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11-November
D A V IB C O U N T Y ’S O L D E S T N E W S F A P E R -T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E R E A D •WERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GADLn VOLUMN X L I.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, W EDNESDAY. NOVEMBER* I, 1 9 3 9 NUMBER 15 NEWS OF LONG AGO. Wbat Was Happening In Davie Before The New Deal Used Up The Alphabet, Drowned The Hogs and Plowed Up The Cotton and Corn. (Davie Record, Nov. 2, 1 9 1 0 ) Mrs. Julia Heitman and daugh ter, Miss Mary, spent Thursday in Winston shopt>iug. Misses Luna Brown and Helen Allison spent Wednesday in W in. ston shopping. Miss Edith Swicegood returned Thursday from an extended visit ta friends in Philadelphia. Work on the handsome new gra ded school building will begin at an early date. A concrete sidewalk is to be laid in front of the new coutt house. Master John LeGrande, of. Tl;e Record force, was under the weath er several days last week with a cold. Mrs. W. A. Griffln returned last Thursday from an extended visit to her sister in Baltimore. Miss Mary Kelly, of Salisbury, spent several days last week in this city, the guest ot Mrs. T. L. Kelly. While working at a saw mill last Thursday, Geo. Tutterow had the misfortune to fall on a saw and cut his hand right bad. (Davie Record, Nov. 8, 1911.) Attorney T. B. Bailey made a business trip to Raleigh last week. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Grant, Ir., on Thursday, a fine daughter, their second. G. A. Sheek sold his barber shop last week to Tom Dwiggins, of Center. ■ Eight new houses are in course of erection in this city now. Miss Octa Horn spent Saturday in Winston shopping. Mrs. H . F. Pardue is very ill with fever, we are sorry to note. Miss Mary Hodges, who is a stu dent at Salem College, spent Sun. day and Monday with her parents in Jerusalem. Attorney E. L. Gaitherand Miss Daisy Hampton went to Elkin last week to be at the bedside of Mrs. William Shugart, who is quite ill. Miss Nora Henry was brought home from the Winston hospital Sunday. She remains quite ill. The new residence of Chas A. Clement, on Lexington street, is nearing completion. W hen. com pleted, it will be one of- the best residences in town. C. C. Santord bid off the Hutch ens farm near Cana, Monday, at $2,3 8 5. The farm contains about 1 5 0 acres. R. H. Rollins and the editor spent a day or two in Hickory last week on business. Mr. Rollins is preparing to locate in Hickoryj. Winter struck us a tough blow Thursday night. The thetmome ter fell to 2 9 degrees above zero, and plenty ot frost aud ice was In evidence. H . C. Hunter, who went Wed nesday to Statesville to undergo an operation for a tumor on his neck, returned to bis home near Cana, on Monday- Tom W hitaker made a business trip to the mountains recently and purchased two pigs-and two dogs. The pigs cost him $4, and the dogs cost him $to. J. K. Foster, of Smith Grove, - who has been clerking here for W. - Ir.'Call & Co., returned home last - week to enter sebool. ■. ■ l aic Sm ith.has returned- from the "Golden W est,’* and is visiting ^ relatives and friends-in and around Smith Grove. ■ The many friends of Mrs;.H. E. 'V -Ellis kave her a birthday dinner on 'Friday in honor of her 7 7 th birth- ^ a ft at her home at Smith Grove. I Don’t Want To Go To War. IB. G C. In The Dallas, Texas, Dispatch Journal) I am a young man. I am can- non fodder. I am right at the age when, if enlistments opened up or the first draft came through, I would be in the army. I don’t want to go to war. I remember the last war I re member it because I sold Saturday Evenicg Posts and The St. Lonis Post Dispatch in an army camp. I remember it because mess sergeants always gave me a block of cheese and two hunks of bread on the side- I remember it because the officers rode spirited horses, and the pri vates on the downtown streets snap ped to. attention as the Major and his lady walked by I remember a lot of things gla morous about the last. war. But I remember other things, too. I re member a boy named Dewey Till man who came- up from Georgia, and at Camp Bowie leaned over a trench mortar and they never a- gain saw anything of Dewey Till man or the eight men with him. I remember Canadian boys, stran gers in a strange land, plummetine to their deaths in planes that the government wouldn't let leave the ground now. I remember boys enjoying the lust of life while it lasted, I remem. her the Icy notification that Joe Jones was mi :sing in action o'e had died, his face in the mud, during the Battle of the Marne. I remember the return. I remember seeing a young cap tain — 19 years old he was at the time and looked 4 5 — who .came home with a grip fall of medals and a leeling that put him in his grave at 2 5, a dipsomaniac. I remember the soldiers who came tack from the trenches and wouldn't tell the home folks how many Germans th y had killed. The home folks couldn’t under stand why they didn’t want to talk about it. I remember youths who went a. way fine, ambitious felKws1 and came back out of the mire and blood, hopelessly lost in the econo mic scheme of things. "A s I say, I don’t want to go to war. It Was EverThus. The fellow who came in at the eleventh'hour and wei.t to work, received as.much pay as the man who toiled all day. Seems that this old . Biblical quotation holds true to day. We know folks who don’t go to work even at the eleventh hour, but they seem to get as much pay as those who labor hard during the heat of the day. After a town or county gets all modern conven iences, which has been brought a- bout by long years of toil aod boost' iug by the citizens of the town and county, the fellow who hasn’t toil, ed. and-worked to bring these im provements about, comes in and yells, • “Look at the wonderful things we have accomplished.*’ We nave at least a few examples of this type' of citizen. We don’t know where they were, or what they were doing while we were working and fighting for better schools, better roads, electric power, wr.ter works and everything that goes to miakea bigger and better town and county in which to live. Tbe old saying that "the horse who pulls the plow should eat the fod der,’’^eems to have been thrown into the'discard. MERCHANTS? W ISE .A d v ir tis tl EDITORIAL TID-BITS. Up this good hour there are three men who are potential candidates for Register of Deeds. Takeiteasy, boys, it is over seven months until the June primary When the hens quit layiug the Drice of eggs go skyward. When the hens go to laying the price heads downward. This will apply to the price of cotton, tobacco and other things.. The frost is on the pumpkin and the fodder is in the shock; persim mons are about ripe and ’possums are roaming the woods. We don’t want any .’possum, but wouldn’t re fuse a good pumpkin or two. Everybody; seems’ anxious that H itlerism be wiped off the earth, but our folks seem to want France and England to do the wiping. This country is in enough trouble al ready; without getting mixed ud ' in a European war. Hon. Giles Y. Newton, of Gib son, was a Mocksville visitor Fri- ra r. Mr. Newton was a demo cratic candidate for Congress in this district two years ago, and says he is thinking seriously of entering the race again next vear. He has number of friends in Davie who are always glad to see him. T h e Saturday night parking situation in Mocksville doesn’t seem to be improving fast. We would a- gaio suggest that the local people who live close in, leave their cars at home on Saturday nights and give the- out of-town visitors and shoppers a chance. It would help the merchants and business bouses. Let’s give the visitors a chance. Some of the New Dealers are say. ing that if business continues to im. prove the government will be able to balance the budget next year. After talking to business men in this and ether counties we hadn’t found out that business had even begun to improve. W ith 4 cent cotton, 10 cent tobacco and 9 5 cent wheat, it is hard to convince the farmer that prosperity is here or anywhere near. Our subscribers are tbe best peo ple in world. - We couldn’t get a- Iong without them Sometimes they forget to come and see 11s, or write us, but it; is just negligence on their part, and they don’t mean to neglect us. Our office is open daily from 7 :3 0 a. m., to 5 p. ra., except Sundays and Masonic pic. nic day. We extend a cordial in vitation to.any and all of our sub scribers to call and see us when they are in tow n.. If you want anr information about the price of cot ton, corn or wheat, the weather re port, or anything that we know a- bout, just phone No. 1, and we will be glad to help you if we can. The Davie County Fair has come and gone. - Those, who did not at- tend the.fair were the losers. The fair directors and the stockholders worked hard to' make the fair a suc cess, and they were given the hearty co-operation of many of our citizens. I ThejrAeserve much credit for the success of the fair." W eare sorry to say this, but there are some people in the county who did not even take the time to come out and Iaok- at the fine exhibits of live stock, .poultry, farm and school ex. hibits that were on display. We believe that .all our citizens should have enough pride in their connty to take off at least one day or night to visit the fair. There • is nothing that helps a county more than good agricultural Tair; Trnat Fund for Seruon' . Three sermons are to be preached in Oxford, England, every 20 years, beginning in 1959, and the text used is to be “Thy Kingdom Come.’* Funds for this plan are provided In the wijl of an Engligli clergyman. M ICKIE SAYS— NEP, WE KMOWTMlJ HeRE NEWSPAPER- AIUt THE VYORIOiS GREATEST but btenuER vs our/ to w m * m o o TM aeS t VME WUj IU OURTlELO , f p p l f p Finds SureAstbmaCnre Hickory — H. L. Hallman of Hickory has concocted from roots and herbs what he believes is a ‘sure fire” remedy for asthma, from which he had suffered for the last seventeen years. At least, he has no’ been bother* ed with the ailment since he secur ed' relief from bis home made re medy almost two months ago. Now he is able to sleep, he said, only one pillow whereas he used three or four for years. Although Mr. Hallman could (iossibly make a small foitnne for himself from the cure, if it pans out, be will contribute i’, instead, to the gcod of humanity, be as serted. “I hope I can help every asthma sufferer, poor and rich," be stated, had A Poem From Missouri. Editor of The Davie Record;—I am working, I am praying and half on the way the King’s Highway, and God through me has saved 145 mem* bers to the church—the church of God and the Baptist denominatin. No man made church, but God’s a- lone! It is built on ChriBt, the corner stone! Though wicked men this church as sails The gates of hell cannot prevail. This Holy Temple in the Lord Is fitly framed, without discord, Of polished stone her walls are laid. Complete in one, as Jesus prayed. God joined the members, every one, Unto the body of His Son! Their names are in the book of life; This Holy church is JesuB’ Wife! ^ Built upon Christ, their living bead,. Together quickend from the dead, This church of God is from above. Its only Lord, the bred of love! I dare not trust in human aid Nor join a church that man has made. Built on the sand. label tall, When storms arise her waves will fall. With Jesus alone, with Jesus alone Is only foundation, Chief Corner stone; Thru faith in Christ, thru JesuB blood. We are members of the church of the church of God. Yours in the work and Christ. . the Lord: REV. JESSE C. PACK. Kansas City, Mo Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Roy Feezor all dressed up and no where to go—Lady playing solitaire on Main street—Sheriff Bowden lis tening to radio—Patrolman Norris and policeman sitting in car talking things ever—Pretty girl with bunch of pretty chrysanthemum) walking down street—Street Rambler look- ing over room full qf pretty girls— Robert Marlow talking about good B hoesheboughtayearago at the Mbcksville Cash Store—Gaither Sal ford explaining where he got a suit of clothes—Miss Martha Lee Craven on.her way to lunch—Two Baptist preachers walking around together —Mocksville ’possum hunters com- ing in late without any ’possums— Knox Johnstone looking over his new building—Bride and groom parked in car on the square—Bill Leach in- stalling heater in car—Ashley Dwig- gins looking like he had lost his best friend—George Bryan hurrying to meet appointment. Only Carried Out His Orders. Robeit G Elliott, official execu tioner at Sing Sint, New York, died the other day after pulling the switch that sent more than three hundred persons into eternity. He died from a persistent disease. Elliott’s predecessor bad official, ed at 1 1 0 executions, and bad corn- t milted suicide. The first official executioner at Sing Sing, is credit ed with only eight official deaths. His fee was only $5.0 0 . Elliott re ceived $ 1 5 0 for each electrocution. A 4 2 year old World War veteran will succeed him. The pay will be the sam e.. . Elliott bandied his death gartges with neatness and dispatch Kill ing was his job and be was known as a gcod workman, even if some Sing Sing officials avoided him as a man un-clean. His conscience must have been dear, for in bis idle moments he busied himself with the flowers in bis little garden, He loved life, even as those he killed would have loved to live. Who knows but there will be forgiveness now-that he Is oil the other side? Somebody would have done tie job—for the pay that was in it— just like old Bob Elliot’, and while some of us would have balked, would have found something, any thing else to do earn to live, the man can’t be blamed too much. And long before he put out to sea, Elliott unburdened bis heart concerning the job that was bis. He was opposed to capita! punish, meat as curious as that may seem, and left this contribution to what is hoped may be the ultimate abolish, ment of official killing: "But I have not killed these peo pie. Yon who read this and are voters of these six States have done that. - (H e was official executioner for half a dozen states). Youhave done it through due process of the courts. I have carr’ed out your orders.” I’. And counting evetything, it is ournctiou that Robert Elliott earn ed every cent be got for'bis work. As plausible as tte: made bis posi- tion in regard to his job, it is pro bable that the red of the flowers re. Not Willing To Adjourn Politics. Vienna, Il'..—Senator Robert A. Taft ot Ohio said that Americans wishing to remain at peace after 1 9 4 0 "had better ,trust the admin • istration of their foreign policy; to the Republicans.” In an address composed for a four-state Republican rally he a- ligned himself against proposals for an adjournment of' politics in the face of the European crisis. "There are some who say that p rlitics should stop at the water’s elge, and that the nation must prec sent a united front,” said Taft 1 fS- vowed candidate for the Republi can presidential nomination. " I do not believe that any position of the Republican party should be dictat ed by partbanship.. .but if the pre- s dent should advocate a policy -for s auce, which leads ibis country to ward war, I would feel it not only my right, but my duly, to oppose it as.energetically, and as publicly, as possible. “ There is n 1 principle of subjec tion to the executive in foreign policy.” AFINE GIFT FORl SOMi OP •VA SUBSCRIPTION [THIS NEVSPi Why Not Stay At Home. Before the Kuronean war broke our there bad been constant threat of war for more than 12 months and United States cit zens bad been warned to get out of Europe. The curious sightseers, most .of whom probably had not seen A- merica fir>t, insisting on staying a. r und the danger zone and depend ing upon the great Urcle Sam to pull them and .’heir chestni ts out ot the fire. • - When the war st-utcd so sudden. Iy thousands were in Europe and they Stirted clamoi ing to get back to good old, peaceful America where bombs are not likely to drop out of the skies just any moment.' Some of the persistent European visitors bought passage on the ill- fated bri.ish ship Athenia and' a few of them went to D 3ry Jones’ locker. Of course, we resent the action of Germany submarines in sinking the ship with Americans a- board but we also resent the action of Ameri an citizens in doing some thing that may lead to internation al complications, including war. Jifot why some selfiisb people In - sist on jeopordizing their nation’ to satisfy their own personal whims is beyond us. Like some spoiled childreu we know, they need to be laid across somebody’s lap and giv en an bonest-to-gooduess spanking, which is lesson number one in learn ing to mind one’s own business. Staying out of war is everybody's business and do the job perfectly the nation needs the corporation of all its citizens. When the govern ment says stay out, of the war zone. We shouldstayout and be sure to mind onr own business, internatiod- :d y speaking.—Ex , Must Call A Halt. Newton, .Oct. ^ i-T lie death of John R. Williams, 6 1 , of Granite Falls, as a results of injuries sus tained when he was struck by an automobile in Hickory at noon Sat in tawba coun'y since August 2 6— within a period of seven weeks. ■ . , , a .. . . . . uvday, brought to twenty the totalminded him of the blood he had », ’ “ ' _, . - .• • . of motor vehicles fatalities in Ca.stilled, and memories haunted his sleep. : -But aren't we calloused to kill ings? On the highways anti on battlefields men are slain in the u t most abandon. Then why sboutd Bob Elhpkt tr V toexcusehis grue some service? It must have been because; he, more than any other m anin American, bad seen the fu Ulyof it all.—Statesville Daily-,- ADS For SZi LL IN OUR NEXT 15LUL THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON XTEW YORK--Admiral Emory S. ' Land, chairman of the mari time commission, says the proposed safety belt around our shores is a “nice idea,”Oar tSabt Zone but seems to Is ‘Nice Idea,’ concede noth- SaysAdm-Land ing more. Hewonders what will happen when “somebody sticks his nose inside the zone.” Admiral Land’s opinion is that of a technician and expert on ob trusive noses, particularly those of submarines, and, to be more ex plicit, German submarines. He got the Navy cross for his work in de signing and building submarines in the World war, in which he served as commander of the construction corps, and, in 1919, he turned in a searching technical study of what German submarines had done and what they might do in the next war. Tbe spirited little admiral, a cousin of Charles Lindbergh, has most important business on hand jnst now, with something like $400,000,000 staked out for building a merchant marine. This business of new ships, and how good a risk they may be on sub-infested seas, is decidedly in his department. He is a native of Canon City, Colo., born in 1879. After his graduation from Annapolis, he did postgraduate work in naval architecture. Football has engrossed him almost as much as the navy. He was the garrison finish star of that famous “crap ■game” match between the Army and Navy in 1900, a-gridiron hero, and thereafter a successful concili ator in the long-drawn-out army and navy athletics row. His suavity and persuasive ness are always effective, as when he invited some C. I. O pickets of the maritime commis sion into his office and talked them into good humor. He suc ceeded Joseph P. Kennedy as chairman of the commission in February, 1938. He’s in a crit ical goal-keeper’s spot just now, and everybody is satisfied. w<r ORD comes from Paris of the demobilization of Lucien Le Long, the famous dressmaker. The government puts him back on the - r r job designingLucien Le Long g0wns. “Grace Back to 4Grace , swirl and free- Swirl, Freedom’ <|om” has beenhis rallying cry as a designer. This isn’t that kind of war, and perhaps the French think they are wasting his talents as a soldier. However, soldiering is one of the best things that M. Le Long does. In the last war, a shell blew him out of a trench into the dressmaking business. Se verely wounded, his hearing im paired, he borrowed $2,500, em ployed 50 midinettes and seam stresses, married the cousin of the late Czar Nicholas of Russia, . and ran his business up to a daily gross intake of 1,000,000 francs, employing more than 1,000 women. He took with him into the business a .Croix de Guerre and two citations. He had been a liaison officer with Allenby in Palestine. Brisk and businesslike, although still boyish-looking, he says the hap piest day of his life was when he ireed women from tubular gowns. He has visited this country frequent ly and is widely known and popular here. His is one of the most inter esting of all “between war” careers. ♦— jTp HIS department gets word from a Washington ringsider that Dr. William M. Leiserson, summoned by the President several months ago — , . to unscrambleD r. L e ise rso n ^ie National LoosetungKnota Labor Rela- In Labor Tiftip J'ons board,has been mak ing swift progress and that, just as a matter of war preparedness, the outlook for labor-employer peace is much better. Previously a member of the national mediation board, he was appointed to the labor board to succeed Donald Wakefield Smith, center of bitter controversy. He is said to have greatly clarified and expedited procedure under the Wag ner act. He is one of millions of Amer ican citizens who in late years have seen their native countries taken prisoner. Born in Estonia, he was brought to this country when he was a.small child. At the University of Wisconsin, he was schooled in economics. He obtained his doctorate at Colom bia in 1911 and made his career in Wisconsin in various state in dustrial, employment, labor and workmen’s compensation posts. He personalizes and particularizes each case and sees no hope in "legalistic” solutions of labor prob lems.(CcnsoUiated Features—WNU Servlc#.\ As British Minesweepers Protect Nation’s Shipping \ Y ~ «s% r, Paravane overboard; . cuts mine anchors 2 Mines bob to surface; . fired by sharpshooters Buoys overboard to mark ‘clean’ lane The crew of a British minesweeper at work seeking and making harmless any enemy mines that might endanger the country’s shipping. At left is the paravane, a device that cuts the anchor lines of mines, permitting them to bob to the surface where they can be destroyed by gunfire. After they are exploded, buoys are put overside to mark a “clean” area to sea. Italian Honeymoon on a Bicycle Built for Two ft"'-I'~ n ii himm r r 7» ,IpT -S iiaja k They're not bothered with a string of old shoes, this Italian couple married recently in St. PetertS cathe dral in Rome. With the government curtailing the use" of motor cars In an effort to conserve gasoline, bi cycles have become not only a fashion but a necessity. Here is the wedding party, headed by the bride and groom on a “bicycle built for two/' A d v e n t u r e r A F o u r C h i n e s e W h o C a u s e d a W o r l d C r i s i s A chip off the old block is Qnentin Roosevelt, 19, who has returned to Harvard university with some of the valuable art objects collected on his recent expedition into the wilds of Nashi, between China and Tibet, i I I r o n L u n g B a b y f l . f \ Medical history was made in Chicago when 22-year-old Mrs. Ger trude Epstein,' infantile paralysis victim, successfully gave birth to a six and one-half pound baby while encased in an iron lung. The moth er died the day after Uie operation. Here are the four Chinese whose alleged murder of a Jap puppet official at Tientsin, China, several months ago precipitated Japanese demands that Greait Britain recognize the “new order” in China. British- Jap conferences in Tokyo, started as a result of the incident, are still continuing and the four prisoners are shown being removed from Britisli to Japanese custody, one o( the points on which the British capitulated. T f a a n k s g i v i n g Q u e r y — ‘W h e n D o W e E a t ? ’ /*»£m i KEY ^^^Httovember 23 I I November 30 ^ Undecided Divided response was accorded President Roosevelt’s action in setting Thanksgiving a week ahead. Twenty-two states will celebrate on Novem ber 23, the new date; 24 will celebrate traditionally on November 3V) Texas will have two Thanksgivings and Mississippi was undecided. S t a r D u s t ★ Too Many Good. Ones ★ ‘Gang Busters’ Do ★ Artie Shaw Goes G. B. B y V irg in ia V a le —;— T HAT argument between Bette Davis and Warner Brothers should set a record of some kind. Usually a star pro tests because she either wants better stories or more money. Miss Davis didn’t want either. She gets the best stories that the studio can find; in fact, the execu tives can’t hear of a good one with out trying to buy it for her. The latest purchase is “No Time for Comedy,” the play that Katharine Cornell has been doing so success fully for so long on the New York stage. It’s said that George Brent will play opposite Miss Davis, in the role done in New York by Laurence Olivier. Miss Davis’ complaint is that they buy too many of these good stories for.her—in other words, she works too hard. Since last January she has made “Juarez,” “Dark Vic tory,” “The Old Maid," and “Eliza beth and Essex,” which makes an impressive record. — % ~ - Loretta Young, in “Eternally Yours,” has a chance to wear chin chilla and orchids and look beautiful against a luxurious background. The picture is light and amusing, and some of your favorite people are in & LORETTA YOUNG the cast (at least, they deserve to be among your favorites). Hugh Herbert, Zasu Pitts, C. Aubrey Smith, Ralph Graves and David Niven have combined to give you something to laugh at in this one. Jimmie Cagney’s sister, Jean, who’s twenty, has landed a movie contract for herself; starts her new career with a salary of $250 weekly —not bad for a beginner, though in Hollywood language that’s barely pin money. — *— Andrea Leeds begged off from playing opposite Gary Cooper in “The Outlaw” so that she could get married; she wants a real wedding and a real honeymoon, instead of one of those hurried ceremonies that motion .picture .actresses .usually participate in. She may decide to give up her screen career altogeth er, in favor of matrimony. “Gang Busters” starts its fourth year in a crusade against crime on an enlarged network that includes 61 CBS outlets. Since its debut it has presented more than 150 dramas of actual cases; through clues pre sented near the end of each broad cast, it has been credited with the ultimate arrest of more than 130 sus pects. Its producers work with law enforcement authorities, and each case that is dramatized is based on facts supplied by official agencies. During each program Col. H. Nor man Schwartzkopf, former head of the New Jersey State police, inter views officers connected with the case just dramatized. It adds a thrill to Saturday evenings. Artie Shaw, whose clarinet play ing practically makes history, has been startling people—especially his sponsors—by saying what he thinks about the jitterbugs. Band leaders have wanted to say what he has, in times past, but haven’t dared, be cause the yelling, shouting mobs who stormed the theaters where they appeared were "the public.” They didn’t dare pause to consider the rest of the public, who went to hear them play. So Shaw has come out into the open, rebelling against being goad ed into writing autographs when he’s due on the stage, resenting being jeered at when he doesn’t do as he’s asked. His radio sponsors feared that it might affect his popularity. Far from it—he attracts more peo ple than ever. ODDS AND ENDS—Ltmny Ross Iika “Over the Rainbow” the best of the popular tunes . . . A print of l4Intermezzon has been sent to the King of Siveden1 requested by the president of the United Swedish societies ... Merle Oberon wants to start Hollywood’s feminine contingent knitting for the soldiers of the Allies— watch for a flood of publicity pictures of the girls with their needles — And look out Ior a flood of spy pictures, with “Espionage'* as a Samptet though Urendn Marshall is above the average- heroint you can expect to see.IBeteasid by Western Newspaper UnlonJ N e w a n d I m p o r t a n t E a s y - t o - D o F a s h i o n s I F YOU take a large size, then 1835 is a pattern you’ll thor oughly enjoy, and make up time and again. Excellent for house work, with darted, unconfining waistline and deep armholes, it is so neatly tailored and smart look ing that you can receive your sup per guests in it, too, and wear it for shopping and runabout. For home wear, make it of gingham or percale. For street wear, choose thin wool or flat crepe, and omit the pockets. Pleats Are Smart. If you spend most of your hours in an office or at college, then a dress like 1814 is a joyful neces- Z sity. It’s blithe, tailored, becom ing and youthful, with box-pleated skirt and button-front bodice, fin ished with a crisp little collar to keep it always fresh and new-look ing. Make it up in plaid wool or in bright-colored jersey—or in both. It’s too good a design to make up only once! The Patterns. No. 1835 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material; % yard of contrast; Vh yards bias fold or braid. No. 1814 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 re quires 3% yards of 54-inch ma terial; % yard contrast. New Fall Pattern Book. Send today for your new Fall Pattern Book with a stunning se lection of a hundred perfect pat terns for all shapes and sizes. Save money and know the keen satisfaction of personally planned, prefectly fitted garments by mak ing your own frocks with these smart, carefully cut designs. You can’t go wrong—every pattern in cludes a step-by-step sew chart to guide beginners. Price of Pattern Book, 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. ■ ' (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) Pull the Trigger on Constipation, and Pepsin-ize Acid Stomach Too When constipation brings on add indigestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your stomach is probably loaded up with certain undigested food and your bowels don't move. So you need both Pspsin to help break up fast that rich undigested food in your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be sure your laxative also contains Pepsin. Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that wonderful stomach-relief, while the Laxative Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the power of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of undigested protein food which may linger in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric acidity and nausea. Thi3 is how pepsin- izing your stomach helps relieve it of such» distress. At the same time this medicine wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your bowels to relieve your constipation. So see how much better you feel by taking the laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on that stomach discomfort, too. Even finicky children love to taste this pleasant family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative—Senna with Syrup Pepsin at your druggist todayl Temptations Mnltlply He that labors may be tempted by one evil; but he that is idle is tempted by a thousand.—Italian Proverb. MdRdLiNlVPETROLEUM JElLYw V S tK m m Cause of Misery Much of the misery in this life is caused by being unkind to those who love us.—G. F. Hoffman. AtOOODDRUOSTPICI tat 60s tessedfteuei. X V ti r a wee AT nesd j.i, aefs. M Pino Thur T. (own ness i Mr. of Fo ville FO sbire Mts Thelm Salisb Rev J. H. Winst Phil Washi you wa Alto Thursd attendi Miss the Co spent th her par- Mrs. son, of are snen Smith’s M. Call. Rev. esville S pulpit at tist chur evening A. L. town Th Iiowies pounds o of which Attorn; spent abo Hospital, return h ir;t-i;d.s wi] There ;v the Bpptist ine, when the church Rev. J. H. FOR SA trie Motors We also Re Miss L teen a paije Salisbury, i Mrs. Lan stronger sh home Mock Highwav has been ill more with 8 and who wa. ville Hospita friends will Mr. and M have been sto ville for so~ rooms with . North Main Monday to th A. J. Black citizen ot this at Durham, viveu by hi children. Mr. { in the cotton 'i years * The RepubI f township will • Grove school h Si night at 7:30 0 jf licansintbet I* fd to be presen v be beard. I AUCTION ' ~ ^oidered i f gSfdsati“read.DU- imic young designer medallio hundred-year-old Egypti :ie with butterfly motifs in It uosaic. The story of handba Iiis season promises to be ing one. Hooped Peplom ])sned to fit over the newe hipped evening frocks is th ermine wrap shown b ;re. The coat is about finge agth and has a peplum fringe rtiite silk and held out with .-hoop. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. broidered in gold tiire a d .Tne amic young designer medallions the Hundred-year-old Egyptian1 frame with butterfly motifs in Ital ian mosaic. The story of handbags for this season promises to be a thrilling one. Hooped Feplam Designed to fit over the newest wide-hipped evening frocks is the white ermine wrap shown by Bru^ere. The coat is about finger tip length and has a peplum fringed with white silk and held out with a wide hoop. Many of the incoming frocks are styled with wide inset belts that ac cent high bustline and small waist line. The trend to jeweled girdles is also noted. Belts of gold or sil ver kid give a dramatic touch to black velvet gowns that stress ut most simplicity in their styling. A Bow for a Belt Trading a belt for a bow or a tassel, Bruyere features in his new collection slim beltless frocks which have a bow or a tassel posed at the waistline where a belt would ordi narily be. Household N gujs PUMPKIN PIES FOR HALLOWEENSee Recipes Below. When Witches and Goblins Roam If certain thatnenasaneavSHy Fa ther who takes careful account of the loving deeds of His children and who will reward him, both in this world and in the world to come. Memories of Happy Days Why is it that the memory of some days in the past, unmarked by any striking event, always come to us like the breath of spring? It may be that on those days, in re ward for some forgotten act, God drew us close to Him, and that we absorbed something of His eternal peace and happiness. What night is better suited to in- jformal entertaining than all Hal low’s Eve? Candlelight, leering Jack-o-lanterns, and crepe paper decorations in orange and black cre ate an eerie atmosphere for an eve ning of hilarious fun. No one “dresses”—or, if they do, they dress in grotesque costumes which only add to the festivity. Entertainment is simple, and easy to provide. Old fortune telling games and bob bing for apples a re always fun, and a trip through a “cham ber of horrors” is as much a part of Halloween as are good things to eat. For variety, and a lull in the ex citement of wilder entertainment, |you might try a “paper and pencil game”—a prize to be given to the Iguest who can list the greatest lumber of superstitions, or answer he greatest number of questions in I “Cat Questionnaire” (for exam- jle), “What cat is an ancient bury ing place?” (catacomb) and “What [at is a plant of the mint family?” [Catnip). Food for a Halloween gathering simple and substantial—baked eans with brown bread, cabbage aw, and coffee; doughnuts with ulled cidpr, or pumpkin pies a mode. You’ll find among the fol- wing suggestions some that are d and some that are new. Caramel Fecan Tarts. (Makes 6 tarts) 1 can sweetened condensed milk 2 tablespoons hot water 6 small tart shellsVz cup nut meats (cut fine) Place the unopened can of sweet- .ed condensed milk in a kettle boiling water, and keep at boil- g point for three hours. (Be sure keep can covered with water.) emove the caramelized milk from e can and blend with two table- poons hot water, beating until imooth. Cool. Pour into baked tart ihells, and sprinkle with chopped huts. Cut pattern of cat from stiff white paper. With a sharp knife, [carefully cut cats from pastry, using the paper pattern as a guide. Place on cookie sheet and bake in hot oven (450 degrees). Cool and place one on each tart before serving. Chocolate Indians. Vt cup butter 1 cup granulated sugar 2 eggs2 ozs.-chocolate (melted) Vi cup bread flour Dash saltI teaspoon vanilla extract Vi cup nuts (broken) Cream the butter and add sugar slowly. Add the eggs and beat well. Add the melted chocolate, flour, salt, vanilla ex tract and nuts, blending lightly. Bake in a shal low layer in a well greased pan in a moderate oven (350 de grees) for 30 to 35 minutes. Re move from pan and cut in bars while hot. Harvest Moon Doughnuts. (Makes 24 doughnuts) Vi cup butter 1 cup sugar 2 eggs 4 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder I teaspoon salt I teaspoon nutmeg Vi teaspoon cinnamon I cup milk I teaspoon vanilla Fat for deep fat frying Cream butter and sugar. Beat in eggs. Sift together dry ingredients and add alternately with milk. Add vanilla. Roll dough Yi-inch thick and cut with doughnut cutter. Fry in deep fat at 385 degrees until doughnuts are brown. Sausage RoU-Em-Ups. 4 small pork sausages 4 long slices bread Prepared mustard Melted butter Cook pork sausages until lightly browned. Spread bread with pre pared mustard. Wrap the sausages in the bread and fasten with a tooth pick. Brush with melted butter- covering outside entirely. Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) until brown. Garnish with crisp bacon and par» ley. Taffy Apples. 2 cups granulated sugar Vz cup light com syrup 3A cup water Red liquid coloring (few drops) 12 red apples 12 skewers Few drops oil of peppermint, cinna mon or cloves Wash apples thoroughly and dry them. Insert skewer in blossom end. Put sugar, corn syrup and water into a saucepan a n d cook, stirring un til the sugar is dissolved. Con tinue cooking without stirring until the temperature 300 degrees F. is reached—crack stage. Wash crystals away from side of saucepan as mixture cooks. Cook slowly during latter part of period so that syrup will not darken. Re move from flame , and set saucepan into boiling water. Note: A double boiler may be used for this. Add coloring and flavoring and stir just enough to mix well. Holding apple by skewer, plunge it into hot syrup. Draw it out quick ly and twirl it until the syrup runs down to the stick and spreads smoothly over the apple. Stand skewer in a small glass or cake rack so that apple will not touch anything while cooling. Apples should be made the day they are to be used because moist ure from apple will soften candy and make it sticky. Dipping must be done rapidly or syrup will be come too stiff for coating. The football season is in full swing! One of these chilly Sat urdays it would be a grand tr^at to let the youngsters bring “the gang” home from the game for a football supper. r-DOLLAR MAKERS-------- Ads Invariably ‘Contact’ Part Of Community Get Copy of ‘Better Baking.’ This practical and clever cook book by Eleanor Howe, the radio Home Economist, contains a collec tion of choice recipes. Luscious, un usual cakes, cookies, pies that are perfect, and hot breads that melt in your mouth—you'll find tested recipes for all of these in “Better Baking.” To get your copy of this cookbook now, send ten cents in coin to “Better Baking,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Desired Extra Bathroom Need Take Little Space Few houses are being built to day without two bathrooms, or at least a bathroom and extra lava tory. In the modernization of an old house, consideration should be given to this feature. Plumbing authorities have found that the essential fixtures of a bath-, room can be installed in a floor space which measures five feet one way and six feet the other. Space at the unused end of the hallway often may be converted into an ex tra bathroom, and in some cases an oversized bedroom may be con verted into a guest suite by parti tioning it and including a bathroom By GEORGE T. EAGER T HE owner of a fine florist shop in a midwestern city was recently discussing adver tising with a business friend. The friend owns a thriving food store that does an annual vol ume of $300,000. A complete stock of choice foods, excellent service and judicious use of newspaper advertising had built the business. “Don’t talk to me about advertising,” said the florist. “There is so much of it every where that it just can’t pay. Look at this newspaper here. So chockful of ads that mine would never be seen or noticed.” The two men happened to be walk ing through the busiest section of the city. “YouADVBRTlSINa IS SIMILAR —are one of a num ber of men in this city who would be making more money if you understood how advertising works,” said the owner of the food store. “Advertis ing is just like the traffic in this city. Traffic looka tangled up and confused, there’s too much of it and you might think that any single automobile or truck would be lost in the shuffle. But just remember that this gray car that is passing us and that red de livery wagon that just turned the corner, are very important to a cer tain number of people in this city.*' ilIfs the same way with adver tisements. There seem to be so many of them that they are confus ing. But each advertisement is im portant to somebody. Today’s pa pers carry an advertisement of my store featuring a special purchase of oranges and grapefruit, a lot of new cheeses and a special offer on ginger ale. To a lot of people that advertisement is lost in the traffic. But experience has taught me that this same advertisement will seek out for me enough people to whom the merchandise is highly important to make it pay." A G O O D A D H A S ‘V O IC E ’ O NE of the successful young er men in the advertising business was recently telling of the valuable lessons he had re ceived during his period of training. “I received my most valu-i ab le lesson w hen I first learn ed th a t an a d v e rtise ment is not something pretty to be looked at but should appear to actually give out sounds. I first got this idea while working for one of the greatest advertis ing men the coun- try h a s ever known. When a series of adver tisements was submitted for his approval he would run through them quickly and when he came to one he didn’t like Si he would put his hand to his ear and say ‘I can’t hear this one.’ “His judgment was unerring and I began to realize that advertise ments for luxury articles such as perfumes, foreign cars, diamond necklaces should give forth a quiet sound like that of a conversation between cultured people. But other advertisements addressed to people who are in a hurry and have only a second or two to give to you have got to have more of the ‘Hey you!* appeal. By their very appear ance, illustrations and headlines, they have got to make enough noise to stop the reader.” One of the most interesting and profitable studies in advertising is to study the sound producing power of different arrangements of pic tures and type on the page of a newspaper.(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) ‘Policeman of Paris’ Called Back to Duty PARIS. — The magnificently bearded and mustached “police man of Paris,” Rene Ie Clerc, was brought out of retirement re cently by the exigencies of war. The picturesque character, who used to direct traffic near the Porte Saint Denis, returned to active duty at the request of his former superiors. He had retired a few months ago to devote his time to painting. “The most photographed po liceman in the world,” as he was known, took up a post in front of the town hall of the fifteenth Arrondissement in the Rue Blom- et near Porte Versailles, where traffic is lighter than at his old boulevard location. TMfe DAViE RECOftD1 MOCRSV TME D A V IE RECORD. Progressive M usic C lub Sm ith G rove P. I . A . C. Fit A.VS STROUD - - Editor.Meets. TSLE?HON£The Progressive MusicCIubhelditsfirst At the first meeting of the yeai the Smith Grove Parent-Teacher Association was re organized with] * meeting of the season at the home of the ] 'he following officers: Mrs. Grace^ ~~,4~ J- TIT A “ — T-TT-T T . teacher. Kiss Louise Stroud. Saturdoy 1 Boose Foltz, president: Mrs. Frankl Vine18N0 C., as S e^ -cU ss -Maiijaflernonr' ThB followins officers, werej M. Smith, vice-president; Miss Eu-I matter March 3 1903 : elected: President. Jessie Ubby StroudJla Reavis secretary, ana Mrs. Mar-| i Vint-Presidem. Louise Caudell: Secretary, | v:n timith, treasurer. * Bjbbie Jean Smith. Program Committer. I Afterthebusiness meeting was| Martha Bowden and Betty Honeycutt, and I over Mr. Proctor, our county su- Mdbcot, Betty Lou Martin. Following the j pejntender.t, made an educational] business session, a short musical program s talk which was very interesting. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: -) ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - S I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S SO Some one has suggested that all school teachers be made retire when they reach the age of 60 This would be all right if a big pension didn't go along with the retirement. The merchant who advertises in his local paper is the man who gets the business. We have been check ing up on this for the nast several months and find that most folks who take their county paper not only read the ads but trade with the merchants who appreciate their Datronage enough to ask for it. The Record isn't paying any body to subscribe, and it is putting cn no contests. To begin with, we believe our paper is worth the price we are charging for it, and subscri bers who have to he paid to take a piper don't Ttmain subs riibers for, long. Several years ago a numbers oc papers in this state put on con tests to boost their circulation but found that it did not pay. A tax of $50 to $100 was levied on all newspapers that put on circulation :ontests, and this may have bac something to do with the discon tinuance of these once popular con tests. We are glad to add new names to our subscription books but we will not put on any contest to get them. andIf the citizens of lht town county would do all their banking in another town, and if the people would go to ether towns and conn Rcuie 2 ties to purchase all their suppii it would make the local busi men feel very bad. We wonder was enjoyed. At the conclusiua -of the program, a number of Hallowe'en games and contests were enjoyed, prize winners being Sarah Catherine Sraitb, Janie Nay lor and JessieLibbyStroud. Refreshments carrying ou* the Hailowe’en motif were served to the class. M urchison Joins F ra te r n ity. Fourteen students in the school of agriculture at State College, Ra leigh, have been initiated into toe local chapter of Alpha Zeta, na tional honoraiy agricultural frater nity. Among the new members is Kenneth MuicbisoD9 son of Col, and Mrs. W. C. Murchison, of Mocksville, R. 2. H allow e’en P arty. Miss Ruth Whitaker and Pansy Evans were joint hostess at a Halloween party given in honor of their Sunday school class. It was given at the home of the latter. The color scheme used was yellow and white. A number of games and contests were played. Winners were Junior Blackweldert Nora Bracken. Lewis Beck, Ada Bracken, Hardins Wagner, and Virginia Blackwelder. The hostess assisted by Dora Bowles served hot chocolate and cake to the following guests: MissesAda Bracken Nora Bracken Jobnsie Bracken. Luciie Bracken. Ira Tuttercw. Pearline Beck. Emma Rollins, Janice Eat on, Mary Nell Eaton,Elaine Eaton, Rachel Sherrill. Edith Sherrill. Beatrice Sherrill, Martha Bowles, Virginia Blackwelder. Dora Bowles Ruth Whitaker and Pansy Evans. Messrs Lewis Beck, Harding Wagner, Odell Wagner. Bruce Beck, Grady Tutterow1 Tommy Eaton. Junior Blackwelder, Marshall Bowiess, B. C Moore, Bennev Moore, Albert Mitchela Earl Beck, Felix Reavis and Hugh Graves, Mr and Mrs. L. F. Evans, Mr. and Mrs F.0. Black welder of Kannapolis. Mrs. Rena Cleary, Mrs. Mae Moore, Mr and Mrs. Fletcher whitaker and s'ins Paul and Silas, Miss Evansand Miss Whitakerlive on Mucks- Between that time and the datefl of the second meeting the execu-T tive committee met and selected! the-following committees: Ways and Means—Will SpryJ Chairman; Clyde Cook, Lrankl Smith, Mrs. John J. Allen, Tr.,] Mrs. Harry Sheek. Hospitality or Soeial—Mrs. Ravfl Cornatzer, Chairman, Mis. VaudaT Langston, Will Alien, Mrs. AlDerJ Howard. I Membership—Alb e r t. Howard! Chairman; Mrs. Will Spry, Rich^ ard Allen, Jesse Laird, Willie Beau-J champ; M. K. Allen, Mrs. Gracq Call. Program—M rs. Willie Beatil champ, Chairman; Mrs. Will Ho\q ard, Miss Kate Shore. Publicity—Mrs. Kate Dund Chairman; Mrs: Richard Alien Willie Howard. The secretary wi| work with this group. Welfare—C. S.- Dunn, Chairmanl D. T. Pavne, 0 . H Smith. The following were chosen to bj grade Mothers. Each may choose a helper. Mrs. Marvin Smith, 7th grade. Mrs. Willie Beauchamp 6th gradq Mrs. IVT. K. Allen, 5th grade. Mrs. Ray Cornatzer, 3rd grade. Mrs. Ollie Dunn, 2nd grade. Mrs. 0 . H. Smith, 1st grade. O Legion Enjoys Supper. rj Post 174, American Lpgion,H Ctiunty, together .with the Clyde Bulling the newspapers don't feil bad when 1 Post Bund, of Winston-Salem, enjuveil abig barbecue supper at the Masonic nic- of Davie nic grounds Eriday evening at 7 o'clock. About 200 Vrere present tor the supper. A r:;i:u:erf was given on the square h / the Lesinri band preceding the supper. It is iieehifcas to say that ihose present er.jjv ed the occasion very much, many of the leading business men go to other towns and cities to yet their newspapers instead of pat ronizing tbeir IoCrtl papers. Li is lb. local newspaper who boost their towns and business houses and back up every movement that comes a- lon;r th?t will help ’he local mer chant, the banker, the mill em-j ployee and the ‘armer. The news - jj a number of counties in papers give away thousands of c'.ol- tion. Iars worth of advertising space to boost their local communities. Wouldn’t it be fine if all the citi zens of ail the towns would boost their local newspapers? We believe it would. M ocksville Defeats I M aiden. The Mocksville high school foot ball squad motored to Maidenl Thursday afternoon and defeated! the Maiden high school forth?'.: .squad by a score of 7 to 0. This id the second game that our boys havej won from Maiden this fall. F o rk News Notes. Mr. B W, Allen, of Winston-Salem wak a visitor here Saturday. Mr. A N. Liveneoodl who has been in : v«ry critical condition at Lowery’s Hospifl tal. is now reported to he improving.Mr, Guy Wilkerson, of SheffieIdcanvasJ ed this section 1 his week, enlarging phntof Miss Monba Gfmg*, of Liltle Rock. ArIT who spent a inonir. hr re with Mr and Mri A N Livengonrf, returned home this wee! Jos John5Tnne, of Statesville and I Luther Daywnlt. of Davie Acadpmv j R. D. B^y erii, of this city, has Jtion and Mr. and Mrs. Cleary, of Statd accepted a coition as salesman for I ville visited Mr. and Mrs. Z. V. Johnstj the Holland Furnace Co., one 0 f , last Sunday. IarjreNt furnace companus ini G. R. Pack. Krs Lula Park*, vtated , , j and Mrs Jesse Leonard, of Lexington,sou Ii. Mr. Bay .ess iv.l! travel |3 !as[ Sun(lay. tliis G ot Them W rong. Iu taking down the names of the Methodist pastors over the radio last week we got at least one name wrong, and missed ooe altogether. It is Rev. A. W. Lvnchl from North Wilkesboro, who comes to the Davie Circuit, instead of Rev. A. W. Lentz as we printed it. The name of Rev. P L. Smith, who was returned to the Advance cir cuit was missed altogether. Weare glad to make these corrections. H ailow e’n C arnival. The Hallowe’en Carniva! which was held at the high school Friday evening wasen joyed by both old and young.. A colorful parade was given by the school children and the high school band at 2:33 Friday afternoon. The parade was led by a highway patrolman and Chief Smith, fol lowed by Mayor Caudell and little Miss Lettie Lindsay Sheek on horseback. Char les Woodruff and Miss Kathryn Gibson won first prize, and IittJe Miss Tenie Short won second in the parade. Li the contest for King and Qjeen of the Carnival. Gene Smith W8S crowned Kinf1, and Kathryn Gibsou Qieen. They play put on by the high school was enjoyed very much. Tbe carnival was a success in every way more than $125 being taken in during the eveninb, A delicious supper was served from 5:30 to 7:30 o’clock, preceeJing the play and other festivities. J. S. Green, well-knowu merch ant who lives beyond the chilly waters of Bear Creek, was in town Wednesday on business. Sanford tells us that the Bear Cretk bridge, on the countv home road, has been torn away tn make room for a new bridge wbich is being built. Pjo pie living in thnt section are having to detour via Jericho or to S.ate highway 04, near Center. Mrs. A. T. Daniel and children, and Miss Thelma Marshall spent Tuesday af'ernoon in Sahnhurv I uncb G. A. Carter is still to his room.very sick, confiri .-.''.!LVALl-A tread Isji cdjvitable from 40;:0 £3 inches. Widesth IrccJ bhov/n h ere.?• —SaSrSfjSy I p g ip s G e n v i n ® ^ Q u a l i t y _ H e s r v e s t e q n e w L o w F A R M A L L P r i c e © FARMALL-A is a Farmall through and through! It bri ngs you smooth 4-cylinder poiver in a compact adjustable- tread tractor built to do all kinds of work. It brings you Keui comfort. Whether you sit in the roomy sponge-rubber upholstered seat or stand on the operator’s platform , all controls are within easy reach. I: brings you "Culti-Vision You sit in the seat and see your work when you drive the FARMALL-A. IVo neck cran ing. No body twisting. We’re proud to offer you this new small FarmaIL When you see it and try it yourself you’ll say, "It's the biggest tractor value in the $500 price class!" Phone us foe details on the FARMALL-A and its direct- attachable machines . . . or stop in at the store and talk it over. shopping.I “Everything For Everybody” C. C. Sanford Sons Co. Telephone 7 ' Mocksville, N. C. MOCKSVILLE LUMBER COMPANY AU Kinds Building Material SUSS. * ~ I-C-Virc ansi-,'v I Rough And Finished Lumber It Will Pay You To See Us And Get Our Prices When In Need Cf Anpthing In Our Line. Phone 42 M ocksville, N. C. th e Davie record , mocksville , n . c . Novem ber I, (M t IHE DAVIE RECORD.' Davie County Newspaper. NEWS AROUND TOWN. Mrs. Rohert Gobel spent the week end with relatives at Cliffside. Miss Virginia Byerly spent Wed nesday in Winston-Salem shopping J. H. Williams, of Woodleaf. R. i, was in town Wednesday onbusi ness. Mr. ana Mrs. John H. Swing, of Pino, were Mocksville visitors Thursday. T. F. Bailey, of Advance, was in (own Wednesday looking after busi ness matters. Kr. and Mrs. W. Henry Davis, of Fork, were shopping in Mocks ville Thursday. FOR SALE— 15 big bone Berk shire pigs. • J. FRANK HENDRIX. Mis. J. A. Daniel and Miss Thelma Marshall were shoppers in Salisbury' Friday' afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Hodd and J. H. Fulghura spent Friday in Winston-Salem shopping. Philco Radios a n d Meadows Washing Machines, at the price you want t ) pay. YOUNG RADIO CO. Attorney A. T. Grant spent Thursday and Friday' in Raleigh, attending the State Bar Association. Miss Helen Daniel, a member of the Collettsville school facultv. spent the week-end in town with her parents. Mrs, C. B. Smith and little son, of Elizabethtown, , N. C., are spending two weeks with Mrs. Smith’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Call. Rev. W. H Dodd went to Stat esville Sunday, where ^e filled the pulpit at tbe Western Avenue Bap tist church at both tbe morning and evening services. A. L. Bowles, of R. 4 , was In town Thursdav on business. Mr. I E. G. Price spent Thursday in I Winston Salem on business. Mr. and Mrs Roy White spent Largest Circulation of Any Saturday afternoon in Winston. I Mr. and Airs. William Call, of Selma, spent tbe week-end in town with relatives and friends. Mrs. Jack Allison, of Avondale, Ga., spent several days last week in town with relatives and friends. Miss Sallie Hanes, of Clemmons, and. Miss Tempe Smoot, of near Kappa, were pleasant visitors at onr office Monday. Miss Helen Avett, of tbe Cleve land school facully, spent the week end in town with her parent®, Rev. and Mrs. E. M. Avett. J. R. Cornelison, who lives on the muddy waters of the big Yad kin, in Farmington township, was in town Thursday on business. Call at our shop and look over onr line of Meadow Washing Ma chines and PhiIco Radios. YOUNG RADIO CO. Mr. and Mrs. Hasten Carterspent awhile Sunday afternoon at the ItOweiy Hospital with Mr. A. N. Livengood. Mr. Livengood is im proving we are glad to state. Mr. and Mrs. Howard McLamb and children spent last week' with Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Benson, Mr. and -Mrs. McLamb ure going to move to our community. We are glad to welcome them back. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stewart and Mr. and Mrs. Hoey Postom, of Statesville, motored to Cascade, Va., Sunday to a biitbday dinner given Mrs. Charlotte Fitts and Mrs. SaIlie B. Fitt®, twin sisters of Mrs. Jacob Stewart. > The Ladies Aid Society, of Beth el Methodist ,church will hold a bazaar, together with a barbecue, chicken pie and cake supper at Bethel school house Saturday, Nov. 4 tb, beginning at 5 o’clcck, p. m. The public is cordially invited. J. R. Gaither, of near Sheffield, wbo served many years in the U. S. Navy', was called back to the colors last week, and left Monday for Philadelphia to report for duty. Here’s hoping Rastus won’t , come in contact with any German bombs. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Dwire, of Princess Theatre ' WEDNESDAY ONLY • Tex Ritter in ‘•MAN FROM TEXAS" THURSDAY and FRIDAY Jobnoy Weissmuller, Maureen O'Sullivan and John Sheffield in -TABZAN FINDS A SON" SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE Tailspin Tommy in "STUNT PILOT” with John Trent AND Charles'Starrett in "TEXAS STAMPEDE” MONDAY Fay Batnter in mTHE LADY AND THE MQB m TUESDAYFrankie Tbomaa In “CODE OF THE STREETS*’ BARGAINS! Now is the time to purchase your fall and winter goods. Prjces on cotton, wool and I leather goods are advancing rapidly. Buy now and save money. Plenty White Swan Flour $2.50 Everv Bag Guaranteed. BranandSborta $165j Pure Bran Sugar 10 lbs Sugar 25 Ibs Sugar 109 Ibs $6.15 Men’s Union Suits 69c Hanes Heavyweight Union Suits 89c I Am Agent For Alladin Lamps IOc Fast Color Prints, yd 7c Dura Play Cloth, yd IOc 80 Square Prints, yd ]£c Silks 59c Quality, yd 35c Good Feather Ticking, yd 19c See my sweaters for men, women and children. I can save you money on them. I have a good line of Ked Goose and Woolverine Shoes. I can save you money on most anything you need. Local Cotton Market. Tuesday, Oct. 3 1 . Seed cotton 3.9o;-lint 9:4 0 . Tobacco on the Wiuston-Salem market Monday averaged £19.7 0 . More than one million pounds.were sold. Mrs. Coolidge In State. Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, widow of President Coolidge, arrived ct Tryon, N. C., last week, where she will spend the winter Enterprise Moves. The Mocksville Enterprise has moved from the Honeycutt build ing, next door to Duke Power Co., to the Johnstone buildiug on South Main street. This building has just been completed, and The' En terprise will have much better quarters in which to print their paper. $1.60 65c j $1.59' Bowles says he has about 4 ,0 0 0 {Salisbury, J-are rented the Bailey pounds of tobacco this year, some of which is very good. Attorniy Brewster Grant, who spent about two weeks in Davis Hospital, Stotesville, was able to return home Friday, his many iriecds will be glad to leatn. There was a baptismal service at the Baptist church Wednesdaveven- ing, when two members added to the church by baptism. The pastor, Rev. J. H. Fulghum officiated. FOR SA LE-Sbock-Proof Elec tric Motors for Washing Machines We also Repair Washers. . C. J. ANGELL, The Maytag Dealer, Mocksville. N. C. MissL Rebccca.Charles'whdhas teen a patient at Lowery Hospital, Salisbury, is now with her cousiu Mrs. Lannet Coggins. When stronger she will return to her home Mocksville, R. 2. . Highwav patrolman Norris, who has been ill for the past week or tnore with Au and septic sore throat, and who was a patient at Mocks, vilie Hospital, is much better, his friends will be glad to learn. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gobel, who have been stopping at Hotel Mocks ville fo.r some time, have taken rooms with Mrs. C. N. Christianon NorthMainstreet. Theym oved Monday to their new home. A. J. Blackwood, 5 7, a former citizen of this city, died Thursday at Durham. Mr. Blackwood is sur vived by his widow and. several children. Mr. Blackwood had been in the cotton mill business for many years The Republicans in Clarksville township will meet at Chestnut Grove school house next Saturday night at 7 :3 0 o’clock. All Repub licans in the township, are request ed to be present. Short talks will be beard. AUCTION SALE—I will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, on Satur day. Nov. 4 th, beginning CE 10 o’clock, a. m., at the; Ioe Peebles farm, 3 miles east of Advance, the following personal property: Two mule?, one milch cow, and a lot or farm machinery* ^ MRS. P. I. W AGONER. f A rthur Daniel, popular' rural leuer carrier onR. 2. returned Monday from New York ;City where be visited his son James Daniel. It is needless to say that Mr. Daniel took in the big Fatr while in the metropolis. He stop /ped over In Philadelphia to visit his aunt Mrs. Lucile Miller, ^ bouse, in East Mocksville and will move here in the near fure to make their home. Mr. Dwire has a big farm near Turrenline, which be will look after. TbeK ecordisglad to welcome Mr. and Mrs. Dwire to our', town. Salisbut y's loss is Mocksville's gain. The Business Woman's Circle of the Baptist church entertained the faculiy of the Mocksville schools, Rev. and Mrs. Fulghum, and Mr. and Mrs Claude Horn, in the base ment of the Baptist church, Tues day night, Oct. 2 4th. A number of games and contest were enjoyed. Refreshments carrying out the Hallowe’en motif were served to about thirty guests. Rev. M. G. - Ervin aiid family left yesterday for Charlotte, where Mr. Ervin will take up bis work as pastor of the Chadwick Methodist church. Rev. and Mrs. Ervin made many friends in Mocksville aid Davie county during tbeir five years sojourn in t his citv. The, Re cord is sorry to lose these good peo ple, but wish them God-speed in their new field of labor. The Chad- wich church has more than 5 0 0 members. Plenty 66x76 Blankets only 51 5? Box of Matches 2 for' I 5: Box of Salt 2 for I Rice, 5 Pare Coffee IOc I 41b Cirton of Lard 41 See Me For Anything You Need Leather $ff 95 COATS . Linoleum, $0.1 9 x 1 2 ..........................................O Tennis Shoes, .S O 100 Pairs . . . The Fair Is Over But We Are Still Dispensing Fresh Drugs And The Best Ice Cream & Sandwiches Visit Our Store Often J|ALL-|£IMBROUGR JJRUG £0M PANY A Good Drug Store SCHOOL SUPPLIES Tablets and Note Book Paper 3c Each or 35? D zen AU Plow Parts 25% Off GOOD PRICES ON STOVES, RANGES Bargains, In Boys, Mens Clothing, Piece Goods. “YOURS FOR BARGAINS” J. FRANK HENDRIX DepotEt. Mocksville N.C Notice Of Re-Sale! Underand by virtue of an order of. the Superior Court of DavieCounty, North Carolina, made in the special proceeding entitled. H. B. Bailey, et als, -vs- A. B. Carter, et als., the same being a petition to sell lands for partition, and duly filed and re corded in the office of the C erk of Superior Court for Davie County, North Corblina, the undersigned commissioner will, on Monday the 13ch dav of November. 1939. at twelve o’clock noon, at the Court house door of Davie County.- in Mocksville, North Carolina,-re-sell to the highest bidder tbe following de scribed real estate, to-wit: lleginning at a stake or stone; lheDce S. 85 degs, E 6.22 chs. to a- stone; thence N. 3 degs. E. 27.90 chs. to a stake nr stone; thence N. 85 degs. W. 6.34 cbs. to a stone; thence S. 3 degs. W. 27.90 chs. to the beginning, containing 17 3-10 acres more or less. For a more particul description, reference is hereby made to a divi sion of the land of Joel Lvocs. re corded in Book 12. page 527,. Regis ter’s office for Davie'County. ,North Carolina. - The bidding will start at one hund red. sixtv-five ($165 00) dollars, tbe amount of the increased bid: TERM OF SALE: One-third cash and the balance on ninety days: time with bond and approved security, or all cash at the option of tbe pur chaser. . j This, the 28th day of October. 1939, J. B. GRANT, Commissioner. Notice of Sale. Under and. by virtue of an order of the Superior Conrt of Davie coun ty, N. C.. made in the special pro ceeding entitled Charles H. Sink, in dividually and as Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, and others, ex! parte, the same being upon the spec ial proceeding docket of said Court. I the undersigned Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, will, on the 25th day of November, 1939. at 1:30 o’ clock, p. m„ at the home of the late Christian Conrad Myers1Shady Grove Township, Davie County, N. C„ of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land Iving and being in Shady Grove Township, Davie County N. C., adjoining the lands of George Hartman and oth ers, and being more particularly de scribed as follows: Beginning at a stone in Hartman’s line; thence North 5 degrees East 16' chains to a stone; thence East 4 chs. to a stone; thence South 16 chains 10 links to a stone; thence West 4 chains to stone in beginning, containing 6.4 acres more or less, being lot No. 5. being known at part of the, late James Myers lands by division of heirs. See Degd Book 26, psge 429.: The undersigned Executor will al so sell at the said time and place all of the personal property belonging to the estate of the said Christian Conrad Myers. This the 24th day of October. 1939 CHARLES H SINK. Executor of Christian Conrad Myers. E. M. Whitman, Attorney. Specials! Week Only. 3 Piece Upholstered $3(1.95 Liviing Room Suit . . Free 9x12 Gold Seal Rug 3 Piece Maple Living $1 C-OO Room Suit . . I* ' 3 Piece Wicker Living $OQ95 Room Suits . . . Rugl End Table, Lrap Free. Radios, Electric Appliances And Furniture Of AU Kinds At Savings. Daniel Furniture And •any EASY TERMS Overhead Bridge Mocksville, N. C. GLASS In Any Size For Window Pane In Home Or Store -And- AUTO SAFETY and PLIAN GLASS F O R WINDSHIELD or DOOR We Have The Window Pane Glass In Any Size' And Will Install If Sash Is Brought To Us. COMPLETE LINE OF Auto Heaters, Zerone And Prestone AntiFreeze HORN’S Service Station Telephone 31 Mocksville, N. C. I Builders Supplies! J • • * We Are Headquarters For I AU Kinds Of Builders Supplies | Lime, Cement, Sheet Rock, * Rock Lathes, Bird Roofing. * We Are Prepared To Do Mill Work And Repair Jobs. Consult Us For Prices When You Need Anything In Our Line. Caudell Lumber Co. Phone 139 Mocksville, N. C. Q n U td iM f Do a Better, Lower Cost Job Propare your home-grown'feeds and .0, cut grinding costs with the John Deere :s .. Hammer Mill—a 10-inch machine with f big capacity for the small am ount / of power used. . Available in several . 'V ' types, to suit individual needs. High- '• / Quality materials. All-steel construe- Mon, with boiler plate sides and ends. High-carbon steel rotor and fan shaft , ' on ball bearings.' Extra-powerful fan. . ■ Bhmp-eutting, reversible, alloy-steel hammers. Variety of round- and : - square-hole screens, changeable In t> :-;Z' minute. Baflle plates to protect hood,-. < M /fj 7 - Lvge feed collector. ■ ii IldA IiT IN BROTHERS . NEAR DEPOT MOCKSVILLE. N. C. J j£. JOHN DEERE QUALITY IMPLEMENTS AND SERVICE ‘4 THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. F o rm T hese L o v e ly L a ce A ccessories Pattern 2210 When medallions are as easily memorized as these, there’s no excuse for not having a variety of lovely accessories. And it’s all accomplished by crocheting and joining these simple medallions in mercerized string or finer cotton. Pattern 2210 contains directions for making medallions; illustra tions of them and of stitches; ma terials required; photograph of medallions. Send 15 cents in coins for this pattern to The Sewing Circle, Nee- dlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets made of May Apple are effective in removing accumulated body waste.—Adv. Performing In Silence It’s a good file that cuts the Iron without making a noise. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Cceonnflsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm. Increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. Inflamed bronchial mucous membranes: Ho matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sea you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding that you are to like the way it Quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back.CREOMULSION forCoughs,Chest Colds, Bronchitis Officious Cbarity I trust no rich man who is offi ciously kind to a poor man.—Plau tus. Got MALARIA? U you have Malaria, you owe It to yourself and your family to get relief. AU over the South—-and in 21 foreign countries—Wintersmith'a Tonic is known as one of the oldest and most reliable Malaria medicinea on the market. We believe yon will agree this is proof of quality. For your own sake—TRY Winter- smith’s—and see. for yourself I WINTERSMITH'S TONIC From Trivial Causes In war events of importance are the result of trivial causes.—Cae sar. IJjIBETWEBH SNEEZES Qpm HAY FEVER Incurring Censore Those who raise envy will easily incur censure.—Churchill. BILIOUS?.ItoMtoAiiiaiIneltoIIeffof CondHiMS Dm to Staggisli BMnto ■ Tf tttti ttitnV nil livmHif f act alike, jot tty Ud• __ all wiitaU* Iaxatl _ , refreshing, Do*pendable relief from sick tyadacbea. USooa Bpelbw tiled teting when associated with eonstipation. WHfa^tHsk ^OistUahfteMMbnIf not delighted, retain the bos to ua. Wa wfl! tefnod the purchase ^ price. Tbafa fair. JV S Get NRTaMeta today. Au Admission Revenge is a confession of pain. —Seneca. 6 6 6 LIQUID -TABLETS SALVF.-NOSE DROPS TTUsLeAJJ Chi i fa d J : ! SHOPPING J lj .* - S g ping tour is In your favorite easy- chair.wtthanopea newspaper. Make a habit of reading the advertise ments in this paper every week. They can save you Ume1 energy and money. eT o u r E H S I n n o U IE S I BY TALBOT MUNDY • TAUOT MUNDY—WNU SERVICE CHAPTER XV—Continued —14— “I don’t get your point. What do you reckon to find out?” asked Stod- dart. . / “Time," said Moses. “Gulbaz times it like a jockey. He’s the best judge o’ pace in all India. He times it to the minute. If he isn’t ready, then he’ll play for •time.” The truck halted in front of a bouse whose red front' door was bolted, barred, and scrawled in chalk with infamous remarks anent the virtue of its inmates. There was an alley, a yard wide, pitch dark at the farther jnd. Into that alley yel low light streamed through a door that was partly ajar. There was a faint staccato drumbeat, a twang of stringed music, the sickly wail of a flute, and a stench in which sensu ous perfume fought with the reek of garbage. Moses spoke to the truck driver, and the truck driver sounded the horn—three times, then three more, then once.The dissolute and dirty looking person in the big white turban, to whom Moses gave a captured knife in the bazaar, Appeared suddenly, apparently from nowhere. “What’s that bloke up to? Where did he come from?” Stoddart de manded. “If you’d looked under the truck you’d know,” said Moses. “He ain’t respectable, so he don’t ride first class like me and you.” Moses whispered to the man, who walked down the alley and entered the door. . “Is this your harem? Aren’t we going in?” asked Stoddart. “No. You’d break the ladies’ hearts. We’ll wait here and give ’em a chance. This is Gulbaz* tem porary field headquarters. I’ve sent him a message. He’ll come or he won’t. If he don’t, we’ll know the answer.” “What did you tell that bloke to say to him?” “I said that Sergeant Stoddart’s here with information that he’ll sell for a price and wants a personal in terview, face to face, no go- betweens.” “You’ve got your nerve," said Stoddart. “It’ll be all over the bloody bazaar that I’m telling se crets. Why don’t you use your own name?” “We’ve hooked nim. Here he comes,” said Moses. “ Keep your hair on now and sit tight. Say noth ing, and leave it to me.” ' Through the door, down the alley and straight to the truck, without glancing aside, without a moment’s hesitation, came a man of medium height and middle weight, who walked like a young god, though be was middle-aged. He was dressed in a tight-fitting turban, white singlet and loin-cloth and - a striped silk semi-European jacket. He came to the tail of the truck, gave one glance at Stoddart and stared straight at Moses. His smile changed, outward ly only a little, but something hap pened at the comers of his lips. It had changed, to a fighting smile, merciless, malicious. “You’re a dog,” he remarked in plain English. “Fancy you giving, away secrets,” Moses answered. “I’m here to sell ’em for cash on the nose. Me and this Sergeant know something. It’s hot We’re splitting fifty-fifty. How much?” “I will listen. You may tell your secret.” “Cash on the nose,” said'Moses. “Money down or nothing doing.” Gulbaz* smile changed again. It conveyed a suggestion of vanity be yond the utmost reach of ordinary mortals. He glanced at Stoddart then back at Moses. “Are you satisfied?” he asked. "You have recognized me? You can truly report that you have seen me in Kadur? You saw the door I came from? Very well, you niay watch me return. After that, you may go to the devil.” “I’m staying here "until my -mes senger comes out into the street alive,” said Moses, “I will send him to you,” Gulbaz answered. . “He is lucky. Luckier than you are. Wait and see.” Gulbaz strode, back down the alley and entered the door. A moment later the messenger came out, look ing scared, as if he felt murder be hind him. He ran and crawled in under the truck. Moses spoke to the driver. The truck started, for ward, because the street was too narrow to turn around in. “Where now?” asked Stoddart “Back to camp,” said Moses. “Well, you drew blank that time. If you feel as foolish as you look you’ll think twice before you call me a fathead again. You’ve spent a rupee eight annas for nothing, and you’re not a cent the wiser.” “Plus having learned that you’re stupider than any other blasted Brit isher I ever met,” said Moses, 'Tve learned all I came for. Gulbaz isn’t as smart as he thinks.; In some -ways he’s near as stupid as you, all along of his pride.” “Oh. that’s easy to say but ft’s just talk,” said Stoddart. “If you ask me, you’re a Bar. You haven’t learned -anything." To; the extent that a white man can condescend to a half breed without losing caste, we’ve been fair to middling friends, you and I. But if you use my name again promiscuous like that, I’ll' knock your block off.” “Fathead,” said Moses. "He knows me. He doesn’t know you. He came out because he was cu rious.” “And he told you to go to the devil. That’s all you learned.” “Fathead! You mean that’s all you learned. I learned that he’s ready. He’s red-hot ready.” “Ready for what?” “To get Norwood. He’s trigger- ready. If he weren’t, he’d be play ing for time, and we’d be arguing this minute about the price o’ what we’ll tell him if he’ll pay.” “You mean he’d have bribed us?” “I do not. Gulbaz makes prom ises. And he sometimes keeps his promises, unless.” “Unless what?” “Unless someone else can keep ’em for him with a long knife. He can hire that done for five rupees a head. So why pay us a thousand? Can your intellect answer that con undrum? Figure it out on a . board when you get home.” CHAPTER XVI The Maharanee was scrupulously fair. Rather than disguise her mo tive, she revealed it. She stripped objections to it naked. She didn’t pretend that Rundhia was a prince of virtue or a man of his word, except when it suited him, or when compelled to keep a promise. The The Mabaranee believed every word she said. Maharanee believed every word she said. But she used arguments that sounded curious, even to Lynn, who was under the spell of the eastern environment. Lynn later found Rundhia stand ing in moonlight, in a golden tur ban and European dinner clothes. As a palace door closed behind Lynn, she, too, stepped into the moonlight, with her face half veiled under the sequined sari. It was she who looked oriental, dressed accord ing to the Maharanee’s wishes. Run dhia looked like a western athlete, in more or less fancy dress. And he called Lynn a goddess in west ern terms that any polo-playing American gallant might have used: “You look like Miss India! You almost give me religion! Pull away that curtain! Show your golden hair, and let’s give all the other goddesses a sight to make them green with envy!” Lynn uncovered her head and walked beside him In silence. , “I feel like a god tonight," said Rundhia. ' “Have you been drinking?" Lynn asked. “You golden-haired iconoclast! Your arrow aimed into the heart of my ballooning self-esteem! You de licious archer! I have ha* five cock tails. Do I seem drunk?” “What sized cocktails?” “Measured to my mood, exactly." “Then you seem astonishingly so ber. What have you done about Captain Norwood?" “Lynn, let’s forget Norwood. I want to talk to you.” “I can’t forget him,. You and I have wronged him.” “Has be answered your letter?” Rundhia retorted. ' “No. But have you forgotten your promise?” / “Didn’t the Maharanee tell you? Don’t trouble yourself about Nor wood. Forget him. Talk to me.” “I wish to talk about Captain Nor wood.” “He has talked about you, I don’t mind telling you. According to one of the palace servants, he told your aunt this afternoon that he’s dis gusted with you.’* “I can believe he is disgusted,” Lynn answered. “But I can’t imag ine him'saying so to Aunty, or to anyoneelse.” “Let us talk about you,” said Run dhia. “Very well, what about me?” . “Now you have made me speech less!” ' “Have I? Then perhaps you will listen to me.” “Beloved, I will glady listen to you, in an ecstasy of patience and devotion, during years which shall flow so fast that we’ll be old before we know it!” “Did you get that from a book?” “I never read books. When I talk to you, my tongue can only stutter miserable hints of how I feel. You make me delirious. Be good enough to notice that these arms resist im pulse!” He extended his arms to ward the moon, then dropped them to his sides. “Oh, Lynn, I love you.” “Good job I don’t love you,’’ she answered. “There’d be—” “A new golden age in Kadur!” Rundhia interrupted. “Lynn: philos ophy, religion, economics and the other muck they made me listen to at school and college left me, until you came, dry of faith in anything but evil—and even evil dying! You are my first glimpse of goodness.” “Don’t you love the Maharanee? Isn’t she good?” “Oh, yes. She is good past his tory. Lynn, you are the present and the future! One straight look into your blue eyes, and I knew what hope means and the higher vision. I had never seen it, until I saw you.” “Sounds good,” Lynn answered. “What was in the cocktails?” “Don’t joke! Lynn, I’m in love. I mean every word I’m saying to you.” “I mean what I say, too,” Lynn answered. “I don’t love you—What was that noise? In the distance. It sounded like shooting.” “I didn’t hear it,” said Rundhia. They had reached the steps that led to the kiosk on the garden wall. It was dark in the wall’s shadow. He was justified in offering his arm to guide her up the steps, but he put it around her. She could feel his vibrance. She escaped him—ran up the steps ahead of him, then waited on the wall in full moonlight, facing him, unafraid. “There! Did you hear that? Wasn’t that a rifle-shot, Rundhia?” “Might have been,” he answered. “Not so easy to tell.” “Isn’t Captain Norwood’s camp in that direction?” Lynn asked. “Somewhere over there, yes. Pos sibly a jackall or a stray dog scared his sentries. Never mind Norwood. Lynn, you say you don’t love me. I don’t believe you.” “Why not? I told you the plain truth—Do you think sentries would fire at a dog?” “His would! He’s crazy. Lynn, I don’t believe you because you for gave what I did in the treasure room. And because when you hurt me, you were sorry. Also because you are not afraid to be alo'ne with me now. Lynn, you don’t know yourself. You’re—” “Do you know yourself?” she re torted. “Don’t you think it strange that they should be shooting at night?” “No. Most soldiers live in a con tinual state of false alarm. Lynn, listen to me. Don’t I excite you?” “You did. But I saw you, and I heard you laugh at Captain Nor wood’s ruin.” “You dislike me?” “Oh, no.” "You admit I can stir your emotions?” “Oh, yes. I admit that. Why tell lies about it? You’re magnetic. I almost fell in love with you.” “Lynn, you are thinking about East and West. That hoary old su perstition! It lingers, they tell me, in America more tenaciously than anywhere else,'though even school- books nowadays admit that we and you are of the same race. Do you know how many western women have become the wives of Indian ■ princes?” “I don’t want to know.. I don’t care.” . “You are right, Lynn. Quite right. Why should you care? It is love, not what others have done, that crum bles superstitions. Lynn, I love you. I wouldn’t lie to you—” “Have you done your best for Cap tain Norwood? Have you really done it? What have you done?” “Never mind. I have done it.” “You swear?” • “Yes.” “Then I will listen. You were saying—?” Rundhia had to recover the train of his thought. He turned away from her a moment, paced the wall, and came back: “Lynn, my love for you may sound selfish. I . always have been selfish, until I met you. I have no practice with words that a genuine lover should use. But I am genuine. For the first time in my life, I am un selfish. May I tell you—will you listen if I tell you—what my heart tells me?” “Yes,-I will listen, Rundhia.” “Will you really, listen?” “Yes, Rundhia. I would rather listen to almost anything than my own thought, at the moment." “You are feeling deserted?” “Despised!” Lynn answered. “If Captain Norwood had answered my letter—” “You are lonely! So am I lonely! Lynn, diwaza kola hai! The door is open! Enter, It is that short step across the threshold that makes you hesitate. Leap!” “You mean into your arms?” “Yes.” “No.” “Come, Lynn!” “No.” “Lynn, you make me hate myself. Am I so unappealing to your—” Suddenly he changed his voice. He sounded angry: “Are you in love with Norwood?” “I hardly know him. How could I be? I only know that I never felt dirty before in all my life. I don’t like it, Rundhia. And I can’t for give you for having crowed over Captain Norwood’s disgrace. You and I brought it on him.” “Lynn, is that all that’s the mat ter? If I give you my word of honor that I have solved the Norwood problem, will you listen to me?” “Have you solved it?” “If I prove to you, before mid night, that there is no longer any problem about Norwood, will you come into my arms?” “Speak plainly, Rundhia.” “I will. Lynn, face it! Norwood has no use for you. Has he answered your letter? He has not! The mes senger reported that he tore up your letter without reading it. I don’t !mow why you care a damn what happens to him. He doesn’t care what happens to you. Your aunt doesn’t care. She is leaving you fiat.”Lynn interrupted: “You say Cap tain Norwood, tore up my letter? Why didn’t you tell me that before?” “To save your feelings. However, you know now. That’s how he feels. That’s Norwood. Lynn, you are merely hesitating on that damned old superstitious crumbling plat form of ‘East is East and West is West,’ that Kipling lied about You and I are above all that nonsense. Lynn, beloved, come into my arms now! You are lonely. So am I lone ly. See, I am waiting for you. Come here, Lynn. Come of your own will. Be mine. Face things from the in side looking outward. YoushalIbe my wife, and I swear by my love for you, that Norwood—” “Oh, that’s only a. promise," Lyiin interrupted. “I won’t believe you about Captain Norwood, until you prove it.”(TO BE CONTINUED) Psychologist Discusses Effect of Meat on Energy Is the jungle lion ferocious be cause it lives on raw meat? Would it be more gentle if a vegetarian? And are men who live principally on a meat diet likely to be more belligerent than those' who prefer vegetables? The answers to those questions, according to Martin F. Fritz, as sociate professor of psychology at Iowa State college, is yes and no. Lack of meat in the diet may cause an animal or human being to live on .a lower energy plane, Fritz found, thus giving the ap pearance of a peaceful, mild dis position.“According. to that hypothesis,” he said, “a vegetarian^ diet simply depresses the activity level while a generous intake of meat may bring out the full energy potenti alities. “It might be argued that the continued eating of -high protein foods, such as meat, might result in a permanently higher plane of basal metabolism which would ac count for the energy and vigor of meat-eating nations,” he continued. But Fritz apparently found a hitch -in this argument, fo r if it were true, lie said, the Eskimos could be expected to be especially violent “for they eat a meat diet and their basic metabolism is about 33 ,per cent higher than that of people living in temperate zones.” The Eskimos, however, are the most peaceful and unwarlike race in the world, the professor de clared. Inheritance is an important factor in the degree of activity, he said. But, “it may be argued that all races have inherited a po tentially high level of activity—a very questionable assumption—and that the differences'we observe are due to the failure to utilize a diet which will bring out this activity to its .fullest extent” Fritz summarized by saying: - “It is quite possible that diet does influence racial temperament, but until further evidence, is gathered we may well be just a bit cautious in drawing conclusions.” World’s LMigest HeketT A ticket issued by the Canadian Pacific railway Is 15 feet 11 inches long! It was the longest ever sold by the company, and was issued to Miss Alice Johnston, an English lec turer, traveling all over Caiuda on a lecture- tour. CLASSIFIED DEPARTM ENT BABY CHICKS CHICKS1ssffwsssiisrfNo colls. 10« postpaid » 8eod Honey Older for Prompt Shipment.LUttDilivenf GuorantMd JFRAS CO, 2651 CimrtMiirS t LoatovMaw PHOTOGRAPHY Trial oiler—6 or 8 exposure roll developed and printed 19c. Velox never-fade prints. Snap Shop, Dept. Lt Drawer A1 Jax, Fla* Buckram and T acks T o Stiffen V alsm ce “ FJEA R MRS. SPEARS: A friend gave me a copy of your Book 3 and I can’t tell you what a transformation is taking place in my home because of it. For a long time I have wanted liv ing room curtains with smoothly fitted valances stiffened with buckram. Could you give me step- by-step directions for making them?” A four-inch valance shelf; buck ram and thumbtacks are the only “extras” needed. I: Cut the buck- CUT BUCKltAW-V CUPSTITCH NSERT STUSNjANOPW MD TACK ram the exact size of the finished valance—no seam allowances. The chintz for the valance and the fac ing material are cut larger as in dicated. 2: Outline the scallops by drawing around the buckram. 3: Stitch the chintz and facing with right sides together. Steps 4, S, and 6 : Trim the scallops; clip between them; then turn and press. 7: Insert the buck ram; fitting it smoothly into the scallops. Turn in and stitch the top; allowing Vz inch to extend above the buckram. 8 : Tack this soft edge to the shelf. NOTE: If you have had Mrs. Spears’ books I and 2, you will want No. 3. It is full of new ideas for homemakers, and step by step directions for making important pieces of furniture. Also newest styles and methods of making slip covers and curtains. Original de signs for rag rugs; gifts and ba zaar items. Send 10 cents in coin with name and address to Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chi cago, ni. Alms Done by Acts Alms may be done not only by jnoney, but also by acts. For ex ample, one may kindly stand by a person to succor and defend him, one may reach to him a helping hand; the service ren dered by act has often, done more good even than money.—St. Chrys ostom. W gasi Heartburn ? Colombas, Ga. — Mrs. Clara Lisle, 410 38th St. says: 4tHly stomach t seemed so upset because K of excess acidity. I never I felt like eating and was so I weak. I used Dr. Pierce's I Golden Uedlcal Discovenr and my appetite improved, * I was ever ao much stronger and was able to eat without being dis- tressed by gas.” Ask your druggist today for it in liquid or tablets. According to Kind Each thing lives according to its kind; the heart by love, the intel lect by .truth, the higher nature - of man by intimate communion with God.—Chapin. A wonderful aid for boils where a drawing agent is indicated. Soothing and comforting. Fine for chit- ' dren aad grown-ups. Prac tical. Economical. * GRAYS OINTMENT 25' W NU-7 43-39 Naturally ■ “Have1 you; ever noticed that most successful men are bald?” “Yep—they come out on top.” Watch Youk Kidneys/ H dp Hicm Qeanse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Toor Udnm are constantly filtering mate matter from the blood stream. But Mdneysaometimes Iaginthdr work-to not set ss Nature intended—fau to re* move impurities that, If retained, may poboa the system snd upset the whole body1 machinery. "Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headacne,attackBo< dttrlpnee, - getting up nights, swelling, puffines under the eyes s feeling of nervous anxiety snd toes of pep snd stfength.Other signs el kidney or bladder disorder are sometimes burning* scanty or too frequent urination.There — ■***CNStmei Ddoa's Inew friends far more than forty yean; Vhqr have a nation-wide ieputatfaa. Are recommended by grateful Deonie the ssantry oyer. Atk your ntigkborl Doans Pills FI £ D A E N T THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. Ic k s I postpaid Iopt Shipment,fRiCci i. St. Louist Mo. Lp h y j ro ll d ev e lo p ed I’e r-fa d e p rin ts, pr A. Jax, Fla. ITacks ^alance PEARS: Aa copy of hn't tell you pa is taking !cause of it. i wanted Iiv- Ith smoothly Jfened with live me step- Ior making I shelf: buck- Iare the only Tut the buck- Ig■CHWT2 -C- Ich laucKR^i ^Mark . 4Irt buckram ?! |n AND PRESS; PrHUMB-TACK / VALANC£ -jSfgLFl I Ithe finished Jvances. The land the fac- arger as in- Ihe scallops Ie buckram. I and facing lther. Steps pe scallops; then turn the buck- hly into the |i stitch the to extend Tack this Ie had Mrs. 12, you will bf new ideas (step by step important |Mso newest I making slip !Original de- |ifts and ba- lents in coin ]ess to Mrs. nes St., Chio Acts Inot only by Its. For ex- Ily stand by I and defend to him a fervice ren- done more I.—St. Chrys- lTBURN? Ist Ga. — 3fr3. Js. 410 JStb St.. IMy stomach I upset because lcidity. I never |ing and was so led Dr. Pierce’s Idical Discoveir Iietite improved, Iver so much Tnd was able to Jut being dis- Idruggist today lording to its Ire, the intel- Igher nature I communion Il aid for bolls Iawiog agent is poothlng and I Fine for chiU lowfrups. Prac- Imico]. 43—39 noticed that are bald?’* It on top.” t the Blood IyWaste Itantly filtering Biod stream. But Itbeir work—do Tied—fail to re- J retained, may |pset the whole sing backache, eke of dizziness, IlliQgt puffiness Ing of nervous I and stfength. I or bladder dialog, scanty or t that prompt m neglect. Use Ie been winning Ian forty years. Ide reputation. J B I G T O P B y E D W H E E L A N cWHlLEr THE CLOWNS VlERE CtSCUSSlMG "SILK JEt=F RODE INiTOTDWN NJtiM HIS PRESS AGENT.DON VIRISHT- HeLLO1TON-TUIS I S ^ \ JEFF - VEH - TOO BA O t THAT'S ALL RIGHT, b o s s, bdt i've. GOT SOME GAP MEIrtS T UDNT WANT TO MENTION IN My VilRE - LISTEN O. VC. DON, - VVE GOT To GOLONG. CHIEF IN HERE AND PHONE THE 2.4 HOUR MAN AT RlVERSlTElly AEOUT THE FLOODS AT RWERSfTE - WHAT ? -VES1 WE'RE SHOWlNGr HERE AN EXTRA DAy AND THEN tum ping Dir ec t.To EARNS B O R O -I/ PUT ANOTHER "AD INTHE PAPERS t AND TRy TD GET THEM TO GIVE A LITTLE SPREAD ON THE FRONT PAGES ’ FfMk Jty Mtrktj LALA PALOOZA —Lala Impresses the Doctor With His Mistake B y R U B E G O L D B E R G OH, MY OH, MY! OHt MY OH, MY! THAT MUST BE THE PATIENT, PINTO OH, I’M SORRY, DOCTOR ^ BUT I HAD TO DO IT - QUICK, SNAP OUT OF IT PINTO’S ROOM IS IN THERE NOWtTAKB IT EASY, LITTLE LADY-PLL BB AS GBNTLB AS I CANARKFFl e> I Frank Jay Markey Syndicate, Inc. By C. M. PAYNES’MATTER POP— And If He Can Do It, He’s Got Somethin ! w h a t 5 THe 13l<4 I DEA- •> I1M UGrtTlN1 -A MATC-H-MATCH T*|a T, WAV 'M Bdl SyndJcat..—WNU Servlc.. If the Apples Only Hold OutMESCAL IKE B7 s. u huntley H SS LOOKIN’ FER. AMOTHER GREEM APPLE LIKE TH' OME h e e a r y estid o v _ nev_ UAWCMA DOIM B y J . M IL L A R W A T TPOP— “Watt’s” m a Name? I HOPE YOU PUTHIS NAMES W ATT— HE’S AN ELECTRICIAN -AND HES CHARGED WITH BATTERY!HIM IN A DRY CELL Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service RING THE BELLCheerful News MUSEUM MILEAGE By GLUYAS WILLIAMS CZECH} EEUOlT AGANST WZlS HUHDeEDS DIE IN RUMANIAN PUK6E 3U3MARINES JEEH NEAR US. NAZIS ANDPUSSM SPLIT RJLAND LONDON IS COMttETlV BlAtKED- OliTATHIfeHT HffTA LlfeHTVISIBLE IN STCOlL ABOUND PAElS ATN16HT jdBsL u»m n c&iHEKEiSOING PACK TtDThfc PARK AGES J CITy TO INAUGURATE new m B m mSYSTEM TCfIlfeHT ► T An Italian who was working on a railway in Florida had been told to beware of rattlesnakes, but was as sured that they would always give the warning rattle before striking. One day he was sitting on a pine log eating his dinner when he saw a Mg snake coiled a few feet in front of him. Keeping an eye on the rep tile, he began to raise Ms feet from the ground, and as he did so the snake’s fangs hit the bark beneath him, no warning having been given. “Son of a gun!” yelled the Italian. “Why you no ringa da bell?” That’s thpt Question Father—Isn’t it wonderful, Dollie, how the little chickens get out of the eggs? Dollie—Yes, father, but tell me, how do they get in? New Territory Voung Mosquito — Soft pickings these days, aren’t they? Old Mosquito—Yes, and to think, when I was your age I could bite girls only on the face and hands. SNMffiSUOIfi-tlltWM FBKJtSS 15SlCWtEtMiE BSSIlfelbeEf tinmtfcies MOSHER-to HMfEMfWamLMSiOiYWBrjM1 jamKEfBaiueFm neonMitleenow prowess«r»uni6«>U(M6 JmiIOtt-PUtEtas 1W0 mois BKK HiOlHE 1b 6t BOHE PRElW SOOlI KEEP BNIBMC BSdCfiVME ItOttlHC Hf HlIItfB MtiowslsonHiIIltf PlYjalKiswiSETIiOtlStFKltllorENIIBlfS BCEItES HEMSV FEES. SEHIIIS SHIMHBdiW SESSS S CSU SHBFMIIS SNtWNCB FurfWICS HUEIS5B IlREB IF HE CSPSIfS WWOR HSBVSHISHE5 -frttfJlWiPR HSSSDttf- * 601*1«. Mt fHBJIW*HIS COKE OBtESB OT WflRElVl IRSBSIHM- HOWBOrtWRORflllE HRUEff HS WSMWHEKVtESSlKS If SElfBKK RODHBSHESB HtBSSHMie HF* HSW■ Bell Syndicate.—WKV Service. _____ _ HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS Biscuit Pans.—A shallow pan about one inch deep is the best to use in baking biscuits; otherwise the biscuits will not brown evenly on all sides.* • * Mending Pillow Slips. — Hem stitched pillow slips that are too badly torn to mend neatly can have the hem cut away and a pi- cot edge crocheted on.* ♦ * Browned Potatoes.—Before fry ing cold potatoes slice them and well dredge with flour. This not only causes the potatoes to brown more quickly but improves flavor. * » • Canape Hint.—Spread thin slices of bologna with cream cheese mixed with chopped pickles, olives and onions. Roll the slices up and stick a wooden pick through each. Quickly dip the rolls into salad dressing mixed with catsup and broil them four minutes on toast squares. Serve them. It Pays to Advertise In the Newspaper “Advertising in the newspaper sells the goods,” writes the Creo- mulsion Company, makers of Creo- mulsion, one of the largest selling cough medicines on tiie market today, in releasing a new series of ads on their product. Creomulsion, acknowledged by thousands of satisfied customers as a superior prescription for the. relief of stubborn. Coughs, heavy! Chest Colds and BroncMal Irrita tions, is sold by all drug stores on the basis that if the desired results are not obtained the entire pur chase price is refunded.—Adv. Highest Duty The sun will sMne after every storm; there is a solution for ev ery problem, and the soul’s high est duty is to be of good cheer. CHILLS AND FEVER H ereiS R e I ie fF tfm M a la ria ! Don’t let Malaria torture yout Don’t sMver with chills and bum with fever.At first- sign of Malaria, take Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. A real Malaria medicine. Made especially for the purpose. Contains tasteless quinidine and iron.Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic actually combats Malaria infection in the blood. It relieves the freezing chills, the burning fever. Helps you feel better fast.Thousands take Grove’s Tasteless Chill ToMc for Malaria and swear by it Pleasant to take, too. Even children take it without a whimper.Don’t sMver and bum. At Malaria's first sign take Grove’s Tasteless Cbill Tome. At ail drugstores. Buy the large size as it gives you much more for your money. Just and Unjust That which is unjust can really profit no one; that which is just can really harm no one.—Hemy George. For quick relief—always use this accurate aspirin. ^AcIimv I S t J o s ACENTIME PURE ASPIRIN Shameful Victory Victory may be honorable to the army but shameM to the coun sels of the nation.—Bolingbroke. DASH IN RATHERS Under the Surface The gloss of association wears off, leaving things as they really are. FILMS Developed- Printed A r.y S ize R o ^5 or 8 E xposures £ FadclD BS P rin ls- * * ' Postage P aid ■ rOUCIE HLM SERVICE P. O-Bos 438S-A AltoMatCa. A GREAT BARGAIN V ESPER TEA ' PURE ORANGE-PEKOE- 50 Cups for IO Cents A sk Your Grocer Good Mercwmiise Cmi Be CONSISTENTLY Advertised • BUY ADVERTISED GOODS • 02*THi 5 a v ie ft££6ftfc, M6£ksViii£ ii t November i, t<*6 A Real Man (Morgantou NewsHeraldJ This striking statement, author unknown, is quoted from the Duke Power magazine: A real man never talks about what the world owes him, the hap. piuess he deserve?, the chance he ought to have, and all tb«t. All that he Uaitns is the right to live and p!ay the man. A real man never Hontt; danger, and the dark, in his ow:n room, as h - is in public. A real man does not want pulls, tips and favors. He wants work and hnnest wages. A real man is loyal to his friends and guards t’ueir reputation as his own. A real man is dependable. His simple word is as his Bible oath. A real man never hunts danger, and never dodges it when he ought to meet it. A real man is—well, be is an honest man, tbe finest, bes.t, noblest most refreshing thing to be found on all tbe greeti earth—unless it is a real woimn. When YOU W ant Good Meal, Feed Stuff, Laying Mash or Scratch Feed It will May You To See Us. You Can Buy Our Meal From Your Grocer. F. K. Benson & Sons The Poor Cave Man Had No Newspaper To Advertise In. But You Have! I ® The More Folks You Tell The More Goods You Sell Notice of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order made and entered in the special pro ceeding entitled. FannieG Womack, et als. vs Juanita Womack, the same neing a petition to sell’lands for par tition, the undersigned Commission er will on Monday the 13th day of November. 1939, a, twelve o'clock, noon, at the court house door in MocksvilIe Davie County. North Carolina, offer for sale to tne high est bidder for cash, tbe following de scribed lands: 1st Tract: Beginningat a stone. Mrs. Ijames corner, to West side .of Wall Street, running with said line 150 feet to back alley; thence with said alley 50 feet to a stone; thence with the 0. C. Wall Co. line 150 feet to a stone in Wall Street; thence with said street 50 feet to the beginning. See deed Jrom L. C. Deadmon to A. E Tatum. 2nd Tract: Tract beginning at a stone in the O. C- Wall Co. line, run ning South 50 feet with said line to a stone in said line; thence East 150 feet to a stone in Letier’s and Wall’s corner; thence North with Leflarand Wall’s line, 50 feet to a stone; thence West 105 feet to the beginning. See deed from R, L. Spry. 3rd Tract: Beginning at a stone in Wall Street, West side Deadmon’s corner; running with said line 150 feet to a stone in back alley; thence with said alley 60 feet to Grove St.; thence with said street 150 feet to Wall Street; thence with Wall Street 60 feet to the beginning. > See deed from the O C. Wall Co., to A. E. Tatum. 4‘.h Tract: Beginningat a stake or stone in a branch in W. S. Green’s i ne and running East with said _ W. 3. Green's line, 9 chs. and 67 links to a stonein said Green’s line; thence South 4.40 chs. to a stone; thence N. 88 degs. W 6 chs. to a Btone on the bank of the branch; thence up said branch as it meanders to the begin* ninsr, containing three and one-half acres more or less. Terms of Sale: One-third cash, the balance in sixty days with bond and approved seeuritv; title reserved until tbe purchase money is paid in full, or all cash at the option of the purchaser. This the 10th day of October, 1939, J. B, GRANT, Commissioner. fWanted Paradiute jsy ,> I MR. MERCHANT The EYES of THE COMMUNITY WOULD BE ON YOUR AD- fid l IF IT HAD BEEN SJwtee .!N THIS ISSUE 1 9 4 0 C h e v r o le t s M a k e T h e i r B o w V f 1? ' Three series of passenger cars, re-designed in the new “Royal Clipper” styling, and embodying numerous mechanical improvements to assure - greater safety and comfort as well as liner performance, comprise CheTio- . let’s new line for 1940, introduced today. All series are mnch larger, overall lengtti being increased 4% inches.-The new exclusive vacuum power shift (lower left) is now regular equipment on all models of all series at no extra cost. Special De Luxe series, the Sport Sedan of which b shown at center, has a new T-spoke steering wheel with horn-blowing ring (upper right). Lower right, the 1940 Chevrolet six-cylinder valve-ln-head engine, which Iiaa Seen improved for smoother, quieter operation, and extremely long lifa. Sflil Let’s H elp Each W e trad e ou t th e bulk o f our earnings in M ocks- ville and D avie C ounty. W e could sp en d m ore if w e had it to spend. If You Can Use Our Services To Advantage You Should Do So. If Will Be To The Benefit Of You, Ust And The Whole Community. Read our paper and keep in touch with your county and its people, You can buy nothing for one dollar that will do you more good and last longer than a year’s Subscription To The Davie Record. “We Are Not Begging, Mind You, Just Soliciting Your Valued Support.” W h en Y our Subscription F alls D u e A P rom pt R en ew al Is A p p reciated . We Thank You For Your Patronage and Support. CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directors AMBULANCE SERVICE Plume 164 North Main Street MOCKSVltXE - - N.C Executor’s Notice. Having qualified as Executor of the estate of the late C. C. Myers, of Davie County, North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persona having claims against tbe Baidestate, to. present them to tbe undersigned, on or before Sept. 19,1940, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recoveiv. All-persons indebted to the said estate, are requested to make imiLe- diate payment. Tbis Sept. 19. 1939.CH AS. H, SINK. Executor, CC. Myers Dec'd, Clemmons, N. C . R 2.E. M. Whitman, Atty. Notice Of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order made in the Special Proceeding:, en titled. Elia Orrell and G. L. Beck, Execators of W. M. Williams, de ceased. etc., - vs- Ure. Fallie Lowery, et ux John Lowery, et als., by C. B. Hoover. Clerk of Superior Coiirt for Davie County, the undersigned will sell publicly to the highest bidder at the Court House door of Davie Coun ty. in Mockaville, N C , on Monday, tbe 20th day of November, 1939. at twelve o’clock Noon, the following described lands, to-wit A tract teginning at a stone; thence N. 4 E. 25.05 to a.stone; thence S. 13 degs. E. 43.27 chs. to a stone; thence S. IJ degs. E. 18.80 chs. to- a stone;’ thence S. 30 W. ■ 2 ch 9. to a stone; thence S. 45 W. 8 50 chs. to a stone; thence 6.23 degs. W. 8 50 chs. to a atone; thence N 8 6 W. 10 65 chs; thence N. 4 E. 5 31 chs; thence W. 5 09 chs. thence N. 4 E. 17 50 chs. thence North 8 6 W. 27 70 chs. thence N. 19 E. 823 chs, thence N 65 degs, E. 10.94 chs. to the be ginning, containing 267 9*10 acres more or less. Save and except a- bnut lj acres conveyed to Mrs. George Woodward. . JERMS Of! xSALE; — One-third cash, and the balance on ninety days time with bond and approved securi ty, or all cash at the option of the purchaser. This the 16th ri&V nf October, 1939. J. B. GRANT. Commissioner, Land poster* for sale at Tfas Rcccrd oftic* \ A A D S A R E N E W S Printed In Big Type Now is tbe time to Sub**! scribe for Tbe Record. I DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALERS IN BRICK and SAND WOOD and COAL Day Phone 194 - flight Fhone 119 Mockaville, N. C. Robertsons Fertilizers COTTON! COTTON! E. Pierce Foster Buyes And Ginner Of Cotton • Mockaville, N C. - Phone 89 Near Sanford Motor Co. If Its Cotton, See Foster WRlTEA WANTAD CASH IN ON STUFF IN THE ATTIC U NEW MONEY FOR YOUR OLD THINGS Your Discarded Furniture, Piauot Radio, Bicycle, Tools, Iee Box, can be sold with A WANT AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER ~ 0 A LETTER s l / A Welcome GIFT to-the Farmer SeAdent OTTKXaVEfWHESi THEY CANT TAKE YOUR AD V'"*v* rr is on BILLBOARD R A D IO S BATTERIES-SUPPLIES Expert Repair Service YOUNG RADIO CO. We Chartje Batteries Right Depot St. Near Square Walker's Funeral Home AMBULANCE Pbone 48 Mocksville, N. C, The Lost is Found By O u r W a n t Ads When you IoscnV idvctti** Tliey Don't Stay Lott Lmif ^ Today's Forgotten Man Quit Yesterday I 1111155122962999105411449999998899996999966256960454121211164815155550009151 D A Y I E C O U N T Y ’S O L D E S T N E W S P A P E R - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E R E A D NEWS OF LONG AGO. What Was Happening In Daeie Before The New Deal Used Up The Alphabet, Drowned The Hogs and Plowed Up The Cotton and Corn. (Davie Record, Nov. 1 5, 19 1 1 .) Attorney T. B. Bailey made business trip to Raleigh last week. ■ D. G. Potts, of R. 1 , left Sun. day for Durham, where be has ac cepted'a position. Miss Lillie Meroney went to Bix- by Monday, where she will teach school this winter. Thos. L. Eaton, of Cana, was in town Saturday on business. T. J. Ellis, who lives in the das. ic shades ot Shady Grove, .was in town Saturday. MissElIaLefler, of Cooleemee, was in town one day last week shopping. W. F. Mason, of Statesville, R. 7 , was in town Saturday on' busi ness. Misses Helen and Marie Allison, and Miss Perry GrifBth, returned Thursday from a visit to Thomas- ville. One man was killed and twelve persons injured by a runaway street car in Winston Saturday evening. D. C. Howard, of R. 4 , has mov ed to this city, and has opened up a blacksmith shop on Salisbury St. Miss Lillie Austin, of Winstou, is in this city at the bedside of her sister, Miss Cora Auston, who is quite ill. Mr and Mrs. S. M. Brewer and children, of Cana, spent one day ia town last week shopping. The many friends of Mrs. H. F. Pardue will be very glad to learn that she is much better. Her sis ter Miss Robeitson, of Charleston, S. C,, a trained nurse, is at her bedside. Mr. and Mrs. J A. Yates and children, of Whitefish, Mont., ar rived in this city Thursday to spend several weeks with relatives and friends, who are delighted to have them here. Rev. J F. Kirk, of Mt. A ry1 was in town last week on his way to the Methodist Conference at Statesville. Mr. Kirk has many friends here who are always glad to see him. Mr: and Mrs. Marsh H orn,. of Smith Grove, have moved to this city and are boarding at the home of W. L. Call. Mr. Horn has ta ken a position with W. L. Call & Company. W. P. Etchison, advertising man ager of the State, Columbia, S. C., spent Sunday and Monday in town with his parents. Mr. Etchison has many friends here who were glad to see him. George Walker has purchased the remainder of the Rollins Bros, stock of goods and has . moved the W alker Bargain House from the Red Front into the store where Rollins Bros, did business. Miss Naomi Elam died Saturday at her home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Elam, near County Line, and was buried Sunday at Society Baptist church. - Death re sulted from typhoid fever.. Miss Flam was about 16 years old, and is survived by her parents; a broth er and a number of sisters. I he County Commissioners have let the coutract for a new steel bridge over Hunting Creek near I. F.* Ratledge’s. The bridge is to have solid conciete abutments and is to be 17 feet above common wa. ter. The cost is to be.$6 oo.i' Esq. L. B. Walker, of R 5, was a busy man Senday. He was-, call- ' ed upon to unite two couples In the holy bonds,of matrimony, j . A. Laptsb to Miss Cora McDaniel, of Kappa, and J. H. Dwiggins to Miss ploekie Tutterow, both of Center. Step in Right Direction Hickory Daily Record. News from Charlotte that Judge Frank Sims clipped a six months sentence or a fine of a thousand dollars on a young woman alleged to have been engaged in the num bers racket in the Queen City is a step In the right direction. It is somewqat mysterious that the socalled big shots of this racket are never caught. Certainly, if the officers want to break up the gatnb- lii|g system which it . represents, they can at least round up the smaller fry and by the continued application of ‘medicine’ like Judge Sims has administered, put an end to the vice. And speaking ot gambling, we note that the Elizabeth City Ad- aance has' Become atoused - to the fact that .the loophole made by the last General Assembly is enabling slot machines to stage a comeback Tbe Advance complains that this is is “ a pain in the neck to John Q. Public.” . At the time the legislators were ramming through their so called “ pl«y-for fun” legalization. The Record was about, the only news paper in the state that lifted its voice in persistent protest. As we predicted at that time, the exemption was intended to emas culate the Flanagan act under which slots could be effectually banned from any community in which the law was upheld. Today, as the Elizabeth City editor has observed: The play-for-fun only machines are not played for fun only. At least not much. Where a crowd congregates and the machine is kept going, if the observer wiil wail long enough and if he is not suspected there will be a pay-cff. The present law is a delusion and a scare. It should be repealed by the next General Assembly and slots that can manifestly be opera ted as gambling devices and which manifestly were made for that pur pose should be outlawed or all man ner of slots should be licensed. The present law invites subterfnge, hy pocrisy,. and disrespect for law and law enforcement agencies. To Give Away or to Lend (Gifford Gregory. Des Moines, Iowa) We begin to boil when some one tells us.that the last session of con gress mades a big step toward eco- nomy when it defeated the ‘‘spend lend” bill. The fact is that con gress appropriated more money than the president asked for. And competent political observers say that if a PW A bill, proving hand outs for different states, had been substituted for the lending bill, it would have gone through. A WPA- measure would have given away money with no return to the treasury. The lending bill would have advanced the money on good security and the treasury would have got practically all back. W hat it comes down to is this: Congress'was willing to give Goose Corners 4 0 per cent of the cost of building ' a new auditorium, but wasn’t willing to lend money to tenants at three per cent with which to buy farm3. If that’s economy, we need a new dictionary. I Prosperity in S. Carolina ’ (From Sontb Carolina Farmer .) The: Home Owners Loan Cor poration reports that in January of this year it sold 2 ,3 9 0 homes neld under mortgage; i n February, 2 ,3 9 1 ; i» March, 3,3 7 6 ; in April 3,7 6 1 ; -and in May 4 .1 5 9 homes were sold.' Rather big business sell I ing 1 6 ,0 0 0 homes in five months. ; MANY CHANGES. We used a horse and buggy some thirly odd years ago to ride over the narrow, rough and muddy roads in Davie county. There has beeu wonderful improvements through out the county since the horse and buggy days. We how. travel over the countv in automobiles that cover as much territory in a half a day as could be covered in a week 3 0 years ago. W etraveloverhard surface highways with concrete bridges. We see large brick school bouses instead of the old-fashioned one-rooin log bouses, fine country churches, beautiful homes, iqany of them equipped with water, works, electric lights and all modern con veniences. The barns and other out buildings are far superior to those we found 3 0 years ago, and the fine cattle, poultry, hogs and other live slock to be foUhd on the average, farm leads one to the con. elusion that the farmer has made more progress than the city or town dweller. The country homes pre sent a neat and attractive appear ance, -with many fine yards and spacious lawns, beautiful flower gardens, well-kept orchards and well kept hedges and clean sur roundings. Most of the log cabins and two and three room bouses have disappeared, and have been re. placed by modern, well-painted and up-to date homes. We are living in a progressive age. Local Judges Select Davie’s Beauty Queen. When better beauties are furnish ed Davie county says it will have them but they have to come to come to Winston-Salem to get the best judges for such contei-t”. . Last Friday afternoon a beauty contests was held in connection with the county fair and June B. Goslen 1 Jr., Jesse Bowen and Eugeue H ol land, all of this city,- were the judges. Miss Annie Howard of Mocksville, R. 3, was declared the winner of fitst prize, $ 5 in cash; Miss Mildred Mayberry of Coolee- mec was awarded second prize of $2 5 0. In addition to these prizes the young ladies were each given a new dress value at $5 .9 5 by Belk- Stevens Store of Winston-Salem. A large and enthusiastic crowd was on baud to witness the. beauty contest and appeared perfectly sat isfied the judges had done a good job of “ picking 'em:” —Union Re publican. Petticoat Rule. (Asheville Citizen) Thelittle tiown of Dover, North Carolina, evidently does not agree with Kipspecies, According to an article in the eleven town offices are held by w'oman mayor, clerk, trea surer.- treasurer, tax collector and Iiealth officer. However there is a male chief of police and one lone man councilman. Apparently-the msJority of these ladies are married for they mostly have the title “ Mrs.” before their names though the occupations of their husbands was not listed in the drv outlines of the 1939 40 Roster of North Carolina Mnnicioal officials. Which sets us to wondering. What do the warriors’ - husbands do with themselves while their spouses sit a- round the council table and debate affairs of state? ADS For SALE IN OUR NEXT ISSUE AFINE GIFT FOR NSOSfE O N l -VA SUBSCRIPTION (THIS Grissom May Run. Gilliam Grissom, one of , t b e staunchest members of the Repub lican oarty in North ; Carolina, would not deny that he might be come a candidate a second time for Governor but be was dead sure of one thing—that his party would place a full ticket in the field ask ing the people to vote for every of fice that must be filled. He is sure of another thing—North Carolina, through Democratic rule, has the worst possible election law. The “ war horse" of Republican ism in the state, was caught build ing a fence for his dog at his home in McLeanville by a staff writer of the Greensboro News and unable to get away submitted to a delight ful interview during which he ex pressed his views along many lines, political, war and otherwise. And at the present he is getting bis greatest enjoyment out of bis home life, his tulip beds, bis dog and bis reading. As all North Carolinians well knew, Mr. Grissom for it years gave the state the best service it has ever had iu office of internal re venue collector closing out bis career in that job with the uoique record of making uobodv mad and yet collecting almost 1 0 0 percent of the money due Uncle Sam. He is greately interested in public af fairs and borrows a phrase from that great old Democrat, Grover Cleveland, that a “ public office is a public trust.” And he gives himself to that philosophy when in any office. Mr. Grissom would net ventuie an ,opinion who the Republicans would nominate for the Presidency hut be felt sure lbe occupant 01 the Wbite House for the coming four years will be a Republican: “ We are beading toward a dictator ship in this country and when we head for anything we are far worse than my dog for going places,”, be said. • Neither would the McLeansville man say who the G. O. P. will no minate K r Governor but be is cer tain bis parly is going to give the voters an opportunity to fill all of the offices with Republicans, iu that a full ticket is. going to be placed in the field. How the elec tion will go,< be was not. certain, either. “ No sirree, young man; this is before election rand I wouldn’t admit that a single one ot North Carolina's 1 ,8 7 7 : precincts would go democratic in: 1 9 4 0 ;/.at least it would not be my fault: if they do,” he declared.” Gilliam Grissom 'bad; the prime essential of getting somewhere in politics, says the special-interview, H e was born in ^ log cabin. Who ever heard of a man with such an auspicious beginning stopping with being a tax collector? ;'' But,A then, who said that the man who. ran for governor of North Carolina wiIl not try again? He .didn’t say so. He graduated from the Universiiy of North Carolina! with honors in 1 8 8 7 , started out on a medical career, gave out of money and end ed up as a druggist in Raleigh, where he was a practicing pharma cist 5 0 years ago. He is still a mem ber of the pharmaceutical associa tion. Hego bis firsttasteof poli tics when he was out west, being appointed deputy assessor for Den ver.county, Colorado.. Hehasbeen interested in public affairs ever since. Pnm itive M ethods l Need Hot v 'Be-: .!.FoQowed f A . in- Advertuinf M iP I I,1^ * Be M odw ADVERTISE HEREII Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. 0 0 0 0 0 0 ’ Kannapolis ladies shopping in one of our department stores—Attorney Brock and George Tutterow discuss ing political meeting—Will Call and Turner; Grant talking . fishing' and football—Snow Beck and Lon Gaith er-standing in front of dime store— Mayor Caudell taking horseback ride around i quare—Small boy begging for, ice on hot afternoon—Miss Trox- Ier eating raspberry ice cream—Lady carrying bunch of hundred dollar bills— Mrs. Pennington sitting in a pretty Chevrolet sedan—Joe Graham and T. Angell discussing war and other situations—George Martin in parade with sign reading “Just mar ried ..’’.on his back—Roy Feezor sell ing, apples—Jake Hanes and J. Lee Kurfees taking morning walk—Miss Doris Lagle trying to get in dime store—Merchants and clerks busy washing windows the morning after the night before—Mack Kimbrough begging folkt to vote for bis favor< ites—Charles Lagle crossing square —Jim Cartner expressing his opsn- ion to the Rairbler—Little boy car rying great big horn in . street pa rade—Rufus Brown sitting in barber chair, with Charlie Allen and Sam Binkley to follow. Prettier Homes. Drive over any highway in North Carolina and you can see pretty homes. There has been a very noticeable improvement in ,the appearance of homes during the past ten years. New houses are more handsomely constructed, landscaping is neater, lawns are well kept and paint tlmost invariably touches up the good ap pearance. Peop!e in North Carolinaare show ing deep respect for their own plar es of abode, a fact that speaks well f< r the citizenship. The home is the underlying basis for all -endeavor. Before we can have ■ good communities, villages, counties and statis we must first nave good homes occupied by home laving people. . The hext rtqoisite is a community spirit. -.Our interest should go farth- r than the boundary of the lawn. This means co-operation the part of tbs people in the homes toward build ing community institutions. It means that home owners must stick together to hold up the moral standards of their respective com munities. The person who winks at places of ill'repute because they do not bother him is badly mistaken. Youmaybave an extraordinari'y good house and it may be pretty ss the prettiest picture but its value falls disastrously if the environment is not good. A good house in a good community will, bring what it is worth when s : Id, but a good home in mhad community lacks much of hav ing the same cash value. Thus .it is seen that a person must support community interests in order to.protect his own.. Good churches: and good schools working with a close community spirit are of great value. Even an iufidel does hot want to live in a com munity where there is no church.— Wilkes Journal: Brush-Turkey Covers Its Eggs The brush-turkey covers its eggs with a mound of earth, sand and dead vegetable matter often having a circumference of more than 100 feet, and being 2 feet high. The young, when hatched, dig out. . Early Machme Manufacturers The first successful sewing ma chine manufacturer was Isaac Mer- ntt Singer of Boston, Mass., in 1851. The first sewing machine patent was probably No. 2466, granted to John J. Greenough on-Februarv 21. 1842. SMART 'KNOWS WMtftETOY' OO AFTgR [ READtNO WEAOS MONEY • v 'f-, ' :s. . :• fm MICKIE SAYS— VAlEU VOU G lt THROUGH -REAPIMfms GtREAT 1FIRESIPE COkAPAUlOM, AAAlU K TO ATftlEM D' THEM MEDBE WE HlTA MEW SUBSCRIBER,, NES V - , Wilkes Loses Court. Governor Clyde; Hoey showed the real stuff of which he is made when he petmitted “ pretty politics” to enter into the controversy over the creation of a county court in Wilkes county ; And because- of the stand he took the county com. missioners immediately abolished the court. If a court cannot be operated on its merits and. devoid of, the taiutof , politics, it might as 0 ell be abolish, ed. It cannot hope to get far- if it’s going to be hamstrung by poll, tical appointments. . But the good Governor was true, at least, to the machine that moved him from Shelby to.the Governor’s ' Mansion in Raleigh —Ex. Forgery. A news item in Our favorite fami ly newspaper tells about two young men being, charged with forging checks in various amounts. Forgery is one:crime tbat is al most impossible to get by with. In the first place, it is almost in variably uncovered;.and in tbe se cond place, tbe guilty paitiesdo not b 1 ve a chance of ’ escaping aopre- hension once in too tries. Forgery is just about as difficult as counterfeiting. Ever since mon ey has been bairbrained individuals who sought an easy way of possess, ing money by printing imitations. They look at a $ 1 0 piece of cur rency, think of its value and then devise a scheme to print some. Tbe average length of time that the most shrewd counterfeiters get by wilh their trade is only a few mouths. They may think that they are getting rich easy and fast but the disaster at the end of the road is inevitable. A “ Be'sure your sins will find you out” is more Svtikingly evidenced in production of imitations than in anything else. There is no getting by with anything' wrong because the day of reckoning is just as sure to arrive as sunrise in the morning. -E x . Pastors Can Serve Long er Terms. TheM etbodistpastors and lay men are discussing tbe change made in the new ruling by the Untted Methodist. Church, where by pastors of tbat denomination can remain to serve /their respective charges as “long as the congrega. tion will stand for them /*. as- one ' minister, expressed.it.- T h e law jBfl the: Southern Methodists Churcty ? until a few years ago,' adhered preC- ty stn c tly to tlie .fo u r-y e a r.lim tt IoriaThuf tts p asto rs/T h e district Supenntenents can serve six. years now, .If they so desire, instead-of: four As formerly.—Twin City Sep. lineL „ H THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. P a tla rn s P ra c tic a l A s W e ll a s S m a r t VT O. 1840. Do you take a large size? Then the beautifully long-line dress (1840) is one that you should make up right away. With slenderizing panels, it has the high-bosomed, narrow-hipped ef fect most becoming to you. It’s smart for afternoon wear and ev ery day, too. Make it of wool broadcloth, wool crepe or faille, with the vestee in contrast, or zhoose crepe-satin, using the crepe side for the dress and the satin for the vestee—a new and smart combination. With Slight Military Air. No. 1839. Nor juniors, the basque-waisted frock with flaring skirt (1839) is ideal to wear to school and to business. The little- boy collar enables you to keep it always fresh and new-looking, and it’s such an easy style to make. This tailors beautifully in wool plaid, challis, velveteen or wool crepe. The Patterns. No. 1840 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material with long sleeves; 4% yards with short; % yard for vestee. No. 1839 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Size 13 re quires 2% yards of 54-inch mate rial with long sleeves; 2% yards with short; % yard for collar in contrast. Fall Pattern Book. Special extra! Send today for your new Fall Pattern Book with a stunning selection of a hundred perfect patterns for all shapes and sizes. Save money and know the keen satisfaction of personally planned, perfectly fitted garments by making your own frocks with these smart, carefully cut designs. You can’t go wrong—every pat tern includes a step-by-step sew chart to guide beginners. Price of Pattern Book, 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. (Bell Syndicate—WNXJ Service.) Keep your body free of accumulated waste, take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel lets. 60 Pellets 30 cents.—Adv. Our Will It is our will that determines, not oiur intellect.—Edmtmd Waller. CLOTHESPIN NOSE Setuational extra help for colds •-with Laden's! Thew Camoot coagh drops not only help •oo the throat, but releases Benthol vapor—which, with •very breath, helps penetrate clogged nasal passages, helps relieve "clothespin nose!** L U D E N ’ S Menthol Caugh Drops Quiet Times Our quietest times are our growing times.—Anon. CONSTIPATED?Hofo It Amazing Relief of CBPdMpot Due to Sluggish Pomls ■ If you Udafc all Iaaatlm r act alike, jo t try tUe _ all vegetable Iazatlveh_____, thorough, refreshing. Invigorating. Dwpendabte relief from sick headaches, batons speS* tired feeling when associated with cocuUpatfam*■■■uou 1 eaj-t- get a 25c box of NRiranyaorVVimOUE KISK druggist. Make the test-then if not delighted, retain the bos to as. We Wfll ref and the purchase ^ price. That** fair. dV !i CetNRTaMetetoday. ^ ^ f AsM aaaza * o d d LIQUID -TABLETS , SALVE-N05E-DRCPS AALdX / Qood Memuimse G n Be CONSISTENTLY Advertised O BUY ADVERTISED OQOBS » E H S I n n o IU E S f BY TALBOT MUNDY OTAUOT MUNDY-'WNU SBtVICE CHAPTER XVH —15— The Resident was worried. In view of the prevalent political un rest and of the convenient fact that the State of Kadur had been quies cent for years, he had received con fidential instructions from his State Department to be very discreet in his relations with the court of Kadur. It was impossible to misinterpret the order. It was plainly worded. He was not to interfere, if it could possibly be helped. On the other hand, he had dis covered, rather to his annoyance, that Norwood was a very likeable person, with an exceptionally good service record. Even prejudice couldn’t make him believe that Nor wood had accepted a bribe. It might be impossible to prove that Nor wood hadn’t accepted one, and there might be a cloud over Norwood’s career forever after. But Oxe Resi dent hadn’t a doubt that Ruhdhia, or else perhaps the priests, or even both of them in some nefarious se cret alliance, had framed Norwood. He wail inclined to believe that the priests’ agents had bought Rundhia, with a view to some political ad vantage after Rundhia should have come to the throne. Rundhia, he: suspected, would do almost anything for cash. Not being a fool, nor even a very unimaginative man, he suspected that Norwood’s interest in Lynn Harding was something rather more than platonic. And one could believe almost any thing of Rundhia: even believe that Rundhia might act honorably, if hon or and the circumstances didn’t clash with Rundhia’s convenience. The Resident liked Rundhia. Al most everyone did who knew him. But it was a bit difficult to sepa rate Rundhia, from Rundhia’s unre- generate inclinations and his record. So the Resident wrote a report, marked “secret,” to the State De partment, in which he respectfully urged His Majesty the King’s ad visers to oppose Prince Rundhia’s succession to the throne of Kadur. He had small doubt that his advice would be found acceptable. But that wasn’t going to save Nor wood. . It was far., more likely to ruin Norwood, because Rundhia em ployed a secret agent in Delhi, who would learn of the Indian Govern ment’s intentions about the veto in next to no time. Rundhia, and Run dhia’s friends, would jump to the conclusion that Norwood had been using secret influence in order to get back at Rundhia for the accusa tion of bribery. Rtmdhia and his friends would strike back, and there would be so much purchased, per jured evidence produced, that Nor wood would have no chance whatever,. So the Resident decided to do some private investigation on his own account. There was nothing for it but to call on Mrs. Harding and to ask her to summon Lynn to the guest house for a confidential interview. He detested Mrs. Harding. Heknew she wan a snob and he suspected her of being a title-huntress. He had called on her once,, and she had been damned rude,' because she hadn’t understood his position; she had suspected him of being merely one more penurious BritiSi officer who wished to make Lynn’s ac quaintance. But there are lots of unpleasant tasks that a man feels called on to undertake, in the course of duty, so the Resident ordered his car and set forth, calling en route ~ the Post Office to register his let ter to the Department of State, so that his Parsee secretary shouldn’t know about it and be tempted to talk. Aunty Harding’s locked and la belled trunks stood in a severe row at one end of the veranda. AunOr Harding reposed on pillows at the other end, where she received the Resident with hostile politeness. The veranda faced away from the sun set and the surrounding trees cast a deep shadow,.so the electric light had been turned on in the living- room, and the only light there was came through the living-room win dow. Aunty. Harding couldn’t see him very well, and she Hadn’t her spectacles. But she remembered his name, and she Imd learned, indi rectly, since their first interview, that he was a personage. So she bristled self-defensively and patronized him. ‘Mayn’t I offer you whiskey? You English are such devotees of that drink, aren’t you. Bi the States, our men drink Bourbon. Please smoke.” "I came to talk with Miss Ionon Harding.” “You will have to look for her elsewhere.” "Oh, I know she’s at the palace. Isn’t there a telephone? Coifld you ask her to come here a moment?- It won’t take long. I merely want to ask her a few questions.” “I can’t do what you ask. I am no longer responsible for Lynn. U I should summon her she wouldn’t obey me.” “Oh? I hope . nothing serious has—” “A plot! Dishonorablel Contemptible! I won’t bore you with iny pri?. vate affairs. It is sufficient to say that I received an insolent communi cation from the Maharanee, She has invited Lynn to stay with her—with out consulting me, mind you. And I have received an astonishing note from my niece, addressed to me, but intended for Captain Norwood, of all impossible people! As if I were a mail box! And as if I didn’t know what is being said about Cap tain Norwood! It was a deliberately malicious insult to me!” “Did you forward the note to Captain Norwood?”“No. Why should I?” “May I see it?” “No. Certainly not.” “Well, Mrs. Harding, I think you are within your rights about that. Quite commendable. Yes. Very. But shouldn’t Norwood get it? H you care to put it in an envelope and seal it, I will have it sent to him by a very reliable messenger.” “One more effort to make of me a mere convenience! I won’t do it.” The Resident, having felt out Mrs. Harding’s punches, countered. He began his attack: “Mrs. Harding, it is quite true that you don’t know what is going on. If it weren’t that Captain Nor wood, who is a gentleman whose opinion I respect, has. assured me that your niece is a thoroughly nice girl—” “How does he know?” Aunty in terrupted. “He is an officer of unblemished record, and a gentleman who has never done a shabby thing in his life. That is why I value his opin ion.” Aunty interrupted: “I have my own opinion of an ‘officer and a gen- “No, why should I?” tleman’ about whom even babus and -Servants gossip. If Lynn had wished to associate herself with common graft and bribery, she might better have remained in America. We have plenty of corrupt officials—mostly of foreign extraction, I am thankful to say. Many of them Irish,” she added. The Resident smiled: “Yes, Mrs. Harding. I confess to being Irish. So look out! I will take no nonsense from you. U necessary, I will con front you with Captain Norwood and let him demand that letter.” “What if I destroy it?” "I will have you arrested.” “I am leaving . tonight,” said Aunty Harding, firmly. “Oh, yes? It is a long way from here to the station. You have a lot of luggage. You propose to catch the midnight train?” "I have made my own arrange ments with a native contractor, thank you.” “I understand, then, that you pro pose to go away at midnight, leav ing your niece to her own devices." “Yes.” . “Well, that is perhaps outside my province. But there is no question about my responsibility in connec tion with Captain Norwood. He is a distinguished young officer, in tem porary difficulty, who needs all the legitimate help he can get. He is well connected, and popular. He is the younger brother of the very dis tinguished Earl of Ashlawn. Num bers of people would be shocked if Norwood were disgraced. You have a letter belonging to Captain Nor wood, that he possibly needs. Think that over, Mrs. Harding. It is now up to you. Good evening.” CHAPTER XVHI Norwood went the round of the sentries. - There were , only-four of them. They had already received orders from Sergeant Stoddart. Nor wood repeated the instructions: ‘‘There are thieves in the neigh borhood, and there is a rumor that there might be a raid on the camp. It isn’t likely to be anything serious, but look out for it. Don’t kill any one if you can help it. In any event, you are to challenge three times and then fire your first shot In the air. I am expecting visitors, who.inay perhaps approach stealthi ly, IjecSiiSe their business is secret. So look out for them, and be care ful not to mistake them for thieves.” He returned to his tent, where O’Leary sat holding an empty glass with, futile optimism. "Get out of here, now, and make yourself useful." "Me—useful?” “Yes. Those Brahmins with whom I talked down near the waterfall this morning—” “Yeah, they slipped one over on you! I heard all about it.” “Hold your tongue then. I expect they’ll be coming to talk to me about my visiting the mine.” “You need a nurse,” O’Leary an swered. “You’d never get your brass hat one of these days if it weren’t for your Uncle Moses. Them there Brahmins are as likely to come and talk to you tonight as I am to. kiss the Queen of England. They figure they’ve bought you. And they figure they can prove it on you, if you don’t come across. They’ll sit quiet, them Brahmins will. What you’re up against is what I warned you. That Bengali doctor was too scared for his own skin to be telling me lies. Setyour lamp to one side of the tent and eat your supper in shadow, if you can’t eat in the dark. Watch out they don’t chuck no more cobras at you. They’ve guns. They’ve au tomatics. And there’s Gidbaz in back o’ this, so watch out. Gulbaz and a woman.” Norwood stared at him. “Wom an?" he said. “What do you mean?” “You told me to mind my own business. This ain’t my business.” “Talk!" “How about another whiskey?” “Do you wish to be sat in the cook-fire?” ' “You’d spoil your sUpper! But I’ve been thinking. If you want to know what I was thinking, I’ll tell you. Barring two or three injustices you’ve done to me, and I’m of a forgiving disposition, there’s only one man in Kadur, by my reckon ing,- who’d pay money to see you dead and buried.” “You may name him.” “Name him yourself. Him and you was thumbing a guitar and sing ing to the same girl Let’s suppose he knows, for instance, that the priests slipped you a bribe. And let’s suppose he thinks you’re honest. Let’s suppose he thinks you’ll earn the bribe and fix it so the priests win their case. And him heir to the throne. And him and you mash ing the same golden-haired beauty. He’d be as officer-headed as you are if he didn’t hit quick—and below the belt. He’ll hit hard! What’s to stop him from spiking the Brahm ins’ case by getting them blamed for having murdered you? Answer that one? Why not lay off the girl? If I was you, I’d—” “Don’t let me have to caution you too often, O’Leary. What I expefct from you is information. I do my own thinking.. If I should ever need advice from you I’U tell you.” “ ’Tain’t never no use advising nobody about no woman,” said O’Leary. “I know, symptoms when I see ’em. All right, mum’s the word, I ain’t saying nothin’.” “Get out of here.” After supper, Norwood wrote an other letter to Lynn Harding. He didn’t tear up that one. He ad dressed it in care of Mrs. Harding at the guesthouse, and then stuck it into his tunic pocket. He was still undecided. Determined, but not ready with his plan. O’Leary came and warned him again about sitting too near the lamp, so he went out side the tent'and sat in the shadow cast by the rising full moon. A sentry challenged. “Careful!” Norwood shouted. “Don’t shoot unless you have to. And don’t shoot to kill!" A bullet whizzed past him—then another. They came from two di rections. “Sentries, hold your fire!” he shouted. Stoddart came charging up, breathing hard, fastening his tunic and belt as he ran. .“All present, sir! AU ready!” • “Very weU, Stoddart. Keep your hair on. Post two men to guard my tent. Send two to the horse-line and the remainder to guard the store tent. Thieves—I think.” Norwood walked ahead into the darkness, shadowed by O’Leary. “Now what?” asked O’Leary. “For the love o’—” “Fetch a lantern on a long stick. Hurry.” Norwood stood in deep black shadow waiting for him. O’Leary ran up with a lantern at the end of a very long stick—at least ten feet long. * “Give that to me. Next shot they fire, raise a yeU that I’m hit.” “Okay. I get you. You’re a cred it to your Uncle Moses.” Norwood held the pole extended toward his left to its limit. He walked forward. The lantern danced as if it were in someone’s hand. A bullet spat out of the darkness. Nor wood fell. O’Leary- shouted at the top of his lungs: “Stoddart! Hi there, Stoddart! They’ve shot the Captain! He’s dead! They hit him ,through the heart!” Stoddart and four men came hur rying. Norwood whispered: “Pick me up. Carry me into the tent feet first.” “Mournful and solemn,” O’Leary added. “Lay me on the cot in fidl lamp light. Spread a sheet over me,” said Norwood. “He’s as dead as trouble,” said O’Leary. So they carried Norwood to the cot and there he lay, in lamplight, while Stoddart slightly overdid the business of taking over command. O’Leary scouted. At the end of ten minutes, O’Leary returned to the tent. “That’s done it. They’ve gone. I crashed among the bushes like a pig with a panther after him. No body fired a shot. There wasn’t a sound. They’ve gone for good. AU Kadur wiU know that you’re dead, within twenty minutes. They may even teU ’em the news at the pal ace, though I doubt that. Palaces get the news late, after other folks have had time to lay their bets.” Norwood sat up. He stared at O’Leary. O’Leary held his tongue. He watched, waited. Norwood didn’t speak for sixty seconds. Then: “O’Leary, there is just one chance in fifty that Prince Rundhia is on the wall, by that kiosk, where he was last night.” It almost seemed as if the night knew that Norwood had made up his mind. He wsts riding a fresh horse, but he didn’t hurry.' He was foUowed by a mounted sais, and by O’Leary on another horse. The horses, the sais and O’Leary be haved like a snake’s tail. They fol lowed the head without asking ques tions. Norwood gave no orders. He didn’t teU O’Leary what he intended to do. But as they came near the palace garden wall, he reduced the speed a Uttie and O’Leary, without needing to be told to do it, went scouting ahead. O’Leary, on the Other side, made plenty of noise. He made a signal, pointing with his right arm, as he broke from shadow into moonlight. There was nothing mysterious about his signal; he simply pointed to the swinging tendril of a baobab. It overhung the waU in search of earth in which to take root.- It looked like a python, swaying slightly in the faint evening breeze. (TO BE CONTINUED) Railway Postoffice -Is Important Link in U. S. Mails The efficiency of the United States mail is so taken for granted that very few people reaUy know what takes place between the time a stamped envelope is deposited in one of those famtiiar oUve-colored boxes and when it is received by the ad dressee. Strange as it may seem, only a smaU proportion of out-of-town mail is actually sorted in the marble palaces whose portals are inscribed, "Neither sleet nor rain . . A letter from New York to San Marino, Calif., for example, is han dled once in New York and once in San Marino. In the meanwhile, however, that envelope may be sort ed half a dozen times in order to speed it on its way in the shortest -possible 'time. For some unknown reason the United States post office rarely mentions the RPO (Railway Post Office) and its important part in the 'distribution of mail, hence very few people realize that without it our present postal service would be an impossibility. In this country the. use of the rail way postal car dates' to 1861, when John L. Scripps, then postmaster of Chicago, suggested that the mail which had accumulated at Cairo, Dl., on account of the Civil war, be sorted while it was aboard the train. A few years of experimenting proved the merits of this idea and the use of railway post offices be came a reaUty. Originally the post office cars were used only on the main lines of long-run railroads, but today near ly every line in the country has service to form a network encom passing every town and hamlet of our nation. Within these rolling post offices efficient crews of clerks not only break down mail - shipments into section and state groups, but also sort it for cities and then go further to separate individual letters des- tined for. different postal stations in a given city. A clerk on the New'York to Washington run, for' example, is expected to know the exact location of any address in New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washing ton and perhaps several other inter mediate cities served by that route. Cottages on the CanalsHolland is house-boat land. Ap proximately 50,000 people live all the year round on the canal barges and have no habitation on shore. CLASSIFIED DEPARTM ENT BABY CHICKS BBfgn FOR PRODUCTION: DncklRAISED FOR PROFIT: ChieksSOLD BT QUALITY: TarkeyaSTARTED CHICKS: MILFORD H A TCH EB Y p^V uV ,*^: CHICKS1 £^»3^*3»VVIIVVtWe No cuQs. 100 postpaid ** 8end Order for Prompt Shipment.XitM Deliverv Guarmteei ATUkS CO* 2651 Chouteau, St. Louis, Mo. H O U S E H O L D Q U E S T IO N S Care of Lamp Shades.—Silk and parchment lamp shades should be dusted frequently with a soft brush or the vacuum cleaner.O O O Improving VeaI Roast. — Veal roasts are improved by rubbing them with powdered ginger, black pepper and onion salt before cook ing.O O O Fitting Candles.—A candle may be made to fit any candlestick if dipped for a moment into very hot water. This wiU soften the wax and it can then be easily pushed in.O O O When Baking Apple Pies.—To prevent the' juice in apple pies from boiling over during baking, mix the apples and-sugar and let them stand covered for five min utes, then drain off the juice from the apple slices.o o o Let Beds Air.—In order to give the bedding and mattress time to air out, homemaking experts recommend delaying bed-making until just before noon or after all the other regular morning house hold tasks have been performed.ooo- Shoes That Pinch.—If a patent shoe pinches any part of the foot, a rag well soaked in boiling wa ter should be placed over the part. If this is done while the foot is in the shoe, the leather will soften to the shape of the foot. C o rrect C onstipation B efore—N o t M e r ! An ounce of prevention Is worth a poundof emergency relief. Why Zet yoursel/ suffer those dull UfeIess days because of constipation, «oftp brine on the need for emergency medicines, when there may be a far better way? That way is to KEEP regular by getting at the cause of the trouble.If It’s common constipation, due to lack of “bulk” In the diet, a pleasant, nutritious, ready-to-eat Cereai-EelIogg1S An-Braa-goes straight to the cause by supplying the “bulk” you need. Sat this crunchy toasted cereal every day-wlth milk or cream, or baked into mufBns-drink plenty of water, and See if you don’t forget all about constipation. Made by Kellogg’S in Battle Creek, sold byevery grocer. Life a Pastime . To maintain oneself on this earth is not a hardship but a pastime, if only one will live simply and wise ly.—Thoreau. STUFFINESS Better Speech U thou thinkest twice before thou speakest once, thou wilt speak twice the better for it.—William Penn.' AKE YOU MISERABLE? Durham. N. C. — Un. T. Jo Deadmond, Route 6, say*: “I was very vok, could hardly eat, had poor. nerves and felt miserable over. ‘X took Dr.•is wver, - & K N l AST. !Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip*1 . tion and It s Umolated my ■ appetite and it was not long before I had my > Strengthbackandfeltrerii good.** Bog Favorite Prescription in ligoid * * * ^ #— your druggist today. WNU-7 44—39 That Na^<?in<? Backache • May Wom of DInordered KidneFAction ICodem life with hs Imtiy and work bngriar habite. Improper eating and drinking—Ita ride of expomne and infeo* tion—throws heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become Over-taxed and lad to filter excess arid sad other imparities from the life-giving _________ , _________ _________ up nightVi ’leg .pains. Swelling—feel constantly tuna, nervoos.aU worn oat. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder are some* rimes burning, seanty or too frequent ..Try Doavft PtRt. JDooirt help the kidneys to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have had more than half s - century of public approval. Are rseom* mended by^rateful users et Doans Pills j I Sn ! &i & LALA VIA Nd PATIENI IT1S Pi Nd C S’MATl MESC/ POP— i OC c l a s s i f i e d DEPARTMENT B A B Y C H IC T fg ! ? “ BV QUALITY. thicks..S JIJ it e d CHICKS: Turkey,MILFORD HATCBBRf HwHaFft* _______________________PikesviHe I*, o TgrkiS CHICKS! "HSlSKtMo 1 cl>o«e«u. St Uul,. Ho. household questions Care of Lamp Shades.—Silk an j parchment lamp shades should Ef dusted frequently with a soft brush or the vacuum cleaner.• • • Improving Veal Roast. _ Veal roasts are improved by rubbino them with powdered ginger, black peprer and onion salt befor4 coot • • • Fitting C a n ae s-A candle may d*DMdCf t0 St an^ candlestiCk S^pped for a moment into very ; 0‘ \ a5 'i . ThlS Tai soften the ^ taea be ea^ y • • • When Bakmg Apple Pies—To FreveT1 --tPe ia apple 0 : 4fcaiajg ever during b a te s -J-1- —e appies and sugar and let --'.em s-.ard covered Icr Sve rria- a= c2 the juice from -"-S apr-e s^cas.• • • Let Beds Air.—Izl order to r:ye - e bedding s== n r a e s s t i e •o air out, h--== E V ^g e x ^ ? j r-; ;— a : -e-£7iig bea-=a>ir=—— ;us: bsirr= Z±Z>0Z DT sftsr =U -s .= —-er ^ r - ^ s r =or±rg 2,-yzss- -i-z --=^iis is re b==- perfr-r=:=- » • * Shoes Th.ii Pineh--Ii s rate=* s'-Z'S pinch£s S=T p a n cf the E ra r sc£>=:i ~ briiirs Vi- —- be z U -jii ever the -=rt. - ‘• ^ 2 dr--e -h i;= the izoz'is a —- s z x . the le a d e r softer a —« sh=r>e :: tie ij-.- C o rre c t C o o stq iatio a B efo r e - N o tA f terS ^ g = ^ ^ P ^ =±E3TOra:s SCSTEi/ J=S-T T=QSS e£2 Ci.~ 3555.^35 C-T ryi—«r i.-tS-t-; ZJiZJ Cr. iis -zest ijr acsrpzof —rii-rr-g. Tiisc thsre zssr s: & iz: bssas vev? 2a* xsrr is *3 z-zz-r r ^ s r i r k Sb Sf i g T-nrV.»Ii ir'i n ---■-<- t i s t g = £ £ |3 S ,S tiejsszi. m=i33E, resfj--ts-aEt Cersil-TrgMTgga iz^3cc- 5355 srsisfz: w tie asiseiT fi» *-~==J” 7 = pssi F^rr ear—-gtr; -TTr eg cycr.. Cf bsjsi im -—-T^rrr ci rasr. s=i s s 2 jo : aj£t ix - r s sS siccn csssSpsSo=. vm* ^SaSagrs SiBssae CMfc SSJ Life 3 Pastime To =Sirtai= c-es=h: = this earth a hardship htn 3 p ss is e . if ctiy c~e -stli live I-.—j ssz s t u f f i n e s s ; HAYFEVER Better SpeecIiIf thou thinksst Twire before thou spogjcest ccce, thr-u *vrtlt ^ -V twice the be::er for it.—WiBis=I Penn. ARE YOU MISERABLE? !>«**«. X.C.— its- T. I. IVscssai. SLxst S» , 5 "I 'Ti* rsy -vasl^^vaU Swiir **£. iai jccc I &<tve# &a£ t«£i g^ysaSut*:i ow . I tcob Dr. £ g i& ^ I^nw'* Swans\ Ars* 5S »t.Tf!'sH?aa 27*»i st » a a*i* I-XSVff X-^-r I i i i SJ Uivxxsiii 3a£ SfSSs r»SIU»t KarkMtt? ^Ts.,*r^-:5.*ei ss S^ai WNU 7 4*—5» That NaNawmtf BacKache M«* Vrtfii »v( KitUto^r ,WtWt H* w ry .J*s?i SfefiPSfc■ SNi.1 ^**+- «VNW KMi 1 r*» •«>•*¥ n«<!W- r’- k*—h-i ¥v\v?«tr-1— •nv.j^i.:-^ WWHm1Hf1V-; "’••t"*?. **U v HS r# ' h. ^ ««««««H IS '”*'"-* ^MYy T-' ♦W.S’H WfeMU--,- 4,4 J.-.- ^ .♦ ‘’p; hv»* «Vi»V* 9Att%-*“‘■•“5. AWWjWW* THE DATIE RECORD M0 CKSV1 LLE, N. 0 . THE SUNNY SIDE OFt Clean Comics That W ill Amuse Both Old and Young - j BIGTOP By ED WHEELAN Tc? THB IOT HE FOUNO-* BBNNy. THB SEE HIM -tWHEK TEFF- GOT PACK RARKEg " VWAmNGriaB 06S.X HEARD WOMSeCTLy IASTftlSHT THW THE 'STlNG-ER BROS. SHOW' IS PLANNINCr TO CHANSE-THEtl? KotfTE 4ND HEAD INTO OUR TtRRlToRV - if rr's TRUE .THE1/ MAV TRy TO Make so m e o f o u r TbW fis A DAy a h e a d Of- US AMD CAUSE US PlENTy O r G R lEP " ANN, LET'S NC5T \WORR.y A&OUT -tha T 'sb ifT''o u t fit . Tcm . UNfTIL NWE. LEAPN SOMETHIN® MOfte DEFINITE - U U TAKE CARE O r THeM IF THEy (SET TOO CLOSE T o o i .' -’ \o T T A ^' twraiRL SAILORSEITZ.-MTooeD ml MAIOf?SPECKMitucr FREAKS IS DRNlN = SCOF1 FOOLW MME.WNGE tZPtXXP IADV I — •g-D'Vflea?^ By RUBE GOLDBERG,ALA PALOOZA —Dr. McCarver Meets the Patient SHE NEED HAVE NO FEAR,LADY - I UNDERSTAND HUMAN NATURE J I WONOER IF THIS PINTO PALOOZA IS AS BEAUTIFUL AS THAT OTHER OPERA SINGER I OPERATED ON IN SAN FRANCISCO ^JJVST YEAR TM NOT THE W LET MgPATIENT, OOCTOR- I STRAIGHTEN IT’S PINTO’S TONSILS.V MVSELFNOT MINE* __'] UP ABIT,LADY J QUICK, DOCTOR - HERE’S POOR PINTO’S ROOMHURRY f S’MATTER POP— A Certain Word, and He’s at Your Service By C. M. PAYNE W ANT r MESCAL IKE b? s. l. hunt%ey U B*g gtyndlcatev—WNU Bervto*. r L oS^vlSm )^f-,scvr ^mhjrv,SSTTXe l M M flW - V ^A ^n^H A SJ W R R y r y OBUR siiki '? ----------HURRY What EUe Could One Do? , WAL, I OUMKIO AS HITLmuoulo 0 0 amv e o o o f e r __US TD COME OVER TMAR- ^ i- T = 1S =^■.-rwens all w e kkiovu TO j ~ ■*' ,DO ABOUT HIT.'FCRR1 POP— Almost a Gentleman SO THE BRIDEGROOM DIDN’T TURN u p ! By J. MILLAR WATT Belt Syndicate. Inc.—WNu Service - BUT HE SENT HIS REGRETS! Keep U S. Out of War 5Svoz awMjjSKiaaiiaviauM*K HVJiaaKV SteDOU SELLING TALK A. W. Franklin, secretary of the United Commercial Travelers of America, said at a dinner in Co lumbus: “All commercial travelers should have the gift of persuasion, but few can ever hope' to equal young Bed- does. “A junior partner, as he came into the office, nodded toward the retreating figure of young Beddoes and said to his senior: “ ‘I see you’ve taken on- a- new salesman. Is he good?* “ ‘Good?’ the senior partner said. ‘In the half hour he’s been with us he almost talked me into taking him into -the firm as senior partner. Nothing but your opportune arrival saved me.’ ” No Proof BoOgy-That old friend I was tell- ing you' aliout claims to be a rela tive of yours.Wctogy-That man’s a fool. . Boogy-That doesn’t ,prove any thing. It may be just a coincidence. I FtiLKS HEXT DOOR By GLUYAS WILLIAMS BeHfcBdieiito-VWUwviw WHtf FBEP PERlE-/. eu\NCIN6 Oltf 0THI5 WlKPOW. jiAW Ifttf 1ME MEW NEI6H00RS WHflftI IHEV HftP ASHED 16 DMNER WERE. SflESSlH6 UP, HE KHP HIS WlFE "fORE UH& 1HEIR D/EIIIH6 OJtrtiCSl W WWWWWftyiHE HB6HB0RS Hf® 60t A PEEK K(FREP.NO MRWtP A rew MOMEHfS LKfER1WFIER ft UaflWlHe.CHMttE, W W ClfflWES S tra n g e F acts I Bath Trains Wound Cash Mouth Prints I As most of the private houses in the towns of Transylvania have no baths, the Rumanian government now runs “bath trains” through this section. Equipped with tubs, hot water, soap and towels, they, offer free bathing facilities. The Chinese army awards a cash bonus, instead of stripes, to its soldiers when they are injured, privates getting $10, officers $40 and generals $100 for every wound. Bank clerks, pay-roll carriers and night watchmen may now call for help during a holdup, without endangering their lives by an alarming move, through a new ra dio transmitter that they wear under their shirts. Taking a deep breath closes the electric circuit which makes the set silently flash alarm signals to a central receiv ing station. Positive identification of horses has been found practicable through photographs or gutta-percha molds of the roofs of their mouths, which are as distinctive and individual as human fingerprints.—Collier’s. D oc’s N o te C am e E a sy T o C h em ist— W ith C ash An invitation to dinner had been sent to the new doctor. In reply the hostess received an absolute ly illegible letter. “I must know if he accepts or declines,” she declared. “If I were you,” suggested her husband, “I should take it to the druggist. They can always, read doctors’ letters.’'’ The druggist looked at the sheet of notepaper which she had hand ed him, and without waiting for .her explanation went into his dis pensary and returned a few minutes later with a bottle which he handed over the counter. “There you are, madam,” he said. “That will be $1.50, please.” INDIGESTIONRelief Krom Indijeriwn and One Dose ProTes Il ..If the flnt dose of tbls plewant-ttrtine little bltck tablet doesn't bring yoo tbe fastest sod nost complete relief yoo bsre experienced send bottle tick to Os and get DOUBLE MONEY BACK. Tbls Bell-IIis tablet helps the stomach digest food, makee the excess stomach finlds hsnnless and Itts von eat the nourishing foods yoo need. For heart* Inim, sick headache and upsets so often caused W eiccn jilomich fluids mikinK you fefll Bour aniJ Bldt all ora—JUST ONE DOSE 01 Bell-UU Hora OPMdr relief. 25c ererywliere. Hours of Beauty The hours when the mind is ab sorbed by beauty are the only hours when we really live.—Jef feries. Mnuratr■ INLOosage Double-checked to assure accurate dosage always* lS t aJ o s e j i h GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN Dangerons GameBut war’s a game, which, were their subjects wise, kings would not play at.—Cowper.- How To ReBeve B ronchitisBronchitis, acute or chronic, Is an Inflammatory condition of the mucous membranes lining the bronchial tubes. Creomulsion goes right to tha seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm. Increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal law, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous HiembHinea-TeayourdruggMt to sen you a bottle of Creomolslon with the understanding that you are to Ilka the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. C R E O M U L S IO N for Coughs,Chest Colds, Bronchitis Difficulty Grows What is left undone because it is difficult today will be doubly diffi- • cult tomorrow.—Ellis. RHEUMATISM^ WATCH VOU eon depend on <h* * special' tal« the xherchanU of ota’ town ' announce in the columns of thio-papar. They mean money saving to oux nadeis. It always pay* to pafeonin the merchants ■who advertise. They am not afraid o£ their mer chandise or their price*. T I l E S P E C I A L S THE DAViE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C, NOVE' BER 8 U / ) THE DAVlE RECORD. Bhim’i Almanaa Here. C. PRANK STROUD • ■ Editor. Changes In Preachers. TELEPHONE E n tered a tth e Poetoiilce in M ocks- vllle, N . C ., ae Second-class M all m a tte r. M arch 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I 10 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - I SO S tran g e th a t som e folks w ait un til after an affair is over before they begin to boost it. Armistice Day. S a tu rd a y N ov. n t b , is A rm is tice D ay. Jn st 2t y ears ago on th is d ate th e W orld W ar cam e to a close, and m illions of p e o p le ' throughout* th e civilized w orld spent th e d ay in giving th an k s to G od th a t th e g reat est w ar th e w orld bad ever w itness ed, had com e to a close T o d ay th e w orld seem s on th e verge of a gain en g ag in g in a useless w ar th at will cost billions of d ollars, m illions of dead crippled an d m aim ed y o ung m en.T w en ty one y ears ago D avie co u n ty sent 357 boys to h elp Bght to m ake th e w orld safe for dem o, cracy, to sacrifice th e ir lives,if need he, to w age a w ar to end all w ars. T h e boys left th e ir w o tk on th e farm s in th e m ills and factories and traveled 3,000 m iles to engage in Ibis g igantic stru g g le. T h ey d id n ’t m ak e th e w orld safe for dem ocracy, and th ev d id n ’t end all w ars. Of th e 357 y o ung m en th a t w ent from tb 's ' countv, 340 retu rn ed hom e, w hile 17 eith e r died in cam ps or w ere.killed in action. S o m e o fth e hovs cam e hack sick and m aim ed fo r life and have passed over th e river, to rest on th e o th er w ide. We should pause on th is d a y to shed a te a r and place a w reath on th e graves of these y o u n g m en w ho gave th eir lives in th is g reat w ar, and lift u p a p ray er to H im w ho doeth all th in g s w ell, th a t th is coun try shall rsm iin at place w ith all th e wot Id, and th a t never again w ill th e y o u th of th is free land of o u rs be called upon to jo u rn ey a- cross th e seas to fight for foreign pow ers. No Big Damage. H allow e’en n ig h t h as passed, and so far as w e can learn, no serious dam age w as done t J p ro p erty bv th e ghosts and goblins w ho w and ered around over th e tow n a g reat e r p art ol th e n ig h t. M any w indow s and doors in business houses and offices w ere treated to a liberal sm earing of soap, w hich resulted in said w indow s and doors g ettin g th e ir annual w ashing. T b e young folks had a grand tim e. N o vs* to tell them w hat th ev m ust pr m ust n o t do on th is d n e n ig h t of th e y ear, far th e y are going to do ju st aoout as th ey w ant to in spite c f parents, officers, m ayors, teach ers or any o th er class of folks. M ost of u s w ere y o ung at one tim e. Attend Big BanqueU P u re O ildealere of th e Carolinas. to g eth er w ith 'a num ber of invited, guests, num bering m ore th an 200 . enjoyed a fine dinner a t th e G asto nia C ountrv C lub T hursday evening from 6 to 7:30 o’clock. A m ong the distinguished guests present w ere H V. K altei born, new s com entator. o f Phil'tdelphia; Wile.v Li M oore, P resident a t th e P u re Oil C t . of th e Carolina?, A tlanta. Ga ; O Y. K irk Patrick, C harlotte. S tate sales m ana g e r of th e P o re Oil Co., Gregg. C herry form er speaker o t th e H o . a t of R epresentatives, G astonia, arid others. M r. K atlenbprn w as the gU j3t spea! e • a t th e dinner. Fol low ing th e utnner, tor. K atlenborn a p n k e at th e G astonia, school audi torium fo r m ore than an hour to «n audience of nearly 2.000 people. H e aooke u nder th e auspices o f-th e U . D. C., of G astonia, and it is needless to eay th a t his speech w as enjoyed by thd larg e audience present. Those fro m M ocksville atten d in g th e ban q u e t and th e lecture w ere G radv N W ard , o f th e W ard Oil C >.. Mockt- ville; R. S. P ro cto r, D avie S uperin ten d en t of Schools; F letcher Click, salesm an fo r th e W ard Oil Co . and F ran k S tr ud, ed ito r o f The Davie R ecord. ■ ' ■ • Nothing-NothiDg. The Mocksville and China Grove high school football teams met on the Mocka- ville BMd Friday afternoon and staged a tie game, nothing nothing. We are sorry that our boya didn't make at least one touchdown. . Birthday Dinner. About twenty-five relatives and friends -gatbemd at the.home of Mrs. W. F. hail on Wil|esboro street last Sunday to honor Mrs. Nails daughter Miss Rebecca Nail, of Greebsboro to a surprise biphday. dinner. Everyone present erjoyed dinner which was spread ob a large table in. the din ng room. The out of town guests were Mr. and Mirs-Bob Wbitaker and Mrs. -J. A. Wagoner and children, of High Point. A good time was bad by all Every one left wishing Miss Nallmany more bap-yiHrth- days, ONE PRESENT. T heold reliable Blum’s Alma- Bishop Clare Purcell has authorized the nacs for 1940 are here -If -you following changes of appointments in Ire w ant a copy of th is useful house hold com pendum of inform ation, you can get one free b v calling, a t T h e R ecord office and renew ing v o u r subscription. I i yo u d o n ’t tak e T h e R ecoid, you can purchase a copy of th is alm anac for th e sm all sum of only ten cents. T h e y are w orth at least a q u a rte r. S end,' u s a d ollar to pay on v o u r subscrip tion, and w e will send you an al m anac postpaid. D on’t w ait until thev are all gone. James M. Stroud. Jam es M. S troud. 69. well-known farm er o f n ear County Line, died a t his hom e F riday evening a t 9 o’clock, death resu ltin g from a .stroke of paralysis w hich he suffered' Tuesday. F uneral services w ere held a t So ciety B aptist church Sunday a fte r noon a t 2 o’clock, w ith Rev. W . L . M cSwain in charge, and th e body laid to re st in theichurch cem etery. M r. S troud is survived by hie w idow and seven children, five sons. B ruce. G ov. Jam es. P hillip, H ar m o n y -R I; Paul M ocksville. R. 4; and tw o d au g h ters, M rs W alter Clendenin, o f G reensboro and M rs. W illiam K eilert of this city. T hree sisters. M rs. J , E. S afriett Jackson ville, F la ; M rs. A. A. C artner.S tates- ville, R . 4 and M rs. R obert Safriet, M ocksville, R 4. also survive. In th e d eatn o f M r. S troud. D avie loses one of h e r best know n citizens. F o r m any y ears M r. S troud operated a flour mill and lum ber business, tog eth er w ith extensive farm opera tions. H e bad m any friends thro u g h o u t th e countv w ho w ere saddened by th e new s o f his death. John A. Stroud. Jo h n A u stin S tro u d , 65, w ell- know n and h ig h ly respected farm er of th e S ociety B aptist ch u rch com m unity, died W ednesday n ig h t at his hom e in T u rn e rsb u rg tow nship afte r a long illness. M r. S troud w as a son of th e late M r. and M rs. G iles P . S tro n d . S u rv iv in g are th e w idow , th e form er M iss L ydia Y ates a d au g h ter, M iss E sth er S tro u d , a n u rse in L ow ery hospital a t Salis b u ry ; th ree sons, J . R . S tro u d of T u rn ersb u rg tow nship, G . B. S tro u d of H ig h P o in t, an d L . B . S troud of R ockingham ; tw o sisters, M rs. T hom as G arw ood of Coolee- m ee, and M iss M ary S tro u d of T u rn ersb u rg tow nship. M r. S troud had been actively connected w ith S ociety B aptist cb u rcb for n m y vears, serv in g as deacon- in th e ch u rch and su p erin ten d en t of th e S u n d ay school for a . n u m b er of years.* T h e funeral w as held F ri day m orning a t '10 o’clock at So- c ie iy -Baptist ch u rch , w ith his past or R ev. W . L . M cSw ain co n d u ct in g th e services. T h e R ecord e x tends sy m pathy to th e bereaved fam ily in th e d eath of th is , kind husband and father. A good m an has gone to h is rew ard. A tto rn ey J . E . S nyder, of L ex ington w as in tow n W eilnesday looking after som e legal m atters. dell county: Rev. Y. D, Poole goes from Harmony to the McKendree and Williamson churches in Mooresvilte. Rev. P. F, Snider goes from McKendree- Williamson toOlio. : Rev, R V. Martin goes from Olio , to Harmony. S anford S tro u d , of n ear C ounty Line, is sh m t One ben house and 18 chickens as a result of a fire F rid ay n ig h t, M rs. S tio u d em p tied som e hot-ashes n ear th e house late in th e afternoon, w hich set it on fire a fte rn b e fam ily retired for th e n ig h t. - I N o o th er buildings .were dam aged. W in te r'w e a th e r sw ooped dow n on th is section S atu rd ay . D u rin g th e d ay snow , sleet an d rain fell, and it w as tb e ' m ost disagreeable d ay s felt-here th is fall. T em p era tu re readings w ere in th eir low th irties. ___________ A tto rn ey A . T .' G ra n t m ade a business trip t o W in sto n S aIem M onday. ’ Sale of Valuable Real Estate. U nder and by v irtu e o f an o rd er o f sale m ade by M. K . F eesor, De* puty C lerk of Superior C ourt of Da- vie C ounty, N , G.. in th e special p ro ceedings entitled “ Carl Sink, e t als va J . G. Sink, G eneral G uardian fo r D oris Sink, Rachel Sink and Ida Sink,” d»ted N ovem ber 1st, 1939, th e undersigned com m issioner will sell a t public auction a t th e co u rt house door of D avie C ounty, in th e city of M ocksville, N. C.. a t 12:00 o ’clock, noon, on F riday, D ecem ber 1st, 1939, th e follow ing described land, to-w it: A djoining th e lands of John A. W ood. R obert N . F ritts and o thers in F ulton tow nship, D avie C ounty, N . C., and b eg in rin g a t a stak e cn th e n o rth bank of D utchm ans Creek, running thence N . 43 degs. W est 290 fee t to a stone; thence N , 31J degs. E. 628 fee t to a stone: S. 87J degs. E . 480 fee t to a stone; thence S. degs. E . 1530 fee t to a stone, corner to No. I; thence N . 3 degs. E . 350 fe e t to a stone, corner to N o. I; thence S. 88 degs. W . 950 fe e t t ' a stone, G arw ood’s corner; thence N 4 degs. E. 338 fee t to . a stone and corner to No. 3; thence N . 88 degs, W . 964 fee t to a stone and corner to No. 3; thence S. 3 degs. W. 320 feet to a stone, corner to F ritts tra c t; thence N . 86 degs. W . 2544 fee t to a stak e on th e east bank o f D utchm ans C reek; thence dow n said creek as it m eanders to th e beginning, contain* ing 104 acres, m ore o r less. This be in g tra c t N o. 2 in th e division of land 3 of W illiam A. W ood. T erm s o f Sale: Cash u p o n confir m ation of th e C ourt, bid to be se cured by proper deposit of approved securities. This th e 1st day of No vem ber, 1939,- CA RL SIN K .'Com m issioner, J . E . SN Y D ER, A ttorney. G et a G reater "K kli” m m a » i th a I 9 4 0 Football Is on the air! Tnno in your favorite games. Get the play-by-play broadcasts clearly, more enjoyably . ... with a new 1944) An niversary Special Philco. New fea tures, finer perform ance, -sensational values! Gome see them. PHILCO 1 5 8 F H as c o stly R.: F . A . Stage, never beforeS i A A offered’.in a con- T I I I n I sole at this m oney. X R ffl M . saving price! Pow- w erfult fin e -to n e d . W aInnt cabinet. IOOTBAU OIARMrOAIIIIE^ Novel* fascinating, instructive! Lets/ yon chart -each pU y . « .JteIps you f e e ! understand the in for yonr m e. better.:Com e copy.. CARRY IT WITH YOUI8 IT Self-powered Portable . . . . plays anywhere! Light, ■ powerful, A ne- P g e 6- |7 c . C.Sanford Sons Co. M ocksville, N. C.F hope 7 E A S Y TE R M S i'tJt'-r:j; J 'a r 1,,; I We HaVe A Store Full Of Merchandise That Will Keep You Warm- 'So Come To See Us And Make Men’s and Women’s SWEATERS AU Sizes and Colors 97c Ladies Sport and Dress OXFORD Brown and Black $1.99 HaneA Union Suits ForMen The Kind That Keeps You Warm 85cMen's Good Work Shoes and Women WorkOxfords $1.59 Thanksgiving Spedals SO Ladies Dresses Super Rayon and Silk CREPE Bought to Sell for $2410 Special For This Week $1.48 Children’s Oxfords and Shoes AN DLadies Suede Oxfords $1.19 Men’s Dress Pants Green, Blue and Brown Also Cords $2.98 Men’s Dress and Wotk SHIRTS A LL SIZES 48c Boy’s Union Suits - Men’s Oxfords. Black and Brown Wing Tips and Plain Toes $1.99 Ladies Felt Hats Large and Small Sizes Good Shapes, Good Colors 97c Ladies Slips The Kind You Don't Have To Iron 97c Shoes, Dry Goods And Notions “On The Square” Mocksville, N. C. Cdell Coleman J. A. Jones Nal WestAlso Bill Motsinger Foy W. Call STAR BRAND SHOES-SHOES—SHOES! FOR ENTIRE FAMILY DRESS-SCHOOL-WORK OR PLAY We are inviting you to come to see (is again this year, because we know we can please you in style and quality shoes Our 32 Years Experiencis Has Taught Us Tlut Sdid Lisather Shoes Are Best. Let Uj Serve You Again With Star Brand Solid Leather.Shoes. Plenty Of Rubberst GalosheaAnd Boots. Jones & Gentry ...,........./.Same Location•- ‘‘Sell Your Tobacco On The Winston-Salem Market.*’ GOOD COAL Your Fuel This Winter Depend A Lot On Whether You*re Getting A Coal Which Has A High Heat Content. We Invite You To Let Us.Recommend AFneI Suited To Your Needs. A Fuel Which Will Gut Down Bills A Fuel Delivered .-s*-** Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co. Day Phone 116 Night Phone 187 T H E DA L a r g e s t C D avie C NEWS . M iss H ild w eek-end wi M rs. V . E S m ith w ere S alem F rida M r. and M o f H arm onv, M ccksville F F O R S A L sh ire pigs. J- F M rs. Floy M aude M ila W inston Sal DenDis Sil sp en t a day w eek lookin R eid Tow L in e, was w eek. H is w h at we jud J . A . Jon boro, w as in . Jones came corn crop on S u p t. R S in H ig h Poi m eeting of s 1,000 teache counties. M iss Hele th e M ocksvil tended the D in g at H ig' spent th e we S a lisb u r-. M r. and th e C herry M ocksville v A rn d t tells ch ard is in som ething U th e year. W A N T K ferab ly wii h an d le esta' ness in Davi larg est com p p ly in g 150 necessities, h av e car a w rite W atk lo tte, N . C. B II 5W Pen t) Will Keep Make Union Suits Men d That Keeps u Warm 85c Children’s ps and Shoes AND Buede Oxfords |$M 9 Dres8 Pants IIue and Brown so Cords >2.98 Idies Slips |nd You Don’t e To Iron 97c Iksville, N. C. W. Call b£S! ILAY we know I s Are Best, ioes. [arket.H rh e t h e r lit Content, f o u r Needs. Ills !o. ione 187 V;' ':W', i'- T H E D A V iE RECORD, M OGKSVILLE. N . C ., N O VEM BER 1939. IHE DAVlE RECORD. Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. NEWS AROUND TOWN, M iss H ild a M arkham spent th e w eek-end w ith friends at E lk in . M rs. V . E . S w aim an d M rs. B I. S m ith w ere shopping in W inston- S alem F rid ay . M r. and M rs. C olum bus Cam pbell, of H arm onv, R. I, w ere shopping in U ccksville Friday. F O R S A L E —15 big-bone B erk sh ire pigs. J . F R A N K H E N D R IX . M rs. F lo v d vT u ttero lW atid M iss M aude M ilam spent W ednesday in W inston Salem shopping. D ennis S ilverdis, of R ichm ond, spent a d ay o r tw o in tow n last w eek looking after business m atters. R eid T ow eil, of n ear C o u n ty L ine, w as in tow n one day last w eek. H is car w as loaded w ithIw h at w e ju d g ed to b eco tto n . J . A . Jones, of N o rth W ilkes boro, w as in tow n last w eek. M r. Jones cam e dow n to look a fte r his corn.crop on his farm n ear tow n. Supt-. R S. P ro cto r spent F rid a y in H ig h P o in t atten d in g a D istrict m eeting of school teachers. A bout 1,000 teachers w ere p resen t from 15 counties. M iss H elen Page, a m em ber of th e M ocksviUe school facu liy , a t tended th e D istrict T each er’s .n e tt in g a t H ig h P o in t F rid ay , and spent th e w eek end w ith friends in S a lisb u r-. M r. and M rs. A . S. A rn d t, of th e C herry H ill section, w ere M ocksville v isitors T hursdkV . M r A rn d tte lls us th a t his apple or ch ard is in full bloom , w hich is som ething u nusual a t th is season of th e year. W A N T E D —E n erg etic m an pre ferably w ith farm experience to h andle established W atk tn s busi ness in D avie C ounty. O ldest an d largest com pany backs you in su p p ly in g 150 household and farm necessities. N o investm ent If you have car and w ant m ore m ouev w rite W atk in s, B ox 1975, C h ar lotte, N . C. M r. and M rs. S . H . C artn ert of n ear Sheffield, an d H . W . S troud, of H arm o n y , R . 1, w ere in tow n shopping- W ednesday. M iss E velyn S m ith, w ho holds a position in W inston Salem , visited h e r parents, M n and M rs. B. B. S m ith, n ear Jericho, last w eek. " B 'u m ’s A lm anacs a t th is office. C. L . Clf ary , of R andlem an, w as a M ocksville visitor S atu rd ay . M rs. R oy C alt an d liitle son R oy, Ir., are spending th is w eek w ith re latives a t S anford j Bill A ngell, m inisterial stu d en t a t W ake F orest C ollege sp en t th e W A N T E D -A sh are cropper, ° r w e e k e n d in t0w n w ith his p aren ts, w ill pay w ages to good w hite m an * . w ho will w ork on farm . . I M iss M attie S tro u d , of States* W .D .B O O IE , - ville, sp en t th e w eek end. in tow n M ocksville, R . 2. th e gu est of M r. an d M rs. C. F . -Mrs. W illiam B row n, of L incoln. S tro u d an d fam ily, ton, w ho has been spending a m onth 1 S alisbury, tow n w ith j M iss G ussie Johnson, a stu d en t w ith M rs. P in k T u rn e r and fam ily, at C ataw ba Col|ege) on R . 4, and M iss K ate B row n, in SDent th e w eek.end in th is city, retu rn ed hom e S atu rd ay . h er p aren ts » A lm anacs for .940 are o n ] M jss M ary W UUams, w ho fale al T h e Record office. Ir y o u !/ . - .• ... « . are a subscriber to th is p aper. C all stu ^ en t a t G eyer s B usiness C o - aud renew y o u r subscription and lege, C harlotte,- sp en t th e w eek g et an alm anac free. A ll new sub -1 en d w ith h er p aren ts a t Jerusalem , scribers will also be given alm anacs! ~ ^free I R ev. H . C. S p rin k le w ho is a p a tie n t at C h arlo tte hospital, is g e t T h e g ia s s f r o n ta tD a v ie C a f e h a s .. , „ , . . b een.iem odeled, w hich gives m ore tln g a,o n * wel1 ascould be exPecu room inside th e cafe au d im proves (et^- A ll hope for him an early re its appearance. T h e show w indow s _ covery. w ere torn o u t and a stra ig h t front p n t in. C. F . W ard and M r. and M rs. E d H ow ard, of S m ith G rove, spent M isses H azel T ay lo r and Polly th e w eek end in W ashington, D . C., T hom pson, of th e h ig h school . . . . . t . „ T . faculty sp en t th e w eek-end a t th e ir Suests of |he,f brotber- John Ward hom es, M iss T ay lo r, n ear R u th er- fordton and M iss T hom pson at G oldsboro. M r. and M rs. Brice* P . G arrett, of C enter; M r. an d M rs. H asten C arter an d children, of th is city spent S unday afternoon at L ow ery H ospital w ith M r. A . N . L iven- good, w ho is still im proving. ; R ev. and M rs. A . W . L ynch and th eit th ree little d au g h ters, arrived here last w eek from N o rth W iIkes- boro, and are occupying th e M etho d ist parsonage on S alisb u ry street. R ev. M r. ‘L y n ch succeeds Rev. M . ■ G . E rv in as casto r r n th e D aviej circu it. T h e R ecord is glad to w el-; com e these good people to o u r tow n. ‘ C all a t o u r shop and look over o u r line of M eadow W ashing M a ch in es and P hilco R adios. Y O U N G R A D IO CO . M r. and M rs. I. E . M cD aniel, of W ashington, D C , announce th e ! arriv al of a Gne d a u g h te r, J o in ’ C arol M cD aniel 011 W ednesday, O ct.' i 8 ih . M r. M cD aniel is a form er D avle co u n ty m an, a son of M rs. A . S M cD aniel, of R . 3. H ere’s hoping Joan C arol w ill live, to be a hun d red years old, and th a t 1 h e r life w ill be full of happiness and sunshine. i w ho is q u ite sick in a h ospital th ere. M r. and M rs. B rice P . G a rre tt, of .C entFr, M r. an d M rs, H asteo C arter and ch ild ren , of th is city, w ent to Cooleem ee F rid ay n ig h t to see T he R an g ers. T h ey are m ig h ty fine bovs and everyone enjoys tb e tr nice show s. Princess Theatre WEDNESDAY ONLY ■ BIG TOWN CZAR” with Banon HacLane - Tom Brown THURSDAY and FRIDAY ‘■FRONTIER MARSHAL" with Randolph Seott • Nancy Kelly SATURDAY^ DOUBLE FEATURE "INDIANAPOLIS SPEEDWAY” with Pat O'Brien - Ann Sheridan "TR1GGFR SMITH” with Jack Rsndall m6nday ' “DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS" with Priscilla Lane - John Gorfleld TUESDAY •BLONDIE TAKES A VACATOS" wiih Ihe * BUKSTEADS" g P § P . y o u 'l l G O f o r n , w h e n y o u s e e h o w I T G O E S F O R Y O U ! ! Expect a lot of exdte- M Ot. . . expect a lot of th rills . . . w hen you step Ja and drive th e new Chevrolet far 1910! Cbevndet has lonft had th e reputation of bein£ Jtrrt In accelera tio n In Ita price range—because It’s th e only low-priced car w ith a an p g -v ltalh ad , «uper-«ttent VaKe- In-H eadE nglne! I t h as long had th e reputation Tht Spttiml Dt LmtSport Sedan, tjpl* of being first In hill-cU m blnft,for th e • sam e good, pow erful, Valve-in-Head reason! . ' And it out-ridet th e others, too, because it’s th e only low-priced car w ith “T he Rlde Royal1V th e safeat, sm oothest, steadiest rideknow n! ¥ e repeat, “YouTl GO t e th e new 1940 Chevrolet When you\ »ee how i t GQES fpr you.” B etter eye U , try it, buy It—today / OKlY CHfVROU HAS ALt THESf QUALITY FrATURtS mMYAL CUPfBT STVUNO WW Na-VMONMDBSBYPtfHB • NMT IKlUSIVf VACUUM- MffBt SMPt • mIHE MOB MYAIh ttwwjiTi M U ii b »sum-auwr vaiviwwap moos • PRffCVtt HTDtAUUC ItANSMBSON « IAMB TIffOfrMAIIC OUICN • NRV SUUD BtAM KSA9UQHTS VITH STAtAIS FAftKMO IMHVS. Omw9Uf 6a man Oo Sped*! De Lnxe cod 85 HF* VALVE * IN - HEAli SIX Chevrolet’s FIRSTHiuipmtntSn.MW*^HWatttoHet.......on B tattv .,Inc., wJftak 13c Ib o r 2 lb8.25c BARGAINS! W hite Sw an F lour $2 5 8 Ih C arton L ard 79 10 Iba S uirar 59 25 Ibs Suicar ' $1.3: JOO lbs S u g ar $5 3 Rice, Iba ’ S P intoes 6c Il P u re Coffee 10 U am m iesF av o riteC o ffee 11 Black P epper Bannaa C abbage Potatoes 2 Packs 15c Cierarettea M atches Zi o r 2 fo r 2~5c packs S alt 22 C artridges Hollow P oint 22 Jong C artridges A Few M ore M en's ^ u its $20.00 value $13 97 $18.00 value $11 95 Boy’s $3 69 u U nion S uits 6S H anes H eavy W eight I Q aality 89i 100 P airs Tennis Shoes W orth U p To $ 1 0 0 V alue 59c P air ; 50 P air 2£ to 3i. Galoshes $1.25 V alue 39; Ball Band $150 Q uality $1.19 See M e F or B ridles, Collars, Traces.' H am es and Check Lines. 25 P er Cpnt Off L ist On AU Plow Castingg , H orse and M ule Shoes 8 &c Ib Finished Shoes 10: Ib Axes $1.10 and up School T ablets and N ote Book P aper 3c or 352 diiz. Plenty 66x76 B lankets 59c 66x80 P a rt W optD oabIe B!ankets$ $2 00 L L Sheeting 7c yd P lenty Sam ple Sw eaters A t B argain Prices P lenty Red Goose and W olverine: Shoes A t Old Prices See Me B efore T ou Buy Shoes and Sw eaters Local Cotton Market. T u esd ay , N ov. 7. Seed cotton 3.80 to 4 .00 . L in t cotton 9.50. T h e W inston-S alem Iobaoco m ar* k e t sold 1.400,000 pounds M onday at an average of £19 p e r. h u n d red . M tfcksville w heat $ t p er bushel. C orn 60c. per. bushel. L eath er Coats Plenty M ens O veralls. Plentv Boy’s O veralls Plenty W ork S hirts D ress 7 5 ;v alu e $1.00 value IOc P rints 80 Square Play Cloth O uting 81 yd wide $5.95, $7.95 89c and up 3 5 : and. Up 502 up 60? ' 89i- Ie Vd 13« IOc yd IOe -YOJJJtS FOR BARGAINS’* J. FRANK HENDRIX Depot :?t. Mocksville N C Manufacturers Outlet Store 622 N orth T rade S treet W inston-Salem . N . C. Between Gorrells And Brown’s Warehouses. The Manufacturers Outlet Sell* Most Everything Usually Carried In A Big Department Store, But Being Out Of The High Rent District We Are Able To Sell Quality Merchandise At Much Lower Prices, THE MORRISETT CO. “LIVE WIRE STORE” Trade and West Fourth Streets Winston-Salem, N. C. DRY GOG Great Collection of Woi Silks, Woolens, Aceti AUAtOpei Lovely Spun Rayon 39c 47c IDS DEPT. iderful Merchandise . Bitesf RayonsvCottons, nining Prices. Gorgeous New Shades 54-Inch Dress Woolens $1.25, $1.35. $1 59, $1.69Beautiful Plaid Stripes, Prints 47c 69c 79c Botany Woolens Sponged and Shrunk $1.59, $1.79, $1.95, $2 25, $3.45 Ready-1 Great And Bea Dress SpecuJs $1.95 $3.95 $5,95 $955 1 o-W e a r utiful Collection Coat Specials $6.95 $9.95 $12.95 $18.95; '»1 Lovely , . $3.95 $5.95, $7.95. $10.95 MILLINERY Last Word in Stylea, Shades, Quality I # 3 THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. a s a chipm unk. B u t h e w on’t ev en look ou t of h is n arro w bedroom w indow . H e w an ts no outlook on a w orld tu rn in g itse lf into a m adhouse. P ic tu re s on th e floor, covered w ith d u st a n d cobw ebs, m a y be w o rth a fo rtu n e, p ic tu res of m oods, d re a m s an d m em o ries, b u t th a t d oesn’t in te re st h im . H e h a d renounced th e “ pom ps an d v an itie s of th is w icked w orld” long before it b e a t a p a th to h is door. T he p a ra lle l betw een B lakelock an d E ilsh em iu s is also m a rk ed by th e am azin g d iv ersity of th e ir ta l en ts. B lakelock, th e son of a physician , w as tra in e d in m edicine, gifted B . b > l r L in m u sic and Bests Blakeloek alm ost m ade a In Diversity of c a re e r of th e . . . piano an d m u-Achievements sical composj. tion. E ilsh em iu s h a s com posed a sm all lib ra ry of songs, o p eras and etudes an d used to give piano con c e rts in his youth. H e p ain ted fe v erish ly for 46 y e a rs, quitting in 1922 w hen none w ould b u y his p ictu res an d no g alleries h an g th em . B ut, in his v aried abilities, he fa r out shone B lakelock. H ere a re a few of h is ach iev em en ts: W hen h e w as a stu d en t a t C ornell u n iv ersity , he discovered a new sp e cies of ichneum on fly. L a te r he announced a new . law governing th e “ ram ification of tre e s.” H e w rote so m ew h at m o re th an 50 volum es of p lay s, novels, novelettes, essay s an d v erse. T he v erse, B y- ronic in tone, w as w ritten in E ng lish , F ren ch , G erm an , Ita lia n and S panish. H e published th e m him self an d , like h is p ictu res, th ey g ath e re d only cobw ebs an d dust, H e invented a new kind of “ m ag ic” indelible in k an d sev eral studio devices for a rtists. H e explored v ario u s d iseases and offered m ethods of th erap y . H e w as b o m in L au rel H ill, N . J ., n e a r N ew ark, th e son of a w ealthy glove m a n u factu re r. H e attended C ornell tw o y e a rs an d w as a ’room m a te of R o b ert W . C h am b ers in P a ris w hen th e y w ere studying a rt u n d er B ougereau. H is is- a blue-book fam ily of D atc h an teced en ts, an d his n am e is th e re in scrib ed , b u t th a t in ter e sts him no m o re th a n th e hang- . in g of h is p ictu res in th e M etro p olitan, th e L uxem bourg an d the W hitney g alleries. I N H IS book, “ D y n am ite,” Louis A dam ic say s th e L os A ngeles T im es explosion of 1910 forever end ed m ilitan cy in th e A m erican labor -T.-___ r _ „ j „ • _ m ovem ent. InTones Explosion th at y car Sam . PtA an End to u el G om pers. . . . . . __ an d F r a n kL a b o r M ilita n c y M o rrJson w ere sen ten ced to p rison te rm s on c h a rg e s grow ing ou t of th e B uck sto v e c a se . T h is w as lost in th e shuffle, w ith th e d y nam iting excite m e n t. T he te rm s w ere n ev e r serv ed . T h e re a fte r n eith er G om pers n or M orrison w as m ilitan t. C urrently, M r. M orrison, th e higlily esteem ed s e c re ta ry -tre a su re r an d conserva tiv e eld e r statesm an of th e A . F . of L . re tire s froip office, a fte r 43 y ea rs in th a t post. H e w ill b e 80 y e a rs old n e x t m onth.A n ativ e, of F ran k to n , O nt;, h e is a d octor of law s of L ak e F orejit uni v ersity . H e . en tered law p ractice, b u t tu rn e d to.'the prin tin g tra d e and b ecam e a m em b er.o f th e T ypograph ic a l union in 1873. H e is a m em b er o f th e ex ecu tiv e council of th e C h urches of C h rist in A m erica. (Consolidated FMturec-WNU Scrviced EolBafeguard Hold on Aaland Islands - . - J A *«t 5 - A JL M l - - "V Jj as, som e of th e m no m o re th a n reefs, m a k e u p th e B altic arch ip elag o th a t show s !-controlled A alan d isla n d s. T hough R u ssia h a s no t fo rm a lly voiced d em an d s th a t n a v a l b a se on th e isla n d s, it is ex p ected th e req u e st, w hen it com es, w ill b e re- R u le rs of th e o th e r th re e N ordic p o w ers, Sw eden, D en m a rk a n d N orw ay, m e t in jiu tu al w a r pro b lem s. deals Help Safeguard Russian Sailors I S oviet R u ssia is b u sy w hipping its fleet in to th e b e st possible sh ap e, p re p a rin g fo r an y ev en tu ality . H e re hooded R u ssian sailo rs a re p ic tu red sp read in g an ti-g as ch em icals on th e ship’s d ec k a s th e y de-con- ta m in a te th e v essel. W earing g a s-re sista n t u n ifo rm s, th e m e n sp re a d p ow dered n en tra liz e rs on th e d ec k w hile o th e rs sp ra y o b jects o v erh ead w ith liquid n eu tralizers. No Death Ray? » O nly if th e U nited S tates w ere a t ta c k e d w ould D r. A ntonio L ongoria o f C leveland, O hio, re e re a te h is “ d ea th ra y ” m ach in e w hich h e in v en ted in 1934 a n d w hich h e de stro y ed fo r h u m a n ita ria n reaso n s. H e claim s th e ra y k illed b y changing re d blood co rp u scles to w h ite. Fooey to Herman I E dw ard Gohring of Rockford, Hl., w ishes nothing b u t bad lack to his first cousin,-G erm an F ield M arshal H erm an G oering, No. 2 N asi. H ere G ohring view s the field' m arshal’s picture In his fam ily albuin and ex presses h it nncousinly attitude. As Germany Faces Self-Encirclement m u m G E R M A / 2tun Pf miisJ F e a r of en c ircle m en t b y foes self-avow edly le d A dolf H itler to his policy of ag g ressio n . N ow h e M m seIf h a s com p leted a n iro n rin g aro u n d th e R eich . F ig u re s I , 2 a n d 3 show th e n ew sp h ere of S oviet influence; (4) Ju g o slav ia frien d ly to allie s a n d close to Ita ly ; <5) Ita ly h a s chilled to w ard B erlin ; (6) S w itzerland is re a d y to fight to m a in ta in n e u tra lity ; (7, 8, 9. a n d 10) th e w estern fro n t, w ith B elgium a n d th e N eth erlan d s rig id ly n e u tra l; (U ) N orth se a blockade b y B rita in ; (12) S candinavian co u n tries-n eu tra l b n t frien d ly to allies. Cell Mates Pray for Doomed Convict Twenty-two convicts m ade history in' CM cago’s Cook county jail whea they refused lunch and dinner as*a la st gesture to Steve Cygan, stand ing in rea r, doom ed convict, w ho died a few hours late r In the electric chair. Instead of eating, th e m en p ray ed for th eir fellow convict. S ta r D ust ★ Way Back in Movies ★ War Cramps Hughes ★ Thomas in Screen Debut By Virginia Vale----- I P T H E c u r r e n t c r o p o f y o u n g A m e r ic a n s d o e s n ’t k n o w a l l a b o u t A m e r ic a n h is to r y i t w o n ’t b e th e f a u l t o f th e m o v ie s . P r o d u c e r s a r e f a i r ly f a llin g o v e r e a c h o th e r in th e s c r a m b le to s ta k e a c la im to a s lic e o f it; h a r d l y a d a y p a s s e s t h a t a n o th e r h is to r ic a l p ic tu r e is n ’t a n n o u n c e d . T hough it h ard ly seem s possible, “ H ollyw ood C av alcad e” is histo ry too, th e h isto ry of th e m ovies, re le ased fo r th e in d u stry ’s fiftieth an n iv e rsa ry . THie h eroine, p lay ed by A lice F a y e , is a com bination of all those golden-curled g irls w ho u sed to a c t before th e c a m e ra s (an d a s a ru le m o st of th e m over-acted ), and D on A m eche plays th e h ero , w ho is a n u m b e r o f'th o se histo ric leading m e n rolled into one. B u t th e h it of th e p ictu re, so fa r a s a lo t of people a re concerned, is th e la d s w ho show u s how slap stick com edy u sed to be played. B u ster K eaton, C h ester Conklin, B en T u rpin, H an k M ann, E d d ie C ollins, J im m y F inlayson—th e re th ey a re again, throw ing c u sta rd p ies w ith v im and v igor, stag in g a com edy tre a t for A L IC E F A Y E the old-tim ers w ho u sed to la u g h a t th e m an d th e new gen eratio n who n ev e r saw th e m before. AU haU th e K eystone cops! A nd b e it said fo r AUce F a y e th a t sh e ca n ta k e a c u sta rd p ie in the fa c e an d com e rig h t u p fo r m ore. H ow ard H ughes is retu rn in g to th e p ic tu re business, since th e w a r h a s cram p ed h is sty le w h ere round-the- w orld flights a re concerned. A nd h e w an ts a new boy an d g irl te am . H e h a s show n th a t h e’s a genius w hen it com es to discovering and developing ta le n t; he launched Je a n H arlow in “ HeU’s A ngels,” you’U rem em b er, an d m a d e P a u l M uni a m otion p ic tu re s ta r overn ig h t in “ S carface.” H e’s show n, too, th a t h e know s how to m a k e p ic tu res. D n rin g -the long stre tc h w hen “ H ell’s A ngels” w as considered ju s t a ric h m a n ’s foUy, people w ho h a d serv ed th e ir tim e a t pictu re-m ak in g pred icted th a t h e ’d n ev e r g et b ac k one-tenth of th e m oney th a t h e w as pouring into it. I t’s still being show n and still m ak in g m oney. Jo h n C h arles T hom as is going into the m ovies. R em em b e r th e U ttle difference of opinion h e h a d con cerning h is rad io ap p e aran ce s, be cau se he w ouldn't sing if he cou ld n 't conclude w ith "G ood n ight, M oth e r" ? H e WiU sing in th e p ic tu re in w hich h e m a k es h is screen d eb u t, “ K ingdom C om e,” w hose sto ry d ea ls w ith A m erican folk m u sic. It wiU b e m a d e by P ro d u cers C orpora tion of A m erica, a new m otion-pic- tu re com pany. It’s going to seem stran g e to h av e N elson E d d y p erm an en tly off th a t S unday n ight rad io p ro g ram ;, a lot of h is a d m irers wiU n ev e r b e recon- cU ed to h is d ep a rtu re. B u t h e feels th a t, w h at w ith co ncerts, recordings an d w ork in th e m ovies, h e h asn ’t tim e for re g u la r rad io w ork. E d w ard G . R obinson is all in fa v o r of reaU sm on th e rad io an d in h is p ic tu res, b u t it w as alm o st too m u ch fo r h im a t one of h is b road ca sts n o t long ago. T he sc rip t called fo r th e sound effect of a m a n being M t o v er th e h ead w ith a ch a ir. T he sound effects m a n w as to sm ash th e c h a ir a g a in st th e w all (try it so m etim e an d see if i t sounds like th e re a l th in g ). T he c h a ir slipped, M t a n a c to r o v er th e h ea d , an d p u t M m to th e H ollyw ood em erg en cy hospitaL - ODDS AND ENDS-After having U on and off the schedule since 1936, Metro has finally put “Not Too Narrow, Not Too Deep”, into production, with loan Craw ford and Clark Gable . . . Paramount is offering the public a new romantic team in “Moon Over Burman-Ih eyre Patricia Morrison and Robert Preston . . . “Vera Vague," of the Charlie McCcrAy program, ii played by Barbara Jo Allen, whom you hear as “Beth Holly’ oh “One Man’s Fam ily’ . - . Watdt for more and better (we hope) comedies on A e-screen from now on; motion picture producers are on the hunt for stories that’will help the public to forget the war.(BeleaMd by Western Newspaper Union.) Knit Practical Blouse Over One Week-End P a tte rn 6478 F o r th a t college g irl’s w ard robe! Y ou c a n k n it th is blouse o v e r a w eek-end—it’s done on h uge n eed les w ith th a t p o p u lar so ft w ool th a t’s h e a v ie r th a n can - dlew ick. T he trim m in g —e a sy em b ro id ery in tw o colors. P a tte rn 6478 co ntains d irectio n s fo r blouse an d a p la in s k irt in sizes 12-14 an d 16-18; U lustration of it an d stitch es; m a te ria ls n eeded.To o b tain th is p a tte rn sen d 15 cen ts in coins to T he Sew ing. C ircle H ousehold A rts D ep t., 259 W . F o u rtee n th S t., N ew Y ork, N . Y . P le a se w rite y o u r n a m e , add re ss an d p a tte rn n u m b e r plain ly . Honored by Gems S ev eral k in d s of g em stones h a v e b een n am ed a fte r p erso n s, am ong th e m being th e alex an d rite, w hich b e a rs th e n am e of th e R us s ia n em p ero r, A lex an d er I I (1818- 1881); th e kunzite, w hich w as n am ed a fte r th e A rn erican g em ex p e rt, D r. G eorge F . K unz (1856- 1932); an d th e m organite,- w hich w as n am ed in honor of th e A m eri c a n financier, J . P . M o rg an S r. (1837-1913).—C ollier’s. Constipation Relief That Also Pepsin -izes Stomach When constipation brings on add indigestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your stomach is probably loaded up with cer tain undigested food and your bowels don’tmove. So you need both Pepsin to help break up fast that rich undigested food in your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be sure your laxative also contains Pepsin. Take Dr. Caldwell's Laxative, because its Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that wonderful stomach-relief, while the Laxative Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the power of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of undigested protein food which may linger in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin- izing your stomach helps relieve it of such distress. At the same time this medicine wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your bowels to relieve your constipation. So see how much better you feel Dy taking the laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on that stomach discomfort, too. Even fin icky children love to taste this pleasant family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Lax* ative—Senna with Syrup Pepsin at your druggist todayl P a s t L ives O n T he tru e p a st d e p a rts not. N oth ing th a t w as w o rth y in th e p a st d e p a rts — no tru th o r goodness realized by m a n ev e r d ie s, o r c a n d ie.—C arlyle. I J SOOTHES CHAFED SKIl M o r o l in e|8| HSNOW-WHITE PETROLEUM JEUY L ib erty ’s G ift 'T is lib erty alone th a t giv es th e flow er of fleeting life its lu s tre a n d p e rfu m e; an d w e a re w eeds w ith ou t it.—C ow per. A GREAT BARGAIN VESPER TEA PURE ORANGE PEEOE 5 0 C u p s for IO C en ts Ask Your Grocer - B oth S tren g th en ed H e th a t aid s an o th er, stre n g th en s m o re th a n one.—L u c y L a r- com . FILM S Developed- Printed Any Siie .Riii _ _ S c-T 8 Expas-res wM CT Tadeiess kr.nrs • Pcsiage Fai- • DIXIE FILM SERVICE P.O.feff 438S-A Atlnta.fe.r MORE FOB TOBB M O N E Y • Read the advertisements. They are more than a selling aid for business. They form an educational system .which is making Americans the best- educated buyers In the w orld.. The advertisements are part of an economkt system which is giving Americans more for their money every day. B I G T O P BOSS1X HEAl THAT THE 'S T l PLANNING- Tq A nd h e a d il IF IT'S TRUE ,I Make so m e! TouiNS A D f Op US ANt US PLENTY GPlEP Fuati Itj MirLtji SfadUs L A L A P A L I IVVI NOT PATIENT, Ol IT’S PlNTOT NOT :: S ’M A T T E R l NW i ^ o tl MESCAL P O P — A lr m B OL ITwsu SERVKZ).! Iical Blouse I Week-End tn 6478 ege girl’s ward- knit this blouse Ind—it’s done on Ivith that popular ] heavier than can- Jim m ing-easy em- n colors. Pattern lrections for blouse J:irt in sizes 12-14 fctration of it and Iials needed. Is pattern send 15 I The Sewing Circle Is Dept., 259 W. I New York, N. Y. I your name, ad— Irn number plainly. d by Gems s of gem stones ned after persons, ing the alexandrite, e name of the Rus- Alexander II (1818- mzite, which was he American gem jrge F. Kunz (1856- morganite,- which Ihonor of the Ameri- J j. P. Morgan Sr. fcllier’s. Ltion Relief K Also es Stomach ion brings on acid indi- dizzy spells, gas, coated i, and bad breath, your >ly loaded up with cer- >d and your bowels don't id both Pepsin to help ricn undigested food in I Laxative Senna to puli ose lazy bowels. So be e also contains Pepsin. Ps Laxative, because its ps you gain that won- lief, while the Laxative bowels. Tests prove the > dissolve those lumps of a food which may linger o cause belching, gastric sa. This is how pepsin- h helps relieve it of such ame time this medicine ves and muscles in your rour constipation. So see you feel by taking the puts Pepsin to work on comfort, too. Even fin- e to taste this pleasant Juy Dr. Caldwell's Lax- h Syrup Pepsin at your Lives On ft departs not. Noth- worthy in the past truth or goodness Ian ever dies, or can HAFED SKIN LINE IlEUM JEUY lerty’s Gift I alone that gives the |ing life its lustre and we are weeds with- iAT" BARGAIN ’E R T E A JHANCjE PEXO f ; for'IO CentsYoUr Grothr : !strengthened Bs another, strength e n one.—Lucy Lar- ELMS sloped-Printed It* Roll' , 2 5 II SERVICE I 438S-* Atlanta. Ca. PR YOUR M advertisements, e than a selling ,ess. They form &1 system .Which eiicans the test ers In the world. !Sients are part Kt system which sreric&ns more nay every day. o N E T a M V-- J >• Ii : h THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N.C. Make Everything of Chic Wool: Hats, Bags, Evening Clothes By CHERIE NICHOLAS ■ pjA Y T IM E su its, d re sse s an d ^ co a ts m a d e of h an d so m e •wool fa b ric a re ta k e n fo r g ran ted , b u t h a ts, h an d b ag s, gloves an d ev en fo o tw ear fash ioned of in trig u in g w ool m a te ria ls is re a l n ew s. Shoes w ith p la id w ool s p a t to p s is th e school g irl’s p rid e th is season. T hen th e re is th is m a tte r of eve ning clothes, th e sw an k id e a is to m a k e th e long evening co a t of hand so m e w ool. Y oung g irls ad o re th e floor-length co a ts tailo red of b rig h t re d tw eed o r duvetyn, quite un- fu rre d b u t faste n in g w ith jew el o r m ilita ry b ra ss b uttons. C oats an d ca p es of han d so m e tw eed in rich- b la ck b erry to n es m a k e a p p e al to th e m o re m a tu re. A d inner gow n of a luxurious w ool is considered “ to p s." S ee th e stun ning d in n e r co stu m e to th e le ft in th e p ictu re. I t is fashioned of re d w ool in th a t th e vogue fo r re d is o u tstan d in g th is season. T he d ress h a s an enorm ously full s k irt w ith fro n t 'sh irrin g s, slit pockets an d a gold kid b elt. T he sh o rt sn u g ja c k e t h a s u n u su al buttons of c lu sters of gold colored h ea d s w ith ch ain at ta ch m en t. A tw o-strand gold bead necklace, gold ea rrin g s an d b ra c e le ts a re s m a rt jew el accessories. T h e so p h isticated young w om an to th e rig h t in th e g roup is obviously v e ry w ool-conscious in th a t h e r sw ank ja c k e t, blouse an d sk irt, h e r h a t an d h e r h an d b a g a re m a d e of high-style w ool w eaves. H e r sty lish h a t is o f fine w ool je rse y . I t h a s th e v e ry new fu ll d ra p e d snood. T he o v er-arm b a g h a s a s tra p an d trim m ing of w ool fe lt appliq u ed w ith tin y m ultico lo red w ool d iscs. N ov elties of w ool su ch a s en sem b led in th is costum e, m a d e of g a y w ool en s a re ev ery w h ere p re se n t in th e sty le p arad e . O ne of A m erica’s fo rem o st m il lin ers designed th e d in n e r h a t show n in th e in set below to th e rig h t of sh e e r w ool. I t is sp rin k led w ith seq u in s an d b o asts of a snood (m o st h a ts h av e e ith er snoods o r b u stle b ack s) m a d e of so ft feath ers. T he stunning d re ss w hich you see ce n tered in th e p ic tu re is sty led of- a sh eer w ool in th e now -so-fashion- ab le g ra p e color. I t h a s th e v e ry new an d im p o rtan t b u stle effect. R ow s o f sh irrin g m a k e th e d e ta il a t th e neckline. A huge v elv et rib bon bow an im ates h e r tin y felt pill box chapeau. N ew te x tu res, m a n y of w hich a re sh eer an d dainty, a s chiffon, m a k e w ool an all-year-round fa b ric th a t tu n es to occasion p erfectly . T hen, too, th e fascin atin g color ra n g e pro vided in m o d e m w oolens h a s a lo t to do w ith, w ool's p o p ularity. N ew “ old’’ fa b ric s lik e m elton, duvetyn, broadcloth, flannel, serg e, w ool ben- galine an d o ttom an vie w ith really new w eav es in sh eer w oolens. E v e n tw eedy a re m u ch lig h ter in w eight th a n th e y used to be. A m ong new finds in th e w ool fab ric re a lm , one of th e m o st ap p eal ing ty p es is th a t of p rin ted w ools, som e of th e m done in hand-blocked gorgeous florals, o th e rs in conven tio n al sp o rts m otifs. M etal-touched w ools an sw er th e ca ll fo r fab ric elegance also. T h ese a re effectiye fo r han d so m e evening ja c k e ts. J a c k e ts of p a ste l w ool, e ith e r sequin e m b ro id ered -o r needle-w orked w ith y a rn o r chenille, a re w orn w ith fla r in g s k irts o f crep e o r velvet.CBeleased by Western Newspaper Union.) Town Coat Y our b la ck tow n co a t, if trim m e d w ith brow n fu r, w ill c re d it you as am ong th e b e st d ressed . T h e type p ictu red h a s a d etach ab le fu r p la s tro n w ith so ftly fla rin g re v e rs of th e brow n fu r. I t goes w ithout say ing th a t w ith th is s m a rt black-w ith- brow n c o a t th e re m u s t b e a plen teous g leam in g o f gold jew elry . In th is in stan ce m ilad y resp o n d s to th e c a ll b y w earin g effective tw o- tone gold, hoop e a rrin g s a n d pin to g eth er w ith a strik in g w ide gold link b race let. H a t an d b a g a re su ed e. Flair for Fringe Is Style Message A gain a re v iv a l of frin g e is fore seen . V ery new evening d re sse s a re enh an ced w ith ro w s of frin g e deta ilin g sleev es an d neckline. A lso s m a rt - shops a re show ing b o th blouses a n d ja c k e ts th a t m a k e frin g e th e ir th em e. L ong frin g ed ta sse l ends finish off th e s tre a m e r en d s of tie girdles. W ith evening fringe-covered ja c k e ts tin y m uffs also fringe-covered w ill b e ca rrie d . Simple Styles in Shoes Is Favored N ow th a t d esig n ers of shoes h av e tu rn e d ’th e ir th o u g h ts in th e 'd ire c tio n o f sim p licity in sty lin g a n d a re w orking ou t th e id e a of low er heels, th e re is p ro sp ect of w earied w om e n enjoying sty le plu s co m fo rt in th e n ew footw ear. T h* outlook is also fo r so m e v e ry in trig u in g shoe fashions th a t m a k e th e ap p ro ach to low heels in strik in g ly c lev er w ays. F a iry T a le C olors C olors w ith fa iry ta le n am es a re th e la te s t w him sey of M ainbocher. In h is new collection h e show s a B lu eb eard blue, a C inderella pink, an d a n A laddin gold. B lack C olors N ot co n ten t w ith th e predom i n an ce of b lack in its ow n rig h t a s th e p o p u lar color fo r fa ll co stu m es, M olyneux ad d s b lack tones to m a n y of h is o th e r colors. S hades o f M aiive N am e d fo r th re e fam o u s S panish a rtis ts a re B ru y ere’s th re e new sh ad es, ea ch w ith a m a u v e c a st. T hey a re V elasquez In fa n ta P in k , G reco M auve, a n d G oya G ray. T-DOLLAR MAKERS--------- One Method Of Advancing Is to Retreat B y G E O R G E T . E A G E R T O N S o f ro c k a n d d ir t m u s t b e e x c a v a te d b e f o r e a d ia m o n d is fo u n d . I t is ju s t a s u n u s u a l to fin d a m o n g th o u s a n d s o f s a le s m e n t h a t r a r i t y a m o n g th o s e w h o s e ll— th e m a n w h o b e lie v e s in th e s e llin g p o w e r o f u n d e r s ta te m e n t. A c o ffe e s a le s m a n s ta r t le d th e r e t a il g r o c e r s o f a la r g e c ity b y b e g in n in g h is s a le s ta lk w ith th e statem e n t, “ T his is th e second b est b ran d of coffee on th e m a rk e t.” G rocers n atu rally ask ed , “ W ho m a k es th e b est b ran d of cof fe e ? ” to w h ic h th e s a le s m a n w o u l d r e p l y , “ E a c h o f m y m a n y c o m p e ti to rs m a k es th e b e st b ran d an d th ey a ll w ill tell you so.” A dm it tin g hav in g th e second b e st b ran d evidently placed h im in a position w h ere h e w as W ithout com petition an d h is sale s re su lts proved it. A la rg e baking com p an y h a s su c cessfully m a rk e te d a b ran d of b re a d in m a rk e ts long held by estab lish ed co m p etito rs. T he new b re a d w as. w ell ad v ertised in lo cal new sp ap ers. B u t u n d er in stru ctio n s fro m a p resi d e n t w ho knew th e pow er of u nderselling, sale sm en sold ea ch g ro cer one o r tw o loaves le ss th a n th e s to re ’s n o rm a l d em an d . G ro cers w e re soon telling la te afternoon cu sto m ers, “ I’m so rry w e a re a ll sold ou t of th a t b re a d .” I t w as not v ery long before sto rek e ep ers a s w ell a s cu sto m ers unconsciously th o u g h t of it a s th e fa ste st selling b ran d an d th erefo re th e b e st b read . G ro cers unconsciously recom m end ed it to cu sto m ers an d cu sto m ers soon b eg an d em anding it o f g ro cers an d its su ccess w as assu red . IM anwsiAsnc.' U P -T O -D A T E tR E V O L U T IO N 9 T SERE c o u ld b e n o m o r e c o n v in c in g -w a y f o r 't h e h is to r ia n o f th e f u tu r e to p o in t o u t th e h ig h s ta n d a r d s o f liv in g p r e v a ilin g in th is c o u n tr y th a n to c o n t r a s t to d a y ’s d e m a n d s o f th o s e w h o w a n t to o v e r th r o w o u r in s titu tio n s w ith th e d e m a n d s o f th e re v o lu tio n is ts o f o th e r e r a s in th e w o rld ’s h is to r y . T h e F ren ch m a sse s cried fo r b re a d an d failing to g e t it b rought on th e F re n c h revolution. B ut w hen a p rese n t d ay ad v o cate of revolution in th is co u n try recen tly m a d e a speech h e sa id : “ W hy should th e citizens— c t le a st 90 p e r cen t of th em —be im prisoned behind th e cruel b a rs of w a n t w hen w ithin th e ir griasp th e re a re plenty of shoes, of clothes, of m o to r c a rs , of re frig e ra to rs to w hich th e y a re en titled ?” . F ro m th is point of view it is th e salesm en w ho sell m o d ern conven iences w ho a re o u r m o st im p o rtan t n atio n al a s s e t fo r th e prevention of revolutions. W e h av e 7 p e r cen t of th e w orld’s popu latio n an d sta rtin g w ith a w ilder n ess h av e c re a te d an d ow n today m o re th a n h a lf of th e w orld’s w ealth. In te llig en t salesm an sh ip an d m a ss p roduction h av e distrib u ted this w ealth so w idely th a t strin g e n t im m ig ratio n la w s a re req u ired . T he new in d u stries c re a te d and developed in th is co u n try in th e p a s t SO y e a rs now give em ploym ent to 10,000,000 m en an d w om en. E a c h new in d u stry , w h eth er it b e auto m obiles, rad io o r ray o n rep resen ts a new id ea th a t h a s b ad to ,be first sold to th e A m erican people. I t is significant th a t In th is sa m e period foreign countries, th a t h av e no t de veloped th e ir n ew sp ap ers an d pub lications a s ad v ertisin g vehicles for th e d issem ination of new id e as about th in g s to buy, h av e n o t developed a sin g le g re a t new in d ustry. fit th e U nited S tates h a s reac h ed th e point w hen revolutionists m u st c ry for m o to r c a rs an d re frig e ra to rs to g e t atten tio n , it w ould seem th a t w e a re w ell on ou r w ay to p ro sp erity .(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.* Chemist Devises Method For Hanting Submarines V IN E Y A R D H A V EN , M ASS.—A ch e m ica l p ro cess by w hich th e co u rse an d . position of su b m arin es could b e ch ecked is being consid e re d b y th e w a r d ep a rtm en t, a c cording to D r. M ax T ru m p er, P h ila d elp h ia bio-chem ist.H e sa id th a t c e rta in g ases d is ch arg ed b y a su b m arin e w hen it ris e s to th e su rfa c e to obtain fresh supplies o f oxygen an d re c h a rg e its b a tte rie s m in g le w ith th e w ate r. A su rfa c e ship, by dropping c e rta in ch em icals w hich ca u se th e w ate r to ch an g e color on m ixing w ith ih e g ases could ch eck th e su b m arin e’s position. SA TU RD A Y N IG H T M E A T PKESm Recipe* Below. Hurry-Up Meals W hat a feeling of- satisfactio n It cre a te s to b e ab le to confront th e fam ily w ith a n a ttra c tiv e an d sub sta n tia l m e al, even a fte r a long aft ernoon of shopping o r of brid g e. I t ta k e s a b it of plan n in g to accom p lish th a t! A selection of “H urry-U p-M enus,” plan n ed to econom ize on tim e, w ith o u t sacrificing q u ality , is th e an sw e r to th a t problem . C hoose foods w hich c a n b e p re p a re d fo r cook in g se v e ra l h o u rs in ad v an ce. A c a ssero le d ish req u irin g little cooking is a w ise selection fo r th e m a in dish of y o u r m e a l; o r, if you like, p lan a b ro iler d in n e r o r “ g rill” w hich c a n b e cooked in little m o re tim e th a n it ta k e s to s e t th e ta b le. A ppetite te asin g m e als, a n d m e als th a t c a n b e p u t to g e th er in only a few m in u tes’ tim e , c a n b e b u ilt aro u n d th e se p o p u la r an d Satisfying m a in d ish es. In m o st in stan ces a ll th a t’s req u ire d to com plete th e m is b re a d , a b ev e ra g e, an d a sim p le fre sh fru it d e -se rt. H asty O ven Q aked B ean s. (S erv es 6) 1 la rg e c a n b ak ed b ean s Vt pound bacon% cu p lig h t b row n su g a r 2 tablespoons to m ato c a tsu p P o u r Vi c a n of b ak e d b ea n s ing reased bak in g cassero le. D ice % slices, b acon an d sp rin k le o v er th e b ea n s. A ddt c a t s u p , a n d th e n co v er w ith re m a in d er o f b ak ed b ean s. S prinkle w ith brow n su g a r, an d top w ith bacon strip s. B ake In h o t oven (400 d eg rees) fo r 30 m in u te s. S erv e a t once. H a sty N oodles. (S erv es 6) 1 p ack ag e noodles 8 slices bacon2 eg g s (w ell b ea ten ) % teaspoon s a lt % teaspoon p ep p e r Cook th e noodles in boiling, salted w a te r u n til te n d er. D rain , an d p la c e in a slow oven to k ee p w a rm . P a n fry. th e b acon u n til crisp , an d rem o v e fro m d rippings, an d c u t into sm a ll pieces. D rain off a ll b u t tw o tablespoons of th e b acon fa t, th en p la ce th e bacon an d noodles in th e fry in g p an . A dd -w ell-beaten eggs an d seasoning, an d cook, folding gen tly , o v er a low fire fo r abo u t five m in u tes, o r u n til th e eg g s a r t set. S erv e v e ry hot. A crisp sala d m a k e s a n ex cellen t acco m p an im en t fo r th is m e al. C o n a n d M nshroem O m elet. (S erv es 6) 1 N o. 2 c a n co rn 3 eg g s Vi teaspoon s a lt Vt teaspoon b ak in g pow der2 tablespoons d iced g re e n p ep p er 1 c a n b u tto n m u sh ro o m s '1 ’ tablespoon flour 2 tablespoons b u tte r D rain '.the co rn . S ep a ra te eggs. A dd s a lt to eg g yolks a n d b e a t u n til v e ry thick. A dd bak in g pow der t o e g g w h i t e s a n d b e a t u n ti l stifl. F o ld eg g w hites into th e eg g yo lk m ix tu re. A dd c o m an d g re e n p ep p e r an d m ix lightly. P o u r in to a h o t b u tte re d fry in g p a n an d cook slow ly u n til o m elet is brow ned a n d thoroughly cooked th rough. D ry lig h tiy in w a rm oven (300 d eg re e s). D rain m ushroom s a n d d red g e w ith flour. S au te in m e lte d 'b u tte r. P o u r m ushroom s o v er th e o m elet, fold, a n d p la ce on ho t p la tte r. S erve im m ed iately . M ixed G rffl.(S erv es S) ’ Vi pound sliced b acon I pound p o rk sau sag es 5 fre sh to m ato es I N o. 2 c a n F re n c h lim a b ean s I N o. 2 c a n pin eap p le rin g s B roil bacon an d sau sag es. H ollow out to m ato e s an d fill w ith F re n c h U m a b ea n s. T op w ith b u ttered b re a d cru m b s a n d b a k e u n til tom ato sh ells a re te n d e r b u t w ill s till ImiU th e ir sh ap e. F r y pin eap p le rin g s in butter.j. S erv e a s 'm ix e d g rill an d g arn ish w ith sp rig s o f p a rsle y . I All-in-One D in n er. 1 (S erv es 6) 6 lin k sau sag es 1 largci onion (chopped fine)2 tablespoons g re e n p ep p e r (m inced) % pound ground b ee f Vi pouAd ground p o rk I N o. 2 c a n to m a to e s ............ I N o. 2. ca n kid n ey b ea n s Vt cu p uncooked ric e % cu p h o t w a te r 1% teaspoons s a lt % teaspoon p ep p e r B row n th e sau sa g e s in a h ea v y fry in g p an . R em ove, a n d d ra in off a ll b u t % cu p ol! th e fa t. S au te thel onion an d th e g re e n p e p p e r in th e fa t. T h en a d d th e gro u n d m e a t a n d c o o k ' u n til b row n. A dd re m a in in g in g re d i e n ts;-c o v e r, a n d cook u n til th e ric e is te n d e r (ab o u t SS m in u tes). D u rin g th e la s t IS m in u tes, re h e a t th e sau sag es on to p o f th e m ix tu re. S erv e w ith a g reen sala d . G rilled H a m S andw iches. T o a st slic es o f b re a d a n d p la ce th in slices o f h a m o n u n to asted sid e o f b read . C over w ith ch eese slic es a n d sp re a d w ith p re p a re d m u sta rd . T op w ith slices o f fre s h to m ato m id g rill u n d e r b ro iler u n til c h e e s e 1 m elts. S erve w ith w a te rc re ss a n d stuffed olives. S atu rd a y N lg U M ew t P ie . 4 tablespoons onio a (m inced)I pound gro u n d b eef I c a n condensed to m ato soup % teaspoon s a lt % ' teaspoon p ep p er P u t r y fo r 2 -cru st p ie B u tte r (m elted ) Cook th e onions in a little b u tte r u n til soft. A d d th e g ro u n d b e e fa n d cook u n til b a re ly brow n. B lend in th e soup. S prihlde w ith s a lt a n d pep p er, a n d m ix . L in e p ie p a n w ith ric h p a stry , rolled to % -inch thick n ess. M oisten th e ed g es o f th e c ru s t w ith cold w ate r. FJU th e p ie sheH w ith th e m e a t m ix tu re . C over w ith th e to p c ru st, p rid e to p , b ru sh w ith m e lte d b u tte r, a n d b ak e in a 375 d eg ree oven fo r one h o u r, o r b a k e in a h o t o ven (450 d eg ree s) fo r 15. m in u tes, th e n d e c re a se h e a t to 350 d eg ree s an d b a k e 15 m in u tes lo n g er. W hat is th e first th o u g h t th a t co m es to' y o u r m in d w hen you th in k o f “ en tertain in g ” ? H a rd w ork? E x p en se? F o rm ality ? I t should m e a n none o f th ese! B a th e r, th a t w ord “ en tertain ing” sta n d s fo r frien d lin ess, an d w arm th , an d sociability. E lean o r H ow e w ill te ll you n e x t w eek how to m a k e en tertain in g ea sy . B e su re to look fo r th e artic le , “ L e t’s. AU H av e T e a.” S end fo r Copy o f T U s C eek Book.' S p arerib s w ith A pple StufiSngl B arb ecu ed S tea k , CSam C how der, an d th e old-fashioned A pple D u m p lings' th a t m e n love—you’ll find, recip es fo r th e se an d m a n y o th e r fam ily fav o rites in E lean o r H ow e’s cookbook, “F eed in g F a th e r.” T o g e t y o u r copy e f th is p o p u la r cook book now s a id te n ce n ts in coin to “ F eed in g F a th e r,’* c a re o f E le a n o r H ow e, 919 N o rth M ichigan A ve., C hicago, 1 1 1 .(Released b7 Western Newspaper Union.) Corner Shields Are BigHelpin Lenoa subjects and Scripture texts s»I ected and copyrighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by Permission. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S U N D A Y lCHOOL Lesson By HAROLD L-LUNDQUlSTt D. D. Dean of Tbe Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.(Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for November 12 H ard -to -d ea n c o rn ers c a n b e con q u ered fo r th e housew ife th ro u g h in stallatio n of su p p le m e ta l shields w hich, w hen p u sh ed in to th e an g le w ill elim in ate th e b u sin ess o f keep in g co rn e rs fre e o f d irt a n d d u st. E sp ec ially ' su ita b le fo r th e c o r n e rs of sh elv es, th e sh ield s c a n b e p ain ted o v e r to e scap e n o tice. N o n a ils o r screw s a te n e c e ssa ry fo r in stallatio n , a s th e .shields co n tain m e ta l te e th w hich d a m p to th e sur* face a n d se c u re it firm ly. PUTTING GOD’S KINGDOM FIRST USSSON TEXT—Matthew 6:19-34. GOLDEN TEXT—But seek ye first the Ungdom.of God, and bis righteousness.-* Uatttiew 6:33. SaM the Robin to t!ie Sparrow:“I should really like to know Why these anxious human beings Busb about and worry so." Said the Sparrow to the Robin:“Friend, I think that it must beThat they have no Heavenly Father Such as cares (or you and me."—Elizabeth Cheney M ost m en a re ru sh in g ab o u t m ad - (y. W orry p re sse s th e m dow n.They w onder w h eth er life is w orth w hile, w h eth er som ew here th e re is not re lie f fro m th is nerv o u s ten sio n th a t is destro y in g m ind an d body.W ell, th e re is relief a n d i t consists of blit one in g red ien t. G ive G od H is p ro p er p lace, th e first p lace in y o u r life, an d “ a ll th e se things” (M att. 5:33) w ill ta k e th e ir rig h tfu l places.- S eeking first th e kingdom of G od wiU se ttle ev e ry pro b lem abo u t m oney, ab o u t food a n d clothing, an d abo u t th e fu tu re . ; L M oney ( w . 19-24). I T h e w ord in o u r te x t is -'tre a s u res,” an d w e know th a t it h a s a b ro ad er m e an in g th a n m oney, b u t since in o u r d a y m e n seem to tra n s la te a ll v alu es into d o llars, w e feel free to u se th a t w ord “ m oney” to ex p ress o u r thoughts. T he tre a s u re is som ething A a t one h a s p laced som ew here in o rd e r _ to k ee p -it fo r him self. - I t is .n o tV i^ * ’ , v , thing g ath e re d fo r th e p urpose of u sing it to se rv e o th e rs o r to s e rv e G od, b u t som ething p u t aw ay on th e shelf to b e k e p t fo r one’s ow n en joym ent.T h e re a re tw o p la ces in w hich a m a n c a n la y u p tre a su re , on e a rth o r in h ea v en ; b u t i t is only a s he h o ard s tre a s u re on e a rth th a t h e becom es selfish. T h a t w hich h e sen d s on to h ea v en by h is devotion of life an d in serv ic e to C h rist, by his sacrificial giving to th e ca u se of C hrist, b y h is en co u rag em en t of Oiose w ho a re w itnessing fo r C h rist, all th is is done fo r th e g lory of G od . an d w ithout h ope of re w a rd . H ow g re a t w ill b e th e su rp rise o f som e w hen th e y com e to h eav en a n d find w h a t th e y h av e th u s la id u p fo r etern ity . L ay in g u p tre a su re s on th is e a rth , on th e o th e r h an d , le ad s to covet- sn ess, to en slav em en t to one’s ssessions (b e th e y g re a t o r sm a ll), an d to th e ev ils th a t follow like a tra in in th e w ake of a love o f m oney.n . F o o d a n d d o th in g ( w . 25-32). S om e w ho h av e no .g reat d esire to a m a s s ric h es a re n ev erth eless in co n sta n t an x iety ab o u t food a n d ra im e n t fo r th e m o rro w ; in fact, it is tru e o f som e w ho h av e g re a t riches, th a t th e y liv e in fe a r le st n e x t m onth o r n e x t y e a r o r te n y e a rs fro m now th e y m a y be in need. W hat is th e an sw er of th e L o rd Je su s? C onsider th e b ird s. T hey a re n o t ab le to w ork n o r a re th ey ab le to p ra y , b u t G od feeds them .: C onsider th e glory o f th e flow ers o f th e fields, fo r n o t even a k in g ca n d re ss him self in such b eau ty . “ A re y e n o t m u ch b e tte r th a n th e y ?” (v. 26). “ A s f a r a s know n, no b ird e v e r trie d to build m o re n ests th a n its neig h b o rs; no fox ev e r fre tte d b e ca u se it h a d only one hole in w hich to h id e ; no sq u irre l e v e r died of an x iety le st h e should no t la y u p enough n u ts fo r tw o w in ters in ste ad of O ne;' a n d no dog e v e r lo st a n y sleep o v e r th e fa c t th a t he did no t hav e enough bones la id asid e fo r h is declining y e a rs” (P u b lic H ealth S ervice). I 1Toper forethought is good an d rig h t fo r w e a re intelligent beings, b u t an x iety ab o u t o u r d aily n ee d s is alw ay s dishonoring to G od. III. T he F u tu re ( w . 33, 34). W hy w ill w e fre t o u rselves ab o u t th e fixture? I t is in G od’s h ands, a n d ev en if it w ere in o u r h an d s, w h at could w e do ab o u t it? E v e n tom orrow , w ith its n eed s an d its blessings, w ith its jo y a n d its sorrow s, is no t y e t h e re , a n d w hen it does com e, th e re w ill b e G od’s g ra cious provision fo r ea ch p assin g hour. U nsaved frien d , w ill you no t ta k e th e L o rd J e s u s C h rist ju s t now a s y o u r p erso n al S aviour an d le t H im solve th e p ro b lem s o f y o u r life a s yo u p u t th e kingdom o f G od first? C h ristian frien d , if you too h av e been h e a rin g b u rd en s w hich a re no t honoring to G od, w ill you no t te ll H im ju s t now , an d p u t th e m dow n a t th e fe e t of th e L ord Jesu s? “ C astin g a ll y o u r c a re upon h im ; fo r h e c a re th fo r you” (I P e t. 5 :7 ), w hich m ig h t p ro p erly b e tra n sla te d , “ C asting a ll y o u r w o rries (o r distra ctio n s) on H im ; fo r H e w orrietb ab o u t you.” B e S till T h en a n d K now O nly in th e sacred n e ss o f in w ard silen ce does th e soul tru ly m e e t th e se c re t, hiding G od. T h e stre n g th of reso lv e, w hich - a fterw a rd s sh ap es life an d m ix es itse lf w ith, action, is th e fru it o f th o se sacred , so litary m o m en ts w hen w e m e e t G od alone,—F . W . R obertson T H i DAViE EEEdRb, I i t NdVlM SEft A; i d # I I Notice Of Re-Sale! Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Uavle Countv, North Carolina, made in the special proceeding entitled, H. B. Bailey, et als, -vs- A. B Oartjer. et als., the same being a petition to sell lands for pattition, and duly filed and re corded in the office of the C erk of Superior Court for Davie County, North Corolina, the -undersigned commissioner will, on Monday the 13th dav of November. 1939. at twelve o'clock noon, at the Court house door of Davie County, in Mocksviiie, North Carolina, re-sell to the highest bidder the following de scribed real estate, to-wit: Beginning at a stake or stone; thence S. 85 degs, E 6 22 chs. to a stone; thence N. 3 degs E. 27.90 chs. to a stake or stone; thence N. 85 degs. W. 6.34 chs. to a stone: thence S. 3 degs. W. 27.90 chs. to the beginning, containing 17 3-10 acres more or ies3. For a more particul description, reference is hereby made to a divi sion of the land of. Joel Lvons. re corded in Book 12. page 527, Regis ter’s office for Davie County, North Carolina. The bidding will start at one hund red. sixtv-five ($165 00) dollars, the amount of the increased bid. TERM OF SALE: One-third cash and the balance on ninety days time with bond and approved security, or all cash at the option of the pur chaser. This, the 28th day of October. 1939. .I. B. GRANT. Commissioner. I I'LL BUY THAT SHOT- I G-UN NOW* I SOLD SOME ^ STUFF FROM TME ATTlC A WANTAD “CAW Sell “White Elephant*" , Buy What You W ant! PS THERE GO LD m YOURff^VSvv 4-1 W T i n o .w T=CELLAR? Yes, and In Your Attic Too! Turn Those Things You Don’t Want Into Money with a Want Ad The Poor Cave Man Had No Newspaper To Advertise In. But You Have 11 ® The More Folks You Tell The More Goods You Sell AwegrosHgBB ■Wanted Parachute When YOU Want gtt Good Meal,' Feed Stuff, Laying Mash or Scratch Feed It will May You To See. Us. You Can Buy Our Meal From Your Grocer. F. K. Benson & Sons Notice of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of. Davie coun ty, N. C„ made in the special pro. ceeding entitled Charles H. Sink, in dividually and as Executhr of Chris tian Conrad Myers, and others, ex oarte, the same being upon the spec ial proceeding docket of said Court, the undersigned Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, will, on the 25th day of November, 1939, at 1:30 o’ clock, p. m„ at the home of the late Christian Conrad Myers,Shady Grove Township, Davie County, N. C„ of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land Iving and being in Shady Grove Township, Davie County N. C., adjoining the lands of George Hartman and oth ers, and being more particularly de scribed as follows; Beginning at a stone in Hartman’s line; thence North 5 degrees East 16 chains to a stone; thence East 4 chs. to a stone; .thence South 16 chains 10 links to a stone; thence West 4 chains to stone in beginning, containing 6.4 acres more or less, being lot No. 5. being known at part of the late James Myers lands by division of heirs. See Deed Book 26. page 429. The undersigned Executor will al so sell at the said time and place all of the personal, property belonging to the estate of the said Christian Conrad Myers. This Die 24th day of October, 1939 CHARLES H. SINK. Executor of Christian Conrad Myer?. E. M. Whitman, Attorney. Notice of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order made and entered in the special pro ceeding entitled. Fannie C Womack, et als, vs Juanita Womack, the same oeing a petition to sell lands for par tition, the undersigned Commission er will on Monday the 13th day of November. 1939, a, twelve o’clock, noon, at the court house door in Mocksviiie Davie County. North Carolina, offer for sale to tne high est bidder for cash, the following de scribed lands: 1st Tract: Beginningat a stone. Mrs. Ijames corner, to West side of Wall Street, running with said line 150 feet to back alley; thence with said allev 50 feet to a stone; thence with the O. C. Wall Co. line 15o feet to a S’tone in Wall Street; thence with said street 50 feet to the beginning. See deed Jrom L. C. Deadmon to A. E Tatum. 2nd Tract: Tract beginning at a stone in the 0 . C. Wall Co. line, run ning South 50 feet with said line to i stone in said line; thence East 150 teet to a stone in Lefler’s and Wall’s •orner; thence North with Leflerand Wall’s line, 50 feet to a stone; thence Meat 105 feet to the beginning. See Iecd from R. L. Spry. 3rd Tract: Beginning at a atone ■n Wall Stree', West side Deadmon’s :orner; running with said line 150 feet to a stone in back al.ey; thence with said alley 60 feet to Grove St.; -hence with said street 150 feet to Wall Street; thence.with Wall Street 60 feet to the beginning. See deed from the O. C. Wall Co., to A. E. Tatum. 4th Tract:. Beginning at a stake ir stone in a branch in W. S. Green’s ne and running East with ssid W. 4. Green’s line, 9 chs. and 67 links co a stcne in said Green’B line; tbence -ioutb 4.40 chs. to a stone; thence N. 36 degs. W. 6 chs. to a stone on the tank of the branch; thence up said tranch as it meanders to the begin- ting, containing three and one-half icres more or less. Terms of Sale: Onerthird cash, he balance in sixty days with bond md approved security; title.reserved intil the purchase money is paid in ’u’.l, or all cash at the option of the mrchase'r. This the 10th day of October. 1939, J. B, GRANT, Commissioner. If8? W MR. MERCHANT ^ The EYES of THE ^ 1C 1r COMMUNITY WOULD BE ON YOUR A D - T IF IT HAD BEEN. ^Siwoe JN THlS-lSSUE « PRINTING » to Ord er at Our PRINT SHOP We trade out the bulk of our earnings in Mocks viiie and Davie County. We could spend more if we had it to spend. If You Can Use Our Services To Advantage You / • Should Do So. If WiIL Be To The Benefit Of You, Us, And The Whole Community. Read our paper and keep in touch with your county and its people, You can buy nothing for one dollar that will d o you more good and last longer than a year’s SubscriptionToTheDavieRecord. aW eAreNotBeggingrMindYout JustSoliciting Your Valued Support.” When Your Subscription Falls Due A Prompt Renewal Is Appreciated. We Thank You For Your Patronage and Support. / .-V \ , CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME. Fooeral Directors AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 164 North Main Street ' MOCKSVILLE - - N.C Executor’s Notice. Having qualified as Executor of the estate of tile late C. C. Myers, of Davie County, North Carolina, notice -is hereby given all persons having claims against the said estate, to present them to. the undersigned, on or befora Sept. 19,1940, or this notice will be plead in bar of tbeir recoveiv. AU persons- indebted to the said estate, are requested to make imme diate payment. This Sept. 19. 1939. CHAS. H. SINK. Executor, C. C. Myers Dec’d. . • Clemmons, N. C . R 2. E. M. Whitman, Atty. Notice Of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order made in the Special Proceeding, en titled. Ella Orrell and G. L. Beck, Executors of--W-. M. Williams, de- ceased, etc., -vs- Mrs. Fallie Lowery, et ux John Lowery, et als., by C. B. Hoover. Clerk of Superior Court for Davie County, the undersigned will sell publicly to the highest bidder at the Court House door of Davie Coun- :y, in Mocksviiie. N C , on Monday, the 20th day of November, 1939, at twelve o’clock Noon, the following described lands, to-wit A traet beginning at a stone; tbence N. 4 E. 25.05 to a stone; thence S. 13 degs. E. 43.27 chs, to » ttone; tbence S. 11 degs. E. 18:80 chs. to a stone; thence S. 30 W. 2 chs. to a stone; thence S. 45 W. 8 50 chs. to a stone; thehce 6.23 degs. W. 8 50 cbs. to a scone; thence N 86 W. 10 65 cbs; thence N. 4 E. 5 31 chs; thence W. 5 09 chs. tbence. N. 4 E. 17 50 chs. thence North 86 W. 27 70 chs. thence N. 19 E. 8 23 chs, thence N 65 degs, E. 10.94 chs. to the be ginning, containing 267 9-10 acres more or lesB. Save and except a- bout Ii acres- conveyed to Mrs. George Woodward. Si TERMS OF SALE; — One-third Ash; and the balance on ninety days time with bond and approved securi ty, or all cash at the option of the purchaser. , '■ This the 16th Hav of October, 1939. J. B. GRANT. Commissioner, Land posters for sale at T lia R c c e r d o ffic e . . V ADS ARE NEWS Printed In Big Type Now is the time to sub' scribe for The Record.‘I DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALERS IN BRICK and SAJID WOOD aad COAL Day Phone 194 - Night Fhone 119 Mocksviiie, N. C. . Robertsons Fertilizers COrrON! COTTON! E- Piierce Foster Buyes And Ginner Of Cotton Mocksviiie, N .C . ■ Phone 89 , Near Sanford Motor C". If Its Cotton, See Foster WKIEA WANTAD CASH IN ON STUFF IN , THE A t T i a M— IULJ T NEW MONEY FOR YOUR OLD THINGS Your Discarded Furniture, Piauo, Radio, Bicycle, Tools, Ice Box, can be sold with A WANT AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER % LETTER HOME A V d con e (Si f t-to th e I n s r Jteiid en t ortuisNEwasust THEY CANT TAKE YOUR AD 4>WHVi *t\t* ITIS ON; C A BILLBOARD RADIOS BATTERIES-SUPPLIES4 Expert Repair Service YOUNG RADIO CO. We Charge Batteries Right Depot St. Near Square Walker’s Funeral Home A M B U L A N C E Phone 48 MqcksviUe, N. C, The Lost is Found By Qur W ant A ds 'When you lose V advertise They Don't Stay Lost I § Today's * Forgotten Ahn Qint ldverti*in| Yesterday r \ ^ DAVIE COUNTY’S OLDEST NE W SPAPER-TH E PAPER THE ,PEOPLE BEAD •HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWEO BY INFLUENCE AND. UNBRIBED BY GAOi." VOLUM N X L I.MOCKS V ILLE ,-NO RTH CARO LINA, W ED N ESD A Y , NOVEMBERS 15, 1939 NUM BER 17 NEWS OF LONG AGO. Wbat Was Happening In Davie Before The New Deal UtedUp The Alphabet, Drowned The Hogs and Plowed Up The Cotton and Corn. (Davie Record, Nov. 19, 1913) Seed cotton is 5.25 today on the MocksviIIe market. F. MJ Johnson and T. A. Stone spent Wednesday in Winsten. 1 Miss Kate Doutbit is visiting re latives and friends in Statesville. I. L. Bowles, of East Spencer, was in town a day or two during court. Mrs. C. F. Meronsy and daugh ter, Miss Mary, spent Friday shop* ping in Winston. Rey. E. W. Fox will preach at Liberty church Sunday at 3 p. m. Miss Annie Grant and little Miss Rebecca Grant, spent Thursday in Winston. M issM ary Crews, of Walker- town, is the guest o f : Mtss Annie Allison. Miss Maty Sanford returned Sat urday from d delightful visit to re latives in Chattanooga. Mrs. Ross Mills, of Statesville, spent several days in town last week with her j areots, Mr. and Mrs. G. E Horn. Noah Hussey, who lives near County Line, was in town one day last week on business. Miss Margaret Meroney, a stu dent et the State Normal, Greens, boro, spent Saturday and Sunday in town with her patents.' Mrs. Rebecca Finley and daugh ter Miss Mary, of North W ilkes, boro, are visiting in this city, guests of Mr. and Mrs. A . M. McGIamery. Miss Maty Harbin, of W yo, who has beeu visiting her. father J. R. Harbin in this city for two weeks, returned home Saturday. Mrs. James Cloaninger, Moores* ville, spent several days last week with Mrs J. P. Cloaninger at Mr. and Mrs. R. L- Wilson’s. W A. Owen, who spent some time in Davidson county for his health, has returned home' much improved. Mrs. E liza. Miller, of Forsyth county, died last week at the age of 91 years. Mrs. Miller was born in Davie county in 1823 , and lived in this county until after her mar riage. Mr. Sanford Stanley of / Rock, ford and Miss Louie Wagoner, cf R. 2. were united in marriage at the court house Saturday afternoon. Rev. E; P. Bradley performing the marriage ceremony. License has beeu issued for the marriage of Miss Sarah R. .Foster and Percy Lee Cartnerof the Conn. ty Line neighborhood. E. H . Frost and Miss Annie H olton, both of R. 2, were united in marriage last Wednesd ay-in this city, Rev. J. W. Self performing the ceremony. Samuel L. Bailey and Miss Sarah Ethel Foster, both of Fork Church were married on Nov. 8 Vb, at. the home of L. M. Williams.' The cer emony was performed by Esq. J R. Williams. Mrs. Pritchard Cain has moved her millinery store from the Red Front to her home. Mrs. J. R. Mason, of Spencer, visited relatives and H ends in this county last week. License was. issued Wednesday for the marriage of C. D. Wall to Miss Susanna Hudson. ' A company composed of D. I, ReavJ?, Pink Howell Stnd ptbers have' Been organized a t . Courtney to build and install, a-'roller mill. W. F. Stewart, of Advancej ad vises us that be has a wheat'cradle w.hich" has been in use every£year for forty >ears, ardnot'a cent has been spent on it for repairs. If anv of our readers can beat this, let: them come forward.1 THE OAVlE FAIR. The recent Davie county fair was one of the best that the county has ever held. The attendance was the largest in the history of the fair, and the exhibits were better than was seen at some ot the other iairs held in tbissection. The only drawback to the fair was the riding devices on the midway. A fair is not complete without a 'merry-go- round and a Ferris Wheel for the children a n d t h e grown-ups. Through a misunderstanding at the last moment it was found to be im possible to get these riding devices for the fair, and the riding devices consisted of a chair plane, a sky ride and a tilt-a-whirl. These machines did net do as much busi ness as the other rides would have done had the management been able to secure them. The amusement company that was- to have played heie had to break the contract, and the fair management. had to get what they could find just a few days before the fair opened. We feel sure that when fair time comes around next year the children and grown-ups will find modern and up- to date riding devices on the mid wayv The fair was held just a lit tie late in the season this year, and it has been suggested -by some that the date be moved up to the se cond week in October. The weath er was fair and warm this year, but such conditions cannot always be counted on so late iu the fall. The Davie Fair has done much for the. town and county, aud we feel sure that all our citizens are in favor of a still bigger and better fair in 1940 . Davie Woman Using 61 Year Old Stove. For more than 61 years the cast iron cook stove cow used by Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Ridenhour of the Cherry Hill church section of Davie county has been performing faith ful service. If one-!could stack up all the pie?, cakes and biscuits taken from its oven, or the pans of chicken, bam, meat and other delicacies prepared on top, it would made a mountain of delicious foods. The store used bv Mrs. Riden- hour was made by Charles Noble and company of Philadelphia, a concern that has long since gone out of business. The stove was patened;iu .1871 , according to a stamped nameplate, and is' of the Cotton K ingN o. 7 ” style. It was, probably made around or 1872 and is still in good condi tion. The four “eyes” on the top provide , a good cooking surface while the oven is still solid and hakes well. The oven, does not have a crack in it, hence, no ashes fall on the pies or.cakes. T h e!fife-b ox is solid but the gates went by the board several years ago. Wood is the only fuel used. .; The 'stove was purchased on September I 19, 1878 , by H . H . Winecoffj f lfirmer of t ie Franklin section of Rowan county and the father of- Mrs. Ridenhour. Seven children, were in bis family and all the cooking, canning and preser ving for the group were done on this stove. W heu'Mrs. Ridenhour married a- bout 23, years ago, her parents gave her thestove to-set up in her new home—and 'it continued to perform well in ; its . daily duties. Three clnldreu-are in the Ridenhour fami ly- '•'%?' ,; “ And ith'at stove will give us good-set o c e for many more years/’ said Mt&fRidenbonr. “ I’m not a- bout td'jfiveit up now. It cooks and' b^kes too well.” — Salisbury Post. I L H id rp M to n a t U u* o ffic e ; Favors Republican. The decision banded - down by the North Carolina Supreme Court in RaUigh recently iu: which it said Rov Coboon, a Republican, was en titled to the office of sheriff of Tyr- rell .county, must have been sj much bitter medLine for Eastern Carolina Democrats to swallow. You know Eastern Carolina is supposed to be one of the real bul warks of the Democratic party. The people dowu that way take their voting like th<y do their drinking—straight. The party has rewarded some of these good east, ern counties for always standing by the ticket no matter who or what was on it,-b y , giving them a bunch of .ABC stores. But haok to that decision of the state’s, highest- tribunal. , Justice M. V . -Barnhill, of Rockv Mount, one of the finest jurists in the state, handed down the decision uphold ing the title of Roy Cohoon. There were several unusual aspects of the lawsuit. Itseem sth at Robert L. Swain, a Democrat, was appointed sheriff to fill a vacancy in 1937. In the 1938 election be was the Dem- ocratic candidate and Coboon was the Republican candidate. On the face of the returns Cohoon was e- lectod by a vote of 725 to 719. I he case was contested Defore the Coun ty Board of Elections and the State Board of Elections, both of wh'ch decided in favor of Cohoon. Tbe county commissioners accepted Co boon’s title to the office and he was sworn id. But although he Jost on appeal to bodies ' predominantly Democratic in their membership, Swain remain ed in physical possession of the of fice. Cohoonbrouglitaproceeding in Superior court to oust Swaio from office. Judge Leo Carr elini ina-ed all evidence concerning 25 absentee' ballots, the validity of which was challenged.;hy Swain, and found Cohoou w;as entitled to the office Swain then appealed to the Supreme Cnurt with tne result he lost again ’ ThSs isb n ecase where honesty prevailed inwall of tbe proceedings from the election, through tbe two election boards to the Superior and Supreme Courts, and so a Republi can has been accorded bis rights. But it must be a rather bitter pill for the News and Observer and Eastern Democrats to swallow.— Union Republican. WPA Strikes. (Samuel R. McKeivie) '' The succesful farther has always worked Iong hodra of the' day plus hours before down and after dark. His wife and children have labored equally hard.' ' On a boor basis with tbe tim r.o f -tbe-family charged a- gainst tbe job the reward per hour has been pitiful small, v Imagine the ! farmer’s feelings as be-contemplates the action as WPA workers and organized labor in .-.op posing the reeenely inaugurated 130 hours per month policy Xless'.than five hours perday) for WPA groupB refused to work on the new schedole, and actually-went on a strikesgainst fieir government. ; Organized labor leaders rushed to Washington, demanding restoration Of the old plan of paying the saire boar; wageHn-WPA as in private- in dustry for the'same type of 'work, and reducing , the. hours- worked' to conform to the maximum monthly WPA rates,'. The reason given was that increasing the work per month of WPA workers demoralized the private wage scale and the welfare of labor because of. the lower hour Waga-^setuji, an«f.sthe;'camgetition w 'ith p H ^ ^ e ^of greater workin'g:h'ourft,on tbe part of-IWPAiIy-- -V Why JirifeesM o**Blaek Cap •"'/ Coyering%the; head;waa- a sign: of mourning among the Israelites, Greeks,' Romans and Anglo-Saxons —hence the. blapk cap of an English judge passing a death sentence. M IC K IE S A Y S — WE CAlV TM' WANT AOS OURwMIGmv MIDGETS" BECUX TW^RE SMAlL BUT THEY GET RESULTS ^AlL TH’ BENEFITS OF OUR BtGr CIRCULATION TBB-ATBVMieHELS / Leave Us OurInitiative • (Shelby Sfar)' We believe the federal govern ment authorities who have placed tobacco quotas on' an acreage basis rather than on the old paundage standard, have taken a step in tbe right direction. Some wiil doubt the wisdom of quotas at all, but it they are to con tinue with us, acreage quotas seem far more advisable than poundage quotas. One factor alone, strong ly supports this theory, and it is the element of farmers’ initiative.-. One of the things we have dis liked about crop, quotas has been the factor that seemed to destroy initiative and larmi,ng skill rather than build them up. Down in Eas:eru North Carolina, for in stance, it has been a fair’y com. iron experience for good farmers to taise without much trouble She amounts of tobacco they could sell under tbeir existing quotas. With this situation prevailing, with the knowledge that a farmer doing a little better - job than the average grower and turning his ef fort into better yields couldn’t sell the ext 1 a yield any where, where was the incentive to be a good far- met? Where was .the wisdom of paying a great deal of attention to “ per-acre yields? Where was the urge to improve farming skill or of improving the land? In many cases, the urges simply failed to exist Tobacco authorities of the A A A believe now, according to the quot. as outlined for tobacco farmer, that !production can be kept in line.with demand by permitting a- farmer 'to plant.a ceitain number of acres, but then alii.wing him to. grow just as much tobaqco on that acreage as bis skill will per permit. : W e hope this marks the beginning of a -new trend in crop control that will spread rapidly. Lest We Forget. Will war makers whether in Wash ington or Europe consider these costs id human life of tbe last war before plunging us into another world-wide conflagration? Men mobilized ‘ Men killed -Menmissing Men wounded Men disabled Taken prisoner War made widows' Wawnade orphans 74.000.000 10 .000:000 3 000.000 19.000.000 10 .000.000 7 000.000 5.000.000 9 000,000 Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. 000000 /D r Bill Longburrying to hospital to.set boy’s broken arm—Lady look ing, at.pretty fur coat—Mrs. Daniel reading newspaper—Milton Call ex plaining why he wasn’t at football game—Mrs. Turner Grant shopping 3» cold afternoon—John LeGrand weighing Blum’s 'almanacs—Harley Sofley sbaving a tough-bearded cus tomer—-Frank Stonestrcet working on'.doctor’s car—Miss Christine' Hen dricks hoping.it would snow—John Larew Btarting to football game— Mail carrier walking around with bandaged head—Sam Jones selling meat in front of court house—Will Wright looking for Blum’s almanac —Miss Merrell telling about auto wreck on Fork road—Pearl Richard son in shelter watching sleet fall— Lucky Moore wanting to hear foot ball game broadcast—Party of. Cali fornia tourists taking dinner at local cafe—Mr. and Mrs. Everett Koontz and daughters walking around in the rain—Tom Meroney riding around in truck—Dr. Hall walking streets on cold day bareheaded and coat less—Man and woman walking up town holding hands. Letter To Drivers. Tbe following letter has been published throughout tbe country and perhaps has been in these, col umns before but at the request of readers it is again: Dear Driver:—Today, my daugh ter who is seven years old started to school as usual—she wore a dark blue dress, with a white collar—she had on black shoes—and wore b ue gloves—her cooker spaniel, whose name is Coot,- sat on the front porch and whiner! his canine be lief in the tolly of-education, as she waved goodbye, and started off to the hall of learning. V-Tonight, we talked about school —rshe told me about the girl 'who sits in front of her—the girl with the yellow cur's—and the . boy s- cross tne aisle—who makes tunny faces. She told me'about her teach, er—who has eyes in .the back of her head—and about the trees in ilie school yard, and tbe big girl who doesn’t believe in Santa Clau i. We talked about a lot of tbings—tir- inetndously v i t a l , unimportant things—and then we studied spell, ing, reading, aritbemetic—and then to bed. She's back there now—back in the :nnrsery—sound asleep, with !‘Princess Elizabeth” (that's a doll) cuddled in her right arm. Yott .guys wouldn’t hurt her, would .you?—You see, I'm her’dad- dy—when her d oll. is broken—or her "finger is cut—or her head gets bumped, I can fix it — but when sbe starts to school—when sbe walks a- cross the street—then she’s in your hands. She's a nice 'kid—she can run like a chipmunk—she likes to ride horses, and swim, and bike with me on Subday afternoons. But I 'can’t be with her all the time—I have to work, to pay for her clotber and her education—So please help me look out for her— Please drive slowly past tbe school and intersection — and please re member that children run from be hind parked cars. : - Please don’t run- over my little girl.- S EVERY DADDY. SMART MONEY H tm s MHHEltETO ■GO AFTER READING THEADS IN THIS N EW SPAPK fL The Teacher’s Respon sibility. Eleanor Roosevelt observes that: “ Teachers have'great responsibi lity, because youngsters learn as much from the personality of those they come in contact with as they do from books. Therefore* we should see that education is a round ed thing.” By that measurement then,;-it would seem that there should be a readjustment of the processes of teachcr selection. Along witbrtbe requirements for college degrees, the completion of teachers-training courses, attendance 0 n summer school*;, and other evidence of pre- pardness, tbe teacher should -.be weighed for those other and more personal qualities -of relative good ness, -that will command -the inter est as well as tbe respect of young sters who, according to Mrs. Roose velt, get some of their main lessons from teacher. Those of us who have been toJschool will agree with Mrs. Roose velt when she says that children learn a lot of things at schiol that don't come from books. We know, too, that certain teachers who meti culously followed the textbooks aud mare us follow them too, or else, failed to impart other things defi nitely more important than how to parse and calculate, spell and punc tuate or even master histoty and the languages. And we will h e. a. greeing that the teacher in*o whose hands wh shove our young hope ful ought to be of the kind whose contact will help and not hinder in the polishing process Ihat ttisuef: One who has knowledge and the a- bility to impart -it interest'ngly; who exemplifies patience, laiine*'*, goodwill, co-operation, humility, firmness. For yonngsters not only mirror these qualities, but thi-y have the sometimes disconcerting habit cf reading teacher just as they read their book. Measuring teachers bv the yard stick which Mrs. Roosevelt's obser vation suggests would !.quite tbe abandonment of our pre.»ci t habit of following tbedeuiandsqi influen tial individuals for the enipk-yanut of tliis or that teacher for personal aud selfish Teasbus. — Statesville Daily. New Dealer Indicate^* It is passing strange that cur good friends among t h e Democratic editors, especially in North Carolina, have been so silent .on the indictment of Mayor Maury Mayerick. of San Antonia, Texas, former Democratic Congressman and rabid New Deal champion. He is facing five felony counts and 10 misdemeanors, charg ing bim with conspiracy to pay poll taxes of several workers. There has been also returned in dictments aeainat three other per sons in the case. This conspiracy is a violation of the Texas law that re quires all voters to pay their own poll tax. And tbe New Dealer in Texas called it “just a political smear.” North Carolina grand jurors might take a leaf out of the books of tbdse in Texas. But what’s the use?—Ex; Milan’s Cathedral Is Large ! Tbe cathedral a t ’Milan in Italy coven 14,000 square yards and c t t Qfrwnmodate a congregation e l 4^-.' M people. It is visited annually, Pt hundreds of thousands of ViaW litH e A d v e r lM e d " A FINE GIFT PORI SOI A SUBSCRIPTION [T H IS N E W SP i _.J -.i Irv THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVTLLE. N. C. HSI n n D UIE B Y T A L B O T M U N D Y O TALBOT MUNDY-'WNU SERVICE CHAFIEB XVIII—Continued. —IS— Norwood drew rein beneath the baobab tendril. He didn’t even have to stand in the saddle to reach it. The sais rode forward and took the reins. Norwood climbed the tendril, hand over hand, swung himself on to the wall, and walked forward. As he emerged out of the shadow of the overhanging trees, he saw O’Leary looking backward toward him. Norwood extended both arms and moved them slightly up and down. That was an order to O’Leary to patrol the road. Norwood want ed no witnesses. He walked for ward along the wall, toward the kiosk, where Rundhia stood talking to Lynn. Lynn saw him first. She looked startled and Rundhia faced about— for a moment speechless. “You, is it!” he said. “What the devil do you mean, climbing walls at this hour of the night?” “I came looking for you. No, it isn’t my ghost. They missed me. Did you hear the shooting? Aren't you rather a duffer at choosing marksmen?” “I don’t know and I don’t care what you mean by that remark,” said Rundhia. “Get off the wall.” “When I’m ready. Rundhia, what have you been saying about me?” “You flatter yourself. I don’t care to talk about you.” “What did you say to the Resi dent? He mentioned that you had called to see him." “Did he? Well, my conversation with the Resident was confidential.” “So was mine, Rundhia. Say to me what you said to him.” “You may go to the devil.” Run dhia glanced backward at Lynn, then sneered at Norwood: “People who pocket bribes are not entitled to—” It wasn’t exactly a haymaker. It was a right-handed wallop without any ringside pedigree, but with all the strength, contempt and anger of a clean-living man behind it, that landed on Rundbia’s chin like a gun going off. It brought a laugh from O’Leary, who couldn’t possibly have seen it. Rundhia reeled back ward toward the garden as if pole- axed, out for the count. He did a forward knife-bend on the edge of the wall, and toppled backward into the darkness. The crash of shrub bery announced that he had fallen soft. Norwood glanced at Lynn then: “Just a minute, please.” He ran down the steps to take a look at Rundhia and dragged him out of the shrubbery on to the path. He made a rough estimate that no bones were broken and let him lie there. He returned up the steps and confronted Lynn. “I suppose you’ve killed.him.” “Oh, no.” They could see each other almost as distinctly as in full daylight. Lynn’s hair was a mass of spun gold. Her emotions, revealed on her face, her parted lips, her star tled, questioning, proud eyes drove out of Norwood’s mind the few terse phrases that he had prepared. He said suddenly, because he couldn’t think of anything else to say : “What are you doing in that make-up?” “You should have hit me,” Lynn answered. “That was a cowardly blow. You gave him no warning. Are you sure you haven’t killed him?” I “I’m afraid he’ll live. Is it true, Miss Harding, that you told Rundhia about a packet of diamonds that you saw drop from my pocket this morn ing?” “Yes.” Norwood stared at her. She.didn’t flinch. She continued speaking aft er a moment: “That is why I wrote inviting you to come and see me. I wanted to tell you what I had done, and to ex plain how I came to do it, and to apologize.” “I didn’t believe you had said it,” Norwood answered. “I came to—” Lynn interrupted: “I did say it. It was my fault. I wish you had hit me, instead of Rundhia. I would have preferred that to the humilia tion of being despised and of be ing—” Rundhia moaned on the path in the darkness below. “Captain Norwood, I must go and help Rundhia. Will you please let me pass?” “No,” said Norwood. “I will shout for servants presently, to carry him to bed.” “His nose may be bleeding!” “Serve him right. I came to tell you—” “I can’t bear to be told. I know. Ypu’re too late, Captain Norwood. I have heard that what I said has got you into serious trouble. I am ashamed of it, if that is what you want to know. If you had read my—” Norwood interrupted her. “What do you mean by too late?” “If you had answered my letter—” Lynn’s lips were trembling. She •was choking.' "Rundhia—” She couldn’t continue. She felt like crying. Suddenly she controlled herself and looked straight in his eyes: “Captain Norwood. If you please. I must go and look after Rundhia. Will you let me get by?” Norwood didn’t move: “What did you say in your letter?” he asked. “If you despised me too much to read it, why ask that now? I know you got the letter. It was sent by onfe of the Maharanee’s messengers, who came back and said he had given it to you. He said you tore it up; he saw you do it.” “Did the messenger tell you that?” “He told Rundhia.” “Oh,” said Norwood. O’Leary whistled, in the distance, somewhere between the kiosk and the palace front gate. Rundhia groaned, again. By the noise, he appeared to be helping himself to his feet by holding on to the shrub bery. Norwood called to him: “Are you all right, Rundhia?” “None of your business!” said Rundhia’s voice from the darkness. “I’m going to have you arrested.” Rundhia’s footsteps went stagger ing away in the direction of the pal ace. Norwood faced Lynn again: “Sor ry. I’m in a hurry. Would you like me to see you as far as the palace steps?” “Oh, no. Thank you.” “Well, look here: I wrote you a letter, just in case I didn’t find you. I Lynn interrupted: “I did say it.” I brought it with me. Willyou take it now and read it later? It’s quite important. Perhaps you’ll give me an answer next time we meet.” "If we do meet,” Lyim answered. 'Why should we? Good-by.” “So long; Don’t forget my letter, will you? I didn’t expect to find you alone, so I wrote what I thought you wouldn’t care to have me say in other people’s presence. I said ex actly what I think." Lynn paused on her way to the head of the steps. O’Leary whis tled again,' twice this time. "So long,” Norwood repeated. “See you as soon as I can.” Lynn spoke, abruptly: “One mo ment, Captain Norwood. You say you have said what you think of me in this letter? I said what I thought of myself and of you, In my letter to you. You tore mine up.” She tore up Norwood’s letter. She scattered its fragments into the darkness. “Good-by!” “Careful down those steps,” said Norwood. “See you later.” “Why?” Lynn answered. Norwood swung* himself down from the wall, by the baobab ten dril. He swung himself on to his horse’ and was. off at a gallop. O’Leary had whistled three times. That meant “urgent.” CHAPTER X B The horses and their riders were invisible in the shadow where the high wall curved away from the moonlight. O'Leary spoke hoarsely: “That must ha’ been a snorter! You could ha’ heard that punch half way to DelhL Who did you hit?” “Mind your own business. Why did you whistle?” “Stoddart sent a man from camp to overtake you. He gave the mes sage to me. He said there’d come a sweeper,' running like hell, from Mrs. Harding in the guesthouse. She. says she has to see you in a hurry, it’s important, and won’t you come quick?” “What’s become of the sweeper?” “He lit out. He said all’s quiet at the palace.” “Nothing else new?” “No.” Norwodd thought a second: “You go to the Residency. Ask to see the Resident in person. Give your message to . nobody else. Here—: here’s my card. Send that in. Ask' die Resident to stand by the phone and expect a call from me at any minute.” “Do I know anything, if he asks?” “No. Look here, O’Leary: I know what I’m going to do, but I don’t know what will happen. You follow the Resident to the palace. Slip in through the gate after him and watch for that Bengali doctor. Hold him, if you catch him coming out or going in. When you see me coming out of the palace, if I hold up my right hand, let him go. If I hold up both hands, turn him over to the gate guard. You’ve no police pow er, remember. So be careful.” Norwood was off at full gallop, with the sais hard after him, be fore O’Leary could answer. He drew rein at the palace gate and was delayed there for a moment or two by an argument between the commander of the gate guard and an Indian contractor, who had turned up with a motor truck for Mrs. Harding’s luggage and a car for Mrs. Harding. Because Nor wood was in uniform, the contractor appealed to him: “Sir, I am refused admission. Sir, I have an order from the American lady, Mrs. Harding, to collect her luggage and to convey her to' the station. It is a long way and a bad road. She has already paid me. I fear we shall not catch the midnight train unless—” The commander of the gate guard drew Norwood aside: “It is his hon or the Resident’s wish,” he said quietly. “No business of mine,” said Not wood. “May I leave my horses in- | side the gate?” The great gate clanged behind him. He walked to the guesthouse. Mrs. Harding was no longer recum bent on pillows on the chaise longue. She seemed even to have partially recovered from her lameness. She was seated bolt upright on one of her trunks, on the garden path, in front of the veranda door. “There’s no understanding you English,” she remarked. “Why don’t you use your title?” “I haven’t one.” “But your brother is an Earl, isn’t he? So you’re an Honorable, aren’t you?” • “That is not what you inferred at our last interview.” "Well, I didn’t know who you are. How could I? I have a letter for you, from Lynn. But the envelope was addressed to me. I have thought it over, and I suppose she must have put it into the wrong enve lope by mistake, because I have re ceived no answer to my letter to her. Here it is.” Norwood stepped on to the veran da to read it by the light from the window. “Dear Captain Norwood, “I am feeling ashamed and so sorry that I hardly know what to write. Won’t you please call as soon as you can and let me explain. I mentioned, without thinking, some thing that occurred this morning. To my horror, I have now learned that what I said has been repeated, and that the result may be—I can’t write it! Please, Captain Norwood, please believe that what I said was merely thoughtless; and that what I have heard about you I refuse to believe. I know you are an hon orable man. Please help me to undo my very bad mistake. I will be waiting for you at the palace. Won’t you call as soon as. possible? Lynn Harding." Norwood returned to Mrs. Hard ing. ’How long have you had this?” “Don’t try any of that hoity-toity arrogance on me!” she retorted. “I’m a Harding, I’ll have you under stand! I sent a messenger for you because—” Norwood was gone before she could answer. He dashed into the house, seized the phone and gave the Residency nifmber. Then he lowered his voice: “That you, sir? Norwood speak ing from the guesthouse. Can you come to the palace? . . . Yes, I know you told me to keep away. But I’m a ghost. I’m supposed to be dead . . . You say you’d heard it already? My God, they were quick! . . . No, no, I wasn’t hurt. The point is tiiis, sir: they are betting even money in the bazaar that the Maharajah won’t outlive the night. I suspect poison . . . What’s that? . . . Well, for one thing, I know for a fact that Mrs. Harding has been given poisoned toast to make her vomit . . . Well, sir, obviously to keep her away from the niece . . . Yes, yes, I have that letter. I’ve just read it . . . If I’m not too late, and I don’t think I am, I’m going in to upset someone’s apple cart. He hung up, thought for a couple of seconds and then returned to Aunty Harding. “Thanks,” he said. "Good night. I’m in a hurry.” “Stop! Come back. Captain Nor wood, I didn’t send for you to use my telephone! Here are my trunks, and I can’t get anyone to wait on me. I can’t get away and I can’t go back in! I paid a contractor in advance, and he hasn’t turned up. Please do something.” “Were you running out on Lynn?” Norwood asked her. “Captain Norwood, how dare you say that!” • “Were you?" ’ “No, I was not! I was bluffing.” “Uh-huh. Shall I ten her yeu were bluffing?” “Don’t you dare! If you know where she is, you bring her here.” Rundhia was punch drunk. AU the physical fight had been knocked out of him. He knew his nose was bleeding. He knew Lynn was in Norwood’s grasp. That Norwood had escaped death was a staggerer al most worse than the punch on the jaw. For the moment, he could think of nothing but Norwood. Like a man in the ring, who is almost out on his feet, he obeyed the instinct to deliver a foul blow. He reeled and staggered, gradu ally recovering, along a short cut toward his own palace. As his nerves and muscles recovered, so did his brain. He began to think a little clearly. By the time he reached his palace and had sent for the Bengali doctor, his nose had ceased bleeding and he needed noth ing more than a bath and a change of. clothing. There were plenty of servants to lay out clean clothes. He talked to the Bengali doctor id the bathroom, where the shower drowned the sound of their voices. Even so, he spoke English, lest one of the valets should overhear. “Now listen. Don’t answer me, or PU have you hanged. Damn you, I mean that. I’m desperate. Thanks to your letting me down in a pinch and refusing to have anything to do with it, the attack on Norwood was bungled.” “He is alive? I heard they killed him.” "Do I look as if they’d killed him! He’s on the rampage. I’m -going to get him.” “Careful!” “Watch your own step. If you fail to kill your man tonight, up goes your number! Is the old fool mull ing over his stamp albums?” “Yes. His Highness is studying stamps. He has with him that stamp salesman from Lahore, who can speak nothing but Punjabi, but can swindle without speaking at alL” (TO BE CONTINUED) Government Scientists Record Speed of Bird Flight The swiftest birdflight ever re corded accurately is in the neigh borhood of 175 miles an hour. Ordi nary, unhurried flight averages from 20 to 40 miles an hour, according to the species. The United States Department of Agriculture has compiled a com plete record of the measured flight speeds of North American and Eu ropean birds. The swiftest denizen of the skies, according to this com pendium, is the California duck hawk whose speed, measured with a stop watch from an airplane, was found to be between 175 and 180 miles an hour. The eagle is rela tively slow. The Department of Agri culture compiler, found one rather questionable recorded speed of 120 miles for a golden eagle. Only two' entirely trustworthy records of eagle speeds were found—one of 30 and tho other of 60 miles. Bird speed records more than 20 years old are worthless, the report explains, because any possible means of measurement was quite in accurate and some fantastic esti mates were made, ranging up to 5 or 6 miles a minute. Most such guesses, and by far the most trust worthy, were made by hunters. A hunter, aiming at a bjrd in flight, had to make three subconscious esti mates—the distance of his target, the speed at which it was moving in order that he would know how far ahead to aim and the speed of his bullet. The skilled marksman learned to make allowance for these three factors instinctively, but never coidd explain satisfactorily how he did it. Only one of these elements of marksmanship, the velocity of the bullet, could be measured ac curately. But, says the report, “it has been found recently by experiment that there is an appreciable loss of time in pulling the trigger. Against the sky it is practically impossible to gauge the exact distance of the bird, and the distance it. travels-may be exaggerated because momentum will cany a shot bird some distance before it falls. An overestimate of a very few feet in these figures will result in the computation of very high speeds for game birds. Gun ners have been prone to attribute speeds of 100 or even 150 miles an hour to ducks.” Lost Village Found Drouth dried up an artificial lake near Chambon, France, revealing a lost Village on the bed. A N EXTREMELY new and very becoming ,dress fashion is yours in pattern No. 1848. It has the smart double swing skirt, is cut on a true princess line that whittles down your waist, and of fers a choice of two necklines— one with a tailored collar, the other high and collarless. Also, you can make it with long or short sleeves. The row of buttons down the front is very Victorian—there fore much in fashion. Velveteen, flat crepe, wool broadcloth and faille are smart materials for this. Sports Two-Piecer for Girls. If there’s a lively school-girl in your family, who loves to roller skate, ice skate and generally frolic around outdoors, you can make h er. feel very happy and look very cute, by means of No. 1825. It’s an excellent style for the classroofn, too. Has a very full skirt, a nipped-in jacket blouse, and it’s finished with cuffs and becoming little collar. Vel veteen, wool plaid, corduroy and blanket wool are good fabrics for this. The Patterns. No. 1848 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 36 or 39-inch fabric, with long sleeves. With Strange Facts » Odd Court Rulings I Freaks for Speed I Minnows, Whales During recent years, courts of law in various states have held that railroad cars are buildings, asses are cattle, bicycles are ani mals, dentists are mechanics, death by lynching is an accident and baseball is labor, not a game or sport. Even the Supreme court of the United States ruled in 1931 that the airplane is not a self-pro pelled vehicle. Many characters in animated- movie cartoons are drawn with W y three fingers and a thumb on each hand because the omission is rarely observed and saves con siderable time and labor. There are approximately; 700 submarines in commission in the navies of the world today, ranging. in size from the giant French “Surcouf” with a surface displace ment of 2,880 tons down to the lit tle Finnish “Saukko” of only 99 tons.—Collier’s. PARTH ENT short sleeves, 4% yards; % yard contrasting for collar. No. 1825 is designed for sizes 8 , 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. Size 10 requires I yard of 54-inch mate rial for jacket-blouse with long sleeves; IVi yards for skirt; Yz yard for contrasting collar and cuffs; 1% yards 39-inch material to line jacket-blouse; 2 yards to line skirt. New Fall Pattern Book. Special extra! Send today for your new Fall Pattern Book with a stunning selection of a hundred perfect patterns for all shapes and sizes. Save money and know the keen satisfaction of personally planned, perfectly fitted garments by making your own frocks with these smart, carefully cut designs. You can’t go wrong—every pat tern includes a step-by-step sew chart to guide beginners. Price of Pattern Book, 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, HI. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each.(BeU Syndicate—WNU Service.) Hnr:CO LD S DUE 1 0 Need More Than “Salve” To Quickly Relieve DISTRESS I Before you go to bed rub your throat, cheat and back with warming, sooth*—Muaterole. You get such QUICK reli< . because Musterote is MORE than “just a salve.” Ifs a marvelous stimulating ‘•counter-irritant” which helps break up local congestion and pain due to colds. 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'EM - DEy’RE JUST PLAIN DUMB .PAT'S ALL!!, By ED WHEELAN O-K., BENNY. VDU GO 13 TAKE A LITTLE WALK / I AND I’LL GO IN AND ) l ( ? ATTEND To THE /!!!/M A . FREAKS !! |V\VM \t«v.«ypiA/#.» __ '-EDVfflEEiAN',.^ r — 4 LALA PALOOZA —An Expensive W ork of A rt By RUBE GOLDBERG PINTO IS TAKEN TO TH E X-BAY LABORATORY FOR SOME PICTURES TURN ON THE X-T-3/* JUiCE OHt DEARtNWHAT OOTHE PICTURES SHOW? THE OOCTORS WILU HAVE TOOETERMtNE THAT* MADAM THE m r I DIAGNOSETONSILS ■ THEM ASLOOK ■ THE FIVE-VERY I HUNOREDEXPENSIVE I OOLLARb TO l VARIETY/I me Mm I THINK WE SHOULD ADD TEN PER CENT ON ACCOUNT OFCHRtSTMAS THE ADENOIDS SHOULD DOUBLE THE BILL Frank Jay Markey Syndicate, Iae StMATTER POP— Okayf Resume the W ar! B y C . M o P A Y N E S T o fP T+J& rR A cT er* T A U T rS T o fP T +h£_ I W Aia =FiTTZ -A SEjSC Ut-Th. rP o rP i s S a v i h ' S O M eT -4 'NG T o o m uch — n o i 8>£I Can't 4 fe a-k M VSELPTALif IL L LIS^Ets/ A K T e u l "/a v/+)a VA hA 'i/pcrpl K-A y T E L L A is I Y, Bell Syndicate.—wnu Service. M ESCAL IK E Br S. L. HUNTLEY To Them That Hath * Z y r S t* /'. vuH SOr vo-R KlSRvie OOMiW iROU nD h ere ASKIM' PER VOlR BAseBAU— TMET BALL DURKJ MISH KILLED ONE OF TUT VOUNG'UNS T AlNrr NO U S E A-GTTlM' RUCKSH OS NOW, C teM -A F T E R / ' ' VLM GOT SEVEN)KlDS AN)’ w e AIN'T , GOT BUT OMEj BOSE BALL.1 Lolly Gaos Q i TWEM MAiVS >OP— Too Much Effort W H Y d o n 't y o u l ik e - it?®l MHOTTOjJCMj 187 U /os wot tqhch A W E L L j FANCY HAVING TO CLIMB OVER p o pes Z-T j C I PO MOT TqucmI B y J . M I L L A R W A T T -WHEN YOU WANT TD SIT The B dl Syndicate, Inc.—WNU Service DOWN Cheerful N ew s m s PROBLEM SOUP COMFORT By GLUYAS'WILLIAMS POLISH KFOGEtS STARVING THOUSANKOPTOtN AHP OHIlPeEN HOME LESS IN FOUND DISEASE NOW 1AKIN6 ITS Toll IN WAR-TORN FOLANP WARSAW A CITY OF RUINS ANP PESOLATON NAllS ANP REPS PIVlPE IOLANP Little Johnny should have been hard at his homework. As it was, his father found him listening to the wireless and sucking his pencil. “Well,” asked father, “why don’t you get on with your work?” “I can’t, Dad,” came Johnny’s re ply, “until I’ve heard the latest news bulletin. You see, I’ve got to draw a map of Europe.” * DB VOlHrt OH JOFA WtA 6M0 BOOK MID HtFOSAR BEails-ItieefrtaiMiipM-IItEHEOKIMtStIBnP nowneft!tvmit>Mirt60FSouv<oMf!>ltf Miiie he kehbuinsk nuows RAINS AND COLP A PD T O -M ISE R y O f FPLES MV,MV7IHOPE- WESTAVOlir OF THEIR WAP LOMMUN Ity CHEST FUNP PRfVE IS 60IN6 OVER THE TOP* Ham And Eggs When the well-known actor and producer retirei!, the son carried on with some of his father’s honors. One evening in front of the father’s theater an old friend of the family, affectionately patted the son on the back and remarked: “A chip off the old block, eh?” To which the critic groaned: “You mean a slice of the old ham!” I lK f J L I UCBMWK, fWRtiumNe'-ftRfla BEfFER- Ml» Bis- CCFJ tROtttH VMEHTdHI-FMttlOHS JEfflK HKttlI OlrfCWlIBBam HUB MHEair OfTtCKEfl BOOH AKV OKEFIUM JUVIH6 1BFlMRj He’s in a Harry Mrs. Crabshaw—You’re becoming absolutely unbearable. It will soon, be impossible to live with you. Crabshaw (hopefully)—How soon? IiFJtOWrtmirt ton REI05, FEEUHBrtRwlHVlW- OVBIIF REHPW6, IWVlFINaBSME WJWMIKS EKIlY-toSEEVfHIrttsSIioartSWWMM BKKBIWERtHSMONS. SEeWW RESf SeU SyndBrBt*.-WKU 8mi«*. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BABY CHICKS CHICKS! fisrttffiz a s*VW VIIVo ciJjk iDQ postpaid Seod Uoney Order for Prompt Shipment. LtM DeftMrv GuarantiedATlAS CO., 26S1 ChouteaiitSt. LooistIIlOb HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS O Freshening Celery. — Celery which has become wilted may be freshened by standing in a jug of water to which a pinch of bicar bonate of soda has been added. * * . Variety in Fruits.—If your fam ily likes variety, serve stewed prunes, apricots, fresh berries, ap plesauce, fruit juices and fresh fruits. A whole week can be cov ered without repetition. . . . Removing Candle Grease.—To remove candle grease from black suede shoes, take a piece of brown paper, cover the candle grease with it, then hold a warm iron over it. The spot will soon be absorbed.* * • For Ink Stains.—Immerse an ink-stained handkerchief in milk immediately after it has been stained, allow it to soak and the ink will disappear. . . . Removing Scorch.—To remove scorch from linen place between two dampened Turkish towels and press with a hot iron. The scorch . stains will go into the towel and can be easily washed out. . . . To Thicken Frosting.—If in making frosting you add too much water to the confectioner’s sugar, instead of adding more sugar add flour to thicken the frosting. It will be impossible to detect the taste of flour.* * * Removing Mildew. — Mildew m ay be successfully removed by using kerosene. Saturate the gar ment with it thoroughly, roll it up and put it away for 24 hours. Wash in warm suds and all trace of mil dew will be gone. LOST YOUR PEP? Hera fs Amazing ReHef of ComHttens Due to Slugglsb Bowels , If you think aU laxatives ' act alike, just try this_____________________ all vegetable laxative.So mild, thorough, refreshing, invigorating. Dependable relief from sick headaches, bilious spells, tired feeling when associated with constipation. IiniIiMNBi BSmL Set a 25c box of NR from yonr VllUUHU HISH druggist. Make the test—then If not delighted, return the box to us. We win refund the purchase price. That** fair, m v .i GetNRTahletstoday. Proud Hearts What hypocritites we seem to be whenever we talk of ourselves! —Our words sound so humble while otw hearts are so proud.— Hare. Relieve th e discom fort w ith rSimiile\ ' / » « « » * « a s p ir in . .—ySt.Joseph. SENUIHE p u r e a s p i r i n -V-—~— ^ -Learning and Thought Learning without thought is la bor lost; thought without learning is perilous.—Confucius. CATCH COLD EASILY? i Greenville, S. C.—T. Im ,Key, 401 Easley Bridge -Road, says: "I was suffering ' from. a. weakened condition, my appetite was poor, and I Had one cold after another. Dr. Pierce’s ■ Golden Medical Discovery soon had me eating regularly and feeling stronger .' and better In every way.”Btiy it in liquid or tablets from your druggist today.See now vigorous and how much stronger * ’■ yon fed after using this tonic. WNU—7 Evil Suspicion ; To suspect a friend is worse than to be deceived by Kim.—La Hochefoucauld. Today’s popularity of Doan's Fills, after many years of worldwide use, surely must be accepted as evidence of satisfactory use. And favorable public opinion supports that of the able physicianswho test the value of Doan's under exacting . . . laboratory conditions... - Inese physicians, too, approve every word of advertising you read, the objective of which is oiuy to recommend Doan's PUts as * good diuretic treatment for disorder of the. kidney function and for relief of the pain and worry it causes.I i more people were aware of how the kidneys must constantly.-,remove waste that canftot stay In the blood without In- jury to health, there would be better un derstanding of why the whole body suffers when kidneys lag, shd diuretic medica tion would be more often employed. Burning, scanty-^r too frequent urina*P tion sometimes warn of disturbed lddney * function. You may suffer nagging backache* persistent lieadache* attacks of* dizziness, ' getting up nights, swelling, puffi- ness under the eyes—feel weak, nervous, tyed out._. i Doan's Pitts; I t Is'better to rely on n medicine that has won world-wide acclaim than on something less favorably known. Ask your neighbor/ DOANS Pl H S f "45—39 I • S I X, \ saasasGassss THE DAVlE RECORD, UOGKSVlLLEi N* C v NOVEMBER 15. 1939. THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD Editor. Kansas Visitor Here. TELEPHONE Entered at the PostofiSce in Mocks- vllle, N . C.. as Second-class. Mail m atter, March 3,1903. Nel;on Mock, sales manager for The New Era Milling Co. of Ar- j ; kansas City,-Kansas, was a Mocks- jville visitor Wednesday. Mr. Mock was trying to get some facts about Jurors For December Court. The following jnrorswere drawn last week tor the Decemberterm of Davie Superior Couit which con veues in this city on Monday, Dec. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE I I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - * 50 Better do your Christmas shop, ping early. The president may change the date to some time next week. the Mcck family in Davie. H s 4, b, with his Honor, Judge Frank Governor Clyde Hoev has issued a Thanksgiving proclamation call ing on the people of North Caro Iina to cease from their labors' on Thursday, Nov. 30th, and give thanks to God for the many bless ings he has bestowed upon ns dur ing the past year. The Governor 'didn’t mention the uame of Presi dent Roosevelt, nor his new thanks giving day in his proclamation. When Is Thanksgiving? Seems that President Roosevelt has got this country in a confused state. Folks are wondering when th ey will eat the turkev and the hash. The President decided a month or two ago that he wanted to change the date of Thanks giving and set it a week ahead. The present date was designated l>y President Abe Lincoln some 75 years ago, and for all these years the last Thursday in November has been observed as Thanksgiving day. Ssem stbat under the New Deal a change had to be made. The result is tbat 23 states will ob serve the New Deal date, whtch is November 23rd, and 23 states will observe the Lincoln date, which is Nov. 30th this year. Two states, Texas and Colorado, will observe two Thanksgiving dates this year. North Carolina is one of the 23 states that will observe the date set by Lincoln, Nov. 30 th. Rural Carriers Meet. . The. Piedmont Rural Letter Car riers held their semi-annual meet ing at Mt. Pleasant last Wednes day evening. A big turkey dinner was enjoyed by the let.er carriers and their families, after which a business session was held. About 200 were ptesent for the meeting. Those attending from Mock'sville were Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Ander- .seu, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Meroney and J, Arthur Dauiel. This dis trict is composed of four counties, Davie, Rowan, Cabarrus and Stan . ley. It is needless to say that those .present enjoyed the meeting, in eluding the turkey dinner. Big Cotton Yield. " Sheriff SheekB ow denis a good farmer, a good bffirer and a truth ful man. This is preliminary to saying that Sbeek had 5.4 acres in cotton-; this year on bis farm near Advance. This cotton averaged 1 ,500. pounds per acre the first picking. One acre of this cotton grown- by Herman Orrell, produced 1,914 pounds from the first picking. So far as we know, this is the big gest yield per acre in Davie coun y. Mr. Bowden is no relation to a man named Carter, who once grew so many oats that he couldn't find room to shock them in the field on which,thev grew. Couuty Federation To Meet At Pino. The County Federation of Home Clubs, will be held Saturday after noon, Novsmber 18 ;' at 2 o'clock, p. m , in the Piho Community Grange Hall with Pino, Clarks ville, and Cana Clubs hostesses. A receiving line made up of the district and county officers is a so cial event which will precede the meeting. Mrs: W. C. Cooper, of Mocks ville. County Chairman will preside during the meeting. Miss Eliza- be h Miller ard Mrs. F. H . Babn- son of the Pino Club will be in charge of the music. Henry Jarvis, .of Advance, R 1, and Nathan Jarvis, of Mock‘ville, R 3 w-re in town last, week on business. % giaodfather, A.-bury Mork. mi grated from Davie to Kansas about 78 years ago, and died there last year at the advanced- age of 92 yrars. Previous to the Civil War, Mocksville was known as “ Mock’s Old Field,” a member of the Mock family, possibly the father of As- burv Mock, having deeded to the county of Davie, a number of acres of land oiuwhich to build a court house and jail. The county com mission! rs sold off most of this land to secure funds to build-the court bouse and jail, retaining about one acre for this purpose. The court house was erected in 1836 37, short Iy after Davie county was fottued from a part of Rowan. Mr. Mock went from MocksviIle to Winston Salem to see P. W. Mock, one of that city’s oldest citizens, and tben on to Durham and other Eastern Carolina towns.- We were glad to meet this young man, an:T extend an invitation to him to visit our town often Fork News Notes. Mrs. Mamie B. Carter, of Wiostoo-Salem spent the week end here with relatives recently. Mrs. A. M. Foster, who has been suffer ing with rheumatism is better. Mr. 8 nd Mrs. James Johnston, of Moor esville, spent Sunday afternoon here with relatives. Wilburn Bailey has been spending two weeks with his sister Mrs. Jack Deese. of Thomasville. Z V. Johnston spent Saturday after nccn at the bedside of hiaannt MissLanra Heneycnt t. of Statesville, who suffered a stroke of paralysis. Mrs. W. Henry Davis has been suffering with acute neuralgia. Mr and Mrs. Irvin Bailey have moved into their new residence, and Mr. and MrL Harold Hamilton have moved into the home vacated by Mr. and Mrs Baiiey. “ Mrs Z. V: Johnston who has been hav ing severe bead neuralgia fcr several weeks, went to Winston-Salem. Friday to take treatment from a specialist. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Hager and family also Mr and Mrs. C. E. Hager and family of Statesville, R. I. Sunday afternoon here with Mr. and Mrs Z V. Johnston. Armstiong- ot. Trov, presiding: CalahaIiI—L. M. Latham, T. A. VanZart, W . M. Green, R. D. Stroud. Fulton—tGray Sheet=, C. W . Minor, Heury Douthit, G. K. Husser. Jerusalem—C. H. Grimes, M. A. Carpenter, W. A. Kirk, W. A. Kilts. Mocksville—R. M. Woodruff, E. G. Hendricks, J. C. Dwiggins. Shadv Grove—Noah Robertson, A. E. Bowen, Charlie Essex. Ben Anderson, of Mocksville, R. 1, thinks he is the youngest grand father in Davie county, Ben is 39 years, old and has two grandchild ren, the oldest one being 2 H years of age. If we are not mistaken, Ben is offering a Christmas present to any grandiatber in the county who is younger. S e S S 8 \ SnperiorCnnrt Notice of Re-SaIe of Land. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain special proceeding in the Superior Court of Davie Countv entitled, Wal ter Smith, et al vs Billy Williams, et al. the undersigned Commistioner therein duly appointed, will, on Sat urday, the 25th day of November, 1989, at the hour of 12 o’clock, M. at the. conrt house door in Mocks ville, N. C.. expose the following tract of land in Davie County, N. C. to public 4th re-sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, to wit: Beginningat a stake, center of Highway 158 running S 5 W. 30 20 chs to a stone, tbence S. 85 E. 14 20 chs. to a stone, thence N 4 E. 7.92 chs. to an iron, thence N. 86 W. 6.23 chs. to a stone, thence N. 2 E. 3.20 chs. to a stone; thence E. I OO ch. to a stone, thence N. 4 E 24 chs. to cen ter Highway 158, thence S 70 W. with aaid highway 9.35 chs. to the beginning, containing 33 acres, more or less This the 8 h day of Nov. 1939. ROBERT SMITH. Commissioner. Mocksville. N C , Phone 42. B. C. BROCK, Attorney. Mocksville, N.- C.; Phone 151. A. E. Turrentine. P whib" The Mocksville high school foot ball team met tbe Spencer high school team on the Spencer- field Friday afternoon. Our boys were defeated by the close margin of 8 to 6 Here's hoping we do belter next time. A. E.. Turrentine, 62, died Friday at bis home here. He suffered a stroke of paralysis last-week. The.-funeral wsb held Sunday afternoon a t.2:30 o’clock at Oak Rrove Methodist Cnurch, Rev. E. 1 . M. Avett and Rev. A. W. Lynch con- XT "! 11 , Ple suPPer0 at ductyd the services. Burial was in 0 s Ark school house next Sat- the cburch graveyard. ^orday night, Nov. i8tb, beginning Surviving are the widow; three a t'7 o’clock. Tbe proceedsgo for daughter, Mrs Alice Bowers, of tbe beneft of building a new cburcb Cooleemee1 and ,Misses Roth and st Ijames Cross Roads. Everyone Miry Turrentine of the hcm i. one js jnvited son, Clarence Turrentine, ot Damas- Va ; one sister, Mrs. Alice Shaw, o f. Wins’on-Salem; and one" brother, ' Sam Turrentine, of Greer, S C. Notice T,o Creditors. Haviatf qualified as Adrniniatrator' of the estate of Janies M. Stroud4 deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons hold* ing claims flgainst the estate of said de ceased, to present tbe same to ’be under signed. properly verified, at Mocksville. North Carolina. Route No. 4. on or before tbe 13th day of November. 1940, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery*All persons indebted to said estate will please make settlement without delay. This 4 the 13tb day of November4 1939. PAUL H STROUD4 Admr c ofjames M4 Stroud4 deceased* By GKANi & GRANT4 Attys. BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS SEE US FOR THE BEST FIANO VALUE We Have a Large Stock Of The Newest Model SPINET PIANOS Buy now from our present stock and save money with our present Lnw Prices. We can’t replace our present low prices. WHEN YOU BUY FROM US YOU ARE DEALING WITH YOUK OLD FRIENDS Buy With Confidence at Jesse G. Bowen’s—In Business in Win ston-Salem 37 Years—More Than 14 Models to Choose From .—A Liberal Trade in Allowance-Terms to Suit Your C .nvenience. REAL BARGAINS IN -USED PIANOS- We have a number of good Uaed Pianoi at special low prices- Terms to Suit Jesse G. Bowen Music Co. WINSTON SALEW4 N. C217 WEST FIFTH ST $it■ H■ it■ *iIit-H-H'H iI* Ii I i Get Ready Eor THANKSGIVING!’ r * ’ „ '.'A ’ • - ■ We Have Everything You Will Need For This Happy Occasion, In The Grocery Line. Fresh Line Canned Fruits Ali Kinds Fcuits And Vegetablei, Big Line Fruit Cake Materials. Everything You Need For The Thanksgiving ; Dinner Except The Turkey. C> G Sanford Sons Co. wEverylIiiDg For Everybody’1 Phcne 7 'Mocksville, N C. Notice Of Re-Sale. Under and by virtue of .an order of re-sale made in the civil action en titled. Bank of: Davie, et al -vs- C H. Tomlinson, et al. the undersigned Commisioner. will re Bell the lands mentioned and described in tbe Com plaint in tbiB cause on Mondav. the 27th day of November, 1939, at twelve o’clock noon at the Court house door in Mocksville. Davie County. North Carolina, to the high est bidder, the following described lands: Beginning at a Sycamore on North Bank of Hunting Creek. S a l l i e Smith’s corner and running N. 11 degs. £ . 15 chs. to a Bweet gum; thence S. 70 degs E. 5 i chs. to an elm; thence N 38 degs. E. 11 chs. to a stone; thence N. 22 degs E. 13 chs. to a stone; thence S. 75 degs. E. 3 chs and 30 links to a stune; near T N. Anderson’s bare; thence N . 7 degs, E .7 chs. and 73 links to a hick ory; thence S. 86 links to a post oak; thence N. 7 chs. to a st< ne near a branch thence N. 72 degs. W. 9 chs and 65 links to stone in the line .of Dr. J Anderson’s land; thence S. 25f degs. W. 19 chs. and 60 links to s Sycamore in the pasture; thence S 82 degs. W. 6 chs. and 20 links to a sweet gum; thence S. 214 degs W. 7 chs. and 23 links to a stake on the! ditch; thence S 78 degs. W. with ditch 2 chs and I link to a stone; thence S. 11 dears. W 14 chs. and 94 links to a wiilow; thence S. U degs. W. I chi to Hunting Creek; thence down said creek with its meander- ings to the beginning, containing seventy (70) acres more nr less. See, deed recorded is Bonk 19, page 617 in the office of the Register of Deeds! for Davie County, North Carolina. The bidding will start at. the price! of tbe increased bid of $1575 00 . I TERMS CF SALE: One third cash’ and balance on sixty days time with) bond and approved security, or all- cash at the option of the purchaser.! Title reserved until the purchase money is paid in full. This, the IOth day tf November, J. B. GRANT, Commisaioner. MEN . . . REMEMER: You Always Save At SANFORD’S TO LOOK YOUR BEST WEAR A SANFORD SUIT Come In And See These New Suits For FaIL Our Stock Is Complete In Its Range Of. Styles, Models and Sizes—So You’re Sure To Fird Suits You Like That Fit You. And They’re AU Moderately Priced. $14-95 $22 50 Ynnng Men's s u i rs $13.95 llny’s SUITS. 3-Piece $8.95 See Our Selections Of Topcoats That Are The Neweat Material Patterns In Solid Colon, Stripes and fweeds. They’re “Tope” In Economy, Too. $1495 - $17 50 North Carolina ( In The Suoerior DavieCounty I Court Notice of Sale of Land. Under and by virtue of the power and authority, contained in a certain decree in a certain special proceed ing in the Superior Court of Davie County entitled W. S. Phelps vs Charlie Lee Phelps, et al. the under signed commissioner, therein duly appointed, will, on Saturday. the9ch day of December, 1939. at the hour of 12:00 o’clcck, M . at the conrt house door in Mocksville. N. C., ex pose tbe following tracts of land in Davie County, North Carolina to public sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, to* wit: Begjnning at a stone. W S. Phelns corner and rnnning S. I West 24.53 cbs to a stone on North bank nf branch. C. H. Jarvis corner and.Ma rion Essex line or cornei; thence S. 78 5.E. 2 48 cbs to a stone os N sine of branch and Marion E=s?x corner; thence N. 83 E 4.52 chs. to a Btore at fork of branch, C H.. Jar vis line and' Marion Essex corner, tbence N. 31.5 East 3 61 chs. to a stone in fork of branch and W. S. Phelps corner in C. H. Jarvis line; thence N., 31.0 West 2.76 cbs. to 8 white OBk, corner of W-. S. Phelps; rhence North 5 West 18.05 chs. to W. S. Phelps corner; thence N. 87 5 W1 6.35 chs. to the leginning. con taining 16 35 100 acres, more or less This tbe 8 th day of Nov., 1939. B. C. BROCK, Commissioner. Mocksville, N. C., Phone151. Men’s Dress Shirts Newest Colors. In Solids, Stripes and Checks - - 98c, $1.48 Arrow Shirts . $2.00 Men’s Hats Newest Styles in Mixtures ani Solid Colors $1.49 to $3.50 Boy’s Hats , . 98c Accessories For Men 48c Cheney Ties . 98c $5.95-$6.95 Boys $1.9§ up $1.49 to $295 Ties, Leather Jackets, Mens Melton Jackets, Men’s All-Wool $3.95 Mens Dress Pants Hanes Underwear Mediumweight - 79c Heavyweight 89c C. C. Sanford Sons Co. “EVERYTHING FOR EVERYBODY’ Phone 7 Mocksville, N. C. ■ a GOOD COAL Your fuel This Winter Depend A Lot On Whether You’re Getting A Coal Which Has A High Heat Content, We Invite You To Let Us Recommend A Fnei Suited To Your Needs. A Fuel Which Will Cut Down Bills A : Fuel Delivered:r ‘ ^ v ' Mocksville Ice & Fnel Co. Day Pbone 116 Night Phone 187 THE DAI Largest Ciij Davie Coi NEWS AF Miss Ruth I end with her i per. Mr. and Md Wednesday in) ping. - Will BeardJ was in town ness. Mr. and Ml Winston-SaletJ vis'tors Thutsl Mrs. C. F. I Sarah Metonel Salisbuty shod Mrs. Georl Friday in WinI of Mrs. R G.I Miss PauIinI accepted a pd with C. C. Sal Miss Virgin! day in Winstd ber aunt, Mrsl Miss Beltie spent the we gnest of Miss j FOR SA LI shire pigs. ‘ J. FR ) D. R. Stroul to his home la ter his friehdsl Mrs. W . F .l ing some titnel Mrs. Alex K o| Mrs. Maudl spent the weed guest of her st| lick. FOR RENT room house as No. 158, near I W | Mr and Ml and children,! spent tbe weelf Mrs. Hasten 1 J. A. CraveJ Jr., stydtnts CbaDel H ill, s | town with lion Rev. A. WJ at Hardison's | Sunday, Salen Center at 7 p. I cordially iuvitl The mat,}’ fn Sprinkle, who) pital recoverinl will be glad tol ting along nica J. W. CartDl and Frank Lail ot tbe editor f| kins which good old pump Call at our! our line of Mel chines and Phil YOLI Marshall Boi good tobacco f^ load of rzoo Salem last wq him S506, an : per hundred pd Mr. and Mrs| Thomasville, inus Phelps and ton.Salem, Mrl Carter and cp spent Sunday and Mrs. B. P j The census I 7,558 bales of 1 ned'in Dayie Cl as compared w | ned to the sa This is a gain bales over last j The Ladies . nut Grove chu annual bazaar I l 8 tb, at Ched bonse. There) and a lot of otb also plenty of e | string music, dially invited. W A N T R D - ferably with handle establis| ness in Davie 1 largest com pan! plying 150 hoi necessities. N o) bave car and f write W atkins) lotte, N , C. 155449999998555555555442211155429990999245 the same to 'he unn verified at m 1 oute No. t, on ^>r hpf ' ovemhet. 1940 or.°h? eh/a bar ofr^overy 8 ebted to said estate will r^ T ftV ith0ut d^ay ‘ ay of November, 1939 Paul h stroud , es V, Stroud, decent.,) ANT. Attys, eCea£od- At Of tterns In ds. Too. s H a ts s in Mixtures id Colors 0 $3 .5 9 . . 98c S i 88c $5.95-$6.95 oys $1.98 up 1.49 to $2.95 ; Co. DY” svilie, N. C. ether Content, ur Needs. 0 . ne 187 1THB DAVlE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N. C.. NOVEMBER 15. 193d. IHE DAVIE RECORD.1 Largest Circulation of Anv Davie County Newspaper. NEWS AROUND TOWN. Miss Ruth Foster spent the week end with her aunt Mrs. L. P. Cart- ner. Mr. and Mrs. W. M, Crottsspent Wednesday in Winston-Salem shop ping. Will Beard, of Winston-Salem, was in town W edntsday on busi ness. Mr. and Mrs. --Fred Crotts, of Winston-Salem, were Mocksville vis'tors Thut sday. Mrs. C. F. Meroney and Miss Sarah Metoney spent Saturday in Salisbuty shopping. Mrs. George Hendricks spent Friday in Winston-Salem, the guest of Mrs. R G. Walker. Miss Pauline Wyatt, of R. S1Jhas accepted a position as sales lady with C. C. Sanford Sons Co. Miss Virginia Byerly spent Fri day in Winston Salem the guest of her aunt, Mrs. C. A. Jenkins. Miss Bettie Trotter, of Asheboro, spent the week-end in town, the guest of Miss Evelyn Troxler. FOR SA LE — 15 big bone Berk shire pigs. J. FR A N K H EN D R IX . D. R. Stroud, who was confined to his home last week, is much bet ter his friends will be glad to learn. Mrs. W . F. Stonestreet is spend ing some time with her daughter, Mrs. Alex Kosma, in Richmond Va Mrs. Maude Gaither, of R. 2, spent the week end in Newton, the guest of her sister, Mrs. A. L. Bo- lick. FOR RENT OR SA LE— I Six- room house and lot on Highway No. 158, near Smith Grove school. W. F. McCULLOH, Clifton, N. C. Mr and Mrs. Erasmus Phelps and children, of Winston-Salem, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Hasten Carter. J. A. Craven and J. K. Sheek, Jr., stydcnts at State University, Chanel Hill, spent the week-end iu town with home folks. Rev. A. W. Lytch will preach at Hardison's at to a. m., next Sunday, Salem at 11 a. m., and Center at 7 p. m. The public is cordially invited. Tbe m aty friends of Rev. H. C. Sprinkle, who is in a Charlotte hos pital recovering from a operation, will be glad to learn that he is get ting along nicely. J. W. Cartner, Robert Wcodrnff and Frank Laird have the thanks oi the editor for four fine pump kins which wiU be turned into good old pumpkin pies. Call at our shop and look over our line of Meadow Washing Ma chines and Philco Radios YOUNG RADIO CO. Marshall Bowles, of R. 4 , Is a good tobacco farmer. Hecarried a load of 1200 pounds to Winston- Salem last week, which brought him $506, an average of nearly $44 per hundred pounds. ^ Mr. and Mrs Horace Deaton, of Tbomasville, Mr. and Mrs. Eras mus Phelps and children ot Wins tou-Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Hasten Carter and children of this city spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Garrett of Center. The census report shows that 7,558 bales of cotton had been gin ned'in Davie County to Nov.. 1st, as compared with 1,370 bales gin ned to the same date last year. This is a gain of more than 1200 bales over last year. The Ladies Aid Society of Chest nut Grove church will have their annual bazaar Saturday night Nov 18 th, at Chestnut Stump school house. There will be three quilts and a lot of other things for sale, also plenty of eats. Will also have string music. The public is cor dially invited. W ANTED —Energetic man pre. ferably with farm experience to handle established W atkins busi ness in Davie County. Oldest and Iargestcompany backsyouin sup. plying 150 household and farm necessities. No investment If yon have car and want more money write Watkins, Box 1975, Char- W e are not selling Blum's Alma nacs at 50. each. We are giving them away—to our subscribers. Mrs. Fred Swing, of Lancaster, S. C., spent several days last week with Mr. and Mrs. J. H . Swing at Pino. Kenneth Murchison, a student at N. C. State College, Raleigb, spent Friday and Saturday with his par ents, Co), and Mrs. W. K. Murchi son, on R. 2. Mi. and Mrs. A. W. Ferabee and Miss Elizabeth Ferabee visited Miss Jane Ferabee Sunday. Miss Ferabee is at the N. Y. A. Train ing Center at EUerbe Spring, El- lerbe, N. C. If yon want to know thejdistance to any impottant city throughout the country, and to many town in this state, and the routes to travel to reach them, just stop at Kur- fees & Ward’s service station and dial the town or city to which yon are traveling. This is one of the latest inventions and will save one asking many questions while tour ing the country. Stop and try out this machine—it is free. Local Cotton Market. . ' .aNov. 14 - Seed cotton 3.83 to4 c; Lint 9 00 to 9.60 . - Tobacco averaged -around 19c. per pound Monday on the Winston- Saleni market. . More than a mil lion pounds was sold.. Local wheat $1.05, corn 60 c. Delightful Party. Miss Ruby'Collette, of Cana1 was given a surprise birthday party last Tuesday evening, about 25 of her friends being present to enjoy the happy occasion. Tbe evening was enjoyed by all oresent. Following the playing of a number of games, refreshments were, seived consist ing of cake, piqkles, sandwiches and grape juice. Mrs. N. H . Col-' lette was assisted in serving by her daughter, Miss Colleen Collette. The guests left wishing for Miss Collette many more such happy oc rasions. Mr. and Mrs SJieek Miller and babe, of Kannapolis, visited rela tives in town last week. SAVE ON YOUR FUEL With A “Wood Saver” Therniostically Controlled Wood Heater Keeps Even Temperature $1450 $|0.5O REDUCTIONS ON ALL Circulating Heaters 20^ Off Full Line Of Cement, Lime, Mortar Cement and Galvanized Roofing I9x12 Linoleum RUGS $3:50 f I I I AU John Deere Farm Implements, j I "a.********-************ ******> ******* *> ****»**•******» Martin Brothers Near Depot Mocksv0fe ;N. C. 1VFrRE G O lN U in CamforL S3 g o i n g fa SqVL H Snr Somptt Oot-Way fang WinStonSalem 1 NvC. 40c - Greensbcrv1 N. C. 85c RaIeigb1N1 C. $2,10. Asheville. N. C. $2.10 Charlotte,N.C. _ j 8Sc ; t&umbia.S.C; ; Blg EXTJM Saving* j On Kowid-Trtp Tldtoti | : LeGrand's Pharmacv PhoneZl MockavUle1 N.C. GREYyHOUND Rev. John F. RatledgeJ .. Rev. John Thomas Ratledge1 71, retired Methodist minister, died at his home at MadiBon Thursday night after a serious illness of several days. A native of Davie county. Rev. Mn. Ratledge was born at Calahaln His wife, the former'Miss Mary Sue] Dalton, died several years ago. Surviving are. tw o daughters,i Misses Annie Ruth and Maude Rai-I ledge, of Madison: three brothers,] A.' D, and, M, G. Ratledge, of Cala-f bain, and Rev. A. P. Ratledge, of] Sylva; three sisters, Mrs. Charliel Booe, of Wjiiston-Salem, Mrs. S. 0.1 Stimpson, of Statesville, and Mrs.| Jesse Richardson, of Harmony. The funeral was held Saturday! morning at 10 o’clock at Madison] Church. ________________ , Mrs. Clementine Towell Mrs. Clementine Towel), 80,. died] at the Davie county home Monday night of last week, following a long illness. She was a daughter of the late Mr, and Mrs. Pinkney Horn.] Surviving are a number o f nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held at So-I ciety Baptist church last Tuesday] afternoon at 2:30 o’clock, with the pastor. Rev. W. L McSwain conduct I ing the services. The body was laid| to rest in the church cemetery. Princess Theatrel WEDNESDAY ONLY •THE GIRL AND THE GAMBLER" WithLeoCarriIIo Stf ff, DunaTim Holt| “ THURSDAY Nancy Drew and “THE HIDDEN STAIRCASE" with Bonita Granville, Frankie Thomas FRIDAY and SATURDAY | DOUBLE FEATURE Gsne Autry in ‘‘COLORED SUNSET” and Franhie Darro in 1TRiSH LUCK” with Dich Purcell * Lillian Elliott MONDAY and TUESDAY! “COAST GUARD” with Ralph Bellamy,] France* Dee. and Randolph Scott - 2c 25: box BARGAINS!) White Swan Flour 8 Ib Carton Lard 10 lbs Sugar 25 Ibs Sugar 100 Ibs Sugar RLe, Ibs Pintoes 6c I Pure Coffee 10 Mammies Favorite Coffee 11 Black Pepper 13: ib or 2 lbs 25 Bannas Cabbage Potatoes 2 Packs 15c Cigarettes Matches 3: or 2 for 2 -5c packs Salt 22 Cartridges Hollow Point 22 long Cartridges A Few More Men’s Suits $20.00 value $13 97 $18.00 valu& $11 95 Boy’s . $3 69 up UDionSuits 69c Hanes Heavy Weight I Quality 89c 100 Pairs Tennis Shoes Worth Up To $1 00 Value 59c Pair 50 Pair 21 to 3i Galoshes $1.25 Value 39: Ball Band $1 50 Quality $1.19 See Me For Bridles, Collars, Traces, Hames and Check Lines. ' 25 Per Cent Off List On AU Plow Castings Horse and Mule Shoes 8 |c Ib Finished Shoes IOc Ib Axes $1-10 and up School Tablets and Note,Book Paper 3s or 35c doz Plenty 66x76 Blankets- ■ ■ j -'.SSte] 66x80 Part Wool Double B!ankets$ $2 00 L L Sheeting : 7c yd Plenty Sample Sweatere •- At BargainPrices 1 4 Plenty Red Goose and Wolverine Shoes At Old Prices SeeM eB eforeY ouBuy - ShoesandSweatere . Leather Coats $5.95. $7.95. Plenty Mens Overalls 89e and up Plenty Boy’s Overalls Plenty Work Shirts Drera 75c value $1 .00 :value IOc Prints 80 Square Play Cloth 35c and Up .. SOcup 60c r :89c J^7c.:yd ' 13c , IOc yd lotte, N . C. Outing 8 Jc yd wide width IOc “YOURS FOR BARGAINS’* J. FRANK HENDRIX Depot St. Mocksville N C. We Want To Gin Or Buy Your COTTON Will Pay Highest Market Prices FLOUR We Carry AU Kinds Dairy Feeds, Meal Etc., When You Want Good FLOUK Call For Daisy Plain or Self-Rising Flour. Green Milling Co. FLOYD NAYLOR, Manager. Phone 32 Mocksville, N. C. S V s V f tV iV iV iW A V s V A V i Turkey And Baking Time IsNotFarOff We Have AU Those Fresh, Choice Essentials FOR THANKSGIVING Such As Cranberries, Lettuce, Celery Carrots. ALL TURKEY ACCESSORIES '’AU Kinds O f1Tbe Best Fruit Cake Materials FuU LineO fB akedC akes AUison-Johnson Co. “We Delivery The Goods” Telephone l l l Mocksville, N. C. 'tit $ i*•♦ I I I I Iistingnished Service medal, the Navy Cross, the Silver Star and the Legion of Honor decora tions. IN HIS new book, “The Defense of Britain,” Capt. Liddell Hart, the British military expert, says, “Our chief risk of losing a war lies in try ing to win the war." His gen eral finding is that m odern war cannot be BritaMs Danger Is in Trying to Win, Says Hart supported in the style to which it has been accustomed, and observes that “War will only be ended when the power-lusting nations recognize its futility. The growing power of modem defense is bringing that prospect in sight.” In his preceding book, “Europe in Arms,” published in August, 1937, he thought there was hope of ending war in the limitations of the mili tary mind. Fat-headed generals would cling to gaudy mass attack and make war so stupid and ridicu lous that anybody surviving would just forget it. But the 'trouble with a war expert is that you can’t bottle him up, and other nations in the past have used him as a military consultant. In the World war, a stripling just out of Cambridge, a captain and a war correspondent, he gave the generals a lacing to the limit of the censorship, and, al though they growled menacing ly, they took him into tlmir counsels. He invented a lot of new trick plans, including the “indirect approach” and the “ex panding torrent” system, and / bis reputation was well on its way before the war ended. He‘has scolded many of the main panjandrums of the big war, in the post-war years, apparently with public approval, judging from the sale of his books. He was a war buddy of Lawrence of Arabia and insisted that this human cryptogram knew more about war than all the generals put together.!Consolidated Peflturgi-W N U StrvtCfl^ THE DAYIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. sSnow Cruiser’ Goes for Trial Spin L tMm : v,. m iered in Chicago’s Grant park recently to view the “snow cruiser,” a huge glacial I Richard E. Byrd’s expedition to the Antarctic. In an experimental trip the huge ' hour on its 10-foot wheels. Fifty-five feet long, the gigantic machine is built to carry I levers control the wheels in pairs, although any one wheel may be turned sep- IieselmotorssuppIypower for the cruiser. gland’s ‘Rightful’ German Government 4W |p a “rightful” German government (similar to the Polish government now internationally, these three men would undoubtedly head it. They are: Dr. social democrat, who would be foreign minister; Dr. Hermann Rauschning, |t of the Danzig senate, who would be chancellor, and Dr. Joseph Wirth, right, i would be finance minister. The three men are all exiles from Germany. The Iloan the “government” 2,000,000 pounds sterling to defray expenses. Aerial Musketeers Don. Fighting Togs Former British and American championship golfer, Pam Barton, now does all her driving from be hind the wheel of an ambulance. With thousands of British women, Pam volunteered for ambulance service and is now in training. Flees Exile _ Bound for an observation flight over enemy territory, these three British musketeers of the air head for their bombing plane. Equipment includes oxygen masks, telephone apparatus, parachutes and machine guns. In addition to the gunners, the plane carries a pilot, co-pilot and photographer. Convicted Pastor Fights for Life A Fears that Ham Amin El Husse- ini,’ former grand mufti of Jeru salem who recently escaped from exile, may start a new anti-British terrorist campaign were expressed by government officials. The mufti, now in Iraq, is held responsible for the Arabs* campaign of terrorism. Rev. Walter Dworecld,-..Camden, N. J., preacher,, sentenced to die In the electric chair, is getting'another chance to prove his innocence. The pastor win appeal his sentence, given him when he was found guilty of plotting the murder of his daughter, Wanda, who was slain by a stran gler who testified Dworecki hired him to commit the crime. He is shown receiving a final embrace from his daughter, Mildred. The appeal auto matically postponed the execution date, originally scheduled for the week of November 12. S t a r D n s t ★ Peak Performance ★ Wanting to Stay? ★ Dangerous Subject B y V i r g i n i a V a l e ------ T HERE’S 5,one. thing that must be admitted about Bette Davis; she’s not afraid to stick her chin out. She’ll ask for anything that she thinks she deserves. If she gets it, fine; if she doesn’t, she proves that she’s a good loser. She wants to do a play that she saw last summer in Provincetown— at least, at the moment of writing she wants to do it. She persuaded Warner Brothers to buy it. They’re willing to let her do the movie ver sion, after it had been produced‘on the New York stage with names that mean something in the legiti mate theater. With characteristic confidence in her own ability, she can’t see why they won’t let her have a try at it in New York. It’s said that they’re afraid of what might happen to her draw, at the box office of motion picture houses if Broadway didn’t feel that her performance on the stage came up to the mark. James Stewart may find himself receiving one of those statues for giving the best performance of the year, as a result of “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.” It’s a grand JAMES STEWART picture on every count, and adds another laurel wreath to the col lection already amassed by Frank Capra, who directed it. Whatever you do, don’t miss this one! The world premiere of "Mutiny in the Big House” was held at the Berks County Jail, Pa., one of the largest penitentiaries in the state. It was the first time in two years that a commercial feature had been shown at the penitentiary. After the screening the warden said, “The boys liked the picture a lot and I believe they learned some thing from it that will hold them all.” Hold them in jail? If you value your life, don’t ever mention model planes to anybody connected with the screening of the “Tailspin Tommy” comic strip. The other day they were using 10 of the toy planes during the filming of the picture, called “Danger Flight.” Danger was the right word. They were shooting an important scene, in which a midget plane is used to warn “Tailspin Tommy” of impending danger. Every time the plane was turned loose it headed for the top of the stage and became entangled in the rafters and lights. Then the crew had to stop work and disentangle it. Half a day’s shooting was lost in all. Those 10 small planes were worse than the battalion of transport planes used in the film. They flew into houses, broke windows, got lost In trees, hit the wrong people or disappeared completely. “Danger Flight” is the story of a boy who saved many lives because he had learned about flying from model airplanes. John Trent, who plays the lead, is a real pilot and knows all about big planes. AU the members of Jack Benny's radio show troupe, with the excep tion of Mary Livingstone, are facing the cameras at Paramount for "Buck Benny Rides Again.” Andy Devine wiU be in character, but Don Wilson plays a straight role. The two men who turn out Benny’s radio scripts, got a break—they wrote the script for the picture, and get screen credit for it. At first it was announced that Nel son Eddy was leaving that radio program because he hadn’t time for it. Now it develops that his spon sors feel that his salary is just a bit too high, and that other mem bers of the cast heartily agree with them. Six thousand five hundred doUars a week does seem a mite high for the once-a-week efforts of the blond baritone. — * — ODDS AND ENDS — They’ve given Dinah Shore a new spot on the air, Sunday nights, opposite lack Benny; “if somebody has to ’budd Benny, it might as well be I" quoth she . . . A friend in India wrote Bennay Venuta, asking if she’d like a muckna—she was on the verge oj accepting, when she found out dial a muckna is a male elephant without tusks . . . Mervyn Leroy went to the rodeo in New York, and saw and signed a sixteen-year- old Texas girl, Sydna Yoakley—he an nounces that she will be put into an early production.(ReIeaMd by Weetern Newsaaper Union.) / Pattern 6312 Mother or big sister! Knit this Ihree-piecer. It’s mainly in stock inette stitch aqd the skirt is knit ted to give the effect of pleats! It’s a suit that gives smart all- year-round wear. Pattern 6312 contains instructions for making the suit in 6, 8 and 10 -year size; illustrations of it and of stitches; materials needed. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in ,coins to The Sewing Cir-. cle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th St., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, ad dress and pattern number plainly. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a tonic which has been helping women of all ages for nearly 70 years. Adv. Revealing Death Men may live fools, but fools they cannot die.—Young. Relief At Last ForYourCough Creomulsion reUeves promptly because It goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, Increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulmonwiththe understanding that you are to like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSIONfor Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Another’s Secret I may give to one I love, but the secret of my friend is not mine to give.—Philip Sidney. Put Just "2 drops” !a each nostril for quick relief from Spring head cold discomforts* P E N E T R O om ul Riches Trickle Away Beware of little expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship.— Franklin. Pull the Trigger on Lazy Bowels, and Also Pepsin-Ize StomOch! When constipation brings on acid indigestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your stomach is probably loaded up with certain und igested food and your bowels don’t move. So you need both Pepsin to help break up fast that rich undigested food in your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be sure your laxative also contains Pepsin. Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that wonderful stomach-relief, while the Laixative Sennamoves your bowels.Tests prove the power of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of undigested protein food which may linger in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric aridity and nausea. This is how peosin- izing your stomach helps relieve it of such distress. At the same time this medicine wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your bowels to relieve your constipation. So see how much better you feel by taking the laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on that stomach discomfort, too. Even finicky children love to taste this pleasant family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative—Senna with Syrup Pepsm at your druggist today! Toar Reputation No man was ever written out of reputation but by himself.—Bent ley. V.. hjdu-'.'U- i 7nX4J>AJ/ C* LIQUID -TABLET.} SALV E-NOSE DROPS : y e s ! You find them announced in the columns of this paper by merchants of our community who do not feel they must keep the quality of their merchan dise or their prices under cover. chant who buy oz the mer-ADVERTISEa BIG TOP VtELL ,BEnnI TVtE TROUBLI VIHY 150 VOC THE FREAKSl PRIMING- VOlI Frink Jnj SIkrktj Sjnl LALA Pi PINTO TAKEN] THE X-, LABORATd SOME PIC W 67 S’MATTEl MESCALl POP— Tol W H Y DC C S IS7 Q[ FOLlSH KEFUfi St a e v i N 6 NAZIS ANP RB PlVlPE FOUN I (WNU S EU VICE) J ./'■ V i l J f E n j o y H e r - I ? le c e K n i t S u i t THE DAVTE RECORr. MOOKSVTTJ,E. N- C. SSSslB Pattern 6313 I or big sister! Knit this . It's mainly in stock- Ich arid the skirt is knit- Te the effect of pleats! t that gives sm art all- d wear. Pattern 6312 nsfructions for making I 6, 8 and 10-year size; :s of it and of stitches; needed. in this pattern send 15 oins to The Sewing Cir- liold Arts Dept., 259 W. ew York, N. Y. write j’our name, ad- pattern number plainly. ? Favorite Prescription is a i lias been helping women TornearIyTOyears. Adv. evealing Death iy live fools, but fools )t die.—Young. ifwr Ooagh ion relieves prompUybe- ■s right to the seat of the xisen germ laden phlegm, iretion and aid nature to heal raw, tender, Lnilam- ial mucous membranes, how many medicines you tell your druggist to sell of Creomulsionwiththe Ing that you are to like quickly allays the cough o have your money back. M U L S iO N , Chest Colds, Bronchitis other’s Secret ive to one I love, but f my friend is not mine Iiilip Sidney. I Put Just "2 drops"I each nostril for quick I relief from Spring f head cold discomforts. P E M E T H O SB I Ies Trickle Away of Jittle expenses; a will sink a great ship.— the Trigger on |owels; and ASso l-ize Stomach! fctipation brings on acid indi- ■tmg, di2zy spoils, gas, coated ■ taste, and bad breath, your ■robably loaded up with cer- ■ed food and your bowels don't Ru need both Pepsin to help • that rich undigested food in r , and Laxative Senna to pull Im those lazy bowels. So be fcative also contains Pepsin, ■dwell s Laxative, because its Ti helps you gain that won- Jch-rehef, while the Laxative I your bowels. Tests prove the ■sin to dissolve those lumps of frotem food which may linger ftcn. to cause belching, gastric pausea. This is how pensin- Jmach helps relieve it of‘such |ne same time this medicine w nerves and muscles in your B2ve your constipation. So see WtJer you feel by taking the ■also puts Pepsin to work on 7 discomfort, too. Even fin- J love to taste this pleasant Be. Buy Dr. Caldwell's Lax- Byi;1 Syrup Pepsia at your Bur Reputation Ivas ever written out of ■but by himself.—Bent- y e s ! I ihom announced In Sizis of this paper By Its of our community Jot feel they must keep Bty of their xnerchan- pir prices under cover. J to Buy of the mer- Ih o ADVERTISES. Necfcw^' With Simple Foundation Dress Is ‘Style’ B y CH ERItf NICHOLAS W HEN you go shopping keep re- ’ “ peating over and over to your self these words—“simple founda tion dress of fine sheer wool, flatter ing seductive neckwear to add the sweetly feminine touch.” Follow this style formula and you can’t go wrong in matter of smart apparel selection. You see it’s this way, current fash ion is in a be-a-lady mood and it follows as the night the day that when it comes to ladylike dress lovely seductively feminine neck wear is inevitable. So, apropos of present fashion trends, the para graphs following, together with the accompanying illustration, will carry the message of what’s showing these days in the way of delectable col lar and cuff sets, sports scarfs and jewelry to wear with the new dress of bright sheer wool. Did you know that a cunning col lar made of lustrous gold kidskin is one of the newest neckwear notes? Well it is! See the “darling" one shown above to the left in the il lustration. This little two-bow gold kid collar worn as it is with a sheer wool, moss green dress, is the sort that dolls you up in the twinkling of an eye. And isn't the little Sally Victor sweetheart toque with its velvet applique hearts winsome? We think so. By the way, speaking of gold kidskin, you can buy little bows of it to wear in your hair or clip to your pocket, or anywhere it shows off to the best advantage. Venise lace revers, snow white and starched to crispness and with lovely Val edging, as illustrated to the right at the top, give the perfect answer to what to wear with your stylish basic wool frock. A dia mond brooch and a suede bustle hat complete the accessory ensem ble. A demure collar and cuff set of handsome Venise lace, finished with a pique fold, as pictured below to the left, with your neatly styled daytime frock label you as "a lady” anytime. The gold clip and the mas sive finger ring, the visor shaped hat with its gold ornament are also fashion highlights. Fresh and crisp is the Venise lace collar and cuff set with its embroid ered pique flowers as shown below to the right. It will give added dash to your new wool dress. Wear it with a corded felt toque with vel vet binding as pictured, As to the nonchalant plaid scarf of fine, soft, pure wool, centered in War Creates Novel Styles in Britain The war has already killed the bustle and the crinoline and all the eccentricities of dress that marched in their wake. These may be revived later when the men returning from the front demand that women shall be 100 per cent feminine, but for the moment the whole trend of dress is to be “sensible.” Subdued colors, outfits that match up with khaki uniforms, high collars and long sleeves (even for evening frocks) have replaced the frills and flounces of the last few months. For the hour of the raid has been designed the “air raid siren suit”— a form of super workman’s overall combining slacks and tunic. Step into it, zip .it up and you can hop out of bed and remain in cold and drafty places looking smart. The suits are made in warm wool- Iv material and are becoming. the illustration, take note that the ends are pulled through a gold ring set with catseye. Jewelry! It’s too stupendous a theme to unfold in words. So we are simply inviting you to take a look at the fetching necklace cen tered above in the group. This dec orative costume jewelry piece is of gold with gold and a pearl pendant set in blue cloisonne. <He]eased by W estern New spaper Union.) Gorgeous Handbags For Autumn Season You can’t “get by” with an ordi nary hapdbag this season. Even the bag you carry with your daytime tailleurs will have subscribed to some sort of fancy stitching, or shirring and will show a novelty touch in its mounting, As to bags with dressy afternoon costumes you will want one of the dressmaker types of moire silk, not plain tailored but with a fussy little pleating or a jewel mounted frame, or something to give it the feminine touch. Newest thing is the hand some black velvet bag carried with the velvet hat to match. Mayhap it will have a rhinestone clasp, for glittering rhinestone accent is latest fashion. Evening bags are gorgeous —glittering sequins, brocades, os trich feathers, rich embroideries and all that sort. Velveteen Vogue Velveteen is regarded as one of the smartest fabrics in use this sea son.' Everytbifig that can be made of velveteen is being made of vel veteen. It is so satisfactorily work able and comes in such fascinating colors and now that designers have taken up the idea of velveteen they are playing it up for all it is worth. The two-piece afternoon dress shown is of royal blue velveteen, the top stitched in Chinese red and closed with silver buttons. The heart-shaped felt chapeau is also in Chinese red. This jacket can be worn with different skirts. IM P R O V E D ^ U N IFO R M IN T E R N A T IO N A L U N D A X l CHOOL L esso n OLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D.' The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.(Released by W estern Newgpaper Union-I S By ISAROLD L. LUND P eaa of T ---------- Lesson for November 19 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts selected and copyrighted by International Council of Reugious Education; used by permission. WARNINGS AND PROMISES LESSON TEXT—M atthew 7:l-i4. GOLDEN TEXT—And as ye would that nen should do to you. do ye also ?o them likewise.—Luke 6:31. “How to Win Friends and Influ ence People” may be worthwhile to study, unless it is done from a pure ly selfish desire to be popular so that one may make more money and get on in the world. Everyone should desire to make more friends and better friends, and the Chris tian in making friends should make them for his Lord as well as for himself. Actually the best of the rules and suggestions offered on this subject are already an integral part of Christian conduct as revealed in the Word of God. I. Avoid Judgment (w . 1-5). By not judging others censoriously we escape such judgment of our selves both by God and by our fel low man. The admonition, “Judge not,” obviously does not mean that we are not to exercise our God- given ability to discern between good and evil, nor does it mean that we are to stand silent in the -pres ence of wrongdoing. Verse 6 in this very chapter calls for the use of judgment (see also I Thess. 5:21). In allesuch judgment we are to avoid an unkind spirit and the hy pocrisy described in verses 3 to 5. We are to be certain that our own lives are above reproach regarding that which we condemn (v. 5). The none too common exercise of cor recting our own faults will serve a salutary twofold purpose of improv ing ourselves and of making us too busy to find fault with others. II. Be Reverent (v. 6). While we are not to judge oth ers, we are not to go to the opposite extreme of being so lenient in our attitude that we permit ungodly men to profane and trample down sacred things. This does not mean, as some would have us believe, that we are not to present the gospel to the low est of sinners; for example, to a drunkard. Only thus can such an individual be saved. But it does mean that in dealing with holy things we are not only to be rev- ereni ourselves, but we are to be careful that we do not permit wick ed men to misuse and to profane the holy things of God. In . Pray in Faith (w . 7-11). Here is a straightforward prom ise from the lips of our Lord Him self, assuring us that prayer will be answered. It seems that He must have foreknown that some would feel that the promise was too good to be true, so He stated it in three fold form and-repeated it twice. Why not believe it, act on it, and re ceive the answer? Observe that there is to be im portunity in prayer, we are to seek if we would find. “Our Lord does not guarantee to us anything at first asking. God does not open His treas. ury to a passing bugle-call or the tap of a careless hand which just touches the door and then passes on. Prayer is not a momentary wish or a transitory whim. It is the ut terance of a confirmed and persist ent and unwearying longing. If you want a prayer answered, you must go on praying” (J. G. Greenhough). Wel have included the so-called Golden Rule, under this section be cause the word' “therefore” links it with that which goes before. . Dr. G. Campbell Morgan aptly says, “If we omit the ’therefore,’ we cannot obey the verse. If we retain the ‘therefore,’ and are driven- to ask, to seek, to knock, and to know that the Listener to the asking, to the seeking, to the knocking, is our Fa ther, then the rule is golden with heaven’s own light, but in no other way.” -The Golden Rule is really the ful fillment of the law and the proph ets, but in the light of Christ’s glo ry it is also a great principle of Christian love and consideration. IV. Walk in the Narrow Way (w . 13, 14). The road to heaven is a narrow way because it is built to carry us through the quicksands of this world to a glorious consummation. It is not'a dismal road, for it is lighted by God’s glory; and it is not a lone some road (even though few go that way), because Jesus walks with us. The road to destruction is broad. The entrance is easy; there is much company, but one soon finds that the company is distasteful—just fellow sinners. Jesus is not going.that way. The best people, God’s people, are going the other way. The road leads into all kinds of by-ways where pit falls abound. The earthly pleas ures one thought to enjoy have, as Maclaren puts it, “a strange knack of losing their charm and at the same time increasing their hold,” Foil of Grace I will neither be content with what Measure of grace I have, nor im patient of God’s delay; but every day I will endeavor to have one drop added to the rest; so my. last day shall fill up my vessel to the brim.— Joseph Hall. ONE-TWO-THREE-FOUR CAKES See Recipes Belowr Let's All Have Tea There’s something so social about serving tea! Friends and neighbors drop in for a bit of rest and re laxation, conversation flourishes, and the whole house is aglow with hospitality. Serving tea is one of the simplest and most gracious ways of enter taining — wheth er you invite one guest or fifty. It may be a cozy, informal affair only a ^ewS B “h a n d p ick ed ” friends invited, and simple bread and butter sandwiches, with a cup of perfectly brewed tea for refresh ments. Or, you may plan a much larger, more elaborate tea as a means of entertaining the Parent- Teacher association, the Garden club, or perhaps the Women’s aux iliary of your husband’s lodge. Formal or . informal, large or small, you’ll find that beforehand preparations and carefully laid plans help to make this kind of en tertaining easy. Admit the limita tions of your budget, your equip ment, your time and strength, and don’t plan more than you can carry out comfortably and sensibly. Re member that a cup of tea and a slice of bread and butter can make a party if the tea is perfectly made, the bread enticingly, thin, and the service dainty and attractive. Keep sandwiches, muffins, cakes and cookies small and dainty. If your invitation list numbers a large number of guests, bake your favor ite cakes in jelly roll pans, frost, and cut into small, diagonal pieces. Ginger Cream Cakes. To make these qlever little cakes, use the thin gingersnap or cookie ordinarily sold on the market. Al low from three to five to a serv ing. Put together with sweetened whipped cream in the same man ner as in frosting a miniature layer cake. Cover the top and sides gen erously with the cream, and chill thoroughly. Ground candied ginger may be sprinkled sparingly over the tops. One cup of whipping cream will make six cakes. Orange Ice Cream. 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin % cup cold water 1 % cups sugar 1 % cups boiling water 1 % cups orange juice % cup lemon juice. 2 tablespoons orange rind (grated) 2 cups coffee creamYi teaspoon salt 2 eggs (beaten separately) Soak the gelatin in the cold water for five minutes. Dissolve sugar in boiling water and add to the gelatin; stirring until dissolved. Add' the orange juice, o r a n g e rind, lemon juice, coffee cream , salt, and beaten egg yolks. ■ Fold in egg whites and pour mixture into freezing container of ice cream freezer. Assemble and cover. Then pack mixture of crushed ice and rock salt (use three parts ice to one part salt, by volume) around the freezing container. Turn crank slowly but steadily. When mixture becomes too stiff to turn, remove cover carefully, take out dasher, and pack down evenly with a spoon. Cover ice cream with wax paper and replace cover. Repack. Cover and allow to. harden at least one hour 'before-serving. One-Two-Ihree-Fonr Cakes. (Makes four dozen small cup cakes) 1. cup margarine , 2 cups sugar. 4 eggs (separated) 3 cups flour 2. teaspoons baking powder H teaspoon salt 1 cup milk - 2 teaspoons flavoring Cream the margarine thoroughly. Add sugar gradually and cream together until Hght and fluffy. Add egg yolks, and beat welL Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift together three times. Add flour, alternately with milk, a small amount at a time. Beat after each addition untO smooth. Add flavoring. FOld in stiffly beaten egg whites. Bake in small, well greased muffin pans in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees) for about 20 minutes. Frost as de sired. Brown Bread Peannt Sandwiches Slice Boston Brown bread very thin, spread with creamed butter, sprinkle generously with finely chopped salted peanuts. Parsley Sandwiches. Slice day-old bread %-inch thick. Cut into rounds with a doughnut cutter, toast one side, and spread with I parsley butter. To make parsley butter, cream butter, add lemon juice to taste, and finely minced parsley. Banana Nnt Bread. Yi cup butter Yz cup sugar 2 eggs 2 cups general purpose flour Yi teaspoon soda Yz teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder Yz cup chopped nut meats Yz cup wheat bran 1 Yz cups mashed bananas , 2 tablespoons sour milk Cream butter and add sugar slow Iy, beating constantly. Add eggs- one at a time- beating thorough ly. Mix and sifi the flour, soda, salt, and baking powder. Add nut meats and wheat bran to this mix ture. Combine bananas and sour cream. Add flour mixture alternate ly With banana mixture—beating thoroughly after each addition. Bake in well-greased loaf pan in a mod erate oven (350 degrees) about IYi houijs. .. _ Note: This bread is really better if sliced the second day. Delicious for sandwiches with butter or with unflavored cream cheese for fill ing. Reception Cakes. (Makes 90 two-inch cakes) 2 cups shortening (part butter for flavor) 4 cups sugar 16 egg yolks 9 cups cake flour 8 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 2 cups milk 1% tablespoons orange or lemon extract 1. Cream the shortening; add sugar very slowly, beating well after each addition. 2. Beat the egg yolks until very thick, and add gradually to the creamed mixture. 3. Sift dry ingredients together, and add alternately with the milk and extract. 4. Ppur the batter into large jelly roll pans, which havA been greased and lined with wax paper. 5. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 30 minutes. Cool, and cut into diamonds. Send for Yoar Copy of ‘Easy Entertaining.’ In her cookbook, “Easy Enter taining,” Eleanor Howe Igives you suggestions for a Halloween menu, as well as countless other holiday meals, children’s parties, “teen age” parties, picnics, and a wedding reception—you’ll find ideas for all these and other social occasions. Send >ten-cents in coin, to !'Easy Entertaining,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Ave., Chi cago, Hl., and get your copy of this book now.IEcleased by W eatem Newspaper Union.) BurgIar-PtoM Ordinary window latches can be burglar-proofed by boring a hole in the turning part of the catch. A small padlock locked in the hole will not allow the catch to be opened. C l im b ; t a : I h e A t t i c ;. B r o u g h t P o s s i b i l i t ie s By RUTH WYETH SPEARS 'T'HE bride came home, but not -*• to weep on Mother’s shoulder. “There are too many bare spots in our house,” she said; “and I want to rummage in your attic.” “You are welcome,” replied Mother, “but you will find no antiques— nothing there but junk.” A golden oak dresser; a fish bowl; an old portier; a chromo in a wide gold frame; and an old piano stool; were carted away. Varnish remover and plain drawer pulls transformed the dresser into a good-looking chest ATTIC PICTUREHOOK CASING TOR CURTAIN ROD RIN6E C-TURN EDGES 10 RIGHT SIDE of drawers. A glazier put a mir ror in the oval gold frame. Those are dusky pink branches in the fish-bowl—lovely against the rose- red brocade hanging. The dia gram shows how the hanging was made from a part of the portier. The edges were finished with dull gold colored braid and fringe; and it hung with matching cord, tas sels and an ordinary curtain rod. What became of the stool and the mirror will be told next week. * • • NOTE: Readers who are now using Sewing Books No. I, 2 and 3 will be happy to learn that No. 4 is ready for maUbig; as well as the 10 cent editions of No. I, 2 and 3. Mrs. Spears has just made quilt block patterns for three de signs selected from her favorite Early American quilts. You may have these patterns FREE with your order for four books. Price of books—10 cents each postpaid. Set of three quilt block patterns without books—10 cents. Send or ders to Mrs. Spears, Drawer 10, Bedford Hills, New York.. T H IN W O M E N LO O K T O O O LD WGmen needing tbe Vitamin B Cont- : and Iton at VinoI to stimulate aP- a lew 'S and iJ VinoI at your ding I Co., 34 S. Wabasha, St. Panl, I Useless VWsdom If wisdom were offered me on condition that I should keep it close and not. communicate it, I- would refuse the gift.—Seneca. CLOTHESPIN NOSE Semational extra help far colds-with Laden’s! Thesa fam ous cough drops not only help soothe throat, but release a. menthol vapcr— which, with every breath, helps penetratedogged na» sal passages, help "clothespin nose!” L U D E N ’S 5* Service to Others t “You’re good for something In this world—for service of some kind to your fellow men—or you’re good for nothing.”—Dr. Reisner. Usefnl Delusions I was never much displeased with those harmless delusions that tend to make us more happy.— . Goldsmith. FILM S D ev elo p ed - P rin ted DIXIE ITLM SERVICE LO>Sss4988 >A Atlanta, Ccm 2 5 r BEJlCONSof H - S J i r E T Y - H • lik e a beacon light on the height— the advertise ments in newspapers direct you to newer, better and easier ways of providing th e th in g s n eed ed or desired. It shines, this b eacon o f new spaper advertising—and it will be to your advantage to fol lo w it w henever yon make a purchase; ' AV ■ ■‘■• V i "Hr V- T i ! D A V if fic 6 fe b , m o c ^ s M lI , » . 6 .. MdvfeMBER 115 1939. Reil Cross Nurse Reserve at Peak 0 /, 30 *i£:; tS Disaster Service, Home Nursing, Health Education, Keep ; I Thousands Busy Washington.—'The Red Cross reserve o( registered nurses qualified for im mediate duty is stronger than ever hefore, Miss Mar; Beard, director ot the American Red Cross nursing ser vices. announced. "We now have a first reserve of 15,000 unmarried nurses under 40 years ot age available for duty with the Army. Navy or government nursing services and subject to call by the Red Cross for disaster work.” she said. "This Is 700 more than any previous first reserve registration.” Misa Beard pointed out that the in crease has been gradual and that only . registered nurses meeting rigid require m ents ot training and physical fitness are enrolled. All classes of nurse reservists, including nurses now em ployed by the Red Cross, bring the reserve corps total to 44,283. During the . World War of 1914-18 the American Red Cross mustered nearly 20,000 nurses for duty with Army, Navy and Red Cross hospitals, at home and overseas. “Maintenance of the Nurses Reserve Is provided by our charter and is in line with Red-Cross policies of preven tion and preparedness, but the peace time work of our nurses is equally im- /portant." Miss Beard said. . The director - explained that more than 2.000 nurses, chiefiy borne hygiene and care of (lie sick instructors, were -regularly engaged in visiting the sick, aiding/physicians In examining school children, conducting inoculation pro- grams to stamp out contagious illness, 'launching trial,nursing services in out- of-the-way communities, and carrying on Important health education work to quality family groups to care tor sickness at home. Al! nurses who are needed for Red Cross -nursing activities are drawn from the Red Cross reserve ot qualified nurses, Miss Beard said. Last year Red Cross public health nurses made more than one million visits on behalf of the sick and gave skilled care to 272,729 persons. - Last year, in schools and clinics, nurses' cooperated with physicians In examining 595,575 children, and aided In the task ot correcting defects. Chil dren examined were enrolled for the most part in rural schools where this type of preventive service is rare. There are 655 Rsd Cross nurses en- gaged'in this work in 477 communities. In the field of health education. Red Cross nurses have instructed more than 1 ,000,000 family members since 1914 in how to care for the sick at home and have set new standards of hygiene for the family. Last year the Nursing Service held 4,505 classes in' home hygiene and care of the sick and awarded certificates to 61,296 persons "who passed examinations on the sub jects taught. “Because the nucleus of all Red Cross nursing activity is our nurses' reserve, it is a source of great satisfac tion that each month the list of ap plicants increases,” Miss Beard said. This' service to the public is sup ported by the men and women who join as members of the Red Cross, through their local Chapters, during the Roll Call, November U to 30. ' S a l e " o f V a l u a b l e R e a l E s t a t e . ...Under and by virtue of an order of sale made by M. K. Feezor. De puty Clerk of Superior Court of Da vie County, N. C.. in the special pro ceedings entitled “Carl Sink, et als vs J. G. Sink, General Guardian for Doris'Sink, Rachel Sink and Ida Sink." dited November 1st, 1939. the* undersigned commissioner wili sell at' public auction at the court house door of Davie County, in the city of Mocksville, N. C., at 12:00 o’clock, noon, on Friday, December 1st, 1939, the following described land, to-wit: Adjoining the lands of John A Woodi Robert N. Frit.ts and others in Fulton township. Davie County, N . C., 8 nd beginning'at a stake 'cn the north ban t of Dutchmans Creek, running thence N. 43 degs. West 290 feet to a stone; thence N, 31i degs. E. 628 feet to a stone; S. 87i deps. E. 480 feet to a stone; thence S. 86 degs. Ej 1530 feet to a stone, comer to No. I; thence N. 3 degs. E. 350 feet to a stone, corner to No. I; thence S. 88 dees. W. 950 feet ta a stone, Garwood’s corner; thence N 4 degs. E. 338 feet to a stone and corner to No. 3; thence N. 88 degs W. 964 feet to a "tone and corner to No. 3; thence 'Si 3 degs. W. 320 feet to a stone, corner to FrittB tract; thence N. 86 degs. W. 2544 feet to a stake on the east bank of Dutchmans Creek: thence down said creek as it meanders to the beginning, contain ing 104 acres, more or less. This be ing tract Mo. 2 in the division of lands of William A. Wood. Terms of Sale: Cash upon confir mation of the Court, bid to be se cured by proper deposit of approved securilie?. ThiJjihe 1st day of No vember, 1939 CARL SINK. Commissioner. ' J. E. SNYDER. Attorney. r e a d t h e a d $ Along With the News When YOU Want IlIlliM ^ Good Meal, Feed Stuff, Laying Ma^h or Scratch Feed’j It wili May You To See Us. You Can Buy Our Meal From Your Grocer. IlllBlHlllIIUIIiM F. K. Benson & Sons N o t i c e o f S a l e . Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Davte coun ty, N. C„ made in the special pro ceeding entitled Charles H. Sink, in- Iivirinally and as Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, and others, ex carte, the same being-upon the spec ial proceeding docket of said Court, the undersigned Executor of Chris- rian Conrad Myers, will, on the 25th day of November, 1939, at 1:30 o’ clock, p. m„ at the home of the late Christian Conrad Myers,Shady Grove Towrship. Davie County. N. C„ of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land Iving ind being in Shady Grove Township, Oavie County N, C., adjoining the lands of o'eorge Hartman and oth ers, and being more particularly de scribed as follows: Beginning at a stnne in Hartman’s ine; thence North 5 degrees East 16 chains to a stone; thence East 4 chs. fo a stone; thence South 16 chains lO inks to a stone; thence West 4 chains to stone in beginning, containing 6.4 acres more or less, being lot No. 5. being known at part of the late James Myers lands by division of heirs. See Deed Book 26. page 429. The undersigned. Executor will al so sell at the said time and place ail of the personal property belonging to the estate of the said Christian Conrad Myers. This the 24th day of October. 1939 CHARLES H. SINK. Executor of Christian Conrad Myer?. E. M. Whitman, Attorney. N o t i c e o f S a l e . Under and by virtue of an order Tiade and entered in the special pro ceeding entitled. Fannie C Womack, -it als, vs Juanita Womack, the same oeing a petition to sell lands for par tition, the undersigned Commission er will on Monday the 13th day of November. 1939, a, twelve o’clock, noon, at the court house - door in Mocksville Davie County, ' North Carolina, offer for sale to tne high est bidder for cash, the following de scribed lands: 1st Tract: Beginningat a stone. Mrs. Ijames corner, to West side of Wall Street, running with said line 150 feet to back alley; thence with said alley 50 feet to-fc stone; thencc wuh the O. C. Wall Co. line 150 feet to a stone in Wall Street; thence with said street 50 feet to the beginning. See deed Jrom L. C. Deadmon to A. E Tatum. 2nd Tract: Tract beginning at a stone in the O. C. Wall Co. .line, run ning South 50.feet with said : line jto a stone in said line; thence East 150 feet to a stone in Lefler’s and Wall’s corner; thence North with Leflirand Wall’s line, 50 feet to a stone; thence West 105 feet to the beginning. See deed from A. L. Spry. 3rd Tract: Beginning at a stone in Wall Stree', West side Deadmon’s corner; running with said line 150 feet to a stone in back al>y; thence with said alley 60 feet to Grove St.; thence with said street 150 feet to Wall Street; thence with Wall Street 60 feet to the beginning. See deed from the O. C. Wall Co;, to A.-.E. Tatum. 4th Tract: Beginning at a stake or stone in a branch in W- S. Green’s l<ne and running East with said W. S. Green’s line. 9 chs. and 67 IinkB Co a stnnp in said Green’s line; tbence South 4.40 chs. to a stone; thence N. dege. W. 6 chs. to a stone on.--the bank of the branch; thence up'.said branch as it meanders to the. begin ning, containing three and one-half acres more or less. Terms of Sale: 'One-third cash, the balance in sixty.days with bond and approved security; title reserved until the purchase money is paid in full, or all cash at the option of the purchaser. This the 10th dav of October. 1939, J. B. GRANT, Commissioner. AfR. MERCHANT * * 5 The EYES of TOE COMMUNITY WOUtD BE ON YOUR A D - IP IT HAD BEEN Awitog IN THlife ISSUE m We trade out the bulk of our earnings in Mocks ville and Davie County. We could spend more if we had it to spend. If You Can Use Our Services To Advantage You Should Do So. If Will Be To The Benefit Of You, Us, And The Whole Community. Read our paper and keep in touch with your county and its people, You can buy nothing for one dollar that will do you more good and* last longer than a year’s r: Subscription To The Davie Record. uWe Are Not Begging, Mind You, Just Soliciting Your Valued Support.” When Your Subscription Falls Due A Prompt Renewal Is Appreciated. We Thank You For Your Patronage and Support. / { W' itth is CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directors AMBULANCESERVICE Phone 164 North Main Street MOCKSVILLE - - - N.C * PRINTING , to Ord er at Our PRINT S H O P E x e c u t o r ’s N o t i c e . Having qualified a* Executor ot the estate of the late C. C. Myers, of Oavie County, North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons having claims against the said estate, to present them to tbe undersigned, on or before Sept. 19,1940. or ■his notice will be plead in bar of tbeir recbvety. t AU perrons indebted to the said estate, are requested to make imae* diate payment. Tbis Sept. 19, 1939. . CH AS. H, SINK, Executor, C. C. Myeia Dec'd. Clemmons. N. C. R 2. E. M.> Whitman, Atty. p N o t ic e " O f S a l e . f Under and;by. virtue of an order made in the Special Proceeding, en titled, Ella Orrell and G. L. Beck, Executors of W. M. Williams, de ceased. etc., .vs- Ura. Fallie Lowery, et ux John Lowery: et ale., by C. B. Hoover. Clerk of Superior Court for Davie County, the undersigned will sell publicly to the hifrhent bidder at the Coart House door of Oavie Coun ty,' in Mocksville, N C , on Monday, the 20th day'of November, 1939, at twelve o’clock Moon, the folio wins described lands, to-wit A tract beginning at a stone; thence N. 4 E. 25.05 to a stone; thence S. 13 degs. E. 43.27 ch9, to n stone; thence S. I l degs. E. 18.80 chs. to a stone; tbence S. 30 W. 2 cKb. to a stone; thence S. 45 W. 8 50 eh*, to a stone; thence 6.23 de(W. W. 8 50 chs. to a stone; thence N 86 W. 10 65 chs; thence N . 4 E. 5 31 cbs; thence W. 5 09 chs. thence N. 4 E. 17,50 chs. thence North 86 W.' 27 70 rlis. thence 5 :1 9 E. 8 23 chs, Oienrt N: 65 degt>, K. -10.94 chs. to the be ginning, containing 267 9-10 acres more or less.' Safe and except a- bout 1 } acres conveyed to Mrs.. George Woodward. VIERMS OF. SALE; — OnirtMrd easftf ao^thfrbidance on ninety dayt time with bohil and approved aecuri ty, or all casB.at the option of tht purchaser. "’>■' This the 16tb dttv of October, 1939. Jv B. GfiANT, Commissioner, Land posters for sale at Tke Rccard office. : - •%£/ ADS ARE NEWS Printed In Big Type Now is Ibe Ume to sub-1 scribe for The Record. I DAVIE BRIGK / COMPANY DEALERS IN BRICK and SAND W O O D a n d C O A L Day Phone 194 • Night Phone 119 Mocksville, N. C. R o b e r t s c n s F e r t il i z e r s COTTON! COTTON! E. Pierce Foster Buyes And Gmcer Of Cotton •-* Mocksville, N. C. 1 Phone 89 Nm r Sanford Motor Co. If Its: Cotton, See Foster m mW flW E A AD CASH IN ON STUjgF IN* THE ATTIC NEW MONEY FOR Vour old things Your Discarded Furniture, Piano, Radio, Bicycle, Tools, Ice Box, can be sold with A WANT AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER A LETTER A Welcome GIFT to IiKe Farmer Xtetident IU TfflSN EW fA PSft 1 THEY CANT TAKE YOUR l\Vv» Vim** IvUl* r r i s o n BILLBOARD RADIOS BATTERIES-SUPPLIES Expert Repair Service Y O U N G R A D I O C O . We Cbarce Batteries Right Depot St. NearSqaare Walker's Funeral Home A M B U L A N C E Phone 48 , Mocksville, N. C T H e L o s t is F o u n d By Our W ant A dt When you lose V iJwiMw They Don't Stay Left I ^ Today's Man Quit Advertinne 4853535348484853232323232323232323232348484853532323482348482353535353484848532323234848485353532323234848484853 5353485348534853535323534848234853482348534823238953534890535348232353532348234853535353485353535323232348535353 DAVIE COUNTY’S OLDEST NE W SPAPER-THE PAPER THE ,PEOPLE READ aHERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAINt UNAWEO BY INFLUENCE AND' UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN XLI.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER it, 1939'NUMBER 18 N E W S O F L O N G A G O . What Was Happening In Davie Before The New Deal Used Up The Alphabet, Drowned The Hogs and Plowed Up The Cotton and Corn. \ (Davie Record, Nov. 23, 1910 ) 1 Mrs. I. 0 . King returned Wed I nesday from a visit to Charlotte. •- Mrs. Mattie Brown, of Albe marle, is the guest of Mrs. R. P. Anderson. R. H . Rollins has moved his fam ily into the Saunders house on San ford avenue. Mrs. C. F Stroud and children returned last week from a visit to relatives at Statesville. Miss Kopelia Hunt spent Friday afternoon and Saturday in Clem mons with friends. Walter Clement has sold his tim ber in Spiytown to Everhardt & Son, whc are sawing it. Miss Bettie Linville spent sever al days last and this week with re latives and friends in Winston. E. W. Mooring, formerly of this city, but now traveling for the N . C. 0:1 Co., was in town last week. Dr. H . F. Baity, of North W il- kesboro, was one of the attendants at his brother's marriage Wednes day. The many friends of Dr. M. D. Kimbrongh will be sorry to learn that he continues seriously ill. T. C. Sheets, of Bixby, newly elected County Treasurer, was in town Monday. Jacob Stewart, Jr., who has bean in the Salisbuty hospital undergo ing treatment tor appendicitis, was able to return home last week and is getting a’ong nicely, Mrs M. E. Swicegood who has been quite ill fcr several days, is much better. Burton Brown, one of the town’s oldest citizens, has been very ill for several days. Dr. Evans, of Mooresville, was in town Monday looking for a Ioca tion. He may locate here or at North Cooleemee. Hon. W. A. Bailey, of Advance, newly elected Representative fropi this county, was in town Monday and yesterday, shaking hands with his many friends. H. V. Stroud, of River IIill1 was 'in town Thursday on his way to visit relatives at Winston. Mr. Stroud is 51 years old, and tells us that this was bis first time to. ever ride on a train. It is reported that one of our most promising young business men will shortly go to Statesville and bring away one of that city’s fair, est young ladies as a bride. Pearl, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R L. Walker, of R. 2, who has been very ill, is somewhat improved. W e learn that H . C. Meroney has sold his house on Salisbury St., and will move into his new house in West Mocksville soon. Mrs. Sam Turner, of Monbo, is spending a few days in town with her brother, J. J. Eaton. .Thefoundation for the graded school building is about completed, and the work of laying brick will begin this week. C. C. Craven, who has been oc cupying the Saunders house cn Sanford Are,, has moved back to his farm at Oak Grove. Ketchie G Son. of Kappa; have just, installed a first-class flourmill, and are turning out an excellent grade of flour, Married, in this city Wednesday .evening, at the. home of the bride’s father, W. H. Graves; Miss Thirza Graves to Mr. John Tatum, of Cooleemee, Rev. C. S. Cashwell performing the Ceremony. Only a few intimate friends were present. Mr. and Mrs. Tatum will pake. their home at Cooleemee. . L i t t le S t i n g e r s . (From The Yellow Jacket) If an old maid named Patridge married a widower named Robbins, and their daughter became the wife of a man named Swan and they spent their honeymoon on the Can ary Islands would their off spring bs a bird of paradise? Henry Fork is the richest man. W ho is toe poorest? The distinc tion belongs to a fellow we call Un cle Sam; he is forty-four billion dol lars worse off than nothing. And that’s the sort of a fix the New Deal crowd got Uncle Sam into in six years. How much more ot it do you want, Mr. American Voter? A Nation that continues year after year to spend more than its income is not on the road to pros, perity and social security, but to bankruptcy and ruin. W e’d just like to see the N e w Dealer who has the gall the gall to stand up and dis pute this statement. Few will dispute the statement that recovery begins, not in legis lative halls, but in every man’s workshop, but recovery stands a poor chance in the workshop as a political wire is strung from every work bench in Washington. Secretary Ickes had a bill passed in Congress in its last days appriat- ing $8,250 to purchase reindeer in Alaska. These reindeer are to be distributed among the. Eskimos in that territory, little red eyed devils how these Washington spenders can think up schemes about how to spend the taxpayers’ money. BIumtS A l m a n a c s H e r e . The old reliable Blum’s Alma nacs for 194Q are here : If you want a copy of this useful house hold compendum of in for mation, you can get one free bv calling at The Record, office and renewing vour subscription. . If you don’t take The Record, you can purchase a copy of this almanac for the small sum of only ten cents. They are worth at least a quarter. Send us a dollar to pay on your subscrip tion, and we will send you an al manac postpaid. Don't wait until they are all gone. W a r B o o m M ir a g e . Uolon Republican. Thirsting fo r prosperity, the United States sees today the mirage ot a war boom in the desert of de pression. declares the Boston Tran script, which goes on to add that “ unmindful of the bitter lessons of the World War and its aftermath, which gave • conclusive evidence that civilization cannot escape the consequences of war, the public mind visualizes that American com merce and industry will thrive as never before on the conflict now in progress in Europe.” The well known Boston newspa per then continues to say: “The false and dangerous psy chology, which threatens to lead the nation into the same pitfalls that brought about the unpreced- ’ ented economic collapse of ten vears Itju stb eats seven >8 ° ’ is R ea d in g rapidly despite the experences of the past and the sent warnings of eminent authori ties. To be sure, there seems to be less speculative hysteria atd more caution and restraint today than prevailed at the time of the last war boom. Nevertheless, com modity prices began to rise before the latest European war Was a week old. The cost,of steel and other ma'eria's used in the manufacture of implements of warfare advanced sharply. Production was speeded in many industries. But from the mo t responsible and authoritative sources has come the admonition that the .Uoited States should have no illusions a- bout profiting from tbe European War." I n t e r n a t i o n a l E x p e r t s . W e don’t kuow how you feel about it, but speaking from a personal point of view, we are get ting fed up with the commentaries of so called international experts in tbe newspapers and on tbe radio. After having been bombarded with their outpouring of infotmation for the past several months, we have come to the conclusion that they don’t know any more about what’s going on in' various parts of the wotld than does the average cross, roads citizen in North Carolina. The assumption .on the part of these experts appears to be that the majority of newspaper readers and radio listeners haven’t sense enough to interpret tbe news they read and bear: therefore it must be explain ed to them in detail. If you want some amusing and interesting reading, just dig back through the newspaper files in your public library and compare the commentaries published a fe w weeks ago with developments that actually have taken place.— The State. H o w M a n y W a n t W a r W i t h J a p a n ? Am American business man in China is quoted as saying: If Japan wins the war, we will be thrown out of China in three years. If China wins we will be thrown out in five. He is probably right. No matter which crowd wins, the day of special privilege'for the foreigner in China is-over.' Yet the United States still keeps warships and soldiers in war territory in China, Japan, and in general trying to bump its nose into somebody’s first. It we want to stay out of ah Asia tic, war. wehad.better get our sail ors, soldidrs and civilians out of the fighting gone. Mrs. F., D. R. declares against MICKIE'SAYS— / — :----- OUTSIDE PRlMTlklft COMCE RMS SPEMD MO AAOMEY HERE 'M PAY MO TAXES^ LET US DO YOUR PRlMTlkie JO BS/ W o n d e r in g . Many drunks ,'are arraigned in the Raleigh police court and wheu the judge under take .to trace the li quor to its source th e ’ defendants usually insist that it was “ guy” to ’em by some guy they plutnb dis* remember. But the other .day a Negro de fendant relieved the monotony with a new version: Some fellows had wanted to sell him some liquor, but being a good churchman'and above such things refused/. Then they offer to give it to him, he explain, ed to tbe judge, and when he re fused this kind offer, they set upon him and made him drink the - vile stuff, and that was how come Char lie Martin was suffering th e . em barrassment of being in court—and having to pay the costs. . No particular reason why we should be taking note ot this little matter here, except, to show the versatility of those who offend, and use it as a preface to our wonder ment as to hew those young'col lege girls from Charlotte who werp ^ involved in,a liquor case withsom e young men up this Way,; explained to teacher their absence from class next morning, and’ whether thought to tell their parents of their pro gress) in college and to request a Jit tie addition to their thonthly al U . S . M a s t K e e p O a t O f W a r - . (Senator Capper, of Kansas) The United Stales must be kep' out of War! That demand rings clarion clear from the hearts of our most patriotic citizens. I have no doubt where Kansas, stands on' the question. Hundreds of letters, tele grams and telephone calls from peo ple all over the state, regardless of class, religious beliefs or political leanings, agree with my own con. yictions that. keepiug out of the present European war is the honest, honorable, sane thing to1 do. He roics have no place in our national actions, they have nothing in com mon with the cold facts which, we must face and which our . actions must, be based. This isn’t a war that will end war, or oppression, or dictatorships. The last World War didn’t end such things. Greed and lust for power brought on the 1914.18 mass murder, which blasted thousands of our. most promising young ,men into eternity, Suchwas the ghoul tim .; that and a Gethsemane of suf fering for thousands more of our boys who were maimed and wound* ed, and for parents and wives and children who plumbed the depths of broken-hearted despair. If it is indelicate to mention war realities, lets by all meat’s be inde licate. Ask the man who had half his face smashed away what be thinks of war. Let my shell-shock ed friend tell you that be was quite normal until he saw his buddy's head shot off as he stood on Ihe fir, ing shelf of a filthy trench. Im agine the agonized breathing of a war-gas victim as be struggles vain ly for the air that would keep him alive. You can’t ask questions of those living dead whose minds were snuffed but “Over There,” but yon shudder as their mirthless laughter echoes war’s diabolical dreadful price we had to pay in human suf fering last time “to make the world safe for demon acy.” > O r p h a n a g e G e t s . $2 0 ,0 0 0 . The Baptist orphanage at Tbom asville has recently received 1 check for $20,000 from the estate of the late. Samuel Huffman, pro minent manufacturer and capitalist. The money will be used to build ,a new girls domitory at th e. orphan. rRe. ’ Vv waspwaistS. -,With food prices Iowgh^..J>ecause'oFutifor<^dfi'but they are/a lot of people, however. |“ ent .^-Statesyjlle Daily, will be taking up a few notches to c I T O J E tl ’EM, TOLL iE t t U With A . M the belt.??Cfeveland Plaift Dealer. famsiea.Trees Have Strange Fruits - Manyr-Of the Jamaica trees bear; strange' frbits. Mangoes of all kinds, avocado or “alligator” pears, bread fruit, akee, naseberries and star ap ples grow in profusion. SM ART HUOWS WHERE TO 1 GO AFTER 1 READING THEA DS INTHIS NEWSPAPER A n I m p o r t a n t F a c t o r . ,M ost of us will be agreeing with Judge Johnson J. Hayes that next to our schools and churches the Building and'Loau Associations are serving belter than any other a- gency in elevating citizenship, and contributing to the common ;.good of-the common people of North Ca. rolina. • ■ In his address at the seventh dis trict meeting ot the North Caro lina Building and Loan L eague,. at Statesville, Judge Hayes, the prin cipal speaker at the dinner meet- ing program, deploped the general tendency toward installment paying rather than installment saying de scribing the former as mortgaging the future to secure immediate lux uries that are so easily translated into' personal needs. H e thinks every yoqng person with any re gular income at all should salt some of it away for the rainey day that is sure to come; that they should be thinking in terms of instalment >av ing and resist to the utmost tbe urge for ins'allmeut paving. And borrowing money to biiild a home obviously may be classed as sw ing, aur because the building md IOan associations makes funds available for this purpose, there are thousands of homes in North Carolina that otherwise would not have been built. And because hOmeownership tends to make for a better citizenship, these institutions may well be classed next to our schools and churches. It was pointed out at tbe Sta'es- ville meeting that the various B and L associations in North Carolina had financed the construction or re- pairs of mote than Ihiiteen thous and homes in this State during 1938 , Multiply, that number by the: years of sen ice and you get comprehensive glimpse of import, ance of these institutions to com. muoitv and State. . M t is significant, we think, that it the recent meeting much thought -vas given to improvement of . the already .fine service these associa- ciation, are rendering Government competi.iou bas put these mutual organizations on. their toes and banks, sensing ibe dependability of installment loans to tbe man With small income, are adding to this competition. But as'Judge Hayes pointed out, the. building and; loan associations invariably are manned by outstand ing . citizens q I the community, WithoUtsthe profit motive, and Wuh a pian that in tbe long rnn is more economical than anything compe tition has to offer, they should have tbe co-operation of the prospective home builder.—TaylorsvilleTimes. N o t h i a g F o r N o t h in g . “ Nothing comes from nothing,” wrote Shakespeafs. The -Bard of Avon died some three centuries'ago, but his advice seems more necessary today than ever before. For tbe first time, in onr American history at least, a substantial group of citizens have come to believe that they are en titled- to something for nothing. They feelth a t. the; world, as ex- plified by their government, owes thepi a Jiving. They are quite con vinced that no responsibility de. volves upon them, tb save, to work, to think, to plan. A f lN E G IF T F O R SOME O N i A SUBSCBVTMMI THIS NEVSR S e e n A l o n g M a in S t r e e t By The Street Rambler. 000000 Three Advance ladies talking to bald-headed man on square—Couple of. country folks wanting the Street Rambler to take, baby picture—JJId gentleman-looking at pretty girl in department store—Lucky Moore am bling around the court house—Miss Wyatt waiting in early morning for store to open—Phil Johnson wrapped up in big.overcoat on warm night— Gsorge Barney busy selling apples— Lady shopping around trying to buy pair of hose that wouldn’t run—Ras- tus.Morris catching early bus out/of town—Young clerk sticking bis fin ger through an egg—Ladies from rural section doing their CbristmaB shopping early—John Harding hang* tng around the court house—Girl trying to hitch-hike out of town Fri day night—Dr. Bill Long out on the square taking a little exercise—Offi cers holding up cars that had no tail lights—Gentleman drinking his bot tle of morning beer—Two pretty school teachers talking abont foot ball game—Wayne -MerreIl starting home at dark with car load of com muters. Id O a r T o w n . AU over the United States a pat tern is repeated again which the traveler is not likely to find any where else in the world. The A - merican is so used to this pattern that he never gives it a second thought. But it’s a good thing In look inlo the matter once in awhile; it's a good thing to see wbat bolds t’te pattern together. / The pattern referred to is that of the average American com01 unity. Whatever the surface differences, in the width of Main Street or the number of stores the central shop ping district, there is some has-c ilentity among most Americrn,'' towns. Pethaps it can be pinned down in the foru of a question: “ To wbat does, ibis community owe its origin?'' Here is tbe pictnre again: a num ber of stores, serving tbe varied tastes ot the town’s population; some professional men, doctors, dentists and lawyers, to iron out the individual's difficultion for bini; a school system to educ te Ijije young; and most likely, a busy factor or two. • s And when, it all boils right down it is the last-named—the busy fac tory or factor.es—on which tbe pat tern of this Commnnityv is almost invariab'y based. It is the weekly payroll that generates the purchas ing power wbich makes Main Street prosperous. The money from that payroll is sent out through the stores and reaches the farmer manv' miles away, so that be in turn part ly depends for his "well being; on the factories io individual towns and cities throughout the nation. , ' N o wonder that tbe Dean of a Midwestern university, in t h e : course of listing the factors he con sidered most important in the de velopment of a modern community, listed first of all the following: “ Factories, offices, merebantijp establishments* in proper number to-provide a regular and profitably employment.” In our town—in any town—the factor that creates the pattern '.of " happy and successful living is not : hard to fiod. S J V. •H e Advertised” THE DAVTE RECOR1T MOCKSVTTXE. N. C. ' \ * > • H O U S E H O L D QUESTIONS Sliding Drawers.—Wax or soap rubbed along the sliding edges of dresser drawers will make them move in and out easily.* * * When Glass Breaks.—A handful ef moistened absorbent cotton will pick up bits of broken glass with out endangering the fingers. * * * Removing Odors.—Odors can be removed from bottles by rinsing with cold water to which a little dry mustard is added! * « * Care of Electric Cord.—Don’t twist, bend or tie the so-called cord attached to your electric iron. It is not a cord, but two bundles of wires.• * * New Hot-Water Bottle.—Add a teaspoonful of glycerine to the hot water when filling a new rubber hot-water bottle for the first time. This keeps the rubber soft and in good condition. • • • Restoring Leather Bindings.— Equal parts of milk and white of egg beaten together will freshen leather bindings. Rub on gently with old flannel. Polish with an old silk handkerchief. '• . • Topping for Pork Roast.—For a tasty topping for that pork loin roast: when the roast is nearly cooked, spread generously with applesauce mixed with brown sug ar and a little cinnamon and clove, then brown until a slight crust is formed. PuIItheTriggeron Constipation, and Pepsin-ize Acid Stomach Too When constipation brings on add indigestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your 6tomach is probably loaded up with certain undigested food and your bowels don’t move. So you need both Pepsin to help break up fast that rich undigested food in your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull the trigger, on those lazy bowels. So be cure your laxative also contains Pepsin. Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its Synip Pepsin helps you gain that wonderful stomach-relief, while the Laxative Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the power of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of undigested protein food which may linger in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin- Izing your stomach helps relieve it of such distress. At the same time this medicine wakes up lazy nerves and. muscles in your bowels to relieve your constipation. So see how much better you feel by talcing the laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on that stomach discomfort, too. Even finicky children love to taste this pleasant family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Lax- •. ative—Senna with Syrup Pepsm at your druggist today I Lost Wanderer If any man fancies that there fs some easier way of gaining a dollar than by squarely earning it, he has lost the clue to his way through this mortal labyrinth, and must henceforth wander as chance may dictate.—Horace Greeley. JIM OBI (UK Need More Than Mlust SaM 9 To Relieve DISTRESS! tTo quickly relieve chest cold misery and ■ muscular aches and pains due to colds— it takes MORE than “just a salve”—you need a wanning, soothing "counter* M tontttIjikB good oldretiableMusterole —used by millions for over 30 yean.MxisteroIe penetrates the outer layeia of the skin and helps break up Iocd conation and pain* 3 strengths: Regular,*'' n’s (mild) and Extra Strong, 40& Setter Hian A Mustanl Plasterl Alone in Poverty Whilst you are prosperous, you can number many friends, but when the storm comes, you are left alone.—Ovid. M iserab le with backache? VV/HEN kidney; function badly and Wyou suffer a nagging backache, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, neivous, allupset.. T us< Doan*< Pillt. Doan's are especially for poorly working kidneys. Millions of boxes aie used every year. They are recom mended the country over. Asic yout neighbor! DOANS Pl LLS W N U -7 46—39 MOBE FOB TOPB M o N E Y •Bead the advertisements. They are more than a selling -aid for business. They form an educational system which is making Americans the best- educated buyers in the world. The. advertisements are part of an economic system which Ia giving Americans more tor thsir money every day. EHST nno UIESI BY TALBOT MUNDY OTAUOT MUNDY—WHU SERVICE CHAPIEB XIX—Continued. —17— "I’ll talk EngUsh to His Highness,” said Rundhia. “The old sheep shall do one tiseful'thing before he dies. You have the poison ready?” “Yes, but this is a crisis," the Bengali answered. "Are you in a fit condition to control a crisis? To me, you seem very nervous. Let me feel your heart-beat. Why not postpone this until tomorrow?” “Because tomorrow the old sheep might change his will. I’ve had a warning from the Resident. ’ By the day after tomorrow, they might al ready have vetoed my succession to the throne. If he’s already dead they’ll let me succeed, to save them selves trouble. So poison the old sheep tonight, and take your money and go to the devil. I hope I never see you again. If you fail. I’ll take damned good care you hang!” “There is no risk of failure, un less you are too excited and behave suspiciously.” “Yes, there is,” said Rundhia. “You do as I tell you. Be a little late with, his tonic, so that he drinks it greedily. Fm going in to see him now. After. I come out, you wait until someone else goes in to see him.” “But if no one goes?” “I will take care that someone does go. If you give it to him in someone else’s presence, it will look more innocent. Will he be able to speak after he drinks it?” “No. It will paralyze his nerves immediately.” “How long will it take him to die?” “Perhaps ten minutes. Perhaps less. It will appear to be heart failure.” “Very well then. Where’s your needle? Give me a strong shot." “No. Not too strong. You must not get the habit. After this, you will need your faculties and self- control, if we are not to be found out. I will give you just sufficient to steady your nerves.” The Maharajah stared, noted the expression on Rundhia’s face when he entered the room and made a warning gesture toward the Punjabi stamp salesman. “Can he understand English?” Rundhia demanded. “I believe not.” “Well, I will speak English. If he does understand it, it won’t much matter. I want you to call up the Resident and demand the immedi ate arrest of Captain Norwood!” “Why?” asked the Maharajah. “He has not only taken a bribe from the priests, as you already know—” “I have heard it said.” “You know it’s true. And now he has assaulted me. He knocked me out with a punch in the face.” “Were you drunk?” asked the Ma harajah. Andi before Rundhia could answer: “It .would, be beneath my dignity to ask the .Resident to .take official cognizance' of a brawl be tween two drunkards.” CHAPTER XX Lynni changed from the Indian cos-' tume. She entered the Maharanee’s boudoir in a chiffon evening gown. “Please don’t get up, Maharanee dear. You treat me as if I were royalty and you a subject or some thing.” “Why did you change your dress, Lynn? You looked so charming in—” “Oh, this dress feels more honest somehow. I mean more like my real colors. Maharanee dear, Tm afraid I’m all upset. I’m not fit ^o talk to." “Lynn dear, what has happened?” “Rundhia made love to me, and I wasn’t even polite to him. Captain Norwood came, and punched Run dhia—he knocked him off the wall. I thought he had killed him. Oh; why do I-keep on getting other peo ple into trouble!” The Maharanee’s worried face seemed to age under Lynn’s eyes: “Lynn, did he hurt Rundhia bad ly?” ‘ “No, I think not. Rundhia walked away.” “Did you speak to. Captain Nor wood?” “Yes, I insulted him. I did it thoroughly. I suppose I shouldn’t have, since it was I who injured him. But I couldn’t help it. He tore up my letter, so I tore up his. I am not meek by nature. I’m not good at pretending.” “And Rundhia wasn’t hurt? You are sure?” “Captain Norwood went down off the wall to look. It'wasn’t long be fore Rundhia walked away. I don’t Imow why he didn’t come back and face Captain Norwood, but perhaps he was too stunned by being knocked off Uie wall. Bundhte didn’t behave very well.” • . )■ “He needs you, Lynn.” , Lynn laughed—bitter—contemptu ous: “Needs me? I need a friend. Rundhia is— “Be strong,” said the Maharanee. "I am your friend.” “Yes, bless you! Rundhia seemed strong,” Lynn said. “And. he talked like a perfect lover. I had almost beeun to belitve he can love. And then something happened. There was shooting—perhaps nothing im portant—I don’t know. I asked Run dhia, and I thought he was.lying, when he said he didri’t know. After that—it was quite sudden—I didn’t believe in him any longer. I can’t explain it. Then Captain Norwood came.” A servant entered. He announced that Prince Rundhia was waiting. “Lynn, will you see him?” “Not alone,” Lynn answered. The Maharanee thought a minute: “It is against precedent, against custom. Lynn dear, will you be shocked if I ask Rundhia to come in here to talk to us?” Lynn found a smile. “I suppose you’re afraid he might brag! Let’s risk that. I won’t tell.” Rundhia strode in. He stood stock still in the center of the room. He was wearing a blood-red turban and dinner jacket. He looked like the real Rundhia again. Easy to imag ine him horsed and riding hard at an enemy. He gazed at Lynn a mo ment, then at the Maharanee: “Has Lvnn told you?” he asked. “Yes, Rundhia. What did you do to make Captain Norwood strike you?!’ Rundhia tossed his head. He looked like a man when He did that. “Lynn saw. Lynn heard,” he an swered. “I went at once and de- 17 “Lynn dear, what has. happened?” manded Norwood’s arrest. His High ness your husband, my revered and beloved uncle, refused. Lynn must decide.” “Decide what?” Lynn asked. Rundhia looked strangely at her. “Does he live or die? It was be cause you were there that Norwood struck me. I hadn’t offered to strike him. There is only one possible re tort to that insult—unless you for bid. That is what you must decide now. Lynn, I have offered you my heart and the throne of Kadur. What is your answer?” “Lynn,” said the Maharanee—and stopped speaking. There was a knock at the door. A servant entered: “Captain Norwood sahib! He waits. He begs leave to speak to Her Highness the- Maharanee. Cap tain Norwood says his business is very urgent.” “I will not see Captain Norwood,” said the Maharanee. “This is no hour for me to receive him.” She stared at Rundhia. Then, slowly, to the servant: “Tell Captain Norwood he should ask for His Highness my husband. I will send word to His Highness, asking him to receive Captain Norwood.” The servant vanished. Lynn got up out of her chair. She looked desperate but perfectly calm. “Lynn' darling,” said the Maha ranee. Rundhia interrupted: “Norwood’s fate is in your hands. I will do any thing for you—if—” “If what, Rundhia?” “If you accept my love.” “I don’t love you,” she answered. “Accept my love. My love will make you love me!” “If not?” Lynn asked. “I will kill Norwood. After that, I will let happen what may. If my love means nothing, I will trample it into oblivion. Yes or no, Lynn?” “Rundhia.” Lynn’s voice was as quiet and controlled as if she were* facing death. “The barrier between you and me is your laugh when you boasted of Captain Norwood’s ruin. You promised me that you would do your best to. clear him. Did you?" “No,” said Rundhia. “But if you will marry me, I will. I will accept your promise. I dop’^ believe you know how to break one. I will keep mine.” “Rundhia," said Lynn, “I will promise to marry you, if you will write, and sign, a retraction of any and all accusations against Captain Norwood. You must put it in the form of.a letter to the British Resi dent, and it must be witnessed by the Maharanee and the Maharajah. You must meet Captain Norwood In my presence, and the Mahara nee’s, and you must say to him per sonally Jhat you withdraw.^ I won’t, ask you to beg.his frardon, because I won’t do that. I won’t speak to him. But I insist on your behaving like a man." The Maharanee spoke suddenly with a ring of command in her voice: “Rundhia, go to the table and write!” Rundhia went to the table.- Lynn sat down beside the Maharanee: “Maharanee dear, you must be my wise friend, for I am all in the dark. I feel so western and so lone ly, and I don’t know whether I am doing right or wrong. But I will do my best.” “Lynn—” . Lynn interrupted her: "Will you make me a promise? Will you nev er, never tell Captain Norwood why I married Rundhia? Will you keep it a secret?” The Maharanee was silent for nearly a minute. She was not quite dry-eyed. She spoke suddenly, low voiced: “Lynn, do you love Captain Nor wood?” “Maharanee dear, I have prom ised to marry Rundhia.” CHAPTER XXI Norwood stood stock-still, beneath a Tibetan devil-mask, between two suits of ancient Indian armor. He had sent up his card to the Maha ranee with a request for an imme diate interview. It was an outra geous request, and he knew it. The palace chamberlain approached him, stared—stared harder—hesitat ed, and then: “Captain Norwood? We had heard you are dead!” “Yes. I have been wondering who is sorry I’m not dead. Has the Ma harajah heard it?” “No, I believe not. He is rather inaccessible this evening. And it was only a rumor, unconfirmed yet. It was thought best not to mention it to him prematurely. May I con gratulate you on your escape. It was said that criminals attacked your camp. I am sincerely—” “Thanks.” “Your business at the palace? I think the Maharajah might be pleased to see you. He has a docu ment—” “I have asked to see the Maha ranee.” “Oh, impossible! Captain Nor wood, please. We have been very unconventional of late, but—” “Here comes the servant,” said Norwood. The servant delivered his mes sage: the chamberlain accompanied Norwood upstairs as far as the ante room that led into the Maharajah’s study: “I am sure His Highness will be glad to see you, because of that new document he has discovered. The at tendant in the anteroom will an nounce you. Hee-hee! You may be lieve it or not, but I wouldn’t dare to do it. “Don’t mention niy name,” said Norwood. “I wouldn’t think of it. The doc tor and I are not cronies. I will simply say someone went in. I be lieve you will be admitted. His Highness spoke of you. I think he. really wants to see you.” The chamberlain left him. Nor wood was announced. The Punjabi stamp salesman was dismissed, smiling as if he had done good busi ness. The door closed, and Nor wood was alone with the Mahara jah. At last the Maharajah spoke: “I am pleased to receive you, Captain Norwood, even though the hour is unusual. You came to speak, to me about the—ah—boundary dispute? I have news. Since I saw you, my secretary has found a document which seems to me to make the priests’^, case, so -ridiculous that—” ■ “Oh, I expect to find in the favoi of the priests. Your Highness. Those documents may interest lawyers. I am only concerned with the bound ary line. I have been accused of accepting a bribe from the priests—” “Oh! Captain Norwood, you aston ish me. Who is your accuser?” “I supposed you already knew. He will tell you. As a matter of fact, I called on Her Highness the Mahara nee. I want to speak to Miss Lynn Harding. I have reason to believe that without the Maharanee’s advice she might refuse to see me until perhaps tomorrow. I need to see her tonight. I hoped to persuade the Maharanee to arrange the inter view, but she refused, so I came to you instead.” “Is it urgent? Won’t you please be seated? Won’t you read this docu ment?” “Your Highness, do you think I would disturb you at this time of night if it wasn’t urgent!” “Oh, well; possibly an interview can be arranged. I will enquire presently. Won’t you read that doc ument?” Norwood smiled agreeably: “I will. As you have reason to know, sir, I’m a bit slow at reading this ancient script.” “I wouldn’t care to let that out of my possession,” said the Mahara jah. “Suits me,” Norwood answered. “I ask nothing better than to sit here for the time being. You will learn why, later.” The Maharajah looked up sharply, but Norwood raised the document between them. He couldn’t see Nor wood’s face: “You flatter me,” he said after a moment. At last came a knock at the door. The Maharajah tapped the gong with his fingers and the Bengali doc tor entered, making his suavest pro fessional bow. He was followed by the Maharajah’s personal attendant, carrying a big blue goblet on a sil ver tray. The Bengali eyed Nor wood with horror. “You are late,” said the Mahara jah. “Why are you late?” “I was delayed, your Highness. I—” Norwood had laid down the docu ment. He rose from his chair. He stepped behind the Bengali. He held his right fist ready for emergency and seized the goblet in his left hand. The Bengali stepped back, out of reach of the fist. The Maharajah made a sudden exclamation, not un like a sheep's bleat. The white-clad servant backed away, showing the whites of his eyes. Norwood held the goblet toward the Bengali: “Drink it!” he commanded. The Bengali was speechless. It was several seconds before he could stammer: “Sir, are you mad?” The Maharajah, with his elbows on the desk, and one hand within reach of the drumstick of the golden gong, leaned forward, staring. Norwood spoke again quite calm ly. But it was a deadly calm. It frightened the Bengali: “You are, aren’t you, the doctor who poisoned Mrs. Harding’s toast?” “Sir, beware whom you slander!” The Bengali appealed to the Maha rajah: “Is Your Highness pleased to hear me slandered by a mad man who is known to have been bribed by—” Norwood interrupted: “Cut thatl You heard me. Drink it!” •That is His Highness’ tonic.” ‘Drink it!” said the Maharajah. He looked almost happy. He sound ed quite calm. But his fingernails drummed on the desk. Not a sign of humor. (TO BE CONTINUED) ‘Algae’ Worry Scientists Seeking Pure Water Supply Supplying pure, good-tasting wa ter to a modem city has its ups and downs. One of the biggest “downs” is the sudden appearance of a smell or taste suggesting moldy base ments, cucumbers, pig pens or long- dead fishes. This means that algae is in the reservoir and instead of calling the police with a drag-net, the trouble shooters at the water works go hunting with a microscope. Algae are the simplest and most ancient forms of plant life. They do not bother drinking water as long as they behave themselves. Usually they are taken care of by filtration and other purification. But,'like any crowd, there is always a smart aleck or two. That is when the superin tendent of the reservoir has his wor ries. Nearly every city water system that draws its supply from surface reservoirs must be guarded con stantly against sudden invasions of such algae and their relatives, writes Walter E. Burton in Nature Magazine. The chemist at the wa ter works keeps a rogue’s gallery of photomicrographs of the offend ers. Ohce they, are identified he starts in to round them up—and out. One of the most offensive algae— Reservoir Enemy No. I—is Synura Uvella. He is a two-tailed creature that likes to travel in gangs of 50 or so. Such a bunch, magnified 600 times, makes a spot about the size of a quarter. Three of these gangs in a gallon of water will make it taste pretty awful—some say like geraniums; others like dead fish. Syntura loves the cold, so is specially offensive in winter. Anabaena is good-looking algae— under the microscope—with cells ar ranged in graceful curlicues. How ever, it creates an odor and taste described as “grassy, moldy and vile.” Asterionella adds the.delight ful touch of a pig-pen odor to the reservoir water, and it, too, is pret ty, with its cells arranged like a star. These and other public water ene mies are one reason why you have a water bill to pay. Just as you need a police department to protect you, so you iwed the men at the water works, particularly the trained, chemists, to keep ,the water pure and tasty. N o w f o r t h e M ir r o r A n t f O l d P ia n o S t o o l By R fTH WYETH SPEARS ''HE ^lustration shows what be- s of the mirror and piano stool wiiich the bride had left over last week. To the mirror and stool wt^e added two wooden boxes fnjm the grocery. These were placed on end about 18 inches apart and a shelf of Vt- inch pine screwed to the top. A frame was then screwed to the back of the boxes as shown here. A curtain rod was placed across FiunEOFUMBER: SMRTOF BOXES AND HINSED ARMS the top and the mirror hung lengthwise under it. An arm was- then hinged to the front of each box.. Paint was next. White,.be cause white furniture is smart and because it matched the woodwork. The flowered chintz in tones of rose and blue-green with narrow frills of the plain blue-green tone matched the window curtains. The dressing table skirt was made with a one-inch heading at the top and tacked along the ends. of. the table and the hinged arms with thumbtacks through a double strip of the plain material. NOTE: Readers who are now using Sewing Books No. I, 2 and 3 will be happy to learn that No. 4 is ready for mailing; as well as the 10-cent editions of No. I, 2 and 3. Mrs. Spears has just made quilt block patterns for three designs selected from her favorite Early American quilts. You may have these patterns FREE with your order for four' books. Price of books—10 cents each postpaid. Set of three quilt block patterns with out books—10 cents. Send orders to Mrs. Spears, Drawer 10, Bed ford Hills, New York. Isn ’t T h is W h y Y o u A re C on stip ated ? What do you eat for breakfast? Coffee, toast, maybe some eggs? What do you eat for limch and dinner? White bread, meat, potatoes? Wslittle wonder you’re constipated. Tou probably don't eat enough "bulls" And "bulk" doesn't mean the amount you eat. It’s a Kindalloodtliat forms a soft “bulky” mass in the Intestines and helps a movement. If this Js your trouble, may we sag* gest a cranchy toasted cereal— ICellogg’sAll-Bran—toibresktast. All-Bran Is a natural food, not a medicine—but it’s particularly rich In “bulk.’’ Being so, It can help you not only to get regular but to keep regular. Tou won’t have to endure constipation, you can avoid it Eat All-Bran daily, drink plenty of water, and life will be brighter for you! Made by Kellogg’s in Battle Creek. Spontaneous Humor Humor is a thing one ought not to be conscious of—it ought to be just there, ready to brim over—it oughtn’t to be cultivated. I QUICK,WITH THIS FIRST-THOUGHT TIKSFI IJUD FOR HEAD COlDfNASAL MISERIES I PENETRO NOSE DR0PS-2DR0PS-THEVI \ SOOTHE AS THEY TOUCH, THEY COOLAS f F THEY VAPORIZE, THEY SHRINK AS THEY ] XT-AND FRESH-AIR BREATHING I IS FREER AGAIN. ^ r e j s j i s w s T g# ’' ^ ' 1 Natural Wisdom The unselfish heart knows as much as a book on etiquette can teach. Are You Weak, Nervous? Cdlumbus, Ga.—Mrs. Henrietta Sentz, 1009 • 20 th S t, flays: “I was IrightfuUy nervous and [ suffered Irom irregular* I ity. Dr. Pierce's favorite Prescription stimu-. Iated my appetite, I en joyed e a tin g , gained weight and felt so uucti stronger and better.* ’ , ...... Ask your druggist todayfor it in uqtud or tablets* See bow much calmer 700 fed after using thf« tonic. h m lI far year money... bay fireworks Idireet SScbox estates FftCE with Iflferj order.Esrafireworicstahow- ltngeitatogtoyoor friends. 8end I. far PVtUestaJog today. SKHCBt HREWfORKS COMPANY P. O. Box W-IM FOLK, OHIO mODERIIIZE VlicUitr you’re phuuog a party or remodeling a room you should follow tbt advertisements... to learn what's new... and cheaper... and better. And the place torfind out about new things Is right here In uib newspaper. Its columns are tilled with -Importaot messages which you should read regularly. I BIGTOP IgEAVlHG- THE EiARXER LALA PALfl ‘WELL, SIS, PM BACK - I KNEW VOu1O Neeo Md WITH VOUR I OISAPPOINTMeNl IN V-OVE AN’ I YOUR SICK DOSl AN’ EVERYTHINf S’MATTERl 'P o P jVcj C=OOU vj+Jew IS S d 'u il MESCAL % POP— SoJ I COULl O STEP! WESODtlHH IHEB VttSKIlM THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. ' t h e IVT1V 1. Nd p- ro1- ! I ^ n o S f c 03, I rS s speaSS 1 I lle mjTor anrihat be- I 1® b,'ide had ] l Piano I 0 the mii -1 0ver I added two r and Lthe SrOcen- "'Sjden r on end ',’u hese J and a shelf ““t* 18 | re'ved to of Vi- I hen s « e^ V ? P- A V 1oxeS as shown L the lS rSL1"**I 0 the i Z t 0» I “ -Jlext- wWte, bt If U j re is smart and Itched the woodwo*I chintz in tones^ p-green with narro™ Ilarn blUe-Oreen tone Iwindow curtains T1S table skirt ;vas Prt ?ne,'m=h heading Jid tacked along the ■able and the h^ged ■umbtacks through a ■I the plain material. I r^is vho are now ■Books J>0. I. 2 and 3 ■to learn that No. 4 is th n g ; as well as the Ps °f ^o. I, 2 and 3. Jhas just made quilt Is for three designs ^ her favorite Earlv Ilts. You may have FHEE with your books. Price ofIs each postpaid. Set Iblock patterns with- lcents. Send orders J-s. Drawer 10 , Bed- few York. I T tis W hy C on stip ated? . eat for breakfast? I maybe some eggs? I eat for lunch and Ie bread, meat, pota- - ponder you’re con- 1 Prooabhj don’t eat |2 t." And "hulk." the amount you Id of food that forms I" mass in the intes- Ilps a movement. If !rouble, may we sug- Ihy toasted cereal- ■Bran-forbreakfast. I natural food, not a fit it’s particularly L” Being so, it can I only to get regular ■regular. You won’t Ire constipation, you ■Eat All-Bran daily, I of water, and life Ier for you! Made by Battle Creek. Ieous Humor lthing one ought not of—it ought to be Idy to brim over—it I cultivated. T H E S U N N Y S ID E O F L IF E Clean Comics That W ill Amuse Both Old and Young |il Wisdom heart knows as bk on etiquette can eak,Nervous? J Columbus. Ga.—Mrs*BHcnrietU Rent*. 100 "I - 20th St., says: “I I mj?htfully nervous ana I suiTered from irresular- I ity. Dr. Pierce’s Favor- I ite Prescription stimu- I Jated my appetite, I en- Ijoycd eating, gained I weight and felt so mtidi !stronger and better.I Ask your druggist today I tablets. See how much Ir using this tonic. . M ost..L. .bay fireworks UuUs FREE withn f ireworks Bhow-jur friends. Send Btalog today. w COMPANY FOLK, OtfIO ■>u’re planning a party Kng a room you shooia ^ivertisemenU... to Icarn T... aod cheaper.. • an® f the place to-find out !things is right ^efe ,n laper. Its columns are r important messages Ishou idreadregawV* BIG TOP ByEDW HEELAN J0EAVING- BARVitR ’ TME EXASPER£TeD"eeNNy.THE- S tF F ENTEREO THE SlDE SHOtf - tN uaO 1THE EUROPCAH SlAKT-MASOR SPECK1IHEM lPaET- LOTW1TWE BAT Q lRL- ALMA .THE AL&1NO- PROP HORACE. COPE1THE ASTROLOGER - SAILOR SETC. THE TATTOOED MAH- MME. FRINGE, THE EgARDEp LAOy- W oop1 th e w ip m /W .an d ku-ku.the e-iecx?ii5L, a i l cam e fo r w a r d - AIOW SEE HEEE -ALLOP VOU - X WANT NO MORE PA-Z-Z-INS- OF E C N N / I’LL PlRE THE FIRST OWE- NHHO TRIES TO Kl C> HIM ASAlN - DO VOU V UNDEfeSTAHD THW ?-"• yiS -SS ALt Rl&HT EVERX&ODy Do w n VHHfiP1S) I GEE. HOQO W NPER UP • FranlL Jit Hirltf SitJkiM. Im VfeeiAtf LALA PALOOZA —Vincent Can’t Resist a Bed By RUBE GOLDBERG THE POOR DARLING’S WAITING TO BE OPERATED ON DONT LE T HER KNOW HOW SERIOUSIT IS ^ _ _----1 I’L L 6 0 I OIONrT KNOW VINCENT WOULO TAKE IT SO HARD I CAN HEAR HIM SIGHING - POOC FELLOW ’S ALL.BROKEN UP THANKS, VINCENT YOU CAN GO IN ANO S E E PINTO FOR A M INUTE - IT MAY B E FO R T H E L A S T T IM E - BOO HOOl W ELLy SIS4 I’M SACK - 1 KNEW YOU'D NEED M E, WITH VOUR DISAPPOINTMENT IN UOVE AN* YOUR SICK OOG AN* EVERYTHING . Frank Jay Uarkey cate, Sne By C. M. PAYNEIt’s H ard for a FeIIah to Figure OutS’MATTER POP •A m' "Yo u M V <S©oT> MOfH.WlMiS v j4 e -m it'stZ a ik im ' Am' S T otcm i n -Au' - A i n T T=EfcLlw1 ^Stooro I V A - A i.su A 'i s K n o w vj+)a t VA A(2£_ S rtV lM 1 Vme-Ki JP Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Miss Sally’s Off to a Good StartMESCAL IKE B r S. L. HUNTLEY I SOTTWer BOMP WHEW I STUCK MV W X*K AftOUWD TH' CORMER TO , SEE UMO UJASTHiaoaiIM BRICKS AT “ = ' SALUVS B n o S a l n ) STUCMU OP OM A u£ld >stoj /PMBeNOLOGtf BOOK-SHE WOLD STILL Zcam -ren TUlMSS ABOUT KJOW.TWIS BUMP SMOWSCURIOSITY.. OW, SOOD.1 DADSUM TUCTS A FACT.TRYlM VORWEADSALLY By J. MILLAR W ATTPOP— Someone’s Unlucky I COULO M U R D E R THAT M A N O F MINE- - LEAVING THE- HEN-HOUSE- DOOR O P E N 1 N O ! , THEY LL O O SA C K WOME- TO RO O ST.' W O NT THEY C O M E BACK H O M E The Bell Syndicate. Inc.—IVW Semce STEPLADDEft By GLUYAS WILLIAMS 4f> . _____ COES Oltf WVMW ft WHtHB- 6ES HRED ® KBN6 MMi. WHER SHfMKS 1fc SET WrtK. IHEH WORKlKe ON SttPLMIDEft 'AainSWeEtIDEmiIER..' ' WES-SO OlSIHPlESf »W IlSIEMSUlEftV IrOtWtiros «61*» WE ISMlERJOBHfREMARKS - SEEM * WM K UHSIttW OS ROllHD. DRIffe OTT1 IEWNji HO; TkMEftIiMSirKtBcD Syiydlratr -WKV S«rvlc* • ______ ONE TO TIEBR TKWERS HEftOESK FAST MAIL “Did you post my letter, Mary?” asked her mistress. “Yis, mum, indeed I did.” “But why have you brought the pennies I gave you for the stamps?” “Sure, I didn’t have to use one, mum,” replied Mary. “I shlipped th’ letter in the box when nobody was lukin’.” What’s in a Name! Here is a list of towns with odd names, whicli, with the state in cluded, make interesting combina tions: Ash, Kan.; Carpet, Tex.; Ogoo, Ga.;. Odear, M e.; Skeleton, Ky.; Shoo, Fla.; Kay, O.; Houdy1 Miss.; Fiven, Tenn. — Wall S t Journal. : !-------Comparison Spectator—I simply can’t under-' stand why anyone shoidd- miss a putt as short as that. Golfer—Let me remind you -that the hole is only four and a quarter inches across and there is the whole world outside it. O t Cheerful New s D0VIM6 PRIVILEGES M N KJOT W lc b SPEEPEE. MOIDRlSrHELPAfTER PEAW OF CVCllST TDEEtWILP PRIWERS get ja il sentences 6IBLIHJUBEP IN _ AUTOM(MLEA«lPEHT AlWBPEP^lQOOtf PEieHTUSHTS CAUSE OF FATAL CRASH CAE PEMOLISHEO AT BMLROAP CROSSING T w s r ta itR V - P0PY IN SUCH A PIG HUEEV I A eo o r ? A -p ly v F m n 'r n J o n ty <37, FINISHES 0EP SfiEEAD SHE SfiET EP-KNmiN6 2 2 VEAUSA60 ChildWouldLove These Dutch Dolls Pattern 6475 Dolls are always fun to sew. When they work up as quickly as these (they’re two pieces with a band to round the head) you’ll want to keep on making them. Pattern 6475 contains a pattern and directions for making the dolls and their clothes; materials needed. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Cir cle, Household Arts Dept., 249 W. 14th St., New York, N. Y. S t r a n g e F a c t s f jobs vs. Positions I Netv ‘Antiques’ ’ I Taps for Evil Spirits The captain of one New York er’s private yacht draws a larger salary than the master of the Queen Mary, the colored manager of a Harlem dance hall is paid more than the governor of Penn sylvania, and a Midwesterner re ceived more money as the presi dent of a local musicians’ union in 1938 than Mr. Roosevelt re ceived as President of the United States. For a number of years, at least three-quarters of all “antiques” imported into this country have been fakes. More Europeans are employed in a certain large industrial plant in Detroit than there were Ameri cans employed in all the indus trial plants in Europe before the outbreak of the present European war. The three volleys fired into the air at military funerals were origi nally intended to frighten away evil spirits and, therefore, prevent them from entering the mourners' hearts, which stood ajar at the burial of a comrade.—Collier’s. CLOTHESPIN NOSE Got a cold? Get two-way relief with Luden's! A LudenfS on your tongue helps soothe throatj —then, as it melts, releases coo menthol vapor. Your breatl carries this to dogged «««* ^'passages, helps open jroui "clothespin nose!** L U b E N 1S £* M enthol C oogh Drops Reward for Efforts It never will rain roses; when we want to have more roses we must plant more trees.—George 1Wliot AtOOOtDIVOSVOUS •The beat place to start your shop ping tour is is your favorite easy ■[ chair, with an open “ • newspaper. Make a habit ot leading the adveitti*. menta in this paper every week. Tbaj.. can save you time, energy, and MiMy. SHOPPING T o u r b -/ f Creation of Idleness It is idleness that 'creates im possibilities; and where men care not to do a thing, they shelter themselves under a persuasion that it cannot be done.—South. . OLD FOLKS H ere fs AroazIns AeKef o f ConditiMis Due to SIusgisIi Bowels K you thtrik all Iaxatlvea act alike* just try tbla all vegetable Iaxatlva.__ mfld, thorough* refreshing, invigorating. Dei' peadable relief from eicfc headacics, bilioos spells, f ~ tired Ceding when associated with constipation** ' itiML— « B>-|. get a 25c box of NR from yonr ■VIUlODI KlSK druggist. Uske the test—'then If not delighted, return the box to us. We/irilt xefond the purchase price. T hat's fair. J rT V GetNRTaMetstoday. 'tessedKdUel. I E T t a n a Q S f uH IBEBM y '„jgits '-S i Vwl 55 M l W :: m TiiS b.-Jv;Z uRcdM>. iiocKsviLLi. n . c . N o v e m b e r 22.1939. TH E D A V IE RECORD . C. FRANK STROUD - - Editor. teleph o n e “ P oor F ath er.” B ookm obile F or D avie. Entered at the Postoffice in MockB-. vllle, N . C., as Second-class Mail .matter, March 3,1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - * I OO SIX MONTHS, IN ADVANCE - $ SO Al Sm ith’s son has been elected to a city office in New Votk- He didn’t tod as a democrat or New Dealer, but as an independent. Mrs. E iitY Luiher a deserted wife, starved to death a few days ago at her home within a few miles of Raleigh. Itt these days of New Deal prosperity, and a man in the .White House who was to look after the forgotten man, it doesn’t seem possible that a woman would be allowed to starve to death almost within hollowing dhtince of Gov ernor Hoey’s Mansion in Raleigh. It is only a week until Thanks giving day. U p to th isg o o d hour no one has said anything ahout giving us a turkey for this happy occasion. W e have received the pumpkins for the pies, and the persimmons for the pudding, but a Thanksgiving without meat would be like a ship without a rudder. Of course there are.other kinds of meats besides turkey, such asback- ribs, spare bones, and chicken, for instance. M ore A bout S heriff's C otton. Sheriff.Sheek Bowden has finish ed gathering his 1939 cotton crop. The sheriff had 5 4 10 acres in r cotton this year, which produced 10,864 pounds. One acre of this cotton, grown by Herman Orrell, young son of Lee Orrell, produced 2,564 pounds of seed cctton, which is equivelant to.about two bales of lint cotton. So far as we have ; heard, this is the largest yield per I acre of any cotton grown in Davie this year. Ths Athletic Aesociationof Mocko-' W P. A, Library Project bat two book- ville high school is sponsoring a 3 act mobiles ia areas 5 and 7, TbeBaW P. A. comedy. "Poor Father.” to be pre- Boakmobiles are equipped with 2.000 new sented at the high school auditorium books, fictional, non-fiction. Books on ev- Friday night, Nov. 24th. Following ^ry subject. Books for young and old. I The Bookmobile is operated and super- I vieed by the W. P. A. Library Project. There will be a driver and bookmobile Ii- brariad frum the W. P. A. Library Pro ject. This bookmobile will be in Davie for three months, and started Monday, Sergt. O'Connor—Roadman Pope. Nov 20th. Books are free to every one. Marv Thompkins—Jessie L. Stroud Bookmobile and 2,000 books are loaned is the cast of characters: William Tompkins—John Eatob. Clifford—Avalon Frye. Harold Caldwell-Harold Benson, Sidney Dummel—Hiltv Hoots.- George Washington Brown-Rob' ert McCorkle, H undreds See W adiow . Nearly one thousand people from ail sec tions of Davie were in town Saturday afternoon to see Robert Wadlow, the 21* year-old man who is; 8 feet'/ 81-2 inches tall and weitfbs.491 pounds. Wadtow is the tallest man in the world. Hewasac- ..j'l compAriied by bis father, and a represen tative of the Peters Shoe Co. Ile 8Peot one'hour in front of-the W. J. Johnson De partment Store, who sell the Peters Shoes. Wadlow travels ovef. the country by auto* mobile, despite hia Immense height. The Record is not running a baby ,contest. It is the Statesville Record. Gladys—Mary Marklin. Bessie-M ary Neil Ward. Caroline—Sue Brown. Marie-GeraIdine Stonestreet. Vivian LaramieH-Louise Foster. { S hort Is A P asser. v .. The Twin Cily Sentinel of last i V/ednesday had the following to )' say about Frank Short, one of the ) Mocksville high school football ') players: ’ We saw one of the most amazing for ward, pass exhibitions of the year out at the Stadium last niflht. Biddie Holt's Mocksville team bowed te Gray High, 18 to 6. But a back named F. Short, wearing a steel mask over his face, did something that made alt of the re ports of brilliant' forward passiog look ,.small. TheMocksvilleback threw at leabt a f-in passes, maybe more, as no statis- V were nept on the game, and compiet • every one except one and that attempt intercepted, v Aocksvil’e receivers, usually making -;ra five, to ten yards on the plays, found e ball right in their bands. While the i oning plays of the team were piled up '^cojd the passing of Short made the Daviejj team a threat the entire last half j ** That’s some kind of a record to com>i plete every pass except one and have that< Intercepted. __________ M rs. L ula W alsh. Mrs. Lula Walsh, formerly of Mocksville. died Friday at the home of a son, Tracv Walsb. Jr.. at Dallas, Texas.The funeral was held at Z o’clock Mon day afternoon a t the WalkerFuoersl Home. Rev. W. C. Cooper. Rev. G. M h Avett and Rev. J. H Fulgbum conducted ghe services. Burial was in Rose Ceme- TneHocal chapter of Order of East- Jb Star have charge of the services. . Surviving are one son. Tracy Walsh, Jr., of DalIgSs and one daughter, residing at ; Jacksonville, Fla. M erchant D ies A t K an- to counties lot three months only for cost 'of transportation, (gas.oil and minor re • pairs.) This project is sponsored by (he Davie county Board of Education. , .... .t Routes and schedules will be plannedihe playis constructed with just , communities in one object—to create plenty of hear* , __ ... tv laughter. Make plans now to be and “ “ W Pa9aib ? *?* present Fridav night. It’s just too err two weeks. The bookmobile will cir. funny for words. Voit the county twice a month giving ev- ------------------------eryone an opportunity to borrow books I l B I p _ . every two weeks. Books are due afterJOUD f t . VJICCU. I you have ^ept ,|,eni ,wo weeks and please John W. Green, 67. died at Ms home on remember to return them. R. 4 Sunday morning, following a heart These routes and schedules are tenta attack. He had been In bad health for tive and if there is anyone who failed to several years. | Set books, write Mrs. Elizabeth C. Meade, Funeral services were held at Center Yadkinville, N. C.. Supervisor of the W. Methodist church Tuesday afternoon at 2 P. A. library Project, and she will make o'clock, and the boJy laid to test in the every effort so serve you. church cemetery. Mr. Green is survived j Collections of books will be left at by hi9 widow, five sons. J. B and Wallas, schools. Home Demonstration Clubs, etc. of R. I: T. C.. Winston-Salem; T. R. and I William, of R 4; one daughter, Mrs. K. G. j Ridenbour, of R: 4; one sister; Mrs. R. L. j Walker, of this city, and one brother, J. S. j Green, of R. I. In the death of Mr. Green, Davie comity has lost a good citizen, the wife and child- red a kind and Iovinghusband and father. We have known Green for more more than 40 years. He was our friend, and we will miss him. M errell R eunion. The third annual Merrell reunion was held at the home of George Merrell near Fork Church on Sun day Nov, 12th, with about seventy- five relatives and friends present A wide area was represented with peo ple from Cleveland, Davidson. Fot- syth and Yadkin counties present. The event has come to be one which is looked forward to with a great deal of anticipation it is one day out of the year when the mem bers and friends of this clan aeem to forget the troubles of the present day world and meet to revel in the past. However at Cie noon hour on this occasion as on all others, the group ceased to think and tell of the past and gathered around a table in the yard which was spread with a bounteous supply of good things to eat. It was decided to hold the re union on the 2ad Sunday of October next year at which time at perman ent organization wiil be affected. BY ONE PRESENT. ROUTE FOR BOOKMOBILE. Route No. I, Nov. 20tb. Place Time Four Corners 8:25 Pino 9.-O0 Farmington 9:40 Smith Grove 11:10 Hartman’s Fijling Station 12:15 Advance 1:40 Bixbv 360 Cornatzer 2:25 Route No. 2. Nov. 21st. Clarksville 8:80 Chestnut Stump 960 Caua 9:25 Holman's 10;20 Cheshire's 10:45 Calabaln 11:30 Center 1260 Mocksville High School 1:45 Mocksville Court House 260 Robert’s Store 8:15 Route No. B, Nov. 22nd. Mocksville Elementary School 8:45 County Home 9:35 Jericho 10:05 Davie Academy 10:35 Cooleemee Junction 1120 Cooleemee School 12:45 Davie Cross Roads 2:00 Oak Grove 3:00 Route No. 4, Nov. 23rd. • Bethel Church 9:00 Grubb’s Filling Station 9:35 Fork 10:05 Fulton 1160 Concord Church 11:40 J. B. Price, 62 year old pioneer mercb- [ ant of Kannapolis, died at bis home on ! •South Main street in Kannapolis Sunday evenirg after a lingering illness. Funeral services were held at noon Tues d ay at the Jercbo Church of Christ, with Ir. John Kurfees of Winston-Salem in icharge. Thebody layio statetberefrom I’ll until 12 o’clock. T. Mr. Price is survived by bis wife, the pormer Miss Anns Stonestreet, of Mocks- Ip, thrdp children; Swindell and Kermi UiseofKannapolis; and Mrs. R. E. Perry I Kannapolis; a half brother, J.. C. Price fCjoccjtd; and two grandchildren. . . Mocksville Building & Lean nciation nave’ moved their of. JiSce ftom the second floor of the Merouey building to the Iohnstone building on South Main street. I Mr. and Mrs Jake Meroney are- lith e proud parents of a fine sou who W anrived - Monday, Nov. 20th. M rs. T Meroney and bzbe are at Davis I Hospital, Statesv.lle. Monarch Ranges 1-Malleable Iron Construction (an axe will not break it) 2-Finest Grade Porcelain Enamel Armour. 3-Four (4) Wall Body Construction. 4 -Vitrifused Rust-Resisting Flues. 5-Mirco Processed Top and Oven. 6-Dust-Tight Firebox Front. 7-Duplex Draft-Copper Resevoir. 8-Convertible, Thermometer, Warming Closet As Fine As Money Can Buy-Should Last The Average Family A Life Time. Only Two (2) To Sell. One 19-inch Oven $OC.50 Regular price $139.50, now w One 21-inch Oven $QQ.SO Regular price $159.50, now At Slight Extra Charge We Will Give 2 Years To Pay. Remember Only 2 To Sell So; Hurry Daniel Funuture And Electric Co, Mocksville, N, G Overhead Bridge. ... 5 ' r Always Bargains: In Furnituie And Appliances S e e U s F o r Y o u r N e e d s . I F o r Your: I I Thanksgiving Dinner j I You Will Want Fine Foods SuchrAs The P T. A. of Sm itlf1 Grove is sponsoring a taqky part given on Friday . .night, November t h e twenty-fourth There w ilffe prizes for the tackiest, foods that Will make your mouth Water, and amusements ralore The amusements include bingo fishing pond, cake walks, for tunes,* and a. number of jally side shows. Come and enjoy it with us. Mr and /-Mrs. . Ed Howard, of Cooleemee, Mrs: Will Markland, of this d tv, and C F. Ward, of Smith Grove left Wednesday for Wasb- ington, D C . to be at the bedside of their brother, John J. Ward, who is seriously ill. at his home in that cily. M n Ward has been very sick for the ; past seveial weeks. Tbey returned Friday._____________ j. Cranberries, Celery, Lettuce, Cauleflower, Carrot*, j $ Green Pepper*, Brocili, Cocoanuls, Canned Pumpkin, j 5 Pickles, Olives, Mince Meat*. | I We Have A FuU Une OfThe Finest! I Fruit Cake Ingredients -At Very | Reasonable Prices. FreeDelivery Phone 36 NOTICE, FOLKS! National Dry Cleaners Announce The Opening In Mocksville, Monday, Nov. 27th. LOCATED AT C. J. ANGELL JEWELY STORE > ain Dresses and Mens Suits • 3 5 c eaned and Pressed . . .. J Every 6th Garment Cleaned FREE All Work Guaranteed And Fully Covered By Insurance. Garments Will Be Picked Up On Wednesday And BT Saturday, And Ready For Distribution Saturday. J i So Bring Your Six Garments And Get Your Free One j m " ’ f o r M O R E m ildn ess , COOLNESS, aw* FLAVOR SLOW-BURNING COSTUEB TOBACCOS Of the largest-selling brands tested - slower than anFJ?* them—CAMELS give a smok ing plus eq“M 5 e x t r a s m o k e s P E R PACK! A U l o w - p r i c e d c a r s h a v e p e r f o r m a n c e BUT CHEVROLET HAS BETTER PERFORMAHCE! '1*1 S B S T '- ,J : v ^xss&t%Z&.8 S888 &3& H S It gives the finest combination of power, acceleration, driving ease, riding ease, dependability and economy to be found in any low-priced car! £i|e It * T/uj It • Biuj It I TPa Special Da Uua Span Sedan. ISOta Chenolet far ’40 Iua hair-trigger getaway! Its Soper-SUent Vahe-In-Head E n gw ables you to accelerate from S to 25 miles per hour with almost unbelievable speed! Its Exclusive Vacuum-Power Shift gives an exclu sive kind of handling ease— la Perfected Hydraulic Btakee the vety-Ughest degree of safety! And in the combination of all these factors—In over-all performance with over-all ,economy—the motor world Jnst doesn’t hold its equal! Eye i t . . ; Tty Ir . . ; Buy l t . . . and convince youiaelf, “Chevrolet’s FIRST Againr SM*, vain- $ SMKMiK 1 S AND UPt 9Ot PHmr Michigan. Tranapmartanbantlca taU ratal, ttata end local nan Wan*), optional arprtp. maaaaAaccauartn-anra. Srtncaapfact » cboaac • trttPaat aartea. Satapcr ten d, au ra <m Maatar SI *Sarin. A OaaaraI MdiSKrIft&t. -Wjf.-.. "C hevrolet’s FIRSTA gahTj , be, wSfe*** ITffiDAVlERl Largest C if4u latioJ Davie County Net! n e w s a 8 o u n d | •G. B. Myers, of Win was in Iown Thursday Dr. Robert Lowery, i was in town Thursday : office a visit. Attorney Jacob SteJ Thursday afternoon on business Miss Lillie Meroney a week in Asheville wit] er, R. S. Meroney. Mrs. Melvin GillespieJ spent the week-end in her mother, Mrs. W. L .| FOR SA LE—I5.big l shire pigs. J. FRANK H E l 7. C. Powell, of h | who is with the Duke was a Mocksville visito| day. Mrs. J. A. Daniel leftl Dallas, Texas, where sha three weeks with her | Mrs. R. H . Shank. Call at our shop and our line of Meadow W al chines and Philco Radio.1! YOUNG RAI The Mocksville Baptl will have their Cbristmal on Sunday evening, Dec.| ginning at 7:00 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs Henry ! moved from the Cain I Salisbury street to the R l Turner .house on Pine strl W ILL PAY STR A IG l ARV $35.00 per weekj woman with auto, selling ducer to Farmers. Euil Co., East St. Louis, Itl- I. A. Mason, of Clevell was in town Tbursdav on home from Winrton-Salel he carried a load of tobaq Godfrey Click, who quite ill at the home of ter at Salisbuiy, is mud friends will be gtad to Ieq Miss Thelma Beck, wb position in Washington, SDending 15 davs with hd Mr. and Mrs. J. B. BeckJ rusalem. There wi'l be a Harvesl at Cool Springs high scbl nesday evening, Nov 2911 oi good things to eat. P l to the basketball team, and coine out. FOR REN T OR SAL^ room house and lot on I No. 158, near Smith Grol W. F. McCUl CliftoiT Our high school footb went to Winston Salem IJ day night where they p i South high school rq u / local boys were defeateg score of iS to 6. J. L. Swicegood, of R .■ ed last week from CreJ where he spent several (I his uncle, A. H . Swtcegol Swicegood ,reports tfcal plenty to eat while in Viij The Davie Electric Mul potation have moved tff from the second floor of ford building, to the new I building, on South Mai Their new office is moderf to-date, with plenty oi fid FOR SA LE-Shock-Pq tiic Motors for Washing W e also Repair Washers. I C. J. A N G l The Maytagl Mocbsvif Tvphiod Clinics will Advance community I fourconsecutives .Wed (finning today at 3 0 ’ persons interested will these dates in mind—I Dec. 6-13. J. C. Jones, A. E. I A . Black welder, D. C. B. Cain and I. G. Ro last Tuesday in Charl ing a meeting of the South' Carolina R. I meeting was held in tl burg county court hous W . Scott Turner, soi Mrs. M. M. Turner, Grover Nellie Dwiggir of_ MrV and Mrs. G. . gibs, all of Calahaln tot united in marriage W( ternoon, Nov. 15, at 3 at-the borne of Rev. E th e’ officiating clerg Cbtirch street. The R for these young people nappy married life. it S m ith Iith Grove is Iy to be given Ivember t h e Iwill be prizes Ihat will make I amusements nents include Jse walks, for- Io f jolly side jy it with us. [Howard, of jMarkland, of ard, of Smith for Wash- I the bedside In J. Ward, Ihis home in lias been very |etal weeks. THE DAViE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. H. C„ NOVEMBER 22. 1M». in d Iwer than T15 other jig brands In any of Ie a smoK- IO K ES IC K! “••11 away! j be en -; |e s per; ItS| Iexclu- \ [fee ted ;ree of I these t \>er-aU j : hold! ♦ and I i I ajuip- Uchange xter SS ■, in! ^ t v iile , fH E D A V lE i' R EC O RD . L a r g est C ir q u la tio ii o f A n y D a v ie C oiujjgr N e w s p a p e r N E W S A ftO U N D T O W N . G. B. Myers, of W inston Salem, was in town Thursday on business. Dr. Robert Lowery, of Salisbury, was in town Thursday and paid our office a visit. Attorney Jacob Stew art. spent Thursday afternoon in Lexington' on business Miss Lillie Meroney is spending a week in Asheville with her broth er. R. S. Meroney. Mrs. Melvin Gillespie, of Brevard spent the week-end in town with her mother, Mrs. W . L. Call. FOR SA LE—IS0M gbone Berk shire pigs. J. FR A N K H EN D R IX . I. C. Powell, of H igh Point, who is with the Duke Power Co., was a Mocksville visitor Wednes day. Mrs. T. A. Daniel left Friday for Dallas, Texas, where she will snend three weeks with her. daughter, Mrs. R. H- Shank. Call at our shop and look over our line of Meadow W ashing Ma chines and Philco Radios YOUNG RADIO CO. The Mocksville Baptist .church will have their Christmas program on Sunday evening, Dec. 17 th, be ginning at 7:00 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs H enry Poplin have moved from the Cain house on Salisbury street to the Rev. E. W. Turner bouse on Pine street.'. W ILL PAY STR A IG H T SAL ARY $35.00 per week,' man or woman with auto, selling Egg Pro ducer to Farmers. Enreka Mfg. Co., East Sr. Louis, 111. I. A. Mason, of Cleveland, R. r, was in town Thursdav on his wav home from Winston-Salem, where he carried a load of tobacco. Godfrey Click, who has been quite ill at the home of his daugh ter at Salisbury, is much better, friends will be glad to learn. Miss Thelma Beck, who holds a position in W ashington, D. C,, is spending 15 da vs with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Beck, near Je rusalem. Tbere wi'l be a Harvest Festival at Cool Springs high school Wed nesday evening, N cv 29th. Plenty ot good things to eat. Proceeds go to the basketball team. Be sure and come out. FOR R EN T OR SA LE— I Six- room bouse and lot on Highway No. 158, near Smith Grove school. W. F. McCULLOH, Clifton, N . C. Our high school football squad went to Winston Salem last Tnes day right where they played the South high school squad. The local boys were defeated by the score of 18 to 6. - /J. L. Swicegood,.of R: 4 , return ed last week from Crewe1J Va where he spent several davs: with his uncle, A. H . Swicegood. Mr. Suicegood ,reports that be- had plenty to eat while in Virginia. The Davie Electric Mutual Cor poration have moved ’.their office from the second floor o f the- San ford building, to thenew Johnstone building, on South M ain'street, Their new office is modern and up- to-date, with plenty Of floor space. FOR SALE—Shock-Proof - Elec- t'ic Motors for Washing .Machines. We also Repair Washers. ,. C. J. ANG ELL, T he Maytag Dealer, Mocksville. N . C. Typhiod Clinics will-: be- held at Advance community building for four consecntives W ednesday. be ginning today at 3 o’clock. A ll persons interested will please - keep these dates in mind— Nov. 22-29, Dec. 6-13 . I. C. Jones, A. E. Hendrix, T. A. Blackwelder. D. C. Rankin, J. B. Cain and I. G. Roberts, spent last Tuesday in Charlotte attend ing a meeting of the North; and South Carolina R. E.. A. The meeting was held in the Mecklen burg county court house. W. Scott Turner, son of Mr. and | Mrs. M. M. Turner, and - Miss Grover Nellie -Dwiggins. danghter of SlrV and MfsV' GV C. Dwig.j gins, all of Calahaln township,’Were, united in marriage Wednesday af- > ternoon, Nov. 15, at 3:30 o’clock, at the borne of Rev. E,- M- Ayett, the' officiating clergyman', ‘f.o n Church street. The Record wishes Sor these young people a long and rnppy married life. * „W, H._ Foster, of Winston-Sal-: em, was in town Monday, Rev. H . C. Sprinkle, who under went an ..operation at a Charlotte hospital about two weeks ago, was able to return to his home Sunday. Miss Virginia Bverly attended P arty Stroud, who has been manager of the United Variety Store a; Brevard, for the past seven years, has accep'ed a position as manager of the Wallace 5, & toe store at Marion; and took- charge of that store Monday. H e. will move his family to Marion in a few the Jeiikins - Womble wedding day;, which occurred a t Centenary Methodist church, Winston-Salem, Thursday evening at 8:30 o’clock. There wilt be a pie supper at Oak Grove Methodist church Sat. urday evening, beginning at six o’clock. Good string music. Be sure and come, out and enjoy the eveding. D elightful B irthday An enjoyable affair took place last Thnrsdav' afternoon when Mrs. Dewey: Martin entertained at her home on Maple Avenue, in honor of her little daughter Ann’s tenth birth day. A number of games were en joyed by the group throughout the afternoon. Delicious refreshments carrying out the Thanksgiving motif, were served by the hostess, assisted bv her sister, Mrs. Nathan Holden, of Winston-Salem, and MiBs Louise Foster. Thosepresentwere:' Ann Martin, the honoree, Betty Lou Martin, Bob bie Jean Smith, Bettv Jean Daniel, Rachel and Patsy Grant. Marion Horn. Corolyn Craven, Betsy Short, Margie Harding, Louise Foster, and ' Doris Holden of Winston-Salem. S. S. Short received slight bruis es, and his two sons, Sam and Henry escaped injury, when Mr. Short’s car skidded off the high way near Fork about 9 :3 0 o’clock Sunday evening. The car was bad ly damaged. Charlie Blackwelder, of Cala- haln, carried a load of tobacco to Winston-Salem last week which brought an average of nearly $24 per hundred pounds. The lowest grade brought 16 c per pound, and the best grade 47 c. per pound. This is a fine average this vear, as prices are much lower than last season. Havina qualified as Administiator of the estate of James M. Stroud, deceased, Mrs. Varner Steele, 70 , diedsud- notice is hereby given to all persons bold' denly last Wednesday at her home! '"8 claims, against.the estate of said de-^ a&ABiul « Pa inpaaant VfkA AAnnA Wa tha tea N otice To C reditors. in Rowan county. Funeral and burial services took place Thursday afternoon at Third Creek Presby terian church, with her pastor, Rev. E . D. Brown, conducting the services. . Mrs. Steele was the mother of Mrs. M. M. Turner, of Mocksville, R. 4 . W . C. Pharis, of Cooper, and Eddie Bachman, of Faith, South Dakota, arrived i n Mocksville Thnrsdav night with two car loads of fine western horses, mares, mules and colts, which are now at the ceased; to 'present the same to 'he under signed, properly verified, at Mocksville. North Carolina. Route No. 4, on or before the 13th day of November, 1940, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make settlement without delay. This, the 13th day of November. 1939. - PAUL H. STROUD. Admr, of James M, Stroud, deceased By GSANT & GRANT. Attys. N otice O f R e-S ale. Under and by virtue of an order ¥ of re-sale made in the civil action en- Feezor farm, two miles south of,**1^ - Bank of Davie, et al -v«- C Mocksville. Mr. Pharis has m any' JJ- Tom 1 js o b. et al. the undersigned ,1,- „ „ CommtBioner willfriends here who are always glad to see him. Drive down and take a look at this fine stock. R esigns H is Position. A. E- Hendrix, for the oast ten years game protector in Davie coun ty. handed in his resignation last Wednesday. So his successor hasn' Mr. Hendrix made a good officer, and resell the lands mentioned and described in the Com plaint in this cause on Mondsv. the 27tb day of November, 1939, at twelve o’clock noon at the Court house door in Mocksville. Davie County. North Carolina, to the high est bidder, the following described lands: Beginning at a Sycamore on North Bank of Hunting Creek, S a l l i eM LJ Q 11 W ABA AA W Il Vt I' p. t—l I , aj CS Ig l V far as we can learn, J Smith’s comer and running N. 11 a’tbeen appointed.;degs. E. 15 chs. to a sweet gum; n r. aenurix uutiie a good officer, and .thence b 70 degs E. :5i chs. to an m * ib . a * - I W j - I f a j t s J ! . r a s s ties, race, color or previous condi- to a Btone; thence S. 75 degs. E. 3 tion of servitude. He made many chs and 30 links to a stone; near T friends who are fit to resign. F o rk N ew s N otes. sorry that he saw N. Anderson’s barn; thence N. 7 degs, E 7 chs. and 73 links to a hick ory; thence S. 86 links to a post oak; thence N ,7 chs. to a sb n e near a branch thence N. 72 degs. W. '9 chs .. j u . Li u- ■ * /-L- and 65 links to stone in the IiQe ofMr. and Mm. Archie Michael of China Dr j Anderf,on.„ land; thence S. Grove spent last week-end with Mr. and 25J degs. W. 19 chs. and 60 links to a Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Bailey. | Sycamore in-I he pasture;, thence S Tbe Annual Merrell reunion was held at 82 deg9. W. 6 chs. and 20 links to a the home of Geo. E. Merrell last Sunday, sweet gum; thence S .21i degs W. 7 with about 75 relatives and friends pre- chs. and 23 links to a stake on the sent. Mr. Merrell also celebrated his 52nd ^jtch; thenCe S 78 degs. W. , with anniversary at the same time. A boun-| ditch 2 chs and I Jmk to a stfine; teous dinner was spread on a Iongtable in thence S.T l d en . W 14 chs.-and 94 , Iitiks to a willow; thence S. 11 degs.the yard apd all present enjoyed the day. W l ch. to Hunting Creek; thence Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Bailey and small down said creek with its meander- son Billy, spent last Sunday in Thomas j jngs to the beginniug, containing ville, with tbeir daughter, Mrs. Jack Deese seventy (70) acres more nr less. See and family.and visited Mr. Deese who is deed recorded is Bonk 19, page 617 a patient in the hospital. Mrs. John.Smithdeal, and dogBtei Mrs. Gilbert Robertson, of Winston-Salem spent Tuesday here with Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Aarcn. ; . . Mr. and'Mrs. R. C. BeIU of Oak Forest, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hoger, and family of Statesvilie1-R. I, visited Mr. and Mrs. Z, V. JohnstonJast Sunday. The membeis of the Episcopal congre gation held a parish meeting Friday after noon with Mrs. G. V. Greene. Dr. G. V! Greene has gone to the east ern part of, the atatefor a two weeks bunt- S tockholder M eeting. '• The annual Stockholders’ meet ing of tbe Davie County Feir As- sedation Wiil be held Friday, Nov. 24 , at the Court House at 7:30 p: m. A lt Stockholders, Directors, and others interested iu the Davie County Fair are urged to attend. Pi S.: YOUNG, Secretary. BAD COLDS For 'SimRle Head And Cheat Cold a And Congha Due To Colds, See Ua, Wie Carry Standard Branda Cold Remediea And Cough Syrup*. IMBROUGH jp lT G £OM PANY A G oodDrugStore in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina. The biddihgwiIIstartKt the price of the increased bid of $1575 00. TERMS CF SALE=Vboe third cash and balance on sixty days time with bond, and approved security. , or all cash at the option of the- purchaser. Title 'reserved until the. .purchase money is paid in full. This, the IOth-,day; of November, 1939 . J. B. GRANT, CommisBioper. North Carolina \ 1 In The Superior DavieCounty I Court N otice of S ale o f L and. Under and by virtue of the power and authority ,contained in a certain decree in a certain' . special proceed ing in the Superior Court ' of DaVie County, entitled W. S. Phelps vs Charlie Lee Phelps, et al. the under signed commissioner, therein; duly appointed, will, on Saturday, the 9th day of December. 1939. at th e' hour of 12:00 o’clcck. M-. at the court house door in Mocksville. N. C., ex pose the following tracts of land !in Davie'County." North Carolina ' to public sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, to-wit: Beginnihg at astone. W. S. Phelps corner and running S. I. West 24.53 chs. to a stone on North ; bank of branch. C.'H .' Jarvis corner and Ma rion Essex line or corner; thence S. 78 5 E. 2 48 chs to a stone ' on 'N. side of branch and Marion'. Essex corner; thence N. 83 E 4.52 cbs. to a stone at fork of branch,'C. H. Jar vis line and Marion Essex corner, thence N, 31.5 East 3 6lc h s . to a - Btone=Infojdr of branch -and-: JWtf/S . Phelps corner in C. H. . Jarvis line; thence 'N, 31.0 West 2.76 chs. to . a white oak. corner o f W. S. Phelps; thence North 5 West 18.05 chs. to • W. S;. Phelps corner; thence'N. 87 5 W. 6.35 cbs, to the ■ beginning, con taining 16 35100'acreB, ffibre or less. I This the 8 th day of Nov., 1939. ! B. C. BROCK, Commissioner.- ‘ - Mocksville, N. C., Phone 151. W . W . Stroud, of Harmouy, R. r, was in town Thursday and gave our office a pleasant call. \ Princess Theatre WEDNESDAY ONLY “THE COWBOY QUARTERBACK" with Bert Wheeler, Marie Wiisoo THURSDAY and FRIDAY Laurence Oliver, Ralph Richardson in “CLOUDS O'ER EUROPE" SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE • ROUGH RIDER3 ROUND UP" with Rov Rogers and TaiIspin Tommy in “SKY PATROL" MONDAY and TUESDAY Joan Blondell, Metvyn Douglas in ■ GOOD GIRLS GO TO PARIS" 1DaWe County8 [ <° Superior Court N otice of R e-Sale of L add. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain snecial proceeding in the Superior Court of Davie Countv entitled, Wal ter Smith, et al vs Billy Williams, et al, the undersigned Commissioner therein duly appointed; will, on Sat urday, the 25th day of November, 1939. at the hour of 12 o’clock. M., at the court house door in ... Mocks- ville, N. C., expose the following tract of land in Davie County, N. C. to public 4th re-sale, for casn, to the highest bidder, to wit: Beginning at a stake, center of Highway 158 running S. 5 W.' 30 20 chs to a stone, thence S. 85 E. 14 20 chs. to a Btone. thence N 4 E. 7.92 chs. to an iron, thence N. 86 W. 6.23 cbs. to a stone, thence N. 2 E. 3.20 chs. to a stone; thence E. I 00 ch. to a stone, tbence N. 4 E 24 chs. to cen ter Highway 158, thence S 70 W. with said highway 9.35 chs. to the beginning, containing 33 acres, more or less This the 8 h day of Nov. 1939. ROBERT SMITH. Commissioner.' Mocksville. N. C , Phone 42. B. C. BROCK, Attorney. Mocksville, N. C.; Phone 151. ! C otton, G rain an d To bacco M arket. Mocksville, N o v .. 2 1 —Seed cot ton 3.50 to 4 .00 ; lint 8.00 to 9.75. Wheat $1.00 , corn 60 c. Winston-Salem tobacco averaged $18 75 to $19 per buodred Monday. Total sales t,400 000 pounds. C lass P arty . The 9th grade students of Farmington high school, eujoved a delightful party at the home of Mias Madeleine Smoot last Thursday evening Games and ^contests were enjoyed by those presear, after which delicious refreshments were served by Mrs, Robert Smoot, mother of the hos tess. Io additionto the students, those present were Prof. Graham Madisoo, Misses Frankie Craven and Mary NichoK mem-1 here of the school faculty, and Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Smoot. Sheffield N ew s. j Farmers were glad to see the fine rain that fell here Sunday night Joe Reavis who has been suffering from blood poison in her hand is improving. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gaither and Peggy Joan Alexander, of High Point, visited this section Sunday evening. W. W. Smith is preparing to build a large stock bam on his form neatSheffleld- Several wild geese have taken up camp on Hnntiog Creek, near Snow Beck's; Look ootgoosieor Snow will have goose for Thanksgiving. It is not known who will get the Stadson hat and five dollar bill for not getting drunk this year. It looks like some of the Hill Billies, thought Christmas like Thanksgiving had been changed and were celebrating Satur day night Land posters for sale at 1 The Record office. Plenty 9x12 Rugs $3.69 WhiteSwan Flour self-rising $2 65 8 Ib Carton Lard ; 79c 10 Ibs Sugar 59c 25 Ibs Sugar $1.39 ( IOOlbsSugar $5 39 Rice. Iba 5c Pintoes 6c Ib Pure Coffee IOe Mammies Favorite Coffee . lie Black Pepper 13c Ib or 2 Ibs 25c Bannas . 6c Ib Cabbage 2 c Ib Potatoes 2c Ib 2 Packs 15c Cigarettes . 25c Matches 3e or 2 for 5c 5c packs Salt Sc 22 Cartridges Hollow Point . 20c 22 long Cartridges 25c box A Few More Men’s Suits $20.00 value $13 97 $18.00 value $11 95 Boy’s $3 69 up UnionSuits 69c Hanes Heavy Weight I Quality 89c 100 Pairs Tennis Shoes- Worth Up To $100 Value 59c Pair 50 Pair 2J to 3£'Galoshes $1.25 Value 39c Ball Band $1 50 Quality $1.19 See Me For Bridles, Collars, Traces. Hames and Check Lines. 25 Per Cent Off List On AU PlowCastings Horse and Mule Shoes .. - 8 |c Ib Finished Shoes IOc Ib Axes $1.10 and up Scbool Tablets and Note Book Paper 3cor35cdoz. Plenty 66x76 Blankets 59c . 66x80 Part' Wool Double B!ankets$ $2.00 . L L Sheeting .'••• 7cyd • Plenty Sample Sweaters . A tBsrgain Priceg Plenty Red Goose and Wolverine Shoes At-Old Prices . SeeM eBeforeYou Buy ! Shoes and Sweaters - LeatherCoats $5.95, $7.95 Plenty Mens Overalls 89c and! up Plenty Boy’s Overalls 35c and Up' PlentyW orkShirts SOcup Dress 75c value 60c. $1.00 value .89c IOcPrints !:£'- ; ‘ 7c yd 80 Square . !■• 13c Play Cloth IOe yd Outing 8 Jc yd wide width iOc wY o u r s f o r b a r g a i n s * J . FRA N K HENDRIX DepolSL MockgYilIe N, C> M l For Thanksgiving! We Have Just Received J A Fresh Line Of The Famous Ferndell Canned Fruits The Best On The Market, Ml Kinds Of Fruits and Vegetables At Very Reasonable Prices. ALL KINDS FRU ir CAKE MATERIALS. If You Haven’t Purchased Your Holiday Matetials - S e e U s Today. Oranges, Apples, Grape Fruit, Cranberries, Choice Hams, Old Time Cheese, Breakfast Foods, Jello, Candies And Everything You Will Need For The Thanksgiving Dinner Except The Turkey. Our Store Will Be Closed AU Day Thanksgiving. G. C. Sanford Sons Co. “Everything ForEverybodyn Phone 7 Mocksville, N. C. I I i f . /V" MORRISETT CO. “LIVE WIRE STORE m Fourth and Trade Sts. Winston-Salem, N. C. SPECIAL COAT VALUES $9.95 $14.95 $18.75 $25.00 ONE RACK TO CLOSE Only 72 odd coats in all sizes and colors, re- gular $9 95 to $16 75 values, take your choice for only . « •$5. 0 0 Gold and Silver Tinsels For Evening Wear $1.95 54-Inch' Woolens Large Collection 98c to $1.35 Nets and Laces For Christmas Parties 79c 98c $1.95 Botany Woolens Nice AssortmentVSpunged and Shrunk $1.59 $1.95 $1.45. Beautiful Taffetas PIainandWatered 79c and 98c ■ Hsund Bags Greatest Values In N. (Y - 48c and 97c L Dress Fabrics la st Word Styles. Special Values - 39c,:47c 69c 79c 98c Curtains and Spreads Curtain Dept, loaded Will -all the new things for Christmas. Full assortment of tufted bed spreads 84x105. !AU colors, $4 96 value when regular. These are pieced, but only $1.98 : ;; Table Linens And Damask. ~ ... => •' , Special; Values. -1 49c 59c 95c $1.95 /Lingerie 1 Dept. . Resdy For The Holidays, Beautiful Line ot Blipsand Gowbs 98c and $2.98 " \ • I JL JtICi JJA V l£i Kul/vKl/« ItIUvIVO V ILfiiu* !”• WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON N EW YORK.—Somebody was al ways turning in a riot call when Igor Stravinsky’s “Fire Bird” and “Sacre du Printem ps” were first 'Wild * Composer p la y f,d ' _ H «r was the EarlSpears Harvard B row der of servatories, but now he’s as respect able as Nicholas Murray Butler1 as he takes his post as professor of po etry at Harvard. As he writes his fourth symphony, he enjoys full and complete academic sanction for what were once considered the wild vagaries of his compositions. 'In Russia, bis parents wanted him to be a lawyer. Rimsky- Korsakoff was the Pied Piper who lured him from law books to outlaw music, but who un leashed his genius and himself profited as Stravinsky became one of his most knowing and . gifted interpreters. The frail person of Professor Stra vinsky, as he m ay now be called, has been shaken and racked by the torrent of his genius, and every so often he has found it necessary to take time out in Switzerland for re pairs. But, at 54, he still has furious vitality and is still at mid-way in his creative career. With a sharp pencil he spears snperanral sounds. Marshaling them in a symphony, he looses demons, to slay them with his baton. This demoniac disso nance caused riots in France when his .compositions were first produced. It took quite a few years for discerning critics to discover that he “planned it that way,” and that there was law and order in his music. A /fU CH is being written currently in comparison of the intellec tual climate of America today with that of the immediate pre-war pe- Vet Steel Maker £jod of 19” - E u g e n e G.Debunks War as Grace, presi- Source of Profit d^ V e h e m Steel corporation, offers something possibly worthy weighing in-this bal ance in his vehement repudiation oi any desire for w ar profits. “ We don’t want any war to inflate Bethlehem’s business,” says Mr. Grace. “We prefer peace. We are in a position to be w ar baby number one, as in the last war, but I can tell you that our directors and associates don’t want that kind of business. I’d like to see the war stop to day. Bethlehem would be better off if it did.” In contrast are the words of an other great industrialist, now dead, who, at a New York luncheon club in January, 1917, spoke as follows: “America has come of age. Its ships cannot be driven from the seas; its citizens will go wherever their trade or business leads them. No insolent challenge to our enter prise will stay us in our peaceful pursuits whenever and wherever we fchoose to go. And I say to you that our great business establishment will rem ain world business for what ever profit may legitimately accrue. It is not only our right, but patriotic duty to seize opportunity to main tain the full solvency of this na tion.” Mr. Grace, as president of both Bethlehem Steel and the Bethlehem Shipbuilding corpora tion, had special charge of all production of cannon, armor plate and munitions during the World w ar. Last summer, he / rounded out 40 years with Beth lehem, one of the great steet- m asters of the country. After his graduation in electrical en gineering at Lehigh university, his first job at the company was operating an electric crane. He became general superintend ent, m anager and a director in 1911. He became president in 1913. He is 63 years old. COM PARISONS are dangerous, but it would appear that Walter A. Wood, wearing the colors of the American Geographical society, has fa M * Citato Maps Peaks of m o u n ta in - c l i m b i n gEhas Mountains sweepstakes. Ifis currently reported achievement >Jh mapping the peaks of the Elias mountain range in the Yukon terri tory caps a list of hazardous assign- .. m ents of the last six years, in most of which Mrs. Wood has shared. Last March, he led several ;; companions up a 19,000-foot peak I-in the Alpine jungles of the Si- •^.iterra- Nevada de Santa Marta range in Colombia. ; With the Louis Boyd expedition to east Greenland in 1933, Mr. Wood has traversed many countries, in the last six years, on .research missions for the American Geographical so- ciety.(Consolidated Features—VNU Service.) France Demonstrates Undersea Fighting Technique I? Accent is on undersea fighting in the present European' conflict, and France, with some of the world’s finest submarines, is prepared for whatever m ay come. Here is a graphic idea of the fighting technique of an undersea warship. Upper left: Brains of the submarine is the m an at the periscope. He navigates her into firing position. Upper right: Here’s what the navigator sees. The periscope’s crossed lines spot the target, the “ladder” gives him the range. Lower left: The torpedo crew slides one of the deadly “fish” into its tube. Lower right: The torpedo is in place and all is set for the order to “fire!”_____________________________' War in Europe Influences American Christmas Toys The influence of war was distinctly noticeable in the preview of American Christmas toys held in New Xork recently. In addition to guns, tanks and planes, there were toy ambulances and other first aid equip ment. A little w ar nurse in toy uniform inspects her battlefield casualty—a don. A young soldier has the time of his life with front line equipment. Igloo Dwellers Go Modem—in New York The Mayokoks, only full-blooded Eskimo family in the United States, were saved from a dangerous 7,000-mile journey to blizzard-swept Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska, when the husband found a new job. During the closed season Mayokok will serve as caretaker of the World’s fair carrier igloo in New Xork. Battlefront Headgear Stresses Safety With camouflaging weeds fastened on their steel helmets to fool enemy airmen, three Tommies of the E ast Surrey British regim ent pause to light their cigarettes. N atural and artificial camouflages have been developed to a high degree by both sides of the present conflict. I Just in Case— The United States coast guard at Miami, FIa'., takes no chances. When foreign submarines were re ported to have been sighted in Florida w aters, coast guard officials painted a large American flag on the underside of the wing for identifica tion purposes. ‘Fixed’ Fighter Harry Thomas, Eagle Bend, Minn., heavyweight fighter, started a boxing w ar recently when he an nounced his fights with M ax Schmel- ing and Tony GaIento were “fixed.” Investigation was opened when Thomas declared he was paid “H f money” to lose the fights. Joan Crawford S ta r D u st ★ Trick of the Peacock ★ It9S Micky W ith Judy •fir First V p Gets It! By Virginia Vale----- W H EN an actress who is fa m ous for w earing beauti ful clothes beautifully w ants to g et a bit of extra publicity, it’s u sually a good trick for her to announce that she’d just love to h ave a role in w hich she- wore rags. U sually, too, she hasn’t the faintest desire to wear rags, or any thing faintly approaching them; sh e’d scream and gnaw the IU B jvrvw W I woodwork if any- I A r Io j one suggested it. I H f ,2 j | But women who "**■* can’t dress -as she does on the stage or in pic tures are sup posed to like her, better for saying that she’s tired o f b e in g a clothes horse. Joan Crawford is proving that she really wants to be something more than a modiste’s mannequin. In “Not Too Narrow, Not Too Deep,” her new picture in which Clark Gable plays opposite her, she has just one dress. There may have to be replacements, it’s true, for she has to do. quite a bit of dashing about in a South American jungle, but technically it will be the same frock. That is, according to the pres ent announcements it will be. . As for Gable, he’s to be a really tough egg; escapes from a prison colony and all that sort of thing. With some of these ladies of the screen it’s a calamity if the public doesn’t see through that ostrich- with-its-head-in-the-sand disguise of dark glasses. Not long ago your correspondent lunched with one, in New York. We just went in, sat down and ordered luncheon. Dis mayed, the lady glanced around. “Isn’t anybody looking at me?” she asked, in anguished tones. Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland are going to go with on—and on, and on—as a team, because the pub lic likes them. “Babes in Arms” h a s d e c id e d that; it pairs them musically as well as ro mantically, fin ishing the work begun in “Love Finds Andy Har dy” and “Thor oughbreds Don’t Cry.” Inciden tally, people who meet him like the Rooney lad a lot better than they did for a while, when he was accused of having a swelled head and all the things that go with it. He’s grown into a likable chap, mod est rather than bumptious, and he and the pretty Judy make such a nice pair that the people who pay to see them on the screen seem to want them to stick together. There’s a tradition in radio that the first actor to try out for a part is sure not to get it. Dorothy Knox has proved that it isn’t so. She competed with 27 other actresses for the role of “Frieda” in .“The Life and Loves of Dr. Susan”—was the first to enter the audition room and the last to leave it—and she got the part. ^___ Major Bowes is rapidly becoming a public benefactor. Not long ago he presented St. Patrick’s cathedral in New York with 11 Schwedleri maples and four English elms—a gift which cannot be appreciated by anyone who does not know how bar- Ten New York is of trees, or how some of its inhabitants long to see one. The tie.es are magnificent, a iving tribute to the Major’s thought fulness. Now he has given his estate, Laurel Hill, at Ossining, N. Y., to the Lutheran-church for a retreat for the clergy and laity of New York and nearby states. The 10- acre estate is a show place,- filled with memories for Major Bowes; he and the late Mrs. Bowes, who was Margaret Hlington, the famous ac tress, bought it in 1927, and through the years they landscaped it, in stalled a swimming pool, and did everything they could to make it beautiful. Major Bowes not only gave the estate to the church, but added a substantial gift to help equip it. ODDS AND ENDS—Charles Boyer is to come to this country on a propaganda mission for the French government . . . Greta Garbo is not only going to be a comedienne in her new picture, nNihotch- ka”—she’s going to do a scene in which she drinks just a bit too' muck champagne . . . Andrea Leeds was married recently in Del Monte, Calif., to Robert S. Howard, whose father owns a famous racing stable ... The British government wouldn’t grant Edward Small permission to film some of the scenes of “My Son, My Son/’’ against the actual backgrounds in Manchester , London, and other'cities, so the entire film will be made in Hollywood. (Released by Western Newspaper UnloaJ Judy Garland C L A S S I F I E D d e p a r t m e n t TtABY CHICKS B R E D FOR FkMuCTION: Ducg R A IS E D FOB PCTFIt * T ark ey sSOLD BY QVMATYf pulletsSTARTED CHICKS- ’ Rockda|e, Md. BflLFOBD HATCHEBTpj^esfiiit P- 0* CTICKS! K S S S T Seod Money Order for Prom pt Shipment. Live Zklivery GuaranUeS _ ATLAS CO., 2651 Chouteau, SL Louis, W ft Q Snuincl Fatura PEACE : «n p H E greatest guarantee of peace is a public opinion that desires peace. Without a knowledge of the facts we cannot have such a public opinion. Give lfght and the people will find their own way.”—V• S. Senator Henry C. Lodge Jr. B ag W as P ositively G olfer’s Last Chance The fat m an decided to try golf. Armed with six golf clubs, a ball, and a caddie, he m arched off to the links. The caddie placed the ball on the tee. Then, with a terrific swing, the fat m an whirled his club through the air. But the lit tle white ball rem ained on its tee, while the club, m eeting mother earth, broke into splinters. The second, third, fourth, and then the remaining clubs shared the fate of the first. “What would you do now?” asked the golfer of the caddie. Holding out the empty bag, the youngster replied, “Don’t give in! Hit it with this!” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are an effective laxative. Sugar coated. Children like them. Buy now!—Adv. Experience and Memory Experience is the father of Wis dom, and Memory the mother. 1 ^ M 9M T J.2N and OneDose Proves ItIf the first dose of this pleas ant-tasting little bhcfc tablet doesn’t bring you the fastest end most complete relief you have experienced send bottle back to us and get DOUBLE MONET BACK. Tbls Bellmans tablet helps the stomach digest food, makes the excess stomach fluids harmless and letsSon eat the nourishing foods you need. For heart, urn, sick headache and upsets so often caused by excess stomach fluids making you feel soar and sick all oTer—JTJST ONE DOSE of Bell-Uis proves speedy relief. 25e everywhere. Life’s Thirst Life’s thirst quenches itself , With draughts which double thirst. —Anon. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptlybe- cause It goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, Increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Ko matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell' you a bottle of CreomulsIon -with the understanding that you are to like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Still Schoolboys Nations are but enlarged school boys.—Froude. ___________ WRlDS LARGEST SEUFR AT I Power of Ink A drop of ink m akes millions think.—Byron. A wonderful aid for boils where a drawing agent is indirated. Soothing and comforting. Fine for children and grown-ups. Practical. Economical. There Are Bonnds He that sips often at last drinks tt up. ^ . a ' OOO L IQ U ID -T A B L E T S 5 A L V E -N 0 5E DROPS .. - f e v i i ! Good Merohahiise Cao Be CONSISTENTLY AdyerbstJ • BUY ADVERTISED COODS • B g B S = B B B I. Z I C3U,bt. I.•:,»!.•<■ >'l Iwafc llial -f Ihc lively thance ,.-Jod to irv go1.;. Llf clubs, a ball,I marched off to Iced the ball on I with a terrific pan whirled his Jair. But the Iit- Iained on its tee, meeting mother splinters, ird, fourth, and ne clubs shared 1st.J you do now?* |if the caddie.: empty bag. the “Don't give in! Pellets are an Sugar coated. . Buy now I—Adv. Memory I father of Wis- the mother. Thirst Iuenches itself |.-hich double thirst. —Anon. Cmsghs hmoE colds [Hang Oi Relieves promptly be- Iht to the seat of the Ti germ ladenphlegm, pn and aid nature to I raw, tender, inflam- Jnucous membranes, [many medicines you |your druggist to sell [Creomulsion with the ■that you are to like Ikly allays the cough ^ive your money back lest CoIdslBronchtti. !schoolboys Ibut enlarged school fSsggj K-EST SELLER AT Iver of Ink I ink makes millions A wonderful aid far Imils where a drawing agent is indiealed. Soatliing and comforting. Fine for children and grown-ups. Practical. Economical. ;e Are Bounds s often at last drinks l i m m m i JiSlSTENTLY/Wyertised PVERTISEP COOPS • TH E HAVTE RECORD. MOCRSVTT.T.E. N. C. rer !Si I R o tte n A p p le s ', I W'ERE you ever a youngster back East,* where thdy , bought apples by the barrel and stored them in the cellar over bgainst the long winter evenings'" When winter came, did yr spend most of your Saturday Iprting over the barrels of apples, Tcking out the rotten ones so |iey would not make the whole arrel that way? And didn’t you and the family bat nothing but rotten apples the Inext week? Isn’t life like that? , And didn’t you live In the kitch- because Uie parlor should’ not mussed up? And isn’t it the uth that you lived in the kitchen ..your life? IAnd didn’t you always wear Tur old clothes, because you had [keep the good ones to go to “ ting on Sunday? And as a re- K weren’t you run down at the “ and patched on the seat most Le time? !• did you ever get over it? Haveh’t you gone through life Bwith an !inferiority complex, hold- Fing musty ideas and most of the ‘ time th$ sam e old worn-out no- 1 tions until they were ready for the grab-bag? Do you still wait for somebody else to step ahead-and .do the pioneering? You do—if you’re still eating rotten apples.—W. L. Y. Davis, in Los Angeles Tribune. r G em s o f Thought IVT OR deem the irrevocable past as ^ wholly wasted, wholly vain, if rising on its wrecks, at last to some* thing nobler we attain.—Longfellow . Happiness never lays its finger on its pulse. If we attempt to steal a glimpse of its features, it disappears. — A lexander Smith. As a moth gnaws a garment, so doth envy consume a man.—Chrysostom . Better it were, that all the miseries which nature owns were ours at once, than guilt.—Shakespeare, Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let every year find you a better man.—Franklin. Courage does not consist In the absence of fear, but the subjugation of fear. It is as easy to call back a stone thrown from the hand, as to call back the word that is spoken.—M enander. Y O U C A K A F f O R O FAST RELIEF fr o m fa ir s o f RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS HEAUACHE « • A TABLET IC N O W Bins * • GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN Ia 2 seconds by stop watch, a genuine B m r Aspirin Tablet starts to disintegrate and is ready to go to work. See tor yonraetf this way, Wbr Barer Aspirin acts so adteUy. Millions now enjoy m odern speed m e th o d a n d .save m oney they once spent fo r high-priced remedies. T ryit. You may be surprised at the speed with which Bayer Aspirin brings re lief from headache and pains of rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia. Among the fastest, most effective ways known, Bayer Aspirin not only brings relief from such pains very fast. . . but this quick way is very inexpensive. It may save tne dollars once spent on high priced remedies. .Once you try i t . . . actually feel its quick relief, you’ll know why thousands make sure they get no substitutes for Bayer * * Aspirin by always asking for it by its full name... never by the name “aspirin” done. Dertiandl BAYER A S P IR IN MERCHANTS •You* Advertising Dollar Buys something niors thsii space'and circulation In the «*R*dniiiwfl of this news* paper. It .buys space and circulation plus die favor able consideration ot our readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons. L E T V S T E U T O O j M O R E A B O U T I T r-DOLLAR MAKERS,---------- Showmanship Is Essential To Success B y G EO RG E T . E A G E R T H E sellin g end of any busi n ess consists of a num ber of b asic operations that are re peated over and over again. C ustom ers are attracted and held when such routine opera- 'tions are occasionally done in a different w ay by an added touch of show m anship. A fruit packer in K entucky sen t his food broker in Buffalo a crate of carrier pigeons. As each order w as secured b y the broker it was enclosed in a metal band fastened to a pigeon’s leg and the bird released from the custom er’s office. Just a different way of placing a routine order but it made both the fruit packer and the food broker better known among customers a n d prospective cus tomers. For years dogs displayed in the windows of pet shops have at tracted more passersby than any other type of window display. But until recently not a single man ufacturer of dog food has made use of this natural interest in live dogs to sell his product. A recently con structed billboard in Chicago com bines an air conditioned kennel con taining live dogs with an advertise ment of a canned dog food. The crowds that are continually in front of it leave no doubt as to the com mercial value of this combination of advertising and showmanship. The acknowledgment of orders received by a manufacturing organ ization might seem to be a routine matter with little possibility of be ing made more interesting. Instead of the usual cold, formal method of acknowledging orders, one company attaches a sheet noticing the cus,- tomer that the order is of direct benefit to 800 people on the com pany’s. payroll and that the raw ma terials used in making the goods are bought from 412 different firms employing 50,000 people. E X P L A N A T I O N S W O N t T S E L L TP KiBP TOUNO A s a l e s m a n should know every detail about the product he is sellin g so as to be prepared to answ er all ques tions. B ut if this know ledge lead s him to think that m erely explaining a product w ill sell it h e should be prepared for seri ous disappointm ents. Successful salesm en never forget that hu m an beings are reservoirs of emotions and desires which when touched by skillful appeals bring more immediate response than end less explanations. Years ago Carnegie wanted to sell his steel mills. The most likely buy er was J. Pierpont Morgan. Did Carnegie call on Morgan with blue prints of his steel mills and count less figures about operating costs and profits? He did not because he was too good a salesman. He knew that details were useless un til he had first aroused an over powering desire to buy on the part of Morgan. So he arranged to have Charles M. Schwab speak at a dinner in Mor gan’s presence and paint a picture of the great steel corporation of the future. When Morgan’s con structive imagination saw the vision he was then ready to buy. Thousands of successful'salesmen are carrying, out the same princi ple in countless small transactions that total each year more than Mor gan paid for Carnegie’s steel mills. The washing machine salesman talks to a woman about keeping young by saving energy before he explains the details about the mo tor; the oil burner salesman pic tures the fun the family will have in the new game room. IBeU Syndicate—WNU Service.) In d u stry , A g ricu ltu re H a rm fu l to W ild life That nature never planned to sup ply game for 6,000,000 licensed hunt ers and approximately 7,000,000 li censed fishermen, nor to provide against the great inroads that modem industrial and agricultural developments have made upon wild life, is the opinion of Professor Ralph T. King, head of the Roose velt Wildlife Experiment station at the New York State College of For estry. Professor King asserts that according to figures of the United States bureau of biological survey there are more than 13% million persons hunting and fishing annual ly and that the numbers are rapidly increasing, says the Hartford Coup ant. Jklu MWZ. MEMORIES OF THANKSGIVING PRICELESS HEIRLOOMS (Recipes Below.) Cooking the Thanksgiving Dinner Incredible as it may seem the cal endar is bringing Thanksgiving time again and with it comes to every homemaker thoughts for the Thanks giving menu—plans for its prepara tion and anticipation of the family’s return. Today, however, -I want to re verse this whole situation. I want to suggest to you that enjoyment of your family on Thanksgiving day should be the key note of every one of the plans that you make for the day. Now that does not mean for one minute that I am suggesting that the Thanksgiving dinner be slighted. I couldn’t do that, for who of us for one minute would sacri fice those precious memories of Thanksgiving dinners at grandmoth ers that are really priceless heir looms. No, I say—we won’t sacrifice the dinner—but we will plan it so that you will be as free as possible on Thanksgiving day so that you too can enjoy the family and let the family enjoy you. A miracle you say? No—not really—just wise plan ning—plenty of work the day before perhaps—but time—no worry—and an easy dinner on Thanksgiving— and that’s worth while isn’t it? How to do it? Well here are my suggestions. First, it is entirely pos sible to clean, prepare and even stuff the turkey the day before Thanksgiving rather than on Thanksgiving morning. Then put it on a rack in an open roasting pan and store it in your refrigerator over night. If you have a mechani cal refrigerator it will be running of, course. If you have an ice refrig erator, be sure to get an ample sup ply of ice so that your refrigerator can really work for you over* this holiday. . ' Vegetables—salads—relishes, in cluding celery, radish roses, etc., even desserts, one and all can be gotten ready on Wednesday and as I say, then all that remains for Thanksgiving day is just the cook ing, the table set ting mid later the serving of the viands. Below I am including a number of Thanksgiving recipes which are all planned for just such Thanks giving ease. And—a happy Thanks giving to each one of you. Roast Turkey. Allow % to I pound of turkey per PersonjServed.. Dress, clean, stuff and truss turkey. Brush well with unsalted fat and place on rack in large open roasting pan. (Store over night in refrigerator if desired). Roast in moderate oven (325 de grees) allowing approximately 20 minutes per pound roasting time for a 12-pound turkey, 17 minutes per pound for an 18-pound turkey and 15 minutes per pound for a 22- pound turkey. Brush with melted butter just be fore serving. Dressing for Turkey. 10 cups soft bread crumbs | I cup butter (melted) I tablespoon salt 1 cup chopped parsley 2 tablespoons poultry seasoning Mix all ingredients thoroughly and use for stuffing the turkey. Note: This amount of dressing is sufficient for a.10-pound turkey. If a larger turkey is to be stuffed the recipe should be increased proportionately. GibIet Gravy. Pour off liquid in pan in which turkey has been roasted. From’liq uid skim off 6 tablespoons fat; re turn fat to roasting pan and brown with 6 tablespoons flour. Add 3 cups stock in which giblets,. neck, and tip of wings have been cooked; or if preferred, 3 cups milk may be substituted instead of the stock. Cook, stirring constantly, * until thick; then season to taste with salt xnd pepper. Add giblets (cut in small pieces), heat well, and serve hot. Oranged Sweet Potatoes. (Serves 6-8 ) Parboil 6 medium sweet potatoes, peel and slice lengthwise. (Prepare to this point on Wednesday and store overnight in refrigerator.) Arrange slices in baking dish and sprinkle with % cup brown sugar, dot with 2 tablespoons butter and add I table spoon grated orange rind. Pour over this Vt cup orange juice and scatter 2 tablespoons brown sugar and a little paprika over top. Bake cov ered for 30 minutes in moderately hot oven (375 degrees). Uncover and bake approximately 15 minutes longer. Creamed Onions With Cream Cheese. (Serves 6) 2 pounds small white onions 3 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk % teaspoon salt” I block cream cheese Boil onions until tender in salteu water. (This can be done on the day before Thanksgiving and in this way the onions will be all ready for their final baking on Thursday.) Melt butter, add flour and stir thor oughly. Add milk and salt and stir until thick. Then add I block of cream cheese broken in small pieces. When blended, pour over onions in a baking casserole. Sprin kle with buttered cracker crumbs and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) until crackers are browned. Serve at once. Cabbage-Pineapple Gelatin Salad. I tablespoon unflavored Gelatin Vt cup pineapple juice (canned) I cup water (boiling) 1% teaspoon salt 1 Vt tablespoons vinegar 2 cups cabbage (shredded) I cup pineapple (diced) Soak gelatin in the cold pineapple juice. - Add to hot water and stir until'dissolved. Add salt and vine gar. Chill. Add remaining ingredi ents and pour into mold. Chill un til set. Pumpkin Pie. (Makes 2 pies) 3 cups pumpkin 4 eggs Vk cups brown sugar Vt teaspoon salt % teaspoon grated nutmeg % teaspoon ginger ’ % teaspoon Cloves Vt teaspoon allspice Vt teaspoon cinnamon 4% cups milk (scalded) To cold canned or cooked, pump kin add the eggs (slightly beaten). Blend salt and spices with the brown sugar. Mix pumpkin mixture with the brown sugar mixture, and to this add the scalded milk. Pour into pie plate lined with pastry dough. . Bake 10 miputes in a hot oven (450 degrees), Or until crust is set. Then reduce heat to a mod erate oven (350 degrees)-, and bake until filling is firm—about 45 min utes. (These too can be baked on the day proceeding Thanksgiving.) Don’t Miss These Household Hints. “Household Hints” by Eleanor Howe contains as helpful a group of time-saving suggestions on every phase of housekeeping as one can ever expect -to find. To secure a copy—to be able to put these ideas to work in your own.home—send ID cents in coin to “Household Hints,” care of Eleanor Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. ' Homemade Broad for Xoung And tor" Old. All the world loves homemade bread and what is more home like than the old-fashioned hot butterscotch rolls, homemade bread* parker house roils, etc., that mother used to make? It’s just those kind of recipes, (simpli fied though) that you will find in this Coiumn next week. Be sure to look for them.. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S U N D A Y ! CHOOL Lwesson By BABOLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D. D tan of Tbe Moody Bible Institute . of Chicago.IB eleastdby W estern M ew qtaptr Union.) Letson for November 26 „ Lesson subjects and Scrhiture texts st> Ieeted and copyrighted by International Council of Rebgious Education: used by permission. THE WORKS OF THE MESSIAH LESSON TEXT^iifiittaew 8:14-27.GOLDEN TEXT—Jesus of Nazareth . . . went about doing good.—Acts 10 :38. “Does it work?” Modem man is not impressed by a thing simply because great claims are made for it or it is intricately organized. After all, the important thing is, does it really, work? Such a test can be carried to an extreme and the finest and richest things of life be thrown aside because (hey have no utilitarian value. But in gen eral, the question is a good one', and especially -is that true as it is ap plied to religious systems and philosophies of life. These claim, to have power to deliver .man from his sm and give him peace' ah’d rest. What we want to know is, do they actually do it, not only in the day of health and prosperity, but in the hour of death and devastation? The answer is that every one of them has failed and does fail, with the exception of Christianity, which comes “not in word blit in power” (I Cor. 4:20). In Christianify is found the only real dynamic for daily living. I. Personal Needs Satisfied (w . 14-17). This entire section of the Gospel of Matthew is concerned with miracles. It is interesting to note how many of these events concern personal needs. There is scant comfort to the needy one to speak to him in generalities about a great God . who is ready to help people. When I am in need I want to know whether there is any help for me. Jesus healed Peter’s mother in the home, and then He went out and healed multitudes in the throng, but in each case it was a personal in terest which He took and a per sonal healing that was received. Observe also that He met the need of all whether they were sick in body, mind or spirit. Someone may say, “That is all very well, but that took place when He was here on earth.” Well, He is here now, work ing in and through the power of the Holy Spirit and in and through His children. The Lord Jesus Christ daily satisfies eveiy need of His disciples, and often does so in ways which are miraculous in their sight. H. Sacrificial Service Exempli fied (w . 18-22). Following Jesus in discipleship is more than speaking sweet words of devotion or of taking part in the carrying out of some public wor ship ministry. To really follow Him is to “follow one whose vocation is such that there are incessant de mands compelling the renunciation of home and the comforts of a set tled life. Only the call of God can make one equal to the demands of such a hazardous life” (Edward E. Anderson). Observe that even the demands which love may present on behalf of an aged father must not be per mitted to stand between the disciple and his Lord. There is no thought of unkindness or lack of considera tion here, for as our Lord points out, those who are spiritually dead, although still physically alive, may well be called on to care for the physical needs of an aged parent, even in the hour of death, if the Lord Jesus has work for His disciple to do elsewhere. There is no thought of neglect of the duties of life, but rather of a placing of the Lord first, whatever else may take the second place. The blight upon many a Christian experience is that almost Anything else which is of interest is allowed to take first place and the Lord roust take second place if He is given any place at all; III. Divine Power Demonstrated (w .-23-27). There are those in the world who are unable to see the workings of God’s power in the spiritual realm because they themselves have not been spiritually born again (I Cor. 2:14). For these the Lord here pre sented the working of His mighfy power in the realm of nature. Satan, who is “the prince of this world” (John (14:30) had evidently whipped the waves of the sea into a mighfy storm, possibly thus hop ing to drown Jesus and get rid of his divine adversary, but the Lord Himself speaks in the majesty of His eternal power and we read that “there was a great calm” (v. 26). Even His disciples were strangely astonished that the very “winds and the sea .obey Him.” Yes, the forces of nature respond, to His slightest word. The. winds and the sea obey Him. But what/is even more wonderful is that the turmoil of a man’s soul becomes a 'great and blessed calm when this holy Lord Jesus speaks the word ot peace. Confused and troubled man or woman who reads these words, will you not now by faith submit your self to the One who can speak to you, who can meet and satisfy ev ery one of your needs, and who can give you die blessed privilege of sacrificial service on His^behalf in a needy world? T a ilo r e d , P r a c tic a l; S m a r t a n d Y o u th f u l IF YOU want a bright new every- day dress that’s tailored- and practical, yet sufficiently youthful and gay so that-you’ll never tire of it even after constant wear, make it like No. 1850. It buttons down the front, coat style, is dart- fitted at the waistline, and trimmed with contrast. If this is your first attempt at home dress making, it’s a simple pattern that goes very quickly and easily. It’s especially pretty in plaid wool, velveteen or challis. Smart and Youthful. For large women, No. 1849 has beautifully slenderizing lines, and is expertly designed to give the round-bosomed, slender-hipped ef fect that mature figures look best and most youthful in. A good style for card parties and lunch eons because all the detailing is on the bodice. The neckline is particularly flattering. This dress makes up smartly in velvet, faille or thin wool. The Patterns. No. 1850 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires 4% yards of 39-inch ma terial with long sleeves; 4% yards with short; % yard contrast. No. 1849 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 4% yards of 39- inch material with long sleeves; 4% yards with three-quarter sleeves; % yard ribbon. Fall Pattern Book. Special extra! Send today for your new Fall Pattern Book with a stunning selection of a hundred perfect patterns for all shapes and sizes. Save money and know the keen satisfaction of personally planned, perfectly fitted garments by making your own frocks with these smart, carefully cut designs. You can’t go wrong—every pat tern includes- a step-by-step sew chart to guide beginners. Price of Pattern Book, 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, HL Price of patterns, 15 cents. (in coins) each. (Bell Syndicate—WNTJ Service.) PETROLEUM JELLY Beyond Teaching Who is too old to learn is too old to teach. A GREAT BARGAIN V E S P E R T E A PURE ORANGE PEKOE 5 0 C u p s for IO C en ts FILM S D e v e lo p e d -P iin te d Any Si2e Boll 6 or B Exposi^*es X Fadeless, PnnIs . Postage Paid • DIXIE FILM SERVICE ».O.Bo«438S»A i MERCHANTS •Your Advertising Dollar buys something more than space and circulation In the columns of this news paper. It buys space and circulation plus the favor able consideration of our readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons. I I L E T V S T E L L T O U M O B E I B O U T I f j ffti r>AVii iic6fe6. mocksville. S. c.. November 22 Quick War Relief I* Given by Red Cross !Shipwrecked Am erican Citizens, Wounded Poles, Refugees, • I Repatriates Aided ■Washington.—The American Red Cross moved quickly at the onset ot hostilities in Europe to organize relief for war sufferers and give aid to Ameri can citizens stranded in danger zones or rescued from sea-warfare catas trophe. Red Cross officials pointed out that lollowing contact of German-Polish forces on September I. the organiza tion made available medical relief for civilians and armies of Poland; pro vided aid for Americans repatriating from Europe as they landed in the United States ports; granted medical and maintenance assistance to Ameri can survivors of the “Athehia,” first sea casualty of the war; gave financial aid to the American Hospital In Paris, -France; and developed a comprehen sive communications system to allay the fears of distraught relatives. Norman 1H. Davis, chairman, cabled the International Red Cross Committee in Geneva on September I asking what relief would be needed from the Ameri can Red Cross. In a first step In con solidating Red Cross relief forces throughout the nation, 3,700 Red Cross chapters were authorized to begin pro ducing refugee garments and to ac cept 'contributions' for war relief. A quick response from the Polish Red Cross to Chairman Davis’ cable to the International Committee resulted In an American RedCross appropria tio n of J50.000 for the purchase of 45 I Items ■ of -medicines, and for army blankets and a quantity of large hos- • pital tents capable of housing 50 I stretcher cases each, ' A grant of $25,000 was also made to ,the American, Hospital In Paris to !evacuate American patients from the !hospital and to purchase in the United !States a 100 (bed hospital unit for ship ment to the American organization. It > was Baid. To meet needs which were thought j likely to result from bombardment of rural villages and the passage of hostile armies, the Red Cross called upon 21 of its large city chapters to roll sur gical dressings of a special new type for European warfare injuries. More than 500,000 yards of gauze were pur chased and 40,000 pounds of cotton, enough to make 157,000 surgical dress ings. On September 2, the American Red Cross announced it was organizing to meet repatriating American citizens at seaport cities through chapter re ception committees. Citizens without resources were given temporary shel ter, and aided to resettle in their former homes or work. Between September 5 and 7, the American Red Cross cabled $20,000 through the State Department to help American survivors of the “Athenia,” who had -been taken into Irish and Scotch ports- ‘"The Red Cross is not interested in the origins of the present conflict,” Chairman Davis declared following his cabled’offer of assistance to the Inter national red Cross Committee. “As part of the great International Red Cross it is our duty to do what we can to aid the helpless civilians who will suffer:during the hostilities.” ’ An Inquiry and Information Service was organized through which contact -.- would'be made with relatives ot Ameri- - cans in the belligerent countries. Red Cross chapters were instructed ' to accept funds for the purchase of - supplies for impartial distribution and funds' for purchase of supplies for a designated country to be expended '- Ahrongh the RaA Cress gocjetjr of that nation, ^r Itlt.:: -atoiaiitWml (Record Number of Dis asters Reported by Red Cross for Year American Bed Cross gave ency relief and rehabilitation >130.000 sufferers of 157 disas- I the United States during the year ended June 30, according Report submitted by DeWitt i>new\y appointed director of Crbss disaster relief ser- ;.Smith said the number ot dis- (!Ojerations exceeded that of Ffidwvious yean with cloudbursts, ; fires, wlndstdrms; snow- % other catastrophes strik- l states and the territory of H i , Cross disaster relief ex- Jjjjtotaled $2,276,109 for the !.founding in 1881 the khca aided victims of 2',495 ■sragfiltail typei here and tiding $143,000,000 for llith in g , shelter, medi- ng aid and -the perma- ation of families un- Sh themselves,” Mr. nerican Red Cross methods to more .-life saving skills 00 . and home hy- K-JffiK sick to more than $pM?Older girls. A D $ : v m the New* I M When YOU W antlf Good Meal, Feed Stuff, jlH Laying Mash or Scratch Feed ' It will May You To See Us. You Can Buy Our Meal From Your Grocer. F. K. Benson & Sons N otice of Sale. Under and by virtue of an order of the SuperiorCourt of Davie coun ty, N. C„ made in the special pror ceeding entitled Charles H. Sink, in dividually and as Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, and others, ex oarte, the same being upon the spec ial proceeding docket of said Court, the undersigned Executor of Chris tian Conrad Myers, will, on the 25th day of November. 1939. at 1:30 o’ clock, p. m„ at the home of the late Christian Conrad Myers,Shady Grove Township, Davie County, N. C„ of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land lying and being in Shady Grove Township, Davie County N. C., adjoining the lands of George Hartman and oth ers, and being more particularly de scribed as follows: Beginning at a stone in Hartman's line; thence North 5 degrees East 16 chains to a stone; thence East 4 chs. to a stone; thence South 16 chains 10 links to a atone; thence West 4 chains to stone in beginning, containing'6.4 acres more or less, being lot No. 5. being known at part of the late James Myers lands by division of heir3. See Deed Book 26, page 429. The undersigned Executor will al- -o sell at the said time and place all of the personal property belonging to the estate of the said Christian Conrad Myers. This the 24th day of Oetober, 1939 CHARLES H SINK. Executor • of Christian Conrad Myers. E. M. Whitman, Attorney. Let’s Sale o f V aluable R eal E state. Under and by virtue of an order of sale made by M. K. Feezor, De puty Clerk of Superior Court of Da vie County. N. C.. in the special pro ceedings entitled “Carl Sink, et als vs J. G. Sink, General Guardian for Doris Sink, Rachel Sink and Ida Sink.” d.ted November 1st, 1939. the undersigned commissioner will sell at public auction at the court house door of Davie County, in the city of Mocksville. N. C., at 12:00 ,’dock, noon, on Friday, December 1st, 1939, the following described land, to-wit: Adjoining the lands of John A. Wood, Robert N. Fritts and others in Fulton township, Davie County, N. C„ and beginning at a stake cn the north bank of Dutchmans Creek, _ running thence N. 43 dpgs. West 290 feet to a stone; thence N, 3l£ degs,- E. 628 feet to a stone; S. 871 degs. E. 480 feet to a stone; tbence S. 86 degs. E. 1530 feet to a stone, corner to No. I; thence N. 3 degs. E. 350 feet to a stone, corner to No. I; thence S. 88 degs. W. 950 feet t.' a •(tone, Garwood’s corner; thence N. I degs. E. 333 feet to a stone and corner to No. 3; thence N. 88 degs. W. 964 feet to a atone and corner to No 3; thence S. 3 degs. W. 320 feet to a stone, corner *o Fritts tract; thence N. 86 degs W. 2544 feet to a stake on the east bank of Dutchmans Creek: thence down said creek as it oleanders to the beginning, contain ing 104 acres, more or less. This be ing tract No, 2 in the division of lands of William A. Wood. - Terms of Sale; Cash upon confir mation of the Court, bid to be se cured by proDpr deposit of.approved securities. This the 1st day of No vember, 1939. CARL SINK, Commissioner. J. E. SNYDER. Attorney. We trade out the bulk of bur earnings in Mocks ville and Davie County. We could spend moi*e if we had it to spend. If You Can Use Our Services To Advantage You Should Do So. If Will Be To The Benefit Of You, Us, And The Whole Community. Read our paper and keep in touch with your county and its people > You can buy nothing for one dollar that will do you more good and last longer than a year’s Subscription To The Davie Record. wWe Are Not Begging, Mind You, Just Soliciting Your Valued Support.” When Your Subscription Falls Due A Prompt Renewal Is Appreciated, We Thank You For Your Patronage and Support. IiuiHlllllllllliIIMIIII CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directora AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 164 North Main Street MOCKSVILLE - - N.C E x ec u to r’s N otice. Having qualified as Executor of the estate of the late C. C. Myers, of Davie County. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons - having claims against the said estate, to preseut them to the undersigned, on or before Sept. 19,. 1940, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recoveiv. All.persons indebted to the said estate, are requested to make immediate payment. Tnls Sept. 19, 1939. . CH AS. H, SINK. Executor,C. C. Myers Dec’d.Clemmons, N. C. B 2. • E. M. Whitman, Atty. N otice O f Sale. £ MR. MERCHANT TbeEY ESoflH E - COMMUNITY WOULD BE ON YOUR A D - (Ssjjf IF ITHAD BEEN iuSiw f IN THIS ISSUE M AKS MON e t BY READING THE AO S V Undlr and by virtue of an order made in the Special Proceeding, en titled, Ella Orreil and G. L. Beck, Executors of W. M. Williams, de ceased . etc., -vs- Mrs. Fallie Lowery, et'ux John Lower/, et ale., by C. B. Hoover. Clerk of Superior Court for Davie County, the undersigned will sell publicly to the highest bidder at the Conrt House door of Davie Coun ty, in Mocksville. N C , on Monday, the 20th day of November, 1939, at twelve o’clock Noon, the following described lands, to-wit A tract beginning at a stone; tbence N. 4 E. 25.05 to a stone; thence S. 13 degs. E. 43.27 chs. to » stone; thence S. I i degs.. E. 18.80 chs. to a stone; tbence S. 30 W, 2 chs. to a stone; thence S. 45 W. 8 50 chs. to a stone; thence 6-.23 degs. W. 8 50 chs. to a stotie; thence N 86 W. 10 65 chs; thence N . 4 E. 531 cbs; thence W. 5 09 chs. thence N. 4 E. 17.50 chs. thence Notth 86 W. 27 70 rhs/ thence N. 19 E. 8 23 chs, lhenre N- 65 degs, Ej 10.94 chs. to the be ginning, containing 267 9-10 acres more or less.' . Save and except. Sr bout I i acres conveyed to MrB. George Woodward. J TERMS? 0 F ’,.SALE: •+• One-third ''cash, and the. balance on ninety days time with bohd and approved securi ty. or all cash-at the option of the purchaser. -JThis the 16th day of October, 1939. ' J. B. GRANT. Commissioner, : Land pesters for tale at HieRecefdeIftce. Now is tbe Fme to sub«>| scribe for The Record. | ADS A RE NEW S Printed In Big . Type tthstss DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALERS IN BRICK and SAND W OOD an d COAL Day Phone 194 - Night Fhone 119 Mocksville, N. C. R o b ertso n s F ertdizers COrTON! COTTON! E. Pierce Foster BuyeS And Ginner Of Cotton Mocksville, N. C. Phone 89 Near Sanford Motor Cr. If lts- Cotton, See Foster A WANTAD CASH IN ON IHEA NEW MONEY FOR YOUR OLD THINGS Your Discarded Furniture, Piano, Radio, Bicycle, Tools, Ice Box, can be sold with A WANT AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER A LETTER A Welcome GIFT to the Yorner Iiefiident INTHISNEW JBttfii THEY CANT TAKE YOUR AD OME ITIS ON i. A f BILLBOARD SOOMRce RADIOS BATTERIES-SUPPUES Expert Repair Service YOUNG R A D IO CO. We Charce Batteries Right Depot St. Near Square Walker’s Funeral Home AMBULANCE Phone. 48 Mocksville, N. C, T h e L o st is F o u n d By O ur W ant Ada When you lose V advertise They Don’t Stay Lost Todayls Forgotten Man Quit Y esterd ay 02^1584823007827026824589945241482446^^51401260 08 DAVIE COUNTY’S OLDEST NEW SPAPER-TH E PAPER TIIE PEOPLE READ NEW S O F LO N G AGO . What Was Happeaiog Io Daeie Before The New Deal Used Up The Alphabet, Drowoed The Hogs aod Plowed Up The Cottoo aod Coro. CDavie Record, Dec: 3, 1919) Buck Allison returned Saturday from a short visit to Raleigh. B. F. Hooper returned Sunday from a few weeks visit to Norfolk, Va. Robert McKeown, of Winston- Salem, spent Thanksgiving tn town with relatives. Miss Ivie Horn, who is teaching at Lowell, soent Thanksgiving in town with her parents. Misses Elsie and Pauline Horn spent Thanksgiving with relatives and friends in Statesville. Mi. and Mrs. Henry Kelly, of Taylorsville, were Thanksgiving visitors. Miss Mary Meroney, who teaches at Albemarle, spent Thanksgiving in town with her parents. We are glad to see Prof. Rich ardson out again after an illness of some time. Misses Gwvn, Mattie Connor and Virginia Cherry spent several days in Advance last week with rela. tives. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Stroud, of County Line, are rejoicing over the arrival of a fine Thanksgiving pres, ent—a fine son arrived just in time for dinner Thursday. Up to Monday the Sheriff had sold 1,427 dog tags, and the end is not yet. The mon y goes to the school fund and will bo used to ed. niate the children of the county. W. A. Kerr is preparing to move his family to the Griffin farm near town. He will occupy the house which I. D, Cartner will vacate this week. J. C. Dwlggins has moved into the bobse purchased from the Cle ment estate, on North Main street. Mr. Reece, who has been occupy ing the house, will move into the Herbert Clement house on Salis bury street as soon as it is remod eled. Rev. T. F. McCulIoh and family are moving from Mocksville to Greensboro this week. W e are all sorry to lose these good people, but wish them well in their new home. Miss Rose Owen, who teaches in the Thomasville graded school, vis ited her mother here over the week-end. Dr. C. A. Owen, pastor of the First Baptist church of Salisbury, filled the pulpit at the Mocksville Baptist church Friday evening. He preached a wonderful sermon. Mr. and Mrs. W .. S. Cbappel and children spent Thanksgiving with friends at High Point. 0 . L. Williams, of Suinter,;S. C., spent a day or two in town last week looking after his veneering plant here. Rev. L. M. Holloway and fam ily were given a severe pounding last Wednesday evening, by the members of the Baptist, church J. R. Gattber, of the IL S. Navy, and who is stationed on the U. S S. Kearsage, was in town Saturday and gave us a pleasant call. Cecil Morris and Miss Ossie A l. Iison attended the Virgiuia-Caro lina football game at Chapel HiU Thursday. William Franklin Bali, 68 , died at his dome in ClaTksville town ship Sunday of ..pneumonia. The body Was laid to rest at -Chestnut Grove Monday: Tbe cotton gin of Daniel & Ev erhardt, - near Ephesus,' was- de stroyed by fire yesterday afternoon We’ understand that about $3,000 worth of cotton was burned, to gether with the gin. Y M aking T hem Com e A cross. North Carolina merchants, big and little, are required to serve as tax collectors—without psy. They are expected to collect the three per cent sales tax and remit promp t ly to Raleigh. They are penalized if they don't. The thing is quite imperative. Some merchants are more lax in their methods than others, and for this rerson and that, become delin quent in remitting the sales tax they have collected, and some of them actually don’t collect it. But they inust pay whether they col lect or not, and the many delin quents have been no little worry to those at the receiving end in Ra leigh who had to write letters about it. But when these reminders really became pestersome, the Revenue Department found a way to ease the strain on its over-worked clerks. An up-to-the minute new address ing machine was provided: a tna cbin»that all but thinks in that all but thinks, in that the address plates may be flagged and tabbed under various classifiation to be picked up at will by the machine, that all but thinks, in that the ad dress plates may be flagged and tabbed under various classification to be picked up at will by the ma chine. • This doodad cost nearly four thousand dollars, and the re tail merchants, by all means, ought to be made to pay for it out of their own pockets, for aren’t they responsible for i t s need, a n d wouldn't that be just as reasonable as requiting them to work for noth ingf It would be asking to much of the State to. provide the merchants with some helpful and convenient method of- handling these collec tions, or even offering inducements for prompt remitting. But making the work at Raleigh as easy as pos sible is quite another thing.—Stat esville Daily. U topian Schem es. In elections the voters of Cali fornia turned thumbs down on the “30 -every Thursday” plan and in Ohio a cr'arzier scheme was defeat, ed. Defeats of the crazy schemes are a very good indication that the A- merican people have not lost their reason and still believe in the ine vitable law “ by the sweat of bis brow man shall eat.” Promoters of such schemes as $30 every Thursday persons over 60 can almost convince an intelligent person that it will cost nothing. But to" apply common sense to the argtfment, who not make the age 20 instead of 60 ? . If it will work to retire everybody at 60 on a big salary without adding taxes, Vhiy w ill it not work for everybody to quit work and draw, big pay? Production bears the cost. If sim e people are to be paid $60 evety week for not working, it simply means that those who are working or producing something must pay it. 't There is no other way and all the hair brained people tn the world might just as well quit looking for one. The idea of a big Santa Clause dishing out- something for nothing I is passing. That ts an idea which cannot stand the teri of use. There is nothing for nothing, and sooner all people get that into their heads the better it will be for all concern ed.— W iSes Journal. D runkenness. Wilkes Journal. A W ilkes man in superiour court said that be had been jailed 140 times'for being drunk and that he had never been charged with any other violation of the law except for being ,before the court one time for participation in a fist fight. On many occasions be had been sentenced' to work on the roads, thence usually being 30 days. Notwithstanding the fact that be has never hurt anyone except him. self, he has been jailed 140 'times. Little could be said against- the system had it done any good but it appears that after all bis experi ences be still has the drink habit or—to state it properly—the drink habit has him. The many times that he has been locked up and the many timhs he has served time on the roads definitely did not cure him because officers' found a halt pint on him as he'went UP toward the courtroom. Probably thinking that longer abstainance would lielp, the Judge gave him an extra 12 months and 30 days on another case. Tbe state of' North Carolina, and every state, is facing a challenge— what to do with the habitual drink er. They are cot criminals. They could be dasred as diseased. The state needs a separation in stitution for such people, a place within the best of medical and scientific treatment would be given in an iffoit to cure them of the drink habii .and to make them fit for leading useful lives. Commenting on the subject, the Winston-Salem Journal carried the following editorial: “A W ilkes man presents a pro blem that is all too frequently in many cases and rarely solved. "This man has by his-own ad. mission been in ji.il for drunken'ess- es 139 times. In other-respects be is a law-abiding citizen, Dut he can not abstain from "going on a spree” occasionally, and when be does he is locked up. There may be others in 'W ilkes county and even in Forsyth coun ty who have been drunk more than 139 times, who have never seen a courtroom ' except as a spectator.- They have friends who take care of them, see that they get off the streets. Sometimes the police wink at the habitual drnnkard, if he does not cause a disturbance on the streets. "But all that is beside the point. Wbat should be emphasized1 is that these chronic drunks present a problem that is not justly or ade. quatefy solved Ly coui t action a- gainst them. ' When a m in is con stantly in court for diunkenness, it serves no interest of the munici pality or state to sentencehim to the toads.’ The trial of his case' is just an unnecessary expense to the community, for sentence, obviously does not serve as a deterrent.” M ICKlE SAYS— TRYlM TOWBlfE AWL- TH' UEWS TO VOUB- D1STAUT TBlEMD IS QUITE ATASK*WWY NOT SUBSCRIBE :? THIS "LETTER, TROWI NOME" TOtb HEBj. j YOURmSHIP WILL COME IN” Sooner By lfliy Aid «1 Newspapeir ADVERTISING. T he T ow nsend P lan . Some of our citizens.: are'• very m uch in favor of the Townsend old age pension plan. . The folks over 60 who are. too-feeble to work, and those who cannot get a job under the New Deal, could use a pension all right. The Record is not op posed to the Townsend Plan, pro vided it can be carried out with equal rights to all aod special pri vileges to none. W e are reminded * of what George Washington ■ said I more than a hundred and fifty.years ago. On one occasion he remarked tfcatSo long as the people suppo’rt- e I the Government of the United States the couotry - was in good shape, but .when the .Government had to support the people, then the country w as tn an unhealthy condi. tion. LandpM ton a t Ihia offic*. F io a n d a l C razy Q uilt. “You can’t have your cake and eat it, too,” is a homely expression of basic economic law, and it is as true today as i< was at the begin- ing of time. - The only difference is that today we have unconsiously deck red a moration on reality. How else can the . present deficit system and a #40 ,000,000 peace time Federal debt be explained? Again we are riding an economic crest—according to business index —just as we' were riding one in 1937. And again no effert hdS been made to tighten the govern mental fiscal belt, such as was pro inised under the theory , of spend mg in bad times, saving in good. Ou the contrary, there is again talk of still greater public.'spend ing to take up the slack” the in stant there is indicaticn of a ces- sition in the upward trend. ' It we do not have a “ war boom” we ap parently are to- again tty to make our own boom by the bootstrap method—the same bootstraps'that are alwars flimsy from stretching, stretching. How long can this eracy quilt of public spending be continued? No man can tel!. Ameirca is a strong nation, but like a strong man who takes to dope to enjoy fantastic ballnciuations, she will meet a nerve shattering end unless her people are to swallow the bitter pills of reality and demand a government . that earns” more than its “spends.” G ran d fath er O f F o rm er D avie M an W as In R evolution. . Raleigh—Officials .of the North Carolina Societv of Sons of: the A . merican Reyolntion -Wondered - to day if Noah Brock, -103 year-old native of Davse county, who , now livesin Darlington, Ind., is now probably the only living grandson of a veteran of the revolutionary war. . Brock applied by letter last week for membership in North Carolina society. He said be was born in 1836 and served during the Con- federate war-as a lieutenant in com- pany B. roth regiment of . Virginia cavalry. H e said his grandfather. Nathaniel Brock, of Davie, fought in the tevolution and died January 22, 1S16. , G. G. Willard, of -Raleigh, sec retary of the societv, received the application. NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING AT YOUR* SERVICE TO-HELP YOU; ,V e s b b s s S een A long M ain S treet ByTheStreetRambler. 000000 George Graves busy looking at shoes—Lady trying to get to bank before it closed, but the town dock was 7 minutes fast—County survey or' searching the town for a demo cratic lawyer—Dave Pardue loading up-fishing poles and leaving for a fishing trip to Dutchman Creek* W. L. Moore and family on way to fu neral—Mr. and Mrs. Frank- Wyatt shopping in Cash Store—F, M. Smith eating ice cream—Highway patrol man heading toward Winston-Salem -Young lady busy eating big yel low apple—Charlie Riddle carrying big can of oil—Will Vogler. popular Twin-City undertaker in town but reporting everybody in good health —Mr. and Mrs. Alex Tucker and lit* tie,daughter in town consulting den tist—Misses Kirkman. Ferree and Hornenjoying cold drinks—Claude Horn changing a $5 bill—Bald head ed, bare-beaded man marching up and down South Main street—Geo. Hendricks visiting drug Store--Law- yer Burr Brock busy eating peanuts. —Joe Graham discussing Iynchings and gold mines in Georgia—Dr. An derson. Mayor Caudell and Hilary Meroney enjoying jokes in front of postoffice—Misses White and Rene- gar looking in Sanford’s .show win* dows—Arthur Daniel looking for a new $5 bill. C o art O rders B oys To A ttend S ervices. Judge Allen H Gwyn, in Iredell superior court, ' at Statesville de cided to: give four youths, who had been cod vie ted of breaking and en. terihg, a chance,to make good citi zens by placing them on probation and good behavior, at the same time ordering them t > a’tend sctr.e Cbur h service each Sunday wiili their parents. TbeY yoiing men, Chester' C. Brooks, 18 ; Robert Troutman,. 19: Paul Beaver, 19;'Kenneth Gibson, 17 ., and Donald Troutman, had been found guilty of ibe charge of repeated breaking and entering filling>tations ip5 Statesville. Judge Gwvn gave each youth a term, of two years at bard labor on the Toads, the road sentence in earh OasO suspended; tor five years, three ydars of: which the boys are placed 0.1 probation. The judgement in. eluded a condition: that the hoys, accompanied I y the parents, ', at- sim e religious service each Sunday, except when sick, for the purpose of receiving religious training, dnr iqg the probation period; that- the boys,attend school during school age', and show that they have pass ed the Work and have been of good behavior; the defendants and lbeir parents to appear in the county re carder's office each month - and show that the defendants have been of good-behavior and are comply, ing with the terms of the judgment. Thedefendants are taxed with' the court costs and are given i 2 months in which to pay the costs. The probation:' officer was given full authority in the cases N otice To C reditors. Having qualified a* Administrator of the estate of James M. Stroud, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons bold ing claims against the estate of said de ceased,to present the same to the undersigned, .properly verified, at Mocksville. North Carolina. Route No. 4. on or before the 13th day of November, 1940, or this notice, will be plead in bar oT recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make settlement without delay.This, the 13tb day of November. 1939. RAOLH STROUD: Admr, of James M, Stroud, deceased, ByGKANT & GRAflT,: Attys. ' WAKE UP BUSINESS, By Advertising In | / This Newspaper / \ T . : N ew $100,000 H ighw ay Salisbury Post. Construction of the long-sought highway between Cooleemee and WoodIeaf will get under way early in 1940 , according, to information received, from tW nstate highway commissioners by a member of : the Rowan countv board of commiss- sioners. J. T. Graham,. Rowan county commissioner said he Jtmd received notification that the con tract for the new 'highway would he let either in IateDecember onin early January, with the construc tion work to get under way imme diately tbeieafter. The new highway will cost ap. proximately'fiioo.ooo with $30,000 to be spent on the Davie county side of the Yadkin river and $76 - coo on the Rowan county side. The highway will cross the river near the Erwin Cotton mills, located . On the Davie side, and a new bridge will be constructed just below the one used on the old dirt road from Cooleemee to VVoodleaf. The new paved, highway will re place the old dirt road designated as highway Sot,■ Granam explain ed. tfud w>ll not follow the same route. H e said -, it would enter Woooleaf 10 intersect the preseit Woodleaf-Salisbury highway. Graham also said that W olfe had. informed him the new highway would be continued to BaTber when funds were made available. The new highway project has been endorsediby’both the Rowan and Davie county boards of com missioners. Y' T he W eekly N ew spaper There is sometimes an inclina tion on the part of people and mer chants to underrate the small week- v newspaper. They sav it is ido small and too insufficiently suppos ed to have much influence. Lodk at those towns which have no news paper and then glance In any neigh boring lown that ha* » local paper in their community.’ Yau will see more trade and .enthusiasm among the mercb-ws and the people. ’ The weekly paper plays a large part in promot ng a community and as the community grows so grows the paper. It isy e ll to temember that a small paper has the closest contacts to it's readers than ajry other publication, - It is the most typically American of all our '.in stitutions. * Through the columns of the weekly paper public opinion Jis formed and judged in all small towns. So far the weekly news paper has not been' taken over by large industries and set up in great chains whose opinion.is all molded and set out from one source. The editor of the average week ly i3 subject to no orders from “ higher ups" and is held account able only to bis own conscience. T hew eekly is the spokesman qf the farmer, the editor and the small busioess man. It is these groups who speak the truest Americanism ■ad democracy. The readers and supporters of the small weekly think only in terms ol Ihe common good. The editor stands tor all things that are best for all the people of bis com munity. The country newspaper istb e most typical American in stitution remaning in this country: —Exchange. THIS WAS ^ ADVERTISING ONCE ■ w iNEWSPAPER IiB E n n ti THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVTTXE. N. C. G a y S c o t t i e P a t t e r n F o r P i l l o w o r T o y By RUTH WYETH SPEARS D Y FAR the most admired toy ■*-* in a gay and modern nursery was a red and black striped Scot- tie with- a gleam in his pearl-but ton eye. A college girl in the fam ily pilfered the pup for a mascot -which she kept perched on her desk. The baby cried, and an other Scottie had to be made. The JOIN SIDES WITH A Z* STftIPs ,ETWEEN PORJLfiTllPPE) TOY $4!%__y > I ft S'S II »1r 5 *f- 'FOR APPUOUE RUU PAPER scorre AS SHOWN same pattern was used for an ap plique for Sonny’s pillow which m et 'with enthusiastic approval. , Ry this time it seemed obvious that a Scottie might solve the Christmas gift problem for any number of people. So here he is. You can make a pattern for him yourself by following the diagram. By ruling the paper in either larg er or smaller squares, you may make a dog any size desired. NOTE: Readers who are now using Sewing Books No. I, 2 and 3 will be happy to learn that No. 4 is ready for mailing; as well as the 10-cent editions of No. I, 2 and 3. Mrs. Spears has just made quilt block patterns for three de signs selected from Iier favorite Early American quilts. You may have these patterns FREE with your order for four books. Price of books—10 cents each postpaid. Set of three quilt block patterns without books—10 cents. Send or ders to Mrs. Spears, Drawer 10, Bedford Hills, New York. Constipation Relief Th at Also Pepsin-izes Stomach When constipation brings on acid indigestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, crated tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your stomach is probably loaded up with certain undigested food and your bowelsdon’t move. So you need both Pepsin to help break up fast that rich undigested food in your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be sure your laxative also contains Pepsin. Take Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative, because its Syrup Pepsin helps you gain that wonderful stomacb-relief, while the Laxative Senna moves your bowels. Tests prove the power of Peprin to dissolve those lumps of undigested protein food which may lmger in your stomach, to cause belching, gastric acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin- izing your stomach helps relieve it of such distress. At the same time this medicine wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your bowels to relieve your constipation. So see how much better you feel by taking the laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on that stomadi discomfort, too. Evoi finicky children love to taste this pleasant family laxative. Buy Dr. Caldwell’s Laxative—Senna with Syrup Peprin at your druggist today! AU but Dead One’s life is what he is alive to; to be alive only to appetite, pleas ure, pride, money-making, and not to goodness and kindness, pur- :ity and love, history, poetry, flow ers, stars, God and eternal hopes, is to be all but dead.—Babcock. ^or CHESTCOLDS I----- OUICK--RUB on super-medicated PENETRO. LET IT GET IN ITS GOOD WORK.FASTER. BECAUSE IT CONTAINS 2 TO 3 TIMES MORE MEDICATION THAN ANY OTHER SALVE SOLD. NATIONALLY FOR COLDS* MUSCULAR ACHES AN D /7 NASAL MISERIES. («> P E N E T R O MEDI CA TEvD RU B The Happy Ones But happy they, the happiest of ' their kind, whom' gentler stars unite and in one fate their hearts, their fortunes and their beings blend.—Thomson. BLACK MAN for— •PERFORMANCE • CONDITION • HEALTH Drop BlfffVmffn** IldEdLBilde Is &e food trough* Stode do tho rest. Ro drenching. No dosing. Aaimcds koop in healthy working condition NotarofS way* ttROCK LICK IT—STOCK LIKK IT** SOLD h r Ioeding Soafhom DoedersONE P H lC E............................-BSe If there is no Doedor near you* writs direct to BLUCKMAN STOCK MEDICINE 00.• O SL •“ Chattanooga, Toon. . A GREAT BARGAIN V E S P E R T E A PURE ORANGE PEKOE 5 0 C ups for IO C en ts EHST an IUESI B Y T A L B O T M U N D Y • TAlBOT MUNDY—WNU SBlVKX CHAPTER XXI—Continued. —18— The Bengali backed away from Norwood. He looked three shades paler. He was trembling, The Ma harajah’s ' right* hand seized the drumstick of the golden gong. He raised it. “No,” said: Norwood. “Not yet, please, Your Highness.’’ The Maharajah stared. He seemed uncertain whether to feel flattered or offended, He laid down the drum stick and resumed the tapping on the desk with his fingernails: “I become nervous,” he said, “without my tonic. This is very bad for my nerves. Captain Nor wood, how did you know about this?” Norwood answered without look ing at him. He was watching the Bengali and.the white-clad servant: “I didn’t know. I guessed it. Both of you, go and- stand over in that comer, with your backs to the wall!” The servant obeyed promptly. He went down on his knees in the cor ner. He put his hands together and held them in front of his face. The Bengali backed away slowly, watch ing Norwood’s eyes. He backed un til he reached a bookcase. Sudden ly he snatched a stamp album and hurled it at the goblet. Norwood caught the album in his right hand, by one leaf of the cover. He set the goblet on the desk, without spill ing more than two or three drops. Then he closed the album carefully and gave it to the Maharajah. The Maharajah petted it, stroked it: “My collection of Cape of Good Hopes! My triangular black!” He glared at the Bengali. “You vandal! Now I know you are guilty! Why did you throw it?” The Bengali had recovered some of his presence of mind: “It was at him I threw it. By his touch he has defiled your drinking goblet! He is a bribe-taker! I suspect him of hav ing tampered with your tonic. What has he put into it? I advise Your Highness not to taste it!” The door behind the screen opened, closed again, and the Ma haranee appeared. Norwood bowed to her, but she took no notice of him. She went straight to the Ma harajah, knelt beside his chair, and whispered. He grumbled at her, sotto voce. She continued whisper ing. At last he nodded. She stroked his right hand, murmured tradition al phrases of respect and left the room. She didn’t even glance at the Bengali. “I need my tonic,” said the Ma harajah. "I am becoming more nervous each minute.” “Whiskey and soda should be a good prescription for that,” said Norwood. “I’d have brought a flash if I had any sense. I didn’t think of it.” . “I have never defiled myself with whiskey,” said the Maharajah. Norwood kept his eye on the Ben gali: “If you had iiever drunk any thing worse than a scotch and soda, they wouldn’t be betting in Kadur bazaar that you’ll be dead by mid night. Atqr money on it, doctor? What odds did ybu get?” -' The door behind the screen opened again. The Maharanee, reappeared, veiled. She was followed by Lynn, and then Rundhia. Rundhia looked startled. He shot one penetrating glance at the Bengali, then at Nor wood, then at the Maharajah. He made a very , obvious -effort to -re cover self-possession.- "Captain Norwood,” said the Ma haranee,“why did you wish to see me?” “About this," said Norwood. He hadn’t time to reply decently. He had noticed that Rundhia was trying to signal the. Bengali through the opening under the desk, iso he got in the Way. As soon as Rundhia had stood-up again, Norwood spoke: “Rundhia,- here’s something for your bruised face. Come and drink it." Lynn stared with parted' lips from one man to the other. Rundhia glanced at her; he looked stung, scared, sullen. Norwood hadn’t looked at Lynn once since she en tered the room. The' Maharajah pointed the gong drumstick at* the Bengali: “Stand still,” he commanded. “If you are unable to stand, you may sit—-on the floor—where you are.” “Rundhia,” said Norwood, “how about a trial by ordeal? You have accused me, behind my back. I ac cuse you, to your face, of an at tempt to poison His Highness. What do you say? Shall we share this drink together? You drink half. I’]] drink what’s-left.” . “You are theMast man I would drink with,” Rundhia retorted. Norwood laughed. He thrust his right hand into bis tunic. “Steady, Rundhia! Keep your hand away from your pocket. I have you cov ered.—Lynn! Readi into Rundhia’s hip-pocket and put his pistol on the desk!” • Lynn stared—resentful, alarmed, puzzled. Parted lips. Wide blue eyes. Frowning. Norwood repeated the order: "Lynnll do as I tell you!” ____ Lynn felt in his pocket. She laid an automatic 09-the table: “Rundhia,” she said, “I didn’t think that of you." ,. “Rundhia!” said', the. Maharanee.- She had unveiled her face. Lynn spoke again: “Rundhia, you came-, to offer Captain Norwood something else than that, didn’t you. Where is it?” Rundhia snarled: "Tell him to put his own pistol on the desk.” “I haven’t one,” said Norwood. He reached for Rundhia’s pistol, jerked it open- and broke it. There came a knock at the door. The Maharanee rearranged her veil. Norwood stepped aside, keeping his eyes on Rundhia, who was biting bis lip. The Maharajah tapped the gong with his fingers. The door opened. The anteroom attendant spoke rap idly in his native , tongue. The Ma harajah looked like a frightened sheep. He nodded, speechless. The attendant bowed in the Resident and closed the door behind him. Nor wood, still holding the goblet in his left hand, reopened the door and jerked his head at the Bengali: “Get out!” he commanded. The Resident stared. He almost forgot to bow to the Maharajah. He “I have never defiled myself with whiskey,” said the Maha rajah. watched the Bengali leave the room. Then he looked at Norwood again and raised his eyebrows. Norwood spoke sotto voce: “Did my man follow you?” “Yes,” said the Resident “All right then. The doctor won’t get far.” “You surprise us,” said the Ma harajah. “We are overburdened with joy by this visit. But what does it mean?” The Resident looked comfortless: 'I am at a loss' for an answer!. Captain Norwood sent me a sort of SOS. He—” “May I speak?” asked Norwood. The Resident answered: “I think you’d better, if His Highness—” "Yes, please,” said the Mahara jah. ‘Rundhia,” said Norwood. He held up the blue goblet in Ms left hand, almost as if he were going to drink a toast: “Let’s hear your ac cusation. What hive you against me?” RundMa eyed Mm sullenly: “Nothing,” he answered. “I don’t know you.” Norwood smiled: “Very cautious of you, RundMa. I am really alive.” The Resident also smiled. He star tled everyone by saying: ‘Rundhia, there is a conversation on record. Of course, only my ver sion of it. But I refused, you re member, to treat it as confidential. I made a memorandum of it.” RundMa swallowed^ what was left of Ms dignify.' He wah looking beat en. He spoke as if the insolence had all oozed out of him: “I forget ..what I said. I with draw it anyhow. I have already written this." He groped in his inside pocket, avoiding Lynn’s eyes, although Lynn looked sympathetic. He produced an envelope, strode past Lynn and offered it to Norwood. Norwood waved it aside and jerked his head toward the Resident. The Resident accepted the enve lope, and bowed to the Maharajah: “You permit me?” “By all means. I am fascinated.” Lynn was watching the Resident. He had opened the envelope. He read the letter. He' passed it to= Norwood: ‘Is this satisfactory to you, Nor wood?” “It’s entirely up to you, sir. I accept it if you do.” The Resident stepped forward and laid the letter in front of the Maha rajah: “Will your Highness please read that and, if you see fit, w it ness it? I have a gallant officer here in need of a rebuttal of some secret accusations . that m ight: ruin his career.” ! The Maharajah read, stared at the Resident, stared at RundMa, stared at Norwood, reached for his foun tain pen and signed.. RundMa recovered a bit of his in solence. “Are you satisfied?” he de manded. “No,” said Norwood. . "Not yet.” He reached for the goblet—raised it, sniffed it, smiled at RundMa Then he looked straight at Lynn. Lynn was watching the Mahara nee, but she seemed conscious of Norwood’s stare. RundMa wMs- pered to her,' but she took no notice. “RundMa,” said Norwood, !‘I will ask you two questions. Answer whichever you please. What is in this goblet?” The Maharanee pulled herself to her feet, picked up her cusMon and went and. knelt,at the Maharajah’s, left hand, so that she could watch Rundhia: "RundMa,” she said, “answer!” RundMa 'said nothing; he glared at Norwood. Lynn turned in her chair to watch Rundhia’s face. Nor wood spoke again: “You don’t answer the first one? Very well, here’s the other: why did you sign that retraction? I didn’t ask you for it. Who did?” , RundMa was silent. “Speak!” said the Maharanee. She had unveiled her face. She was looking at Lynn. RundMa glanced at Lynn. Lynn looked suddenly straight at Nor wood and spoke with such con strained emotion that her voice sounded fiercely angry: “Captain Norwood, I asked Run dMa to write that. If it isn’t what you wanted, you may blame me.” Norwood’s lips- moved toward a smile, but he saw her embarrass ment, so he checked it. He looked straight in her eyes for several sec onds before he looked at RimdMa again: “Substitute question, RundMa! You didn’t answer that one. How much did you charge for this re traction of your accusation against me?” RundMa had had time to consid er. He sneered: “I wrote that as an act of magnanimity. Was it wasted on you?” Norwood glanced quickly at Lynn. “No, no, RundMa, it wasn’t wasted. But tell us all what is in this goblet. I could have it analyzed. Perhaps you would prefer to consult that Bengali doctor before you answer? Question a bit awkward? Your trou ble is that you can’t guess how much I know, can you? Can you guess why I let the Bengali leave the room? Any chance that he betrayed you? Rather drop the question? Very well, answer the other: how much or what did you charge, and to whom, for the magnanimous re traction of your accusation against me? I insist on an answer.” RundMa spoke sullenly: “Nothing. No one. I don’t even know what yea mean.” Norwood looked at Lynn. Her lips moved. He was in time to check her: “Please say nothing! I want Run dMa to tell it—RundMa, choose. I won’t wait all night. Account for the contents of tMs goblet—or else answer: what promise have you ex acted—from whom?” The Maharanee spoke in a strained voice: “Answer him, Run dhia.” RimdMa was silent. Lynn stared,. He avoided her eyes. "If I should have to mention tMs goblet again,” said Norwood, “I will ask His Highness the Maharajah to summon the guard. What promise have you 'exacted from whom as the price of your signing that re traction?” “There was no price.” The Maharanee was looking at Lynn. She spoke suddenly: “Run- dMa;-speak like a man! There was a promise!” RunfMa stared at his feet. He had tfee grace to speak as if he were ashamed,. He alMost.mnmMed: • "I release her from the promise.” Norwood looked at Lynn steadily:. “Do you accept that?” "No' I refuse. Js this your ven geance? It’s cruel. Doesn’t the re traction .satisfy you?" ■;........ ..... Norwood smiled at Lynn, and made a reassuring gesture. 'Run dMa stared; he looked astonished.' The Maharanee stood -up. Norwood .spoke: “Lynn, did RundMa tell you that I tore up your letter? He lied. Yoiir aunt gave it to me less than an hour ago. It reached her by mistake in the wrong envelope.” , “I confirm.that,” said the Resi dent. Lynn stood up and waited for Run dMa to speak. He didn’t. "Rundhia," she said, “did you hear that?” Then, turning: “Thank you, Captain Norwood.” “Just a misunderstanding,” Nor wood answered. “I will explain it later.” Lynn shook her head. Her eyes met his but she made no reply. She left the room by the door behind the screen. The Maharanee followed her. Silence. The Resident wiped his face with the handkercMef: "Steady, Nor wood,” he said. “Steady.” He spoke aloud to the Maharajah: “Does Your Highess wish—” “I wish for tranquillity! I do not care to know any more!” —■ “Carry on!” said the Resident. “Careful!” Norwood raised the goblet, this time in his right hand: “You don’t deserve this, RundMa. You’re a blackguard.” He glanced at the Res ident: “You agree, sir?” The Resident nodded. The Ma harajah stared, fascinated. Norwood spilled the contents of the goblet on the floor. The Maharajah turned to Run dhia: “Leave the room. Never return.” Rundhia moved toward the door behind the screen, but the Resident jumped out of Ms chair. RundMa began to hurry. Norwood was too quick. He shoved the screen in Rundhia’s way. It banged against the door and the noise almost made the Maharajah scream. “Your Highness,” said the Resi dent, “in Prince RundMa’s presence, I take this opportunity to inform you that I have written to His Maj esty’s advisers, strongly recom mending them to exercise their veto in the matter of Prince Rundhia’s succession to the throne of Kadur.” “You have already written?” “I have mailed the letter.” “I resign,” said RundMa sullenly. “You and your veto may go to the devil.” “May I speak to Your Highness alone?” asked the Resident. The Maharajah scowled at Run dMa: “Go out that way!" He point ed to the door into the anteroom. RundMa walked out Norwood fol lowed. He overtook RundMa at the head of the stairs, and Rundhia turned about and faced him: ■ “I sincerely regret,” he re marked, looking straight into Nor wood’s eyes, “that the men who fired at you, missed.” “ Yes, you had rotten luck, Run dhia.' What will you do—go to Eu rope? The Riviera? That's crowded with might-have-beens who insisted on Mtting below the belt. D’you know, RundMa, if had even sus pected you of having put one over on Lynn Harding, I would have let you hang. You know, they hang even princes who play at your game.” He laughed. “No, Run dMa, no. Youwillwalkaheadofm a down the stairs. I know that trick.” (TO BE CONTINUED) C L A S S I F I E D D E P A R T M E N T FUUL DfiESS S S S TO IIE N T iS K a rilSX 1lSSM-SIEM AClLiniLSt w«iu«to>.ac._ AGENTS Dlstalbalors S tart business of your own. Bxceptlonal Mew B erotattonary M otor Oil. Profits can am ount ireekly. No ex- • nerience. PBNN GBAPHCO OU* CO.* 1984 M ary St., Pittsburgh, P a. BABY. CHICKS * 0 9 0XJre DeUreiy I We pay postage. teeJU U S CHICK CO.,Staieutap9to* As- Nature Dictates E n g lish A b b ey B u ilt 8 0 0 ; Y ears A g o N o w U p fo r S ale Rufford Abbey, 800-year-old Eng lish estate, is being put up for sale, London papers report. The estate contains 18,700 acres and includes the abbey, founded in the reign of King Stephen, partly rebuilt In the Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries and an ancient deer park of more than SOO acres. It also includes the whole or great er part of the villages and parishes of Old Ollerton, Eakring, Wellow, Bilsthorpe and Ompton, as well as parts of Walesby, Egmanton, Ed- wtostowe, Farnsfield, Kirton, Blid- worth and Tuxford. The estate comprises about „70; farms,- 38- small Kbldihgs,' four li censed houses, including the famous Hop Pole at Ollerton, many private residences and shops, nearly 2,000 acres of woods and plantations, and hundreds of cottages. One of the most famous estates in’the dukeries, Rufford abbey nev er has been in the market before, and its forthcoming sale will be one of the outstanding transactions of re cent years in real estate. * Lands at Rufford -were recorded long, before Domesday, but its history as an ab bey began in 1148, when Gilbert de Gaunt, Earl of Lincoln, founded an abbey there,, dedicated it to the hon or of the Blessed Virgin Mary and colonized it with Cistercian monks from Rievaulx abbey. The abbey lands increased, and from the earliest times the monks enjoyed special privileges M the sur rounding Forest of Sherwood. The abbots became rich enough to enter tain royalty, and September 18,1290, Rufford received the first of many subsequent royal visitors; Edward I passed a Mght there and. sealed a variety of documents. The rich abbey attracted the at tention of Henry VIII’s commission ers when he was considering the dis solution of the monasteries and in 1537 he annexed the abbey and gave it and all its lands to George, earl of Shrewsbury, with whose descend ants it ever since has remained. Thus began Rufford abbey’s 400- year existence as a country house. The chapel of the abbey was the scene of the wedding in 1574 of Charles Stuart, younger brother of Damley, and Eikabeffi Cavendish. Nature will give unto us without stint, but to !'return she demands that we study her precepts am*, abide by hfer dictates. A hundred cows in. a meadpw. meant for oMy 50 spells disaster—a bit of wis dom with wMch every farmer is thoroughly familiar. A million people gathered together in on» spot where-there ..shoulcLbe only 100,000 causes congestion, poverty and unnecessary suffering.—Hen drik van Loon. How To Relieve BronchitisBronchitis, acute or chronic. Is an Inflammatory condition of the mucous membranes linlngthebronchlal tubes. Creomulslon goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germIm lcn ph le gm , Incrw im secretio n a n d aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes/Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding that you are to like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back.CREOMULSION IbrcoughstChestCoidslBrandiitif QnIck to Speak The rushing flow of speech and their own eloquence is fatal to many.—Juvenal. Are You Weak? Meridian. Miss.-—Mr*. D. H- Ottt 317 - 41st Ave.,says: “Dr.Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov ery surely Is good med icine; it increases the appetite and thus gives one strength and helps tone up the hody just wonderfully. We have used it in the family as a tonic on different occasions, with excellent benefit.** Buy it Ia liquid or tablets at your drug store today. AU for Fame I The desire for fame is the last desire that is laid aside even Im the wise.—Tacitus. * ^ £ £ hjdcvs&L- 0 0 0 LIQUID -T A B L E T S / SALVE-NOSE DROPS f G s t t < Horitog OorseIres To be angry is to revenge the faults of others upon ourselves. —Pope. ■PETROLEUM jelly Conquering Fate To bear is to conquer our fate. -Thomas CampbelL FILM S D ev elo p ed * P rin ted ES= 25'Fadeless rri.-.K • pcs’age Paid • BIXIE FILM SERVICE P.O .Boa438S-A AOaatOeOa.I W NU-7 4 7 -3 9 W a t c h Yo u k K i d n e y s / Hdp Them Oeanse the Bbod of Harmful Body Waste Tour Iddnev* are constantly filtering waste matter from the blood stream. But kidney* sometimes lag in their work—do • not act ag Nature Intended—fail to re* move'lmfraritie* that, if retained, may poison the Bjretea and apeet the whole Bymptoms may hie Bagging baekadw* peratutent headache, attacks of dirriaf , getting up nights* swelling, pnffinea under the eyes—a feeling of nervous anxiety and Ion of pep and strength.Other signs of kidney or bladderdie- Order are sometimes burning, scanty or too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Vse DomCs Pius, Doan’s have been winning new friends for more than forty years. They have a nation-wide reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the conntty over* Ask your ntighoort D o a n s P ills -FROCK SUTTJ TniiaiJAcusoris 'rit* fvr Att^s9 ■klnelOi.D.t your own. Iilei7 >5*°^ JrrWv. JTo ex* ■TL CO., lost » 9 0 ate.? Is without Idemanda Iepts an/*. I hundred t lor only of wis- ^rmer is million in on® I be only poverty Is.—Hen- Ieve Is c. is anhe mu- onchial Itto tb e In germ lion and ja l raw, Imucous t to sell Tiththe to Iibe Je cougb fey back. IO N pnchitis beh and Iatal to k ? k —lira.Jr • 4ise I Pierce’s I Discov- Iod med- is es the Jis gives I d helps Id v just |e have Tiily asPSt OC-y it in : today* Ihe last Tven bjj Ige the ■selves. & fate. »7—39 Ilood Itertnc |n . But Dk—do I to re*. may I whole ache, Jioesa, Iffiaees srvoue _ ngth. fcr dis- cty or nmg !years. Jation. |ie the 3 3r4- f 3 ;'j\ THE DAVIE RECORD MOCKSVILLE. N. C. 1- T w hen you have th ese signs of Acid Indigestion BIG TOP By ED WHEELAN A P E W M IN U T E S L A T E RIN THE FIRST RLACEJ WANT VOU ALL T o STOP KIDOINOr BCNNV BECAUSE HE CANT TAKE IT - IN THE SECOND PLACE .HIS FAIHER USED Tb WORK FOR ME IN THE d a y s a n d t pr o m ise d him i’d ew e BENNyADREAK -------' SOME DAV AND IN THE THIRD PLACE. ALTHO HE DOESNT KNOW IT. I CONSIDER BENNy CNE CF THE MOST VALUABLE AND UNOSOAU CURIOSITIES I HANE VlfIH THE SHOVl .N O EO D y ENER TALKED cuEE, t a n k s , cu v m o r ,I e e r VATOLD PEM MOTS VIHERE T O GET O FF AT - A RIGHT,: A1 RIGHT S EVHayiHING- IS O .K . NOW. BENNVI THDSE FREAKS VIONT DARE KID VOU ANy MORE BELIEVE M E I! A-L J - PHeMtfcum n ^ t h . Dluose*OltoJW*®*u CDMlC Cheek these symptoms—and if you suspect excess stomach adds, take PhiIUpst Mttk of Mat * nesia, If trouble persists, See Your Doctory Today it’s so easy to "alkalize” excess acids anywhere you are. Now when distress comes at home, altK,;'"»A. you do is take 2 tablespoonfuls of Iiqnid Phillips’ Milk of Magnesiap when you are out with OtherspBy RUBE GOLDBERGLALA PALOOZA —Those Tarbam Look Funny but They re Useful simply sbp 2 Phillips Milk of Ma nesia Tablets in your mouth like you would candy mints. That’s all you do to feel wonderfuL Either form of Phillips’ works the same way—very quickly. You can’t beat it for welcome fast relief from after-eating distress.-Almost LEETLE LADY,YOU MOOST NOT SPOIL ZE COMPLEXION WIZ ZE FOOLISH TEARS - I SAY, * BAZOOLA BAZOO lA" AND ALL WILL BE HUNKY-DUNKY BOOHOO THANKS, PROFESSOR” BOOHOO- PLL BEHAVE WHILE PINTO IS UNDER THE KNIFE, LALA’S NERVES REACH THE BREAKING POINT AND SHE SENDS FOR PROFESSOR ZEERO TO FIND OUT IF HER PET SHRIMP-HOUND WILL RECOVER MORE BANDASESr MORE BANDAGES! GETtEM OH, WHY DO THEY HAVE TO KEeP RUNNING IN AND OUT OF a n y w h e r e : ROOM OH, PROFESSOR, TELL ME - WILL _ PINTO GET WELL? GOT1TO KNOW! acid breath” are corrected right at the source. It’s a wonderful way to free yourself from distress and embarrass ment. Try it But be sure when you buy to ask for “Phillips’ ” to in sure getting the genuine fast-acting Phillips’ article P H I L L I P S ' MAONCSIiIHf//* •Frank Jay Uarkey Syndicate, Inc S’MATTER POP— Oops! Exception!By C. M. PAYNE * ? v -t+ Ia t s -AFTErK. IM1DiAhs <pk *- CJ Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service* Anything Up to Half a TonMESCAL IKE By s* l . h u n t l e y LONGEB UFE-UNE OH, HIT DOWT MATTER A H E A P - DO YOU THIMK YOU'D UKE ■SOMETUllOS »«.. LIGHT? NESSUMj SOM E KINlD O P BO O K TO READ O P MlSWTS TUB OOWf AWARDeDYWfn, ? ^Hgft *k>ooo recnSSf. \ UIHD IdisSEO NO, HE D oesw r HAVE £\CtOOO AmOuOBODY HMaM D .TftMSS HEftSlNCE4IHEN POP— No Substitutes By J. MILLAR W ATT WMAT DOES • KlCfT TRANSFERABLE MEAN O N THE t ic k e t , POP ? THAT M E A N S-IF VOU DON’T 6 0 YOURSELF THEY W OKT LET YOU ON THE Q TRAIN! The Bell Syndicate, Ine WNUServlce I f you trade in your car now, or run it through its full mechanical life, it’s all loss and no gain if your car grows old before its time. So guard it against the dangers of haphazard lubrication. . . drain youi- crankcase regularly. . . use only . J Add-Free Quaker I State Motor O il I and Superfine m Lubricants.-. IM lKS CARS RUN BEUER ...M S I IOfiGER THE AUDIENCE ByGLUYAS WILLIAMS USrtSlKCHAIR BKflUSE .FAfrtERWAHft ToREfltf m HftTWCfWC WrtOE FROM MA&flZiHE AflWfiOH BE&tftT) EtfFftiMgtfft WiTrt WsftRS ON KH08 Otf $ft«StRAtf. EFAMlHB SCflft VARIOUS WAtfS OF5tflW6 OFcHftiftj HOPJtfSHEEfllJIES OtfStRflV ff SPtHto ft irtilE Time WEftVl K6LESS TtfROd&H UHIft OF CHAIR, T lIusstlHE-MElItlir AStMDEfi: OFBKER- DUHMEIir KtmtlKC Them free AMiK Bell SimGieet*.-WffV fervfr* BAlRKCtS CRRlR OK BRCR MlSJUtOtS. FMAER,Wlfil IEOS AseHWODESIIltRE ISKYMOtMUSt IH flHISHIHC- 1RE ARDfiE FAIR PLAT The actress was appearing in a breakfast scene where eggs were being served, and a child sitting in a box made manifest bis interest in the food. Stepping down to the footlights the actress tendered the youngster an egg; but his mother drew back her child with a sign of annoyance. “You should let the young man take it,” said the actress quietly. “It is quite extraordinary for eggs to be passed from this side of the footlights.” ’Strike’ Defined Fisherman—When a fish takes the hook we call it a strike. Tourist—Why? Fisherman—Well, the man with the rod begins to have a lot of labor trouble. Ahem! “Where is the man who doesn’t like to see smiling, cheerful faces around him when things go wrong?” “You’ll find him on any golf course.” fl[Cheerful News COlJDJNAPDBNtt NANV (ALU RK HELP UNDER NOURISHED CHILD STRICKEN , IN SCHOOL LOCAL ORGANIZATION JWAHPED UflTHttUS RlRRElieF t PEAlH DRlNGS EELItf 10 DHfflBH MOfHEB- - J L J g j L , REUEf R* THE NEEPy K UBPENT (OLD MD RAIN ADDlO DISTRESS OF unfortunates WE VE OQX XD DOSOMElftlNG AftMTHlS1NOW CUKMUNiry (WEST FUND DRIVE,OOiNb OVERfHElDP . $ L f a V— ... T /j f L I l J f s^seW QUAKER S T A T E MOTOR OIL RetailpHce Qpaker State Gil Ilefitmg Corp., Oil Q tft Jkb Good Merchaidise G n Be CONSISTENTLY Advertised • BUY ADVERTISED GOODS-• V TfiE OAVlE RECORD, MftfKSVILLE, N. 6 , NOVEM RER 29.-1939. — a. Gjgaaaaaanua^ aafiieaaBEaaSB IHE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRHNK STROUD ■ ■ EdiUf. TELEPHONE Entered atthe Postoffice in Mocks vllle, N . C., as Second-class MM! m atter. March 3,1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - 5 I «0 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ 5« Better do your Christmas shop ping early. No one knows during this New Deal administration just what day will he designated as Christmas by our chief executive. W e are still waiting for our Thanksgiving tm key and cake. The pumpkins, the persimmoos and the apples have arrived, and we can eat pumokin pie from now until Chriftraas if we can get the crusts and sweetening. The Record office will be open all day tomorrow. Drop around and see us while you are in town, renew your subscription and get a Blum’s Almanac for the year 1940 Corae and see us whether you are a subscriber or no'. We are al ■ ways glad to have you call. Tommorrow is Thanksgivingday —the day that has been observed f ir nearly a century. On this date we should all nause in onr mad chase after the dollar and give thanks to the Lord tor the man) . blessings he lias bestowed upon us. ' W e have all heen blessed more than w e deser.ve. We should all remem ber those who have not fared so - well and give our means to the thousands of orphan children who are depending on us to help keep these worthy institutions—the or phanages, going. Those who are able, should douate to help feed and clothe these fatherless and motherless children. Rememt e* the Lord said nearly two thousand years ago, that it was more blessed to give than to receive. B uys N ew spaper. Iobn F. Leach, C. R Allen and W . E- Tbornbrough have purchas ed the Lexington Times from A. C Honeycutt, and took charge last week. The Record wishes the boys much success in their new venture, and hopes that it will keep one of them busy .writing receipts both day and night. Leach and Allen are Mocksville men, and bare spent many years in the newspaper busi ness. M anyA ttend M eeting. More than 250 members of the P. O. S. of A. from 12 cities in this section of Noith Carolina attended a district dinner meeting at Ccoiee- inee Thursday night to hear the national inspectors of the order ad dress the membership. Rev. Earl Pellingill, nation ! in spector of Philadelphia, made the principal speeph of the occasion. W ith Pettingill were eight other PhilrdeJphians who are delegates visiting various lodges in the South. C. N. Sprv1 state president of the P. 0 . S. of A , presided. Plans were made , for particioation' by Nottb Carth orders In the nation wide membership' campaign. ' D avie F arm ers O n A ir. County agent D.' C. Rankin, together with four of Davie county's most progres sive farmers, were heard on the Farmers Forum of the Air, over Radio station WOT, Charlotte, Sunday from 12:05 to 12:30 p. m. Tbe gentlemen heard were Mr. Ran kin. E . C. Tatum, manager of the Erwin' cotton mill farm. Hannan McMahan, of Pino, tanner and molasses manufacturer. Paul Blackwelder. of the Sanford & Black welder dairy farm, and J. G. Crawford, of Jerusalem. These gentlemen were inter viewed, and gave some interesting infor. malion about farming methods, cans cul tivation and other matters pertaining to better farming. T o Close T hanksgiving. Thefollowing business houses in this city have agreed to close their places of business Thanksgiving day, Thursday, Nov. 30th: Meal Grocery & Market. Mania Brothers. Allison Johnson Co. =• C Cj Sanford Sons Co. ' J. Frank Hendrix. Daniel Furniture & Ekctric Co. Pardue's. Mocksville Hardware Co. W. J. Johnson Co. StarDepartmentStore. Wallace Store. United Variety Store. • Mocksville Cash Store. > Mocksvllle Meat Market. Birthday and Wedding Anniversary. MR AND MRS. J. F. GARWOOD. Mr, J. F. Garwood of Cooleemee, celebrated his 75th birthday Sunday, Nov. 26tb with a dinner. This occasion also was the celebration of Mr. and Mrs. Garwood's 51st wedding anniversary. The dinner table was centered with a large two-tier cake, which held 75 candles. Those enjoying Mr. and Mrs. Garwood's hospitality and bountiful dinner were the following relatives and friends: Rev. and Mrs. A. T. Stoudemire, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Garwood, Mrs. Frank Seders and son Donnie. Mrs. A. B. Gobble and Mr. and Mrs. Hu bert Eaton and children, all of Cooleemee; Mr. and Mrs. B. Wilhelm and children and Mrs. Frank Heodley, of Albematle; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Naylor, Mayor and Mrs. T. I. Caudell. of Mocksville. Jesse F. Garwood was born in Davie county, near Fork Church, in 19S4. He was reared on the farm of his parents near Fork, receiving his free school education un der Ptof. W. F, Merrell and others, who taught in the Sowers school. In the year of 1888, Mr. Garwood married Miss Georgia Benson. Soon after his marriage he bought a farm adjoining his home place, where be and his wife lived until Mr. Garwood was 40 yearn of age. About 1904 Mr. Garwood and wife moved to Cooleemee in the section which is now known as Gladstone. Here he went into the mercantile business and has been a very successful merchant ever since. When he was 23 years of age, he joined the Fork Baptist church and has been ac tive in church work all these years. When Mr. Garwood moved to Cooleemee, be moved his membership to the Cooleemee Baptist church. Forseveralyears he was chairman of the Board of Deacons, and has been teaching the Adult Bible Class for 20 years. Wh n Mr. Garwood was elected teacher of this class it was small in num ber, but th-ough bis leadership the class has grown in number and enthusiasm. Mr. Garwood is one of the leading citizens of his community. £M (I (I (I 41 4« (I «1 it (t It it It It (t i t Itl It It it it it h $it it it it it it it it i t i t it i t it it it it it it $it it it it it it Watkinsj Largest And Best GiftDisplaylnHistory —Now OUR whole store is brimful of tempting GIFTS. These gift items ave been personally selected from thousands offered by the leading ew York importers and manufacturers. BOOKS FOR ALL AGES THEY COST SO LITTLE AND MEAN SO MUCH _________________________BEATIFUL VOLUMES FROM IOc UPi SHEAFFER DESK SETS—PENS AND PENCILS ■ - ~ _________________Sheaffer the Finest Pen the World Affords Is Not a Co8 tly^jift^^L ^_-^^__ _ IMPORTED ENGLISH LEATHER GOODS — Fitted Cases for Women-Fitted Cases for Men* SCRAPBOOKS ZIPPER KEY CASESi DIARIES BILL FOLDS BIBLES WALLETS •BRIEFCASES BILL FOLD SETS MANICURE SETS The largest selection in the state of personally selected Christinas C irds. Cards for every mem ber of the family. Sweetheart—Convalescent—Sympathy—Religious. BRASS WARE CHROMIUM WARE POTTERY LAMPS CANDLE STICKS BRONZE WARE CHINA BOOK ENDS GLOBES KODAKS CANDID CAMERAS ZIPPER CASES-GAMES-CAROM BOARDS- PICTURE FRAMES-WOODEN SCRAP BOOKS Name Printed Free On AU Leather Goods-Pens And Pencils . . 50 for $1.00CHRISTMAS CARDS PRINTED WITH NAME Stationery Monagrammed 25c Quire Extra Beautifully Boxed Assortment 80c Up Christmas-, Cards Ic To $1.00 Each GET IT AT D avie Boy M akes G ood. J. Paul Leaeans, son of Mr. and Mrs. Granville, Leagans1 of near Cana, has been appointed assistant land use planning specialist. Mr. Leagans is a Davie county man, a graduate of the Mocksville high school and N . C. State College, Raleigh. After his graduation he taught agriculture at the Norwood high school, was assistant county agent in Rowan, and later served for several years as county agent in Alexander county. Mr. Leagans moved to Raleigh this fall where he was connected with the State College Exteusion Service. Tbe Record is glad that Paul is making good in bis chosen profession. M any A ttend C onven tion. More than 1,500 Baptists from all sections of North Carolina at tended the Baptist State Conven tion which was in session Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of last week at th e, First Baptist church in Winston.Salem. A number of Baptist from Davie attended the Convention which was one of the best ever held in the state. The next convention will be held in Charlotte B io th er E ditor D ead. ,. Sam H. Farebee 57, editor of the Lakeland, Fla., Ledger, died sud denly at the home of his daughter in that city last Tuesday afternoon. H e had just returned from a fish, ing trip. Mr Farabee was at one time editor of the Winston-Salem Journal. Tbe Salisbury Post and the Hickory Daily'Record. For a shoit white Sam was a printer on the Davie Record force back in 1901 . This is when we first learn ed to know him. W e visited his office frequently while he was edit or of the Hickory Record, ' and counted him “ amoug o n r good friends. ' It is- with sadness that we chronicle his death. Survivingisbis widow;three daughters,;histhother and two sisters. Funeral and. bu rial took place at Tinkeland ;Tb urs- day afternoon. .• N ew G am e P ro tecto r. Rufus Brown, of this city, has been appointed game protector for Davie county, sue .ceding A. E. Hendrix, who! resigned about two •Aeeks ago. 1 • Mrs. OUie Stockton returned last week from an ex ended visit with her daughter, Mrs. George Byrd, at Waukegan, 111. W A T K IN S $ I I I I 4» I I Il I l I l I l Il Il II Il I I ( I fil Ifl Il Il Iii 81 Ifl II IR 418 N. Liberty Street Winston Salemj N. C. “The Christmas Store of All The People” Trade & West Fifth Sts.Winston-Salem, N. C. I Christmas Gift Roundup! It’s Fun To Be Santa If You Shop At Because Belk’s, from the basement to the top floor, is abounding in smart new j | gift ideas that will thrill every man, woman or child on your list . . . gifts of qual-' ity and practicability, the kind everyone likes to receive, yet priced to please your budget. Make Belk's your gift headquarteis this Christmas and see how much less it costs to be a bountiful Santa Claus. SAJJb! Better Coats $59.50 Coats 49.50 Coats 39 50 Coats 24 75 Coats $39.50 29 50 24.50 19.50 These are all fine quality dresses and sport type coats and suits, reduced for final clearance. Gifts for Children The kind that little girls like to receive on Christman morning. Useful, serviceable things to wear. Children's Dresses $1.00 to $198 I Children's Sweaters 98c, $1.48 $1-98 Silk and Velvet Dresses $1 95 to $3 95 Useful Gifts For Bop: Shop Our Complete Boys’ Departmehf For Smart, Serviceable Gifts.-. ; 1 i LeaherJackets $3.95 to $9,95 I Corduroy Jackets, ,■ $1.98 to $3 95 I Gloves . / 79c and 98c 4 - Gifts For Mother or Wife . Chenille Bedspreads $1.98 Single or double bed size White grounds or pastel grounds. A real $2.98 value. CANNON TOW Ei SETS 56s to $2 95 Paeked in lovely gift boxes. A practical and useful gift. AU colors. Gift Handkerchief 25: and 48c Each Pure linen handmade. Packed in gift boxes. BED ROOM SLIPPERS for Ladies 48? to $195 Give Her Hosiery For Christmas Heiress Hosiery 79c *3 thread, 45-gauge lovely sheer stockings. A real $1.00 value. AU the newest colors. Lovely Bags 97c to $198 Suedes, calf t. pig-skin. alligator. AU styles and sizes to suit every one. VUit Belk’s NoveltyGiffDepartment Gift for Every Member cf tbe Family Attractively Priced. Silver Plated Gifts Silver plated on copper, water pitchers, cocktail shakers, fruit dishes. Your choice at this low price. > $2.98 $ I l $41 41 4» (I (I 4» 41 Gift Suggestion for Men Shop Belk’s Men’s Department For The Larest Selection of Useful Gifts in the City! ARCHDALE SHIRTS $1.50 Fine woven madras and woven broadcloth. Aisofinequality white broadcloth 7-buttin fronts, sanforized shrunk, the greatest shirt buy in America. Giive.bim Shirts for Xmas. • ■ :v-- ; All-Wool R O B E 3 $4.95 AU Wool Fine Quality Flainnels, - Colors Maroon and Navy. [BE DAVII Largest Circul Davie Counts NEWS A RO l Postmaster Johl W inston Salem F l R. B Sacford | spent Wednesday business. D F. Sofley, o | was in town T ueJ around to see us. f Paul Stroud, Line, was iu towf ing after some lea AU kinds hems| ering buttons. M RS. S. C. SI Mrs. Robert week at Cliffsidel who has been qul B. C. Brock, \1 and Robert Sm itf trip to Statesvillq John Larew, Georgia Tecb, last week in towd FOR S A L E -I shire pigs. J. FR A lI Otis Foster, w | in Washington, : last week with Jericho. John F Dv nees trio to Thursday, returi| day morning. Mrs. Wilburd turned Sunday V a., where she I with her daug Kosma. Call at our our line of Meadl chines and Philcfvouiq Mrs. Bruce granddaughter I day from a visil Price, of Kannal Mrs. Freemanl daughter Jennie J ington City, are ents, Mr. and Mi| Most of the bers of the Mod] ty are leaving to Thanksgiving various homes. There will be) cake walk at H ol urday night, DeJ ceeds will go fori Good string rauq invited. Miss Maude I manager, of the I for the past ten [ day for Mt. H o| take charge of Miss Maizie Miss Milam as n | lace store here. J. M. Call, o f| corn shucking o | Am ong the 54. supper with Mrf Mrs. J. H . L. This was the they had attendf years. A light snow I last Wednesday ing house! torts, I as fast as it hit I per Davie Jhe | ground to a dep .which was the I season to this d | M iss Mary 14 thanks of the eq of persimmons, of Cana has oui| large pumpkin, to enjoy this wA of R. 4 , also hal Big bag of turns toes. Mr. and Mrs.! and children wll . at Roseboro, N i several years, h i EavJi and are I east of town highway. TheJ welcome these j Tlavie county. FOR SA LE - cows, and-twin I Priced to sell qtl H A RVEY BF _ I. W . A ngell| liisted- oh the roll released thi| W ake Forest tihction was attl percent of the s i bout one man o f the honor roll 1 an average of < jo-his studies. est have New ry mem- WARE DS R A S I* «» « 1 (I M <1 I l $ 41 11 ( I I l «1 » t& O c U p JJ m 9% M 4t r S1.00 f t N . C . N . C . tment e Family is pitchers, s. Your $2.98 r Men For The in the City! .50 roadcloth. 7-buttm greatest Shirts for .95 inels. y. The da Vie record, m o c k s v ille . tt. c .. tiovfcM BE® (» fH E P A V lE R EC O R D . O ld T w W aBted. «V Mayor Caudell requests The R e. cord to ask all persons who have old dolls and otl.e- toys that they are willing to donate, to bring them to him or turu them over to the Boy Scouts. They will be re Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. NEWS AROUND TOWN. Postmaster John LeGratid was in Winston Salem Friday on business. R. B Sanford and E . C. Morris spent Wednesday in Charlotte on business. D F. Sofley, of W oodleaf, R. i, was in town Tuesday and dropped around to see us. Paul Stroud, of near County Line, was in town last week look* ing after some legal matters. AU klndis hemstitching and cov ering buttbns. MRS. S. C. STO N ESTR EET. Mrs. Robert Goebel spent last week at Cliffside with her mother, who has been quite ill. B. C. Brock, W . F. Stonestreet and Robert Smith made a . business trip to Statesville Saturday. John Larew, J r , a student at Georgia Tech, spent several days last week in town with his parents. FOR SALE— 15 big bone Berk shire pigs. J. F R A N K H E N D R IX . Otis Foster, who holds a position in Washington, spent a few days last week with bis mother, near Jericho. John F Dwire made a busi ness trip to W ashington City Thursday, returning home Satur. day morning. Mrs. Wilburn Stonestreet re. turned Snnday from Richmond, Va., where she spent throe weeks with her daughter, . Mrs. A lex Kosma. Call at our shop and look over our line of Meadow W ashing Ma. chines and Philco Radios. YO UNG RADIO CO. Mrs. Bruce Ward and little granddaughter Gay, returned Sun day from a visit with Mrs. J. B. Price, of Kannapolis. Mrs. Freeman D. SIye and little daughter Jennie Anderson,of Wash ington City, are guests of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Z. N . Anderson. Most of the out of.town mem bers of the Mocksville school facul ty are leaving today to spend the Thanksgiving holidays at their various homes. There will be a pie supper and cake walk at Holman’s school Sat. crday night, Dec. 2nd. The pro ceeds will go for benefit' of church. Good string music. The public is invited. . Miss Maude Milam, who has been manager, of the Wallace store here for the past ten months, left Fri. day for Mt. Holl», where she will take charge of the WaVace store. Miss Maizie VanZindt succeeds Miss Milam as manager of the Wal lace store here. J. M. Call, of R. 4, had a big corn shucking one night recently. Among the 54. shnckers who took supper with Mr. Call were Mr. aind Mrs. J. H . L. Rice, of Cooleemee. This was the-first corn shucking they had attended in mote than 30 years. . A ligh i snow fell in. Mocksville last Wednesday morning, covern- ing house to^s, but m elting about as fast as it Iiit the ground. Xn up per Davie Ihe snow covered the ground to e depth of I Yi. inches, .which was the biggest snow of the season to this date. Miss Mary N eil • Ward has the thanks o fth e editor for a big- box of persimmons, and J. D. Collette, of Cana has our thanks for an extra large pumpkin, which we are going to enjoy this week. B. B. Turner, of R. 4 , also has our thanks for * big bag of turnips and sweet pota toes. Mr. and Mrs. Howard McLamb and children iWhio have been living at Rostbojo, N . C., for the past several years, have moved back to DasU; and are living three miles east of town on the Lexington highway. The Record is glad to welcome these good people back to Davie county. FOR SALE— Two Jersey, milch, cows, and-twin colts, 7 m onthsold. Priced to sell quick. H ARVEY BLACKW ELDER. Mocksville, R. 2 T. W . Angell qf- Mocksville1 was listed on the -mid-semester honor roll released this week by official of Wake Forest -Colieg*. Thiis dis. tinction was attained by only Sight percent of the student body,-or a bout one man out of 12. To make the honor roll a student most have, an average of 90 peiteot or betteri in-bis btudies. " H . L. Seagrove, of Raleigh, will be at the court house here on Sat urday, Dec. and, at 2 o’clock, p. m., to discuss the cotton situation,, and the referendum on cotton market- Ing quotas. The election will be oaired and-repainted by the boysof this club and distributed to child ien in needy families at Christmas. This is a worthy cause and we hope noble re. held on Saturday, Dec. glh. Mrs. Eliot, wife 0 f Major George Fielding Eliot, spent a few days last week with her mother, our people w ill, make Mrs. J. D. Hodges, on R. 4 , while spouse, her husband was making a lecture toui in Atlanta and Savanuah, Ga. Mrs. Eliot joined her husband in Salisbury Thursday and accom panied him to Greensboro, where he lectured at W . C., U i N . C., Thursday evening. They return ed to New Vork following the Iec ture. C ottoot G rain an d To bacco M arket. Mocksville, Nov. 28 —Seed cot ton 3.80 to 4 .00 ; lint 9.00 to 9.75. Wheat $1.10 , corn 65c. Winston-Salem tobacco averaged $•7 5° to $18 per hundred Monday. Total sales 1,400,000 pounds. G ro v e r C. H ellard. Grover Craveo Hellard. 44, of Raleigh, formerly of this city, died Friday at tbe U. S. Veterans Hoapital, at Oteen, when he had been a patient five weeks. Mr. Hellard was a fireman with the N.& S. Railroad, and had made his home in RaIeiRh for some time. The fnneral was held Sunday afternoon at I o'clock at tbe Walker Funeral Home with Rev. E. M. Avett conducting tbe services. Burial followed in Rnse cemetery.. Surviving is the widow. Mrs. 6. C. Hel- He had laid, of Raleigh, and a half-brother, Joe Hellard, of Davie county. 1 C ard O f T hanks. We wish to think all of our neighbors and friends for tbe many acts of kindness shown us during the illness and after the death of our dear husband and father. May tbe Lord blera you all. MRS. J. W. GREEN AND FAMILY. A T hanksgiving P ray er. My Dear Little Friends: I am thinking of each and every one of you. far and near, and I hope you all will be thinking of me for Thanksgiving. Dear God in heaven I do pray.We all know this is Thanksgiving day, IthankTheBforthepwiousfood That is given ns each day.And. Ob. God in heaven I do pray. Guide uv, keep ns thro the way. Bless all my little friends And every step they makeFor Jesus sake. Amen. ___—Little FRANCES COLLETTE. L M .N o lle y . Funeral services were conductod Sun ducted Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock for E. M. Nolley, 66. who died at bis home near Cooleemee Saturday morning. Tbe rites were held at Liberty church, l^r. Nolley wsa a farmer and: one of Davie county's most respected citizens. 1 confined to his home for the months. Sarviving are sev- WHY NOT HAVE THAT DRESS or SUIT Look Like New For Thanksgiving? We Can Do It. All Work Guarnteed. I SERVICE DRY CLEANERS I Phone 190 Mocksville, N. C ForThe Thanksgiving Dinner You Will Want Good Flour There Is None Better Than “MOCKSVILLE BEST” and “OVER THE TOP” SeH-Hwing We Will Pay $l.l6 Per Bushel ForGoodWheat * Horn-Johnstone Co. Telephone 3 iiiiiiniininii Mocksville. N .C . THANKSGIVING This Year, More Than Any In The Past Twenty-One Years, We Have AReasonToBeThankfuL Let’s All Do Our Part To Make Davie County Highways Safe Thanksgiving Day And Every OtherDay. Ward OillGoi Pure Oil Products Telephone 80 Mocksvflleit N. C Princess Theatre WEDNESDAY ONLY “FIVE CAME BACK" with Chester Morris, Wendy Barfle ' THURSDAY and FRIDAY Ginger Rogers. David Niven in “BACHELOR MOTHER” SATURDAY DOUBLE FE Al URE Jack Randall in “MAN’S COUNMRY h and Cagney vs Raft -EACH DAWN I DIE" MONDAY and TUESDAY Bettie Davis, George Bent in “THE OLD MAID" BARGAINS! $2 65 79c 59c $1.39 $5 39 Se 6; Ib IOc lie 2c Ib 2c Ib 25c 5c 5c 20c : box Plenty 9x12 Rugs White Swan Floor self-rising 8 Ib Carton Lard 10 Ibg Sntrar 25 lbs Sugar 100 lbs Sngar Rice, Ibs Pintoes Pare Coffee Mammies Favorite Coffee • Black Pepper 13: Ib or 2 lbs 25c Bannas 6c Ib Cabbage Potatoes 2 Packs 15c Cigarettes Uatches 3: or 2 for 2-Be packs Salt 22 Cartridges Hollow Point 22 long Cartridges SSi A Few More Men’s Suits $20.00 value $13 97 $18.00 value. $11 95 Boy’s $3 69 up Union Suits Hanes Heavy Weight I Quality 89c 100 Pairs Tennis Shoes Worth Up To $100 Value 59c Pair 50 Pair 2$ to 3& Galoshes $1.25 Value 39: Ball Band $150 Quality $1.19 See Me For Bridles, Collars, Traces. Hames and Check Lines. 25 Per Cent Off List On AU Plow Castings Horse and Mule Shoes' 8 &c Ib Finished Shoes - IOc Ib Axes $1.10 and up School TabletB and Note Book Paper 3c or 35: doz. Plenty 66x76 Blankets ' 59c 66x80 Part Wool Double BhnketF? .$2 00 L L Sheeting 7c yd ' Plenty, Sample Sweaters At Bargain Prices ^Plenty S o i Goose and Wolverine i: j . Shoes AtOId Prices See Ue Before Ton Bny . Shoes and Sweaters ' Leather Coats $5.95, $7.95 Plenty Mens Overalls 89c and op Plenty Boy’s Overalls 35: and Up Plenty Work Shirts Dress 75e value $1.00 value IOc Prints 80 Square Play Cloth See Our Showing Of Winter Suits Sturdy Woolens In The New Patterns Prices Range From *14 to *2250 SMART “Every Day” and Dress Coats Tweeds and Sports $6.50 $3950 Just Recoved Childrens SNOW SUITS $5.95 $6.95 Childrens Coats $198 $8.95 INFANTS SUITS . . $1.98 $2.98 INFANTS SWEATERS . 48c 98c We Have Just Received A Fresh Line Of The Famous Ferndell Canned Fruits AU Kinds Of Fruit Cake Materials Outing 8 ic yd wide, width 50s up. 50c( 89a j 7c yd 13c j IOc yd IOc wYOURS FOR BARGAINS’* J. FRANK HENDRIX Depot St. Mocksville, N. C. North Carolina ( In The Superior DavieCounty t Conrt N otice of Sale o f L and. Underand by virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain decree in a certain special proceed ing in the Superior Court of Davie County, entitled W. S. Phelps vs Charlie Lee Phelps, et al. the under* signed commissioner; therein duly appointed, will, on Saturday, the 9th day of December, 1939, at the hour of 12:00 o’clcck. M., at the court house door in. Mocksville. N. C.. ex pose the following tracts of land in Davie County. North' Carolina 'to public sale, for cash, to the highest bidder, to* wit: * Beginning at astone. W. S. Phelps comer, and running S. I West 24.53 chs. to a stone on North bank of branch. C. H. Jarvis corner and Ms'- rion Ewex line or corner; thence S. 78 5 E. 2 48 chs to a stone oh N. side of branch and Marion Essex corner; thence N. 83 E-’ 4.52 cbs. to a store at fork of branch, C.,H. Jar-, vis line and Marion Essex corner, thence N, 31.5 East 3 61 chs.- to a stone in fork of branch IaBil W^.-Si Phelps corner in C. H, Jarvis line; thence N. 31.0 West 2.76 ' chs. to .a white oak. corner of W. S. Phelps; thence North 5 West 18.05. chs.r to W. S. Phelps corner; thence N. 87 5 W. 6.35 chs. to the beginning, con taining 16 35 lOO acres, n^ore or less. This the 8 th 'day of Nov., 1939. ' B. C. BROCKv ComnUssioner. MacksvSUel N. C.yPhone'jlSl. : G. C. Sanford Sons Co. “ E verything F o r E verybody” Phone 7 Mocksville, N. C. In Our New Office. The Office Of This Association Is Now Conveniently Located Qn The Second FlocHr In The New Johnstone BuUdingi - - You Are Invited To Visit Us Any Time. I December 2nd Will Be Formal Opening Day ForThe Entire Building. Be Sore To Visit Us On That Date. Mocksville Buflding And Loan Association ; Mockavillet N. C. You Can Epjoy A ThsnkssivinK Turkey Dinner' ’ ■* ■ : IlY ou Make Oor Cafe Yotir Eating I1Iace Daring 11>is Bappy Occasion. WEe Have Everything Good To Eat Together With - All KindsJOf Cold Drinks, Cigars. Cigarettes, Candies. Etc. V I S I T O U R C A F E O F T E N . AMERICAN CAFE E R, PRICE. Prop.On The Square TH E DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVTLLK. N. C- WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON XTEW YORK.—Rudolf Frim l, mak- er of melodies for 25 years, final ly gives credit to his collaborators. With the ouiji board, he’s always Noted Composer ^ hm | r f a° Pt CreditsEthereal co m p o sers, Collaborators an d e Ye r ?o n c e in a ■while they help him round out a score. He never knew why the “Song of the Vagabonds” just sang itself through in five minutes, faster than he could score it, until he learned that he had an ethereal spokesman, or spooksman. His career, from the start on down to his present fifty-ninth year, is a testimonial to occnlt guidance, in planting him al ways in the highway of Lady Luck. In Prague, his birthplace, his father worked in a bakery. One day, his mother gave his father money to buy wood. Fates or phantoms guided him instead to a pawn shop, where he made a down payment on a tiny piano. Rudolf’s mother was so angry she wanted to chop it to pieces, but the boy persuaded her to let him keep it. One day the owner of the bakery passed by, heard the lad playing beau tifully and helped groove him into his musical career. At the age of 10, he had pub lished a barcarolle. In the musical conservatory of Prague, where he studied under Antonin Dvorak, he team ed up with Jan Kubelik. They T.'ore playing at a concert which Daniel Frohman happened oppor tunely to attend. He took them to the United States for a tour of 80 cities. Whether or not Mr. Frim l was just an amanuensis for spirits, his com positions stream ed along rapidly— “Glorianna,” “The Firefly,” “Ka- tinka,” “High Jinks,” “Music Hath Charms,” “The Vagabond King,” and a whole album of others, none of them seeming to be of ghostly inspiration. Hollywood still keeps him busy and successful. ♦----- Hg o r d o n SELFRIDGE, the • Anglo - American merchant prince, visiting this country, makes it a tossup between communism u r ' and ruinousH. G. SeUndge t a x a t i 0 n. Sees Passing of Queriedabout Success Idyll com m unism overrunning Europe after the war, he asks, “What of it? What is the difference between communism and a society where a tax takes half of the income and t. surtax the other half?” He says the day of initiative and enterprise - is past. He is an authority on that subject. Sixty-two years ago, he swept out a store in Bipon, Wis. Two years later, he was an errand boy for Marshall Field & Co. in Chicago, and a partner when he Quit, in 1901. Punch ribbed him mercilessly when he opened his store in London, and the smart salons were full of clever mots about the American invad er. He made them like him. He hired as head of his dress de partment Lady AiBick, who had thought up the cleverest jokes about him. Here in 1937, he was optimistic about Europe and the world in gen eral. Now he says,' “The opportu nity to achieve and to show results has been eliminated all W er the world.” Germany1S Guns Face West Towards ‘No Man’s Land’ Camouflaged with clumps of grass and branches of trees, this mighty piece of German artillery faces west as a gun crew watches activity on the other side of “no man’s land,’' somewhere in Germany. This pic ture is one of the first made on the Nazi side of the western front. Pensioneers Defeated on ‘Ham and,’ ‘50 at 60’ V Still smiling are the AHen brothers, Willis (left) and Lawrence (center),' promoters of the '‘ham and eggs” pension plan which proved to be an unpalatable dish for California voters, who emphatically rejected the scheme in a special election. The plan called for the payment of $30 in warrants every Thursday to each unemployed Californian over 50. Right: Rev. Herbert Bigelow, proponent of Ohio’s pension plan, which, like California’s, was flatly rejected by voters. Bigelow’s plan called for an income of $50 per month to Ohioans past 6V. Other Words ‘Don’t D istu rb V A LBERT SARRAUT, French min- ister of interior, swings on the French Reds with a spiked club. He links them with the Germans and promises toAlbert Sarraat Tough One Day, PadRc the Next sweep them from all “vil lages, munici palities, cities And he means to doand towns, just that.’ M. Sarraut, as governor-general of French Indo-China, was regarded as a hard-fisted and implacable colonial administrator. Returning to his country villa in. France, he read Tolstoy, and renounced all belief in force. When he became minister of interior, his enemies, catching him thus off guard, swarmed all over him. He resigned from the minis try and said: “I find now that I have no de sire to smite hip and thigh those who do not think as I do. Tou gentlemen take over the job and see what you can do with it.” He again became minister of the interior, but offered his resignation tvhen Eling Alexander was assassi nated in Marseilles. But, taking the premiership, he again swung his war club, hotly denouncing obstruc tionists and meddlers. Alternately tough and conciliatory, he is a vet eran- of the rough-and-tumble of French politics. A vacation, in his garden, where h? is given to read ing and meditating, is apt to bring on the Tolstoyan mood '(Consolidated Feature*—WAtU Servlet.] This poster, distributed in Italy, shows Premier Mussolini at the controls of his bombing plane which bears the inscription: "The Italian people know that they must not disturb the pilot, especially when he is engaged in'tempestuous navigation; nor ask notice of the route'at every turn.” The inscription, of course, applies to Italy’s stand on the inter national situation. Italy’s diplomatic coarse is not to be questioned by its people. End of Tiger Grid Star’s Playing Career Don Herring, inset, 21-year-old football and track star at Princeton university, is carried off the field after receiving an injury that resulted in the loss of his left leg. The youth, who aided in a 26 to 12 victory over Brown, was.injured in the first quarter of the game. Examination revealed that ligaments below the knee were torn and three main ar teries had been severed. The amputation was made necessary because of the danger of gangrene becoming acute, j Help From the Sky A “suicide squad” of women par achute jumpers to offer first aid to wounded soldiers; behind front lines is advocated by MaHe McMillan, New York, holder of the world’s parachute jumping record for wom en. The services of the “battalion of mercy" will be offered to France, said Miss McMillan. Deadeye Gomez Home in New Sork from a hunt ing trip to the New Branswicic woods, Vernon “Lefty” Gomez, pitching ace for the Yankees, holds the 60-pound bear cub he dropped with one shot.' It should make a beautiful rag. S t a r D u s t ★ Picturing Thomas Edison ★ Great Picture to See ★ O’Brien Rates Contract B y V ir g in ia V a l e------ T HERE are two new books that should greatly interest you, one if you like the movies, the other if you are interested in radio serials in general and two in particular, “Pepper Young’s Family” and “When a Girl Marries.” The book for movie fans is by an ex-motion picture actress, Patsy Ruth Miller; its title is “That Flan agan Girl.” Patsy Ruth made a name for herself on the screen in the days of silent movies, although she’s very young to be a veteran of that era. Some of you old-timers may remember her as the girl in the Lon Chaney version of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame.” She gave up the movies for the stage, after a while—she’s one of these girls who want to take a shot at everything. Simultaneously, and very successfully, she tried her hand at writing short stories. Then she went back to Hollywood and wrote scripts for the movies, also success fully. “That Flanagan Girl” is that rare thing, a novel about Hollywood which doesn’t try to get even with the place and its people by slam ming it. As for the other book, it’s Elaine Sterne Carrington’s “All Things Considered,” a collection of short stories that have appeared in some of our best magazines. Mrs. Car rington made her name as a story writer and a playwright before she ever thought of writing for radio. The life of Thomas Edison is now being turned into motion picture his tory. Two pictures based on it are being made—“Young Tom Edison,” with Mickey Rooney, and “Edison SPENCER TRACY the Man” with Spencer Tracy. Tracy took a trip East to familiarize himself with the famous inventor’s background—he visited the Edison laboratory at Menlo Park, N. J., and then went to Washington to talk with Charles Edison, son of Thomas. At last we have “Drums Along the Mohawk,” and a swell picture it is, too. Plenty of thrills, plenty of Indians; lots of romance and hu mor. Maybe you re'd the book—if you did you won’t be disappointed in the film version, which was ably directed by John Ford. It deals with an aspect of the Revolutionary war that is .unfamiliar to many of us, showing settlers in the back woods region of New York fighting a war without really knowing what they were fighting for. The cast couldn’t be better— Claudette Colbert, Henry Fonda, Edna May Oliver, Ward Bond, John Carradine. After five years Freddie Bartholo mew is off the Metro payroll. Re member when he came to these shores to play “David Copperfield” as a young boy? His last picture on the home lot was “Listen Dar ling,” and at present he’s working for RKO in “Swiss Family Robin son.” When you see the new “Hunch back of Notre Dame” pay some at tention to Edmund O’Brien, if you want to see the kind of performance that picks up a contract for an actor. RKO just gave O’Brien one, which permits him to switch from screen to the stage and biick again. When the “Pretty Kitty Kelly” cast assembled recently they found a large sign on the studio wall. “This is NOT the Floyd Bennett Aii Port!” it sternly announced. Seems that the boys and girls had been amusing themselves at rehearsals by making paper airplanes, flying them all over the place and then leaving them—also all over the place.— * — ODDS AND ENDS—Bob Hope m i Bing Crosby livened up the luacheon houi on the Paramount lot the other day by riding around on bicycles, in black-face, and wearing turbans and baggy pantaloons . . . Mark Warnow, conductor on the Hit Parade, used to play the violin in a street comer band . . . And by the way, his pet baton was whittled from a bat used by Babe Ruth in the 1932 world. Series . . . Irene Dunne and Cary Grant will appear together again, this time in “Passport U Life."(Released by W esteni Newspaper Union.) Brighten Yonr Room, With Applique Quilt Pattern 2282 These patches are so easy to apply you’ll be surprised to see your bed of pansies grow so quick ly. Pattern 2282 contains a Dia gram of Block; accurate pattern pieces; directions for making quilt; illustrations; yardages. Send 15 cents in coins for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Nee- dlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. MIGHT DUE TO COLDS Need More Than "Salven Ta Quickly ReHeve DISTRESS! Before you go to bed rub your throat, chest and back with warming, soothing Musterole. You get such QUICK relief because Musterole is MORE than “just e salve.” It’s a marvelous stimulating “counter-irritant” which helps break up local congestion and pain due to colds. Its soothing vapors ease breathing.Used by millions for over 30 yeare! 3 strengths: Regular, Children's (mild) and Extra Strong, 40#. Hospital Size, $3.09. Presume Ability Men who undertake considera ble things, even in a regular way, ought to give us ground to pre sume ability.—Burke. OUTOF SORTS?Here is Amazing Relief of Conditions Doe to Sluggish Bowels ■ If yon think all laxatives ' act alike, just try this ___________ all vegetable Uzatfv*,So mild, thorough, refreshing, invigorating. ‘ De pendable relief from sick headaches, bilious spdla, tired feeling when associated with constipation.UfHhniif Pielr Se t a SscbozofN R from your TVIUIOUI HISK druggist. Make the test—then If not delighted, return the box to us. We will refund the purchase p ric e . T h at'* fa ir.Get NR Tablets today. I Best Friend “Your best friend,” said Emer son, “is the one who can make you do what you know you ought to do.” WORLDS LARGEST SELLER AT Stern Lights Human experience, like the stern lights of a ship at sea, il lumines only the path which we have passed over.—Coleridge. ON A DIET? Try This Help A deficiency of V itam in B Complex and Iron in your diet can contribute to serious weakening of your strengtb. By all m eans take VinoI with your diet lo t its helpful Vitam in B Complex and Iron. At your drug store, o r w rite VincA Co., 94 S. W abasha, St. Paul, Minn. No Business There She (trying to be stern)—You had no business kissing me! He—But that was pleasure! Man Proposes Man proposes, but God disposes. -Thomas a’Kempis. AT6000DIUOSTOtKi Swtas ' L a v i s h I ZC - V. . 3 - F a s ] THIS is a se | a a and nicetiesl gracious-lady fal surest signs thafl being sounded if signers are m akl ery and other fa| orations, such design, exquisitJ splendent seqtf also (very im pl latest costume | the revival of ioned, now ne| menterie. Been treasurii| precious passen grandmother’s perhaps her bes| ing dress? Now to bring it out. ornament, appl heart on your j frock and it wi] Iy as a jewelry I motifs of a kind! atop each slee^f style prestige t | Embroidery il in every direct! gaily decorateq gowns of silk velvet, electrif; ning gown with ing note, addin sweaters with stressing the formal evening • stylish) with gadgetry. Speaking frl standpoint, om l will your glovel be this year, yef scarf, your w il and even yourf immune from . broidery. I The charmin Breakf The knitter I terms of Chrisl friends will dq this winsome can make it knitted in an I stitch. 'Dame Fa Goesl 1 It’s star ga /joying this wiJ r star-shaped ni scattered over| dresses and fects adorn. Dattemings arl . A 44 b n Y o u r R o o m Ipplique Quilt !Pattern 2282 btches are so easy to |U be surprised to see : pansies grow so quick- |n 2282 contains a Dia- llock; accurate pattern Iirections for making Itrations; yardages. Icents in coins for this |The Sewing Circle Nee- ept., 82 Eighth Ave., N. Y. IT OLDS /lore Than “Salve" To i Relieve DISTRESS! I go to bed rub your throat, Back with warming, soothing I You get such QUICK relief ■isterole is MORE than “just It’s a marvelous stimulating mrritant” which helps break Igestion and pain due to colds. K vapors ease breathing, ■millions for over 30 yearsl 3 Tegular, Children's (mild) and bg, 40e. Hospital Size, $3.00« Presume Ability |io undertake considera- even in a regular way, ■give us ground to pre- lity.—Burke. I OF SORTS? ? is Amazing ReKef of |is Due to Sluggish Bowels L I t you think all laxatives r jtH r H if act alike, just try this _ _ j£ Z3r all vegetable laxative* touch, refreshing, invigorating. Dff- If from sick headaches, bilious spdfa, Iwhca associated with constipation, i. get a 25c box of NRfremyoar *» druggist. Make the test—then , return the box to us. We will Purchase I’s fair. i ■to today. Best Friend best friend,” said Emer- he one who can make you Iyou know you ought to i s e p h ftS® Stem Lights experience, Jike the hts of a ship at sea, il- Ionly the path which we psed over.—Coleridge. DIET? Try This Help Incy of Vitamin B Complex and Iu r diet can contribute to seri* In in s of your strength. By all f e Vinol with your diet for its eamin B Complex and Iron. At store, or write Vinol Co., 94 fa , St. Paul» Minn. Ho Business There Irying to be stern)—You lusiness kissing me! ut that was pleasure! Io-IAt ad — GAltoloitd Man Proposes lroposes, but God disposes, ps a’Kempis. THE HAVTE RECORD. WOCTCSVTTJ.E. N- C. t -I 0 '\ I I La vish Embroidery ' Bespeaks Fashion Trend to Elegance n B y C H ERIE NICH OLAS m 'T'HIS is a season of elegancies i * and niceties such as bespeak I gracious-lady fashions. One of the surest signs that ^the luxury note is being sounded is'the lavish use de signers are making of rich embroid ery and other fastidious surface dec orations, such as intricate applique design, exquisite beadwork and re splendent sequin embellishment, also (very important is the news) latest costume collections declare the revival of handsome old-fash- ioned, now new-fashioned, passe menterie. Been treasuring for years a bit of precious passementerie that adorned grandmother’s wedding gown, or perhaps her best Sunday-go-to-meet ing dress? Now’s the big moment to bring it out. If it is just a single ornament, applique it near your heart on you: smartest blouse or frock and it will serve as effective ly as a jewelry gadget. If it’s two motifs of a kind you’ve hoarded, one , - atop each sleeve will bring infinite style prestige to your best gown. Embroidery is wielding its magic in every direction, enhancing with gaily decorated sleeves afternoon gowns of silk crepe, sheer wool or velvet, electrifying the formal eve ning gown with resplendent glitter ing note, adding intrigue to sports sweaters with yam-worked posies, stressing the sumptuous trend in formal evening sweaters (now so stylish) with all sorts of dazzling gadgetry. Speaking from the accessory standpoint, ornate with embroidery will your gloves and your handbag be this year, your mittens and your scarf, your wide corset-like girdle and even your chapeau will not be immune from the epidemic of em- s broidery. ( The charming gold tissue lame IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY I CHOOL L esso n By HAEOLD L. LUNDQUIST, 0 . O. Dean oi The Moody Bible Institute _ . of Chicago.(Beleased by W estern Newspaper Union.) Lesson for December 3 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts selected and copyrighted by Intem atiomil Council of Helislous Education: used by permission. evening gown to the left in the pic ture will, no doubt, prove one of the loveliest that goes to parties dur ing the winter social season. It subscribes to the embroidery vogue in that the cunning little gray Uda cloth jacket that is worn with it is embroidered with sequins and gold cord. It’s a gay and very formal sweat er that you see portrayed in the oval inset. The sweater is of sheer- I knit fuchsia wool, tuned to evening formality with embroidery worked with sparkling gold sequins in a leaf I pattern. A foremost topic in fashion cir- I cles is the floor-length evening coats made of liandsome wool' material. ‘ See centered in the group a gor geous affair styled of red broad cloth enhanced with massive gold applique done in gold kid with em broidered accents. And-now comes the climax of our story—the allover embroidered day time coat! When Jane Alden, Chi cago stylist, flew back from Paris following a week-end to week-end flight she arrived just as you see her pictured to the right in the il lustration. Her hurried trip was made to work out special styles with Madame Bruyere. of the Maison Bruyere1 for use in her talks be fore the Four-H clubs throughout the United States. She stepped out of the plane wearing a dark green kid hat, in a snail design, with matching kid gaiters, a black dress of the new one-side fringed apron type and an allover-embroidered gray coat by Bruyere. You sense the exquisite detail of the coat at first glance, and you are at once . impressed with its quiet elegance. ’ The embroidery reflects consum- j mate art in its refined handling and | although it is done in an allover . patterning the effect is smartly con- I servative and practical because of the soft gray coloring of the em- , broidery that blends into the back- | ground in perfect symphony. (Released by W estern Newspaper Union.) Breakfast Jacket ■ , The knitter who is thinking in terms of Christmas presents for her friends will do well to take note of this winsome breakfast jacket. You can make it in no time, for it is imittgd in an easy effective drop stit6h. !UMATISM-LUMBadp ' iDame Fashion Now Goes Star Gazing _ it’s star gazing we will- be en- Ijoying this winter, for the latest is ‘ star-shaped nailheads and sequins, scattered over bags, snoods; gloves, dresses and wherever spangled ef fects adorn. Silk prints with star , natternings are also shown. Jewelry Vogue Is For Diamonds Now * Diamonds' have entered' a new era of popularity, both as jewelry and as personal possessions of marketa ble value. In several style shows recently staged many of the mani kins wore this sparkling type of jew elry in preference to the spectacular gold effects. New ear-rings from a noted Paris house are called “opposites,” in that one earring is a diamond flower set with sapphires, the other a sapphire surrounded by diamonds. Which do you wear in which ear? Well, that m ake;, no difference, .but to have a touch of sapphire blue repeated in your dress somewhere scores high in allure. Diamonds can be worn for day or evening. One fine piece such as a brooch or a clip can be used on the coat lapel, at the neckline of a dress, at the center of the velvet neckband or even in the coiffure. Leather Important In Style Picture It has come to the point that suede is regarded as important a medium for wearing apparel and fetching accessories- as any : fabric might-be. The' loveliest' suede items imagina ble are being turned out—hats, bags, dresses, coats, bolero jackets, tai lored classic jackets, and so on. Seeing that suede brings into the fashion picture a wealth of color un surpassed, small wonder is it that it has come to be considered “tops” in fashion. Leather trappings on wool sports togs include smart leather buttons, stitched applique of leather, leather bindings, belts and an endless list of the .uses of leathei too numerous to-mention. SPREADING THE GOOD NEWS . LESSON TB X T-M attbew 10:24-39.GOLDEN TEXT—Let him that lleareth say. Come.—Revelation 22:1?» “Bewilderment.” That is the word which the president of a great American university recently said accurately described the present condition of the minds of men. Lit tle wonder that the men of the world are bewildered, for they are like mariners who sail an unknown sea after liaving thrown away map and compass. Without Christ and with out God’s Word men cannot be any thing but bewildered. That which gives us even greater concern is that many who are Chris tians, who really know the Guide and who have the Guidebook, are also declaring themselves to be ut terly bewildered. What is the rea son? Obviously that they have not read the Book and have not talked with their Lord. Our lesson for the coming Lord’s Day touches on one of the problems which causes many Christians to question God’s love and care. They find that their efforts to testify .tor Him by word or life meet- with'.a violent reaction from a bitter world, and they discover that such a life involves personal sacrifice and frequently results in even the mem bers of their own families turning against them. Can this be God’s way of dealing with His people? The answer is found in His Word. The Christian is to be I. Fearless in a Hostile World (w . 24-28, 32, 33). Note carefully that he is not to be silent (w . 32, 33). We deny our Lord when we fail to speak for Him when we ought to do so. Christi anity is not something to be hidden in one’s own bosom, a fire to. warm one’s own soul. It is good news which is to be proclaimed even from the housetops. But, someone will say, when I do speak there is opposition; they call me names, they threaten to kill me. Yes, and what of it? “The disciple is not above his master, nor the servant above his Lord” (v. 24). They called Jesus a devil. They even crucified Him. Should we then expect to be borne to glory on flowery beds of ease? God knows all about this, yes, even about the hidden and whispered plottings of evil men (v. 26). He will deal with them and judge them in due season. 1 We need not fear men. The most they can ’ do is to kill the body. Let us consider the eternai God, who not only may take the life out of the body, but is also able to cast both soul and body into hell (v. 28). God is not as a theory, a bit of pious imagination. He is real, He is all-powerful. Why then should we be fearful-if we serve Him in faithful devotion? II. Fearless in Personal UIe (w . 29-31). It is one thing to be bold in the midst of battle. It is quite an other thing to be fearless in the- quiet of one’s own room, or of one’s- own heart. Satan is expert at that point. He comes to us with his humiliating accusations of our un worthiness, yes, of our worthless ness. Sadly enough our own knowl edge of ourselves confirnTs his dis m al judgment. . But wait! If we are. Christians we are not our own. We are bought with a price, the precious blood of Christ. We belong to Him. He is our advocate with the Father. Let Him meet our accuser. What does He say? He tells us that He has numbered the very hairs of our head (v. 30), that even a dying sparrow concerns Him, and that we are worth more than many spar rows (v. 31). We are His and He is our Saviour, Friend and Brother. Let us look up and be without fear. HL Fearless in the Family Circle (w ~ -.34-39). • . Here, after all, is the acid test of discipleship. Christ did not come in order to stir up needless strife between members of the family, but Be well knew'that divisions would rZome as the result of true discipleship. Men who are ordinarily kind and cul tured in their dealings with their friends and families but who do- not know Christ, can become like ver itable demons against any one in that circle who hears the call of Christ and follows Him. No human tie, no matter how in timate or precious, is to be permit ted to stand between the individual and his devotion to Christ. If it does, Christ is evidently no longer, first. He is no ldnger Lord of ail lit the life, and if He is not Lord of all, He is not Lord at alL While it seems almost paradoxical to say it, Scripture teaches and ex perience demonstrates that if you keep your life for yourself and your own interests, it will die in your very hands and you will lose it If you give your life in glad aban don to God, on the other hand, you will receive it back from Him trans formed, enriched, and glorified by His grace and blessing. ’TEEN-AGE GIBLS ENJOT MAKING HOMEMADE BBEADS (Recipes Below.) Homemade Breads Hot and Cold Yes, even girls in the ’teen age'or younger enjoy making homemade breads of various types and who in all the world does not enjoy eating them? Bread aft er all is still very much the staff of life and fortu nately our modem up-to-date experi mental food Mtchens are constantly developing for all of us a large num ber of brand new—good-to-eat, hot or cold, bread recipes of the broadest possible variety. The making of yeast breads the modem simplified way is certainly a far cry from some of the difficul ties that our grandmothers or even our mothers may have experienced when they made it regularly—years ago. In the first place, yeast is now readily obtainable both in moist or dry form. Furtiiermore we now know that we can help to regulate the rapidity with which the whole bread-making process can proceed by adding more or less yeast—more if we want to hurry the rising—less if there is no particular reason for speed. Then too, we have learned to watch the temperature of the dough a little more care fully and we kiiow that if kept at the just right temperature, nei ther too hot nor too cold, the bread can be trusted to rise as it should and to develop, while ris ing, the best possible homemade bread flavor. . Then we have learned some mod em recipe adaptations of those nev er-to-be-forgotten butterscotch rolls, parker house rolls and coffee kuch- ens that our mothers used to make. AU of which brings me to sharing with you now some of my favorite yeast and baking powder, hot and cold bread recipes. Here they are: lea st Bread. .(Makes 3 medium loaves) 2 cups milk * . 1 % teaspoons , sa lt. 1 % tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons shortening 2 cakes compressed yeast % cup lidcewarm water Vt cup bread flour Scald milk and to it add the salt, sugar, and shortening. Cool until lukewarm. Soften yeast in warm water and add to the scalded milk mixture. Add just enough flour to make a stiff batter and beat welL Then add enough more flour to make a firm but soft dough. Mix well, turn out on a floured board, and kneaduntilthedough is1 smoothand' elastic and until small blisters form on the dough itself. Place in a well-greased bowl and brush with melted fat. Cover, and place in a w arn (not hot) place to rise. When dough has a little more than doubled in bulk, knead it down lightly and let it rise again. When light again, shape into loaves and place in well- greased bread tins. Grease top of loaves with melted fat. Let rise un til bread has again doubled In vol ume. Bake 40-45 minutes in a hot oven (425 degrees), Miracle Boils'. 2 cups boiling water . % cop and I teaspoon sugar " I tablespoon salt % cup fat - 2 cakes yeast % cup ltdcewarm water 2 eggs 8 cups bread flour Mix together boiling water, % cup sugar, salt, and fat and stir until dissolved: Cool until mixture is luke warm. Dissolve yeast and remain ing I teaspoon sugar'in the luke warm water -and add to first mix ture. Add eggs and one-half of the flour; beat thoroughly. TOen add remaining 4 cups of flour-4*®? well. Place in refrigerator. When ready to bake, make into rolls and allow to rise in a warm place about I hour or until doubled in size. Bake , in hot oven (400 degrees) approximate- Iy 20 minutes. Bishop’s Bread. (Makes I loaf) Mt cup shortening I cup brown sugar i lk cups bread flour % teaspoon salt I teaspoon cinnamon ’% teaspoon soda I teaspoon baking powder I egg % cup sour milk Cream shortening and slowly add the sugar, flour, and salt, mixing very thoroughly. Resehre % cup of this mixture for top crumbs to be used on bread while 'baking; To the remainder, add the soda, baking powder, egg and .sour milk and beat until batter is smooth. Pour into well-greased loaf pan, sprinkle sugar and flour mixture on top and bake 25 minutes in a hot oven (400 de grees). Raisins and nuts may be added if desired. Hot Cbmamim Bolls. (Makes 18 rolls) 1 cup milk (scalded) 2 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon salt % cup fat I yeast cake % cup warm water 3 to 4 cups general purpose flour Melted butter Granulated sugar Cinnamon Scald milk and add to it the sugar, salt, and fat. Cool until luke-warna and add yeast which has been softened in the warm water. Add a s u f f i c i e n t amount of flour > to enable han dling as a dough. Knead thorough ly," and allow dough to rise un til it doubles in volume. Knead lightly, and allow the dough to dou ble in bulk a second time. Then knead lightiy and roll dough into a sheet—%-inch thick. Spread with melted butter and sprinkle with cin- namdn and granulated sugar. Roll like a jelly roll and cut in slices one inch thick. Place on. a well-greased baking sheet and allow to rise until light. Bake in a hot oven (400 de grees) approximately 20 minutes. This basic recipe may be used to make any kind of coffee cake or sweet roll. Fecan MafBns. (Makes 12 medium-sized muffins) Vx cup light brown sugar I cup graham flour - I cup general purpose flour % teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons baking powder I cup milk " 2 eggs Vi cup shortening (melted) Vi cup pecan nut meats (chopped) Place brown sugar and graham flour in a mixing bowl and mix thoroughly. Mix and sift general purpose flour, salt, and baking pow der and add to the brown sugar mix ture. Beat milk and eggs together and to them add the melted shorten ing. Pour this liquid mixture into the dry ingredients and mix as gen tly as possible with a fork. Do not stir or beat. Add nut meats. Place in well-greased muffin tins and bake in a very hot oven (475 degrees) for approximately 15 minutes. Improving Meats and Fish.— Bacon fat gives good flavor to meats and fish when browning. * * * ‘ When Making Waffles.—Never open a waffle iron until the steam ceases to come from the iron. The waffle is then done. • • • DeBeions Baked Apples.—Ap ples baked in pineapple juice are delicious. P ed and core the ap ples, cover them with juice and bake until soft.• • • Stiff Cake DOngh.-If you get cake too stiff never- add more milk, but beat an egg and add it gradually until the desired thick ness is attained.* * .* Washing Curtains.—Scrim, lace or marquisette curtiUns should al ways be soaked for an hour in cold water to which a little borax has been added before being put into warm suds.• • • Dried Fruits.—To bring out the full flavor of raisins, dates, cur rants or figs soak them in a lit tle boiling water for five minutes. Two tablespoons of boiling water for each half cup of fruit will be satisfactory.• * • Care in Cleaning Enam eL-In cleaning enamel and porcelain bathroom articles, be careful not to use .too strong a solution of cleansinfj 'material. One cause of difficulty in removing water stains from some tubs m ay be found in the fact that the finish has bees partially removed by too severe cleaning. BetterBaking.. This cook book contains an ex cellent collection of good-to-eat, new and different, yet easy to make, inexpensive recipes. Available, postage prepaid, at only 10 cents per copy, no one should m iss this opportunity to secure i t Send 10 cents in coin to' “Better Baking,” Care of Elea nor Howe, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. (Beleased by W estern Newspaper Union.) HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets made of May Apple are effective in removing accumulated body waste.—Adv. Respect Xour Host Never speak ill o’ them whose bread ye eat.—Proverb. j A P e n n y a T a b I e t H a w b u y s fa m o u s B A Y E R A S P IR IN yS F a st r e lie f fr o m m u s c u la r p a in s Talc*2 Boyer Aspirin Iablels with a glass of wotar T h e quick m o d e r n way i o ease Headache, and n e u r itic and rheumatic pain . We feature the fact that Bayer As pirin costs only Ie a tablet, to drive home the point that there’s no reason even for the most budget- minded person to accept anything less than genuine fast-acting Bagt I Aspirin. For at the most, it costs but a few pennies to get hours of relief from the pains of neuritis, rheumatism or headache... and get it with Uie speedy' action for winch Bayet Aspinn is world famous. I iy this way once and you’ll know almost instantly why people everywhere praise it. It has rapidly replaced expensive “pain remedies in thousands of cases. A sk for genuine “Bayer Aspirin” by its full name when you buy. . . never ask for “aspirin” alone. D em an d B A Y E R ASPIRIN Good Connsel For arms are of little avail abroad, unless there is good coun sel at home.—Cicero. CLOTHESPIN NOSE Bm « cold pinched yon* Aose shot—as if with * clothespin? Lay s Lvden** OftymirtciOgiieeAsatiDdtst cool menthol vapor, rises, helps penetrate dogged na* passages with every breath...help* relieve that •ttotheapin nose!" LUDEN’S 5* Mm HmI Cough Drops B M O a iN s l —that will save yon many a dollar will escape yon if you fail to read carefully and regularly die advertising of local merchants » » » IM THIS PAPEBI • :- S ;; - m\:-’ 44 b iM . r.ic6ft5; Md&svitLi. £ c:. no$emb£r 2» j&. A HELPING HAND FOR ALL I Arnfrlcati Red Cross American Red Cross Roll Call Poster (or 1939. Guardian of Life and Health p * V l i f e , ; ISIfc A reserve of 44,000 Red Cross registered nurses stands ready to aid In preserv Ing the life and health of the nation. Typical activity of Red Cross nurse is shown, working, in clinic under doctor’s supervision. Red Cross nurses are nation's reserve for Army, Navy and Government hospital service, and also to serve civilians in epidemic or disaster. The Red Cross Nursing Service.Is’sup- ported by members who join the Red Cross during Roll Call, November 11 to 30. O O lN v G O IN G Sampio Oae-Woy Farti Winston Salem. N. C. 40c Greensbrro, N. C. . 85c Raleigh, N.C. $2.10 Asheville. N.C. $2.10 Charlotte, N. C .. . 85c Columbia. S. C. $2.15 SlS SXTRA Soviass .: ,Oa Rouad-Tfip Tickets.'. [ LeGrand's Pharmacy Ph-ne 21 Mocksville, K. C. G R E Y y H O U N D Voo .-Vf TRAPS' BLOW YOUR OWN HORN In TJie Advertising Columns OF THIS NEWSPAPER When YOU Want Good Meal, Feed Stuff, Laying Mash or ScraVch.^eed It will May Yra-To fee Us. You Can BuysOur Meal From Ycur Grocer. F. K. Benson & Sons IliiKlililiilBllHIIDIIiII We trade out the bulk of our earnings in Mocks ville and Davie County. We could spend more _ if w? had it to spend. I If You Can Use Our Services To Advantage You I Should Do So. I If Will Be To The Benefit Of You, Us, And H The Whole Community. I Read our paper and keep in touch with your county and I its people^ You can buy nothing for one dollar that will I do you more good and last longer than a year’s I SubscriptionToTheDavieRecord. I “We Are Not Begging, Mind You, Just Soliciting I Your Valued Support.” S i I When Your Subscription Falls Due A Prompt I Renewal Is Appreciated. I We ThankYou For Your I Patronage and Support. fS Illllillllllllllllillllllllllllllllll CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directors AMBULANCE SERVICE - Phone 164 North Main Street MOCKSVILLE' - - N.C \ V _ 1» t?ie> ^ Sale of Valuable Real )Estate. : Underand by virtneof an order of sale made by M. K. Feeior. De* outy Clerk of Superior Court of Da vie County, N; C., in the special pro* ceedings. entitled “Carl Sink, et ala vs J. G. Sink, General Guardian for Doris Sink, Rachel Sink and Ida Sink,” dated November 1st, 1939. •he undersisned commissioner will tell at pnblic auction at the court bouse door o f Davie County, in tbe .-ity of Mocksville, N. C.. at 12:00 ■’dock, noon, on Friday, December 1st, 1939, the following described land, to-wit:. Adjoining the lands of John A. Wood. Robert N. Fritts and others ■n Fulton township, Davie County, N. C., and beginning at a stake cn rhe north bank of Dutchmans Creek; running thence N. 43 degs. West 290 feet to a stone; thence N, 314 degs. E. 628 feet to a stone: S. 87J degs. E!. 480 feet to a stone; thence S. 86 degs. E. 1530 feet to a stone, corner to No. I; thence N. 3 degs. E. 350 feet to a stone, corner -to No. I; thence S 88 degs. W. 950 feet to a ttone, Garwood’s corner; thence N. I degs. E. 338 feet to a stone and corner to No. 3; thence N. 88 degs. W. 964 feet to a stone and corner to No. 3; thence S. 3 degs. W. 320 feet co a Btone, corner to Fritts 'tract; thence N. 86 degs. W. 2544 feet to a stake on the east bank of Dutchmana Creek; thence down said creek as it meanders to the beginning, contain* ing 104 acres, more or less. Tbiii be* ing tract No.: 2 in the division of lands of William A. Wood. Terms of Sale: Cash upon confir* mation of the Court, bid. to be se cured by proper deposit of approved securities.: This tbe 1st day of No* vember, 1939, . ~ C A R L S f^ . Commissioner. : .'j. El SN Y pE E Attorney. BUYER MEETS C C l I CD IN OUR ADO LLLL-IN COLUMNS ... Now is the time to sub-1 scribe for Tbe Record. | ADS ARE NEWS Printed In-Big Type DAVIE BRICK COMPANY • DEALERS IN BRICK and SAND WOOD sad COAL Day Phone 194 • Night Fhone ll9 Mocksville, -N. C. Robertsons Fertilizers COTTON! COTTON! Ed Pierce Foster Buyes And Ginner Of Cotton :; Mocksville, N. C. : A - Phonel 89 j Near Sanford-Motor Co, If Its-Cot ton, See Foeter WANTAD CASlfINON STUFF' 'IN YHEAtTIC=IL NEW MONEY FOR YOUR OLD THINGS Your Discarded Furniture, Piano, Radio, Bicycle; Tools, Iee Box, can be sold with A WANT AD IN THJS' NEWSPAPER Q A LETTER HOME A W s x m GIFT to the Former IN THKNEWBAPtt THEY CANT 0 W * TAKE Y 0 U R AD Uw* M vlvUl-. ■t’l- J.A OME Wt** *\Utl»u\t*- ITISON I. A I BILLBOARD RADIOS BATTERIES-SUPPLIES Expert Repair Service TOUNG RADIO CO. We Charge Batteries Right Depot St. Near Square Walker’s Funeral Home AM BULANCE Phone 48 Mocksville, N. C, m m T h e L o st is F o u n d By Our W ant A ds When you. lose V They Don't Stay Loit Ss Today’s Afan Quit