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04-April
The Davie Record D A V I E C O U N T Y ’S O L D E S T N E W S P A P E B - T H E P A P E R P e o p l e h e a d mHERE SHALL THE PF'SS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWCO BY INFLUENCE ANll UNBRIBED BY CAIN " VOLUMN L.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5 1050.NUMBER 36 NEWS OF LONG AGO. What Was Happening In Da vie Before Parking Meier* And Abbreviated1Skirl*. (Davie Record, April 4, 1934.) Miss Bthel Butler spent the E ast er holidays with her parents at Reldsville. “ Buck” Allison, of W ilmington, spent Easter in town with home (oiks. M issViolet Allison, of the'city school faculty spent Easter at her home in Rnck Hill. S. C. M n and Mrs. Gilbert Kurfees1 of Richmond, soent Easter in town with home folks. Miss Louise Frost left Saturday for a visit to Dr. and Mrs. I. S1 Frost. Miss Nell Trivette, of the local school faculty, spent Easter with her parents at Boone. Miss Ruth Daniel, a student at Catawha College, Salisbury, spent Easter in town with her parents. Mrs. Rowe Davis, of Elkin, visi ted her parents, Mr. and M is. R. L. W alker here, over the Easter holidays. Mise Louise Daniel of the local school faculty, spent the week-end with her parents at Greensboro. Miss Elva Cartuer1 a member of the Kannapolis school faculty, vis- ited her parents here during the Easter holidays. Brewster G rant, Rufus and M ar. shall Sanford, students at David son College, spent Easter here with their oarents. Mrs. Georee Sheek is recovering from an operation which she un derwent Sundav at Long’s Hospit al, Statesville. Miss Lillian Moonev, who is a nurse at W ashington Emergency Hospital, W ashington. D C spent Easter in town with home folks. Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Ruth and little son. of Columbia, S C ..snent Easter in town with Mr. and Mrs. E 1 Meronev. Henrv Poplin, of this city, and Mi«s Opal Livingstone, of S uitb Grove, hied themselves to York, S. C,, Sunday, where they were uni ted in the holy ponds of matrimony Mrs. Frank Clement returned home Thursday from Chapel Hlll where she spent a month with her sister, Mrs. R. D. W, Connor. Mrs Clement was taken il' while at Chapel Hill but has about re covered. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Miller and family, of W inston-Salem, speut Sunday in town, guests of Mr. and M rs. C. G. Woodruff. Felix Harding and Panl H end. ricks, students at W ake. Forest College, spent Easter in town with their oareuts. Miss Hazel Baitv, assistant li brarian at the State University, Chapei Hill, spent Easter tn town with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Smith and daughter Miss Louise and son Ker- mit, spent W ednesday in W inston- Salem shopping. Mrs. H. T . Brenegar is a patient at the Baptist Hospital, WinsJon- Salem. H er friends wish for her a speedy recovery. Thos. W. Rich arrived home to day from Miami Beach, Fla. where he spent the past tour m onths In the ‘‘Land of Flow ers.” Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Kurfees, of near Cooleemee, speut Thursday in North Wilkesboro with their daughter, Mrs. W. E. Jones. Miss Rnth Graves, a student at Flora MacDonald College Red Springs, spent Easter with her par ents on Route 4. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. W alker, of this city, announce the m arriage of their daughter Helen Margaret, to Mr. O tii McClamrock1 of Coolee mee. on Tuesday, Dec. 261b, 1333, at York, S. C. TheMan WhoLives To Do God's Witt Rev. Walter E. Isenbour. Hitfh Point. R 4. The man who lives to do God’s will And proves quite true along the way. Though oftentimes he sufiers 111, And finds it hard sometimes to pray. Yet holds t 0 God’s unchanging hnd In spite of all that comes and goes. Shall a victor some day stand Beyond the reach of all bis foes. There’s no defeat to any man W ho’s fully yielded up to God, And never shrine* from his good plan Though critics say he strange and odd; Therafore we want to say, good folks, Be bold and tearless, strong and brave. For God takes care of all the strokes And nuts them in a names grave. God never lets a mau go 'down In spite of what the world may do If he sets out to gain a crown Like saintly men who've made it through And never stops for knocks and blows, N or compromises in his soul. Whose love for God and mankind grows AU the way up to heaven’s goal. Trade JIHth The Merchants Vfho Advertise In The Davie Record Teachers Outraged An intolerable situation in North Carolina was disclosed by Govern, nr Scott when he told a news con ference he had affidavits a n d checks to prove that in some parts of the State public school teachers must make ‘ kickbacks” of part of their salnries to hold their jobs, that they are told tQ “ put up or get out.” T he Governor would have been remiss if be had not directed an ex haustive investigation. The pnhlic will exoect that Chief W alter Anderson and the State Bureau of InvrstigBtion will get the facts to reveal how extensive such practices have been and that the spotlight will turn upon the guilty persons or groups, no m atter who they may be. The charges are shocking to the sensibilities of Hght- thinking, citi zens, who m ust look upon the al leged practice as not only an out. rage upon the teachers who are victims but also as an outrage of decency. And yet the Chief Executive says the situation apparently pre- vails 01 a county-w ide basis tn three or four counties rnd on a smaller scale In other counties. If such a situation is fouud bv a re lentless and thorough SBI invest!, gatiou, then of course the counties and the individuals involved should be publicly named. The Governor said he was not certain who bad been the benefici. aries of the kickbacks, whether they went to individuals for their own use or were demanded as po litical party contributions. But that should make no special dif. ference. An interested and disquieted public will 9w1.it the outcome of the investigation with keen interest and grave concern.—Charlotte Ob server. SevenDeadIySins PutOntoCanvas ByNotedPainter NEW YORK.—What are the ' “seven deadly sins?” j An artist has put them on can- i vas. He is Paiil Cadmus who says: "Intimate and prolonged study of the seven deadly sins might, I thought, make a better man of me —but I am just as bad as to begin with.” But that was just a little whim- j sical talk, for it’s easy to see that Cadmus isn’t very bad when one talks with him. Cadmus’ pictures were put on exhibition in the Midtown galleries here and, as was expected, stirred up as much controversy as his work has done regularly in. the past. Second Show This was only his second one- man show in oils; the first was in 1937, but at that time he was al ready widely known for pictures of girls with sailors—and very unfair he was to sailora, the navy com plained. He was 40 in 1944 when he start ed the present series. He had been taking notes about the deadly sins for some time. “I know no one who is free of them,” he says, and adds: “In every case friends of mine have come hi handy. But the most use ful object of study was myself, and in a way the series is autobi ographical.” Cadmus lists the seven deadly sins as pride, lust, envy, gluttony, sloth, anger and avarice. In Roman Catholic theology, the last two are identified as wrath and covetous ness. In the exhibition the various sins were not identified. Cadmus thinks visitors were more interested in guessing which is which; or in- let ting tFsir conscience be their guide. He hoped the series would go entire to one purchaser, and though he was not optimistic about it, he further hoped the purchaser will be a church. Lists Worst Sins The worst sins, he says, are those which do the most harm to others. He places pride at the head of the list. A friend suggested that, for this one, he simply put a frame around a mirror and let pride con front its own image. The difficulty was to intensify its interpretation beyond mere vanity, which seems to him comparatively innocent. Though lust enjoys a considerable ill fame, Cadmus regards it as not too harmful. Gluttony hurts no one but the glutton. Lust is more com mon among men, sloth among wom en, he finds. And he has a particu larly low opinion of avarice, “the loneliest of all sins.” For an eighth sin, he suggests immoderation, but he believes it’s really the evil part of the other seven. LfNES That Should Op It Trainm en Delay Schedule To Pot-Shoot a t Game ONSLOW, IOWA.—It took an Iowa conservation officer to discover why a freight train required two hours to travel two miles. Reporting on the case of the late branch-line freight, Officer Louis E. Lemke said he found that the train was stopping at likely-look ing spots while crewmen fired at game from atop its boxcars. They would then get off the train, pick up their kill, and in some instances clean it before proceeding. Receiving complaints from farm ers about the shooting, Lemke watched the train one day from a near-by farmhouse with a pair of binoculars. Lemke said he flagged the six- car train a short time later and went through it. He said he found nine rabbits and three quail. Since he reported the incident to a Chicago Sc North Western Railroad official, Lemke said,1 there have been no more reports of shooting. No charges were filed. There is no provision in Iowa law prohibiting shooting from a train as there is from an automobile on a public road, Lemke said. NO DANGER Ihe fine old gentleman was beside himself in gratitude. “Splendid, young man!” he cried. “When you rescued my daughter from the river you must have had no idea of the danger you were placing your self in.” “There wasn't any,” shrugged the hero. “There wasn’t any. I am a champion swimmer, and I’m already m arried.” ■ HINT, if properly managed, * * may be given without offend ing. “Are you still bothered by those relatives of yours who come down from town to eat a big Sunday dinner and never invite you in re turn?” asked Mrs. Smith. “No,” said the unfortunate vic tim, “they finally took the hint.” “What did you say to themT” asked Mrs. Smith eagerly. “Nothing was said,” explained the other, “but we served sponge cake every time they came.” THEY’LL WAIT A pink elephant,' a green rat, and a yellow snake entered a cock tail bar. “You’re a little early,, boys,” said the bartender. “He ain’t her* yet.” Squelcher A miserly man was approached by a friend who did his best to per suade him to dress more in accord ance with his station of life. “I’m surprised,” said the friend, “that you should allow yourself to be come shabby.” “But I’m not shabby,” said the aaiser. “Oh, but you are,” said his friend. “Remember your father. He was always neatly dressed. His clothes were always well tailored and of the best m aterial.” "Why! ’’ shouted the other, tri umphantly, “these clothes I’m wearing were father’d ’* Fair Assumption Two men, who were visiting a museum, were seen standing in front of an Egyptian mummy, over which hung a placard bearing the inscription: “B. C. 1187.” Both visitors were much mysti fied thereby. “What do you make of that,” said one. , “Well, I dunno; but maybe it was the number of the motor-car that killed him.” I Certainly Are j “Don’t you think a real friend ought to feel sympathetic when on* needs money?” 1 “I think a good many friends ii such cases are touched.” CLEVER DEVICE First wife: money out Second going back to mother and be in$- mediately hands me railroad fare.f’ Evasive Taeties St. Peter (welcoming Muldoon in side the Pearly Gates)— “You find that things are done here dn the grandest possible scale. Wilth us a thpusand years is but as Ia moment, and a million dollars ajre but a cent.” Muldoon—“Then, St. Peter, woi^ld y* be linding me Uie loan of cent?” St. Peter—"With pleasure, ijlr. lluldoon; Wait Just • moment.”-; Control Blue Mold Blue Mold has already appeared in Eastern counties and will prob ably move west in the near future. Shortage of plants in 1949 caused tobacco farmers a lot of expense, and loss of money at sale time. Blue Mold cannot be cured but it can be prevented. Plants should be treated when the size of a dime. Beginningthen is reasonable as surance that the grower will get ahead of the blue mold. They should be treated twice weekly un til sufficient plants free from mold are available for transplanting. Treatments can be in form of dust or spray. For spraying use 76 per cent fermate at the rate of one pound to 25 gallons of water, or use 65 per cent dithane Z-78 or parzate at the rate of f pound to 25 gallons water. Flacethe required amount of chemical in a large fruit jar or other tight container; add a little water (not over 2-3 full); close lid and shake until the chemical is thoroughly wet; stir the wetted material into the full amount of water required and the spray is ready for use. If the sprayer does not have an agitator, keep mixture well stirred while spraying to pre vent settling. Mix fresh batch of spray for each application. The following amounts will aid in de termining how much spray mix ture will be needed to cover plants: 1st to 4th applications, about 3 to 3$ gals, per 100 sq. yds, per ap plication. 5th to 6th applications, about 4 gals, per 100 sq. yds. per application. 7th and other appli cations, about 5 to 6 gals, per 100 sq. yds. per application. The first 3 to 4 applications may be applied through the plant bed cover if it is stretched well above the plants. Remove the cover for later appli cations. Keep the spray nozzles about 10 inches above plants, mov ing them back and forth or from side to side until spray droplets appear on all leaves. About two pounds of 76% fer mate or 24 pounds of the other dust is needed per 100 sq. yds. of bed per season. For dust treat ments get commercially prepared dust treatment containing not less than 15 per cent fermate dust and not less than 10 per cent dithane or parzate dust. The filler in these dust mixtures should be nyrophyl- Iite or neutral talc. 20 to 25 lbs. of prepared dust will be required for 100 sq, yds of plant bed per season. Commercially prepared dust mix tures are purchased ready for use. Do not use dust mixture in sprays. The following amounts will aid in determining how much dust will be needed to cover plants: 1st to 4th applications, Ii lbs. per 100 sq. yds. 5th to 6th appli cations, 2J to 3 lbs. per 100 sq. yds. All other applications, 3§ to 4 lbs per square yd. Dusting: Apply early in morn ing or in evening when air is quiet preferably when plants are moist with due. Do not fill dust hopper more than 2-3 full at any time. Be sure all leaves show uniform coat ing of the dust; in narrow beds, not over 3 yds. wide, with board sidewalls that hold the cover well above the plants, the first 3 or 4 applications can be applied thru the cover. For later applications and other type beds, always re move the cover before treating. More people are familiar with the use of fermate than some of the other materials mentioned. There will probably be more fer mate available and it is just as good as the other kinds. I cannot over-emphasize the im portance of treating tobacco beds against blue mold. Start treatment in time and get ahead of blue mold. “Don’t put it off—put it on;’’ F. E. PEEBLES, County Agent Seen Along Main Street By Thn Street Rambler. OOOOOO Herbert Eidson discussing court proceedings -H . R. Johnson look ing over new spring line of men’s suits - Mrs. Paul Hendrix and Miss Cornelia Hendrix going down De pot street at luncheon hour—At: tomey Allie Hayes out looking for votes - Duke Whittaker hang ing around court house-Officer driving across square chewing big cigar—Robert Foster putting cur rency and legal papers in big bill fold - Alex JTucker and Hubert Eaton busy shaking hands in and around the court house—Tommy Ellis on way to temple of. justice —Dr. W. M. Long hurrying down Main street on foot—Lady sitting in parked auto doing fancy work Gossip Club wondering about why some pay big fines and costs while others keep loafing around the town —Miss Doris Chaffin on wav across the square. Our County And Social Security Bv W. K.*White. Manager. I have a few questions and an swers regarding the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance program that should be of interest to every wor ker and his family. Who Gets The Benefits? The monthly payments made under the Old-Age and Snrvivors Insur ance program fall into two main groups: 1. To insured wage earners age 65 or over who are temporarilv or permanently rerired, to their wives age 65 or over, and to their child ren under age 18. 2. To survivors of insured wor kers who have died. These sur vivors may be children under 18, widows (of any age) who have a child of the wage earner in their care, widows age 65 or over, and dependent parents age 65 or over. When there is no survivor eli gible for monthly benefits at the time the wage earner dies, a lump sum payment may be made to the widow or widower if living with the wage earner at the time of death or to whoever pays the fu neral expenses. How Much Are The Benefits? The amount of the benefits to a retired wage earner is based on his average monthly wage in em ployment covered bv the Social Security Act and the length of time he worked under Social Se curity. For example, a worker who had an average of $150 per month for the past 13 years would re ceive $33.90 per month on retire ment. Wife’s, minor child's, and parent’s payments equal § the worker’s benefit. Widow’s pay ments are f of the amount the worker would receive. How Are Benefits Applied For? Benefits are paid as a mattar of right. They are not charity and are not based on need. They are not paid automati cally, an application must be made for them. Don’t lose benefiis by failing to file for them. AU workers age 65 or over and the survivors of those who have died should contact their nearest Social Security Field Office as all services are free. The Social Security Office in Winston-Sailem is located at 437 Nissen Building. Office hours are from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Monday through Friday. I will be in Mocksville on Wed nesday, April 26th, at the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m. I will also he in Cooleemee on the same date at the Erwin Cotton Mills office at 11 a. m. THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N Watcb IH Your watch got its name from the fact that the first portable timepieces, cumbersome devices made of iron and shaped like 3 huge egg, were carried by towD criers or “watchmen” on theii nightly rounds. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds! ANY SIZE (6 ei 0| EXP. KOU HIM OEVHOPED. 8 HOBBt PAINTS {.very Qfinl Qn nihrgtmtnl)HauiSy MiiltHf Sncrlapa Fumithei YftfuabU Ptemiums Gntn GET CETTEft PICTURES FOR ISSS 'Hg J-ACM R A B B /T CO.=S P>A IZTA N S U IZG S.C. Grandma’s Sayings w $ m m m THEBE AIN’T NOTfflN* like a good sense o’ humor. It's a gem that puts a sparkle in your eye and brightens the hearts o’ all the folks around you. $5 paid Marty Arawar, Winburno, Pa,* LOOKINf to improve your pies *n cakes? Then look for Nu-Maid. Yep, “Table-Grade” Nu-Maid is better- than-ever . , . spreads easier and is plumb full of that sweet churned- fresh flavor. Try the new Nu-Maid! As fine a spread as money kin, buy. HAPPINESS is like a butterfly. If we pursue it too hard, it'll alius be jest out o‘ reach—but if we try waitin' quietly, most likely it'll light right on us. $5 paid EUie W all, Lakeland, ilorida* cfir JES CAN'T WAIT to tell the news about new Nu-Maid! It's improved! Spreads easier. Tastes milder ’n sweeter than ever. And "Table- Grade” Nu-Maid’s sportin’ a brand new package, specially made to pro tect that good tastin’ “Table-Grade" taste! * $ eJ will be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each accepted saying or idea. Address "Grandma” 209 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2, Ohio. Cow-toon “What -will I tell her now, she wants to know where 4TabIe- Grade* Nu-Maid Margarine comes from?”Copr. 1050 no Uloml Marsarine Co. WHEN SLEEP WONT COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Try This Delicious Chewing-Gum Laxative • When you roll and toss, oil night—fed headachy and Justaw lul because youneed a laxative—do th is... Chew FEEN-A-Mirrr—delicious chewing- gum laxative. The action of hon-a-mint's special medicine '4Detottbsm the stomach. That ie, it doesn't act while In the stom ach, but only when farther along in the lower digestive tract.. .where you want It to act. Tou feel fine again quickly I And scientists say chewing m akes teen-a fine medicine more effec tive—"readies” it so it flows gently into tbesystem.GetFEEN-A-MiNTatany I f lrf* drug counter-250,50* or only. . . . IU ¥ K F E E N - A - M l N T ' ! EftMWIS CHEWlNfrCttM IAXATWt AfH &StJoseph IS ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST fIO fu jS uU eh7 — FOI MIROI MIU MO Hill Of RHEUMATISM < NEURITIS-LUMBAGO Large Bottled mu Small Sise 60c* CilTIOI: ISI MlT M IIlECtCI *IT Ul MQB m i STQKS Ii 11 Kill •« (K«|t «1 ptlei M tii m i COh lit. Jicitomiu o.nomi THE SPEAKS Inl'rivliimal Uni1Km Sunday School Lessons By PR KEHHETH I FOREMAN SCRIPTURE: I Corinthians IS; Luk< 24*1-12DEVOTIONAL READING: John 20-19-23. T r u t h A b o u t E a s t e r Lesson for April 9, 1950 h t t p THIS WAY,” writes a friend ^ in a great city, “the hats and the burmy-rabbits have run awaj with Easter.” The fact is, the world has stolen Easter and made something silly out of it. The world will not believe the truth about Easter, yet the world wants a holiday. The Man from Mars, visiting our “ * *•“ ! planet at Easter time, would have a hard time guessing what the festival means. Rabbits? N ew clothes? A Dr- foreman day off? The return of spring? Not at all, nothing of the sort. Bunnies and hats are gay; but the right word for Easter is not Gaiety, it is Glory.♦ * * God’s Victory PV EN IN churches you will not “ always hear the whole truth' about Easter. You may hear that it is the festival of Returning Hope1 or that it symbolizes new life, or that it stands for the triumph ol faith over despair, or that it ex presses our belief in immortality. In a way, all these ideas about Easter are true, but if that is all, then we have not yet got down to the truth about Easter. The fact is—the fact which gives a solid ground for all these other facts—the first Easter was the day when God raised Jesus Christ from the dead. It was the day of God’s victory over death, when the gates of death swung backward and the bars of death were broken. The troth about Easter is that something happened on that day that never happened before and never will happen again. Because never before had the Son of God risen In per sonal triumph from the grave, and never will that have to be done over again. If it were not for that fact, Jesus might have been remembered as a long-dead Jewish teacher, a hope ful but mistaken a n d defeated teacher, a name to be found only in encyclopaedias. But the truth about Easter is that Jesus is not dead, his hopes were not mistaken, he was not defeated, his Name is above every man! He is the Chris< tian’s living Lord.* * * His Power in Hs ■PHAT STRANGELY TWISTED man Kierkegaard called Chris tianity “God’s attack on man.” You could not get that idea from the New Testament. Marvelous as it is, Christian ity is God offering to man the power to rise out of onr dead selves, to do for us what we could never have done for our- - selves. What has this to do with Easter? Just this: That : when the Apostle Paul wants to . explain what the power is I which God sets at our disposal, what it is like and what it will ! do, he tells us it is the same power with which God raised Christ from the dead. (See I Cor. 6:14 Eph. 1:19,20; 2:6; Phil. 3:10.) You see the truth about Easte: is that it is the day when the Chrii tians celebrate the most treme: dous act God ever performed this planet, or rather that day wh< God brought, to a climax the who|e mighty action of the coming and the life and death of Christ. And that is the power which is- avail able for the Christian.» • • A Christian Is Supernatural JF ALL YOU WANT of God is to “ have him do something for y( u, then you are rather like a ba by who keeps crying for some one to bring him more toys . . . butJhe stays a baby. If your want of Qod is to have him do something wlith you, in you and through you, trfen you are like a child who really wants to grow, up. The Christian is a siipernatu: ral being. As C. S. Lewis puts it, ve are not God’s little toy soldie: 's, we are intended to be his sons a id daughters. But if the’ Christ is thi "first-born among many breth ren” then here is this life those] who accept him have access the same power that wrought in him. And at the end of life* we shall not be afraid, know ing that we belong to the same God who raised our Lord from the dead. The glory of Easter is not somi thing merely to be remembered sung about; it is something to experienced. The same God wh i conquered death “giyeth, us vie tory through our Lord Jesui Christ.” (Copyright by the International Counel of BeUgious Education on behalf of 41 Protestant denominations. ReleasedW 'ra Features.) Him:th-J osel to\ 0 0 © I ' Appeal to Appetites With Novel Methods Of Food Preparation TT ISN’T ALWAYS the elaborate ^ meal that tastes the best, nor the most expensive food that makes the family call for more. When the food, no mat ter what it may be, is cooked perfectly and served attrac tively, it’s bound to please. Certain foods should not be allowed to over cook, as they will lose their appetite appeal because texture is destroyed. This is true of both fish and cheese, so popular’ in menus right now. Pish is delicate and tender. To have it reach perfection, time its cooking to the minute. Then you’ll have fish anyone can enjoy! Cheese becomes stringy when cooked’ at too high temperatures. Cooked slowly and carefully, it’s mouth-watering, creamy texture is preserved.• » * Jl DD A DELIGHTFUL garnish to “ foods if you find they aren’t going over too well with the family and serve them as beautifully as you possibly can. You’ll be sur prised how much of a difference in . their acceptance this little but thoughtful touch can make. tPan-Baked Perch (Serves 6) Place two one-pound packages of ocean perch fillets in a baking dish. Add salt and pepper to taste. Melt % cup butter and mix in cups cracker crumbs. Cover the fillets with the butter-crumb mix ture. Sprinkle with chopped parsley, if desired. Bake 30 minutes in a moderate (350°) oven or until fish is done and the crumbs browned. Serve with pickled onions and beets.. . . IJE R E ’S A RICH and spicy sal- ^ mon casserole which will give you a complete meal when served with a fruit salad: Spicy Salmon Casserole (Serves 4) 1 pound canned salmon 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour I cup milk 1A cup catsup I teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Vi pound American cheese, grated Toasted crackers Flake the salmon and arrange in bottom or individual dishes. Melt butter in top of double boiler. Stir in flour and add milk. Cook slowly until smooth and slightly thick ened. Add cat sup, sauce and cheese; cook un til cheese is melted. Arrange toasted- crackers around edge of baking dish. Heat thoroughly in a moderate (375°) oven for 20 min utes, or until cheese sauce bub bles. Serve at once.* * * O YSTERS have a rich mineral content and are especially de lightful when prepared in this man ner and served with rice: Oysters Poulette (Serves 4) I pint oysters w . Fish is easily and attractive- ly preparcd for the table when pan-baked and served with a topping of crumbs and en circled with pickled beets and onions. LTNN SAYS: Xou Can Make Laundering Speedier and Easier . If you can’t get to all the ironing after it’s dampened, store in plas tic cloth or cellophane bags in re frigerator to prevent mildew. Lace tablecloths and bedspreads need no ironing i! they are placed Dn a curtain stretcher for drying. Ihey shape beautifully. Never dry blankets in harsh sun light. . Shade is best for keeping their color as well as their texture is new’as possible. ' >' H l - -•* < fV ! ;•?* Lenten meals can be made nourishing as well as pleasing if you make a main dish out of a rich soup such as this creamy rich asparagus and cheese combination, A simple salad and dessert completes the meal. LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU ; •Pan-Baked Perch I Baked Potatoes I Pickled Onions and Beets Hot Biscuits j Pineapple-Pear Salad Lemon-Frosted Cupcakes Beverage •Recipe Given 2 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour Vi teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper Vi cup nutmeg IVa cups milk 1A cup CTeam 2 egg yolks 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 cups boiled rice Drain oysters and cook two to three minutes or until their edges curl. Melt butter, stir in flour, sail and pepper, and when well blend ed, a d d milk a n d cream. Cook, stirring, until thickened. Add nutmeg a n d slightly beaten egg ^olks. Cook gently, then- fold in oysters and lemon juice. Serve in a border of rice, gar nished, if desired, with green pep per or pimiento and parsley.• * • 1PHE APPEAL of baked or broiled — fish is enhanced if they are served with one of the following sauces: Tartar Sauce I cup mayonnaise I tablespoon minced pickles I tablespon minced parsley I tablespoon minced capers I tablespoon minced onion Mix ingredients together and serve. Cucumber Sauce I tablespoon butter 1 tablespoon flour Ys cup milk Vi cup mayonnaise Vi cup finely diced cucum bers, drained Ya teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons lemon juice Melt butter, add flour and grad ually blend in milk. Cook until thickened, stirring constantly. Let cool, then add remaining ingred ients. Serve well chilled. Asparagus-Cheese Soup (Serves 5-6) 2 No. I cans of asparagus or 2 medium bunches 3 cups milk 4 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour Vs teaspoon salt I tablespoon minced onion I tablespoon minced parsley I cup grated American cheese Remove 10 choice tips about 2%* long, split lengthwise and cook un til tender; use for garnish. If using canned vegetable, set 10 tips aside, as above. Cut remainder of aspara gus fine, cook until tender, then press through a coarse sieve. Measure puree and liquid; there should be about two cups. Melt but ter, add onion and cook slightly. Add flour and blend, then add salt. Add milk, stirring constantly. Cook until smooth and thickened. Add puree. Just before serving, add grated cheese, stirring until melted. Add parsley and serve garnished with asparagus tips. Turkish towels will shrink slight ly when they are washed the first few times as their knit is drawn closer together. They will reach maximum absorbency after four or five washings. A bit of glycerine added to the last rinse for woolen tilings will make them softer and smoother. Do not dry any woolens near heat. Mops can be washed in luke warm water and mild suds just as such clothing is laundered. Do it frequently to keep mops condi< tioned. I ASK m \ ANOTmn I A General Quiz ,V. <*. (*. <>- <»• c- “■ The Questions 1. Who was the tallest Presi dent of the United States. 2. How many judges are there in the United States Supreme Court? 3. Who was the shortest Presi dent of the United States?4 What United States newspa per is often called “The Man chester Guardian of America . The Answers 1. Abraham Lincoln, 6 feet 4 inches. 2. Nine. 3. James Madison, 5 feet 4 inches. 4. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. JOUy popping Deficiotfs. 3-M-ONEWAKES roller skating-SUPERniN I COULOnT KSEP HOUSE WITHOUT t w 3IM-0NB 3 -IN-ONE 0 // &Reset loose casters and drawer >pulls easily with PIASTIC WOOD : flo j AM m M i K M fr besbtvWem j ! CRlSP RICE KRISFIK VOTHtCDMlHbl I e ftfv S m m * 4 mWSPlESMakes a good breakfast—fun fo eofl [ crisp, CRiSpeg.cgtSPesr l j I B a a a iiB tiB B a n i n a a a S S i i S S a B S B M a a a S 1SSS FOR A QUICK AND TASTY MEAl = ■ ||jj Van (Snip's IB B B I H I ■ ■ ■ ■ Always fender- ! 5 5 5 never cfoughy !5555S555555!! I B B a S tB B B B B S S i ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i S S a a a i offl/3 win«fes1 oimV 6 ecause Sl\lOl/l/lPI?IFr & £m(tfcor/ked/ Only an emulsorized shortening gives you these luscious cakes with such mixing easel CHOCOLATE ALMOND CAKE Quichmethod recipe Sift together into a large bowl: Vfz tQpi sifted cake flour teaspoon* double-action boking powder (4Vi teaspoons single-action) I teaspoon salt IVa cups sugar Add:Vt cup Snowdrift Vi cup milk Mix enough to dampen flour. Beat 2 minutes. If by hand, count beating time only. W ith electric mixer, use “low speed”; scrape bowl often; scrape beaters at end of 2 minutes. Add: 2 egg whites Vi cup milk I teaspoon almond extract Beat X minute. Turn into 2 greased 8* layer pans, lined w ith plain paper. B ake in m oderate oven (350* P.) about 30 minutes. Frost and fill w ith- ALMOND COCOA ICIN6: Cream3ttwa. Snowdrift with 2 tbsp. butter. Add % cup sifted cocoa, 3 cup- ' confectioners? sugart and _ .. salt alternately with % cup mil.. When smooth, add X tsp. almond extract. F rost cake. Dip tips of blanched almonds in Icing; press upright around bottom of cake. Yes, you can make these marvelous cakes with EmuIsorized Snowdrift with just 3 min utes mixing time. No creaming! No egg-beat ing! All ingredients are blended smoothly and completely in the same bowl. Ready to bake after 3 minutes mixing! And your Snowdrift cakes are light, rich and luscious to the last moist crumb. Only an emulsorized shortening can give you such quick, sure success. Make Snowdrift’s Chocolate Almond Cake, today. ^ S N O ItiP R IF r PUREVEGCTABUSHORnNIN MADE BY THE WESSON OIL I For Your Ful U.S. Savingj HAPPY DAY NOT CONsj “I feel happier, pot constipated I Kating y l does so much for me! I relief, after so manyl pills and medicincsf Ever your friend/l W.H.Rooney, Dctroiu 2, Mich. Jnsl one ojfl many vnfolicUcd M-I tersfrom ALL-IiitAiM users. If you sufTea from constipation due to lack of dictar j| bulk, try eating i * ounce of crispy BRAN daily, drink d not co»i/>/rtrf# satisfil send empty cartol Battle Crook, M icn YOUR MONEY BI 'FO R PR O U D l BAKERS. ESPECIALLY Y o u '" J f I CobberG,1 the I coke or b | light and F your ovclJ Clobbci <1 double “4 Mi | i ^ i j t i C has. L. Fd the M ccksvil Guy, were col last week wl m anv cases o | Mocksvi He. Jack and Saturday fori Training S t| w here they ’ in training boys. H ave| G. B. My^ ton-Salem Davic farmd week on bus a big dairy H e is a fc^ M r. and ot VecdersH M r. and JvSj Circle Drivi| tv were on a pleasure t | Sanford right arm a l ious injurif the R eadinl Pa., several! along nicelT glad to lea| Jim m ie’ J corner on M aple avej ed by J. business ty was rec| Caudell fr| M r. an d | Jr., have to one of I on Bingha Rov CartiJ T . I. Caud bv Mr. anl Attornd Taylorsvil W ilkesbol Y adkinviJ W alter were atn | here last | T he1. Jl M ocksvill ed a -ocif dav even! Ieadershil M rs. H .| Louise bers andl . i n i i s r i d u * M E N T , •S. &• S.. ». I’. ' >f‘j' nI" y k s i . O i1P fJu : . . .K V.U-:*.. i\t-. ri: is. I'M'. I.Ilr I VKEJ-MLN v\.Iiiit-.: . r.;v-tT*i.-'O;- unli*u-i r»T. Supi., Ahbc- :il ALb*'- W l i i Xv r... i. i . !.I’j.Sj.tVS I iOi .'.Ji.'m u N CU. I V! i.A M A . >r:iJtLiKs__ I IltiA i1 INkS s’.U.•..ii. I• :i. ‘. !..I M< t.t, t .Nif .:IN <* INC. i,- L-i;r- co:n- c. . ; rrei . - : I on.• \ J'.irming. > t A i> : i :v-.;_:l>U5 ■ :• ••. : .euernd I'ruducts,I. OtwHT-' iiave : c-< Koct > - .:bout .'.U'.: .::.= T.onds. j; V. C. !’.rough, ItIiiIadeIphia. Pa. ■lev.CO S- T- FX i; ".'.c.c-r. 2f>c ench, • :i SAL P.R. Alva, cr c:o! ' ' " ;.s Or:.!. _ ' 'ruck Icuid. itia. K S & E Q U IP . • or-.iiki from = $2.85—100. AAA •ks. Crosse?, heavy .O.D. F .0.I3. Super rris, G eneral De- on Values the Ads dGet RESULTS Is in skin Infec- -SOL. Whfiiher (j by germ s or L got-.* to w ork is ;ircJ> Ii itt iny e£- amazir.^ results n infections, in- euro” ailm ents Ac no. ImjjfJilB-Ot am i U:rif;worni. rem edy. K E R - . powerful hut aci'ls. ts. Doctors and m selvcs and rc-c- ^•ondcT--.vorking ! L'sc it tin anv the body excop’t potent scrmf- available only plion. N ow you precrription di- ry. Send SI for tie, K alilonberg I St., Sarasota, ion guaranteed •k. L 13—50 G FROM TISM? NEWS!, :r y s t a l s For Your Future Buy U.S. Savings Bonds HAPPY DAYS NOW- NOT CONSTIPATED *‘I feel happier, younger now, not constipated! Eating your ALL-BRAN does so muck for me I What wonderful relief, after so many pills and medicines. Ever your friend,” W.ILRooney, Detroit 2, Mich. Jast one of many unsolicited let ters from ALL-BRAN «sers. If you suffer from constipation due to lack of dietary bulk, try eating an ounce of crispy Kellogg’s ALL BRAN daily, drink plenty of water! If not completely satisfied after 10 days, send empty carton to Kellogg’s, Battle Creek, Mich. Get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK I 'F O R PROUD BAK ERS, ESPEC IA LLY ' By Len KleisVIRGIL by Oark S. Haas I'VE BEEN TAKINQ THOSE PllLS SUNNYSIDE MRS. RANKLE, VOU SHOULDN'T TAKE SO WlANy SLEEPING PILLSi THEVaL BECOME HABIT FORMING'/ EVERy NITE FOR TWENTy YEARS. ANO THEy-BE NOT A HABIT YET a > ii it in- itn By Clay HunterTHE OLD GAFFER ,i \ C o WHERE'S VOUR WALLET?IN MY LEFT REAR POCKET. SHUCKS, ONLY I=OUR DOLLARS/ SUESS ItL HAVE TO HOLD UP SOMEBOOy ELSE. F E L L O W / f fr " of pridefu .Qn Clobber G.rt * o prom. *he T irn e d when Y<>ur ise ,u K ‘ W scultt ' i5= w coke o. Ib«em * . lig h t a n d « « « » T h a t '« your ovelJ..;,,." balanced Clobber G.ri * double ByMELLORS Ctteg t should OOEfi THAT V> HAVE TSIEO A ANSWEEWinr T d r v r jn QUESTION? A . FIRST... BOUFORD IT'S MV UTEST J ITB A HONBEti IPEA FOK & TO ME THAT NO ,PAINT.. BOUFORD! WHAT AEE VOU DOINS WITH #y EtECTEC Mixeer QNB TOOuSKT O fSPEEDING IIP PRODUCTION"THIS B E F O fS E - WATCH' *L|C|L> By Bud FisherMUTT AND JEFFGuaranteed by Good Houselceepmg HEV, M U T T / HOW DID THE*/ WHy ARE you RIDING T 'CAUSE AWAV OUT HERE INTO / I GET THE COUNTI?y P /" 7 TDO MAHy TICKETS W H A T'S T H EACTlN&y*ot iforrtnivt o» s 1 Alim^i^Dvtinsca v>&MATTER? hl.M -KNOW I WAS H E R E ? A Arthur Pointer By Bert Thomas HAS TD ASK YOtf £ PANCE TONIGHT/ TAKE a LCtfG W ALK OFP A SHORT PiSR / V/E A FRIEND O MUCH ABOUff G o o d S h o w er G ift Id e a Gift Suggestion TRISH rose decorations are “ crocheted in pale pink set in a cobwebby background of spark ling white to trim a pair of guest room pillow-cases and dresser scarf. Nice shower gift idea—and make several pairs in different colors to replenish your own linen supply. Pattern No. 5406 consists of complete crocheting instructions, stitch illustra« tions, material requirements and finishing directions. SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 630 Soatb Wells St., Chicago I, 111. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No......................... N a m e .............................................................................. Address ...................................................... Discretion—Something that comes to a person after he’s too old for it to do Iiim any good. Jeep—A vehicle which, if It were struck by lightning, the lightning would be towed away for repair. RIDVOURHOMEofINSECTS Press the button and thehandy dispenser ejects a cloud of aerosol fog which kills flies, mosquitoes, roaches, ants, bed bugs, moths and silver fish. Leaves no unpleasant odor and is. harm less to humans and pets when used as directed. Sold at drug, hardware and farm supply stores. PRODUCTS & CHEMICAL • RICHMOND, VIRGINIA ^ R O S O * LnsecI TOBACCO BY CORPORATION Help relieve distress of MONTHLY ^ FEMALE COMPtAINIS Are you troubled by distress of female functional periodic disturbances? Does this make you suffer from pain, feel so nervous, tired—at such times? Then start taking Lydla B. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound about ten days before to relieve such symptoms. Plnkbam's has a grand soothing effect on one o/ woman's most im portant organsI TIiiIy the woman’s friend I vIYOIA LPINKHAM’SSM S' p K I JTi m J c , PLASTI-LINER asi to is e srn in One application MAKES FALSE TEETH FIT for the life of your plates It your places are Joose and slip or burl, cefit them for instant, permanent comfort with soft Brimms Plasti*Liner strips. Laystripoo uppei or lower plate... bite and it molds perfectly. Hardens for lasting fit and comfort Even on old rubber plates. Brimms PIzsri-Liner gives good results from six months to a year or longer. Ends forever mess and bother of temporary applications that last a few hours or days. Stops slipping, rocking plates and sore gums. Eat anything. Talk freely. Enjoy the comfort thou* sands of people all over tbe couotrv oow get with Brimms PlastMinet Casy to RHitor Tighten False Teeth Permanently Tasteless, odorless, harmless to you and your plates.Can be removed as per directions. User» say: "Now t can eat anything. ” Monty back guarantee. $1.25 for Uner for one plate;$2.23 for both plates. At your drug store. PAGE FOUR THE DAVIE RECORD MOCKSVILLE N. C . APRIL 5. I960 THE DAVlE RECORD. A Big Court Buys Building C. FRANK STROUD, EDITOR. TELEPHONE Entered at the Poetoffice in Mocke- yille, N. C.. ae Second-cliw MeII matter. March 3,1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: OYE YEAR. IN N, CAROLINA • * 1.50 SfX MONTHS fN N. CAROLINA - 75c. OWE YEAR. OUTSIDE STATI • *2 00 SiX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE - *1.00 We have heard merchants, manufacturers and office-holders boast that thev had no competi tion. Some of them awoke later to fine out that they were sadly mistaken. Politics seems very quiet in Davie Countv up to the hour of going to press. Only a' few Re publicans and fewer Democrats have filed f o r county offices. Maybe folks have decided they can’t afford to take the offices at the present salary. There are but ten days left in which to file Iyour name if you mean to run for Sheriff, Clerk of Court, Representative, Senator or Coroner. Filing time is out at noon Saturday, April 15th. If you don’t file now you will have to wait another two years. Be sure are Se; that the census taker gets your name when he visits you this month. We are hoping that Davie county will have a population of 20,000, and MocksvilIe 2,500. If you haven’t sent in your guess on the Mocks- ville population mail or bring it in this month. The March term of Davie Su perior court adjourned Thursday afternoon. This was the longest court term held in this county in a long time. There were nearly ; two hundred cases on the docket and most of them were disposed 'of. Tudge T. C. Rudicill, of New- j ton, was the presiding Judge, with Solicitor Avalon Hall, of Yadkin- ville, prosecuting. There were a- bout 100 cases of drunken driving, reckless driving, driving without license and after license had been suspended and other traffic viola tions. Among the other cases dis posed of were the following: Charles Padgett, false pretense, nol pros on payment of costs. Fred Jones and Fred Cassidy, larceny. Jones 6 months and Cassidy 8 months on roads. W. H. Chamblee, manslaughter, nol prossed. Sanford Plowman, v. p. I. $35 and costs. Lockley Sofley, v. p. I. $25 and costs. W. K. Edwards, non-support. Six months on roads. W. R. Smoot, v. p. I. $25 and costs. John C. Smoot, v. p. I. not guilty. Solomon Campbell, v. p. I. $25 and costs. I. M. Broadway, Jr., assault, $25 and costs. Herman Berrier, assault $25 and costs. Boone Hudson, c. c. w. Costs. A. B. Hall, v. p. I. $25 and costs. Ezraand B.atrice Cain, v.p.I. $25 and costs for both. Will Myers murder. Continued. Clint Tucker, a w d w. To pay Dr. W. M. Long has purchased the new E. C. Morris office build ing on comer of South Main and Water streets, and will move his office from the Sanford building into the new building in the near future. Dr. Robert Long, dentist, will also move his office into his brother’s building. Don t Steal Wes Seems like the Winston-Salem Journal has stolen Wes McKnight from Farmington Township and moved him over to Clemmons, in Forsyth county. The Journal is right about Wes being a molasses maker, but he makes good old Davie syrup instead of Forsyth svrup. NOTICE! New Accountant F id d le r’s C o n v e n tio n ! There Vfill Be An Old-Time Fiddlers Convention At Shady Grove High School, Advance, N. C. Easter Monday, Apr. IOth, 8 p. m. Prizc-s Will Be Awarded As Follows: costs. Ralph Luckey, assault. Fined „ . . $50 and costs.The Davie County Commission-i „ 7___ n „ _ , ., . ’ Wayne Deaton, a. w. d. w. anders have appointed M rs. Orant n , . ,„ . c. c. w. On probation and to payStevens, of Route 4, County Ac-^cogfg countant, to fill the vacancy caus-( chag R Beauch assault ed by the resignation of Miss Inez. ^ tQ ki„ Fined $10Q Naylor. Mrs. Stevens entered up- j and on her new duties yesterday. First Prize Second Prize First Prize Second Prize First Prize Second Prize First Prize Second Prize First Prize Second Prize First Prize Second Prize STRING BAND CONTEST VIOLIN CONTEST BANJO CONTEST GUITAR CONTEST MANDOLIN CONTEST DANCING CONTEST $10.00 $5.00 $5.00 $2.50 $3.00 $1.50 $3.00 $1.50 $2.00 $1.00 $2.00 $1.00 THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED ADMISSION - She is a daughter of Clerk of Court Stacy H. Chaffin, of Route I. Vfhicker Candi date For Senate J. H. Whicker, Sr., prominent North Wilkesboro attorney, has filed as a candidate on the Re publican ticket fot the 24th. sena torial district of North Carolina. Mr. Whicker is a widely known attorney and has been prominent for many years in public atfairs in Wilkes county. He is a Baptist and teacher of one of the largest men’s Bible classes in the State of North Carolina. Jericho Church to Have Meeting The Jericho Church of Christ, Jericho Road, invites you to hear Evangelist Cecil L. Derryberry, of Winston-Salem, in a series of gos- Press C. Robertson; costs. Thos. Deese, manslaughter. To pay $800 damage to parties invol ved, and $75 court costs, and pay J. C. Smoot $75 damage to car. W. T. Dull, larceny and receiv ing. To pay costs. John Pressley, attempt to make crime against nature. Two years hard labor on roads. James C. Rogers, v.p.l. Nol pros, Dan Cuthrell, a.w.d.w., with in tent to kill. Three to five years in penitentiary. James L. Evans, abandonment and non-support. Two years on roads. Julius C. Brock, assault. Not guilty. Rufus Dwiggins, Jr; non-sup port. Sentence suspended 5 years. and to pay costs. Noah Hairston, v.p.l, non-suit. A number of cases on the crim inal docket was continued until the October court. The following divorces were granted: Peggy Robertson vs Carl Spencer J. D. PARKER ELMER MOCK MANAGERS: W. B. ETCHISON SAM TALBERT pel meetings, April 9-18. Services will begin promptly at 7:45 each evening. If you are tired of hearing serm ons with very little of the word of God in them, and you want to hear the gospel preached without addition or substraction and with out the creeds and dogmas of de- nominationalism, you will find this meeting a fulfillment of your desires. The singing will be directed by Willard Conchin, minister of the Jericho Church of Christ, and will be entirely congregational. No col lections will be taken, so forget your pocketbooks and bring your friends instead. YOU WILL FIND A WARM WELCOME AT THE CHURCH OF CHRIST. J. E. Latta. of Durham, has ac cepted a position as a soil con servation man in Davie County, and will work with Claude Thompson. Mr. Latta succeeds H. J. Williams, who is now locat ed in Boone. Mr. Latta is stop ping at the A. M. Kimbrough home. The Record is glad to welcome him to the best town and county in North Carolina. He entered upon his new duties last week. Vickers vs Viola C. Vickers; Jas. T. Cloer vs Margaret CIoer; J . E. Moore vs Susie J. Moore; Frances Collins Adams vs Arthur J. Adams, Jr.; James E. Allen vs Juanita T. Allen; Thos. Reid Boger vs Evelyn W. Boger. J, H. Broadway John Henry Broadway, 70, re- 1 tired Davie County farmer, died I late Tuesday at Rowan Memorial ] Hospital as a result of injuries re ceived earlier in the day in an I automobile accident on Salisbury I Highway south of Mocksville. Stove Orrell, of Advance, R. I, traveling toward Cooleemee, ran into the Broadway car two miles south of Mocksville. Mr. Broad way lived about five hours after the accident. Orrell receieved slight injuries and was later lodged in jail here, charged with driving intoxicated and also with man slaughter. Surviving are his widow and three children, five brothers and - two sisters. Funeral services were held at 2 p. m., Thursday at No Creek Baptist Church. Attorney J. H. Whicker, of North Wilkesboro, was in town Thursday on business. PICTURE OF A MAN ENJOYING -HIS CLOTHE You'll be happy, too, when you join the growing family of satisfied men who are stretching their clothing dol lars with the famous AND OVER CLOTHES. You'll have a wealth of quality fabrics to select from . . . newest pat terns to fit your personality . . . styled in the m anner pre scribed by fashion authorities , . . and priced to give you most for your money. Come in and see w hat you get when you buy ANDOVER CLOTHES. 7 ■ E . # Regulars, Longs, Shorts, Stouts Sizes 34 to 50 LESLIE’S MEN’S SHOP ON THE SQUARE MOCKSVILLE, N. C. Oldest Pan No LiquorJ NEWS A A ttorney 4 fined to his I week sufferii Ralph K ul College speij his m other ' M iss Lillil Lexington lj eral days John H od2 M rs. R ot children, oil were recentl M rs. Johh Il Misses C J rion H ornl Forest C ollJ holidays in | ents. M rs. C. daughter Ld to New Bed weeks with I Jericho Roq T he frie w ho has bel wan Mem I bury, will is m uch in M r. and I Circle DriJ oyster supy honoring I and childrd Spurgeol route I ru | covering operation Davis Hosl M r. and w ood mod B. Sa .ford N o rth M a| Stroud he C has. L | the M cck Guy, were last w eekl m anv case M ocksvilll Jack amj Saturday I Training where the in trainid boys. H | G. B. ton-Saler Davie faf week on a big d a| He is man. Mr. art ol Veedd M r. and I Circle D | tv were i a pleasud Sanfoi right arrf ious injl the ReaJ P a- sevd along n l glad to T Jim m | corner M aple ed by . busines| ty was Caudel M r. ; Jr., hav| to one I on Binl Roy Ctf T. I. Cd bv Mr. I A ttol T aylorl WilkesT Yadkid W aited were : here la T hel Mocksl ed a -d day ev| IeaderJ M rs. Louisd bers a l THE DAVIE RECORD MOCRSVILLE. N. C. APRt L S 1950 PAGE FIVE THE DAVIE RECORD. Oldest Paper In The Countv No Liquor, Wine, Beer Ads NEWS AROUND TOWN. Attorney Claude Hicks was con fined to his home several days last week suffering with Au. Ralph Kurfees, senior at State College spent the week-end with his mother Mrs D. C. Kurfees. Miss Lillie Meroney went to Lexington last week to spend sev eral days with her sister, Mrs. John Hodges. Mrs. Robert C. Caldwell and children, of Winnsboro, S. C., were recent guests of her mother, Mrs. Johh Daniel and family. Misses Colean Smith and Ma rion Horn, students at Wake Forest College, spent the spring holidays in town with their par ents. Mrs. C. P. Iohnson and little daughter Louzenia, have returned to New Bern, after spending two weeks with Mrs. D. C. Kurfees on Jericho Road. The friends of E. C. Sanford, who has been seriously ill at Ro wan Memorial Hospital, Salis bury, will- be glad to learn that he is much improved. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Vernon of Circle Drive, entertained at an oyster supper on Friday afternoon honoring Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Smith and children of Sheffield. Spurgeon Anderson, popular route I rural letter carrier, is re covering from a n appendicitis operation which he underwent at Davis Hospital, Statesville. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Black wood moved Friday from the R. B. Sa .iford apartment house on North Main street, to the Joe F. Stroud house on Salisbury street. Chas. L. Farthing, principal of the Mccksville schools and son Guy, were confined to their home last week with Au. There are manv cases of Au i.i and around Mocksville. Jack and Thom.is LeGrand left Saturday for Great Lakes Naval Training Station, near Chicago, where they will spend two weeks in training school. Good luck, boys. Have a Ane time. G. B. Myers, well-known Wins ton-Salem business man a n d Davie farmer, was in town last week on business. Mr. Myers has a big dairy farm near Advance. He is a former Davie Gounty Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Lightv, of Veedersburg, Ind., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. C.J E. Vernon, of Circle Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Ligh tv were on their way home from a pleasure trip down in Florida. Sanford Woodruff, who lost his right arm and r. ceived other ser ious injuries while working for the Reading Railway at Chester Pa., several weeks ago, is getting along nicelv his friends will be glad to learn. Jimmie’s Ice Cream Bar on the corner of Salisbury street and Maple avenue, owned and operat ed by J. R. Bowles, opened for business Saturday. This proper ty was recently purchased by T. J. Caudell from E. C. Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Sheek Bowden, Jr., have moved from Pine street to one of the T. J. Caudell houses on Bingham street. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cartner have purchased from T. I. Caudell the house vacated bv Mr. and Mrs. Bowden. Attorneys Haden Burke, o f Taylorsville; Allie Hayes, of North Wilkesboro, Boone Harding, of Yadkinville, Hayden Clement and Walter Woodson, o f Salisbury, were among the court visitors here last week. Thel Junior B. T.U. of the Mocksville Baptist church enjoy ed a -ocial at the church on Mon day evening, Mar. 27th. under the leadership of Mrs. Harry Stroud. Mrs. H. W. Brown and Miss Louise Stroud. Nineteen mem bers and two visitors were present. A. H. Cozart has begun the e-1 rection of a 5-room house with j bath, in West Mocksville, on the j Statesville Highway, The house, will be for sale. Mrs. Z. N. Anderson returned' home Thursday from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Freeman Slye, at Takoma Park, Md. Mrs. SIye accompanied her mother home, returning to Takoma Park Friday. There will be a fried chicken supper at Courtney High School lunch room on Friday night, April 7th, sponsored by the Cross Roads Baptist Church. Proceeds go to ward repairing the church build ing. Come any time after 6 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Daniel arrived home Friday from a Ave- months sojourn at their winter cottage at New Port Richey, Fla. They returned home via. Dallas Texas, where thev visited their daughter, Mrs. R. H. Shank. They report a delightful stay in the Sunshine State. The E. Pierce Foster lots, locat ed on Wilkesboro street, were sold at auction Saturday and brought good prices, ranging from $113 to $140 per front foot. Elmo Foster and Otis Hendrix bought one lot, Wade Smith two lots, and M. H. Murray two lots, each lot having a frontage of 30 feet. This is val uable property. Princess Theatre WEDNESDAY William Powell & Shelley Winters In “TAKE ONE FALSE STEP” with Marsha Hunt & James _________Gleason_________ THURSDAY &. FRIDAY Fred MacMurray & Maureen O’Hara In “FATHER WAS A FULLBACK” with Betty Lynn & Rudy Vallee SATURDAY George O’Brien In “THE FIGHTING GRINGO” Added Serial Sl Cartoon MONDAY S l TUESDAY Spencer Tracy S l Katharine Hepburn In “ADAM’S RIB” The Funniest Picture In Ten Years WEDNESDAY Charles Russell S l Virginia Christine In “NIGHT WIND” with Gary Gray S l Flame The Wonder Dog Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Williams and children moved to Boone last week, where Mr. Williams is en gaged in soil, conservation work. The Record is sorry to lose these good people, but wish them well in their new home. File For Sheriff 'New Farm Equio- WANT ADS PAY. FORRENT-Fumished apart ment on Wilkesboro street. MRS. R. L. WALKER. FOR RENT—Four-room apart ment. Phone 168-W. MRS. W. H. DODD. FOR SALE.—Ford 8-cylinder half-ton pick-up truck, 1949 mod el, excellent condition. A bargain. Phone or see Mrs. H. A. Sanford. Telephone 115-W; Mocksville. CINDER BLOCKS, Concrete Blocks, 4 inch Drain TiL-. QUALITY BLOCK CO. Salisbury, N. C. Warehouse Drive, Phone 233. WANTED-Fishermen at Tom’s Lake. Just restocked with 12,000 pounds fish, weighing 3 to 251bs. One mile west of Mocksville, just off Yadkinville Highway. FOR SALE — Pair o f good horses, cheap, will work anywhere BILL FRYE, Mocksville, N. C, FOR SALE—I Manure Spread er in good condition. See M. B. RICHARDSON. Route 2. Mocksville, N. C. FOR SALE—300 bales lespede- za hay; 100 bales soy bean hay, 10 bales pea vine hay, 75c bale. 9 Acres of pine timber. TOMMIE ELLIS, Advance, Route 2. FOR SALE Ferguson tractor, tillage tool, two 14-inch flat-bot tom plows, double section disc harrow, wood saw and pulley. Price $1750. DEWEY JOYNER. Mocksville, Route I. Let us do your Easter Dying. We are now equipped to give you skilled die work, the best clean ing and pressing, scientific water proofing, moth proofing and expert alteration work. THE BEST DRY CLEANERS Nichols S l Robinson. Phone 212 WANTED—We a re buying I Poplar, Oak and Seech Lumber. ■ Cut Poplar lj” thick, any width. ■ Cut Oak §” any width. Beach J” i thick, any widths. For further in- ! formation, see us for dimensions. I ELKlN FURNITURE CO. Elkin, N. C. Announcement! I Wish To Announce To The Voters Of Davie County That I Am A Candidate For Sheriff On The Republican Ticket. I Would Appreciate Your Vote In The May Primary. Accept My Thanks In Advance For Your Support G. ALEX TUCKER, 80 Advance, N. C., Route 2. RADIO AND TELEVISION STAR UNNY ROSS g RADIO ANO RECORDING ARTIST FRAN WARREN FAMOUS SROftTSCASTSl BILL STERN t J m d M YES, CAMELS AR! SO MIlD that in a coaiWo*caast teit of hundred* of men and women who imoked Camels -•and only Camels—for 30 days, noted throat special* ills, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OP THROAT IRRITATION duo to smoking CAMELS C. A. Tutterow, well • known citizen of Route I, filed Thursday for Sheriff on the Democratic ticket. Up to this time Mr. Tut: terow is the first Democrat to file for a county office. DAVIE DRIV&IN THEATRE Mocksville Salisbury Highway Wednesday and rhursday April 5th and 6th ‘ADVENTTRES OF GALLANT BELL” Fuzzy Knight and AudrevLong InTechnicolor ONE CARTOON Friday and Saturday April 7th and 8th ‘TRUTH ABOUT MURDER” Morgan Conway and Bonita Granville Also “PRIDE OF THE WEST” Bill Boyd ONE CARTOON Monday and Tuesday April IOth and Uth “WHISPERING SMITH” Alan Ladd and Robert Preston In Technicolor ONE CARTOON ment Store - A certificate of incorporation has been filed in the office of Se cretary of State Thad Eure at Ral eigh bv D. & N. Harvester com pany, Mocksville, to deal in farm ing equipment. Authorized capi tal stock $100,000, subscribed stock $400 by W. T. Lowrance. and C. C. Lowrance, of Concord, and Lloyd Trexler, of Salisbury. We understand that this com pany has purchased a 150 foot frontage lot near the new Pontiac bnilding in West Mocksville, for their new building. Hew Type Spreader Hihh Saves Jikssks AU Shows Start At Duek Space Reserved For Trucks Grandma’s old-fashioned hooks ’n’ eyes down the side of her dress provided gentle pressure to keep hips and waist from spreading where they shouldn’t—and generally, it was a “one- man” job. This same dependable method of hooking and un hooking also performs a time, work and muscle-saving service for the revolutionary new Ferguson Manure Spreader and Loader just announced by the local Ferguson Dealer. A similar hook,»’n’ eye device hitches and unhitches the Siireader hydraulically by means of the Finger Tip Contn. of the Ferguson Tractor. The same control also hydraulically operates the Loader. One man with one tractor can do the entire loading and spreading job without leaving the tractor seat. B. & M. Tractor and Implement Company Route 5. Lexington, N. Cy ' A RANGE LIKE THIS AT A $60 SAVING! BEAUTIFUL 1950 DE LUXE. ELECTRIC RANGE WITH 2-WAY AUTOMATIC CONTROLS Never before so many tfe luxe features at such an amazingly low price! / c j , mTVnufiffi MODEL RE-25 » f ^ o n . * d o f f - - * R |0* Uats Ionget* 8*’ ** V c lo c k w ith o ® " d » p p U sm « i& S k itn srssS& a?**4—-cove Tcce3 ^ A $259.95 VALUE T to w O d f (As Shown) LIMITED TIME ONLYI BuyOn EASY CREDIT TERMS Hendricks & MerrelI Furniture Co. Phone 342 Mocksville, N. C. SEE NORGE BEFORE % ’ K THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. O R IW Longtime Effort FRED OSBORN, former U.S. rep resentative on the U.N. atomic energy commission, recently pre dicted that it might take 100 years of prodigious effort by the Ameri can people, to work out a perma nent peace. In view of the fact that the world fought for a solid century during the Hundred Years' War and in the 17th century went through the spasm of the Thirty Years’ War, Osborn’s estimate may not be too pessimistic. But, being a perennial opti mist, I have scaled the time down to 25-50 years. I agree with Osborn, however, that it will require the same kind of hard work our forefathers put in when they built this country to win the peace against a country which is determined the free world must disappear. As stated before, my own ideas on winning the peace are only “Gropings,” and I make no claim of originality or copyright. They are put forward after talking with a great many people, including Sumner Welles and Sen. Brien Mc Mahon, who has done more solid thinking about the Russian prob lem than anyone along Pennsyl vania avenue. At any rate here is my program: GOP Coalition 1. BRING about greater unity among the American people. We cannot fight a prolonged war of nerves entailing great sacrifices, unless we have just as much na tional unity as during the recent war. Greater unity can be achieved by: A. Bringing outstanding Repub licans into positions of leadership inside the administration. B. Keeping the American people better informed. Instead of abrupt handouts from the White House or hasty statements made at presi dential press conferences, Mr. Tru man should go on the air every month with a frank and personal report to the American people. 2. GOAD, maneuver and manip ulate Moscow into calling an inter national conference—on atomic en ergy or anything else—even if we know in advance it will fail. We shouldn’t get up any false hopes, because Russia isn’t going to let any conferences succeed — unless she writes the ticket. And we should attend any conference, no m atter who calls it, because we cannot leave unturned any stone that might bring peace. The World Forgets But it would be extremely healthy if we could force Russia into calling a conference. We should remind the world that we. have called conference after con ference. Time after time we have gone to Moscow, while Russia has 'taken almost no initiative for peace. But the world has forgotten this. We need to remind people of this fact—over and over again. We have been called warmongers so often that the world is beginning ^o believe it. And we have bden either lazy or bumbling or both in show ing that just the opposite is true. 3. HOLD the next session of the United Nations assembly in Moscow. This is Sen. Brien Mc Mahon’s idea, and an excellent one. Most of the Russian people have a distorted notion that the U.N. is not a free and Cs - oeratie assemblage, that Soviet delegates get no breaks, that the cards are stacked in favor of imperialism. If the United Nations went to Moscow, especially for a debate on controlling atomic energy, the Rus sian people would get some con ception of the U. N.’s truly demo cratic form, where any nation can speak its piece. Series of Talks 4. IF MOSCOW will not call an international conference, then we have the excuse of holding a whole series of conferences under the North Atlantic pact. As Senator McMahon once again has pointed out, the North Atlantic pact pro vides not merely for military as sistance, but an Atlantic council to handle political problems. We have neglected this. We have concentrated on the military phases of the pact, ignoring the At lantic council which could mobilize the free world in order to create, as McMahon says, “A climate for peace.” 5. BUT MOST important of all we must reach Moscow’s Achilles heel. This heel is friendship with the Russian people. Most of us forget that the real reason for the iron curtain is to protect the weakest point in the Russian armor—her people. For what the Kremlin fears most is contact of the Russian people with the outside world. All this indicates that friendship with the Russian people is the real way to win the peace. But despite this it is also the point we have most neglected. What we need to remember is that, if we can influnece the Rus sian people, we need not build great armament. -WEBKLY NEWS ANALYStS- Coal Operators Hint at Price Hike; Britain Faces New Economic Crisis; Federal Tax Redaction Poses Puzzle (EDITOR'S NOTE: Wben opinions are expressed In tbese columns, (bey are those of Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not neeessarlly of this newspaper.! COAL: The 'Payoff The "payoff" in the recent coal strike settlement was coming more quickly than was usually the case In the settling of these disputes. The cost to the consumer of John L, Lewis’ power over the operators and his union was to be felt very soon. ANNOUNCEMENT came in the- form of a statement by spokesman for the soft coal industry that there is now in preparation a 10 to 40 cents a ton increase on the price of coal. When the United Mine Workers long strike against the industry was settled recently, operators forecast a rise in prices. However, discussion of the price hike indicated there would be no blanket increase. Rather, the boost would vary according to the finan cial situation and contract com mitments of individual firms. One official was quoted as say ing: "If it (the increase) only amounts to 10 cents a ton, the retailer shoud be able to absorb it. But if it goes any higher, it will affect the price of coal to the consumer.” It seems logical that the retailer could assume an added cost of 10 cents a ton—but the question was: Would he? Except for competition, which would hardly be forthcoming in the way of a price fight, the re tailer could pass on any coal price hike to the consumer. BRITAIN: Another Crisis Great Britain truly had fallen on evil times. Barely escaping one financial crisis after another, the word was that the nation was facing another financial-economic crisis in 1950—just as she did in 1949 and 1948. THE DAY had passed when Amer icans could say to such news: “So what—what has that got to do with us?” For the fact was that because of U.S.-British economic-financial ties stemming from the early Frank lin D. Roosevelt era, whatever hap pened to Britain economically or financially could be expected to hap pen to the U.S. The reason was that in any such crisis there was no one but the U.S. to whom the British could turn for help. The problem, as British leaders viewed it, was that although Brit ain’s production is about as high as it can go in the near future, it does not yield enough exportable goods to meet pressing British problems. ONE OF THESE is the need to increase sales to the United States to earn more dollars and solve Brit ain’s current inability to pay for the goods she must get from the United States. Another is conflicting pressure on Britain to ship goods to other credi tors as a means of paying on huge debts acquired in wartime and since. Possible solutions included nego tiations with creditors to ease pressure on old debts and —as was inevitable and expected—provisions of further loans from the United States. TAX CUTS: A Problem Cynical observers of congression al tax-cut maneuvering might be forgiven a "so what?” reaction to announcement that while Demo crats had thrown out President Truman’s limitations on excise- tax slashes, they promised to dig up other revenue to balance the losses. TO THE AVERAGE taxpayer that must seem to be a senseless business. What was the point in abolishing one type of taxes and levying another? Excise taxes af fected almost every one in the na tion, and the substitute for a slash there — tightening up of tax loop holes and "such other taxes as may be deemed feasible” — would most likely affect a majority of taxpay ers. That “other such taxes as may be deemed feasible,” was the clincher that cut off any relief tax payers might obtain through a slash in the excise levies. President Truman has threatened to veto the excise tgx cut if the loss of this revenue is not balanced by other sources. With develop ments as they were, it appeared certain that there would be no ex cise tax reductions before July I. Accused Dorothy Kenyon, named by U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R., Wis.) as first on the list of alleged "fellow-travelers," or Communists, in the state de partment, was listed as a $12,- 000-a-year-member of the eco nomic and social council of the U.S. commission to the United Nations. ACHESON: Rapped Again Tall, debonair, Dean Acheson, U.S. secretary of state, was under fire again. He was charged, among other accusations, with trying to “shift the blame” in defending the alleged loyalty-suspect cases Sen ator McCarthy (R., Wis.) has been airing on capitol hill. SINCE ACHESON made his now- famous remark that “I will not turn my back on Alger Hiss,” fol lowing the latter’s conviction of perjury in question with treason charges, Acheson has been more or less on the pan as accusers of the state department deliver their verb al . blasts. This time, McCarthy charged three key state department aides as having shown Communist symp athies and demanded investigation of a navy civilian scientist whom he described as working on "top most defense secrets.” The charge that the state depart ment harbors men and women of Communist leanings or sympathies is not a new one. It has been crop ping up for the past several years, and on each occasion the depart ment indignantly rushes forth with a denial. THAT'S NOT SURPRISING for certainly neither Senator McCarthy nor anyone else expected the state department would admit such a condition existed, even if it did exist. To do so would admit either a lack of proper security efforts on the part of the department, or a willingness to wink at any employ ee’s loyalty if that employee hap pened to “stand In right” with the proper officials. ATTLEE: Doing Okay To the surprise of most observ ers, England’s so-called “shaky” Labor government had survived two major tests of strength in par liament. . FOLLOWING the election, in which Prime Minister Attlee’s Labor party won a bare majority of parliament seats, it was predict ed that the victory margin was so slight that the government might crumble—that a new election was practically inevitable. In the recent test—action on a Conservative motion to beat down the cabinet’s housing program— Attlee made a considerably strong er showing than on a previous issue. THE LABOR VICTORY was made possible by support from the Liberal faction, a development at odds with popular speculation as to where the Liberals would go in parliamentary tests. Many top po litical observers had predicted that the Liberals would stand with the Conservatives against Attlee’s broad program of nationalization- of-industry-and-resources, but clos er observers of the British political scene had pooh-poohed the idea that the Liberals would ever be found standing with the Conserva tives. And, apparently, these prog- nosticators were correct. While it had appeared that the Labor forces were to trim down their nationalization program be cause of the close election result, these new victories might reshape the pattern of intent. For example, following triumph on the housing issue, Health Minister Bevan, whose ministry administers the housing program, declared . . . “the government’s program will be persisted in.” QUICK COFFEB Glass Stove Perks Water in 50 Seconds Among many other important things connected with coffee-mak ing is speed of operation, with most users always casting about for methods to hasten the process. Now, a new glass is a trans parent stove that heats air or boils water for coffee—and it will start water perking inside 50 seconds. The glass has a transparent skin that conducts electricity, but re sists enough to make the glass hot, up to 600 degrees Fahrenheit. The skin is a metallic oxide only about sixteen millionths of an inch thick. This bit of glass magic is the latest development of Corning glass works. It is called E-C glass, mean ing electrically conducting. Heat ers made of flat panels of this glass are being used to keep baby chicks warm, among other things. TRUMAN: Costly Figure Republicans, sniping at Presi dent Truman, declared that he, as a private citizen, “is one of the best, if not the best paid man in the world today." Figures lending themselves to many artifices, the gentleman is suing that statement, Rep. Roy O. Woodruff of Michigan figured it out this way: A PRIVATE CITIZEN to match the standard of living now enjoyed by the President woidd need an in come of three to three and a half million dollars a year. Mr. Truman has take-home pay of $110,000 a year out of his salary, $50,000 of which is tax-free. • He has 42 facilities for travel, including 35 automobiles, airplanes, his own yacht, the Williamsburg, a private Pullman car and “vaca tion retreats” in Key West, Fla., and Maryland. He has an estimated stall of 665 persons at an annual cost of $1,- 491,540. He has a travel allowance of $33,000 to $40,000. Then Representative Woodruff listed the costs of the yacht, the President's personal plane, his private railroad car, a destroyer escort for the yacht, secret service and White House guards, White House salary costs for a staff of 225. THEN said Representative Wood ruff: “By comparison, President Roosevelt in 1945 had a staff of 53 costing only $256,431 and Presi dent Hoover’s staff totaled 37 at a salary bill of $127,200. Present White House salary costs, he said, amount to $998,254 annually. That was an impressive list of conveniences and privileges and special help, certainly; rivaling in many instances the best that an Indian Potentate could boast. Yet, democracy comes high, and there was little likelihood that a resume of what the presidency costs the people would raise the blood pressure of many American tax payers. ELECTIONS: Certainty & Doubt A graphic contrast between choices by electorates in Commu nist and other countries was pro vided in the Russian and Belgian elections. In Russia, there was no choice. Prem ier Stalin was the Number I candidate of the Soviets, and he had no opposition. As head of the Communist ticket, he was shooting for as nearly 100 per cent of the vote as possible—with no “No” votes to come. Stalin and associates campaigned on a pledge of following a policy of peace. The Russians elected a new parliament of 1,302 members. IN BELGIUM the situation was quite different. The issue was: Should King Leopold III be returned to the throne? Fifty-seven per cent of the voters said he should, a fact which must have been comforting to Leopold, inasmuch as he had vowed to abdicate unless he re ceived 55 per cent of the vote. However, the victory at the polls didn’t mean Leopold was back on the throne. Parliament would have the last word, as the election was only advisory—being designed to show parliament how the people felt about Leopold. The election was tumultuous, with rioting and fight ing marking the balloting. LEOPOLD had drawn the ill will of millions of Belgians because of his capitulation to the Germans in World War II, although his support ers pointed out there was little else he could have done. The crux of the election was some 151,000 invalidated ballots. If these were counted, the result would give Leopold only 54 per cent of the votes and he would have to act on his pledge of abdication if he failed to receive the 55 per cent he had mentioned. FigKtsTax Fred N. Acker, Cleveland, Ohio, attorney, is testing the validity of present federal in come tax schedules which he declares are “confiscatory.” Acker admitted ne had not filed any return or paid any direct taxes for several years, and “invited the governm ent charge.” CURVES: In or Out? The m atter of whether milady’s curves were to be played down or accentuated in this spring’s fash ions was a subject of no little con troversy among designers. One school of thought wanted curves concealed—The other would have them displayed to the best ad vantage. The subject was important to the American male who, in the end, would be most concerned be cause he would pav for most of it. U. S-M ilkIndustiy VastlyTransformed Cost of Product Rises Less Than Other Foods Since the turn of the century the milk industry has undergone a transformation rivaling that of the airplane, according to dairy scien tist and historian Dr. J. Lloyd Hen derson. Dr. Henderson, co-author of “The Market Milk Industry,” a standard textbook whose latest edition will be released this spring said “Our research since the w ar’s end points up the fact that although labor and equipment costs have kept pace with rising scales in other indus tries, the cost of milk and its pro ducts has risen less than that of any other food. In fact, milk, from a nutritive point of view, is far and away the housewife’s best food buy.” Cost-saving scientific advances in milk processing and startling econ omies due to improved distribution practices have been responsible for this, Henderson points out. The industry shed no tears as it buried the familiar 10-gallon milk This excellent herd of cattle, grazing quietly and contented ly is symbolic of vast milk in dustry which has undergone such a transformation in the past two decades. can and converted to huge insu lated tank trucks for bringing milk from the larger farms to the pro cessing plant. Savings in handling due to this change have only been matched by the improvement in sanitation and quality of the pro duct, Henderson said. Every-other- day delivery, now practically stan dard practice in m ajor cities, plus the use of retail trucks of almost double capacity, also helped keep the housewife’s milk budget in line. The flash pasteurized, once out lawed by health authorities, has been so improved that today every milk company of any size uses it to save expensive man-hours and pro duction space. Check Cows’ Feet Although one would hardly gather the impression from the Holstein cow (above), cows are like people in more ways than one—one sure one being that when their feet hurt, their production lags. Farm ers can help prevent loss of produc tion from this source by period ic attention to the feet of their cattle to check for foot infec tion or other ills. New Daizy Element Seen As Aid in More Output The animal protein factor—mir aculous dairy element which speeds up the growth of farm animals and poultry at less cost to the farm er— is now in tonnage production and should be readily available to con sumers within a short time. Officials of the chemical com pany producing the element which is accomplished by bacterial fer mentation, promise feed efficiency that will represent a significant new advance in animal nutrition. The fermentation APF, as the feed component is known, has a Vitamin B12 content approximately 40 times that of good fish meal, the outstanding natural source of APF which has been widely used hereto fore in feed mixtures. This vitamin compound is one of the most effective known for supplementing chick en and hog feeds. Superphosphate Will Help Add to Manure Properties Adding superphosphate to man ure not only increases its plant food balance, but helps it hold val uable nitrogen that otherwise might be lost, according to Prof C. J, Chapman, University of Wisconsin agronomist. He says it should be added before the manure is spread on the field. The superphosphate can be put in the spreader at the rate of 20 to 25 pounds per load. CLASSIFIED D E P A R TM E N T AUTOS. TRUCKS. A ACCESS. WANTED—Antique automobiles, any con* dition. Must be prior to 1925. (No Fords, please.) Also liberal rewards paid tor tips leading to acquisition of very old hfgh class care. Write W. P. bnyder IU Box 85, SetWckIey, Pennsylvania. BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR- ICE-CREAM plant with retail .store, three blocks from the University of Florida, good year around business, price S14.500. plus inventory. Puritj Ice-Cream, 548 North 9th Street. Gaines vllle. Florida. FRANCHISE year around ice creatn ousi- ness, 120x100 ft. drive In. On U. S. Route 41. Bradenton, Fla. Very profitable Family illness compels return north. Write—- Creamctte, Bradenton, Fla. BARBER Shop for sale. See the owner. SH EP'S BARBER SHOP, Eagle Lake Florida. Good business. SACRIFICE—M ust sell due to health, going Ladies Ready-to-Wear store; doing good volume of business, excellent location. In a prosperous South Georgia town with large payrollls. Phone or write Rich Realty Co., Bainbndge. Georgia. FOR SAiAS-Funerai home, iuily equipped; 15 years under same management; reason for selling, another business requires entire time, particulars.A. M arlin, Marshal), Arkansas. FOR SALE—One music route, 20 music machines, 10 pin-baiis, _P.O. Bex 277, Sumner, Miss., Phone 147-J. Complete Sawmill, D boOO Caterpillar Diesel Power Unit HO H-P.. Ol Frick MUI Tower Edger. 29 Wood Planer- been used 9 months. Al! for $4,800. ViU finish n 3 weeks for delivery. P.O. Box 7* -Iurdock, F lo rid a .___________________ d o g s, c a t s , p e t s, e t c . AiRi>Ai.m pups; Ooirutise a.ram reg. AKC, C. P. JensenRt. 2, Decatur. DE «581. H A y, GRAIN. FEED a liA L>Et% Ilay $30 to MU ton. to Io 29 ton Pea Greene Lesped2a Ray S30 ton. 15 to 20 ton Lespedza Hay $20 ton. 20 ton Oats and Rye Grass Hay $20 ton. F.O.B. here. ArchdaIe Farm s, Kings Mtn., N. C. Tel. 2405.________________ H EL P WANTED—MEN NVANfEO — Experienced woouxvorking draftsman. Morr«son Furniture & Fixture Co.. Statevilte, N. Carolina._______ H ELP WANTED-VVOniEN KEGiSTEK^D Nurses wanted lor supervisors and for general floor duty. Write or call Miss Edna Shcrrer, Supt., Abbeville County M emorial Hospital, Abbeville, South Carolina. LIVESTOCK TWO CATaLE SALC.&TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS RAGSOa LE-LAWIION COMMiSStON CO. NATIONAL STOCK YARDS. ATLANTA MACHINERV & SU PPLIES FOR SALE CHEAP DRAGLINES Vz Yd. Insley With Bucket.^ Yd. Bay City With Bucket. DAVE GORDON, P.O. BOX 5033 43rd St. & ACL R.K. PU. Y1K9I Tuinpa 3, Florida. MONO TREE SAW AND AiOlVEtC UNIT •‘World's Lcst Farm Combination” 3-h.p. engine. Cuts trees down and into convenient lengths. Clears land, mows weeds, sprouts, fenee-rows, lawns. Only $187.50 complete. Call or write MONO MANUFACTURING CO., INC.VMli Spring St.. N. \V. Atlanta. Ga.. AT, 4521 _______ MISCELLANEOUS ONE MILLION Feet of Pine Tinnier. One Year to cut and remove. S8,000 Cash. P.O. Box 7. Murdock. Florida. POSfOFFlCE equipment, complete Corbin Cabinet Lock Company fixtures, complete screen line of lock boxes, drops, parcel post, money order and stamp windows and door, overhead grill. 8 carrier cases, desks, cabinets, parcel bens, distributing cases, good condition. Divner. O. D. Ellard, Box J953, Birmingham, Ala. CHURCHES, INDIVIDUALS: Religiousgoods. Mantle Pieces. Raised letter plaques; fast 35c sellers. From this ad only, 20 assorted S2.00. Walker Products, Mountain Home, Tcnn. ATTENTION Property Owners: Have(and analyzed for uranium ore; collect $10,000 from A.E.C. For details write Gene Rutledge, 200 Cambridge Hall, Oak Ridge, Tenn. DIAMOND ring. Lady's Solitaire, about hf. K arat, Solid Gold, 2 side diamonds. $110. Will send for inspect. C. Brough, 6013 Wharton St., W. Philadelphia, Pa. Flint round lightwood fence posts 7 Ft. 4 In., 5 In., 6 In., diameter. 25c each, F.O.B. loaded In box cars SAL RH, Alva, Florida, 3000 to car, or delivered by truck as far North as Ocala, Florida, tor 35c, 900 to 1000 to truck load. P. O. Box 7, Murdock, Florida. POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. SPECIAL sale, broiler meat chicks from Fullorum-tested flocks S2.35—100. AAA 100 assorted. Red Rocks, Crosses, heavy and light S3.40—100. C.O.D. F.O.B. Super Chicks. Bernard Morris, General Delivery,. Savannah, Ga. Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads SKIN TROUBLE? Get HERMESOLand Get RESULTS To get quick results in skin infections, get HERM ESOL. W hether infection is caused by germs or fungus, HERM ESOL goes to w ork right aw ay w ith hard-hitting effectiveness. HERM ESOL gives am azing results In new and old skin infections, including "hard to cure" ailm ents like Athlete’s Foot, Acne, Impetigo, Infectious Eczem a and Ringworm. Use also for Cuts, W ounds, Bites and Abrasions. Unlike any other remedy, H ERMESOL contains new, powerful but gentle Colloidal M ercury Bloleate. F ree from alcohol, acids, staining or irritating elements. Doctors and druggists use it themselves and recommend It, Every home needs wonder-working HERM ESOL. Sufet Use it on any exterior surface of the body except the eyes. U ntil recently this potent germi- clde-fungicide w as available only on doctor's prescription. N ow you can get it w ithout prescription direct from laboratory. Send $1 for economy -size bottle. KabIenberg Laboratories, Rigel SL, Sarasota, Florida. Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back. HERMESOL W N U -7 13-50 w w w w"w w w w SUFFERING FRO RHEUMATISM? HERE1S GOOD NEWS! Crazy Water Crystal* give almost miraculous benefits to sufferers from rheumatism. arthritis, neuritis, and stom ach disorders' caused oraggravated by poor elimination. Money- back guarantee. If your druggist doesn't stock, send SI.25 for J-Ib. box. Crazy W ater Company, Mineral Wells, Texas. C R A Z Y sk^c r y s t a l s- - - - - - - - - - - - - THE DAVIE RECORD* MOCKSVILLE, N. C. u r s s s . , *vn-• No l-’oros. i »Vi |. OltPOK1 I-;..::o* :-v IMirili (iitilW'S I i' 5. > ■ ».io*' p.i-Ko •. I'.. : Mi.!I. Mo. |{v’. V....'.O. iM'X 7. Is. KTt'. h. M) •. C--I' '•>'H.i:- i .tr.iis. -31E N a ; in s: Im .M ir-.-iuN CO. M I.ANTA rlAl' i.ii i .Nrr • - p. I s i i t «»., INC. .S. \i . ■ I. Oils.i.l-lHTi,;.:. Cor- ..vps. Mirmin5- i..S: iA-.VK'US : .otter nd filkcr i ’ro Ju cts, is iM T-: :i.«ve : v : .Iect • I- ’ATite frid g e H all. O ak S . . ..bout s : rids. ■C\ C. Hrousli, liiladt'l|ihi:i. Ca. o o :? 7 F t. vr. bi»c each, , SA L P.n. A lva. c~ c:«.-.:vored by I .. Florida, f.:ok load. P . 0 . & E o rip . Cf. ■< :1a from _ J CO. A A AI. Crosse?-, h e av y ■ l>. F.O .B . S u p e r Is, G en e ra l D e- In Values the Ads luBLE? IGetRESULTS pTi skir.W hftIhftF S-t:u.s or to work IHttinit Cl- |m azir.^ results infectior*'. <n- S' ailnvrits ,0. lnipotigo, r.in^worm. OUti-I.--. iiilc-s TI E R - verful but BioIftSile. , stainir.^ Docto:-.-: and i and ree l's'! it «>n anv • body except I potent SftTmi- ■ sjvailabb.- onlv '* .i' you on di- Sond Si Jor K ah b -ri)ftrf; .Sarru-sota. DL IiJ—50 P ' i i FROM TlSm? BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET An Old St. Christopher Medal And a Bashed-in Pullman Car -By BILLY ROSE- Ordinarily, knowing w hat editors expect of me, I don’t devote much space in this column to stories of faith, devotion and other such unhep subjects. However, I bumped into a yarn the other night that did nice things to my spine, and here ‘tis, even though it’s as corny as a chorus of “Hearts and Flowers. . . .” Some years ago, a dancer named Jean Armstrong (note to Ed.—that's her square monicker and she’s given me permission to use it) came down with a ruptured appendix, and by the time they got her to the hospital, peritonitis had set in and the doctors didn’t give her much chance. The following day, the nurse of rosary Billy Bose handed her a string beads. “A little girl tried to get In to see you this morning,” she said. “Her name was Sylvia, a n d she said her moth er was a friend of yours. When I told her you couldn’t be disturbed, she asked me to give you this. It has a St. Christopher medal on it, and the kid thought it might bring you luck.” The dancer wasn’t a Catholic, but she was touched by the present anyhow. A n d six weeks later, thanks to faith or the new sulfa drugs, she was out of the hospital. ft * ft FROM THEN ON, she kept the rosary in her make-up box, but a couple of years later, after a suc cession of cheap variety houses and even cheaper hotels, the beads no longer seemed very important. And one day, when one of the girls in her vaudeville unit asked about the St. Christopher medal, Jean said, “It’s nothing at all. Just a piece of old junk. I don’t know why I keep on carrying it." That Sunday, when the troupe checked into a Baltimore hotel, Jean put the make-up case on top of her valise end signed the regis ter, but when she reached for her luggage the case was gone. She.., notified the desk and, when that didrdt produce residts, reported the loss to the police. But when the unit pulled out of Baltimore on Saturday night, neither case nor beads had been found. In Pittsburgh the next week, the show got bad notices and folded, and as if that weren’t enough, the manager skipped with the salaries. A few days later, down to her last three bucks, Jean considered her self plenty lucky when a local- agent offered her a job in a Miami night club. She was given a ticket—car 16, berth No. I—on the 7:22 out of Pittsburgh. At 7 o’clock the dancer left the hotel, but a couple of blocks from the depot she noticed something on the sidewalk and picked it up. It was a string of rosary beads and, attached to it, a medallion of St. Christopher.... JEAN DIDN’T KNOW then, and she doesn’t know now, whether it was the same rosary. She did know, however, that it looked exactly like the one the little girl had sent her, except for one thing —the chain had been broken. As she continued onto the station, she got to thinking of the beads—how sick she had been when she first got them, and how her troupe had been stranded when she had re ferred to the medallion as a piece of old junk. And suddenly it seemed LStfmpathiiY- GRACE NOLL CROWELL IF Jesus had not walked the earth, Footsore and weary, long ago, Oh, I might be so very tired, And even He could scarcely know Rie depths of my discouragement, Or juft how tired I might grow. IfJesus had not suffered much, And borne the greatest agony, I might have more than I could bear Of pain, and He could scarcely see How great would be my suffering Or what that pain would mean to me.1 But oh, my Jesus understands, And looks in loving sympathy; "Like as a father pitieth His child,” ’tis thus He pities me, And I am glad dm Jesus knows When I am walking wearily. important to get the chain fixed. Vp the street there was a com bination hock shop-fewelry store and, forgetting the 7:22, she walked in. The jeweler worked as fast as he could, but when be handed the rosary back to her the clock said 7:30, and the dancer knew she was out of a job again. With less than a dollar in her purse, she went back to the hotel, and a few minutes later the phone The Fiction FIVE HOURS DEAD By Richard H. Wilkinson Corner OBADIAH LITTLE was dead. There were plenty who would be glad to hear that news. There were a great majority of others who didn’t care a rap. Obadiah was a mean old man who lived alone on a farm 10 miles west of Fairview. Everyone hated _____________ him because he3„. drove a sharp • MiniItG bargain and fore- Fiction closed mortgages _____ on the minute. That w a s the situation that confronted Owen and me when we drove up to investi gate. Preliminary investigation re vealed the following facts: Obad- iah had been killed by a rock thrown through a window near which he was sitting, reading. We knew he had been sitting there reading because Moses Morris, a neighbor had passed by in the early evening and noticed the light in Obadiahs wmdow. and noticed Obadiah sitting beside it. Moses had gone up the road looking for a cow that had strayed. He found the cow and started back and no ticed that Obadiah had shifted his position. Something about the way the old man looked aroused Moses’ curiosity, and he went up close and saw blood on Obadiah’s temple. Moses went on home and called the police. We corroborated this by talking to neighbors who had heard Moses calling the cow. and by discovering footprints and hoofprints outside the window, and by the fact that HO b I \LS Obadiah was a mean old man ■ . . everbody hated him. Oscar Jones, another neighbor, had come by while Moses was looking in the wmdow. So we discounted Moses as a possible suspect, and went to work on the others who had hated Oba- diah. There was. for example, Roscoe Norbert, who lived a mile away, and who had been helping Obadiah with his hayiiig. A neigh bor had heard Obadiah and Roscoe quarreling over wages that very day. SO WE CALLED at Roscoe’s house, and struck a snag. Roscoe hadn’t been home all night. That looked bad, or good, depend ing on what side of the fence you were on. I sent Owen to hunt up Roscoe, and returned to Obadiah’s farm. Quite a crowd had gathered out side. Lights from automobiles illu minated the house and grounds. Among the cars I noticed Doc Orion’s little coupe. He was inside, and had already begun his investigation. “How’s it look?” I asked him. “Let you know in about an hour.” He glanced up and returned to his work. I scowled. Doc was usually more confident. I went back into the bedroom. Doc was stuffing things back into his bag. “Been dead about five hours,” he said. ’ “How?” “Some blunt instrument.” “The rock, eh?” “Could have been.” Just then Owen came in. He had a tall, rawboned individual with him. “This is Roscoe,” he said. Owen came in again with Moses. Moses looked important. “Moses,” I said, “you’re a first class liar. You murdered Obadiah!” Moses’ jaw went slack. “How do you figure that, Shurruf?” “Easy as pie,” I said. “You started out after your cow and stopped by to talk to Obadiah— about renewing a mortgage, per haps, or something else. Anyway, you got mad and slugged him with the stove poker. Then you propped him up by the window, lighted the lam p and put the book in his hand. “Then you went outside and heaved a rock through the window. Later, when you came back with your cow you saw that Obadiah had slumped, and you went up to look, which is when Oscar Jones came by.” There was, of course, blood on the poker to prove that part of it, but it was what the doc said that gave me the real lead. Dead five hours. Well, five hours ago the sun was shining, and a mean old man like Obadiah wouldn’t bum oil when the sun was out. CROSSWORD PUZlLE LAST WEEKS ANSWER 16. ACROSS !.Exhibition 6. River (Belg.) 9. Parasitic insects10. Seaweed11. Employed for wages 12. Skins 14. Partof “to be” 15. Skip, as a stone, on water 17. Prepare for 11. publication 13. 18. Custom 20. Doze 22. Greek letter 23. Stringed musical instrument 25. A native of Ionia28. A native ofIran 30. Away 32. Hit (slang 35. Measure (Chin.) 36. Spread grass to dry 38. Constellation 39. Southwest wind 42. Property (Law) 44. Part of “to be" 45. Per. to the sun 47. Kind of cap . 49. Ceremony 50. Another name for Persia Spar Serve DOWN Unsub stantial Breeze FVosted Fortifi cation Chart Toward the lee Matured Salt marsh Draw Stupefy One who paints 19. Goddess of discord: (Gr.) 21. Hawaiian food 24. Before 26. Seize 27. Amazon cetacean . 29.Insect30. Expression of sorrow 31. Having two forms 33. An intimate 34. Quick 37. Left-hand sldeofa ledger tJQQQ BDQQ QQQQ QQQQ □□Q B E QDQDD □P O QaQQDQ QDQQDQQ QQ QQQ QElQQ QQPDQ QQQQQ QQQQ QDQ PQ QBPQPBC QPQBQQ PQQ QQQDQ BQDPQ QBDQ QQPQ QDBQ QQQP 40. 41. 43. Pen-name of CharlesLamb Rodents Withered (poet) Soakflax Flowed N o. 44 W /, I I 3 4 W / S s 7 8 vS t 9 Wet I* WitU W ■2 Ift 14 W/t I* Ift % »7 IN 19 Ze 21 Wa Z2 ZS 24 vS ZS 2ft 27 W 20 29 i %5»Si 02 33 34 SB ...% U Jt Wa 38 39 4»41 42 41 %44 4S 4ft I 47 48 I 49 I 5® WI6«I it"I rang. It was the stage manager ol “The Student Prince” which, for the umpteenth time, was playing the Nixon theater. “Heard your troup was stranded,” he said. “One of our dancers is getting married tomorrow, and if you want to fill in for a few weeks—” And now for as corny a finish as ever found its way into a so-called hep column. When Jean picked up a newspaper the next morning, she read that the 7:22 out of Pittsburgh had been side-swiped by a freight car. It wasn’t much of a wreck— nobody had been hurt because the two berths which were bashed in happened to be empty. One of them, of course, was berth No. I, car 16. moE-CSCRE By INEZ GERHARD DERRY KROEGER, typed on a “ recent Hollywood trip as a young Charles Laughton, is currently heard as “Sam Williams” on “Young Dr. Malone.” He got his first radio contract when the nar rator of Louella Parsons’ show col lapsed in the middle of his imper sonation of Ronald Coleman, back 8 * BERRY KROEGER in 1940. Berry picked up the script and carried on. He had broken into radio in 1930, when versatility was a “must” ; in one local half-hour show he had carried 11 parts, for which he received $2.50! When Charles Laughton was be ing interviewed at luncheon in New York’s Algonquin the other day, complete silence reigned at neigh boring tables; his voice was so beautiful that everybody within range wanted to listen to it. “Stromboli,” which quickly leaped from first to second-run movie houses, is getting bad word- of-mouth publicity. People report that it just seemed so dull and tire some that they walked out before the picture was half over. Walt Disney discovered while doing research for his “Cinder ella” that the famous glass slipper wasn’t glass at all, bnt fur. Charles Perrault, when he wrote the famous story more than 300 years ago, said the slipper was “pantouffle en vair” (fur slipper). The trans lator mistook the last two words for “en verre,” or glass. So there goes another legend! Debbie Reynolds made her screen debut in W arners’ “The Daughter of Rosie O’Grady” re cently, did “Three Little Words” at M-G-M with Fred Astaire and Vera - Ellen, and now has been signed by that studio to a term contract. Next she’ll do “The Ten der Hours.” Debby is top Girl Scout of her district, has 42 merit badges, including one for cooking and one for baking. Tailored Charm for Summer Wear T Crisp Shirtwaister 1OP favorite in every summer wardrobe—the crisply tailored shirtwaister that’s so versatile. This one has comfortable yoke and sleeves in- one, two handy pockets, a neatly tied bow. * * * Pattern No. 8564 is a sew-rite perforated pattern for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20: 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16, 4 yards of 30-inch * • * Send today for your copy of the sprins and summer FASHION. 48 pages m smart, easy to sew styles; special fabric news: decorating hints: free patterrprinted inside the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 Sonth Wells St., Chicago 7, IN. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Patfem No..........................Size.............. Name ......................................... Address ...................................................... a s tm M m s s /M /tz n ISEaiiKa 'TM TIRED—ALL RUN DOWN1* I7Vn Help your liver activity with aa " L t— Qjd time product—improved by years of research and experience. Try ft NICELY BRANCHED AZALEAS 15c Each Please mail me the following giants: Pride of Mobile (watermelon) Formosa (purple) Please mall me the following dwarfs: Snow (white) Hinodegirl (red) Salmon Beauty I enclose remittance for plants plus 50c to cover cost of handling. NAME _______________________ ADDRESS We Pay Postage and Guarantee Satisfaction SPANISH FORT NURSERY, DAPHNE, ALA. Hadacol Is Praised At Famous Spa HADACOL HAS SPECIAL OFFICE IN HOT SPRINGS TO HELP SUFFERERS M RS. JEN N IE WEBB I Hot Springs National Park, Ark.— E (Special)-Health is a major topic of conversation in this world famous C Spa and more and more conversation ' turns to the marvelous, health-giv- i Ing blessings being brought to so [many by HADACOL. Realizing the importance of Hot !Springs as a health center, Dudley 11. LeBlanc1 Founder and President I of LeBlanc Corporation, makers of I HADACOL, established an office in ' Hot Springs to advise suffering folks on how HADACOL can benefit their systems with its wealth of B Vitamins and important Minerals.In this HADACOL office in Hot Springs are records of folks who have found improved health in a bottle of HADACOL. That is one reason why per capita sales of HADACOL in Hot Springs are among the highest in the country. Take for instance Mrs. Jennie Webb, who shares a new home at 237 Cones Road in Hot Springs with her daughter and son-in-law. Mrs. Webb has a host of friends throughout Arkansas who were thrilled to know that HADACOL helped her in a wonderful recovery after several years of illness. Here is Mrs. Webb’s statement: ’I started taking HADACOL in the early fall, buying two of the econ- omy-size bottles of HADACOL. I had been feeling weak and rundown (or several years. I suffered the horrors of gastric disturbances and Indigestion. I had to be very careful in the selection of food that would agree with me. I had tried so many remedies without beneficial results and had just about given up hopes of feeling well again. Friends urged me to try HADACOL. I have never regretted their advice because I have felt better than at any time in years. I digest food better and do not have indigestion. I have more energy.” Mrs. Webb was suffering a deficiency of B vitamins and impor tant Minerals, which HADACOL contains.. A lack of only a small amount of B Vitamins and certain Minerals will cause digestive disturbances. . . •Your food will not agree with you. . .. You will have an upset stomach. . . . You will suffer from heart bums, gas pains, and your food will sour on your stomach, and you will not be able to eat the things you like for fear of being in misery afterwards. Many people also suffer from' eon-'1 stipation. And while these symptoms' may be the results of other, causes," ' they are surely and certainly the- symptoms and signs of the lack of the B Vitamins and Minerals contained in HADACOL. And if you suf fer from such disorder, there is no medicine, drug or treatment that ’ will cure you except the administra- ” - tion of Vitamins and Minerals which -, your system lacks. HADACOL contains not only one, . but five of the B Vitamins. HADACOL contains not only one, but four of the necessary Minerals. It comes to you in liquid form, easily assimi lated in the blood stream so that it can go to work right away. You can not be satisfied with just temporary . relief. HADACOL attacks and. cures the source of such deficiency, diseases. It is easy to understand, therefore; why countless thousands have already been benefited by this amazing tonic, HADACOL. Accept no.* substitute—insist on the genuine.; HADACOL! So, it matters not who you are. . . . it matters not where you live ..,. or_.. if you have tried all the medicines”' under the sun, give this wonderful'' preparation a trial. Don’t go on SUf-: - < fering! Don’t continue to lead-a miserable life. Many persons who. have suffered and waited for 10 to , 20 years, or even longer, are able . now to live happy, comfortable lives again because HADACOL sup^. ' plied the Vitamins and Minerals', wbich their systems needed. Be fair -' to yourself. Give HADACOL a trial. • - We are so firm in our belief that HADACOL will help you that we sell HADACOL on a money-back guarantee. If you don’t feel perfect- ■ Iy satisfied after using HADACOL,. as directed, just return the empty' carton and your money will be cheer-" fully refunded. Nothing coiild be' fairer.Sold at all the leading drug stores. Trial size only $1.25, but save money—buy the large family and hospital size—only $3.50.If your druggist does not have HADACOL, order direct from The LeBlanc Corporation, Lafayette, Louisiana. Senti no money. Just your name and address on a penny .pbst-.. card. Pay postman. State whether’..; you want the $3.50 hospital economy size or the $1.25 trial size. Remem ber, money cheerfully refunded un less you are 100% satisfied.—Adv. PAGE EIGHT THE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE N.C. APRIL 5 1950 J D a B a r B t r D o l l a r - - you cant beat a P U M T I A C ! ATTENTION FARM ERS! POULTRY LOADING We Will Buy Every Thursday Morning From 8 A. M., To 11 A. M. In Front Of E. P. Fosters Cotton Gin Your Poultry highest market prices paid SALISBURY POULTRY CO. Salisbnry. N. C / Chieftain De Luxe 4’Door, Six-Cylinder Sedan (,including white sidewall tires and bumper wing guards)* A U t h a t ’s G o o d a n d P e s fr a h le in a F in e C a r ! It’s no w onder people agree so easily with the idea that dollar for dollar, you can't beat a Pontiac! Pontiac is the lowest-priced Straight Eight in America. Pontiac is the low est-priced car offering the wonderful convenience of GM Hydra- M atic Drive. Pontiac is famous the w orld over for its record on the road of real economy and long life. And certainly not the least of Pontiac’s virtues is its outstanding beauty—Pontiac is certainly the m ost beautiful thing on wheels! Come in, see how much your new-car dollars can buy! cJleflaln Oosinets c c ' J m h n er Sed a n Ce e p e ' * ’ J ehalnse^ n Ccupe • ’ J !eh°i„ 2-D oor Sedan . ‘ ' • ' reo m Hoer 4-D oor S -a ’ ’ ‘ c h ie ^ o O-Ooor Z dZ d an r $1*67 $1,769 $1,790 $1,790 $1,820 $1,841*CMeffo/n De "Sedan S ta te •o u t to ca t Z * * ‘ * a n im ^ 7 t arrma^ f f s & s- differentials. tran^Portatir $1,972 Mer engine, n ar*y model IRVlN & CORNATZER PONTIAC Wilkesboro Street Mocksvillet N. C. JVST JS CASE In his room at the state in stitution sat a man whose only article of clothing was a hat. "Look, friend," an attendant said, "that’s no way to be sit ting around. WTiy don’t you put some clothes on?” "Why should I?” replied the inmate “Nobody comes to see me.” “But why weat a hat?" "Oh,” shrugged the other, “somebody might come.” New9Type Spreader Hitch Saves Mmies Old Grey Mare As old grey mare has upset ani mal disease statistics by dying of blackleg, a disease horses aren’t supposed to catch. Blackley is a prevalent, deadly infection of cattle that also is known to affec! sheen and goats, and even swine occo sionally. But it is practical',- m . heard of in horses. The fata! ce.s- of blackleg in a mare was reco**;c-4 in the Journal of the American Vet erinary Medical associcfon. Lab oratory tests confirmed the diagnosis. Steel Pierced with Oil A practical method using oil to pierce holes in steel is under experi mentation. A column of oil is substituted for , the ordinary metal pouch. The col umn is struck hard at the top. The oil, confined in all directions and not compressible, is forced to punch through the steel sheet at the bot tom of the column and into the hol low area of the die placed under the sheet. The new method, it is --'aimed, would considerably re duce costs in various ways. Roof Cement Saves Fuel Root cement, a product of the paint industry which is used for repairing leaks and cracks in roofs of all descriptions, help3 to cut down fuel bills by increasing com bustion efficiency. This is possible because of its faculty for adhering to brick and mortar, remainin'® elastic and expanding or contract ing with the surface to which it is attached. It can also he applied to the brick and concrete settings of boilers, furnaces, kilns, oil slihs and all other heating equipment to prevent oil infiltration. __ Boger & Howard PURE SERVICE Tir-s Batteries AndAccessories Kurfees Paints Corner N. Main Si Gaither Sts, Phone 80 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiffrsifiiriinKnfiifa The Davie Record | Has Been Published Since 1899 I 50 Years I Others have come and gone-your county newspaper k e e p s going. ometimes it has seemed hard to make ‘'buckle and tongue” meet but soon the sun shines and again we march on. Our faithful su b sc rib e rs, most of whom pay promptly, give us courage and abiding faith in out- fellow man. If your neighbor is not taking The Record tell him to subscribe. The price is only $1.50 per year Tn the State, and $2 00 in other states. When You Come To Town Make Our Office Your Headquarters We Are Alwavs Giad To See You. G randm as old-fashioned hooks V eyes down the side of her dress provided gentle pressure to keep hips and waist from spreading where they shouldn’t—and generally, it was a "one- man job This same dependable m ethod of hooking and un hooking also performs a time, work and muscle-saving service tor the revolutionary new Ferguson M anure Spreader and Uiadar just announced by the local Ferguson Dealer. A similar hoo k ^n eye device hitches and unhitches the 5 „ reader hydraukcally by means of the Finger Tip C o n tO o f the FergusonTractor. The same control also hydraulically operates the Loader. One man with one tractor can do the entire loading and spreading job without leaving the tractor seat. DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALER' IN GOOD COAL Dav RhoTv* 191 • N iehtF honelld Vt K*K<viile. N. C Ot — I ♦ FOR RENT # SPACE IN THIS PAPER Will Arrange -To Suit GOOD NEIGHBORS—PIICES TO FIT >'OUR BUSINESS Walker Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Phone 48 MjcksviNe, N C SILER Funeral Home AND Flower Shop Phone 1*3 S. Main St Morksville, N. C. Ambulance Service COMPLETE MEND "What luck did you have?" •eked the first tramp, who had sent his apprentice up to the house, into which some new people had moved. The latter just shook his head. "Did you ask her for some food?” the first one persisted “Sure I did,” replied the sec ond, “but all she gave me was a cold shoulder, then she lashed out at me with a hot tongue and believe me, she didn’t mince any words.” ASK YOUR GREYHOUND AGENT ABOUT THRItUNG EXPENSE-PAID TOURS ALMOST ANYWHERE IN THE U. S. A., CANADA, MEXICO I! I Now is the time to a b- scribe for The Reord. READ THE AD$ Along With the News HUNTING fo r More BUSINESS T ry O ur Ads ftotice to Creditors H -vipii qu *liH?d or ArfroinifttfAtor of tit** eMau* ot I hos. W. Tutterow, Sr., Jo* Inteof Davie County. Nonh Caro*I hna. nonce ifl her*!" eiven to all pefftOflB ‘ hphnng claim* atfalnst the aaid estate. to I present them to the UnrfersitfOOd OQ Of be* 1. »9R|. «r thi* notice wirf b* . 'n hfit *>f rhwir re f very Ad per j M-p s I iieit wd to the **ii » estate are te ’ qp—.f.' I,, rpafce i rintM srttlrn ent. TbtK Jho. 25. 195«. ;THOS W. TliTTFFOW. Jt. \ Admr of Th *. W. Ttitternw. Sr Mockgville. N C., Route I. LET US DO YOUR yOB PRINTING We can save you money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc. Patronize your boir.e newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. THE DAVIE RECORD. nniniuiuum aat» THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE The Davie Record D A V IE 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 mHERE SHALL THE PP1?SS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BT INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BT GAIN ‘ V O LU M N L .M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W E D N E SD A Y , A P R IL 12 tqSo.N U M B ER 37 N E W S O F L O N G A G O . What Was Happening In Da vie Before Parking Meters And Abbreviated Skirts. (Davie Record, A pril n , 1934) JVC. Sanford made a business trip to A tlanta last week, Sullivan Booe1 of A sheville, was a business visitor here one dav last w eek. C. V. Miller spent a few davs Irst week in C harlotte w ith his son, G radv M i'ler. Mrs. V . E . Swaim and M rs, B. I . Sm ith spent Friday in States ville w ith relatives and friends. O M r. and Mrs. H ouston Gibson, of K entuckv1 are v’siting relatives and friends in Davie for several days. John Brown and Miss K ate Brown spent E aster M onday with relatives and friends in Cooleemee, Cleveland and Salishury. Misses Rebecca B inkley and M ary W ard Stonestreet spent the. E aster holidays w ith relatives and friends in Thotnasville. Mrs. E . G. P ainter, of Leesbnre, V a11 spent several days in town last week w ith her brother, B. O. and E . H . M orris. Miss K athryn M eroney, who holds a position in Colnm hia, S. C., spent the week-end in town with her parents. Rev. and Mrs. W . H . Dodd, w ho spent the w inter at D eLand, F la., arrived home last week to the delight of their m any friends. M rs. Robert W ilson is recover ing from a severe attack of fln. H er daughter, Mrs. Tames M cIver1 of W inston-Salem , has been at her bedside. M r. and Mrs. C. F . H arbinson and little daughter R uth, of P o rtc- m outh, V a., spent several days last w aek in town the guests of Rev. and Mrs. E . J. H urbinson. Misses H elen F ay H olthonser and E m ily Rodwell returned to G reens boro Sundav to resum e their Studiec at N . C. C. W .. after spending ter days here w ith their oarents. T he editor and daughter, Miss L ou’se, soent Saturday in N orth W iIkesboro w ith relatives, and also attended the Republican Tndipial Convention held at W iIkeshoro on S aturday afternoon. Miss Sailie H anes weut to D ur ham Suudav to visit her brother, J. F H anes, who is a patient at Duke H ospital. M r H anesunderw enta knee operation T hursday. AU wish for him a speedy recovery. Rev. and Mrs. W . I How ell, M esdames E L. G aither and T . B. Bailev SDent W ednesday at E lkin w ith Miss Sallie Kelly, who is in her 90th year. She is enjoying ex cellent health dispife her advanced age. She is a form er resident of this c ity ., M r. and Mrs. Ralph M orris and little daughter Janice, of K nox ville, T enn , spent several days in tow n last week T hey were called T uesday to the bedside of Mr. M orris’ m other, Mrs. Ben M orris, who passed away W ednesday af ternoon. J. W esley Cook, prom inent far m er of the Cooleemee section, has been appointed farm supervisor for Davie county, and has entered up on his new duties. M r, Cook has supervision of the farm rehabilita tion m ovem ent, and will be in di rect contact w ith farm ers and ten ants during the com ing year. E . G. H endricks has r. oved his stock of general m erchandise to the A nderson building, next door to T1 F . H endrix store. T his is one of the best locations in M ocksville. W e wish G rover m uch success in his new location. L E . Sloan, of Forest C ity, was in tow n one day last week shaking hands w ith old frisnns. H e is in the oil business. Those Who Are Never Famous R<-v. Walter E. Isenhour. High PointAt 4. O f all the m en and women whose nam es go down on history’s pagas as noble, great and fam ous, I have m y firtt atheist and infidel yet to find am ong the nnm ber. It is true th at Robert Iugersoil, who was an atheist, was quite an orator, an at tracted large audiences to hear him speak on his atheistic views, but who has ever yet arisen and called him great, noble and sublim e? H e never set exam ples nor wielded an Influence that made him famous. I have never heard of parents nam ing their sons after Ingersoll. N oble m en, good m en. great m en, honorable men, fam ous m en have nam esakes. N ot so w ith atheists and infidels. Som e of them mav be highly educated, and m ay be well versed In language, and m ay w rite books, but their volum es, or w ritings, never the great and sub lime classics to he read and adm ir ed, accepted and lived by across the decades and centuries. N o woman who were atheists and infidels have ever graced homes, graced com m unities, graced na tions. nor graced the world. T he great hooks, poems, fam ous songs and SDarbling gem s of literature th at has helped to bless the world certainly were not w ritten bv men and women who rejected the Bible and denied the existence of a true and living God. M any of them have w ritten som ething, we have no doubt, but it has gone into ob livion, or the most of it has; but if even a part of it is yet read by a few people, it never uplifts them in m ind, heart, soul and iife. It hinders them from rising and clim bing to heights sublim e, and to honor and fame, especially if’ they follow the sam e atheistic vi-w s and beliefs of such w riters. N ever think it is great to be an atheist or infidel. N erer think it shows intelligence. N ever think your nam e will go down on his tory's pagns as being a safe and noble character to follow. A the ists aud infidels never m ake a m ark >hat lives after them to bless the lives and hom es of m inkind. They never banish clouds and gloom and bring in sunshine If David had been an atheist the wonderful tw enty-thud Psalm would never have been w ritteu. If M ary, the m other of our blessed L ord, had nean an atheist she never would have given a Savior to the world. A theists and infidels are never trulv, nebly fam ous. The Brannan Plan C ongratnlalions to the N orth Carolina Farm Bureau on its de isiou to oppose adoption of tbe Braunan plan. T he action was most decisive. T here were 328 delegates at tbe Raleigh m eeting who opposed the olan; thsre were 11 who favored it. S aidtheresoluton in pari; F arm ers are entitled to receive fair orices in the m arket place T here is no reason why tbe G overnm ent shonld pay part of tbe grocery biil of every citizens. T be great bulk of our people in Am erica are able and we believe willing Io buy agricul tural products at prices w hich will reflect fair m arket prices to tbe farm ers. W e therefore reiterate our faith in and dem and the con tinuation of the fair exchange con cept of parity, w hich has been the basis for farm program s since 1933. W e will continue to oppose aggres sively the Brannan Plan or any other plan that discards this tunda m ental principle and seeks to put farm ers at the m erev of G overn m ent doles or handouts,” T hem ’s harsh words, if ’w on'll pardon the expression but we glo ry in the spunk of Farm Bureau m em bers in giving voice to rhis sentim ent, . W e’re glad to ee one group of Am erican citizens come out vigorously in oppositson of “ G overnm ent do'esaud handonts. ” W e’d like to see otber groups take the sam e course of action.—T he S tate. Mstiy Well Known Rivers Claim More Than One Name Rivers have aliases, too, New Yorkers remind the world, in plan ning to tap the Hudson and create “North river punch” to m eet future w ater emergencies. North river persists as the Gotha- ! m ites’ name for the part of the I Hudson they live beside. It dates i from colonial times, when it dis- 1 tinguished the Hudson estuary from that of the Delaware, then known as the South river. It takes three nam es to label the m ain stream of North Am erica’s second greatest river system . Melt ing snows from the Columbia ice field feed the Athabaska river, flowing 750 miles northward through Canada to Athabaska lake. From there it becomes the Slave river for 220 miles to Great Slave lake, and then the Mackenzie for its long, cold, final tour to the Arctic ocean. W aters tilted eastw ard from this sam e ice field on the Continental di vide feed the Saskatchewan river. Half way along its 1.700-mile east w ard course to Hudson bay, the stream drops its Indian nam e in big Lake Winnipeg, from which it continues as the Nelson river. Not far south of the Columbia ice field, the Missouri begins its long m eander to the Gulf of Mexi co. Because early explorers of America moved from east to west they named the Mississippi river before recognizing the chief tribu tary of the continent’s No. I river system. Consequently, two nam es -M ississippi-M issouri — m ust be bracketed in referring to the sys tem now. The sam e thing happened to Aus tralia’s principal river system , the M urray - Darling. E arly settlers . nam ed the M urray, flowing from \ near Melbourne to the sea near Adelaide. The nam e Darling was later given to the system ’s far longer, inland branch. It also hap pened in Russia, where Cossacks approached and explored the Ye nisei from the west. L ater discov erers observed tlie greater length and volume of its Angara-Selenga tributary. CROWDED Young m an: “I’d m arry tomor row if I could only find a house to live in.” Friend: “Why don’t you move in with her parents?” Y. M.: "Can’t. They're living with their parents.” ONE SOLUTION “Having a good tim e?” “Oh ye3; her fiance, a young medical officer in Germany, is coming here to m arry her next month.” “Well, she certainly seems to have solved the problem of what to do till the doctor com es!” Such Snobs “Yes,” said the boastful young m an, “my family can trace its an cestry back to William the Con queror.” “I suppose,” rem arked his fnend “you’ll be telling us that your an cestors were in the Ark with Noah?” “Certainly not,” said the othei “My people had a boat of their Largest Mummy Cloth Covers Pre-Incan Peruvian Mummy Archaeologists found a 3000-year- old pre-Incan Peruvian mummy still well dressed when they ex amined it recently at the American museum of natural history. The mum my was covered by a sheet of cotton cloth 87 feet long, 11 feet 3 inches wide. This is the largest such wrapping ever found. Scientists compared it with the size of an ancient mummy winding 47 feet long, which is now in H arvard university’s Peabody museum. Two-thirds of the cotton fabric was found to be in a well-preserved state, despite the fact that no evi dence of preserving solutions' was discovered. The fabric was m ade of both white and brown cotton. The mumm y cloth will be ex amined by Scientists in relation to the long lasting quantities of modern cotton fabrics. “This wrapping sets a world rec ord for a fabric from a non-me chanical loom.” Junius Bird, asso ciate curator of archaeology at the m useum, said. “But it probably never served any norm al useful purpose. Just special for a m um m y.” Symptoms Contagious “Did the patent medicine you purchased cure your aunt?” "M ercy, no. On reading the cir cular that was wrapped around the bottle she got two more diseases.’ SURPRISE! A pastor in Paris received a package from, his nephew in Amer ica. It contained a very plain tie, suitable for one of his calling. He wore it one evening when he called upon a very orthodox family. In the middle of a deep philosophical discussion, the light suddenly went out. It was pitch black except for the pastor’s “plain” tie on which gleamed the request. “Kiss m e.” Future of Electronics Electronic developments in the next 50 years will probably include computing and memory tubes to perform many complex calculations infinitely faster than the hum an mind, electronically controlled I m anufacturing plants with greater i productivity and resulting benefit i to ’ m anagem ent and labor; new tubes to probe the m ysteries of in- ! terstellar space; direct generation of visible light; and a wide variety of new applications of radio fre quency heating equipment in in dustry resulting in greater pro duction at low cost. CORRECT! Young Wallace was an inquisi tive child and had been bar raging his father with questions “P apa,” he was asking, “is it true that Edison made the first talking m achine?” “No,” sighed the father, “God made the first one. but Edison m ade the first one that couic' be shut off.” Perm ission Granted A farm er on his first visit to New York cam e out of the Grand Central station into the confusion of Forty-second street, and after standing somewhat bewildered for a few m inutes walked over to a traffic officer and said, “Mister. I want to go to Central P ark.” “All right,” said the officer. “You can go this tim e, but don’t you ever, ever ask me again ” Duplicate Airplane Crashes Air force volunteers, riding in a rocket-propelled sled, are now duplicating airplane crashes in an effort to provide greater flying safety. The experim ents are be ing conducted at Edwards air force base, Muroe, California. Test con ducted with the strange device, known as an air crew decelerator, already have riven aeromedical science a heretofore unobtainable “stress analysis” of the human body—providing accurate data on just how much of the terrific de- celerative force encountered in a crash the human body can with stand. Car Crashing Pew or T oh Brings About ‘Dark B ciir s’ RADFORD, V A .-1Thrve were dark doings in Radford; A fire burned a wall m the fire departm ent. Officials of the Firih Sr Mer chants Bank had to gc! a s’r.eri- term loan from the People's Bank of Radford so they could begin operations. Three textile plants couldn’t work on their textiles. The Radford News Journal de cided to forego its regular Satur day edition, then reconsidered and published an abbreviated edition late in the afternoon. The whole trouble was caused by a car crashing into a power pole and snapping it off. Woman S p lit's 60 IlGisrs Trapped in Midget Tub COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA.— Mrs. M arie Turnquist is phil osophical about having had to spend 60 hours trapped in a midget neighbor’s m idget bathtub. Hgr hands were raw and blistered from efforts to free herself from the tub, but after examination by a physician, she was pronounced in surprisingly good condition. Mrs. Turnquist was - occupying the home of a friend, Mrs. Inez Bergant, a m idget whose home is widely known for its doll-sized fur nishings. Mrs. Bergant was winter ing in Flcrida. Mrs. Turnauist, whose family call her “pleasingly plump,” got into the bathtub—36 inches long, 19 inches deep, and 19 inches wide. She was held fast for 60 hours until neighbors who had missed her broke into the house. They had not heard her’cries for help, but wondered why she had not answered the telephone. “I just kept praying to get out,” Mrs. Turnquist said. “I said, ‘Lord, why don’t you answer? You have always answered my prayers be fore.’ “After a while I thought that was kind of bad, so I said, ‘Well, Lord, I didn’t ask you about getting into this little dinky tub, so why should you get me out?’ ” New Jersey Court Ruling Frees Movement of Dogs TRENTON, N. J. — Somewhere, possibly in dog heaven, “Cracker,” a foxhound, knows his death was not in vain. That is probably the case, because his death has m ade all New Jersey safe for all dogdom. In a unanimous decision, the state suprem e court ruled that a landowner has no right to kill a dog simply because it is trespass ing on his property. He can kill the trespassing ani m al, the court said, only if he has reason to believe it was “chasing, worrying, wounding or destroy ing livestock or domestic anim als, his person, his property or that of other persons.” . The court made the decision in upholding a $500 dam age award to Ralph Bunn, Long Valley sports man, whose hunting dog “Cracker” was shot to death Sept. 26, 1948, by the son of Mrs. Alma Shaw .Bart ley, sheep breeder. A lower court had ordered Mrs. Shaw to pay dam ages to Bunn. isotopes Are to Be Used On Oysters’ Eating Choice BEAUFORT, N. C.—Thq federal atomic energy commission and the fish and wildlife service are going to try to radio-activate oysters here. The AEC hopes to learn more from the__expcrimen.t than it did in the A-bomb tests at Bikini. The fish and wildlife service’s part in the project will be to de term ine what an oyster likes to eat. In a huge building used before the war as a Jiiologicel laboratory, the oysters will be fed artificially. Tiny amounts of radioactive chem ical substances from th e AEC’s isotope divis'on at Oak Ridge, Tenn., will 'oe shot into the tanks along with organisms which, scientists believe appeal to an’ oyster’s appetite. As the organisms gl ow, they ab sorb the isotopes and the oysters will be eating the “hot” food. Isotopes can be tra o d . Thus the food taken in by the oysters, digested and incorporated in their tissues, may be determ ined chem ically and by radiation m easure ment. Uncle Sum Savs /- '.V, H F My hat is off to the volunteer U. S. Savings Bonds County Chairmen and others who are still giving patriotic service to their country. Tear In and year out these volunteers are carrying the message of financial independence through U. S. Savings Bonds to every county in the nation. For 1950 their slogan is: “Save For Your Independ* ence.” They’ll show you how millions of Americans are securing THEIR future by purchasing U. S. Savings Bonds. V . S. Treasury Department i S e e n A lo n g M a in S tr e e t Bv Thp Street Rambler. OOOOOO Sheriff P aul F oster m eandering slow ly u p M ain street—G eorge H endricks selling cabbage plants —M rs. S. B. H all taking in m ovie show — Policem an L eon Beck m o toring aro u n d th e square— M rs. Tohn B aker purchasing assortm ent o f garden seeds— M rs. T avlor Bail- ev talking about having Au— M rs. C lyde Y oung loading packages in parked auto— M iss Jane D w iggins eating double-deck ice cream cone — M iss P auline D aniel opening com bination box in postoffice — M iss D oris C haffin hurrying across square, forgetting packages -M a c k K im brough w alking across M ain street m inus coat an d vest—M iss M ary M cG uire trying to locate carpenter to repair w ind-blow n fence—Jo h n n y N aylor getting set to eat afternoon ice cream —C ecil M orris and Jeff C audell in consul tation in fro n t o f D avie C afe— K erm it S m ith using big floor m op in Leslie’s M en’s Shop— M rs. I. T . AngelI looking over ladies w ear ing apparel in d ep artm en t store. Our County And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite. M anager. T w ice in every w orker's life his SeciaI Security A cco u n t is extre m ely im portant. W h en a w orker reaches age 65. h e’s in line fo r re tirem ent paym ents; w h en h e dies, his fam ily m ay be entitled to death benefits—often am ounting to sev eral th o u san d dollars. I t is n o t only surprising b u t dis m aying to see h ow m any cases w e han d le every w eek involving lo st Social Security benefits. A w orker is laid off o r has quit after reach ing age 65, b u t fails to apply for his Social Security retirem ent. A n em ployee dies, an d th e fam ily know s n o th in g ab o u t th e Social S ecurity d eath benefits. In such cases every m o n th elapsing before a claim is filed m eans a lo st pay m en t fo r th a t w orker o r h is fam ily. W e urge w orkers w ho reach age 65 to visit th e Social Security O f fice even though they p lan to keep on w orking. W e like to review w ith th e em ployee ju st w h at h e m u st d o w hen h e does file his elaim later. O ften , too, a w orker w ould like to know approxim ate ly how m uch in Social S ecurity m onthly paym ents h e can co u n t on w hen h e does retire. T h ere is o n e p o in t I can n o t to o strongly em phasize, an d th a t is fo r every em ployee to advise his o r ■>er fam ily ab o u t th e Social Secur ity d eath benefits. W e have n o w ay o f know ing w hen an em ployee dies unless som eone n o ti fies us. Som e em ployers an d ,fu neral directors always n otify o u r office im m ediately o f deaths. W e feel sure th ere are deaths o f w hich w e never receive notice. T h a t is w hy I urge everyone— let y o u r fam ily k n o w w h at your Social Se curity A ccount m eans to th em . T h e Social S ecurity O ffice in W inston-S alem is located a t 437 N issen B uilding. O ffice h o u rs are from 9 a. m . to 5 p. m . M onday through Friday. I will be in M ocksville on W e d nesday, A pril 26th, a t th e co u rt house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m . I w ill also be in C ooleem ee o n th e sam e date a t th e E rw in C o tto n M ills office at 11 a. m . Trade Vlfith The Merchants Vlfho Advertise In The Davie Record THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N Smart, Two-Piece Frock Has Pencil-Slim Skirt \1-VIWM. Sm art as Can Be It WELL styled two piece truck. ^ that’s as sm art as can be. The unusual slanted closing is accented with large buttons, the skirt is pencil-slim and has a tiny slit in front. Pattern No. 8536 is a sew-rite perfo. rated pattern In sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. 20; 40 ana 42, Size 14, short sleeve, 4% yards of 39-inch. The spring and summer FASHION offers you a variety of smart, easy to sew styles for your summer wardrobe; special fabric news; decorating tips: free pattern printed inside the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEFT, 630 South Wells St.. Chicago 7, DL Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No........................Size............... Name .. Address L ANY SIZE (0 Of 8) EXP. hOU PIlM ' OIVEIOPEO. I HOBBY PUNTS (*v»ry gn cnlargtrntnt}HonJv .Vatfinp Enrrhptt Yutnislnt I'd IuaMt Prrmiumi Ciren GET GETTER PICTURES FOR IESt J 1ACM R A B S iT CO.= S P A . M T A A/B U ltS S .C . WHEN SLEEP WON’T COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Try This Delicious Chewing-Gum Laxative • When you red and toss all night—feelheadachy and just awful because you need a laxative—do this...Cbew FEEN-a-mint—delicious chewing* gum laxative. The action of Feen-A-Mimt1B special medicine "detours” the stomach. That is, It doesn't act while In the stomach, but only when farther along In the lower digestive tract... where you want It to act. 7ou feel fine again quickly I And scientists say chewing makes veen-a-mint’s fine medicine more effec tive—“readies" it 6 0 it flows gently Into the system-Get feem-a-mdtt at any I Aa drug counter—25^, SOf or only.... I U t FiiN-A-MINTFAMOUS CHEWING-GUM LftXATIVE D O U B LE F ILT E R E D I b,g ja r iotl FOR EXTRAf QUALITY •PURITY M O R O L IN E 7 DAYS W IL L D O IT I TES1 in just 7 days.... in one short week... a group of people who changed from their old dentifrices to CaIox Tooth Powder aver, aged 38% brighter teeth by scientific test. Why not change to Calox yourself? Buy Calox today. . . so your (eeth can start looking brighter tomorrow! C A L O X T O O T H P O W D E R McKesson Robbins Jn&, Bridgeport) Cona *■* ■ icv ★ ; rk’J , HOVSiHPiPMEMOS* 0 * ■> Y. Serve M ain Dish Salads for Variety (See Recipe Below) Vary Menus TF THE WEATHEK turns unsea s o n a b ly warm and you wonder with what food the family can be tem pted, why not try a m ain dish salad? If you’re going to have the wom en’s dub for lunch, why not m ake work easy for yourself, simply by preparing a molded salad that needs only garnishes a n d serving a t the last minute? It’s easy to m ake salads look tem pting because of their fresh, jewel-like colors and crisp touches. • * • O IN CE the following salads all ^ contain fish, m eat or cheese they can readily serve as a main dish ' on one of those days when you need variety in your m eal plans. Tuna-VegetabIe Salad (Serves 6) I tablespoon gelatin Vi cup cold w ater 1 cup boiling w ater 2 cups shredded tuna fish 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 tablespoons chopped pickle H cup peas 1 teaspoon, onion juice Dissolve gelatin in cold w ater; add boiling w ater, m ix thoroughly and allow to cool. Mix tuna fish, lemon juice and pickle and let stand until gelatin thickens. Then add tuna m ixture to it with peas and onion juice. Pour into a wet mold and let chill until firm . Herring Salad (Serves 12) 3 salt herring 2 medium sized apples 5 cups minced, cooked beets V3 cup minced onion Vs cup chopped dill pickle V3 teaspoon salt V3 cup French dressing 3 hard-cooked eggs Soak herring m cold water for one hour. Remove skin and bones; cut into very small pieces. Pare apples and cut fine. Toss all ingredients ex cept eggs to gether and chill for two hours. Serve on large platter garnished with chopped egg whites, sprinkled with egg yolks put through a sieve. *Spiced Salmon Mold (Serves 4-6) 1 pound canned salmon 2 packages lemon • fla vored gelatin IV3 cups boiling w ater H cup cold w ater Ve cup lemon juice 3 tablespoons vinegar Ve cup cbili sauce I cup chopped celery Arrange half of flaked salmon in 'bottom of loaf pan. Dissolve gela tin in boiling water. Mix well.’ Add half of the gelatin m ixture to the chili sauce. Add cold water, lemon juice, vinegar and salt to rem ain ing gelatin mixture. Pour half of the m ixture over salmon flakes in pan. Chill until congealed. Add LVNN SAYS: Add Color to Menus To Tempt Appetites Pot roast takes on a richer color if you use diluted cranberry jelly as the liquid for cooking. It adds a novel, tart flavor, too. • Dried beef can be heated in bar becue sauce, then served over split buns which have been spread with cheese and broiled. Slices or shreds of ham mixed in with potatoes au gratin will give you a colorful supper dish as well as a flavor pleasing one. LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU ♦Spiced Salmon Mold Hot Vegetable Broth Olives Mixed Pickles Pickled Pears Hot Parker House Rolls Chocolate Pudding Beverage •Recipe Given celery to chili sauce and pour over jellied salmon. Chill. Then add re maining salmon and rem aining gel atin m ixture. Chill until firm . Serve on a bed of shredded lettuce with garnish of lemon wedges, sweet pickles and olives. Pass, if desired, bread, butter and lettuce sandwiches. » * * WHEN YOU WANT something special for luncheon m ain dish, there’s nothing that will set file table off better than this tom a to red loaf: Tomato Jelly Ribbon Loaf (Serves 6) Tomato layer: 2 cups canned or fresh to matoes I teaspoon sugar I teaspoon pickling spice V3 teaspoon salt I stalk celery, diced I tablespoon plain gelatin I tablespoon lemon juice I tablespoon onion juice Ve cup water Combine tomatoes, sugar, pick ling spice, salt and celery. Sim m er for 10 min utes. Strain. Soften gelatin in cold w ater, then add to hot tomato m ixture and stir until dissolved. A d d lemon and onion juices. Cheese Layer 1 package cream cheese (3 ounces) V3 cup mayonnaise 2 drops tabasco sauce V3 teaspoon salt V3 teaspoon plain gelatin 2 tablespoons cold water Combine cream cheese, mayon naise and seasonings. Soften gela tin in cold water. Dissolve over hot w ater and add to cheese m ixture. Pour half of tomato m ixture into oiled loaf pan (7% by 3% inches). Chill until m ixture is firm . Add cheese m ixture. When this has al m ost set, add the rem ainder of the tomato m ixture. Serve sliced on lettuce or other greens. * * * T UNCHEON GUESTS wiU also "I* find lobster served as a salad a great favorite. The best of these salads require few ingredients other than the fish, and the seasonings are simple. Lobster Salad (Serves 6) 2 cups lobster m eat, freshly boiled or canned I cup French dressing V3 cup diced celery Ve cup diced green pepper V3 teaspoon salt Vt cup mayonnaise Break lobster m eat into chunks. M arinate in French dressing for one hour. Drain, and add rem ain ing ingredients. Mix lightly. Serve on lettuce, garnished with lemon slices. Use mashed potatoes put through the rosette end of the pastry tube as a garnish for the top of m eat loaf or a roast beef pie. H eat in the oven until the potatoes have a deUcate golden brown color. Dip single pork chops in milk, then in crushed cornflakes. Sprinkle with paprika while they are brown ing and add a bit of diluted catsup or tomato juice as a Uquid in the pan to give them lovely color. Try serving your next batch of chili over a bed of m acaroni to give it a novel look. N a tio n W ill P ro d u c e M o re 1G re e n P a s tu r e s ' Grass. Farm Mechanization More Vital in Later Years Prospects are evident that Ameri ca's farm lands wiU grow greener in the second half of the 20th cen tury. Outstanding in farm ing’s past SO years and bound to play vital parts in tlie years to come are the new importance of grass and the m echa nization of the farm . According to experts on the sub ject, grass is soon to rank as a prime contributor to the health and wealth of the United States. Farm ers who wiU turn to the use of grass as a real crop in itself, wiU find Scenes like this will be m ore common throughout rural America as farm ers turn to grass as a real crop. Here a field forage harvester, one of the newer developments In mechanized farm ing, chops and blows grass into a truck keeping pace with the tractor. that it prevents erosion, builds up the soil, improves the land for crops that are to follow and pro vides greater profit through m ore economical feed. Because they can now grow m ore grass with less work, farm ers are planting m ore and m ore acres in green pastures. They are using m ore grass as rotation and cover crops and tests have proved to them that grass in rotation with com and cotton vastly increases yields. The making of hay and grass si lage is the basis of grassland farm ing. This is a true product of the 20th century. Experim ents started about 25 years ago are just now get ting widespread acceptance as farm ers find that grass silage is second only to grazing in a good livestock program . H andy Device August Bruynell, proprietor of the Forest Hill poultry farm , North W eare, N. H „ has a handy device to carry feed and eggs when he works in his big laying house which houses 1,925 New Hampshire bred hens. Cultivator Needed In Control of Weeds Chemical sprays are not yet ready to replace the cultivator In controlling weeds, according to Dr. J. C. W illard, agronomist in the college of agriculture at Ohio Uni versity. “No chemicals so far available for use in crops will kill all weeds,” Dr. W illard said. “If we use chem icals without cultivation to remove the weeds left after spraying, it will be only a short tim e before we have fields which are as weedy as before, but the weeds will be different and of kinds harder to kill.” Introduction of new chemicals every year m akes spraying m ore of a specialist’s job, he pointed out, cautioning farm ers to beware of the fly-by-night operator. Sleeping Sickness Menace To Livestock Is Recounted Each sum m er and fall livestock owners are warned of the toll which m ay be taken of anim als by sleeping sickness. Losses from this disease showed a startling increase in 1947 and 1948, and figures for the past year are expected to show but little decline when finally com piled. The virus of the disease may have “wintered over” with m ore virulence and in m ore places. I ASH Mi i T I A General Quiz ANOTHiH The Questions 1. Who first m ade trousers pop ular for women? 2. W hat is the m eaning of sedi tion? 3. When and why was the Mex ican W ar fought? 4. On w hat parts of his body • does a dog perspire? 5. W hat is the principal job of a co-pilot on a bomber? 6. Who was the first United States President to be born a citizen of the United States? 7. Which is higher the E m pire State Building or the G reat Pyra m id of Egypt? 8. Which weighs heavier, gold or platinum ? The A nsw ers 1. M arlene Dietrich. 2. Language or conduct directed against public order, also the stir ring up of such disorder, tending tow ard treason. 3. 1846 and 1848, to determ ine the boundary line between Mex ico and Texas. 4. On the pads of his paws and on his nose and tongue. 5. He watches the instrum ents to see that the plane is perform ing properly, retracts and lets down the wheels, works the wing flaps and watches the propeller pitch. 6. M artin Van Buren. 7. The Em pire State Building, 1248 feet—the G reat Pryam id, 485 feet. 8. Platinum . Rice Snacks “ Rice Curls” is a new snack food prepared from ground rice. It was developed through research by the U. S. D epartm ent of Agri culture. !fS r^s-H bm e Popping A fO H H U r O RASKpf^J Are you going tIirougb tbe functional “middle-age" period peculiar to women (38-52 years)? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, high-strung, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms I Regular use of Plnkbam's Compound helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-age distress! LYDIA L PINKHAM'S S S Higher wages... Shorter hours... More and better goods for everyoneAcmf BY TEAMWORK TO PRODUCE MORE EFFiaENTlY FOR EVIRY HOUR WE WORK I ’cause, you Iilce 'em sot ■ Toasted fresh and sweet — for folks eat Kellogg’s Com Flakes fast as we m ake ’em! T hey’re your bargain in goodness. G et Kellogg’s ' Corn Flakes. MOTHER KNOWS BESTI M m to se SMOlrt/PKIFTis Bmalsonzed X **be. I m ^ aw **'**'* l i ,ingl-06"0"’ I packed ... I bonona I a WltoI Miunt beating speed’’: 11 - Vscup choppe™ will>6**F’ S f f iS s iS g k I SWdFOl B s & s s w Only an emulsorized shortening can streamline mixing and give you these better cakes, too! Turn any favorite cake into a real treat merel: using fine, creamy Snowdrift. But for an abso:thrill. Lpu flnmtrdrifDa Hfl-fulnntaU tinhf Incni — T ---------— V Turn any favorite cake Into a real treat merely by using fine, creamy Snowdrift. But for an absolute thrill, try Snowdrift's “3-minute” light, luscious quick-method cakes. Only ancess so quick and easy. Snowdrift is emuwumcu blend all cake ingredients as smooth as silk! Your whole cake Is mixed in the same bowl in only three minutes! Yes, a treat like Banana Nut Cake is that easy t AttA Qaw n 11 cai,« kAblni* KIaai.IFa in oniy tnree Nut Cake isthat easy t And for att your baking—for tender biscuits, flaky pie crusts—use Snowdrift. It's tops for crisp, digestible fried foods, too! SNOWDRIFTS PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING-MADE BY THE WESSON OIL PEOPU VIRGII SIR, I ARE TOtI B O T Jl % 2S MUTTl SAY. VOUi WHO SOlI bir d a c l m o n t h s! IN VOUR PET SHOPl JITTEj WYLDB I'D Lll DANCEl AFRAiC DISMAl S BY 1 CTVQr l r ice.I THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. S'& I? a. a j tne functional d peculiar to Poes this make sues. (eel so urea; Theu do ::vs Veuetnblo i:ch svmptoms! ::i's (.Dimxnmd u’c nirntnst this cr.s'tvs?: M , 0 VEGETABLE IYI O COMPOUND e s ... rs ... b e tte r e r y o n e ■ ?c 'ORK MORE FOR E WORK I I I B- iay« > in P?P|V I (3X h i \ost « lUl * . cream 2 \ Stbsp-bJ1! ' I and I lsP- I Add 3 OJiH \«• sUQQ-r a tn o o th .p “ . aeration. W \ ned In lent®11 Pnu« SPrin' IPOTTO- j rien in g d g iv e o! eat merely by r an absolute yht, luscious ings cake sue- ■mulsorized to as silk! Your I in only three Nut Cake is der biscuits, tops for crisp. f e IL PEOPLE VIRGIL By Len Kleis 5 1 iHEy by Claik S. HooiSUnNYSIDE IMPOSSIBLE/COMPLAINT, SNODGRASS/ ERS YOU SOLTJ ME . . MOUSE "RESIDEDyOUR CRACKER BARREL/ T H A rs By Clay HunterTHE OLD GAFFER WOULD YOU LOOK AND SEE IP MY SHOESTRINGS ARE UNTIED > ^ SIR, I REALIZE THAT YOU AND I ARE TOTAL STRANGERS. BUT — -WILL YOU DO Mt _ A SLIGHT FAVOR ?MAYBE. WHAT IS IT? o o o kW MLW By MELLORSb o u f o r d DONT KCLw MD Boop. WEOOirr AFianMB UNWAi OF COUttse HOT! THE WElDtNB TOUCH WASN'T INVENTED VET/ LC TNEV1RE EENUINE ANTIQUE ANDIRONS. WASHINGTON AFIKBON THEM ONCE... SOLO TO THE VOUNS AMN THE SMIUNS FACBf WELDED rTORCH? By Bud FisnerMUTT AND JEFF SHE ^ SHOULD TALK! sh e's A FEMALE/ HOWCAN \ I TELL IFA WORM IS A MALE OR - , FEMALE? IF IT EATS THE MALE WORM IT'S aSHE and IF IT EATS THE FEMALE IT'S A H E/ HOW-DO I KNOW ) EASY/ IF SHE'S A SHE / GET A. . Ink * J FEMALEAND NOT A W0RM AND A MALE WORM AND GIVE 'EM TO VOUR PARROT! Oh, VOULL HAVE TO TAKE THAT UP WITH THE WORM STORE/ I ONLY SEL BIRDS/ YOU SAID SHE WOULD TALK AND SHE AIN'T SAID A WORD VET t SAY, YOU RE THE CU/ WHO SOLD ME THIS BIRD A COUPLE OFYOH MONTHS AGO J r VEH/ IN VOUR s— fyl HOW'S PET SHOP/ QiRUiJ THE BIRD? m By Arthur PointerJITTER I X e3 By Bert ThomaiWYLDE AND WOOLY WE PONT WANT ANY TROUBLE, BOYS, SO WE'RE ASKIN' OUR GUESTS TO CHECK THEIR GUNS HERE. I'D LIKE TO GO TO THE DANCE TONIGHT, BUT I'M AFRAID OUR OLD NEMESIS, PISAtAL PAN WILL BE THERE/ HE.ESCAPED FROM JAIL AND HE AtAY BE OUTTO GET OS/ I DON'T OWN A GUN, BUT YOU CAN CHECK AV/ CHECK ROOM 7 ' m . m "SORRY, LADY, BUT YOU'RE A PEDESTRIAN NOW ...YOCtfLL HAVE, TO GETOFP THE BRIDLE PATH/ "g e e , d a d, a r e n t you W E GOT A TELEVISION GLAD SET? Four-In-One % Q E N D HER happily off to” school ^ in her Morning Gloty pinafore! It’s darling used as jum per,, sun. dress, or without bib, as a skirt.of • • Button-on -bib. makes this -so useful. Pattern 7434; transfer; cutting chart In sizes 2, 4, 6. . Our Jmrfoved pattern—visual ’ with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions—makes needlework-easy. Send 20 cents in coin, your name, address and pattern number to.v.m .... Sewinc Circle Needlecraft Bept.' P, O. Boa 5746, Cbieago 80, BI. or P. 0. Box 162, Old* Chelsea Station, . . . New Iork Hf.N,. I . : Endoise 20 cents fbr phUef& * •••••••••No-.1 Nama Address • ...... -Even-- lC-other-; m edicinesi. have-> failed, to relieve'-y'otir COLD MISERIES : YOU OWE TC YOURSELF‘ TO TRYr' 666 — 1T-1S-' DI HER E NT FREED FROM CRAMPING LAXATIVES “!Thanks' from the bottom of my heart for what ALL-BRAN has done for me. No more medicines or constipation cramps since I Started eating ALL BRAN every day!” Israel Baum, 3601W. Roosevelt Road, Chi cago 24, HI. Just one of- many unsolicited letters from ALLBRAN users. If you suffer from constipa tion due,to lack of dietary bulk, try this: eat an ounce of crispy Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN daily, drink plenty of water! Ifnot completely satisfied after IOa days;'; return empty box to Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Mich. Get DOUBLE YODR MONEY BACKI * I ) ] Now She Shops “Cash a il Carry WiEhout Painful Backache As we get older, stress and strain, over* exertion, excessive smoking or exposure to cold sometimes slows down kidney function. ThIa may lead many folks to complain of nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness. Getting up nights or frequent p&Bsages may result from minor bladder irritations due to cold, ‘dampness or dietary indiscretions. If your discomforts are due to these causes, don't wait, try Doan's Pills, a mild diuretic. Used successfully by millions for a w 60 years. While these symptoms may often otherwise occur, it’s amazing how aiany rimes Doan's give happy relief— help the 16 miles of kidney tubes and filters iffuah out waste; Get Doan's PBIa today! D oan ’S P ills PLASTI-LINER EASYIO BSE STRIPt ; Oiie application M A K E S FALSE TEETH FIT for the life of your plates If your places are loose and slip or hurt, refit them for instant, permanent comfort with soft -Brimms Plasci-Lioer strips. Lay strip on upper Or lower plate... bite end it molds perfectly. Hardens for lasting fit and comfort. Evenon old rubber plates, Brimms Pksti-Liner gives good results from six months to a year or longer. Ends forever mess and bother of temporary applications that last a few hours or days.Stops Slipping, rocking plates and sore gums. Bat anything. Talk freely. Enjoy die comfort thousands of people all over the country now get ■with Brimms Plasri-Liner.Eusy to or Tighten FoIsoTeefh PemwnenllyTasteless, odorless, harmless to you and your plates. Can be removed as perdirections. Users say: "Note I can cat anything.” Money back guarantee. $1.25 for Uner for one plate; $2.25 for both plates. At your drug store. ' Yes, pipe fans and “makin’s”;smokers find greater smoking pleasure in crimp cut Prince Albert —America's largest-selling smoking tobacco! a * * 0 0 ! I tff AHpeftfl-0\ J ff iwA 1Otff. Cwmp. S T ^ ei I " 0 * I S * * * * A n I*.** VMAURJCE WHfTNfY. - IIW Hm choice,'naturally mild tobacco used in Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco is specially treated to insure against tongue bite. And Prince Albat.stays flavor-fresh in the humidor-top pocket tin. PAGE FOUR IHE DAVlE RECORD. MOCKSVlLLE N. C . APRIL 12. I960 THE DAVIE RECORD., files ForSheriff C . F R A N K STROUD, EDITOR.!W. L. Wallace, well-known farmer of Clarksville Township, New Cotton Law New cotton legislation recently passed by Congress provides for THE D T E !EPHONE i ; Entered atthe Postoffiee in Mock*- ville. N. C., as Second-claw Mail mit.ter. March 3, 1.903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: O -I-' VKA?? IN N. CAROLINA - 11.5# SIX ViOVTHS IN N. CAROLINA • 75c. ONf YF. \R. OUTSIDE STATf - *2.00 SiX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE - »1.00 " if MY PEOPLE. WHICH ARE QUID KV MY NAME. SHALL HUMBLE THEMSELVES. AND PRAY, AND SEEK MY FACE. AND IURN AWAV FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN WIU I HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND WILI WRGIVE THEIR SINS. AND WILL HEAL THEIR UUID"- 2 CHRON. 7:14. C heer up, boys, only six weeks until th e M ay primary will be over and a little more dian two m o n th s until blackberries will be ripe. P resid en t T ru m an , is making fun o f the flying saucers that are rep o rted flying a ro u n d the coun try. H ere’s hop in g that none of them w ill h it h im o n the- noggin T h ere are but three days left in w hich to file your names for coun ty office. If you mean to run for o ffice this year you must file your nam e w ith D r. P. H. Mason, C hairm an o f th e Davie Cbunty E lection B oard before noon on Saturday, April 15th. If the census enumerator hasn't fo u n d you vet, you find the en um erator. If you live in Mocks- ville w e w ant you to be counted. Som e o f th e guesses on the popu lation o f M ocksviIle that have been sent to o u r office runs into high figures aro u n d 4,000.- We ave hoping th a t every person in M ocksville w ill send or bring Li a guess before th e contest closes on M ay 1st. It costs you’nothing to guess. A new $5 bill to the person w hose guess i s nearest correct. Miss Viola Cartner M iss V iola C artner, 42, died at 10 o’clock last Wednesday mom{ ing at L exington Memorial Hos pital, h er death following a week’s serious illness. M iss C artner was the daughter o f W illiam H. Cartner and -the late M rs. C artner, of this city. She held a position in the office o f the E rw in m ills, at Cooleemee. She was a m em ber of South Riv er M ethodist C hurch, in Rowan C ounty, an d funeral services were held at th at church at 3 o’clock T hursday afternoon, with Rev. M r. Sw aim an d Rev. J. B. Fitz gerald officiating, and the body laid to test in th e church ceme tery. M iss C artn er is survived by her father, an au n t an d several uudes. H er m other died 15 years ago. A noble, C hristian lady has been called to h er rew ard. She will be sadly m issed in her community. T o die bereaved father The Re cord extends sincere sympathy in this sad hour. Mrs. AnnieStroud M rs: A nnie Owens Stroud, 82, a native o f Davie County, but for m m y years a resident of Winston- Salem , died at her home in that cits' W ednesday. Funeral services w ere h eld Saturday at 11 a. nu, at Vogl er’s Chapel, and the body laid to rest in ChestnutHilI Ceme-I tery Salisbury. A m ong th e survivors are one bro th er, John O w ens, of Coolee-1 tnee; three step-sons R. A. Stroud, H igh P oint, Carl Stroud. Lexing-' to n and Arch Stroud of near C ooleem ee. was in town Tuesday and filed for ■ minimum 1950 acreage allotments sheriff on the Democratic ticket.: based on one of three provisions, This was the second man to fiIe*L. R. Towell, chairman of county for sheriff on the Democratic PMA committe, said today. The revised allotments are bas ed on the larger of (I) 65 per cent of the average acreage planted to cotton (or devoted to war crops in place of cotton) in 1946-4748; (2) 45 per cent of the highest acre- age planted to co tto n (or devoted C. A. Buck” Garrison, of Farm- J0w arcropsin place of cotton) •ngton Township, who travels for on {arm during anyone of the Pleasants Hardware Co., Wins- ^ fee but (3) not more than ton-Salem, was tn town Thurs-! day and filed for sheriff on the Democratic ticket, subject to die I ticket. U p to this writing Alex Tucker and W. H. Hoots have filed for sheriff on the Republi can ticket. Still They File 40 per cent of th e 1949 acreage which was tilled on th e farm o r in regular rotation. May primary. This is the third Anv owner or operator of a cot- 0 ^ tl0c ~ in Davie to filcJ 0r *hiS ton farm in Davie County office. There .snim or t h a t o n e ^ , ^ he ig ^ dded tQ an of those who filed will withdraw his u m e this week. Jump boy*, the water is fine. w ho tn, Walter L. Call acre age increase and w ants to be con sidered by the county com m ittee for possible allotment adjustm ent under the legislation m u st file an application not later th an A pr. 21 Walter L. Call, 66, died unex- ’ “We urge owners o r operator: pectedly at 6p. m., April 3rd at his who want their farms considered home on Hardison Street. for revised allotments to file ap- He was a barber by trade and plications by this date.” M r. T ow had spent most of his life in ell said. “Farmers w ho are satis- Mocksville. He was the son of fied with their present allotm ents the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Call, need not file applications. H ow - Surviving are the wife, the form- ever, those desiring increases will er Stella Haneline; two brothers, be considered by the countv com - Grady F. Call of Sumter, S. C., mittee after applications fo r such and W . E. Call of Mocksville, and increases have been filed in the two sisters, Mrs. Mary Nail, of county office.” Mocksville and Mrs. Tessie Wag- Each operator o f a farm for ner, of High Point. ' which an application is filed will Funeralservices were held at receive a notice fro m th e county the home at 3 p. m., Wednesday, committee of rhe revised 1950 cot- Rev. A. J. Cox, Rev. R.C. Goforth ton acreage allotment. W h e n th e and Rev. J. P. Davis were in new allotment notice is m ailed it charge. Burial was in the Oak will replace any previous 1950 al- Grove Methodist Church ceme- lotment notice already received by tery. the farm operator. „ . . . . . , . Application forms may be ob-Work is Progressing satisfacton- tained from county pMA office. Iy on the new E. Pierce Foster cot ton gin which is being erected on J. L. Jollv, who has been con- the Salisbury Highway. W hen fined to his home on Route 2, by completed this will be one of the illness for two weeks, was able to largestand most modem fire-proof resume his position last week cotton gins in this entire section, with Heritage Furnitute Co. Spring Fashions From | Sanford’s Dept. Store Misty Loveliness In MISS SWANK BLOUSES Hearts Desire in Sheer Nylon & Batiste, White & Pastels $395 and $5.95 O ur Children’s Department Is Filled With LOVli DRESSES OF FLOWER-LIKE FRESHNESS! So Colorful and Dainty. Sizes 1-3, 3-6X, 7-14 $1.95 to $5.95 Smart Toppers $12.95 Up STUNNING SUITS $16.95 UP PALM BEACH—GABARDINE—TWEEDS FORSTMAN’S MI LATEEN In AU The New Spring Shades Men’s Student Suits $19.95 1005fc Rayon — Sizes 34-36 Men’s Gabardine Suit:* $32 50 Variety of Shades - All Wool Widi Two Pair O f Pants • $39.50 Griffon Suits $49.50 Spring Suits—AU New Shades Mrs. J. M. Granger Funeral services for Mrsl J. M* G ranger, 92, who died Friday at h e r hom e in Cooleemee, were held iit 3 p. m . Sunday at Colter. M erhodist Church, with Rev. Fred j S h in n and R ev. J. B. Fitzgerald of-; fidJting, and the body laid to rest; in the church cemetery. Surviv-: ing are tw o daughters, Mrs. Geo. I G ibson and M rs. FIoyd McSwaint I o f C ooleem ee; one son, Percy J. G ranger, o f Baltimore, Md. COMPLETE LINE OF ARROW AND WING SHIRTS SPORT SHIRTS, gabardine, all shades - - $2.95 DRESS SHIRTS, white and all shades - $2.50 up COMPLETE LINE OF STAR BRAND SHOES To Fit The Entire Family C. C. SAhFORD SONS CO. Phutie 7 Mocksville, N. C. SUMMER FURNITURE Takes The Spotlight Furniture In Groups The perfect way to outdoor living is a Deluxe 3 Piece Ball Bearing Glieer Ensemble consisting of Deluxe Glider and two Deluxe Chairs. (Q Q CA ChoiceofcoIors . . . - METAL CHAIRS TOPS IN RESTFUL $4.95 COMFORT Form fitting seats and tubular frame.Spring steel “Cushion seat” R ocker. Perfect balance and comfort. B aked on Enameled in eolors. Available in ^comwater - resisting enamel. Y our choice plete Glider ensemble Glider and 2 of styles and colors. Chairs for only - - $24.95 Complete $5.95 METAL TABLES 3 PASSENGER SETTEE Practically a necessity on your porch.Combing Comfort, Beauty an d Choice of stvles in gay enamels Durability. Enameled in Gay C olors. $2.95 $14.95 Hendricks & Merrell Furniture Co. Phone 342 Mocksville, N. C. I Attention W e Are Now Offering Special Additional Service On AU Myers W ater Pumps In Case Cf A Breakdown Of A Myers Pump, We Will Immediately Install A Spare Pump For Your Use While Repair Is Being Made There will be no charge tor the use of this pump You Need Not Ever Suffer The Inconvenience Of Loss Of Water. In Case of Breakdown Of Your Myers Pump, Notify Us And A Spare Pump Will Be Immediately Installed. A Complete Line For .Every Need SEE US FOR ANY PLUMBING OR ELECTRICAL NEEDS Sanford - Mando Co. Mocksville, N. C.Phone 175 B Oldest Pa No Liquo NEWS M r. and an d little s E aster in t M iss Jan th e U n iv er E aster w i M ars Crow E dith, Ii an d M rs. 1 been quit b u t is im p M rs. C h b er o f the i tv, wss con w eek suffe M isses b eth K oo d enrs at A sp e n t East C ol. an so n o f w eek fror jo u m at N L ester w ith the D epartm e w ith his L ester M a M r. and m oved street to t' ed recentl ing, on Bi T . J. M yond the S o u th Y shades o W ednesd Spurgeo rural Iett w as able t from D av w here he appendici M rs. W o r o f M a eovering operation a t R ow an T uesday. M isses S m ith, R K en n eth F ran k D b a C olle E aster h M r. an tu rn ed t S. C., Su eral days w ere call d eath o f M isses d e n t at lege, an Sheek, a lege, Bri th e Sprit th eir pa E. C. very ill p ita l for im provi th e Bre W insto h e will retu rn in A rev a t Sm it th is we evening o r is bei G. M . T h e p u1 h ear thi J. E. Dwiggi W ilkes tac bui a fronta isbury M ocksv R aym o E ver\ F arm in T h u rsd h ear th Jo h n N o tio n Jo u rn al B aptist v otion- h am w THE DAVIE RECORD MOCKSVILLE, N. C. APRfL 12 1950 PAGE FIVE THE DAVIE RECORD Oldest Paper In The County No Liquor, Wine, Beer Ads NEWS AROUND TOWN. M r. an d M rs. W . H . H o o ts, Jr., an d little son, o f H ickory, sp en t E aster in to w n w ith h o m e folks. M iss Jane C row , a m em ber o f th e U niv ersity o f M aryland, spent E aster w ith h e r m o th er, M rs. M ars C row . E dith, little d au g h ter o f M r- an d M rs. C arl Shell, o f R . I, lias been q u ite ill w ith p neum onia, b u t is im proving. M rs. C has. L. F arthing, a m em b er o f th e M ocksville school facul ty, wss confined to h e r h o m e last w eek suffering w ith flu. M isses B etty H oneycutt, Eliza b e th K oontz an d P atsv G rant, stu d en ts at A . S. T . College, B oone, sp e n t E aster w ith th eir parents. C ol. an d M rs. W . G . M urchi so n o f R o u te 2, retu rn ed last w eek fro m a th ree m o n th s so jo u rn at N ew P o rt R ichey, Fla. L ester P . M artin, Fr., w ho is w ith th e H alifax C ounty H ealth D epartm ent, sp en t E aster in tow n w ith his parents, D r. an d M rs. L ester M artin. M r. an d M rs. J. E. H ollow ay m oved W ednesday from P ine street to th e h o u se they purchas ed recently fro m M rs. S. A . H ard ing, o n B ingham stteet. T . J. M cD aniel, w ho lives be yond th e m u d d y w aters o f th e S o u th Y adkin, in t h e classic shades o f R ow an, w as in tow n W ednesday o n business. Pfc. Bob Sofley, w ho is station ed at S cott Field, 111., sp en t E aster in tow n w ith h o m e folks. M iss R u th R obinson, o f B ris tol, V a., w as th e E aster guest o f M r. an d M rs. W . F. R obinson, M iss Jane H ad en M orris, w ho h o ld s a p o sitio n in R ichm ond, V a., sp en t E aster in tow n w ith h er parents. New Building Make Honor Roll M r. an d M rs. E. M . V alentine, o f D urham , w ere E aster guests o f M r. an d M rs. Floyd N aylor and fam ily. M r. an d M rs. R eid T h o m pson o f H illsboro w ere E aster guests o f M r. an d M rs. Jo h n A . Bow les, a t E phesus. W o rk o n th e D . & M . H arves ter building o n W ilkesboro street is progressing nicely, an d is ex pected to be ready for occupancy by early in ay. J, S. Braswell, o f C oncord, wil be m anager o f th is new farm , equipm ent store, and will m ove his fam ily here in June. T h e com pany w ill stock a full line o f A llis-C haltneis and N ew Id ea farm m achinery. T h e building w ill be brick veneer 50x90 feet. T h e R ecord is glad to w el com e this new business house to o u r tow n. Mfit^Motor Com pany M rs. D ave M urray retu rn ed to h e r h o m e at M orehead C ity M o n day after spending a w eek in tow n w ith relatives. M iss Sarah F oster, a m em ber of th e L ouisburg C ollege faculty, sp en t th e E aster holidays here w ith h e r parents. M isses C arol Jo h n so n and C lara Belle L cG rand, students at Salem College, are speeding th e Spring h o lid ay s in to w n w ith th eir par ents. M r. an d M rs. P . J. Jo h n so n and j dau g h ter M iss P hyllis, w en t to C incinnati, O h io , T hursday to atten d th e graduation exercises at th e C incinnati C o n serv ato iy o f M usic S aturday eve dng. T h eir daughter, M iss M arie, graduated w ith a M aster D egree in m usic. J. M . H o rn , w ell-know n M ocks- ville citizen, fo r m any years w ith S tate H ighw ay D epartm ent, has accepted a position w ith S anford M o to rC o ., F ord dealers fo r 37 years. M r. H o rn invites his friends to call and see him . H e w ill be glad to serve you at any tim e. Greer- Mfall M r. and M rs. R ufus A . G reer, o f C h arlo tte, announce th e en gagem ent o f th eir daughter, E sther M ac, to Jam es W illiam W all, son o t M r. an d M rs. Jam es W esley W all, o f M ocksville. T h e wed" ding w ill take place in June. Jo h n H . P o tts, o f E d cn to n , was am ong the E aster visitors to th e o ld h o m e tow n. A revival m eeting w ill begin at ; C ornatzer B aptist C hurch next ! Sunday, A pril 16th. R ev. E lm ore I M yers, o f W inston-S alem , will as- ! sist th e pastor. Services every j evening during th e w eek at 7:30 I o ’clock. Special m usic at all the j services. T h e public is cordially ; invited. S purgeon A n d erso n popular rural letter carrier o n R oute I, was able to retu rn hom e lastw eek fro m D avis H osp tal, Statesville, w here h e recently u n d erw en t an appendicitis operation. M rs. W illiam H ow ard, p ro p riet o r o f M ae’s B eauty S hop, is re covering fro m an appendicitis operation w hich she u nderw ent at R ow an M em orial H ospital last T uesday. M isses A n n M artin , H elen Sm i J i, R achel G ran t, Betsy S hort, K en n eth D w iggins, B ill C liek and F ran k D aniel, stu d en ts at C ataw ba C ollege, w ere h o m e for the E aster holidays. I Lewis F orrest, o f R. I, sp en t 1 one day recen ly a t W estern N . C. ; S anatorium , at Black M ountain, visiting M rs. P aul F orrest, w ho has been a p atien t th ere fo r th e past fo u r m o n th s. M rs. F o rrest is getting along nicely. B. C. Cle m ent, o f this city, is also a p atien t an d is reported as doing well. T h e 48th annual m eeting of th e W o m an ’s M issionary U n io n o f th e S o n th Y adkin B aptist A s sociation is in session today at th e C ooIeem ee B aptist C hurch. T h e guest speaker is M iss L ydia G reen, a M issionary to C hina, w ho is n o w o n furlough. T h e program opens at 10 a. m . Princess Theatre T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y C lark G able & L orettaY o u n g In “T H E K EY T O T H E C IT Y ” w ith F rank M organ & M arilyn M axwell " S A T U R D A Y R ed R yder & L ittle Beaver In “R O L L T H U N D E R R O L L ” w ith D on R eynolds & E m m ett L ynn In C inecolor M O N D A Y & T U E S D A Y M aureen O ’H ara & Jo h n S u tto n In “B A G D A D ” In T echnicolor w ith V in cen t Price, Paul C hristian J :W E D N E S D A Y D ennis O ’K eefe, C laire T revor In “R A W D E A L ” w itli M arsha H u n t, Tohn Ire la n d R egistrar H . R . Eggers, of palachian S tate T eachers college, has released th e h o n o r roll for th e w in ter term . j S tudents from D avie C ounty in -' eluded in the list o f those m aking d istinction in the academ ic field are: H elen B am h ard t, ju -io r, o f A dvance; N ancy D u rh am , fresh -! m an, o f M ocksville; C arolyn E at-: o n , sophom ore, o f M ocksville. j T h e h o n o r roll is com posed o f I those students w ho m ake an aver age grade o f “B” o r above. W ith n o grade below "C .” WANT ADS PAY. T R A IN E D Practical N u rse A- vailable. P h o n e 20-J-13 M ocksville. S T R A Y E D —B lack pig, weigh- ng 50 p ounds. F in d er notify W A L S E R S M O O T . W E A R E V E R P A IN T —Inside outside w h it ■ an d w ide range o f colors $1.99 p er gallon M A R S H ’S S T O R E , D ep o t St. A t L exington H ighw ay M ocksville C IN D E R B L O C K S, C oncrete B locks, 4 inch D rain T il Q U A L IT Y B L C C K C O . Salisbury, N . C. W arehouse D rive, P h o n e 233. F O R SA LE— I M anure S pread er in good condition. See M . B. R IC H A R D S O N , R o u te 2. M ocksville, N . C . F O R SA LE— 5-room house on S anford A venue. C all o r w rite H U B E R T F R O S T . M ocksville, R o u te 2. F O R S A L E - 300 bales lespede- za hay; 100 bales soy b ean hay, 10 bales pea vine hay, 75c bale. 9 A cres o f p in e tim ber. T O M M IE ELLIS, A dvance, R o u te 2. M r. an d M rs. G rady F. C all re tu rn e d to th eir h o m e at S um ter, S. C ., S unday, after spendihg sev eral days h ere w ith relatives. T hey w ere called h ere last w eek bv th e death o f W alter L. Call. M isses M arv Jane E idson, a stu d e n t a t V irginia-Interm ont C o l-; lege, an d M iss L ettie L indsay Sheek, a stu d e n t at S ullins C o l lege, B ristol, V a., are spending th e Spring holidays in to w n w ith th eir parents. E. C . S anford, w ho has been very ill at R ow an M em orial H os p ital fo r th e past several w eeks, is im proving. H e was carried to th e B rew er N ursing H om e, at W inston-S alem , last w eek, w here h e w ill sp en d som e tim e before retu rn in g hom e. A revival m eeting is in progress at S m itb G rove M e th o d istch u rch th is w eek. Services are h eld each evening at 7:30 o’elock. T h e past o r is being assisted by Evangelist G . M . H am by, o f Florence, A la. T b e public is cordially invited to h ear th is w onderful preacher. J. E. Q uillan has sold to T . P. D w iggins fo u r 30-foot lots on W ilkesboro street, n ear th e Pon- tac building, an d five lo.s w ith a frontage o f 156 feet o n th e Sal isbury H ighw ay, ju st outside th e | M ocksville corporate lim its, to R aym ond Foster. E veryone is invited to be at th e ; F arm in g to n P . T . A . m e e tin g ’ T hursday, A pril 13th a t 7:30 and h ear th e great speaker, M r. Jo h n Jo h n W esley Clay, w riter o f “ M y ; N o tio n s” in th e W inston-S alem Jo u rn al. R ev. L ow ell R enegar,, B aptist m in ister w ill give th e D e- 1 votional an d M rs. C. H . M cM a- i b am w ill ren d er special m usic. I WHEN YOU ARE Hungry or Thirsty VISIT The City Cafe We Appreciate Your PatrOnage And Extend You A Cordial Invitation To Make Our Cafe Your Eating Place. N e w ! M o d e r n ! S a n i t a r y ! NO WINE NOR BEER THE OTY CAFE Phone 244 W Depot Street H . R . JO H N S O N , P rop. W A R R E N H A L L , M anager W A N T E D — W e a r e buying! P uplar, O ak an d Seech L um ber. C ut P oplar Ig " thick, any w idth. C u t O ak §” any w idtb. Beach §” thick, any w idths. F or fu rth er in form ation, see us fo r dim ensions. E L K IN F U R N IT U R E C O . _________________E lkin, N . C. F O R SA LE— M odem new 7- room brick house, lo t SO foot fro n tage and 190-foot deep, on W ilkes- boro street H o t and cold w ater, electrie lighted, oil heat, w ith 550 gallon tank. B uilt-in cabinets, 6 closets, b ath room o n first floor, w ith toilet o n second floor. E ntire h o u se rock-w ool insulated. M etal-' screened th ro u g h o u t. Large base m ent, th ree porches, circle drive way, open fireplace. For full in form atio n call o n o r w rite A . D . R IC H IE . W iIkesboro St., M ocksville, N . C. DAVIE DRIVE-IN THEATRE M ocksville S alisbury H ighw ay Wednesday and Thursday A pril 12th and 13th “M A G IC T O W N ” Jam es S tew art & Jane W ym sn O N E C A R T O O N Friday and Saturday A pril 14th an d 15th “ BILLY T H E K ID IN S A N T A FE ” w iih Bob Steele A lso “D Y N A M IT E ” V irginia W elles & W illiam G organ O N E C A R T O O N Monday and Tuesday A pril 17th an d 18th “R E T U R N O F T H E B A D M E N ” R andy S cott & A n n Jeffreys O N E C A R T O O N AU Shows Start At Dusk Space Reserved For Trucks A S K YOBR GREYHOUND AGENT ABOUT THRIlilNG EXPENSE-PAID TOURS ALMOST A N Y W H E R E IN THE U. S. A., CANADA, MEXICO MRP worn CfflSZG ? A f *%\ f / i f f M / f U C 6 /0 vQ l Ot F A R M A k L -T lM E -P R O V E P F O R IM P R O V E D F A R M IN G Rankin-Sanford Imp. Co. Phone Mocksville, N. C. Announcement! I Wish To Announqe To The Vojers Of Davie Gbunty That I Am A Candidate For Sheriff On The Republican Ticket. I Would Appreciate Your Vote In The May Primary. Accept My Thanks In Advance For Your Support G. AhEX TUCKER, A dvance, N . C ., R o u te 2 I Why Leave Davie County To Have Your Sewing Machine Repaired I R e p airA ll M akes o f M achines, an d Sell R ebuilt M achines. AU W o rk D o n e P rom ptly, W ith A G uarantee O n E very Job. If Y our M achine N eeds A tten tio n S c; M e. GENE JONES M ocksville, R o u te 4. T u rren tin e R oad, T w o M iles S o u th O f M ocksville A t B row n’s N ursery Kfc- Notice to Creditors H aving qualified as adm inistra to r o f th e estate o f I. H . B road way, deceased, late o f D avie C o u n ty, N o rth C arolina, notice is here by given to all persons holding claim s against th e said estate, to p resent them to th e undersigned o n o r before A pril 4, 1951, o r this notice w ill be plead in bar o f th eir recovery. A ll persons in d eb ted to th e said estate, are requested to m ake p ro m p t paym ent. T his th e 4 th day o f A pril, 1950. J. W . B R O A D W A Y , A dm r. o f J. H . B roadw ay. M ocksville, N . C ., R o u te 4. ' • In a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and worn* en who smoked Camels— and only Camels —for 30 days, noted throat special* ists, making weekly exami nations, reported Not one single cose of threat, irritation jlneto smoking CAMELS ‘ - .. WHY NOTED OPERA SJAR m a m Co n n e r , CHANGED TO CAtylELS... - "WHEN I SMOKE, I HAVE TO THINK.OF my voice. I madethe CAIViEL 30-DAY MiLDNESS TEST, it proved to me c J t j THAT camels AGREE WITH MT throat. JT THEY'RE MILD—THEY TASTE FINE!" THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. ORi r W Trum an and Destiny 1E 1OR SOME TIME there has been a running, private debate be tween the White House and the state departm ent over the all-im portant question of whether the United States should m ake a new, dram a tic peace overture to Russia. This dates back even to the days •when Gen. George M arshall was secretary of state. Recently, how ever, with the advent of the hydro gen bomb and Winston Churchill’s demand for a m eeting with Stalin, the debate has become m ore acute. President Trum an has long felt and expressed himself in private that if he could sit down with Stalin, they could thrash out a lot of the world’s problems. Yet he can’t help being irked at Stalin for being aloof, and for ignoring re peated hints that he, Trum an, would be glad to talk to him if he cam e to the United States. Overriding this, however, is M r. Trum an’s m ystic sense of his own destiny as a peacem ak er. To old friends and m em bers of his staff he speaks of this again and again. During the visits of White House caUers he will sometim es walk to the world globe at one side of his desk and say: "The nearest thing to m y heart is to do something to keep the world at peace. We m ust find a way, or civilization will be de stroyed and the world will turn back to the year 900.” M arshall Said “ No” This sentim ent was behind Tru m an’s move for a conference with Stalin two years ago. The Presi dent had rem arked to a friend, “If I could just get to talk to Joe Stalin, I think we could stop a lot of this trouble. Stalin is a reasonable m an.” L ater he worked out with his in tim ate adviser, David Noyes, and Chief Justice Fred Vinson the idea of sending the chief justice to Mos cow for a talk with Stalin. When this got back to the state depart m ent, it was im m ediately transm it ted by Acting Secretary Robert Lovett to General M arshall, then attending the U.N. assem bly m eet ing in Paris. Alarmed, M arshall flew home for a quick two-day con ference, during which Trum an agreed not to m ake any peace move until it was cleared with our west ern allies or until Russia gave some tangible sign that it wanted peace' Ierky Mr. Trum an In the last few weeks, the presi dential restlessness for a peace conference has been evident again. A shrewd diviner of public opin ion, Mr. Trum an understands the Am erican public’s desire for one m ore talk with Russia before going full tilt into a hydrogen arm s race. Yet m any of his advisers were disappointed when he rushed out an abrupt press release telling the world that the United States would m ake the hydrogen bomb. They felt that he m issed a great opportunity for a world-wide radio broadcast reviewing this country’s m any, m any moves for peace, a broadcast that would put the onus for the arm s race where it belongs—direct ly on the Russian doorstep. The state departm ent was al so upset when M r. Trnm ah bur- riendly granted an interview with New York Times corre spondent, Arthur Krock, after Hrock shrewdly cornered him a t a dinner party given by Sen. Brien McMahon of Connecti cut. The President, in festive mood, definitely prom ised Krock the interview, and kept his' word im m ediately thereafter, despite a previous promise to Secretary Acheson that he would m ake no public state m ents on foreign policy with out state departm ent cleat- ance. While the state departm ent isn’t going to adm it this publicly, what it objects to in regard to current White House peace thinking, are two things: 1. The jerky unexpectedness of Mr. Trum an’s ideas. There is no continuity. The president can be bawling out Stalin one day, as he did to the am azement of Winston Churchill and Jim m ie Byrnes at the Potsdam conference. And later he can be telling friends that Joe i Stalin is a m an who would be rea sonable if you could only sit down with him at the sam e table. 2. The Russians, in contrast, have a fixed, firm continuous policy— nam ely, to break the democratic system s of the free world. Trouble Inside Russia These are the state departm ent’s ideas; and m ost diplomats and diplomatic observers believe these ideas are correct. The inescapable fact is that the 14 m en in the politburo, who really m ake Soviet policy, are not going to change, no m atter what Trum an or anyone else in the U.S.A. says or does. As previously pointed out in these columns, all is not well either in side the satellite countries or in side Russia itself. - W E E K L Y N E W S A N A L Y S IS - Billion Dollars Cut From ECA Fund By House Foreign Relations Group; Truman Plans Speaking Campaign !EDITOR'S NOTE: Wben opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) F O R E IG N A I D : Billion Lopped W hether it portended a m ore realistic view toward European re covery needs, or was just sympto m atic of a seasonal purse-tighten ing effort on the part of some con gressm en, there were m ajor head lines in the fact that the house for eign affairs com mittee lopped a billion dollars off foreign aid re quests for next year. Slashing a proposal m ade by President Trum an, the committee went on to recomm end that the ex isting gap in foreign relief be filled with U.S. farm surpluses. THAT WOULD m ake sense to m ost Am ericans, probably, except those so energetically and enthusi astically comm itted to foreign aid Without any lim it or restrictions, that they brand as narrow isola tionists anyone who argues that U.S. welfare ought to be considered along with welfare of other na tions. ' Paul G. Hoffman, foreign recov ery adm inistrator, w as unable to say im m ediately w hat effect the foreign aid plan slash would have. He said he would prefer to study the proposal and ascertain what kind of farm surpluses the govern m ent has in its bins, and whether Europe needs them . • HE SAID he already knows these surpluses include wheat, cotton and tobacco. A house committee m em ber also nam ed these three and added com , oats, barley, fats, oils and dairy products. No mention was m ade of the huge surpluses of potatoes and eggs which America also has on hand. Hoffman, who m ost likely would end up opposing surpluses in lieu of cash, would be hard put, it ap peared, to m ake the average American believe that a w ar-rav aged Europe couldn’t use, or didn’t need, such item s as eggs, potatoes, corn, fats oils and dairy products. There are m any American families right here at home who would be delighted if they ever had a suffi ciency of any of these item s. R E D C U R B S : Caution Urged The federal justice departm ent has warned congress to “move with caution” in acting on anti com m unist legislation, some of which, the departm ent said, would “inflict punishment on named groups without jury trial.” THUS the nation is treated to the ironical paradox of having the restrictions of its own constitution prevent an action designed at pre serving and protecting that con stitution. As an example, Peyton Ford, as sistant to U .S. Attorney General M cGrath, told the house un-Amer ican activities com m ittee “it is by no m eans certain” that the con stitutionality of such legislation could be upheld. AS ALMOST every schoolboy knows, the constitution was kicked around plenty during the days im m ediately preceding World War n on the pretext that such viola tions were for the “safety of the nation.” It seem s regrettable, then, that a little leeway couldn’t be taken by these sam e patriots when it comes to preserving the “safety of the nation” when w ar again is openly talked and envisioned. R E N T C O N T R O L : Soon to Go? Federal rent controls soon would be a thing of the past, if a partic ular action of congress could be construed as an indication—and it was so construed by everyone in Washington. CONGRESS gave the President a broad hint that there m ay not be any rent controls after June 30, when it sent to him a money bill that included funds earm arked to pay off employees of the rent con trol agency. The senate completed legislative action on the m easure—a 783 mil lion dollar deficiency bill—to pro vide extra money for various fed eral agencies for the year ending in June. INCLUDED in the m easure was four million dollars for the office of housing expediter Tighe E. Woods. Of that amount, more than two and one-half million was to be used to pay for the term inal leave of employees. The other 1.25 was for operating expenses for which Woods had asked 3.6 millions. L E O P O L D : Storm & Strife The future appeared rugged for ex-King Leopold of Belgium and alm ost as rugged and surely as un certain for his troubled country. The fight to restore Leopold to the Belgian throne, which he abdicated when the German hordes overran Belgium, had become a bitter one. The m onarchists won a victory at the polls on a referendum on res toration of the monarchy. E a s te r S e a l C h ild Six-year old Bussell Miller, Columbns, Ohio, the 1950 E ast er Seal Child selected by the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults, feeds a horse on a neighbor’s farm . Russell, has-had cerebral palsy since birth. E A S T E R S E A L S : Help a Child The generosity of the American people during the 1950 E aster Seal campaign, which ends April 9, will help bring new life and hope to m any crippled children. SIX-YEAR-OLD RusseU MiUer knows that, as does his famUy, for. Russell, who has had cerebral pal sy since birth, is now able to start walking by himself—because of the help and treatm ent he received through the auspices of the Na tional Society for Crippled ChUdren and Adults. He was chosen the ‘E aster Seal Boy for 1950” be cause he typifies the thousands of crippled children who have been sim ilarly helped through this or ganization. This year’s E aster Seal, which symbolizes the conquest of a handi cap by a crippled chUd, shows a sm all boy abandoning his crutches and starting to walk by himself. RUSSELL is a handsome boy, with bright and friendly eyes. He is eager to learn and does every day chores, despite his handicap. At home he is an accepted m em ber of the famUy and does not expect or receive any special privUeges. But, if it were not for the guid ance of m edical specialists, the de term ination of his m other that he would walk and play again like other chUdren, specialized care and other E aster Seal services he re ceived. RusseU’s resulting rapid progress certainly would never have taken place. The American people were re m inded that during the E aster Seal sale, no job and no contribution would be too smaU to do its share in helping crippled chUdren walk again. P R E S ID E N C Y : AU Aboard! President Trum an was getting ready to hit the traU again with his gospel of the need for electing and reelecting Dem ocrats. It was believed his spring and fall cam paign tour would m atch the inten sity of his 31,500-mile “give-’em- hell” cam paign of 1948. PLANS were for Mr. Triunan to hit the road early in May for a. rear-platform speaking swing that would carry him into Washington state about May 11 for the dedica tion of Grand Coulee dam . It would wind up with a “fighting poUtical talk” in Chicago stadium the night of May 15 at a giant Democratic rally. The trip will include “off-the- cuff” talks to crowds around the railroad tracks to and from the west coast, and plugs for Demo cratic candidates and F air Deal m easures. For the fall campaigning, an even longer, m ore intensive tour is being planned, for then the Presi dent will go into a score or more of states to slug it out for Demo cratic congressional candidates. MR. TRUMAN’S am azing suc cess at this type of political war fare is the chief reason, curely, why he has decided to engage in it again. Admittedly no orator, the President, nevertheless, did suffi ciently well for himself in the 1948 cam paign to m ake it seem logically good strategy to pursue sim ilar tactics this tim e. The first of American arm ed aid to G reat Britain was between 70 and 80 B-29’s which were started for England in cerem onies at An drews Field, Washington, D.C. Kentucky’s Sen. Virgil Chapman represented the senate arm ed ser vices com m ittee at the exercises. Defense Secretary Louis Johnson declared that the first four bomb’ ers which took off “will be follow*! by a growing volume ...” S E C U R IT Y : Cries of 'Foul' President H arry Trum an and Generals George C. M arshall and Dwight D. Eisenhower have no ap prehensions about the security stat us of U.S. state departm ent per sonnel. The President declared there was nothing to a rum or that U.S. Chief Justice F red Vinson was to replace Dean Acheson as state sec retary, and the two generals de clared that U.S. am bassador Phil ip C. Jessup w as practically be yond reproach from any angle, but particularly so as regards any taint of communism. ALL THESE m anifestations of support of Acheson and Jessup stem m ed from charges by Senator M cCarthy that m any state depart m ent personnel were Communists or leaned strongly tow ard commu nism . Jessup hotly denounced Mc Carthy’s charges as “utterly irre sponsible—a blow at Am erican for eign policy,” and an actual aid to world communism. Generals M ar shall and Eisenhower supported Jessup. M arshall, he said, was “shocked and distressed” by the attack upon Jessup’s integrity. Eis enhower said no one who knew Jes sup would question “the depth or sincerity” of his devotion to “ the principles of Am ericanism .” Under questioning, Jessup, dur ing his exam ination adm itted that he appeared as a character witness for Alger Hiss, form er state de partm ent attache convicted of ly ing when he denied he had slipped out secret U.S. documents to a So viet spy ring. BUT at the end of an hours-long session of Capitol hill, M cCarthy still was insisting that if senators could get a look at the complete files on Jessup, “the im portance of taking action” would be demon strated. M cCarthy w as not per m itted to cross-exam ine witnesses. As for Secretary Acheson, Mr. Trum an thoroughly demolished ru m ors concerning the form er’s re m oval and declared, instead, that M r. Acheson w as running the state departm ent “adm irably." P O T A T O E S : Again & Again Another chapter in the dizzy round of potato price supports was in the m aking if the nation’s farm ers planned script were completed. For, according to reports reaching federal agricultural departm ent heads in Washington, farm ers were shaping a pattern of production that would create another potato surplus and add to an already big supply of livestock and feed grains. ACCORDING to an agricultural departm ent. survey of producers, M arch I planting plans indicated a potato acreage which — at 1948-49 average yields to the acre—would produce 54 million m ore bushels m ore than the governm ent goal of 335 million bushels. Such a crop would m ake it neces sary for the governm ent to spend additional millions of dollars to buy up’surplus supplies to support grower prices. Potato price sup ports already have cost the govern m ent about 500 million dollars since 1943 and have led to demands for more rigid controls on future crops. SO UNREALISTIC was the fed eral program of potato price sup port that the cries of condemnation and censure m ay have some result after all. For instance, the senate had been considering a catch-all farm bill which, among other things, would deny price supports to potatoes grown outside a strict quota system in 1951. Public indignation was under-' standable. The pattern of subsidiz ing expandable potato production with ever-mounting surpluses was causing even the m ost blase tax payers to become irascible about the situation. I n g r id 's D a u g h te r -- , * ' • 4 1.#*• % ' - a This exclusive photo, taken about a year ago, shows Pia Lindstrom , 12, daughter of In grid Bergm an and Dr. P eter Lindstrom. The picture was taken before her m other went to Stromboli to m ake a picture with the Italian director, Rob erto Rossellini. P ia is the ob ject in a bitter custody strug gle between Ingrid and Dr. Lindstrom. B E R L IN : Up to Reds If there is any rioting or violence in Berlin during May 27-30, while a Red youth rally is being held, the Communists them selves will have to shoulder the blam e and answer for the accounting. That was the word of John J. McCloy, U.S. high commissioner for U.S.-occupied Germany. He declared he saw no need for extra troops, but “we are prepared for trouble even though we are not seeking any.” TU-THc slSi lalemstwMl UnlIcnn SundiY SrhooI LcssonJ By PR. KENNETH I. FOREMAN SCRIPTURE: Amos, (especially 2:45; 7-7-15: 8:1-3),DEVOTIONAL BEADING: Psalm 42:1-8. R u g g e d P ro p h e t Lesson for April 16,1950 DON’T MAKE the m istake of thinking that the “m inor1 prophets of the Old Testam ent w ere less im portant than the “m ajors.” The 12 men whose writings end our Old Testam ent are in no w ay less im portant than Isaiah, Jerem iah or Ezekiel. They are called “m inor” only because their writings cover fewer pages. F irst in point of tim e cam e Amos.* • , Ranch-H and Preacher j* MOS WAS NO city preacher, in “ fact not a preacher at all. He would not even call him self a prophet. He was a ranch-hand from the back country, m ore like w hat we would call a hired hand than a farm er on h is,, own. He had no prestige, no back ing, no social or official position, no money, no high education, no na tional reputation, in fact none of the things that m ake us “take notice” of a strange speaker. Foreman He had no lecture bureau, had no luncheon-club, he could not even hire a hall. But the Lord had spoken to him and he knew it. He was determ ined that the wealthy people who crowded the tem - , pie yard in Bethel should hear him. No doubt the m ere sight of the m an would attract atten tion. In his rough working clothes he would look as out-of- place in that well-polished crowd as a huckleberry in a pan of milk. As his voice, trained in the wide open spaces, rang out over the crowd, a few people m ay have laughed at first. But a circle of re spectful silence would grow around him. Indeed they liked what he said, at first. CLASSIFIED D E P A R T M E N T BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOB. Complete Sawmill, D 8800 Caterpillai Diesel Power Unit HO H.P., OI Frick Mill Tower Edger. 29 Wood Planer;' been used 9 months. All for S4.800. Will finish In 3 weeks for delivery. P.O. Box 7, Murdock, Florida.___________ _________ FOB SALE—Wright’s Washerette, Oxford, Miss. Home of Univ. of Miss. Pop. 10,000. Business excellent. Priced to sell. MEN—WOMEN Are you interested in a business of your own? * No Capital Needed. Will set you up to make a comfortable dignified living, not a “get rich quick” proposition but a steady income for those who are not afraid to work. E. T. Hobson, 3918 10 Ave. South, Birmingham, Ala., Pb. 2-3359 LIVESTOCK TWO CATTLE SALES WEEKLY TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS RAGSDALE-LAWIION COMMISSION CO. NATIONAL STOCK YARDS. ATLANTA MACHINERY & SUPPLIES F O R SALE CHEAP DRAGLINES % Yd. Insley With Bucket.% Yd. Bay City With Bucket. OAVE GORDON, P.O. BOX 5033 43rd St. & ACL R.R. PH. JTIHUl Tampa 5. Florida.________ MONO TREE SAW AND MOWER UNIT “World’s Best Farm Combination” 3-h.p, engine. Cuts trees down and into convenient lengths. Clears land, mowa weeds, sprouts, fence-rows, lawns. Only $187.50 complete. Call or write MONO MANUFACTURING CO., INC.1333 Spring St., N. W.Atlanta, Ga.. AT. 4521_______ MISCELLANEOUS Flint round iichtwood fence posts 7 Ft. 4 In., 5 In., 6 In., diameter. 25c each, F.O.B. loaded in box cars SAL RR, Alva, Florida, 3000 to car, or delivered by truck as far North as Ocala, Florida, for 35c, 900 to 1000 to truck load. P. O. Box 7, Murdock, Florida._____________ ONE MILLION Fect of Pine Timber. One Year to cut and remove. $8,000 Cash. P.O. Box 7, Murdock, Florida. I 60-H. P. KEEWANEE boiler. 100 lbs. W.P. Good as new. I 71te-H.P. Farrar St Trefts. 125 W.P. Used very little. Both boilers city inspected. Write Claridze, Seminole Laundry, 4904 Fla, Tampa, fla. MAKE Delicious Wine any time for 50c gallon from fresh or dried fruit or canned fruit juices. Details free. Eugene Conord, R.F.D. #1, Ncshanic, N. J. 21 FT. CORRECT Craft open cabin runabout. Beam 7-10" mahogany finish; double plank: Chrysler Crown motor; built 1948 with less than 30 total hours, boat and motor. Cost S3,700. Like new now. Must sell, 52,350. See Everett Wie- gand, c-o Sisco Trailer Park, Ft. Piercet Fla. Boat at Sisco Dock. Roll-Call of Doomsday ,#JpO R three transgressions of Damascus, yea for four . . I will not turn away the punish m ent thereof,” he began. Dam as cus was capital of Syria, for gen erations their country’s bitter and all too successful enemy. So when Amos predicted a crash for Sjrria1 you m ay imagine the applause would be loud. Then, one after another, as Amos points his finger east, north, south, the lightning of God’s curse is called down on enemy after enemy of the nation of Israel. Fire, hur ricane, defeat and disaster are fore- told for every one. . . . Too. Close Home PVERYTH ING Amos had said “ was true, and cam e true; every nation whose downfall he predicted collapsed just as he said it would. But that was not the .m ain reason he had tram ped all the ,way to Bethel. He had some things to say to the very people before him, something about them selves and their own country. So when he had his audience in the palm of his hand, just as they were gloating over the terrible fate of the na tions they hated, Amos dropped his bomb on their complacent heads. “ Thus saith the Lord: For three transgressions of IS RAEL, yea for four, I will ndt turn away the punishm ent thereof.” The roll-call of dooms day includes every sinful na tion. God has no pets, he plays no favorites. His laws are the sam e for all men. Naturally, Israelites could well believe that God hated the sins of their enemies. But their own? That was a different story. Amos plunged from being the most popular sidewalk preacher of his day to 'being the best-hated m an in Israel. In fact, because he dared to nam e the king as sinner num ber one, he was accused of treason, a capital crim e in any country.* • * "One Man W ith God Is a M ajority” K MOS WROTE OUT his proph- " ecies at some later tim e and they have been handed down to us, • with all their fire and force, in the book that bears his nam e. We shall see in later lessons some of his great m essages. W hat stands out here is this: Truth Is sometim es popular, som etim es not, but the living power of truth has nothing to do with the num ber of people who believe it, or whether it is pleasant, or with the prestige of the m an who proclaim s it. If it is God's truth, it will live even if the only m an who believes it is banished, as Amos was, to the silent wilderness. (Copyright by the International Council ol Religious Education on behalf ox 40 Protestant denominations. Released by WNU Features.) POULTRY. CHICKS & EQUIP- SPECIAL sale, broiler meat chicks from Pullorum-tested flocks $3.90—100. AAA IOO assorted. Red Rocks, Crosses, heavy and light $4.90—100. C.O.D. F.O.B. Super Chicks. Bernard Morris, General De-livery. Savannah, Ga._________________ BABY CHICKS, S7.45 per hundred. Lim- ited time. Overstock sale of highest quality heavy cockerels. IOOCo live arrival guaranteed. Shipped C.O.D. We pay post, age, you pify C.O.D. Send order to Modoc Hatchery. Modoc, Indiana. SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC. SWEET Fotato Plants. Porto Ricians 21 cents per hundred. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Veteran potato grower. William Biggs, Martin, Tennessee.___________ _______WANTED TO TRADE TRADE for airplane Luscombe, Cessna or Cub one Watch Master manufactured by Western Electric Co. Type G-7. Used very IitUe by Jeweler to regulate watches. M. W. Stuart, Box 184, Telephone 580. 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Small Size SOc * CMIIM: HI MlT M EIIECIEt« IT EU UOD ERIIC SIOKS «l Il Mil» tetetpl .I ,lice KcIEH M lt CO.. I.e. JtCCSMTIllE «. TtEtIM I j! :! 'I I & I i BR Brai S e q u A few ers of Seq D ear M' In som um ns you v tract, and m ight be in history of To begin a truck far nam e of I bright wh 'a ’possum w hich is a as the insi ta r barre' calls him stein” a b e a r Lem the dog h brains tha~ sel of p and a ft' happened smoked-ha dance, mo chie is inc’ H ere’s w A COUP ,Will Purd: across the passed aw gathered ■Will's wife - w ith eigh them genu w ore the ham suppe needless t attention f th eir tails Bveryth lasses at the middl net” tube screech an svhen the began hoi the doors been stol chest. The F «*|*HAT A she a halt, be th at h He stoo fence—six hair. Blu easy arro a blue co jeans. “ Your’r said. And “Heavens, Aunt Ber “Is Aun “My re auntie be -Mi Fic her suite “ This is you read ing it fr w ith ho thought be one o things.” Minute Aunt Be over the “ Oh, tell m here? Not a two CO ing sui “ Who? nocently. w orry a unexpect nounced H e’s a The n Phil up w atched thought she said “It is,’ ing on r He poin “Some fields s Two believed and ci always a poor M E N T |e s t. o f p o r , r.:;;0U C atc rp in a r n H .P ., O I F ric kVaod P1-^ic r;£been ox 7, I W aslirrcttc, Ox- l.vv. of M iss. P op. In:. P riced to s e ll I m k nIi of y0UP tU: Sililfia s sv- ok" proposition a:- ’it- i C who a re i; |U ’K ____ _... W K CU LV KvDAVS ItKM^USSiON CO. S. A TLA N TA SI'1V P L II iS I I iI KAl1 I N ES IVaokct.:;!) Hiickct.■r.o. iiox r»u:« . K it. YlSiU .■riila. ___________ k n M OW KU KNIT ;.o a" 3-h.p. a:-.: ;” to con- 1.. t* ii. m ow s Bi. -.s. ;..v.:-.f. Only Ic or write I i ; INK CO., IN C . SMOVS________ :c::iv ',VSJS 7 F t. ..rr.otov. -oc each , SAL K R. A lva, I or Oeavored by I? Oc.ii.i. F lorida, I tru ck Load. I*. 0 , i& W S P & S ?dock. F lorida. ■ . I t boiler. 100 lbs. ■U U -H .P . F a r r a r Ssvcrv . 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W h e th e r Bed b y g e rm s o r E O L go es to w o rk h a rd -h ittin g ef- | s a m a z in g re su lts ^ tin in fectio n s, in c u re” ailm e n ts , A cne, Im p e tig o , . a n d R in g w o rm . , W o u n d s, B ites rem ed y . H E R - bew , p o w erfu l b u t L le rc u ry B ioleate. I i. acids, s ta in in g Ijn ts. D o cto rs a n d |e m se lv e s a n d rec- j w o n d e r-w o rk in g U se it on a n y I f th e b o d y except I is p o te n t germ l- a s a v a ila b le only Jrip tio n . N o w yo u |it presvriiM ion di- ory. S end $1 fo r b ttio. K a h le n b c rg Bge St., S a ra so ta , Yciion g u a ra n te e d tc k . 14—50 ----------- I ACKIS AID PAIRS OF !EViATISW I ITIS-LUMBAGO k ‘US-Small Size 60t Irlt as directed * I r SI Mill on receipt Bi price I acksmville a. Ticrioa .4 THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. B R O A D W A Y A N D M A I N S T R E E T Brainy'Possum Hound Outwits Sequatchie County Jewel Thief By BILLY ROSE . A few days ago I got the follow ing letter from a Mr. Jake W ith ers of Sequatchie county, Tennessee: Dear M ister Billy Rose, In some recent issues of the Nashville Tennessean I noticed the col umns you wrote about educated anim als—dogs that could add and sub- Jn*? horse* that could figure out cube roots—and so I figured you m ight be interested in hearing about the sm artest four-legged critter in the history of Sequatchie county. To begin at the beginning, there’s a truck farm er down here by the nam e of Lem Al bright who owns a ’possum hound which is as black as the inside of a tar barrel. Lem calls him “ Ein stein” and, to •hear Lem tell it, the dog has m ore brains than a pas- sel of professors —and after what happened the other night at our smoked-ham supper and square dance, m ost everyone in chie is inclined to agree. Here’s w hat happened: Billy Bose Sequat- A COUPLE of weeks ago, Mrs. Will Purdy’s m other, who lived across the line in Grundy county, passed away, and when the fam ily gathered for the divvying up, Will’s wife got a gold brooch set with eight diam onds, three of them genuine. Needless to say, she wore the brooch to the smoked- ham supper and square dance, and needless to recount, it got m ore attention than a team-of-four with their tails trim m ed. Everything went smooth as mo lasses at the social until right in the middle of a "swing your part ner” when Mrs. Purdy let out a screech and fainted dead away. And when they brought her around, she began hollering for someone to lock the doors because her brooch had been stolen from right off her chest. Fortunately, our sheriff was on hand, and after he banged the lid of the piano to get people quiet he said, “Don’t nobody leave this room. I hate to say it, but there’s a low-down, thievin’ crook in our m idst, and I’m .a-goin’ to search e irery m an-jack until I find Mrs. Purdy’s brooch.” “Sheriff,” said Lem Albright, “I don’t think that’ll hardly be necessary. My hound Einstein, as you know, is the best-behaved ani m al in Sequatchie county, but the one thing he can’t abide is to have a thief scratch his belly. So, sure as shootin,’ the m inute he feels the fingernails of the fella we’re after, he’ll start in to yowl, and we’ll have the thief in no tim e a-tall.” . . . SOME OF HS began to laugh, but the sheriff took Lem to aside, talked to him a m inute, and then banged the piano lid again. “I don’t rightly know whether Lem ’s notion is going to work,” he said, “but there ain’t no harm in givin’ it a try. I’m goin’ to ask him to take Einstein in the next room, and then I w ant all of you to get in single file and come in one at a tim e and scratch the hound’s belly.” Everybody, including the fiddlers, did as told, and sure enough, 20 minutes later the sheriff pointed at a farmhand as he came out from seeing the hound and said, "It worked, like Jake said— lherds the criminal." ( J l i s t e n i n a I F I can Ieam some lesson through this pain, IfI can hear God’s voice above the Storm, And catch His words and pass them on again To other suffering ones, if I can warm Some troubled heart with cheer and sympathy, And help it find a haven of rfelease, If I can speak the words God speaks to me To one soul that has lo§t its poise, its peace, This, even this, shall not have been in vain! God keep me quiet, keep me very Still, That through the heavy darkness and the tain. The thunder crashing loud upon my sill, I may discern Your voice, that I may heat The gentle, helpful, loving words You say. The Storm runs high, God make the words quite I . dear, And I shall listen carefully today. % GRACE NOLL CROWELL When the m an was grabbed and searched, the brooch w as found in his pocket, and so, on top of a smoked-ham supper and square dance, there was a running-out-of town party to top off the evening. And all in all, it was easily the m ost successful social in a long while. Next day, when Lem w as inter viewed by the editor of our paper, he didn’t brag m uch about his hound. “To tell the truth,” he said, “the sheriff and me, we The Fiction THE THREESOME Richard H. Wilkinson Corner "•pH A T MAN," Janice thought as X she brought her roadster to a halt, “has possibilities. It can’t be that he lives here.” He stood just inside the picket fence—six feet tall leanness. Fair hair. Blue eyes. Bespeaking the easy arrogance of youth. He wore a blue cotton shirt and blue denim jeans. “Your’re not Janice Burdon?” he said. And then at her expression. “Heavens, you are! Why couldn’t Aunt Bertha have warned m e?” “Is Aunt B ertha your aunt, too?” “My real aunt. You only call her auntie because she’s a close friend i _ _ of your mother. 3 „ . T hat m akes us - M inute not cousins,” he Fiction added with frank ______ relief. Janice rescued her suitcase from the rum ble seat. “This is not like one of those things you read about,” he grinned, tak ing it from her. He studied her * with honest approval. “And I thought m y vacation was going to be one of those dull, uninteresting things.” M inutes later Janice faced her Aunt B ertha in the bed cham ber over the front parlor. “Oh, Auntie, why didn’t you tell m e he was going to be here? I didn’t bring a thing. Not a thing, except m y shorts, two cotton dresses and a bath ing suit.” “Who?” Aunt Bertha asked in nocently. “Phil? Land sakes, don’t worry about him . He dropped in unexpectedly yesterday and an nounced he w as here for two weeks. He’s a dear boy. You’ll like him. The next day Janice accompanied Phil up to the north pasture and watched him prune apple trees. “I thought this was your vacation,” she said after awhile. “It is,” he told her. “I like work ing on m y vacations—out doors.” hot days in the sun, long lonely evenings. Even the thought of a farm had m ade her shudder. She wondered about Phil. He claim ed to be a law firm m em ber on vacation. It occurred to her that for a lawyer he was m ighty skillful handling pruning clippers. And his knowledge of farm ing was pro found. THE SECOND DAY of their vacation they knocked off early and went for a swim. The third day they played ten nis. The fourth Aunt Bertha packed them a lunch and they drove to Mount Carter, climbed to its sum m it and watched a glorious sunset while nibbling delicious sandwiches. On the second Saturday following her arrival she was with Phil. They had climbed Mount C arter again, had sat for long, silent m oments watching the afterglow of a blood- red sunset. Unexpectedly, Phil said: “Well it’s gone. And our vacation has gone. Tonight winds up the two weeks.” “There’s always an end to nice things,” she told him evasively. “ There doesn’t have to be. E ver. Listen,” he went on eagerly. “I gave you the wrong im pression about m yself. I'm not a successful lawyer. I never should have tried to be a lawyer. Thank heavens I realized the m istake before it w as too late.” “You m ean you’re not leaving? You’re staying here?” H e nodded. “I’m going to try and raise apples. Auntie and I are going to be partners. This fall I’ll sell w hat we have and next spring set out new trees. He picked up her hand. “Honey, let’s m ake it a threesom e. I know it’s a lot to ask,” he added wistfully. “A city girl like you. It’d be dull. But eventually—” "I could chip in m y roadster,” Janice cried excitedly. “It’s all I have, but it ought to bring $500. How m any apple trees can you buy with $500, darling?” “Enough,” said Phil, reading her eyes, “to keep from being lone some—I guess.” CHOSSWORD PUZZLE IAST WEEK'S ANSWER ^ She wondered about Phil. He pointed aw ay over the fields. “Some day I’d like to see all those fields set out to apple trees.” Two days ago she wouldn’t have believed him. She was city born and city bred. To her a farm had always symbolized hard work and a poor living, bugs and snakes and ACROSS I. A tax 5. Curveon a bar 9. Carry 10. Hillside dugout 11. Droplike marking 12. Kingdom, SE Asia (poss.) 14. Standards of perfection 16. Spill over 17. Measure (Chin.) 18. Total amount 20. Greek letter 21. Attic 24. Adress fastener 27. Divingblrd 29. River (Eng.) 30. Carried away in acart 33. Shaded walk 36. Hawaiian Islands (abbr.) 37. Island In a river 39. Hawaiian bird 40. Inland sea (Asia) 43. Protect 46. Heaps 48. Omit, as a syllable 49. Not any 50. Member of a Philippine tribe SI. Equipment 52.Observed DOWN A painter’s workroom Small coop Wheaten flour River ducks Owns Sashes (Jap.) Verbal Akind of gown (Jap.) H alfapint Twirled Underwater boat (shortened) 19. Wet earth 22. Distant 23. Exclamation 25. Evening sun god (Egypt) 26. Beverage 28. Parrot (N.Z.) 30. Fellow 31. Ventilating 32. Performed 34. Capital (Eng.) 35. A mineral deposit 38. Abounds 41. Genus of lily 42. River (Sib.) QDDQ DQQQ □D B G QDGQ DDQQQ QQQBE QD QQQ QGDE QQQ DQQ DQ BDQQ DQDDQD - DQQDDQD .. UUUUDD QDQU BD DQQ QQQ QQUQ QQQ DQ QQBQQ UUQQD QDDQ DQQD DQUD DQDQ 44. Mass of floating ice 45. Ireland 47. Varying weight (Ind.) t Re. I 1 7 » 4 w,S i 7 »W/<9 H IO Wtn121» 14 »5 i 16 17 W 19 i W 20 Zi 22 23 W/24 ZS 26 i 27 TB W 29 i i S*V 32 WU 54 35 36 W 37 53 Wa 39 40 41 42 i 43 «4 45 44 47 Wt43 %49 W 5o I W 51 m 52.i wasn’t too sure Einstein could spot the crim inal, so we helped out a m ite. I rubbed a little soot from the stove on the hound’s underside, and every tim e anyone cam e out of the room the sheriff looked at his hands. The first person with clean hands figured to be our m an, because the thief was a cinch to m ake believe he was scratchin’ Einstein without really touchin’ his belly a-talL ” Yours truly, Jake W ithers. E^SCRE By INEZ GERHARD OALLY FORREST and Keefe ^ Brasselle are so enthusiastic about Ida Lupino that they had to be prodded into talking about them selves at our interview. Both got their big breaks in Ida’s “Not W anted” and “Never F ear,” (Eagle Lion), thanks to her preference for casting her film s without in- 'I-'x SALLY FORREST sisting on big nam es. Sally, now 20, had three years as assistant director at Metro, playing sm all parts; Keefe had m ore picture experience and plenty of heart breaks. Following “Never F ear” he was given a supporting role in Param ount’s “An Am erican Trag edy.” But Sally and Keefe were really celebrating in New York— both had been signed to long con tracts by M-G-M. Jane G reer wanted an operatic career until, in her teens, she saw her twin brother, Donn, play the lead in a little theatre play. She switched to the movies, and he be cam e a com m ercial artist. But either Jane’s success or a liking fof acting m ade him swing over to her side; he m akes his film debut in RKO’s “The W all Outside,” in which she co-stars with Lizabeth Scott. Jam es Stew art is really playing a supporting role in “W inchester 73,” with the historic W inchester, often described as the “rifle that won the W est,” as the star. He wins it in a shooting m atch; it’s stolen, lost at poker, stolen again, with Stew art after it all the way. Shelly W inters is the girl involved with Stewart in this super-western. But the gun is m ore im portant. Rick Jason was considered for the starring role of “Luis Bello” In Robert Rossen’s “The Brave Bulls,” f o r Co lum bia, but lost out because he was too young. Now appearing with Frederic M arch on Broad way, he got a Columbia con tract anyway. Surplus U.S. arm y air forces breastplates, m ade to turn anti aircraft shrapnel, were convert ed by Columbia arm orers into me dieval breastplates; they’re worn by m en-at-arm s in the John Derek- Diana Lynn “Rogues of Sherwood Forest.” G reat R estraint After having two close decisions go against him , the old lawyer was fit to be tied. He struggled eloquently to restrain his tem per and m ade a great show of pack ing his papers, preparatory to leaving the courtroom. “Be careful,” warned the judge, “ your actions indicate that you wish to show your contem pt for this court.” “T hat is exactly w hat I don’t w ant to do, Your Honor,” de clared the lawyer. “I’m trying m y darnedest to conceal it.” Double Take An Englishm an w as sipping his afternoon cup of tea with a few friends, sm iling a n d chatting am iably, when suddenly he dropped both his sm ile and his cup. “ W hat in the world is the m atter?” asked the lady sitting next to him as she wiped a tea- leaf from her nose. “Oh, good heavens,” he ex claim ed. “ You rem em ber that girl I went around with about five years ago, don’t you?” “Yes.” “I just rem em bered that I gave her m y coat when she said she was cold. I should have known that she wanted m e to put m y arm s around her.” All It Takes A lawyer, whose business for several months had been none too- good, was roused from bis perusal of his lawbooks by the entrance of a timid-looking wom an. “I cam e about m y husband,” she said, “I w ant to know if I can get a divorce from him .” He slam m ed the book shut and countered, “ Are you m arried, m adam ?” “ Yes, of course,” she replied. “Well, yau can get a divorce, then,” he assured her. High Yield Corn Pershing, a late season hybrid sweet corn tried out at NDAC last year, was the highest yielding of all corns grown, and showed no sm ut infection. ALWAYS A W ISE BUY S t . J o s e p h ASPi RiN WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT IOt If You Are 85, 45 or 3, Hadacol Helps All Ages MRS. DOUCGT HADACOL is good for all ages, bringing five of nature’s B vitamins and important minerals to the young and old alike. Recently the HADA COL folks received tbe good news that among the countless thousands who had been benefited by HADA COL was a lady of 85, a man of 45 who felt like he was 18, and a beauti ful little girl only three years old. Mrs. Edmond Doucet, of Church Point, La., is 85 years old, having thousands of friends in the pictur esque Evangeline section of Louisi ana where sh e was bom and has spent all of her life , T hese friends are happy to know that Mrs.Doucet feels bet ter no"' than at any time in two years and gives th e credit to HADACOL. “I had been sick for almost two years a n d was suffering with gastric disturb ances and bloating. I was run down, had lost weight and had to stay in bed most of the time. I lost courage and felt that there was no hope tor me.” Mrs. Doucet had tried many prep arations without apparent beneficial results when she heard the glorious news about HADACOL. “After taking several bottles of HADACOL I felt like a new person,” said Mrs. Doucet. ' I eat anything I want without ill effects and sleep well. I feel much stronger.” Neville Dugas, of Route I, Box 101 B. Cardencro, La., is a successful farmer who had worked early and late at all kinds of bard work and _ it wasn’t so long IifclriEi ago that he won dered if he would ever be able to work that way again. He h a d I tried many medi cines, but felt no better. “I had all kinds I of stomach dis- I turbances,” said ' Mr. Dugas. “My MR DUGAS stomach was so bloated that it felt like it would swell up and burst. I suffered with gastric disturbances, heart burn and was run down and nervous. I had no appetite and suf fered with headaches and I couldn’t sleep at night. I was so drawn and pale that my friends had difficulty in recognizing me. After the third bottle of HADACOL I felt a Teal im provement and after the twelfth bot tle of HADACOL I felt like I was 18 instead of 45. I am feeling perfectly wefl.’’ “My three year old daughter, Joan, had lost her appetite,” said Mt. Dugas. “Her cheeks were pale and she cried often. I started giv ing Joan HADA- COL and after three of the large | economy size bot tles she is now I healthy, has an { excellent appetite and her disposi tion is perfect.” AU three oi these people were suffering from a I lack of B vita mins a n d th e minerals which HADACOL contains. HADACOL comes to you in liquid form, easily assimilated in the blood stream so that it can go to work right away. It is easy to understand, therefore, why countless thousands have been benefited by this amazing tonic, HADACOL. A lack of only a smaU amount of B vitamins and certain minerals wUl cause digestive disturbances. . . . Your food wUl not agree with you. . . . You wiU have an upset stomach. . . . You will suffer from heartburn, gas pains and your food wiU sour on your stomach and you wUl- not be. able to eat the things you like for fear of being in misery afterwards. Many people also suffer from constipation. And whUe these ' symptoms may be the results M other causes, they are surely and certainly ,the symptoms and signs of lack of B vitamins and minerals which HADACOL contains. And Jf you suffer from such a deficiency disorder, there is no known cure ex cept the administration of the vita mins and minerals which your system lacks. It is easy to understand, therefore, why countless thousands have been benefited by this amazing tonic, HADACOL. So, it matters not who you are . . . it matters not where you Uve . . . or if you have tried aU tbe medi cines under the sun, give this won derful preparation a trial. Don’t go on suffering! Don’t continue to lead a miserable life. Many persons who have suffered and waited for 10 to 20 years, or even longer, are able now to live happy, comfortable Uves again because HADACOL suppUed the Vitamins and Minerals which their systems needed. Be fair to yourself. Give HADACOL a triaL We are so firm in our belief that HADACOL wiU help you that we sell HADACOL on a money-back guar antee. If you don’t feel perfectly satisfied after using HADACOL as directed, just return the empty car ton and your money will be cheer fully refunded. Nothing could be fairer. Sold at aU the leading drug stores. Trial.size only $1.25, but save money —buy the large family and hospital size—only $3.50. If your druggist does not have HADACOL, order direct from The LeBlanc Corporation, Lafayette, Louisiana. Send no money. Just your name and address on a penny post card. Pay postman. State whether you want the $3.50 hospital economy size or the $1.25 trial size. Remem ber, money cheerfuUy refunded unless you are 100% satisfied.—Adv. f SHOULD A MAN OVEtf 40 STOP SMOKING? to SANO- the Safer Cigarette with . 5 I .6 V le ss NICOTINE No* O SnbsfrfWe-Wof AIodBcaIod J Sano’s scientific process cuts nico tine content to half that of ordinary cigarettes. Yet skillful blending I . makes every puff a pleasure. ' I * FLEMINO-HALL TOBACCO OO- INC„ H. Z. I * Averap, b d u s DU conKaoinfl to n o fp o rvlo r STauSi V 4« rovroocTog moot U N O tieAw ns PiAM oa CORK HF PAGE EIGHT THE OAVIE RECORD, UOCESVILLE N, C APRIL 12 1950 Medical ScienceGeis Effective New Tool In Tuberculosis War NEW YORK. - Medical science has a new tool in the war against tuberculosis. The tool is Tibione, a newly- discovered German drug. (Pro nounced tibby-own.) Medical ex perts com pare the new drug in its anti-tuberculosis effect with para- amino-salicylic acid ("P-A-S” ). Up to now, PAS has been the most promising running m ate to strep tomycin in combating TB. Research authorities say Tib'one has great promise because it m ay: (1) Be used in more cases than streptomycin; (2) Be used over a longer period of tim e than streptom ycin: (3) Be used with streptomycin and thereby delay development of streptom ycin-resistant bacilli. Two noted tuberculosis special ists—Dr. H. Corwin Hinshaw of San Francisco and Dr. Walsh McDer m ott of New York’s Cornell medi cal center—went to western Ger m any this fall to conduct a study on the new drug as special con sultants for SchenIey Laboratories, Inc. The doctors studied the effect At Tlbione on 2,000 patients who had ;b«en treated with it in 10 Germ an hospitals. Their survey Indicated the drug is an effective weapon against certain types of TB—par ticularly tuberculosis laryngitia and tuberculosis enteritis. There also was evidence, the doctors said, that Tibione m ay be effective against tuberculosis em pyema, a condition on which strep tomycin has shown little effect. Schenley Laboratories is making the drug available to government agencies and outstanding tubercu losis research organizations for clinical tests. It probably will not be available for general use in this country for at least a year. According to medical experts, Tibione’s outstanding characteristic is that its adm inistration—and prob- ably its beneficial action—can be continued for extensive periods ; without the toxic reaction that <*- j curs when streptom ycin is used for I prolonged periods. j But the new drug doe* not have ' the rapid and dram atic effect of streptomycin. Nor does it appear to be effective in two very serious, but relatively uncommon, form s of tuberculosis; m ilitary tuberculosis and tuberculosis meningitis. | M exican Turtle Is T houfht T* Have Swum A erott Sea PLYMOUTH, ENGLAND.—A Mexican turtle, which m ay have swum all the way across the At lantic, had Comishmen in a dither. It was a scientist who said the little fellow m ight have gone swimming and wound up cross ing the ocean. T h e Mexican Loggerhead, about the size of a m an’s head, was first spotted ambling placid ly along a seashore highway several thousand miles from the Gulf of Mexico where he be longed. Comishmen had never seen one like him. They phoned the m arine biological laboratory here. “Very rare thing,” said Dr. D. P. Wilson, the laborato ry’s aquarium chief. He said it was quite possible that the tur tle crossed the ocean under his own power, helped along by the Gulf Stream . Seng Bringing Big Money Te British Night W atchm an LONDON, ENGLAND - “Old BUI,” 75 year old Brixton night w atchm an with the well kept hands and the cultured voice, has written New York’s latest song hit. Billy Whitlock, once a ICKI pound a week m usic hall star, chuckled his way through contracts that •how him as a potential earner Ot thousands of dollars. AU because a very old gram o phone record which he m ade Ilk 1904 was played as a joke on an ultra-m odem phonograph at a New York cocktail party. Billy has been plodding along on his old age pension and odd night watchm an jobs in South London for years. In a few months the sprightly old m an who used to m ake recordings for the original Edison Bell Co. will be back in the money. The record they played at the New York cocktail party was heard by dance band m aestro Guy Lom bardo. It was recorded again and sold fast. The Decca Co. cabled London to see whether the original Billy Whit lock were still alive—and swept him down to the studios to m ake another record of the song hit. “It’s like a dream .” old Bill said. “There I was, just pottering along, getting by as well as I could on any job that offered, and here I am with my pockets stuffed with contracts.” The records of his song, a rollick ing old-fashioned polka cal'eri "Scotch Hot”—now renam ed “Hop Scotch Polka”—are selling at the rate of 15,000 a week in America. His life story is complicated. Son of a musician, he has been a sailor, skating rink instructor, gram o phone recording mechanic, cinem a operator, grocer and tobacconist, orchestrator and arranger, truck driver and night watchman. j TWKcOMMUNITY CAN CONTROL RABIK BY AN ORGANIZED COMW UNITV D O G - V A C C I N A T I N G - P R O & R A M WE FEEL i r » TB Q Q IB L S - THE VIRUS CAUSINd HUMAN'FLU'IS CbKELY RELATED TO TWB ONE CAUSING , SWINE " FLOlLow > ijfc § HOOKWORMS IN HUMANS ABC. TREATED BV A CfIEMICAL USED IN CLEANING HATS, DISCOVERY VIttS MADE BY A VGYtRINARIAN, MAURICE HALL Amtrieaa Foundation for Animal Health Farmer's Question Corner MBPAMBD MT A m erican Foundation For Animal Health The Nation's Worst Swine Killer QUESTION: What disease kills the most swine in America? ANSWER: Hog cholera i9 by far the worst killer. It destroys about 920,000.00 worth cf hogs a year, QUESTION: What causes it? ANSWER: A virus—too small to be seen even under a microscope. The amount you could get on the point of a pin could kill an entire herd of hogs. QUESTION: Can you tell when a hog has cholera? ANSWER: That’s one of the worst 1 things about hog cholera — a number •of other maladies m ay show symp toms like it. Usual ly the first symp toms of cholera in clude loss of appe tite, fever, weakness and prostration. Piga may start dying rapidly. QUESTION: Can cholera be cured? ANSWER: There is no cure. Pre vention Is the only answer. Hog cholera losses cau be cut do...: Io almost nothing by proper vaccination of pigs around weaning time. QUESTION: Any special points t o bear in mind about vaccination ? ANSWER: Jes. Only healthy pigs in good condition should be vaccin ated. Otherwise, vaccination with serum and virus may cause bad re actions. A careful examination should always be made by the veterinarians to determine whether or not the pigs are in proper condition for vaccina tion. Another important point: The virus is dangerous and should be handled only by someone who knows how; and one who understands ster ilization of eauipment and other precautions. NOTE—Due to space limitations, general questions cannot be handled by this column. p k : p a:sed b y AMERICAN FOUNDATION FOR ANIMAL HEALTH HOG CiiOLERA STiLL NO. I HOG KILLER Other diseases may hit harder in some communities, but the nation s No. I swine killer is still hog cholera. Thousands of outbreaks are re ported every year. The disease seems to run in cycles, some years being much worse than others. Just as human tuberculosis is most frequently transm itter by tuberculous A typical case of hog cholera. people, moat new outbreaks of hog cholera can be traced to direct or in direct contact with cholera-infected awine. Some outbreaks have been caused by feeding garbage containing un- I coo‘:ed pork scraps, by virus p reset i in rivers and creeks, by carrier birds, ! or by the virus being carried on peo- I pie's shoes, and even on truck and wajon wheels. Careless or Inexperienced ise of vaccinating virus also may start an outbreak. In such cases. Instead of protecting the animals, the unskilled vaccinator actually Is giving them the disease. Usually, once Introduced Into a drove, hog cholera spreads rapidly from hog to hog, killing most animals It Infects. This high death loss is one of the most typical symptoms of the disease, although In some forms It kills slowly. AU breeds of swine are susceptible. At one time it was thought that the mulefoot hog w.\3 immune, but research veterinarians disproved this Idea.In view of the many ways which hog cholera virus can be spread—by garbage feeding, unsldlly1. vaccina tion. streams, visitors, tires, insects and birds — the only safe protection against it In regions where it has occurred, is by vaccination of pigs around weaning time. r.y \m er:s/.m fo u ?3^ a tic :j r c :j \ t:x*.v. i VACCINES SAVE i FArIM PROFITS New vaccines developed by vet erinary science during the last few Vaccines now produced from chick jaara are saving Uveatock and poul try raisers millions' of dollars*' TJnhatched chicks play a Mg part Ib the advances that have been made. Xoilr methods have made It possible to pcrow (‘:'::” e--.'c : v.:r : i Cts Clii'1'- e;:V;r-;s. “ y i'-'t scientists n~'; r.c;' .■? ' vr.r-r“; against sur-Ji di, s Co e-ji.'.a s c - in'; s;:kne23. fo.vl pox, ;?ow."s' •> disease and laryn .otracI’.oiUs of fti?/ls from the ir.'isied or-':rycs. Through sirrv’ar e s^’c's, veteri narians have developed a vp.es.r.e which protests cattle against rind-v- pest — the deadly “tropical cattle plague.” Another system is being I 1:: (I to •uakei effective vacc'tes against foot- and-mouth disease of cattle and con tagious sore mouth of sheep. This method Is based on removing the disease-causing power of a virus, but leaving its ability to immunise. Thus, when the vaccine is injected into .an animal, .the animal does not co: e down with the disease, but builds up resistance to it. Not only have those discoveries proved valuable in veterinary med icine, but also they are being used to develop vaccines tha; will protect human beings against virus diseases. The search for new vaccines is by no means ended, for many of the known virus diseases of man cr.d animals Iiava yet to be conquered. Boger & Howard PURE SERVICE Ttrts Batteries And Accessories Kurfees Paints Comer N. Main & Gaither Sts, Phone 80 ATTENTION FARMERS! POULTRY LOADING We Will Buy Every Thursday Morning From 8 A. M., To II A. M. In Front Of E. P. Fosters Ottton Gin Your Poultry HIGHEST M a RKET PRICES PAID SALISBURY POULTRY CO. Salisbury, N. C DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALERS IN GOOD COAL Day Phone 194 * Nifrht Phone 119 M'>cksville, N. G I Walker Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Phone 48 Mocksvillet N C SILER Funeral Home AND Flower Shop Phone 113 S. Main St Mocksville, C. Ambulance Service ftotice to Creditors Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Thos. W lutterow, Sr., de ceased, late of Davie County. North Caro lina, notice is h<*r*-by riven to all persons holding claims against th« eaid estate, to present them to the undersigned on or be fore Jan. I, 1951. or this notice will be pieadinbnrof their rpc''v«ry Al! per sons indebted to the salt estate are re quested to make prompt settlement. This Jan. 25, 1950. THOS. W. TliTTEROW. J*. Admr. of Thos. W. Tutterow. Sr Mocksville. N C., Route I. Steel Fierccd with Oil A practical method using oil to pierce holes in steel is under experi mentation. A column of oil Is substituted for the ordinary m etal pouch. The col umn is struck hard at the top. The oil, confined in all directions and not compressible, is forced to punch through the steel sheet at the bot tom of the column and into the hol low area of the die placed under the sheet. The new method, it is !aimed, would considerably rs- ’•ice costs in various ways. Either Way A wag asked his friend, “How m any knaves do you suppose live on this street besides yourself?” “Besides m yself!” replied the other. “Do you m ean to insult m e?” “Well, then,” said the first, “how m any do you reckon includ ing yourself?” LET US DO YOUR JOB PRINTING We can save you money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, PACKET HEADS* Etc. % Patronize your home newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. THE DAVIE RECORD. THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE U n c l e S a m S a y s m m m m I The I= e l B MI Davie Record I = SB I Has Been Published Since 1899 I 50 Years Others have come and gone-your county newspaper keeps gnir.g. t** ometimes it has seemed hard io make "buckle and tongue” meet but soon the sun shines and again we march on. Our faithful subscribers, most of whom pay promptly, give us courage and abiding faith in our fellow man. If your neighbor is not taking The Record tell him to subscribe. The price is only $1.50 per year in the State, and $2.00 in other states. When You Come To Town Make Our Office Your Headquarters. We Are Alwavs Glad To See You. "measure Your Own Progress” should be the ambition of every one of my nieces and nepbews now that we are In I the ulid-Twentleth Century year. Toa j have seen this country grow into the [ greatest power on earth. That progress ; can be measured, but how about your- - selves? How much have you saved to ward that bright and secure financial future to which everyone aspires? It I not now an Investor In t . S. Savings ; Bonds there Is no better time to start than TODAY. START SAVING IN 195« , FOR 1961. Enroll tor the automatic i way of piling np Savings Bonds where j you work, or if self-employed, the Bond* .I-Moiitti Plui where you bank. V. 5. ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPACE IN THIS PAPER W ill A r r a n g e T o S u it GOOD NEIGHBORS—PRICES TO FIT VO’JR BUSINESS I S S U E M I S S I N G The Davie Record D A V IE 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 aHERE SHALL THE prvss. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIRED BY GAIN ” VOLUMN L.MOCKSVrLLK. NOKTH CAROLINA, W EDNESDAY, A PRIL 26 iqSo.NUMBER 39 NEWS OF LONG AGO What Was Happenimc In Da* vie Before Parking Meters And Abbreviated Skirts. (Davie Record, April 25, 1934) T T . AnpelI spent Friday in W inston-Salem on htisiness. M rs. M. D. Pass scent F rldav in W inston-Salem shornine. D. F . and K ellv P otts, of L ex- lngton, were Mocfcsville visitors on T hnrsd ay. K eeister of Deeds T. W . T tirner m ade a business trip to Y adkin vllle W ednesday. A ttorney B. C. Brock and T . J. E llis went to B aleieli T hursday on leeal htisiness, M rs. J. K . M ernney and Mrs, Roy Feezor spent Friday In W ins ton-Salem slioppine. M r. and M rs. Thom as Bowles, of Cana, announce the arrival of 9 d au eh ter on Tuesday. A pril 17. Mrs. Roy H nlthonser is confined to her hom e on M aple e'ventie with an attack of fin. Mr*. E . C. C linard, of L exine. ton, snent the week-end in town th e Pliest nf M rs. W . H LeO rand Mi«s Lnuise Daniel, a m em ber nf th e hfeh school farn 'tv , snent the w eek-end w ith her patents at G reensboro. Mrs. J. G. Adams retnrned Sat urday from Ni*w London, where she spent some time with her fath er. who ha= been Qtiite ill. Mr. and Mrs. Alvfs Chechire.. rf tbls c'tv, and Mr. and Mrs. HsnM 1 n? 3m,rh GrnTO1 spent Fri day in the Twin-CitV shnnnbig'. Mr. and Mrs. W B LeGrard, of Dav’nna Beach. Fla srwnt week—«nd in town with the'r nor. ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. L*-, Grrand. Mr. and Mrs. Duke Smith, rf Redland. are the proud parents nf a fine d-nphter who arrived at their hnme Thnrsday. April tq. R . M. Ijam es went tn L ow er' H nsnital, Sa1|ebnry. one dav 1**t week for a medical exam ination M r. Ijam es has been in bad healtl- for several m nnths. M iss M artha Teon A I Ifcon, wt-o is teachine at Kannapolis, spent the week-end here with her sister, Mlss V iolet AIUsnn, a m em ber nf th e local schnol farn'tv. Work on jR, P. Martin’s new r*. sidpnce on Wilkesborn street is pro pressing nirelv. When completed this will he one nf the handsome=* homes in this certion of the tnwn. M rs. W I,. Triwette, nf Bonne spent the week-end in tnw n with her datiehtei Wi=s N ell T rivette. a m em ber of the M ocksvilie- graded school farnltv. MJeses Kathrvn Fost and B'"v Thompson, nnrses at Davis Hnc- pifal, Statesville, spent Friday in town with home folks. They wi'l graduate in Auenst. Dick B reneear1 who holds a re. sponoihte position with the Sonth- eastern E xpress Co., at R aleieb. is spending some tim e here w ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H . T . B reneear. F rank Stonestreet1 soti of Mr. and Mrs. Boone Stonestreet, a stn dent at A tlanta D ental Colleee, underw ent an appendicitis opera, tion last T uesday. H e is eettine alone nicelv In an A tlanta hospital. Leonard M ayhew and Mtss M ar garet M yers, both of Davie, were united in m arriage at the cnnrt house S aturday m ornine. E sq. F. R. Leagans perform ing the mar- riaee cerem ony. Misses H elen and D orothy Crav. en spent Saturday tn Greensboro w kh their sister, Miss K athleen Craven, a student at G reenshoro College. M iss N athleen accom panled them hom e and scent S un. day here w ith her m other, Mrs. I. A, Craven. Winds Of Oppor tunity Rev. Walter E. Isenboar, HMh Point. R 4. T here are w inds of opposition W hen we stand against the w rong. But it’s blessed when we m eet them W ith a prayer and w ith a song, K eeping sw eet In soul and spirit L ike the saints of other days, W ho revealed the grace of Jesus T hrough their love and b \ their prr.ise. T here are winds of opposition If we stand for all th at's clean, And refuse to yield our spirit T o the low and vile m ean; Bnt it’s great to go forth happy As a victor in th e fight. K now ing th a t rew ards are com ing W hen we Hve to do the right. Strong the winds of opposition Blow against our stand for tru th . W hether we be old and feeble. O r ju st in th e davs of youth; B nt th e God of grace and glory Is th e God of tru th we know . So H e’H crown tts w ith the faithful If we’ll stend th e test below. Strong th e winds of opposition Blow against ris on life's way, B nt it’s sw eet to know th at Jesus H ears us when we hum bly prav. And will guide us on o a r voyage T ill we reach the other shore. T here to dwell w ith hoi* angels And our loved ones everm ore. Everrfwdy Soaked E ^erv vear at incom e tax time T renal! w nat was told m e the >9 ^0’s when I expressed alarm »t ►hp c"eittv Increased governm ent 'iendine. viz.. W hat are vod w or. rvintr ahont; only the rich will eet =oaked." H o w n n tru e th a tre m a rk cas is partiallv revealed by the com parison of payroll taxes w hich follow?: Y early Salary 1929 »950 H s.too (M arred) No T ax $147 50 2.600 “ N o T ax 230 00 3.600 " N o Tax 389.00 1.560 (Single) N o T a x 157 40 T his com parison, unfortunately illustrates only to a m inor extent how th e “ nof-so rich” also are be ing soaked since a m uch greater nortion of taxes of people In the lOw income brackets are, as F . D. R eatd “ paid Indirectly in the -ost of things they b u y .” These •hidden’ taxes tn d n d e corporate in come taxes (increased from 11 to 38 per cent) taxes paid by business on payrolls, oils, transportation, teleohone, telegraph, electricity, Ii- qnor, plaving caids, tobaccos, etc., “xcise saxes oa autos, tires, tnbes and parts, on electric, gas and oil appliances, on light bulbs, refrige rators, gasoline, m usical instru m ents, photogradbic m aterials, ra dios, sporting goods, etc.. also lu x ury taxes on furs, jew elry, Iug- oage, toilet preparations, adm is sions, etc. I once estim ated th at a single woman earning /2,340 a year paid over $800 a year in taxes Indud ing Federal, State. C itv aud th e a- ->ove hidden taxes and although it is about $100 less now thanks to th e reduction given by th e previous Congress, it’s still terriffic. Despite all th e publicity given in new spapers regarding w asteful gov. ernm eot spending and inefficiency, and their effort on taxpayers* ever- iucreastng debt burden and high taxes, too. m any taxpayers are too *>usv ‘’having fa n ' to take a few m inutes tim e to w rite thetr Con gressm an telling them (1) to re. peal all w ar taxes. (2) to balance onr hndget im m ediately, and (3) to stop w asting their m oney. T hat is w hy governm ent spending, th e cause ot taxation and debt, has gone steadily from bad to worse. 0. PITSCHMAN, New York Good Logic : The girl stepped the car and [promptly got on, but the motorman ■had no sooner started the car than :she asked him anxiously: “Will this car take m,e to the lfootball gam e?" “No, m iss.” “But you have an announcement ;of the gam e on the front of the car,” Iahe said, as though that were suffi cient reason for the car to be going to the game. " I know, m iss. We also have an announcement of Bostnn baked ;beans back in the car there, but this car certainly don’t go to Boaton!” DBH VIEWPOINT ::u3«•«/ />\ uT'i / Blind fclan’s Ghariiy Saves Four Gabbies From Prison PHILADELPHIA— A blind m an’s charity has saved from prison four men convicted of an attack upon him which cost him his sight. The blind pardoner was Clair Reed, Jr., 33-year -old form er taxi driver. The men he saved from prison were cabbies too. They were convicted of participating in an at tack upon Reed in which Reed lost his vision when struck with a tire iron. Reed felt his way to the witness chair when the men came up for sentencing. As the four convicted drivers watched their permanently sightless victim, Reed told the judge: “I don’t feel these boys should go to jail because of this act . . . I don’t hold any prejudice against anybody.” The judge then let the men off with $100 fines and court costs, put ting them on probation for two years. As he did so he rem arked that the defendants “normally would be sent to prison.” Reed was injured during violence over a wildcat taxi strike. A fifth m an accused of wielding the tire iron against Reed is a fugitive. The judge took into account a union col lection for Reed, reportedly Sit.ono, in his sentencing, but said the per son who blinded Reed would “even tually be held to account for his act.” “But dad, Fred has character. You can read it in his eyes.” “Then, Elsie, I’ve just blackened his character.” Would Have to W ait A lecturer aboard a southern tra in was complaining about the slowness of the train to the con ductor. "W ell, if yer don’t like it,” the conductor finally blurted out, “why Jn thunder don’t yer git out an’ Walk?” “I would,” the lecturer blandly replied, “but you see the commit- Itee doesn’t expect m e until this train gets in.” Jnst A Habit She was telling an acquaintance about her girl friends. “Yes,” she said, “my friend M aud is only 25, but she’s been m arried three tim es. And all her husbands have been named Wil liam .” “You don’t say!” replied he. “Why, she m ust be a regular Bill collector!” Scientist Changes Mercury To Gold, But Cost too Ni :h CHICAGO. — It m ru: inrd for modern science to do something j the ancient alchem ists sought tu do I for centuries—turn base metal into I gold. I But, there is a catch, as usual. The process costs so much m ore than the price of gold that ‘twou'd be folly to fool wilii it. Dr. Arthur Dempster, of the Ar- gonne national laboratory, reported it had been learned that a small portion of m ercury would change into gold if bombarded by neutrons in an atomic pile. But this is no easy method of making gold, for it costs m any tim es the $35 an ounce being paid for gold. Dr. Dem pster said Argonne phy sicists found that a very weak m er cury isotope — or particle of m at ter m ade radioactive—had a great capacity to absorb neutrons. This particular isctops has an atomic weight of 1S6. A sam ple of m ercury 196 was sent to the Hanford (Wash.) labor atory of the atomic energy com- ' mission and placed under neutron I bombardm ent in the atomic pile. It was left there two weeks. At the end of that time it was found that a sm all portion of the . m ercury had been transform ed into I gold. Sure Proof “Are they in iove?” “They m ust be. She listens to U m describe a bail game and he listens to her telling how her cous in’s new dress was m ade.” How Else? “How can I avoid falling hair?” “Jum p out of the way.” ALWAYS HELPFUL Trade Wfith The Merchants Vfho Advertise In The Davie Record The conductor was perplexed. “Who on earth,” he sputtered, “would want to steal a Pullm an ladder?” Just then, the curtain parted and a little old lady poked her head through cautiously. “Porter,” she whispered, “you m ay use mine if you like. I won’t need it until morn ing.” Single Thought A young couple asked the parson to m arry them im m ediately fol lowing the Sunday morning service. When the tim e cam e, the m inister rose and announced: “Will those who wish to be united in the holy bonds of m atrim ony please come forward?” There was a great stir—and 13 women and one m an walked up to the altar. Empty Phrase “W hat an awful gash you have on your forehead!” “Oh, next to nothing—next to nothing." j W rong M ental /IHiJutis M akes Chores Irksome CHICAGO. — Conserving the hom em aker’s physical energy is just as im portant a household sav ing as balancing vitam ins against the food budget or stretching the clothing dollar. According to research conducted on behalf of an Illiopolis, 111., firm m anufacturing a synthetic house hold starch which rem ains in clothes through many washings and doubles the wear of fabrics, there are several recommended ways to m ake sure that the housewife doesn’t use up her energy unneces sarily in the course of her home- making duties. First, the wrong mental attitude toward household chores can make jobs in the home twice as hard as they need be, the report says. If this is her trouble, the overtired housewife should simplify her work by taking greater advantage of time-saving aids so that she can spend m ore tim e away from the home in relaxing entertainm ent. Second, elim inate household nuisances and chores which clutter up a hom em aker’s day. Such “clut ter" includes unessential furniture which by rights belongs in the attic instead of the living room, where it m ust be dusted; m arketing hap hazardly every day instead of only once or twice a week; listening to favorite ■ radio program s without, at the 3ame time, doing something useful which, as a job, preys on the mind, such as mending. A third help is arranging separate starching days for things such as curtains, household linens and bed room furniture flounces. Farm News The Davie County Aericulture Workers Council is made up of all the County Workers; men and women, The council has been working several months on a long time program of Agriculture. The goal of the program is to promote “Better Rural Living,” The committees have worked out recommendations foi all major farm crops, livestock, home food supp’y. conservation of natural re sources, farm and home develop ment. This is a long-time pro gram but much of it can be done in 1950. AU Agriculture Workers in Da vie are using the recommendations worked out by the committees. Home Food Supply—A vegeta ble garden should have a definite and well planned place on every farm. Plant one acre of good year- round garden for fir -sh vegetables and forconserving. Practice con tinuous planting. 2. Have sot* tested and follow recommendat ions. Ordinarily 1000 pounds of 6-8 6 per acre is sufficient. Stable manure should replace some of the fertilizer. 3. Prepare eood seed bed. 4. Sow recommended cover crop on part of garden land. 5. Plow heavy soils in fall. 6. Follow recommended planting "dates, va rieties and rates. 7. Rotate vegeta bles from vear to year.. 8. Culti vate often enough to control grass ind weeds and to keep well pul verized. 9. Practice latest recom mendations for"insect"control. 10. Gather vegetables at proper time, md conserve by cann'ng, freezing, storing and curing in provided storage space. B. Meat, milk and eggs are es sential foods for the daily diet. I. Two hogs dressing 250 lbs. Mch, 2. One beef calf 3. One hundred straight-run chicks to furnish poultry meat and 35 pul- iets for layers. 4. Two good cows Freshening at different times dui~ ing the year. Produce the following fruits: Ssrawberrie s grapes, figs, Roysen- berries or dewberries, damsons, cherries, pecans. Fifteen Davie faimers entered the 1949 5-acre cotton contest. Av erage yield was 863 pounds of lint per acre. Average county yield not in contest, 400 poun.ds. It paid off. We need more people to en ter the contest. If you plan to have 5 acres of cotton in one field contact the county agent’s office. Somebody in Davie will win a $50 cash prize. Under present allotment system total income from cotton can be maintained and perhaps increased by following recommended practi ces: I. Have soil tested and fer tilize according to recommendat ions, or as follows if a test hasn’t been made. I. In rotation with non-legume crops, 4-124. 2. In rotation with legumes for hay. pea nuts or on potash deficient soils. 4-12-8 or 5-10-10 or equivalent. 3. In rotation with legumes for seed or turned or on soils of high or ganic matter, 3-12-6. Prepare good seed bed. Test seed for germina tion. Amount seed per acre, six pecks undelinted seed per acre hill dropped. Seed should be gra ded to get uniform stand. Use side placement of fertilizer where equipment is available. Plant cot ton between April 18-25. Spacing- 3 to 4 stalks to one foot of row. Width of rows 34-36 inches. Ap plication of side dressing should be made at first cultivation. Prac tice shallow cultivation. Use lat est Experiment Station recommen dations if boll weevils be.ome a problem. Practice defoliation when practical. Keep cotton picked as it opens. Make every effort to get cotton classed. There is more profit in selling baled cotton than in selling it in the seed. Sow cov er crops on land in the fall. Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. noocoo Hubert Eaton standing on Main street shaking hands with friends —Harley Crews all dressed up but not going anywhere—Deanna Sil- verdis carrying white rabbit down Main street—High school girls aazing with awe at large diamond on Senior’s third finger, left hand — Glenda Madison shopping in drug shop—Miss Florence Cor- natzer and friend shopping around 'n dime shop—Mrs. Ethel Mvers putting jewelry in display window - Sain sisters talking with friends in parked auto—Mr. and Mrs. W orth Hendricks carrying cold drinks down Main street. Our County And Social Security Bv W. K. White. Manager. With the coming of spring and the opening of the baseball season all over the country, this would be a good time for us to talk a- bout the “Social Security Nine.” That doesn’t stand for a baseball team, even though it sounds, like it. Not a baseball nine—but a big ger and. better nine that goes to bat for you and your family when you are in a pinch. I’m speaking of those nine num. bers on that valuable bit of card board you should be carrying a- round with you in your pocket- book dav after day—your Social Security Card. You didn’t know it had nine numbers? Just count them and see. Here’s something else you didn’t know! or possibly never even thought about—your Social Security Card represents an insurance account with Uncle Sam. You never considered that before when you figured out your insurance, did you? Your Social Security Card by itself is not a guarantee that any one will receive benefits when you die - you have to use the card, and work under that number to build up credit to your account. When you apply for a Social Securitv Card, the Federal Gov ernment sets up a record under your Social Security Number just for you. As you work and pay Social Security Taxes, your earn ings are shown on that account, but—and here’s the sad. part a- bout it, many people are careless about their Social Security Ac count—they don’t use their Social Security Card. They use an in correct name and account num- ber. The correct reporting of your name and account number is ne cessary before your earnings can be shown on your account. On every job you take, which comes u.ider the Social Security Act, your employer should ask you tor your Social Security CarJ. Keep vour card handy; don’t try to me* morize your number or write it on a slip of paper—always hold on to your Social Security Card. If you lose it, apply for a dupli cate. Check with your employer today. See if he has vour correct account number. If you have lost your Social Se curity Card don’t hesitate to get a duplicate right now. Make ap plication at the nearest Social Se curity Office. No matter where vou got your original card, they can get a duplicate for you. The Winston-Salem office is located in the Nissen building. Office hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., Monday through Friday. I will be in Mocksville ot> Wed nesdav, April 26th, at the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m. I will also be in Cooleemee on the same date at the Erwin Cotton Mills office at 11 a. m. THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSV1LLE. ~N. C. -WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSISW - U. S. Defense Setup Challenged; Progress Reported in ECA Field; Truman Signs Crop Increase Act (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In Ibese columns, they are those of Western Newsnaner Union's news analysis and not necessarily or this newspaper.)Western Newspaper Union's news analysi DEFENSE: Charges Hurled Charges that the government has been “ragging its feet” in organ izing civil defense against an A- bomb attack and in telling Ameri cans how to protect themselves have been hurled by four big-city officials. MAYOR Elm er E. Robinson of San Francisco minced no words in asserting that federal authorities have "fumbled the ball” of civilian defense. He urged that a policy of total defense be inaugurated imme diately by the federal government. Federal planners have said that local officials will have to assume prim ary responsibility for civilian defense against atomic w arfare, the government’s role being that of coordinator. THAT MUST have seemed an odd stand to take to officials who have nc knowledge of atomic bomb ef fects or of the first steps to take toward protection if such bombings occur. Surely public leaders were within the bonds of reason and logic when they dem anded that the gov ernm ent channel to them m ore in form ation on how to provide pro tection against atom ic w arfare— information which only the federal government possesses, if anyone or any group does possess it. The government’s attitude seemed a callous one and hard to reconcile with all the scare techinques prev alent in connection with the possi bility of another w ar in which the A-bomb or the H-bomb would be the most frightful weapons. FOREIGN AID: Some Progress As the economic cooperation ad m inistration started its third year of operations, M arshall plan coun tries were being urged to take two steps of param ount im portance to m ake themselves independent of extraordinary outside aid by the tim e ECA ends in June of 1952. COUNTRIES participating in the M arshall plan were to be told that they should intensify efforts to. sell m ore products to the United States and other hard-currency areas. ECA pointed to that as one m eans of closing the dollar gap. In that connection, the agency continued, the U.S. could assist by following increasingly liberal im port policies and commercial pol icies generally so that trade bar riers do not prevent European countries from increasing dollar earnings in this country. AS to European economic unifi cation, ECA stated its belief that the establishm ent of- an effective European paym ents union is of great importance. Elim ination of public and private trade restric tions also were said to be a con tributing factor to economic unifi cation. As a result of increased produc tion and financial and political stabilization, ECA said, commu nism has been placed on the de fensive in all participating coun tries. HOGS: No Props For the first tim e within the past eight years, hogs were being bought and sold at m ajor U.S. m arkets without any price supports—and dealers adm itted it was difficult to note any difference. PRICES were steady to 25 cents higher. W hat did that m ean? Was it an indication that federal agri cultural planners could have been wrong all these years? If that were the case, there probably would be no admission of it. In fact, one U.S. departm ent of agriculture spokesman hailed the event as a “norm al m arket.” It was “just a m atter of supply and demand,” he said, as if the de partm ent had been aw are of and had considered that venerable law ever since the government went into the farm ing business. FARMERS and traders, however, held varying opinions as to what m ight happen when the m arkets opened for the first tim e since hog price supports were allowed to die. Some felt growers would become panickv and flood the m arket with hogs. But, as was reported, nothing happened. Anti-support adherents, never theless. could draw little consola tion from the evident, for farm leaders had m ade it clear vigorous efforts would be Made to restore hog price props. SUBMARINES: But Whose? Cloaked with all the color and trappings of m ystery and suspense was the report that a naval officer had m ade instrum ent contact with "one or m ore” unidentified sub m arines about 17 miles off the Cali fornia coast. OFFICIALLY, the western sea frontier, which ordered the hunt, reported “results and comment negative.” It added the search had bten discontinued. 'Hot' Shirt '•IV ' . j . ' t WWMSMt Defense Secretary Lonis Jobn- son (right) talks “ cold w ar” In a “hot” shirt as he and President Trnm an discuss de fense strategy and anti-Com- m unist activities at the “little White House” in Key West, Fla. Secretary Johnson’s shirt recalls the “Solomon-in-all-his glory” quotation, bnt even it was topped by one the Presi dent frequently donned for pictures. CROP BOOST: A Compromise In any m anner likely to affect the farm vote—with the congres sional elections not so m any months away—President Trum an showed an unwonted disposition to compromise, rather than come out fighting against anything he didn’t like, as he has done so frequently in the past. THE PRESIDENT compromised on an agricultural bill raising ac reage lbnitations on cotton and peanuts for 1950 and modifying price supports for Irish potatoes next year. In signing the m easure after long study, the President noted, according to the presidential press secretary, Charles G. Boss, that “the good features outweighed the undesirable features.” And with that profound utterance, the bill was signed into law. The President acted after under going heavy pressure from groups urging approval of veto of the joint resolution. The section affecting potatoes knocks out price supports for po tatoes in 1951 unless m arketing quotas are then in effect. Addi tional legislation would be needed, however, to put such quotas into operation in 1951. THE MEASURE as approved authorizes an increase of 1.5 mil lion acres in cotton acreage this year and a SO per cent increase in acreage of peanuts planted for oil production. The previous cotton al lowance was 27 million acres. It would perm it peanut growers —principally in Texas and Ala bam a — 100,000 m ore acres and would perm it excess peanuts to be grown for oil without penalties on certain conditions. JAPAN: Bible vs. Marx Believing that Christianity and the Bible are the dykes that are holding up the flood of communism in Japan, the Am erican Bible So ciety is beginning a campaign to send Bibles to Japan — Bibles printed in the Japanese language. Already the society has dis tributed a total of 2,789,956 Bibles among the Japanese, but it is felt —and this sentim ent is shared by Gen. Douglas M acArthur, that isn’t enough. GENERAL MacARTHUR isn’t alone in that opinion. He has asked for millions more. And Dr. Shiro M urata, an officer of the Japan Bible Society, said: “The eyes of Japan are fixed on two books. One is Das Kapital by K arl M arx. The other is the Holv Bible. Japan is at the crossroads.” To usher in its program of Bibles for the Japanese, the American Bible Society this month is spon soring a huge signature book of donors for the purpose of raising funds with which to purchase and send the Bibles. Every person who contributes one dollar or more to the project will be asked to sign the donor book. WHEN the campaign comes to an end, probably this fall, the huge book, bearing the signature of ev ery donor, will be forwarded to Japan where it will be displayed in the offices of the Japan Bible Society as a token of friendship from the people of America to the people of Japan. Adam’s D aughter? Did Adam have a daughter, no mention of whom is in the Bible? Dr. Guido Kisch, noted scholar, has declared that a 900-year-old Latin m anuscript claim s that Ad am had a daughter whose nam e was never mentioned in any ver sion of the Old Testam ent. Dr. Kisch said the m anuscript, oldest and most accurate version known as “Biblical Antiquities,” men tioned a daughter nam ed Noaba. SECURITY: A Denial U.S. State Secretary Dean Ache- son branded as falsehoods state m ents by Sen. Joseph M cCarthy that Owen Lattim ore—whom Mc Carthy had called a Soviet agent —was the actual director of Ameri can policy in the F ar E ast. An swering questions at a press con ference, Acheson added that: 1. Lattim ore never was em ployed by the state departm ent. 2. He (Acheson) isn’t sure he ever m et Lattim ore. 3. Lattim ore’s contacts with the state departm ent have been lim it ed to a few occasions. 4. According to his information, Lattim ore never had a desk at the state departm ent. Lattim ore, a F ar E astern expert and a professor at John Hopkins university, had reached London from Afghanistan, from whence he was returning to answer Mc Carthy’s charges. In London, L at tim ore branded the McCarthy charges as “unm itigated lies.” McCarthy, meanwhile, was in a hospital after a four-hour senate speech in which he said he would produce a witness who would sw ear Lattim ore was a m em ber of the Communist party. He told the senate he had documents to prove that Lattim ore was a Soviet agent who was getting instructions from Moscow as long ago as 1936. Lattim ore w as m ost im portant to McCarthy, for the senator had declared he would rest his entire case of Communist leanings in the state departm ent on the outcome of his charges against Lattim ore. And, unless the senator could produce his witness and his docu m ents, the case boiled down to one of the senator's word against that of Acheson and Lattim ore, with the public deciding as it pleased about who was right. FLYING DISKS: Navy Says 'No' If there are, or were, any flying sauceTs whirring through space, the United States navy has nothing to do with them and knows nothing about them . The air force said the sam e thing. THE SERVICES also denied that they are developing secret planes, guided m issiles or anything else that could be m istaken for flying saucers. These denials were issued after two published reports traced the saucers to navy and air force “ se cret” projects. An air force spokeman declared that “the arm ed forces are not do ing anything that could be traced to being the basis of reports of fly ing saucers.” He said the air force position was the sam e as it was last December when it announced—after investi gating 375 reports of flying saucers — that they were “m isinterpreta tions of various conventional ob jects, a m ild form of m ass hysteria or hoaxes.” In other words “there ain’t no such thing” as a flying saucer. A NAVY SPOKESMAN denied with equal vigor that the navy is developing super-speed planes that have been spotted as “ saucers.” Said he: “The navy is not ex perim enting with, or doing research on, any type of plane or guided m issile that resem bles in any way a flying saucer.” So, that should be that. However, it would be difficult to convince m any Americans that there are no flying saucers, and if a troubled citizen, seeking, subconsciously or not, a m om entary relief from his woes and burdens, thinks an object in the sky is a flying saucer, no particular harm has been done. In fact it m ay do him some good. B oy o f T h e Y e a r -David Russo, who was se lected “Boy of Ih e -Tear” of the Boys Clubs of Am erica, holds the plaque awarded him and gets a kiss from his moth er after arriving in Hollywood for a three-day tour of film and radio studios. GERMANY: Crisis Impends According to U.S. Germ an High Commissioner John J. McCIoy, a real crisis” appears inevitable in Germany. McCloy uttered the warning in a talk before a con gress subcommittee. He told a house group that Soviet pressure is a result of confidence, rather than any “ sense of inferiority or fear of attack” by western forces. “The Russians feel their strength,” hi said. MIRROR Ot Your MIND Disapproval Won't * * * 'Reform' Hubby By Lawrence Gould Can a w ife “reform ” her husband? Answer: As a rule, not if she goes about it on the basis of a con scious or unconscious feeling that she’s m orally superior to him. For while superficially, some m en want to feel that way about their wives, their self-esteem will final ly rebel against the situation and m ay drive them to find consolation with a less demanding woman. The only sure way to “reform ” any body is to help him realize that he can get m ore satisfaction out of your way of life than out of the one you disapprove of. Making him asham ed won’t do this. Can a baby be "psychotic” (insane)? Answer: Yes, though rarely. Dr. Leo Kanner, noted Johns Hop kins child psychiatrist, reports having studied m ore than fifty cases of a form of early schizo phrenia which he nam ed “infan tile autism ,” and which “is ap parent as early as the second half- year of life.” Victims show a total lack of interest in people, evei their parents, are disturbed bj changed surroundings, and either do- not talk or develop their own private language. The illness is not hereditary or due to physical defect, but seem s caused by wholly unaffectionate parents. Do m ore old m en than old women com m it suicide? Answer: Yes, reports Dr. A. B Stokes in the Canadian Medica Association Journal. While man] characteristics of extrem e age an common to both sexes, the suicide rate is “extraordinarily higher” am ong m en than am ong women. One reason for Qus m ay well be that a woman usually gives up active life so gradually that the shock of having “nothing to do” is com paratively gentle. The m ore suddenly one is deprived of the sense of being useful, the stronger the feeling of frustration, and the rage this generates m ay lead to self-m urder. LOOKIN G A T R E L IG IO N OM HIS WAY TO ROME TO TEACH THE GOSPEL, PAUL WAS ARRESTED-BY-ROMAN SOLDIERS AND CARRIED THERE IN CHAINS?* INSTEAD OF.-SeiNS A MISFORTUNE;THIS WAS ACCIDEMT INSURANCE OF .THS BEST KIND, FOR IT MEANT THAT PAUL" WOULD SET-.TO ROME SAFELY.— WH104 HE MIGHT NOT HAVE DONE IF THE JEWS WHO PLOTTED AGAINST HIM HAD BEEN ABLE TO CAPTURE HIM. KEEPING HEALTHY Poliomyelitis Epidemics Are Costly By Dr. James W. Barton Al t h o u g h t h e e p id e m ic s of poliomyelitis (infantile paraly sis) do not occur usually till to ward the end of August and during the months of Septem ber and Octo ber, parents of sm all children dread the coming of these months as much as do residents of hurri cane districts. Wlien we think of the hundreds of thousands of dollars given by sym pathetic men and women to the National Foundation for In fantile Paralysis, we m ay wonder where and how all this money is spent. Yet epidemics of polio are not decreasing, though fortunately recent ones have not been so dam aging as previous years. When we see these m any thou sands of dollars so carefully and yet so generously distributed to the vsfrious reliable research organiza tions throughout the country, we fail to understand why so m uch money is spent every year with no apparent effect upon this disabling disease. Only physieians and m edical re search workers can really know something of t h e tremendous am ount of work on polio that is being carried on everywhere throughout the country. This knowl edge is m ade known to them by iimans of Poliomyelitis Current Literature, a periodic annotated list prepared by the library of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis at the Am erican Medi ca I association, Chicago. sneaking, “the crip pling and disabling effects of poliomyelitis that occur in about 20 per cent of the cases in an epidem ic constitute a ‘cum ulative’ effect upon a community.” These cases require long periods of orthopedic care (straightening of lim bs by ex ercise and surgery) to enable the child to walk and play again. This takes years. When 'you see a youngster two .or three years of age being wheeled about, and then a few years later see this child playing and running about like other children, the ex pense does seem to be worth while. *HEALTH NOTES While colitis m ay be caused by irritating food, nervousness causes an irritation of the colon.• * • In a reducing diet, fat foods are cut by one-half while proteins are cut 25 per cent, or not at all.• « * Allergy was alm ost unknown as a definite condition or disease of the body until recent years. Relief in some cases of m igraine headache m ay be obtained from ergotam ine tartrate (gynergen)» • • The overweight should rem em ber that his fat tissue is loaded with w ater and that w ater is weight. • • • Rheum atism is considered th» oldest disease known to m an. CLASSIFIED D E P A R T M E N T BUSINESS & INVEST CPPOR. 1149.&0 puts yon In Popcorn, Peanut ot Snow Cone Business. No postcards. Pop* corn Supply. Box 83ft. Atlanta. Ga. AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY 13 BENDIX MACHINES FVLLY EQUIPPED SiKMIOOnly Automatic Laundry in VENICE—18 Miles South of Sarasota. For Details— L. L. STECKLEiY VENICE, FLA., Box 171. Phone 2674. DISTRIBUTION to sell the delicious drink apple jack, in the state of Fla. AU territories open. Act quick to get youi choice territory. Call Lucas Ciffar Store, 605 N.E. Snd. Ave.. Miami. Fla. HELP WANTED—M EN PHAKMACIST-Florida registered, for Tallahassee store. Answer Bennett Drug 6tores. 1510 Elder St.. Jas. Florida. HELP WANTEi*-WOMlCK TEACHERS needed next session totgrades, high schools, specials, colleges, food salaries for well-qualified teachers. Elections begin early. Enrollment free. Write now for registration blanks. Gulf Teachers* Agency, P. O. Box (iiil, Ocala Fla._________________________________ LIVESTOCK TWO CATTLE SALES WEEKLY TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS RAGSDALE-LAWHON COMMISSION CO NATIONAL STOCK YARDS, ATLANTA MACH1NERX & SUPPLIES OPEN time on new quilting machines fox quilting plastic or other materials. Chenille Tnffies 118 E. Waugh St., Dalton. Georgia. ICE CREAM Machines. Super-Cold 2% Gal. Attachment for custards. New Sc is original crates. Guaranteed. ^ e have ac excess stock of these free2ers and will sell limited number at $595.00 F.O.B RAGAN REFRIGERATION CO.. ?330 N Tryon St., Charlotte, North Carolina. MISCELLANEOUS I BOILER—72x18. I boiler 66x16. I engiat (CORLISS) 16x30. I slide valve. Atlai engine, 14x20, Vesta Miller. SyIacaoga Alabama. ____ JUMBO PRINTS. Made from your RoE Films or Negatives, 5c each. Guaranteed work. Fast service. TEX Si PAL’S Pro Iesslonal Film Finishers. Dubuque, Iowa A k lT IA I ICC Have your heirloom; A N I I y U t a expertly repaired, re ^ plated, restored t/Original beauty & charm.Made to order from you! I A Kil DC vase, figure or other keep U A fV ird sake. Plating, polishing Cf all metals.Reasonable prices. All work guaranteed JllieD IIkA U Silver Plating Service,352' R m C niU H R Park Ave.. St. Louis4. Mo POULTRY. CHICKS & EQUIP. SPECIAL sale, broiler meat chicks fron Pullorum-tested flocks $3.90—100. AAA 100 assorted. Red Rocks. Crosses, heav] and light S4.90—100. C.O.D. F.O.B. Supei Chicks. Bernard Morris, General De livery. Savannah. Ga. ___________ SEEDS* PLANTS, ETC. SOUTH'S Finest Lawn Grass! Zoysia Matrella $5.00 a block. 9 sq. feet. CentL£ede $4.00 bushel. Kings Nursery. Dept , Drawer »31. Auburn. Ala. WANTED TO BUT OLD TIME Car wanted—A Ford A tour* Ing (clean). or unusual later car suci as Stutz. etc. What do you have? Write price, description, etc. E. Eikman, 909 Buena Vista, Tallahassee, Florida. Keep Posted on V alues By R eading the Ads You’ll Like Them Too ••HURRY PA! I'VE FOUND ‘EM!!’* Think of It—Grandma Used Them When Her 4Liver was ActiM Up’ She thought Uiere was NOTHING QUITE LIKE ‘EM! I—**Wbat You Talking About ChUdtw “LANE’S PILLS—Of Course" "You’ll Like Them Too" LANES ARE THE BEST w ooo B Le Pil t b r e dFINE ^ j j M O f t O L I N E ms JAB IDtI PETROLEUM JELLY ANY SIZK (6 Or •> [». IcOU FIIM I CIVflOKD. B HOBBY PRINTS («v*ry p * l « ■ wileisemeiit)Hmdf AfotTiiif Andepti AinijtAtf VaihoUt Prm iuttt Ctvm CIT BETTER PICTURES FOR USt I TACAC R A B B IT CO.s SPARTANS URG S.C. IOI IIIMI MKt IM Mill Il RHEUM ATISM i NEURITIS-LUMBAGO ^ saJ f MCNEIL'S S M MAGIC REMEDY BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF; ILarge BottIeU ran Eqig«l*120- Small Size 60c * CMTUI: Mt Nil It DIIECIEI« n hi nil nit suns« it mu «■ k«ui ii »n«■cKIl Mn CO.. In. MMSOMIllt ». HOlIIlW NU-7 16—50 WHiK SLEEP WON’T COME AND YOU FEEL GLUNI Try This Delicious Chewing-Gum Laxative • When yoo roll and toss all night-feel headachy and Jtist awful because you need ft laxative—do thia... Cbew feen-a-mint—delicious chewing* gum laxative. The action of Feen-A-Mint1B Bpeclal medicine "detours” the stomach. That Is, It doesn't act while In the stom ach, but only when farther along In tho lower digestive tract...where you want Ii to act. You feel fine again quickly I And scientists say chewing makes veen-a-mxnt’s ane medicine more effec tive—"readies" It bo it Bowb gently into the system. Get teen-a-mint at any IA a drug counter—25*. 50* or o n ly Ivt E FEEN-A-MINT I j. HWOUS CWWniO-OUH M R I Truman pR E S ID pour Joe JIcC phone co tion hea with co Miss Au VV. C., U ipent rhe v ents i-:i P..i Ianice, Ii and Mrs. J a tonsil op Hospital F Mr. and oil ii H. Pi iere Frida- nd burial Miss A oucc i, >eration tal, Win y- Capt. an d littie •w York ■’S with 3St. Vl H. M •ndricks elc Iishi •n’t kno isht. Vliss Fra a Gover rd, Conn th her rs. B. C. If you h i the po“ > so at oi ceived af ins; your fice. Thiny about a ernm ent departm charged nists is rad Sno was ap~ tion of a backs ator Mc man board i Richard Hoover, aim ar Nei else c the son I partn other McCa almos cow’s tribe Fasci truly Ier . ins t i? his s freed son’s bank, clrea ried He i not be good should secreta son, ir. Senate seeks from tary politic- to his “ Flyin Hara the air the fi Ezeki'- the in ins up t Ca « The;- every there Th,- Train identia “Mr. liners, crews, ington brown Two tag fo nomin Sen. Wes P outqu Nash bert THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. t ’;e functionalVfCllilHT to \ v s trls m ake tcl aow-ci: .' Thon do r.'s Yo-retable oil svrnptom sl .:n’s Compound vzam st tb lsiv :VEGETABLE fii O COMPOUND STfPATION or and very ALL-BSAN ■ation. I shall BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET Jiicc of crispy plenty of • satisfied after carton to i. Mich. GET NLY BACK! \c of the truly Dudley J. Howance on after trying to, La. uThe past year. uthoritative ingredients 23rd edition, r.y purposes •esents both Iiate a part demand for eat that we ates of this edicirse that could have for him to eredients of the factory the shortage in less than ries because in Louisiana ome that he Assistance ■ause of the ped a medi* e Southland. t is sold, iithfully and predated by ose who op- mandate of ay be gly for the bv his past that what r>r you that ’t find the t be wise? of your nc health- Millions of it to your- cmher the Jiis remedy! d the needy! '—today! •opt no sub- e is nothing old for less, D obtain the -only 83.50. you that we eel perfectly i the empty ing could be ct from The y. Just youf ate whether . Remember, Trum an Hits Back PRESIDENT TRUMAN really poured it on mud-slinging Sen. Joe M cCarthy in a long-distance phone conference from his vaca tion headquarters at Key West with congressional leaders in W ash' Patty MacVeigh, a Patient Cop# Worked Hard To Solve 'Hugger Mugger in Automat' Mystery By BILLY ROSE As a burglaree, I’ve done a considerable am ount of hanging around police stations lately, and I’ve m ade a highly edifying dis covery—the average New Y ork detective is plenty sm art and, con sidering how few of them there are, gets plenty of results.To give you an idea of what the ordinary cop can do once he gets go ing, let me tell you the classic story of Detective Patty MacVeigh and how he solved the case usually referred to as “Hugger-Mugger in the Automat.” One m orning in August, 1933, two people died suddenly and within a Things m ost people don’t know about alleged “Commies” in gov ernm ent: Chairm an of the state departm ent’s loyalty review board charged with weeding out Commu nists is a Republican—Gen. Con rad Snow of New Ham pshire. He was appointed on the recom m enda tion of GOP Sen. Styles Bridges, a backstage brain-truster for Sen ator McCarthy’s attacks . . . Chair m an of the top loyalty review board is also a republican, Seth Richardson, who served under Hoover. Most of the lawyers under aim are also Republican. Neither Trum an nor anyone else can overrule them . .. only the courts . . . Actually, Ache- son has fired m ore state de partm ent employees than any other secretary of state . . . McCarthy’s attacks have been," alm ost as vitrolie as MoS-' cow’s. Here is its latest dia tribe against Acheson, “This Fascist-like diplom at . . . a truly incorrigible liar . . . swind ler . . . a hired lackey of the instigators of w ar who spent his scanty brains to belie truth, freedom and peace . . Ache- son’s true m asters are the banks and concerns who dream of looting the globe.” . . . Acheson’s family is wor ried over his terrific strain. He is wondering whether he has not become a liability, that for the good of U.S. foreign policy he should resign . . . W rites another secretary of state, Henry L. Stim- son, in the Hoover cabinet, about Senator M cCarthy: “The m an who seeks to gain political advantage from personal attack on a secre tary of state is a m an who seeks political advantage from dam age to his country. "F lying Saucers” H arassed over flying saucers, the air force now refers queries to the first chapter of the prophet Ezekiel who saw a living wheel in the heavens. Airmen are not argu ing with Ezekiel and cast no doubt up;: ^ what he saw. But they do car# doubt on modern prophets. They say they have tracked down every flyin-saucer report, and there ain’t no such anim al. The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainm en, slightly gleeful at pres idential seasickness, remind him: “Mr. President, modern stream liners, m anned by competent union crews, run daily between Wash ington and Florida. And no little brown pills are required." Two great Bible fans are fight ing for the Republican senatorial nomination in New Ham pshire. Sen. Charles Tobey and challenger Wes Powell are doing their best to outquote each o th er-: . . Bradley Nash has w ritten a book on Her bert Hoover’s reform s. OLIVE DEERING ing began he found Olive. She m ade a second picture, “Caged,” for W arner’s, then she and her hus band, Leo Penn, headed east in their car. He was one of the lead ing m en in “Not W anted.” Had a fine trip all the way. They are a delight ful young couple, very m uch in love. And with their good looks, talent and experience, they should go far in pictures. M rs. Gertrude Berg, author and star of the CBS “The Goldbergs,” has received an offer from George Jessel for a featured role in a forth coming film, the fifth picture con tract offered in recent months. She’s too busy to accept. This does seem to be going a bit too far. By unanimous consent of its city council and approval of its m ayor, Hot Springs, New Mex ico, has changed its nam e to Truth or Consequences, in honor of Ralph Edw ards’ NBC show! Am erican producers have been trying to sign British Kath leen Ryan ever since she ap peared in “ Odd Man Out.” Pro ducer Robert Stillman has done it—one picture a year for seven years. H er first will be United A rtists “The Sound of Fury.” Knowing he was associated with Stanley K ram er in m aking “ Champion” and “Home of the Brave,” she accepted the role without reading the script. Elizabeth Taylor won all hearts one recent afternoon in New York. She was having several coats and suits fitted, and was practically out on her feet from fatigue, but she willingly posed for photographs. She was going out with her fiance that evening, was flying to Texas the next day, and her mother thought she ought to stay home that night and rest. Elizabeth went oiit! ' Howard Lesieur, director of ad vertising and publicity for United Artists, has come up with some thing new. He has engaged two re tired detectives, form erly of New York’s police departm ent and homi cide squad, to visit key cities and prom ote “ D. O. A.” (“Dead on A rrival,” ) story of a m an who “re ports his own m urder.” Edmond O’Brien stars, Pam ela Britton and Luther Adler co-star. G4orge Stern, playing “,Tippy” in. W arner Bros. “B arricade,” has a lot of stern critics lying in wait for him. In his off-screen moments he taught English and dram atics at Lafayette Junior high school in LosTAngeles ..JL. . ing everyone in the neighborhoods where the victim s had lived, inch- by-inched the tenem ent flats they had called their homes; jig-sawed together a lot of biographical bits and pieces, and cam e up with a so lution so simple that no one con nected with the case could imagine why it hadn’t been thought of right away. Jdlinek1S past w as reconstructed easily enough. Starting as a helper in a garage, he had m anaged to save enough to buy his own busi ness, and his garage had prospered until the depression*hit it. When things got tough, he borrowed $150 from a bank, and when he couldn’t m eet the note on July I, he was threatened with foreclosure. Figuring he had nothing to live for, he purchased $3 worth of pow dered cyanide and then, with his last nickel, bought himself a poppy seed roll at the Automat. He dug a hole in it, poured the powder in, bit off as m uch as he could chew and headed for the m en’s room. At the foot of the stairs he collapsed and died. So jar, so char. Next, Mac* Vetgb went to work on Lillian Rosenfeld, She bad been a harm less o ld b a t who scavenged around junk heaps, and for 28 years had lived in a $7-a-montb basement room which was filled with everything from old piano rolls to a rusty weather vane. From employees of the Automat, the detective learned that on sev eral occasions the old dam e had parked herself in the mezzanine where she could watch the tables on the m ain floor, and when some one left without finishing a m eal, she woiUd hurry down and eat the rem ains or scoop them into a paper bag. That finished the case. Obviously the scavenger had seen Jellinek leave part of his roll and had popped the half-eaten bun into her mouth. MacVeigh’s investigation uncov ered an additional irony. While sift ing through the hodge-podge of Lil lian’s room, he found six bankbooks which showed she had $45,000 stashed in various banks in Man hattan and New Jersey. The annual interest on her nest egg was $1,200, or eight tim es the amount Jellinek needed to save his garage and life. , THE FICTION CORNER NO SALE By Richord H. Wilkinson » H fE could sell Dusty,” Sylvia U said. Joe stared at her. ‘You don’t m ean that!” Dusty thum ped his tail on the oor and pricked his ears. There , as, he hoped, a possibility of be ing taken for a walk up the slope behind the house where rabbits frequently ran and offered no end of excitement. Sylvia laughed nervously. “Of course I don’t. I was only joking. We wouldn’t sell Dusty for a mil lion dollars.” She reached down - and twisted one 3 of- Dusty’s Rop- • M inute ping ears around Fiction h e r fo re fin g e r. ___________ Dusty lolled his tongue and sighed in contentment. Next to chasing 'rabbits, there was nothing he liked better than having his ears twisted, unless it was hunting a glove or an old shoe or pocketbook that either Joe or Sylvia had hid den. Joe lay awake that night and thought about w hat Sylvia had said. He felt guilty and asham ed, but when you haven’t enough to eat and you own some property that would bring an easy thousand dol lars on the open m arket, you can’t help thinking about it. Sylvia’s aunt had given them Dusty the week before they left for Hollywood. He was sev en weeks old, a pure bred Springer Spaniel, black as coal and intelligent as two ordinary hum an beings. The next m orning Joe decided to go down onto the boulevard. Some tim es on the boulevard he m et someone he knew and would get talking and perhaps get a line on something. He put Dusty on his leash and started out. Joe turned down Vine street. Just below Selma, some children “How m uch?” said Joe, not looking at him. were playing on a lawn. One of them was crying. Joe stopped to see what the trouble was. A little girl had lost her rag doll. It was somewhere about, but she couldn’t find it. Dusty licked the little girl’s hand. She cooed happily and patted his head. The other children crowd ed about. Joe unsnapped Dusty’s leash, held the little girl’s skirt to his nose and said: “Go find!” Dusty let out a yip and went bounding away. Two minutes later he cam e back, holding in his month the rag doll. The lit- the girl clapped her hands. “Sm art dog,” said a voice. Joe turned. A car had stopped at the curb. A sm all round m an with a friendly face had em erged onto the sidewalk. Joe nodded. “Pure bred Springer. They’re all sm art.” “Are they?” said the little man. His eyes twinkled. “Like to sell him ?” Joe said nothing. He felt a queer prickling at the base of his skull. “Like to sell him ?” said the m an again. “How m uch?” said Joe, not look ing at him. “Nine hundred.” JOE thought of Sylvia. She was probably hungry. She’d be hung rier tonight. The only alternative was city relief. A m an has his pride. He rem em bered the hug Sylvia had given Dusty before they left. He thought of the way Dusty would nip at their toes when they were getting dressed in the m orn ing. He shook his head. “No!” he said. “No! Not for twice that am ount.” The rotund m an laughed. “Then how about hiring him? You, too, of course. We’re m aking a picture that requires a cute dog who will go find things that have been hid den.” Joe threw up his head. “W hat?” “Think it over,” said the rotund m an. “Pay would be $25 a day. H ere’s m y card.” He sm iled. “Hope I didn’t insult you with that nine hundred of fer. Your dog’s worth two thou sand, if a cent. Never saw a pure black Springer with those lines. Be sure to look m e up. If $25 doesn’t suit you, we can probably talk term s.” Joe stood on the curb and watched the black limousine re cede. He glanced at the card, then down at Dusty. Dusty was watching him expectantly. He wanted to walk some more. Joe slipped the card into his pocket and started up Vine street at a pace that rath er surprised Dusty. Prim ary Kaolin AU the prim ary kaolin produced in this country comes from North Carolina. It is a ceram ic used in fine china. FLOWERS . . . Helen Keller, deaf and blind, enjoys flowers presented to her by UNESCO’s international BraiUe conference in Paris, where delegates were trying to standardize t h e BraiUe system . ■ • This Is Your Paper lWanl Ad' Market Place By W illia m R. Nelson P E O P L E who have visited m arket * places in foreign lands find them picturesque, quaint and color ful. If they had studied them care- fuUy they would have found them also m ost inefficient. To seU things there it is necessary to transport them to the m arket place, display them , w ait for custom ers, and take home w hat rem ains unsold. Often considerably deterioriated in value. Perhaps one of the very real con tributors to our high American standard of Uving is the greater efficiency of our less picturesque m arket places, the classified or want ad columns of our papers. j . Classified ad- W astm g vertising brings N o seUer and Jiuy- Time er together without the necessity of m eeting at a m arket place. Aind goods that change hands need be moved only once, need not be exposed to deteriorating forces. People wishing to buy things not offered in want ad columns can generaUy find it by inserting a “W anted” announcement. Classified or want ad advertising gets its nam e, of course, from the way such inform ation is grouped under headings. Included in such columns is con siderable of life’s everyday pathos and dram a, its faUures and suc cesses, its comedy and its irony. Even such item s as “Eggs For Sale” m ay herald an up or down in someone’s life. Certaiiily there is a story behind “Exchange, set of golf clubs for baby buggy”. _. .. W hatever Timeliness one’s problem, and when using a Convenience classified ad to solve it, cer tain m atters of technique m ay weU be borne in mind. Num ber one is tim eliness. Ice skates do not seU weU in sum m er. Num ber two is convenience. M ake it easy to re spond to your ad. And num ber three is adequate description. The m ore you tell, the m ore you sell is an ex cellent bit of advice. If tem pted to keep the cost low by being too brief, rem em ber that your reader knows only w hat the ad vertisem ent says, so telling a com plete story is one way to assure success. Rem em ber also how much tim e you are saving, by not having to go to a m arket place, and be willing to spend some of that saving on additional words in your classi fied advertisem ent. C om fortable Dress Is Cool and F lattering LAST WEEK'S ANSWER ACROSS I. Java tree 5. Healing ointment 9. Silk waste 10. One of the Great Lakes 11. Tally 12. Flavor 14. Small explosive sound 15. Type measure 17. Sailor (colloq.) 18. Lutecium (sym.) 19. Houses for dogs 22. Paragraph 25. Thin tin plate 26. Pulsate 28. Entreaties 31. Chamber 33. Border 34. Sowed, as seed 37. Sun god 38. Hebrew letter 39. Term of negation 40. Obtained 41. A river of Hades (myth.) 44. Ankle bone (Anat.) 46. Broad smile 47. Level 48. Looked at 49. Grit (slang) DOWN 23. Conduct LUnrefined character- 2. A ship's istic of deck knights- 3. Ventilate errant 4. Smooth 24. Satellite of 5. Wager the earth 6. Constella- 27. Larva of tion botfly 7. Hearkened 29. Stranded 8. Mettle 30. Chairs 11. Cleave 32. Male adults 13. Bitter vetch 34. Chum 16. Encoun- 35. Faithful tered 36. Is foolishly 20. Short sleep fond of 21. River 40. Secluded (Afr.) narrow valley QQQQ HHQQ BBDB EBEQ BBGDQ GBGGG □ □ QGG - GGQ GGD GGGGUQQ UQGG BGG BGISGQ EUQQE -- GGQ QUQG □B U D D G Q QUQ □D B v QQG QQ □EQ CIU ^EIJU G B QGQQ GGGQ EQQE QGGG 42. Hasten 43. Conclude 45. Topaz hum ming-bird Ho. 4 t . S r 1 8 8 5 Cool, Flattering NEAT and pretty and the easiesl kind of sewing is this cool, comfortable dress, A narrow beli ties softly in front, the scooped neckline is especially flattering.* . * * Pattern No. 1885 is a sew-rtte perfo rated pattern In sizes 12. 14. 16. 18, 20] 40 and 42 Size 14. 4Vp yard? of 35-inch.* * * The spring and summer FASHION is a complete pattern magazine—it's filled with fabric news, easy to make styles, decorating tips—free pattern nrinted Itt side the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEFT. 530 South Wells St.. Chicago 7, 111. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. Name .......... Address ....... .Size.. At Last! The big business m an had died and gone to—well, not to Heaven Hardly had he settled down for I nice, long sm oke when a hearty hand slapped him on the back. Into his ear boomed the voice of » persistent salesm an who had fre quently hounded him on earth, “Well, Mr. Sm ith,” chortled th» salesm an, “I’m here for the ap pointm ent.” “W hat appointm ent?” “ Don’t you rem em ber? Every tim e I entered your office on earth you told m e you would see m« here.” SAVE . . . W HEN YOU B U Y . S tJ O S e p h ASJPJRIN WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER lit 104 OnlyDuffS MakesPiize HotSollslike these! \ \ / / / %. * « ... v / t ' f l i i -“"H Lighter, fluffier rolls, crisper crusted, fresher keeping, richer tasting... yes, DufFs Hot Roll Mix gives Prize results. And home-baked rolls are so easy to make with DufFs. Everything’s in. Just add water—that’s all! A Froduct of AMERICAN HOME FOODS \ PAGE FOUR THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE N. C . APRIL 26. I960 THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD, EDITOR. TEIEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Moeks- ville, N. C., as Second-class Mali matter. March 3.1.903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: O<E YEAR IN N1 CAROLINA • *1.5» SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA - 75c. ONF YEAR. OUTSIOE STATt - *2.00 SiX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE - $1.00 There are a few business houses in MocksviIle that never use The Reeord columns. Perhaps they have more business than they can take care of. It might be that they think it would be an unpord- onable breach o f etiquette t o carry an advertisement in a Re publican paper. Thare are a few folks perhaps, who do not want any Republican patronage. Such is life. Cancer Kills Many Cancer claimed the lives of 10 persons in this county during 1949 it was announced by the Ameri can Cancer Society which is con ducting its annual fund-raising campaign. This compares with 14 cancer victims in 1948, in this county. Dr. W. M. Long, local campaign chairman, said that these figures cannot be compared with nation al vital statistics yet because of the time lag in compiling figures on a national scale. However, the estimated number of cancer deaths in 1949 through out the nation is in excess of 200,- James W. Wall A pall of sadness swept over our town last Wednesday after noon when it was learned that James W. Wall, 55, had died un expectedly at his home on Church street about 2:30 o’clock, follow- iug an illness of only about one hour. Mr. Wall had worked in Sanford’s store until the noon hour. After eating dinner he did a little work in his flower garden, and becoming ill went into his room. He was given medical at tention, but lived but a short time. Mr. Wall moved from Cana to this city about 27 years ago. He held a position as salesman with Mocksville Hardware Co., for many years. He was with Hauser Brothers grocery store for some time, and for the past 15 years he has held a position as salesman with C. C. Sanford Sons Co. M r.; Wall had hundreds o f friends throughout the town and county: who were saddened by news of his death. I Surviving are the wife, one son, James Wall, Jr., and a daughter, Miss Claire Wall, both of Char lotte; two brothers, Clarence Wall, of Advance, and Johii R. Wall, of Clemmons; four sisters, Mrs. Ru pert Boger, of this city; Mrs. T. L. Baker and Mrs. R. B. Sheek, of Winston-Salem, and Mrs. F. R. Beauchamp, of Advance, and his mother, Mrs. W. E. Wall, of Da vie County. Funeral services were conduct ed at 11 a. m., Friday at Mocks- ville Baptist Church, of which he was a member, with Rev. E. W. Turner, Rev. I. P. Davis, and Rev. I t ’s H e re ! Genuine North Carolina PIT COOKED BARBECUE ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF OUR BARBECUE DEPARTMENT Specializing In BARBECUED RIBS AND LOINS For Sandwiches, Trays Or By The Pound Banana Splits — Milk Shakes — Sundaes CURB SERVICE FREE PARKING AVAILABLE IN LOT BESIDE OF CAFE June Vroadruff June Woodruff, 57, well-kn8wn colored citizen of Mocksville, died suddenly at his home on Lexing ton street on April 16th, of a heart attack. His death was a severe shock to his family and friends. Surviving are the wife, one son, Andrew, of New York, a daugh ter, Margaret of the home; one brother and two sisters, of Wins ton-Salem. Funeral services took place Wednesday afternoon at the Se cond Presbvterion Church, and the body laid to rest in the Pres byterian church cemetery on De pot street. Jtme had many friends among both colored and white citizens of the town. He was a quiet, in dustrious man, and will be miss ed in the town where he spent so many years.___________ C. S. Dunn, of Redland. under went a tonsil operation at Mocks ville Hospital Thursday morning. THE OA £ A Depot Street H. H. JOHNSON, Owner CAFE Mocksville, N. C. WARREN S. HALL, Manager I -L- % I 000. This figure was estimated by E. H. Gartrell officiating, and the the national statistics department | body laid to rest in Rose cemetery, of the American Cancer Society; Mr. Wall has been a deacon in which ever si.ice it was establish, the Mocksville Baptist Church for ed, four years ago, has been cor- many years, and was active in re- rect in its predictions within a ligious work. He will be sadly very small percentage. missed in the home, the church The campaign chairman said, and the business life of the town. “Despite this prediction there is Many local stores and business hopeful news on the over-all pic- houses closed during the funeral ture. A recent report from the hour in respect to the memory of National Office of Vital Statistics Mr. Wall. The many beautiful shows a steady drop in the age-' floral tributes attested the high es- adjusted cancer death rates among teem in which he was held, women. Although the male can- The Record extends sincere cer mortality rate is still rising sympathy to the bereaved family slightly, it appears now to be lev- in this hour of sadness, eling off.’’ i # _ “ Thj ,!I30 cTf cTadVnuT; Davie Censussucceed, he said, so that funds; will be available to work toward \ Retail, wholesale and service es- : tablishments located in DavieI I County, showed a substantial ex- A Y fn V N fiW S, pansion in dollar volume of trade * from 1939 to 1948, according to preliminary figure ■ from the 1948 ing officer for Iredell and Davie Census of Business released today counties announced this week a by the Bureau of the Census, U. new itenery for recruiting office S. Department of Commerce, hours. The Statesville office, Io- Retail sales in the county dur- cated in room 224 Postoffice build- ing 1948 averaged $5.2 million, an ing, will be open and the Recruit- increase of 225 per cent over the ing Sergeant present from 8 a. m., $1.6 million in - i939, when the to 5 p. m., on Mondays, Tuesdays preceding Census of Business was Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, taken. Wholesale sales in the The Recruiting Sergeant will be county reached a total of $4.2 mil- at the postoffice in Mocksville lion in 1948 as compared with $0.2 each Wednesday morning from million in 1939. The service trades 8:30 a. m. to 11:30 a. m. Infor- included in the Census of Busi- mation concerning enlistment in ness recorded receipts totaling the U. S. Army and the U. S. Air $199,000 in 1948 compared with Fosce can be obtained at these of- $49,000 in 1939. Hybrid Corn--N. C. 27. N. C. 26, I N. C. 1032, Dixie 17. AIlgrown in Area 3, which includes Davie County. New low prices on Baby Chicks. See us for your Garden I Seeh and Garden Tools. Davie Feed & Seed Company \ Phone 17 Depot Street SN $ 5 0 B ILL FREE complete control of ca.xcer.” News Sgt. George H. Armour, recruit- y fice hours. . Wins First Prize The Farmington F. F. A. String Band won first prize in the Fid dler’s Convention which was held in the school auditorium at Trout man, North Carolina, on Satur day, April 15. There were seventeen string bands that partiscipated in the convention. Four prizes were given. First prize was $35. The members of the Farmington F. F. A. String Band are: J. C. Caudle, leader violin Ray Hendrix, harmonics Clarence Eaton, guitar Richard Carter, guitar. BAYNE MILLER, Reporter. The Harrell Powell sawmill, near Center which was destroyed by fire on April 15th, will be re built and ready for business with in the next two weeks. Mr. Powell suffered a heavy loss, as he had no insurance on the mill. It is thought the fire started from a sawdust pile that was on fire. • Employment in the county also rose over the 9-year period be tween 1939 and 1948 for the a- bove trades. Establishments in these trades .reported a combined total of 297 paid employees for the workweek ended nearest No vember 15, 1948. This compared with a total of 183 employees re ported for the week of November 15, 1939. Notice to Creditors The undersigned, J. W. Wall, Jr., having qualified as administra tor of the estate of J. W. Wail, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons hold ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 26-h day of A- pril, 1951, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. AU persons indebted to said es tate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This 22nd day of April, 1950. J. W. WALL, Jr., Administrator. R. B. Sanford, Jr., Attorney. Do You Read The Record? Auction Sale Homesites, Bu iness Sites, Homes and Sm all Tracts Mocksville, N. C. Saturday, April 29th Starting At 10:00 A. M. FIRST SALE 1 0 : 0 0 A . M. SEVENTEEN LOTS. Located on South Main Street. These lots are located near the business district and are good business or homesites. SECOND SALE 1 1 : 0 0 A . M. We will sell two brick veneer Houses located on NORTH MAIN STREET near Mocksville High School and known as the Hendrix property. Th se houses have water, lights and heat and are modem in every respect, TH IR D SALE 2 : 0 0 P. M. We Will Sell The R. L. W ilson Homeplace Located The East Side Of The Winston-Salem HignwayOne-HaIf Mile From The Corporate Limits O f Mocksville, N. C. This property lias been subdivided into lots and several small acreage tracts. There will be around 150 homesites in this subdivision along with the house and several small acreage tracts, containing from 5 to 10 acres in each tract. EASY TERMS: On Lots. 14 Cash Balance 6, 12 and 18 months. DWf- LLfNGS: Terms Will Be Announced At Sale. Be Sure And A ttend These Sales for Complete Information, See Or Call E. C. MORRIS, Sellinir Agent, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. SALE CONDUCTED BY Ciark-Menden hall Auction Company O ldest P ap N o Liquor. High Point, N. C.Winston-Salem, N. C. N E W S A George W business trip week. Miss Jessie the week-en t he guest of k Miss Ann W. C., U. spent rhe we ents on Rout- Janice, Iittl and Mrs. Joh a tonsil opert Hospital Frid Mr. and M John H. Pott here Friday t and burial of Miss Ann Route I, u operation at pital, Winst day. Capt. and and littie d- New York C days with N Frost. M. H. Mu Hendricks s week lishin* Don’t know caught. Miss Fran in a Govern ford, Conn., with her pa Mrs. B. C. B If you hav on the popu do so at one received afte bring your g office. Pfc- L. P. been station past 15 m Thursday ni a 30-day fu ents on Ad- R. G. Dvs arrived here some time Dvson says deep in Mo there. We leaving. The 5th take place Baptist Ch April 30th All singers allv, cordial and enjoy s Under a becomes e cities and t United Sta free mail of two or done to cu ficit. Corp. Ca this city, Ir. Borne Trai the Army i pleted his Jackson, S. served as a tended th School wh Sgt. Gler been statin the past 28 30-day Ieav He will be vour, Va., duty. M f ing here wi Mrs. Shee1 husband’s Paul, th Mr. and Ephesus, \ Wednesda o’clock. W1 car driven Clemmons across the car.* He Memorial w as on his 182082628723^36877725082 at the Se- fhurch, and the Pres- Iery on De- ends among Ite citizens of Ia quiet, in fill be miss- I he spent so lland, under- In at Mocks- ay morning. THE DAVIE RECORD MOCKSVILLE. N. C. APRIL 26 1950 PAGE FIVE IS. nt, THE DAVIE RECORD. Oldest Paper In The County No Liquor, Wine, Beer Ads NEWS AROUND TOWN. George W. Rowland made a business trip to Greensboro last week. Miss Jessie Libbv Stroud spent the week-end at Lawsonville, t he guest of Miss Cleo Ray. Miss Ann Frost, a student at W. C., U. N. C., Greensboio, spent the week-end w ith her par ents on Route 2. lanice, little daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. John Smoot, underwent a tonsil operation at Mocksville Hospital Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Potts and John H. Potts, of Edenton, were here Friday to attend the funeral and burial of James W. Wall. Miss Annie Bell White o f Route I, underwent a tonsil operation at City Memorial Hos pital, Winston-Salem, last Tues day. Capt. and Mrs. A. P. Daigler and Iittie daughter Dianne, o f New York City, are spending ten days with Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Frost. M1 H. Murray and George R. Hendricks spent several days last week fishing at Myrtle Beaeh. Don’t know how many fish they caught. Miss Frances Brock, technitian in a Government hospital, at Hart ford, Conn., is spending ten days with her parents, Attorney and Mrs. B. C. Brock, at Farmington. D. R. Stroud made a business trip to Hickory Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bowles, of Concord, visited relatives in- this city Friday. Mrs. B. F. Holton, Mrs. J. D. Frost, Mrs. E. H. Frost and W. M. Frost spent the week-end with relatives at Forest City, Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Angell, of Buie’s Creek, are the proud par ents of a fine son, J. W. Jr., who arrived at Rex Hospital, Raleigh, on April 22nd. Dr. Angell is the son of Mrs. J. T. Angell and the late Mr. Angell, of this city. The Annual Tutterow reunion will be held at Center Methodist Church on Sunday, April 30th. AU Tutterows, together with re latives and friends, are given a cordial invitation to be present. Bring well-filled baskets so that none may go away hungry. Sain-Potts Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Potts of Mocksville, Route I, gave their daughter, Lucille Elizabeth, in marriage, to William Lester Sain, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Gradv Sain1April 8th. Thebride wore a green suit with white ac cessories and the groom wote a blue suit. They were married in the parsonage by Reverand Foster Loflin and are living with the grooms parents at the present. A trash pile on fire near Farm ers Hardware on Salisbury street last Tuesday evening had the fire department on the move about 8 o’clock. No damage done. A garage at the home of Mrs. O. C. McQuage was badly dam aged by fire shortly afternoon last Tuesday. The garage caught from a burning trash pile. The local fireman responded promptly and prevented the fire from spread ing. WANT ADS PAY. FOR SALE • Beautiful window drapes, 79c. value, 43c. pair. WALLACE 5-10c. STORE. W ELLDIGGlNGAnd Repair Work. A. D. JOHNSON; Harmony, N. C., Route 2. FOR SALE-NyIon Hose, guage, 89c. pair. WALLACE 5-10c. STORE. 51 If you haven’t sent in your guess on the population of Mocksville, do so at once. No guesses will be received after May 1st. Mail or bring your guess to The Record office. Attend Lectures Moline. 111. - Rev. A. J. Cox, of Mocksville, N. C., is attending a School of Evangelistic Preaching here April 12-26. He is one of a select group of200 Methodist min isters chosen from all over the nation. Nominated by Bishop Coston J. Harrell, of the Char lotte Area, he is spending the two week period listening to lectures by outstanding church leaders and sharing in practical field work. Those attending the school are assisting nearly 100 churches of a dozen different denominations within a 50-mile radius in a Unit ed Evangelistic M ission.. CINDER BLOCKS, Concrete Blocks, 4 inch Drain Tile. QUALITY BLOCK CO. Salisbury, N. C. Warehouse Drive, Phone 233. FOR SALE—Canasta Plaving Cards. Good quality, 89c. WALLACE 5-10c. STORE. FOR RENT—Four-room house, with good well, located near St. Matthews Church. Call on or write I. LEE CARTNER. Mocksville, Route I WANTED—To get in touch with persons having dogs that caught distemper while in train ing at Rov Elridge’s Kennels, Mocksville, N. C., either in 1949 or 1950. Mrs. G. Lynn Parker; Route 3, Box 92, Statesville, N. C. Princess Theatre THURSDAY & FRIDAY Bing Crosby &. Coleen Gray In “RIDING HIGH” with James Gleason & Frances Gifford Hear Bing Sing SUNSHINE CAKE SATURDAY Allan Rocky Lane & Gail Davis In “DEATH VALLEY GUNFICHTERS” with Eddy Waller & Harry Harvey MONDAY &. TUESDAY Tyrone Power &. Wanda Hendrix In “PRINCE OF FOXES” with Orson Welles WEDNESDAY Robert Montgomery &. Ann Blvth In ‘ONCE MORE MY DARLING” with Jane Cowl DAVlEDRIVE-Ih THEATRE Mocksville Salisbury Highway Wednesday and Thursday April 26th and 27th “IN THE NAVY” Abbott & Costello ONE CARTOON STRAYED On Tuesday, Apr. IKh, from home of T. Ross Alex ander, Statesville, a black, white and tan foxhound. Collar beats, name or T. Ross Alexander. Ifi this hound is found, notify H. Clay Flynt, Kernersville, N. C., or T. Ross Alexander, 143 N. Elm St., Statesville, N. C., and receive liberal reward. Friday and Saturday April 28th and 29th DOUBLE FEATURE “HOLD THAT BABY” Bowery Boys Also “LAW OF THE WEST” fohnny Mack Brown ONE CARTOON Pfc. L. P. Waller, Jr., who has been stationed at Guam for the past 15 months, arrived home j Thursday night, and is spending j a 30-day furlough with his par-! eats on Advanee, Route 2. j R. G. Dyson, of Saco, Montana, i arrived here last week to spend \ some time with relatives. M r.. Dvson says snow was 32 inches j deep in Montana before he left j /rsyoc/% n/RM7V7%y 7 % /S m R M A L L I C C /8 ' there. We don’t blame him for leaving. W The 5th Sunday singing will j take place at Ijames X Roads Baptist Church next Sunday, April 30th beginning at 2 p. m. All singers and the public gener ally, cordially invited to come out I and enjoy some good- singing. Under a new postal law which becomes effective July 1st, all cities and towns throughout the United States, will have but one free mail delivery daily, instead of two or more. This is being done to cut down the postal de ficit. Corp. Carl Atwood Bailey, of this city, has re-enlisted for Air- Borne Training. He enlisted in the Army in June, 1948. He com pleted his basic training at Fort Jackson, S. C., and since this, has served as a Firefighter. Bailey at tended the Army’s Leadership School while in basic Training. I V*:SfiwyA FAR M A L U - F IF S T IN THE FlELP Rankin-Santord Imp. Co. Phone 96 Mocksville, N. C. Monday and Tuesday May 1st and 2nd BACHELOR & BOBBY SOXER Myma Loy Sl Carv Grant ONE CARTOON AU Shows Start At Dusk Space Reserved For Trucks For One Week Only MICHAEL ERIC CHILD PHOTOGRAPHER Nationally Known W E MAKE YOUNG OR OLD SPECIALIZING CHILDREN'S PHOTOGRAPHS Will Be At SANFORD'S DEPT. STORE MOCKSVILLE, N. C. Monday Through Saturday APRIL 24 - 29 To Bring You A Special Portrait Offer: One Beautiful 8x10 Portrait In Black and W hite—For Only $1.00 W ITH A FULL SELECTION OF PROOFS A REGULAR $4.00 VALUE! See Our Photograph Display In Sanfotd’s Dept. Store Window No Appointment Necessary!AU Work Guaranteed! Only One Offer To A Person. Minors Must Be Accompanied By Parents Sanford’s Dept. Store MOCKSVILLE, N. C. Sgt. GIenn Morrow, who has: been stationed at Tokio1Japanfor the past 28 months, is spending a 30-day leave here with his family. He will be stationed at Fort BeI- vour, Va., when he TeporlS for duty. Mrs. Morrow has been liv ing here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sheek Bowden during her husband’s absence overseas. Paul, the little 9-vear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Couch, of Ephesus, was badly injured last Wednesday morning about 8 o’clock, when he was struck by a car driven by Spurgeon Smith, of Clemmons. The Jittle boy ran across the highway in front of the car.* He was carried to Rowan Memorial Hospital. Mr. Smith was on his way to Catawba Col lege when the accident occurred. G o GREYHOUND a n d S A V C If % I l ASK YOUR GREYH OUND AGENT ABOUT THRILLING EXPENSE-PAID TOURS ALMOST^ ANYWHERE IN THE U. S. A., CANADA, MEXICO W A R M SPR IN G D A Y S Is A Rem inder That Hot W eather Is Just Ahead. The Good Housewife Who Uses The Old-Fashioned Wood Burning Stove or Range To Prepare The Meals During The Summer Months Would Rejoice To Receive One Of The Latest And Most Modern Frigidaire Electric Ranges Prices And Terms To Suit Your Convenience FO RTHE W A R M W EATH ER W E H A V E• Frigidaire R efrigerators, E lectric W ater Heaters, Fans, Home Freezers, A utom atic W ashers, Bendix A utom atic Ironer, Lawn And Porch F urniture. And Many Other Items That Will Make The Warm Weather A Comfort Instead Of A Dread. Come In Soon And Look O ver O ur Large Stock O f Spring A nd Summer Furniture And House Furnishings. Farmers Hardware & Supply Co. Phone 46 Wilkesboro Street Suiid This Cozy Homa For Bluebirds, Wrens S fxxefrincb PLANNED TO NEET THEW-. SPECIAL DEMANDS p a t t e r n • 4 277v \ " r FOR A BLUEBIRD AND A WREN HOUSE Birds Have Preferences •THE DEPTH of the house, the width, size of opening, con structions and where located are all im portant to different kinds of birds. 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Leftover Ham and Eggs Make Interesting Dish For Supper, Luncheon Y O U ’LL BE GLAD to have ham * leftover from your E aster din ner as well as those hard-cooked eggs from the tra ditional E aster egg hunt. Both ^ can help make ^ C O ^ i$ * your menus in-V/V v/C /»'\-teresting if y o u ' x ' ' ^ ac}d a few glam- = o ro u s touches to them. You can serve juicy pink slices of ham in sandwiches or with salad as long as you can slice .them, but when you get down to the sm aller ■pieces, then you m ay be looking for such recipes as call for diced or ground ham . : *Ham a la King in Toast Caps (Serves 6) 3 tablespoons butter I tablespoon diced onion Yi teaspoon salt Ys teaspoon pepper 4 tablespoons flour Z1A cups milk 1 cup diced, cooked celery Z cups julienned cooked ham 4 sliced hard-cooked eggs Yi teaspoon W orcestershire sauce Melt butter, add onion and cook until tender over low heat, while stirring. Add seasonings and flour, blend. Add milk and cook until thick ened, stirring constantly. Add cel ery, ham , sliced eggs and Wor cestershire sauce, reserving a few egg slices to garnish top. H eat and serve in hot toast cups. Toast Cups 6 thin slices bread 3 tablespoons m elted butter Remove crusts from bread slices. Brush both sides of each slice with m elted butter. Press into six, three- inch muffin pans with two points each side. Bake in a m oderately hot oven (375°) for 12 m inutes un til lightly browned. Smoked Ham-Pineapple Patties (Serves 6) 3 cups ground leftover ham Yi cup dry bread crum bs Yi teaspoon ground cloves Ys teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon brown sugar 2 eggs 6 slices canned pineapple Combine m eat, crum bs, season ings, i sugar, and well beaten eggs. Mix thoroughly. Form into six flat patties. Arrange pineapple slices in a shallow baking pan. Place a patty ion each ring. Bake in a hot oven (325°) about 25 m inutes or until browned. Ribbon Egg Salad (Serves 6) 12 hard-cooked eggs French dressing 2 tablespoons unflavored gela tin Vi hup cold w ater Yi cup boiling w ater IY t cups salad dressing 2 teaspoons minced onion 3, tablespoons lemon juice Yi teaspoon salt Yi cup chopped parsley Separate yolks and whites. Force the yolks through a sieve and moist en with French dressing. Press the yollta firm ly onto bottom of greased mold. Chop the whites. Soften gela tin in cold w ater and dissolve m boiling w ater. Cool. When sirupy in consistency, add salad dress ing, onion, lemon juice and salt. Pour about half of this m ixture over yolks and chill until firm . Add chopped parsley and egg whites to rem aining gelatin m ixture and pour into mold. Chill until firm . . Cream sauce, strips of ham abd liard-cooked eggs served in toast cups m ake such a tasty and delicious dish when served in. this way, you’d never guess leftovers were being used. LYNN SAYS: Pep Up Lunches With' Variety Tuna fish salad for sandwiches is, nothing new, but when you add to it some broiled bacon, you give it a welcome change of flavor. Swiss cheese paired with thinly sliced dried beef and sliced tomato Wiif travel-Welj, if .made into a lunch box sandwich. ' If the sandwich filling is rather dry, give it succulence by dipping in an egg-milk m ixture and fry it for French Fried sandwiches. 4 Add other ingredients to both ham and eggs to enhance their flavor and extend these pro tein foods when preparing them into luncheon or supper dishes. . LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU . Hot Tomato Juice -Ham a la King in Toast Cups Carrot Strips and G reen Beans Pear Salad Beverage Chocolate Pudding ‘Recipe Given Eggs Stuffed with Crab M eat (Makes 12 stuffed eggs) 6 hard-cooked eggs I teaspoon dry m ustard . Yi teaspoon salt I cup flaked crab m eat 1 cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 54 cup mayonnaise Paprika Cut eggs into halves crosswise. Remove yolks, m ash and m ix with rem aining ingredients. FiU whites, sprinkle with paprika. Baked Hawaiian Hash (Serves 5) 3 tablespoons butter, m elted 3 cups diced leftover cooked smoked ham 3 cups diced cooked sweet po tatoes Yi cup finely chopped onion Yi teaspoon salt Ti teaspoon pepper Yi cup pineapple juice 3 slices pineapple, cut in half Yi cup brown sugar 2 tablespoons butter Combine three tablespoons m elt ed butter, ham , potatoes, onion, seasonings a n d pineapple juice; m ix lightly. Bake in greased eight- inch square bak ing dish in moder ate oven (350°) 30 m inutes. Remove from oven; top with halved pine apple slices; sprinkle with brown sugar; dot with two tablespoons but ter. Broil until pineapple is lightly browned, about seven minutes. Baked Tomatoes and Hard-Cooked Eggs (Serves 6) 2 medium tom atoes, peeled 6 slices bread 6 hard-cooked eggs, sliced 2 cups Cheese Sauce 12 strips cooked bacon Parsley Cut each tomato into three slices crosswise. Toast bread lightly. Ar range sliced egg on each slice of toast, cover with a slice of tomato and bake in mod erate oven (350°) 15 m inutes. Pour hot cheese sauce over tom ato and return to oven to heat until sauce be gins to bubble. Re move from oven, garnish each service with two bacon strips and parsley. -Pineapple Nut Cake (Serves 6—8) 7i CmP Iluftv1F I cup sugar 3 egg yolks I cup crushed, canned pine apple Yi cup nutm eats, chopped 14 graham crackers, crumbled Y cup pineapple juice Vi cup heavy cream , whipped Cream together butter and sugar. Add egg yolks and continue cream ing until well blended. Add pine apple and nutm eats. A rrange al ternate layers of crumbs and pine apple m ixture in loaf pan, leaving crum bs as top and bottom layers. Moisten with juice. Set in refrig erator for’ 12 hours. Serve in slices with whipped cream . Chicken and ham are flavor m ates for sandwiches. Enhance the flavor by spreading the bread with a Thousand Island dressing. For something distinctly differ ent, try using a scram bled egg fill ing in noontime sandwiches. Color and flavor appeal are given the sandwich by adding some chopped green pepper or chopped onion to the eggs. Peanut butter is an old favorite, but it takes on interest when mixed with chopped crisp cucum ber and a bit of pimiento for color. International Uniform Sunday School Lessons KENitETH J FOREMAN SCRIPTURE: Amos, (especially 4:4;5:4-9, 14-15, 21-24.DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 13:1-6. W h e n W o rsh ip Is W ic k e d Lesson for April 30, 1950 TVDN’T THINK for a moment you could stand before some Record ing Angel, with a m emorandum in your hand showing the num ber of tim es you had attended church last year, and expect to see the angel break f - . 1 out into "a beaming "v smile. “Fifty - two J trips to church, 52 B y r Good Deeds!” you M would smile confi- K ", » dently at him. But Mfc. %* ® he m ight freeze you ttSs im with a look of com- J m g l A plete contempt. _ _ “Fifty-two sins!” he Dr- Foreman m ight say. “Next case!” * • * Can It Be a Sin To Go to Church? Church-going is not necessarily a good act. Worship m ay be a quite wicked deed. Most people are slow getting that into their heads. They think that one act of worship on Sunday will somehow m ake up for a let of bad behavior Monday through Saturday inclusive. But it is not so. The first person in history to see and to say that worship need-not be good and can even be very bad, was none other than the prophet Amos. The Israelites to whom he spoke were what we would cail a church-going people; they were certainly tem ple - going. They followed the sam e ritual that was used in Jerusalem , they offered tithes and sacri fices, they kept the Sabbath, they attended the feasts and they observed the fasts and they sang the sacred hymns. Yet Amos denounces the whole business, and condemns the wor shippers as guilty sinners. W hat w as wrong?* • * It Looked AU Right R EADERS of the Old Testam ent will rem em ber that at Bethel, where the Israelites had one of their principal temples, golden calves had been set up to represent Jehov ah their God. Now even though the people worshipped the true God, surely it was wrong to worship him in the form of an anim al. The form of their worship was all wrong, m uch further wrong than any form of Christian worship is today; yet Amos does not condemn them for worshipping in this m is taken way. Never once anywhere does he say a word about the gold en calves. And if he does not say anything about a big thing like gold en calves, still less does he have anything severe to say about less im portant departures from “ good form ” in worship. He does not condemn the peo ple for having the wrong hymn- book, or for not having a good choir. He hasn’t a word of blam e for non-attendance at worship; indeed he comes down hardest on those who do attend. Apparently church attendance in Bethel was excellent—that was not their trouble. Again, he has no fault to find with the Israelites because their ‘ser vices were uninteresting,” Maybe they w ere; but on the other hand they were probably full of color and of pageantry, something to see as well as to hear. Yet Amos was not im pressed. Further, he m akes no complaint about poor sermons. ♦ * * W hat W as the Trouble? 1J1HE TROUBLE with those people, ^ the thing that m ade their wor ship sinful, was not some defeat in the act of worship itself. There was nothing they could do, Amos can think of nothing they could do, to “improve the worship program ” as we would say. The trouble with those people was not in church at all. It was oii the outside. Almost alone in his tim e, a voice in the wilderness—for no one paid him any real attention— Amos, speaking for God, told the Sabbath - keeping, church - going, hymn-singing, tithing citizens of Is rael an im portant truth. Religion, in short, cannot be shut off from the rest of life, as nearly everybody then thought and as too m any people now think. Worship is simply no good if it is not lined up with a good life, a life good by inten tion and effort. Jesus underscored this same point. If you are at the very altar of God, in the act of offering him a gift, and rem em ber that your broth er has something against you, go and m ake m atters right with your brother before you offer the gift. See your brother before you see God! Or else God will not be at home to you. (Copyright by the Internationat Council of Religious Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denominations. Released' by WNU Features.) Plenty of Trails There are 600 m iles of horse and hiking trails in the G reat Smoky Mountains national park. AU for One M rs. Newlywed: “ Darling, I know something is troubling you and I w ant you to teU m e w hat it is. Your worries are our worries now.” M r. Newlywed: “Well, dear, we’ve just had a letter from a girl in Chicago, and she’s suing us for breach of prom ise.” A m an w ill'alw ays go to bat for a girl with good curves. C Gunionteed hv vGood HonsekeepiRt Ti SAVE A LOT OF STEPS BY K eeping an extra can of s3-IN-0NEj mommy... jmjrvk in the oe/BASEM ENT/) ^ L Ta/ N N - O ^iusB?ry Are you going through the functional “middle-age” period peculiar to women (38-52 years) ? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, high-strung, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Pinkham’s Vegetabltt Compound to relieve such symptoms I Regular use of Plnkham's Compound helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-age distress! LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S COMPOUND MINISTER GRATEFUL— OVERCOMES CONSTIPATION “I am a retired minister and very grateful that eating ALL-BRAN overcomes my constipation. I shall boost this good break- fastfood every chance I get.” E. H. Harmer, 726 Lincoln St., Sno homish, Wash. Just one of many unsolic-t iled lettersfrom A LL BRAN users! If you need help for consti pation due to lack of l bulk, simply eat an ounce of crispy ALL-BRAN daily, drink plenty of water! If not completely satisfied after 10 days, return empty carton to Kellogg’s, Battle Creek, Mich. GET DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACKI Annonnces Kadacol Rationing SENATOR DUDLEY J. LeBLANC The continued increasing demand for HADACOL, one of the truly great medical discoveries given to the world by Senator Dudley J. LeBIanc, has made it necessary to decrease the ration allowance on HADACOL from six to two bottles. “We placed the limit at two bottleB to a customer only after trying every other alternative,” said Senator LeBIanc in Lafayette, La. “The demand for HADACOL has increased 1000 per cent in the past year. “When I created HADACOL I read every available authoritative medical and drug book in order to use the very finest ingredients regardless of cost. I read on page 234, U. S. Dispensatory, 23rd edition, that ‘Theoretically Calcium Glycerophosphate should for many purposes be superior to most other calcium salts because it represents both calcium and phosphoric acid in a soluble combination.’ “Little did I realize when I made Calcium Glycerophosphate a part of the now famous HADACOL formula that in time the demand for this great medical discovery—HADACOL—would be so great that we would use up the entire available supply in the United States of this product.” Yes, in HADACOL, Senator LeBIanc envisioned the medicine that would bring blessings to folks of all ages. Perhaps others could have placed the same ingredients in a medicine, but it remained for him to develop a formula which contains the most expensive ingredients of their kind. For instance, he uses Vitamin B-6 which costs at the factory 3550 a kilogram, which is less than half a gallon. At the present time it is difficult to predict how long the shortage of HADACOL will continue. It is still being merchandised in less than a third of the nation and is being denied to all foreign countries because of the production bottlenecks. Senator LeBIanc was the first candidate for Governor in Louisiana to advocate the Old Age Pension. In fact, it is said by some that he was the first public official to talk about specific Old Age Assistance 'n the United States. His heart has always beaten in sympathy with the cause of the down-trodden, and with that very thought in mind he developed a medi cal formula known as HADACOL that is now sweeping the Southland. People are singing the praises of HADACOL everywhere it is sold. Senator LeBIanc has served his people in public life faithfully and well. In private life he brings to you a service which is appreciated by -:uffering humanity—HADACOL. And, as he has so often said to his enemies and to those who op- • osed his Old Age Pension: “Let me quote you an ancient mandate of Jod Himself: “ ‘Honor thy father and thy mother that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee.’ ” So it is that there is a man who has worked untiringly for the ause of the common man, the infirm and the sickly, and by his past Activities in behalf of these people you have the assurance that what he has produced in HADACOL he believes to be the best for you that, money can buy. So, if you have been sickly for a long time and you can’t find the cause, then you owe it to yourself to try HADACOL Why not be wise? Don’t be satisfied with temporary relief. Get after the cause of your trouble. And, as so often, it’s because you need this amazing health- building, nerve and tissue repairing HADACOL formula. Millions of people have benefited by it. So don’t you think that you owe it to your self to give this great medicine a chance to help you? Remember the name HADACOL! Remember the man who discovered this remedy! Remember his activities in behalf of the poor, the humble and the needy! Don’t delay. Start using HADACOL—you and your family—today! We are asking our cnstomers to have patience, and accept no sub stitute. Insist on the genuine HADACOL! Remember there is nothing that was ever made but what it could be made worse and sold for less, and that is what you call imitation. Trial size only $1.25. But if you are so fortunate as to obtain the large family or hospital size, we urge you to save money—only $3.50. We are so firm in our belief that HADACOL will help you that we sell HADACOL on a money-back guarantee. If you don’t feel perfectly satisfied after using HADACOL as directed, just return the empty carton and your money will be cheerfully refunded. Nothing could be fairer. If you druggist does not have HADACOL, order direct from The LeBIanc Corporation, Lafayette, Louisiana. Send no money. Just youf name and address on a penny post card. Pay postman. State whether you want the $3.50 hospital economy size or $1.25 trial size. Remember, money cheerfully refunded unless you are 100% satisfied. THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSYILLE. N. C. u r n 1:1: ihc functional cd peculiar to Doos this niftke t feel 80 Uroii? Then do n:':”i‘a Vegetable ■ >•::<•)! ^ymptomflJ r.;;:v»‘s Compound .ii:co :v::ilnst this ' Jisinv#!VEGETABLE COMPOUND AM’S lATEFUL- Ini^for and very S ALL-BRAN ipation. I shall ounce of crispy uriiik plenty of t ‘ v satisfied after Imnrv carton to eok' Mich. GET Iio n e v b a c k i / i;Q of the truly tor Dudley J. allowance on ■r.lv afior trying iyctto, La. i4The the past year. >!e authoritative •.cst ingredients ry, 2ora edition, • many purposes rc-pvescnts both ■hosphste a part t:ic demand for jrreat that we Id States of this l;G medicine that lliors could have Tvinc-d for him to Ie ingredients of Its at the factory b:.z the shortage Iised in less than Jountrics because |T.or in Louisiana •y some that he A?e Assistance Lhe cause of the Jovolopcd a medi- jr the Southland, ore it is sold. Ta faithfully and i- appreciated by to those who op- cient mandate of rlays may be Ihee.* ” Titinngly for the and by his past |.uance that what I ’^ct fnr you that. can’t find the |Vhy not be wise? hf cau?e of your amazing health- |mula. rlllonjs of in own it to your- t? Rcnicmber the red this remedy! Sile and the needy! b. mily—today! rid acccpt no sub- ’ there is nothing and sold for less, 3 as to obtain the ioney-only $3.50. I help you that we orvt feel perfectly return the empty I Nothing could be r direct from The money. Just youf an. State whether il size. Remember* sfied. VIRGIL FIRE! 7 FIRE! By Len KIeif AnO He JOST LAKE ARfiAL bqemamt CUTE by Claric S. HaoiSUNNySIDE S 0 * 4 /- BUT Ion, VES M | ^I BET PO P NEVER WENT IO SUNDAV SCHOOL WHEK H6 WAS A KO.... SMUCKSv MOM, SUNDAV SCUOOLAGAfNgff ' - - zV - 6ET W 0I 1CtUE W ENT ,SNGLE SUNtW/ME ANY SOODE tT U E W THE OLD GAFFER By Clay Hunter ^ YOU'RE LUCKV you WEREN'T AT VICKSBURG DURINS THE SEIGE' I WAS WITH GENERAL s h e r a w j d u r in g the civil WAR. IT WAS ROUGH/ SAY/ YOU DIDN'T SEE AHYTHtNO ! / FOUGHT AT CWCKAMAUSy t IF YOU THINK YOU HAD IT TOUGH, LET ME TELL YOU WHAT HAPPENED TO M E AT VALLEY FORGB/ By MELLORSOIIFOKD C-MVS ON THEJ1 CAUSE OKE Wtl POtfT HUNT IOVKtaF INTO A CWNEK UKE TNET PO IMINE RINNIE5. SOOF •• Ut ALMOST TO IMS DOCK aORES OVERNKSHT TVM Ttf DVM TUM TEE PVM PU• » By Bud FisherMUTT AND JEFF o h 7 \ NOT HERE/ IT'S MUCH HIOH! (OWOH! V THE MOTOR’S KOMKED OUT/ J BESIDES, THERE'S A SIGH DOWN TH ER E WHICH SB Z fK E E P O FF GRA SS/ " ITS GREAT./ JU S T THINK WE'RE UP 5 0 0 0 F E E T / COME ON, F L L TEAeH y o u HOW !,TO FLv/ / IM READyy ITS.NOT B A P , MUTT / WHAT DO WE DO NOW?WELL LEARNT FLY IH TE EASY LESSO H S Bv Arthur PointerJITTER JITTER TtOK A RlDE ON TOFOF A CAR. OwNEOBjrATHEATOCftt-WODWCeft, AND CAUSED A LOTOP EXCITEMENT.. HOMONKeV CANti VAlTfJ fAAfcE A MONKTEty HE DRAMfS our of me / j-rca o u /o our- side.They'O- , cofAF tNsioe tf^ T O T E e HIM. HMIA- NOT AFAP IDEA — WE CAN USE HIM IHXDUR DANCE* T r o u t in e Pl BUTHOW wiiu-WECetttHIM BACKSME By Cert ThomasWYLDE AND WOOLV KEEP CLWBI NS/ DONT SE a sissy / AND STOP , GRUMBLING/ tOOKoUT/ I TOLP YOU YOU HAD NO BUSINESS LOOKIN' FOR EAGLES'EGGS/ P O " I F G R E G O R y W A N T S TO M A K E UP, H E K t f O W S W H E R E T O F l M D M E / ' *THE PRICE /S A LITTLE MlGH 6UT OUR CARS ARE 100% USED!" -!COfiIfI For a quick lunch spread light ly toasted English muffins with soft yellow cheese, top with tom ato or bacon slices, and put under the broiler. If m ustard spots washable m a terial, rem ove by working glycerin into the stain and rubbing lightly between the hands. Then wash the article in soap and w ater. Kolls that come from the freezer can be thawed by placing them in a 300-degree oven from 20 to 30 m inutes. A little almond flavoring goes well with red cherries or with a custard sauce. It’s good, too, in m acaroons. The action of unprotected m etal curlers and bobbie pins causes pillow cases to w ear out quickly. To save your linens tie a wide, colorful ribbon around your hair pins. M any are the ways cole slaw m ay be varied: With a whipped cream dressing; with caraw ay or celery seeds, with paprika or with a handful of raisins. Leftover m eat m ay be ground and used in a sandwich to pack into a lunch box. To stretch the • m eat, add a chopped, hard-cooked egg and season with salt and pep per and a little finely-grated onion pulp; m oisten with m ayonnaise. HEARIK flafe Jhftpwttr ofeorol ■ Grand breakfast main dish! Here’s the “power” of corn. Tastes powerfully good! Crisp, sweet, fresh! Your bargain in goodness— Kellogg’s Com Flakes. MOTHER KNOWS BEST! m; * * * * ■5SSSSSSSSSSSSS S s s s f o r a qu ick a n d t a s iy meal ss IV anSmPs . r C Si ■ I Leanv tender beef and pork, seasoned m g delicately and deliciously, and smoked to S S S S the right texture and tenderness. Every sausage Invites you to eat another— they’re so tempting and tasty. Forparties, picnics, any meal. • • ready to—* I i i i HEAT • EAT • ENJOY i i i S w — - M M M i - I T henm M rs. William B. Morris o f Dallas, Texas. Dallas Bride says: "G rand Cakesivrfchi S n o w d rfft- 3 m in u te s m ixing" Brides (and experts too!) praise Snowdrift is em vlsorizei—it Snowdrift’s new, lighter, more blends quickly and completely luscious cakes. You need an with all your cake ingredients emtdsorized shortening to make in just 3 minutes mixing, these cakes so easily. And * f£i» Z t W > Y ' X \ r M k ' ^ -i,>. CHOCOLATE CAKE WITH GINGER ICING Snowdrift is emulsorized to bring yon success with this quick-method recipe Sift together into a large bowl: 2 cups sifted cake flour % teaspoon soda I teaspoon salt 1% cups sugar Add: Vi cup Snowdrift % cup milk Mix enough to dampen flour.Beat 2 minutes. If by hand, count beating time only; with electric mixer, use “low speed.”Scrape bowl often; scrape beat* ers after 2 minutes. Add: 2 eggs cup milk 9 squares unsweetened chocolate, melted I teaspoon vanilla Beat I m inute. Turn into 2 greased 8" Iaya pans, lined with plain paper. Bake in moderate oven <375* P.) about 25 minutes. Prost with— 6IN6ER ICING: Combine 2 egg whites, 1% cups sugar, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon cream of tartar and % cup water in top of double boiler over boiling water. Beat witb a rotary beater 7 minutes or until icing “peaks.” Add I teaspoon vanilla and 3A cup chopped crystallized ginger. Spread on cake and top with additional chopped ginger. mm cmra sa ss sses a* kiss&£3gs«s2£»23;gm SNOWDRlFr Pan wtctabit shortening for line baking and flying -made by theWesson Oil People 6e«d BoescfcMpiBg PAGE EIGHT THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE N. C APRIL 26 1950 i opsiues H O S CHOLERA kills over ?zo,ooo(o o o 2 . W O R T H OF SWIME PER YEAR I l i B I OMCE THREATENED OUR CATTLE INDUSTRY. IT WAS ERADICATED AFTE?. VETbSIN- ARY RESEARa-I PROVED IT WA60VRRIED SYA7ICK. D O tS KOT tA U SE"X " DISEASE, VETERINARIANS '* t R E P O R T 'iSw'f^!3a=* Aiccncan Pounaauon for Animnl Health > Faraseft Question Corner ) PREPARED B Y A m erican Foundation F o r A nim al H ealth aplasmosis'— CatiIe Killer QUESTION: Wliat is this strange- sounding disease “p.naplasmosis”, and how seriors is it? ANSWER: A blood disease of cattle which is spreading slowly throughout thr* country. Veterinar ians say it's the third most costly cattle aisep.se in America.QUFSTION: Few doos it affect cattle? ANFAVER: The heart beats faster, the StTin may get yellowish, milk production fsr s off: the animal gets Ustless an'7 weight rapidly. A laboratory I test often shows the dot-like n?.\ in red blood cells. QTT5ST??.)N: What causes anaplas- mo'sis? ANSWER: A tiny parasite which is sometimes ca rr i e d by flies, mosquitoes and ticks. Anaplas- mosis may also be spread by unsteri lized vacci nation needles and dehorn ing inst ruments. When the infection is well established It destroys red bleed ceils. QUESTION: Do cattle die from it? ANSWER: Yes. From one-fifth to ttne-thir.i c? the infected animals die. The c" ~ ""X dr./t d ? remain car riers of the disease parasites. QUESTION: What should the own er do with catt?e that rccover?ANSWER: Usually, because recov ered animals a r e carriers, it’s best to fatten them, and send them to mar ket. but that de fends upon the" local disease conditions. The meat and milk from these animals is cafe for human consumption.QtJESTION: Is it a summertime disease ? ANSWER: Usually, although it may appear during the winter in regions with mild climates. Also, it is mostly a disease of mature ani mals; young calves seldom get it.QUESTION: Is there a vaccine available? ANSWER: No, but resrarch vet erinarians are attemptin'* * develop one. Also, they are u severrl drugs for treating the o as®. but they have not yet found one that is entirely satisfactory. Many infected animals can be scved. however, if treatment is started scon enough. NOTE—Due to space limitations, general questions cannot be handled hit this col umn. Farmers Question Corner PREPARED B Y A m erican Foundation F o r A nim al H ealth Tii2 Great Milk Thief— Mastitis QUESTION: Just what is the cat- t •* disease, “mastitis"? ANSWER: Mrstltis means any in flammation of the udder. Several kinds of germs can cause several types of infection in tsats and udders. Injuries may alsa cause nmstitis. QUESTION: What >arc sosse common v^yrnptoms of mas- dt!i? ANSWER: If the cr is acute, the jSSEr&v uc:'er in'”,' be sore ar.d s.vollen; there may be a fi*o«si the teats, and the mi'k !r»ny be stringy. In chron' ernes, however — and there are hvr.drci’s r/ thc*-::?.nds of these —a Jafcorctcvy test r::1 physical ex amination ire.y ho rcrjuircd for a sure diagnosis. QUESTION: VI1^t treatment is best fc*.* r*r.sL!'h? ANSWER: r.-i --cral types of medi cation are hclnfu!. B:it tests must be made first to find out \v!:at gcrrr.s are c asin g the trouble—so t-.j cgi - rest treatm ent may ,be used to fight thv.t "/articular cavse. The important thing to remember is to have * a vatsrinarMn ciic^.’c the anin’.al at the fi.*'t s‘"n of trouble. Prompt action may e?.vc a co.Vs usefuincs;-. Q u iiG T iO N : \Vi*L‘t c in an o w n er do to D rev sn t n“.v.!I£*s'* ANSV/iTTl: C v i v . inn teat in juries; be s '.re ri‘!':ln-f mscv. nes are ad;-tist2d corr?.*:tit: br.y only clean replacement s-sc : s -..IIine mil':ing ew inircn'; m T: r "cc.ed cows Inst; work o :t a orr.'.-lcr.! control plan with V.'* vctorlrrrlr.n. 3/Iedicaiion alone will not ss’.ve this problem. A p^'T/'^. c~“*t*:^l rrcrram is nacessi'ry. NOTE—.C;*r? tn tpa*.?. limitations. ?.cnvral qurzlicns cznnot be handled by this column. I - I-. ,A-T ■' " A T r>. r QlTP A 017QJ -v -i j 2- ;C Ai-IdLtid It b 's ?*r*.n l:r.' .,n for rnturics th:.t a br.cl vri'.cr s^v^y i,:ay tprcnd hur.:2'i cl'*••**: and deaths. It is not so pciura Iv known that costly livr'rt'iv-; lorr.rs can also oe~ur * y i * ssasw* Water holes can spread disease. where pure water Is not available at •II times. Old water tanks may harbor the living’ IRrvce of many varieties of parasites, or even disease-producing tecteria. Stale ponds or backwater bayous may be incubators for para- sites and virulent germs. 1PAKS3 BY AViCN FSK ANIMAL HEALTH I Windblown green scum or algae on lahas can cause heavy death looses in all species of farm animals. VVeils that are open to seepage from manure piles are grave sources of danjrEr. Each ye3r valuable animals are lost, also, after drinking from streams contaminated by industrial wastes. Rivers and creeks also may carry disease germs and viruses from farms upstream. Veterinarians have tra-ed hog cholera outbreaks to just such situations. Strange as it may seem, actual death of animals by thirst is not too uncommon. Even a short supj'y of water may cause illness or poor pro* duction. While ice cold water may not actually cause disease, it cuts down on livestock profits because animals will not drink enough. The livestock owner should not wait until faulty water supplies cause losses. He should survey the situation on his farm and take th« necessary preventive measures before Iomes occur. Mental Expert serfs Hss NEW YORK.—Anyone who pur sues his quest long enou.h is sure to find a psychologist somewhere that will support almost any belief that may be trotted out. For instance, take that old wist ful, masculine foaling .that it’s real ly the m an of tlie family who does all the work, while m am m a Hoes the playing. Most men would say that it’s no use to try to convince the ‘T itle women” of that, an l have long since given up the ef fort—but Dr. George Lawton, a specialist in the psychological problems of people who are get ting along in years (as who isn’t?) is convinced that such is. the case. With trepidation or apology he told a mixed audience at Cooper Union that “women in the middle income brackets tend to do less work than they should.” and he added, equally as boldly, “and their husbands do more work than they should.” Should Share Work Looking the mixed audience squarely in the eye—there is. in such cases, safety in numbers—the psychologist went on: “In such cases, a wife, in order to help her husband enjoy life more and per haps even live longer, should help share her husband’s work load and share his economic and mental burdens.” Man, the doctor (a man) said, is really not the stronger half of the species. In fact papa has more se vere emotional illnesses, more physical illnesses and lives on the average eight years less than his wife. (Lawton also mentioned that men have a higher suicide, delin quency and alcoholism rate, but it might be just as weil not to inject that into the argument.) “Men, both in the realm of em ployment and in sexual perform ance, face more dram atic crisis in dicative of aging,” lhe psychologist went on. "The divid'ng line be tween the first i:nd last half of life in men and women is very much sharper for the m an.” Many Men Overworked Declaring Ihat it's more difficult for men to “aye successfully,” Dr. Lawton declared that as a m ale got older he had to “exchange speed and quantity for strategy, skill and quality.” “Many a tired businessman is tired because he is overworking as an escape from close emotional re lationships with his wife and mem bers of his fam ily,” he said." “A good husbrnd will provide most women with the greater part of the things that they need out of life for fulfillment, but a modern woman needs even more than her home, a husband and children in order to have a complete sense of purpose and intellectual stimula tion. “Every woman, regardless of her financial situation, needs a part time job. community activities and some creative outlet.” W aitress’ Kindness Pays Her Off to Kie Tune of SDO5GCO CHICAGO.—One of the most out standing cases on record - where kindness “paid off” is provided in the experience of Mrs. Leona Smith, a 40-year old, red-haired waitress. Declared by him to be his only friend, Lucien Gerald Walker, 83- year old retired bit: inesman, !eft her his estate of more than $90,000. Walker, retired owner of a fabric import and export firm, named Mrs. Smith his sole beneficiary in a will signed five days before he died. Mrs. Smith had been with him almost constantly during the last 10 days of his life. She had a cot in his hospital room on which she took short naps whenever she could find the time. Two of Walker!s relatives began a contest of his will. His- sisters- in-law, Mrs. Wylma Perry Spann and Mrs. Olive Perry Maupin of Vicksburg, Miss., charged that at the time he did so. W alker was “wholly mentally incompetent to execute a will.” They wish to ad m it to probate an earlier will which named them his beneficiaries. Mrs. Smith m et W alker 12 years ago when he began taking his two daily meals in the coffee shop in which she worked. Walker was a perm anent resident of the hotel. She said she knew that he was a lonely m an and tried to do “little things” for him, such as seeing that he got plenty of white m eat when he ordered chicken and being sure that his bacon was crisp. About 10 years ago Mrs. Smith invited W alker to her liome for Christm as dinner. After that he spent every Thanksgiving and Christm as and most Sundays with Mrs. Smith, her husband and daughter, now 15. In the last ycnr. Mrs. Smith said, Walker had been too ill to go to her home for dinrer, so she and her daughter would :i-c?t him down town on holidays. W alker's simple, one page will read: “I bequeath all my pnr;:onal prop erty to my friend, Leona M. Smifli of Chicago, who, in my old age and last illneps has really proven to be m y friend.” m g income During an intense love scene m the movies, when the hero was do ing the Charles Boyer stuff, wifey nudged hubby and whispered, “Why is it that yo u never make love to m e like that?” “Say,” he replied, "do you hap pen to know that guy gets $10,000 a week lor doing that?” Never Can Tell “Now,” said the teacher, impres sively, “why should we endeavor to rise by our own efforts?” “ Because,” replied T o m m y , “there’s no knowing when the alarm-clock will go wrong.” BEAUFORT, N. C— The federal atomic energy commission and the fish and wildlife service are going to try to radio-activate oysters here. The AEC hopes to learn more from the experim ent than it did in the A-bomb tests at Bikini. The fish and wildlife service’s part in the project will be to de term ine what an oyster likes to eat. In a huge building used before the w ar as a biological laboratory, the oysters will be fed artificially. Tiny am ounts of radioactive chemical substances from th e AEC’s isotope division at Oak Ridge, Tenn., will be shot into the tanks along with organisms which scientists believe appeal to an oyster’s appetite. As the organism s grow, they ab sorb the isotopes and the oysters will be eating the “hot” food. Isotopes can be traced. Thu3 the food taken in by the oysters, digested and incorporated in their tissues, m ay be determined chem ically and by radiation m easure ment. ATTEN TIO N FARM ERS! POULTRY LOADING We Will Buy Every Thursday Morning From 8 A. To 11 A. M. In Front Of E. P. Fosters Cotton Gin Your Poultry HIGHEST MaRKET PRICES PAID SALISBURY POULTRY CO. Salisbnry, N. C DAVIE BRICK COMPANY DEALERS IN GOOD COAL Day Phone 194 - N ipht Kh.int- lit* Mockstville, N C LET US DO YOUR m PRINTING W e can save you money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc. Patronize your home newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. _____ TH E D A V IE RECORD. mm THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE I Jiiiti Boger & Howard PURE SERVICE Tirv-S Batteries And Accessories Kurfees Paints > Corner N. Main & Gaither Sts, Phone 80 WaHcer Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Phone 46 M.)cksvilfe, N C The Davie Record Has Been Published Since 1899 SILER Funeral Home AND Flower Sh^p Phone I -'3 S. Main St Morksville, N. C. A iiibalance S * vice Aofice to Creditors Having qualified as adminisrra* tor of the estate of T- H. Broad way, deceased, late of Davie Coun ty, North Carolina, notice is here by g vcn to all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before April 4, 1951. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said estate, are requested to make prompt payment. This the 4th dav of April, 1950. J. W. BROADWAY, Admr- of J. H. Broadway. Mocksville, N. C., Route 4. Notice to Creditors H i' i' ° Qti «f . I t» .1 1 h* > ^ V . »♦** c o*‘ DflVtp Cnim tv Nntb Owrn Ic •» pitMrp U h**ri *»• eivpn n> Ml person* hnl«fr>ft r!s»irr< th*» *»id t*» -rpsff» »■» tbp iir.d* rsigned on or be- f •*».!•!! ?Pf»1 Mfth^ h H «»i h* r r rb ^ir r*r*'iv^ry A | per *•>»'« i .'ipb *n rftp sm i 4^ tn te «re rp n <*k** I rnipjit seitlem -'nf. Th** Jun. 25. 1950. THOS W. TliTTEROW. .Ir. Adtrr. n* Th--*. W. Tnwrow, Sr. Mocksvillp, N. C.. Route I. 50 Years Other* have come and gone-your county newspaper keeps going. .*■ ometimes it has seemed hard to make “buckle and tongue” meet but soon the sun shines and again we march on. Our faithful subscribers, most of whom pay promptly, give us courage and abiding faith in our fellow man. If your neighbor is not taking The Record tell him to subscribe. The price is only $1.50 per year in the State, and $2 00 in other states. When You Come To Town Make Our Office Your Headquarters. We Are Alwavs Glad To See You. ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPACE IN THJS PAPER Will Airanse To Suit GOOD NEIGHBORS—PRICES TO FiT >*OUR BUSINESS 9153485348232389235353534853482323234823232323 53535353538948484848484823232323232323235353532353535348 51 ^837