11-NovemberP A G E E tG B T THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE N, C., OCTOBER 31, WSl
OldesfPublic Sieno
Recalls O. Henry,
Other Great,Writers
i N E W Y O R K . N. Y .- E ls le DugR.
40 y «M 8 a veteran at n trade firnd*
ualljr vanishing from the Amcricnn •ccnc, is still busy at 60 years of •g«'. She adm its, however, that the
Job ig'not as glamorous as it used to
be;
.Miea DuCf is said to be the oldest
w orking public stenographer in New Y ork city. And she doesn’t Jcnow
when she w ill retire. “ I can’t,*’ site
M pU ins. "There’s no one to talce
e v tr m y work.”
She points out thot few stenogra* ^hers In these modern times are
wlUing to gamble on earning an income on an hourly fee basis.
M s s D uff operates In the same cubbyhole office In the Old Prince
George hotel where she started m*Ay years ago and she has a mem-
list of cUents that Includes fam ous and interesting per*muiy fa
N BftU tiC iThe hotel was at one time o
gathering spot for writers, and one she knew well, and served often,
1WS the novelist Em erson Hough. She ^ e d his whole m anuscript for
"The M agnificent Adventure,” a •toTj of the Lewis and Clark cx*•to iy of
pedition.
She was also the firi^t to.hear and
read the impassioned temperancp
lectures of John L . Sullivan, boxer
turned crusader, for it was to her that he dictated them.
Once, she was even included in a
story w ritten by one of her customers. T^e author, a silent little man, always brought in his stories written
«n yellow paper in a clean, beauti
ful hand. Once he handed her c manuscript, rem arking, "B y the way, 1 put you in this story."
As she typed the passage in 0.
H eniy’s "The Face in the Circle”
that told of a public stenographer,
she was writing a description of herself.
Oii* Broom Swopi Htavily;
Uw Invottlcates Sweepings
■ CHICAGO—A good sweeper is a good m an to have around for
a janitor, but a heavy broom got Abe Forrest, 29, a Walgreen
drugstore porter, into plenty of trouble.
Forrest was held to a grand jury on a larceny charge. PoUcc
said he "sw ept out” more than $60,000 worth of candy and ciga
rettes trom the drugstore.
Also held to the grand jury was Forrest's half brother, John
Cobbs, who police said told o£
hauling away the "sweepings”
over a period of months.
Karjr Chief Solves Mystery
Of Woman Free Wllh Dollars
N EW Y O R K —The mystery of tho
w oman who happily passed out dol
lars and pep talks to navy recruits
has been brought to light by a chief
petty officer who received $150
from the lady to distribute among a
.contingent of 130 bound (or Newport. R .I.
Petty Officer Steven Kolelas, Sr.,
Bridgeport, Conn., was approached by a wom an asking how m any men
he had in his charge. Not knowing who she m ight be. he refused to
answer.
"She says maybe I got a hundred
m en,” he relates. "She peels off a $100 bill and tells me to divide it
am ong m y m en. It’s then I tell her
I got 130. She gives m e $50 m ore.”The next night same tim e, same place, same routine. Kolelas had
135 m en, the lady gave him $135 ond also gave the recruits on the train
a fine pep talk. The petty officer
then had a heart to heart talk with
the generous donor and discovered
that she was M rs. M uriel McCor
m ick H ubbard, sister of Chicago In-
dustrallst Fowler M cCormick and granddaughter of the late John D.
Rockefeller.
Poor PrtV«t« Wllbiir H«l*s
ButloCill Inlho Morntnt
Let it be known thot W ilbur just hates to get up in the m orning and
if the Arm y buglers operate on Daylight Saving Time, he m ay not
be able to stand it aU.H is worried m other conveyed that
Information to Gen. Lewis B. Her- shey. D raft Director.
She said that W ilbur, not otherwise identified, was about to be
drafted and ^ e feared that he
would not fare so well with Army
living.
"H e never could stand to get up
early in the mornings, and I no
they m ay them get up awfully early
in the A rm y /' she wrote. "And It
w ill be even a hour earlier if they have dayllte savin. So pleese Gen
eral Hershey doiit let them hnv dayllte savin because 1 don’t IhinV
W ilbur coold stand getting up so early in the m om lns and wooldnt
do justis to being a solder.”
World's Oldost anil Biggest Tr«« Said In South MexicoW ASHINGTON-The oldest, big-
gest tree in the world is said to be the Tule cypress of Santa M aria del
Tulc. six m iles from Oaxaca in southern Mexico. It is a Taxodlum
m ucronatum , tho same cypress as
the ones in Chapultepec Pork in
Mexico City.
T liousand of years old, it is still
groen and vigorous, and has a
roundness suggestive of the oak rather than the usual slim cypress.
" E l Tulc,” as it is called. Is so massive that 28 people, touching
fingertips and outstretched arms, barely can encircle it.
Saving Bones
A new method of bone preservo-
tion, which permits bone to be
stored in sterile containers at
room temperature has been an
nounced. This procedure Is accomplished by freezing bone, whicli
stops the growth of ornanisma, and then drying it in a vacuum . The
method was e:tnl.iincd by Copt. F . P . Krcuz, of the U. S. Kav>'
M edical Corps, neth^sdn. Marj*-
land. This new method, thn doctor exploincd. Is another development
in the establishment of bone bankK. Since the lost war. bone banks have
been set up in many hospitals throughout the country. The object
of a bone bank is to hnve avaiiabh;
a supply of hum an bone that might
be needed in an emergency (or
grafting. The bone usually comes from hum an, liviag patients. If a
patient Is scheduled to have a leg am putation, he is ashrd lo donate
the bone to the bank so that another patient m ay benefit by it sometime
in the future.
Preparation of the bone for stor
age is done im m ediatelr after am
putation under sterile conditions.
The common practice is to store
various lengths of bone in a deep
freeze cabinet on the surgical floor
of a hospital, close to the operating
Uncle Sam Says CITY CAFE
T H E H O M E O F G O O D EATS
N O 0 E E R
D epot Street Mocksville, N . C
Farm folks ptooe a liigh value «n de*
pendable Mends. The family dog is one of those friends—fnllhfnl, ond reU-
able as a companion and protestor. Another dependable farm friend la » V. 8. Defense Bond. In these days «f meoh- anlsed farmlnir when eash expenses are hlsh, farmers know they can depend Qpon Defease Bonds In time of emer
gency. Defense Bonds are easily converted Into «asb to raal:o ap for a crop or livestock loss, family aeoldents and sickness, or. other unexpected setlmck^- U. s. rrMivrrOmrtfflont
Notice to Creditors
Having qualified as Admlnlsaator of «he estate of Mamie P. Bills, deceased. • otice is hereby given to all persons hold ing claims a ainst said estate to present ibe same, properly verified, to the under- signed on or before tbe 13ih day of Octo- her. 1952. or this notice will be plead in har of their recovery. All pers«.ns Indebtrd to said estate will please call upon the undersigned at Advance, Route 2. N. C . •ind make prompt settlement..This lath day of October. t»5l.W. J. ELLIS. Admr. ot Mamie P> EUis. decs’d.By A. T. GRA^n*, Attorney.
Light Metals There are m any metals lighter
than alum inum . The lightest is lithium , about five times lighter
than alum inum . However, like sodium . potassium and calcium, which
are also lighter than alum inum , it
is so active chemically that it can
not be left exposed to the air. Of metals that can be so exposed,
beryllium and magnesium are both lighter than alum inum . The weight
ot a particular volume of alum inum , compared with the weight of
the same volume of water, is 2.70
' and this ia called its specific gravity. The s)>eciric gravity of
beryllium is 1.8S, while that of
magnesiimi is 1.74. For lithium it
is 0.53; that is, lithium weighs about half as m ucli as the same volume o(
water.
;
Aofice of Sale
Under and by virtue of au order of the Soperior Court of DaWc
County made in tbe Special Pro
ceeding entitled: Dent (£. D.)
fjames, Kxectiior ot J. S. Parker,
deceaised, vs I^iltoo Parker, et al..
tbe uodersietied Cotnmissiuner wilt
on ibe 17th day of November, iq$j
at twelve o'clock, tn , at tbe court
bouse door Iti Mocksville, Davit
I County North Carolina, olfcr foi
‘sale to the hlehest hidder for casb.
tbat certain tract ot land lyio^ and
being in Calahaln Township, Da
vie Couotv, N C., adjoiniog tbe
lauds of S. H. Chaffit) and others
and bounded as follows, to wit:
BegionloK at an iron stake, runs
S. 85 det(S. £ . to a stone; thence
South 27 East 6 00 cbs to an iron
-take in road; tbirnce 8- 84 East
28 00 chs to au iron stake; thence
N. i6 East 6.32 cbs. to a stone and
sweetgum; th«nce N orth is>4 W ,
.16.63 cbs. to an iron stake; ibence
Nartb 86 West 33.05 cbs. to
htone at toot of sycamore tree;
tbence South 41 W est 6.50 cbs. to
an iron stake; thence Sontb 23 W
3.00 chs. to a stone; tben<M Sontb
30 East 90 links to an iron stake;
Ibence South 10 West a 00 chs to
ail Iron stake; tbence South 4.18
cbs. to the beginning, containing
eighty (80) acres, more or less.
Terms of Sale; $500.00 cash and
tbe balance on thirty days time,
wltb bond and approved security.'
or alt casb at the option of the pur-
(baser, unnn confirmation oft^ tbe
sale. This 151b rtav of October,
1951. A .T . G R A N T .Commissioner.
M ACBIITBR 7
New Mowers, Rakes, Drills, Disc and Section Harrows,
Manure Spreaders, Self .Propelled Corn Pickers.
We Have Some Good Used Farm Machinery
Big Line Of New Parts In Stock
Don’t Purchase Your Farm Marchinery Until You
Look Over Our Stock
HENDRIX & WARD
N E A R C O R N A T Z E R
J. F R A N K H tN D R IX
Massey Harris Farm Implements
M IS S C O L E E N FO ST ER O W E N W A R D
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
W c C an Supply Vour Needs
IN G O O D C O A L .
■ S A N D and B R Ip K
C all or Phone Ua A t Any Tim e
P H O N E 194 -
Formerly Davie Brick &.Coal Co
SILER
Funeral Home
AND
Flower Shop
Phone 113 S. MainSl
Mockiville, N. C.
Ambulance S^rvicie
Walker Funeral Home
A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E
D A Y O R N IG H T
P h o n e 4 8
iM o c k tv ille ,' N . C.
Boger & Howard
P U R E S E R V IC E
Tiri.$ Batteries A n d Accessories
Kurfees Paines
C om er N . M ain & G aither Sts
Phone 80
North Carnlina i , « - DhvI. County \ Tb. Sop,r.M C m
G le nn H am m er and R . L. Sm ith
Trading as
Davie Lum ber Com pany
V8
James Scott.
U nder and by virtue o f an exe
cution directed to the undersign
ed sheriff from the Superior Court
o f Davie C ounty in the above en
titled action, I w ill, on the 3rd
day o f November. 1951, at twelve
o ’clock, noon, at the door o f the
Davie C ounty court house in
Mocksville, N orth Carolina^ oifer
for sale to the highest bidder for
cash, to satisfy said execution, all
rights, title, or interest w hich the
defendant now has or at any time
after the docketing of. the iudg«:
m ent in said action,had in and to
the following described real es
tate, Iving and being in Mocks«
vitle Tow nship, Davie County,
N orth Carolina.
Beginning at an iron, Istah
Saunders comer, runs S. 64 E. 150
feet to that iron; thence S. 12 W ,
86 feet to an iron; thence N . 64'
W « 150 feet to an iron; thence N .
12 E. ^ feet' to the b ^lh n in g ,
containing 1257 square vard^, more
or less.
The above described lands Were
conveyed to the gnmtors by OlUe
Stockton. See Book 4*'i pages 425
»nd 466* This 1st day of O cto
ber, 1531. .G. A. T U C K E R ,
Sheriff Davie County.
The
Davie Record
Has Been Published Since 1899
, 52 Years
Other, have come and gone-yout.
county newspaper keep, going,
.'-'ometime, it ha, ,eeme<l hard to
make “buckle an'l tongue" meet but
,oon the ,un ihine, and again we
march on. Our faithful •ubieriber,,
-------moit of whom.pay.promptlv. give il,
courage and abiding faith in our
fellow man.
If your neighbor i« nut taking The
Record tell him to aubscribe. The
price is only $1.50 per year'in the
State, and $2.00 in other state,.
When You Come To Town
Make Our Office Your
Headquarters.
We Are Always Glad To
^ ■ See You.
A T T E N T IO N F A R M E R S !
POULTRY LOADING?
W e W iU Buy Y our Poultry Every Thursday M orning From 8 A. M.. To 1! A. M, *
In Front Of E. P. Fosters Cotton.Gin
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID
W IL L P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S
SAUSBURY POULTRY CO.
SlaHnhnrv. N. C
I FT I n o -
YOUR JOB PRINTING
W e c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y
o n y o u r
I ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS,
1 STATEMENT^, POSTERS,. BILL
I HEAD^, PACKET HEADS, Etc.♦ -; Patronize your home newspaper
; and thereby help build up yo,ur
; home towjn and county.,
j T H E D A V I E R E C O R D .
The Record has the larqesi white
circulation ot any Davie paper.
R E A D T H E A D $
Along With the New*
♦ F O R RENT ♦
S P A C E I N T H I S P A P E R
, W i l l A r r a n s c T o' S u it
GOOD NEIGHBORt.iMiceS TO
: ; FIT yOUR BUSINESS V
D A V I E C O U N T Y ’S O L D E S T N B W S P A P E R - - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E H E A D
I MAINTAINt UNAWED BY I
V O L U M N U I .L B . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W E D N B S D A Y N O V E M B E R 7, io ? i.
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
What Wat Happening In Da<
^vie Bflfor* Patkinf Meters.
And Abbreviated Skirtt.
(D avie Record, N ov . 8, 1933.)
: A tlo m e v Jacob Stew nrt spent
Satard ay (n Sa!liil>ury on business'
M iss B e rlb a Lee retnroed T burs.
. day from a sfaort visit to Greens*
boro.-
C. R ichardson, w ho live* in
the classic shades o f Iredeii connly
was in tow n T iiuraday.
Miss Jane"'Crow7~ir studeiiT at
Salem Co11e,re, spent tbe weelc^end
in town w ith borne foiics.
M in . M ary K a tb e tln e W allcer
spent F rid a y afternoon in W ins.
ton-Saiem w ith friends.
D r. T , L . G le nn w ent to D u r.
b a m last w eek to. enter Dolce H os
pital for treatnient.
A ttorney A . T i.. G ra n t m ade a
' business tr ip to G reensboro and
H i» b P oin t T hursday .
M rs. la c k A llison w ent to R ic h
m ond, V a ., Iasi week to spenil
some tim e w ltb h e r m other.
^ R e v . j ; W . Poster and C apt. I
. P . G ra b a m , of Cooieomee, were
' M ocksvltle visitors one day last
.w eek..
M iss Louise D aniel, a m em ber of
. th e Mfeh school faculty , spent the
w eek end w ith b er parents in the
G a te C ltv .
'-Mr, and Mrs.' Roy’ Holthonsrr
spent Snnd>v.wi(b their dangbter,
,H Im .Helen Faye, who is a student
'at N ..C .:C .'W ., Greensboro.
: ■BnTglars'entered th e I . N . Lert-
. . ford ,Co.. store a t C ooleem M some
tim e .M onday n f(b t and carried
^ w a ^ a q n a n tlty o f merchandise.
.M iss K a th ry n .Ratledee left S n r.
■ I d iy f o r G r O T N . C .v where
;she w ill enter th e East Carolina
.>:Teseher5’ C olieee.
C harlie W o odruff, M arsh .H orn,
; L u k e G raves and R . S . M cN eill
" r iiltnt lo R a le ic h F rid a y to herr
. Jam es F arley s p e a k .'
A' little SOB and d ane hte r o f Mr.
and M rs. Roscoe Stro ud, o f Sails
. .burr s t m t are eonBned ro their
h o n e w itn K a rle t fever.
' M in H elen H o w e ll, of Oxford
Is spebilInK some tim e in tow n the
(U est o t h er brother. R e v . W . I.
H ow ell, on M aple aveque.
M r. and M r«. C aleb D w im in s
and fam ilv moved last w eak froni
th e Presbyterian, m anse, on South
' M ain street, to th e N ail bouse an
N orth M ain street.
Miss R u th Graves, a student i.t
the Flora McDonald Colieee, Red
’ Sprines, will spetid tbe week-end
with her parents,' Mr. and Mre. L
;M. Graves, on Route 4.
: A . T . G ra n t a nd R ev. W illls n i
H ow ell attended th e C ataw ba Col
ieee-Cltedal football gam e st Siilla.
b u ry F riila v afternoon. T he Ca.
law ba boys w on 10 to ) .
R ev. R . C . G o fo rth and a ,nnn-.
‘ er Ilf B oy S citlt^ s o ^ tt pr^etlcailv
all of Ntonday n ig h t ■’possum hunt
In e . r i is r e ^ r iid th a t they car-
:tnred 6ve 'p o n q m s .
M r; aiid M rs. B. W . Barksdale,
The ReigriOf Sin
Rev. WhIiisi E. iMtnhmir Taylnr(ivlllf!.N. C.
The refgo of sin througbout the
etrth is dreadful. .All war, famine,
pestlleoce, heartache, sorrow, d!^«
siDtment, anguish, deatb, woe
and destrtictioD Is due to sin.. N o.
body is helped aod blessed by sin,
but the entire bumao family has
been and Is eiirsed bv lo. We
know tbat the devil Is the cause of
all slo, but why the masses of mao.
kind yield tbem selres to tbe detrll
rather that to Qod Is bard lo under-
stand. Every blesfllng eomes from
Ood, and nil snivatlon, therefore It
seems that the more reasonable and
common sense things would be to
live for G od and d o H is w ill that
we tnav finally escape tbe eternal
conneqtieDces of'sin But not so
with the masses. They IWe for
and serve the devil, neKlect salva.
tioo, fall to rescb heaven, and
Iben die and eo Into outer dark,
ness, or Into hell. **Turn ye, turn
ye from your wicked ways, for
w hy w ill ye die?"
Many people areue In. favor of
sin, htit there is absolutely no jnstl*
fiable grounds for such. God Is
tremendously opposed to sin, and
we should be. Sin Is ezceedlnffly
sinful. It c u rs ^ ft blights, ft
rulos, U damns. The great apos
tle Paul said, **Let not sin there*
fore reign lo your mortal hody,
tbat ye should obey It In tbe lusts
thereof.** (Pomans 6:12). There
are those who seem to uphold tbe
Idea, and strongly argue lu Its fav.
or, that sin has to reign In the hii>
man bisdy; but there Is absolutely
00 remedy for It; tbat we can’t
help'but sin is thought,- word and
deed. According to the above
quotation this Is absolutely nntrue.
Sin Is not to have control over us
Jesus came to save us from all sin
and deliver us from Its bondage
Hatlelujahl
H ear the words of Paul again:
I beseech yon therefore, brethren,
by tbe mercies of God, that ye pre
sent your bodies a living soc^fice.
holy, acceptable unto God, which is
your reasonable service. And be
not confo med to this world; bni
be ye transformed by the renew*
log of yonr mind, that ye may
prove wbat is that good, and ac.
ceptable. and prefect, will of God.’
(Romans i2;i.3). W e realize that
all people regardless cf bow much
grace they have Itr their hearts aod
souls, are subject 10 mistakes; but
there Is a.world of diffetence be
tween mistakes and wilful sinning.
Cod should reign In our bodies,
our souls, our spirifs. Instead of sin
Amen.
A new clerk, right fresh from the
country, was helping out in a local general store during the holiday
rush.* One ot the town's matrons
approached .the _c|erjc and asked, for^
some anehovy paste. The clerk hesl*
tated (or a m om ent and then walked
over to the table-and-penctl counter and said:
“No, we don't have anchovy paste, but here is some excellent
mucilage.*'
Practical **rm a very busy m an, sir. W bat
is your proposition? “"1 want to make you rich."
“Just so. Leave your recipe with m e and I'll look it over later. Just
now I'm engaged in closing up a little deal by w hich I expect to
m ake $7.50 hi real m oney."
'Who b'ave made tbeir home In this
city for the past tw o years, moved
to Winston-Salem Thursday where
'U r , Barksdale will be .counted
*wltb the Modern Chevrolet Coi:
i The following jurors have been
• !drawn for'tbe ttecember tenn .of • Davie Suj»rlor court; B. I/Smltb,
' vE^ C, koonU, J. Lee Kurfees, K.
.C . Lagle,-J«. H Ridenhour. H. C,
koontK.'E. L.. Freeman/J. J. Woo
ten, E; E. kbbntr, J. A. Black.. ;welder, E: D. Ijames, W. G . How.
elii Roy C Beatichamo, W. A.
Tavlor, Oscar Riddle, J. L. Eaton,
,R. P. Jjames, H.: p: Baity. T. F,
Bailey, G . W. Orrell, I. E. Heur drix. E. N. Hendrix, James Bail
ev. T. 1. deafdrdC
‘ Your social security card wlU
beip yon or your family when ap-
piVittK for social security benefitt.
We don't like to' make X
mrkt after your name.
I Uncle Sam Say^
Tbe vt^e^li-easy' years be«kun ln- Ttttngly to larm people who have built np ft.reUreineni fond In Vnlted Stales----------------- As the only Urge gretip•r Amerleau not eovered by group se^
earl^ er petisloo pim,'formers find Detensa Bonds are Ideal fchid of retire* anent fond. Defensr. Bonds are abso* Mely ^re^.baoked by the foU re* MBteea^ this great eonntry^-and they pay a g«M rate ef iBitcresI—flS Invesled today becemea H M fai U yeara and 91IS.St to M yeara. v.s. ftiww»we«»w#
“V D B S T inilT O N
W rong Point
“How's your daughter's golf?"
asked one grande dam e of another.“She says she is gohig around in
less and less every, week.*'
“I don't doubt that, I asked about
her golf."
SE R V IC E , P LE A SE
Little B elly had been allowed to
stay up to dinner one night on the strict understanding th at she should
.behave very well and not ask for tnything on the table.
W hen dessert cam e all the guests were attended to, but she was over
looked.
She sat despondently for a tim e,
and then was struck by a bright idea. She exclaimed to a loud voice,
'Who wants a clean plate?'*
AMA^eiNU!
A m an was ^scovered by his
wife one night standing over his
.haby’s..crib.,.Sjlcntly_ she. watched
h im . As he stood looking down at
the sleeping infant, she saw in
his face a mixture of emotions—
rapture, doubt, adm iration, despair,
ecstasy, Incredulity. Touched an<? wondering alike at this unusual
parental attitude and the conlHcting
emoUons the wife with eyes glist
ening arose and slipped her arm f
around him .
“A penny for your thoughts,” she said, In a voice tremulous. He blurt
ed them out:"F o r the life of me, I can’t see
how anybody can make a crib like
that for three forty-ninel"
DISTINCTION A new system of memory train
ing w as being taughl In a village school, and the teaeher was bc-
comhig enthusiastic.**For instance," he said, “ sup-
poshig you w ant to remember Uie nam eo fapoet— Bohby Iturns.
F ix in your m ind's eye n picture of a p^leem an in (lames. See->
Bobby B um s?"**Yes, I see,'* said a bright
pupil. “ But how Is any one to know It does not repi’fesent Rob
ert B row ning?"
Poor Service
After several hours’ fishing little
Patty suddenly threw down her pole
and exclaimed, “I quit I"
“ Why, Patty, what’s the m atter?" asked her mother.‘•Well, Mother,’’ she answered,
“ I just can’t seem to get waited
o n !"
ABSENT nilN nr^D
D R O P D E A D ! •
An Irishm an was carried to the hospital h i an uneonselous
eondltton aftor a terrible fall.
The surge<m m ade a brief exam-
hiaUen, but shook his head sig-
Dlficantiy, and turned sympa-
IheUcaUy to the anxious wife.“ Madam,** he said, “ I am
sorry to ton you that your hus
band Is dead.**
1 ain't,'* said the supposed
corpse, opening one eye.“ Rush up, Terence," said the wife, **dwrt the doctor know bet
ter than you?"
Kangaroo M eatballs
Costollo: “Your brother Is cooking m eatballs for lunch.-He went out to
get some chopped rubber."
A bbot:'“ M y brother puts chopped
rubber in meatbfills?'Costello: “ Yeah. He used to be a
basketball player and he likoa to dribble 'em In from the kitchen.*'
When deep in an crri^cvlrtpnt in
ventor Thomas Ed'run frequently
would work around tt:c cl(»ck. his
m ind glued to-his wcrk. After he had practically lived hi his labora
tory for a week, he v.';:s persuaded
to take a nap at 4 a.m .
Edison set tho o-»rm ehick for 7
a.m . When II sw ndcd, however,
he slept right through it. An as
sistant entered with the inventor’s
breakfast. Noticing that Edison
was still asleep, he decided lo lei
him rest a lilUe longer. After
while, the asslflianl become hungry 4ind ate the m eal himself.
Edison stirred. Leaving the dishes
|oa the table, the assistant started for another breakfast tray. He had
^w t reached the door, when the in-
gVentor awoke. His eyes heavy with isleep, Edison -^walked over to the
[table and sat down.
F or a minute he sat there, tryin g to rouse himself. Finally his
eyes opened. He picked up a spoon.
As he’ did so, he noticed that the dishes had just- been used, ^eep-
ishly, he looked up at his assistant.
“I m ust be getting absent-minded*
ed," he said. “ I forgot that I had
eaten."
He put down his napkin, lit cigar and returned to his work
bench.
Sm oking and Gums
. The theory thot smoking ,1s a factor hi gum disease has been ad
vanced, by a Danish dental scicn* tlst in The Journal' o( the Ameri
can Dental Association. Dr. J . J . Plndborg, o( Copenhagen.,who con*
ducted examinations of 9,577 men in the Danish arm ed • forces,' re
ported that Vincent's li^cction characterized by paln(ul ulcerated
bleedhig gum s, was lound prin- cipally -among smokers. The prev
alence of the disease am ong sol-
diers during W orld < W ar I gave it
the name, of trench m outh, Findings
indicaied that thergum disease at-
^ c k a . smokers seven times as (re.
quently as It does non-smokera, T>t. Plndborg said. H e Is an official
«t tha \NaUonal Dental College of
Denm ark, the Danish ..-National
■Health Service and ttie m edical
corps of the Royal Danish Navy. He r e p o rts that Vincent’s infec-
tion was found am ong 6.0 per cent
of the . 6,960 sailors; when they en- tored the navy and the frequency
rose to 19.6 per cent after some months of service. For new soldiers,
the 'hieldence ^was 5.5 per cent,
rishig to twice that percentage ^ter.
prelim biary training.
Oiir County And
Spdal Security
Bv W . K . W hite. Manager.
Most self'cmploycd people are
now working under social security.
Yes, that Is a true statement. A nd
furthermore, the self'cmploycd
have been working under social
security since lanuary 1, 1951, the
date on which this provision of
the new law went into effect.
So, today 1 want to clear up
some o f these points for the self-
e m p lo y ^. To begin with, I think
w e ought to explain w hom we
m ean when we talk about the
sc!f>emptoved. H ie term includes
anyone w ho works for him self or
w ho has his ow n trade or bust'
ness. It also means the partners
In a trade or business. Arc you
dte sole owner or partner in a
real estate business, insurance a-
gency, store, barber shop, beauty
shop, beauty parlor; are you a buil
ding contractor, a restaurant ownr
er, plum ber or electildan; an ar
tist, writer, painter or one o f the
m any other persons w ho work
for themselves? If so, you are
sclf-employed. «
The exclusions under the so
cial security law arc certain pro
fessional classes, such as doctors,
dentists and lawyers, and also
farm owners or op erate ^
N ow , if you are am ong the s^If-
employcd, if you work for your
self as an owner or partner in
trade or business, this Is w hat you
need to know about social secur
ity and what you need to do a-
bout it.
1. Y ou are now working under
social security and have been since
January 1,1951, if your net earn
ings for the year w ill be $400 or
more.
2. Y our social security tax will
not be due until the end o f the
year. It m ust be paid in full on
or before March 15, 1952, when
your 1951 Income tax report is
filed,
3. Y our social security tax will
be at the rate o f of your net
earnings up to $3,600 per year.
4. Y ou need a social security
card before you file your report.
I f you have had a social security
account num ber at anv time
the past, you w ill use the same
number. If you have never had
a social security card, you should
apply at your social security office
for one now.
A representative o f this ofBcc
w ill be in Mocksville again on
N ov. 14th, at the court house,
sccond floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and
on the same date in Cooleemce,
at the old Band H all, over Led
ford's Store, at 11 a. m .
Seen Along Main Street
By Thff .Street Rnmbler.
oooooo
Roy Collette riding m otor bike
dow n M ain street—Mrs. Lester
M artin on way dow n tow n— Pa-
tricia Vaughn playing organ w hile
Barbara Fercbee listpns—Redland
ladies doing some before Christ*
mas shopping— I. A rthur Daniel
bidding friends goodbye before
leaving for Florida— D r. Garland
Greene wearing big red rose—
Mrs. foe Patton btiying . week-end
groceries—Jack M cCIam rock haul*
ing"carload o f ■pajamas~to' post-''
office-Gossip C lub holding brief
afternoon session in front o f cafe
-r-Lady declaring that the Street
Ram bler didn’t know how to s p ^ I
the w ord, "cosmetologist**— Miss
Margaret A nn Ca tner counting
money—'Miss Bernice Powell m ak
ing bank deposit— Fred Daniel
and friend on wav to movte show
Postmaster Kelly gettiiig Thurs-
day hair c u t—Mrs. B ill H ow ard
carrying two small turkeys dow n
M ain street-M r. and Mrs. Roy
Brown lunching at H otel M ocks
ville—Miss Frankie Junksr carry
ing handfull o f m oney into bank
— Frank W alker trying to buy a
pair o f Tousers— D . C . Ratledgc
ram bling around tow n on Satur
day morning-~*Mrs. Hilary A rnold
parking auto in front, o f barber
shop—Bill Daniel walking around
the square wearing a broad smile
Young m an parting w ith cash
to pay for marriage license— M iss
R u th Lakey doing som e before
Christmas shopping— J. C . Jones
getting Saturday shoe shine— Roy
Feezor getting icady to leave tow n
—Bill Ferebee carrying hands full
of cold drinks up M ain street—
Tack Foster and Carl Jones talking
things over in front o f tonsoral
parloi— M other pushing tw in dau«
ghters up M ain street in baby bug
gy - Mrs. Claud T hom pson doing
some afternoon shopping—^Mrs.
Cecil Little on way to pay light
bill— Geo. Row land w orking over
time on television sct—M rs. R us
sell Barber doing some afccrnoon
shopping-M rs. Jake W alker look
ing at costume jewelry Cecil Peo
ples sitting in parked truck read*
ing while waiting for passengers
to show up.
Over A Hundred
Friend— “D id you ever run up against a m athem atical problem
'that stumped you?!’Famotis M athem atician — “ Yes;
indeed. I could never figure out how, according to the m agazine ads,
eighty*five percent of the dentists
recommend one brand of tooth,
paste; nine^-tw o percent recom> mend another brand, and ninety,
five percent recommend still an*
other brand."
Volunteer Population
Tennessee was first am ong the
four states of the East South Cen
tral region in rate of population ^wtb between 1940 and 1950. Dltr- ing the decade Tennessee's popula
tion increased by 12.9 per cent, the highest rato of growth (or the state
In 50 years. This compares with an increase of 6.5 percent (or the
region as a whole during the decade of the 1940's. Alabam a was second
among the B ast South General states hi rate of population Incirease dur
ing the 10-year period, and Ken.
tucky was third. Mississippi lost population, for the first tim e sitice
the decade of the First World W ar, but the loss was quite sm all, amount*
t ing to about 5,000 people', or 0.8 ’ percent.
If Your Stomacli
Is Like a
GAS Factory!
When you eat a meat and It Inrns right Into gas. It's a sign your food
is not digeating quickly enoueh. It
Just lays there and fenoents. So you are In misery with gas for hoars afterward.Many Mocksville people used to feel that way before they go^CBR- TA-VIN. This now medicine digests
(ood (aster and better. Taken before
meals it works with your (ood. Oas
ConUiins Vitamin B-1 with Iron to klve pep and make nerves stronger, pains go! Inches o( bloat vanish! Misernbla people jmmm feel dltferenl all over. So don’t go on suffering.
Get CBRTA-VIN — W llklns Drug
Store.
Better caU at this office
now and get your land' pos
ters before the suppfy is ex*
hausted. Printed on heav/
card hoard 50c. per dozen.
in Th« Superior Court
Before The ClKtkN orth Carolina Davie Cctunty.
O ra Blackwood Boger, Plaintifl
vs
W alton Boger, Defendant
Notice Serving Sammons
Bv Publication
It appearing to the C ourt from
the affidavit o f the plaintift in the
above entitled action that W alton
Boger, the defendant therein, can- ■
not after due diligence and search
be found in the State o f N orth
Carolina^ that a cause o f action
exists in favor of the plaintiff a-
gainst said defendant, and It fur
ther appearing from said affidavit
that the action is for an absolute
divorce as provided for in C hap
ter I, Section 98, o f the General
Statutes o f the State o f N orth
Carolina.
It is now ordered that a notice
be published-once a week for four
successive weeks in The Davie Re
cord newspaper, published in D a
vie County, N orth Carolina, giv
ing the title and purpose o f this
action and requiring the said de
fendant to appear at the office of
the undersigned Clerk o f the Su-
srior C ourt o f ..Davie; Couiity,
. Jbrth Carolina, on the I5th day •
of November, 1951, and answer
or dem ur to the com plaint.This 6th day o f October, IW I. .
F A Y E E. N A Y L O R ,
Clerk Superior Court. -:Deputy Cler
Claude Hicks,Attorney.
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
SC A N N IN G THE WEEK'S NEW S
of Main Street and the World .
Agricullure Department Considers
New Program for the Small Fanner
N EW FARM PLAN— Ab a result of a rccent survey into the problems
of m e smoU Am oricon farm er, the T rum an adm inistration m ay comc im
w ith a new farxh program in the near future m ore controver^al than the
B rannan plan and w hich could become one of the m ajor Issues In the 1952 presidential cam paign.
The survey w as conducted w ith the idea of learning w hat the de- ipartm ent could do to help the sm all farm er who is having .difficulties
! because of Inadequate land, m achinery, livestock ond know how. sThousands of m eetings have , been held in the home towns across the
.naUon discussing crop control, price support, farm loans and other sm all •farm problems.
As a result, a m ojor question has developed: should the government
buy up land, redivide it Into “ economic*’ or “ efficient" units, and resell
It to low'income farm ers? Also, should present crop controls be extended?
B rannan believes that if productivity of substandard farm s can be
Increased m any agriculture problems woQld tend to disappear. On the
other hand, m any farm leaders have rem ained aloof and have not taken p art in the m eetings, criticizing B rannan's methods more than his
objectives.
Two possible legislative proposals m ay come from the survey: (1) A
technicar assistance program for the less efficient form a and farm ers,
;and (2) a farm-loan program designed to help such farm ers acquire land,
im achlnery, equipment, livestock and the know how to operate efficient farm s.
W hatever the final form , any new farm plan, whether it incorporates
-the government buying and redlvlslon of land or not, Is botmd to become
a m ajor cam paign issue. M uch of the opposition w ill com'e from the
!farm bureaus who have long resented B rannan as trying to usurp the roles of the privote farm organizations ond regim enting agriculture.
Mcctlug Place
Pammmjom, is tbe proposed site for new Korea eease^ftre talks. Meath ivhUe, ftghtins conlimies on the ccntral frotit with Allied forces makias iitaiied advaiiees.
, BOYLE RESIGNS— The big question in political circles since W illiam M , Boyle, Jr ., close friend of President T rum an resigned as chairm an of
the Dem ocratic N ational Committee, is whether or not Guy Gabrielson, G O P national chairm an, w ill be the next to goT
Boyle and Gabrielson have been under fire as having used their
positions to influence the Reconstruction Finance Corporation into gronting loons to companies they represented or were connected w ith.
And although Gabrielson insists he w ill stay on, political observers believe his num ber is up, too.
In his letter of resignation Boyle gave health as his reason, insisting he hod a t all tim es conducted him self w ith “honor and propriety.” He
did adm it in testimony during the congressional hearing that ho accepted eight law cases involving government agencies, a t fees totaling approxi
m ately $158,000, w hile serving as chairm an of the national committee.
LESS CIVILIAN GOODS— Defense MoblHzer C h a rle s E . Wilson
announced a cut in civilian goods production, effecUve January 3, that
w ill bo felt In Ihe home towns across the nation.
The cutback in civilian production, 10 per cent for w ashing m achines
and stoves and even more in the automobile industry, w ill provide steel-
for the arm am ent program which w ill h it full stride during the first
three montlis of 1052.
The hom e town that has a school or hospital under construction w ill
get enough m aterials to finish the project, but there w ill not be m aterials available to start new ones. As for fa rm m achinery, so vital to agricul*
ture and home town economy, there w ill be enough to support production “ at a lieallhy and adequate leveL**
MIDDLE EAST BLOW UP-T here is shaping up In the M iddle E ast an explosion that could be felt in the sm allest Am erican com m unity. The
situation has developed as Egypt has increased pressure in recent
weeks to remove the British from the Sudan and strategic Suez.
As a compromise, the U nited States, Britain, France ond Turkey
have asked Egypt to become the center of an alliance in the area against
com m unism , but the proposal was received cooly by K ing Parouk’s igovernment.
This dispute is im portant to hom e town Am ericans because of the
nation’s interest in,Suez, which if placed under E g y p tian protection,
w ould be a prize the Russians could take with little difficulty. The British,
under present treaties with Egypt, have the legal right to m aintain
troops in the canal zone -which is her economic life-line. She w ill not back down in her determ ination to rem ain In the zone. Thus, if the
Egyptian government attempts to'rem ove them .by force the B ritish w ill
resist. If the Russians should decide to step in a t this point, the world would become Involved in World W ar III.
There Is a chance that Egypt m ay accept the west’s proposal of
joint defense of the area, but only because she is not In a position to defend herself.
N EW DECLARATION— In a m ajo r speech last week President
T rum an again declared Am erican foreign policy is “based upon the hope that it w ill be possible to live, w ithout a w ar, in the same world as ^ e
Soviet Union—if the free nations have adequate defenses.” And’ he again offered to “sit down w ith the Soviet U nion” and other notions to work out
agreements to relieve m ankind of “the horror of another world w ar” and provide the basis for “ a durable peace.”
The President pointed out the central theme of A m erica's present
foreign policy and defense program : “ So long as one country has the
power and the force to overwhelm others and so long as th a t eountiy has aggressive Intentions real peace is unattainable. The stronger we
become, tlie m ore possible it w ill be to w ork out solid and lasting
arrangem ents that w ill prevent w ar. O ur strength w ill m ake for peace.**
• IRAN'S OIL— M oham m ed Mossadegh, prem ier of Iran, who has taken the British-Iranian oil dispute to the U nited Nations Security
Council, told U N diplom ats to keep tiieir hands off the dispute and warned “we w ill not be coerced.”
In presenting the Iranian point of view he said there are only two
questions open to negotiations: (I) Compensation for British investments
in the now nationalized Anglo-Iranian O il company, and (2) possible sole of oil to Britain.
Me then m ade his strongest point: “W e w ill not take oction and w ill not engage in negotiations affecting our Internal affairs under pressure.
To do so would not only constitute an admission 4hat; we are not’ a sovereign and equftl nation, but would eventually be fatal to our inde
pendence.”The question rem ains who w ill operate the huge Ahf
com pany refineries. The Iranians do not have the t< *
and the B ritish experts have already been sent home.
oU when it can’t produce it?
THVMB-SUCKING
A Natural Habit, Noted Doctor Soys
after the second year of life, the
noted physician observes. If it per-
Slnce the beginning of tim e m others have tried to stop their
babies from sucking their thumbs. I t now appears, if one Is to be
lieve D r. I. Newton Kugelmass, noted pediatrician of New York,
th a t “ thumb-sucking Is as norm al as
.•breathing” and is not to be worried a b o u t' uiitll the child is over two
'years of age.Thumb-sucking usually declines
sists after the age of two. he discovered as the result of intensive
studies, “the child feels unloved,
imw anted, guilty, resentful or In
need of consolation.”W hat is the r e m ^ y if a d tild
continues to suck his thum b? “Treat
the child, not the symptoms,** advises D r. Kugelmass.
New Weapons
K RO U N D X04fl as our hoped-for
“ friendly relations w ith Russia
were turning more and more sour, Gen. O m ar Bradley, m eeting w ith a
sm all group of congressmen, predicted:
“If the Red arm y chose to invade Europe right now, t h ^ could reach
the English channel In 12 days. Nothing could stop them .”
Today, this Is not the case. The Red arm y could be stopped at the Rhine.
This change Is not because the
R e d .a rm y is any sm aller. It stIU has m illions of m en, still Is com
pletely reckless In Its disregard for
casualties. N or is the change because Eisenhower’s arm y is more
adequate. Though Eisenhower has done a good job, his arm y is still
pitifully sm all com pared w ith the Russian.
The diange, therefore, is chleRy the result of one thing— new atom ic weapons.
Illtlierlo, .the atom bomb could be used only against cities
where the destruction of c iv it ians M-iis such tliat public opin
ion rebelled against It. Now, Itowever, atom ic artillery shells
and other weapons ^ a k e It pos
sible to confine the deadly de-
. Btriictlon of ntomle energy to enemy troops In the field.
This m eans that Ihe civilian death
toll can be divorced from the atom
bom b, and that atom weapons w ill be used.
Bhine Is Barrier
It also m eans that the Red arm y
can be stopped at the Rhine or at
any large river. Because, to cross
the Rhine, an invading arm y must concentrate a t the bridgeheads.
And large troop concentrations form
perfect targets for atom ic weapons. Thus divisions of the Red arm y,
form ing to cross a bridge over the Rhine, could be decim ated by these
new weapons whldh m ake the magi> not line look like cem etcry hill at Gettysburg.
Tlie above fact, under present-
day diplom acy, is som ethhig we
w ant Uie K rem lin to know. For
H itler would not have marched
into Poland had he not felt certain of victory; anfl Stalin will
not m arch Into W estern Europe If lie knows w hat aw aits him .
Ike Will Run
George Allen, the form er White
House jester, is now about the
closest m an to General Elsenhower. It w as Allen who acted os liaison
between T rum an and Eisenhower to m ake sure Ike didn’t get Into the
race as a Dem ocrat in 1048.
Today, Allen, though a Mississlp-
pi Democrat, soys that Ike is sure
to run as a Republican.
Talking to a friend recently, Allen predicted:
“ IVhat Ike iWlI do w ill be exactly w hat Roosevelt did a t Chi-
cage In 1932. lie 'll hop on a
plane and fly straight to the convention.”
“How’s he going to fly from P aris
to Chicago when he’s under orders
from his commonder-ln-chief to do a job in P aris?” asked tlie friend.
“Don’t be foolish,” shot back the
form er W hite House jester, “ w hat’s
the commander-in-chief going to do about it?”
Censorship
Inside fact about the' President’s long press conference lecture about
protecting U. S. secrets was that his
im m ediate advisers didn’t w ant him to m ake it. They knew public reaction would be bad.
However, the Defense department.
Central Intelligence and others in charge of m ilitary secrets urged the
President not only to issue his cen- sorslhip order but back It up—in part
to keep the m ilitary from setting
U . S. policy. ^
Time after tim e, high generals or
adm irals have barged in on civilian policy or disclosed secrets which
caused serious dam age.
M ost im portant was the re
lease of the Smythe report on atom ic energy by Gen. Leslie
Groves. A few hours after the
report was sent to several thou-
sand newspapers; horrified sci- enfists protested to the A rm y
th at the report contained v ita l'
secrets by w hich a n astute scientist - could piece together the
know-how for m akbig the A- bom b. Hurriedly, Groves de
m anded that the.report be recalled. .
“That,” replied a m em ber of his
staff, “would be like trying to put an egg back into a chicken."
Washington Pfpelfne
Ex-Secretary of W ar Robert P at
terson has notified the senate judici
ary committee that he has w ithdraw n his endorsement of M iss
Frieda Hennock to be a U. S. judge. Since Patterson once sat on the U.S.
Court of Appeals, his word counts
heavily w ith the senators. He Informed them that when he original*
ly endorsed M iss Hennock, he had not realized all the facts now
brought out by the New York bar association.
heedlIcraft patterns
Fawn Designs Are in Two Colors
373
N O embroidery noeded-jusl Iron
off the turquoise and soft
brown colors of the transfers onto
your m aterials. Lovely motifs
m easure 3>/& inches; 10 motifs.
Send 2Se for the MulU>Color Fnwns
r a s s ? « „ " ,= a i" w 'V .;i:
Sewinc Circle Needleeraft Dep(. P. O. D«x BT4«. Chleac» 60, 111. *r
Baclese 20 cents, for pattern.
Pattern No.
nam e (Please Print)
street AOarctB or i».0. Wo.
City State
Gone Forever
I was a beauty in m y day.Ju s t another day wasted aw ay I
Bragging
l*m a m illionaire, I could buy
you and sell you!
W ell, l*m a billionaire, I could
buy you ond keep you. I don't have
to sell you.
Revives ’E m
When It comes to m en, I knock
’em dead.
That’s nothing. 1 get 'em dead and bring ’em back to life again.—o—
Dirricuit
I have a white hen that lays brown eggs. . .
W hat’s so wonderfuli-about that? Can you do it?
FEEIHCHY?
DUE TO COLD
■ ■ symptomaKc
O O D RELIEF
MINCEMEAT
BRAN MUFFINS
. . . . Mth tempting fruity Davor. Eosyl --------- /j.tbtoKfeUoiMix to 1 bon’). tb)« KciUoKSreulcb wftyl
1 twp XeHegg'»
AII.Bian .
.V, tup milk
}h «up prtpared . minnmeat
) cvp titled lleut
teoipoen* boking powder Vi leotpoan lell - V4 cup tugar
1 *sg2 Igbletpeont «eff(her(«ntn9
1.Combtnc All-Dran. mUk. mlncemcat In mbcing bowL
2. Sift cogothcr flour, bnking poK’dcr. s< Into same bowl: add sugnr, egg, shortentae. SUr onlv until combined
3. Fill greased miitnn pans % fulL fioko
mufAns. 2Ht Inchos in diameter.
AmerlCB*smost famous natural laxative cereal fordlcti ot InsulHclcntbulh. Tr?alwwlf«lted*ji|
Q U IC K and
TASryMEAL!
Van Cam p’*
Pork and Beont
in Totnato Souca
Cl)oice» plunpi whole beans
.*.a eccrot eavory tomato
flauce...flwect trader [)ork«»
. w ith /laoor through and
] througfi. OnljF Van CuDp*s
...originator ofeaoncd potk
and beans...gives you eo'
much good eating at such
• littlocostofmoaeyaadcfTnit.
If Peter Ruin has voy au.tiep up with
'm o
Ms. IM I
tMns up methvl salicylate and men-pain-relievlng ^ ; i S y
thol. than flve
QUICfC! ~
RUB IN
THE O R le itJA L BAOME A N A t& E S I«O e
IN EV ERY T IN !
IIHC[ ALBFRHk
{ C R I M P C U T f
iOHG BURNING P lP & A fiD s
f.C !G A R & T T & Y O E A C C O I
Y e s , s i r !
Y o u g e t m o re
f o r y o u r m o n e y
in P r i m A lb e r t !
T H E D A V IE R E C O R D . M O C K S V IL L E , N . C.
POPPER'S
r CORNER
By DOROTHY BAkCLAYl|___________________________________
ott TO BOTTOM OF IT / '
if jO W hove your, floors stood up
* 7 under all the extra traffic o(
vacation-tlme? The kids tracking 'In everything from sand to m ud to
grease? Now that they're back a t jschool, and you have a m inute to
lo o k *em over» how have they taken ’it? T im e to do ’em over, and have
*em new. and shin*
Ing for. the holidays,
isn't it? W ell, then, :get to the bottom of
It. Discover how .beautiful that floor
dan be under all; t h e varnish a n d
paint ot the years! i G etting those layers and layers'
o f:p a in t or varnish off is not the back-breaking and dlsposltlon-task-
lob of yesteiyear, lady. M odem. . tent for sanding can be rented
a t your favorite hardw are or paint store. E ven a new solution w h id i
solve your problem as it dis> solves your caked varnish or paint, is^ spreading-over the country, .in
Increasing volum e. And you can
have a ll the fun and pride of a
creator, doing your floors yourself.
.The ideal floor is, of course,:non-
porous, smooth, hard enough to resist abrasive action. Such a floor,
y cared for, and protected
against excessive w e ar,. w ill stay
Md-Iooking for a long, long tim e.
D ifficult floors call for the use of three grades of sanding paper,
v e ^ coarse, m edltm i, and fhie for the f taal touches. W ith the sanding
niachhie you .. can rent a t your
store, you, your m w , o r even the boys, wDl enjoy the job of taktog
o S the old finish this e a ^ w ay;
; • H a rd wood floors, you say? Sand .’em . vacuum off a ll the sawdust,
and then apply the floor finish your
-hardware dealer recom m ends,. a
penetrating wood seal. This stuff
has a ll the advantages and none of the disadvantages of oil and vai>-
n ^ h finishes, for it seals a ll sur> faces ogabist the invasion of d irt
and m oisture, and resists w ear and discoloration. It’s especially good
oh thresholds, w here tlie trafflc Is heavy and constant. It dries so
quickly, too, that w ithin a few hours
'a; second coat can be applied, and
'no line of dem arcation w ill show->
,yoii’U never know the difference.
Now th at you have the. floor
!d a a n ; and in its natural state, ap- jply the finish-you prefer, and then
icomea the W ax. Your hardw are or [paint store :npt only has a ll km ds
.of floor and woodwork w ax, but 'electric w axing m achtaes^you can r e n t These little motors not otOy
seem to run aw ay w ith 'you, but
ru n aw ay w ith a ll the rough spots,
and they’re fun for anyone in the
fa m ily .to ,wbrk;.
' T h ^ wUl m ake short w ork of the job th at once caused back ache aft
e r hours of h a i^ labor.
A WAX FOR EACH FLOOR
''•In m ost waxes there are various
types for different purposes. There’s
the standard, quick drying type,
16t instance, for new or renewed wood surfaces. sThis type pene
trates, protects and preserves the
wood. Ask your dealer for the flat
finish for this purpose, and follow
Kis advice and the direcUons
th e can for its< u ^ .
i- In the finishing waxes, there are
.both pastes and liquids. The liquid
;is for cleanhig and poUshing sur-
Ifaces already waxed, the paste for /both the in itial'w a x in g o v e r'th e
jflat finish, and for general polish-
''^v;For linoleum , rubber and asphalt .tile, a dry gloss is your best buy.
'pastes and liquids contain turpen- iine and naptha, in too strong doses
=fdr the binders in these m aterials. •First of all, wash y o u r .lin t^ u m
w ith a mUd soap solution and rinse
w ith clean w ater and allow to dry thoroughly before applyhig the, dry
gloss. If you w ant a brighter shhie, b uff lightly after the w ax dries.
. F o r w hatever supplies you need
■to fraew . those beautiful floors,
\ abide by your dealer's w isdom and
■ e^e rie nce .
Rtbbers Wait Thraa Honrs
To Snateh $6,000 Bin*
" B R O O K LSN , N . Y .,— Two weU-
'^essed bandits who robbed a fam> Uy oJ $8,000 evidenUy knew- tholt
vjctlnia well. The two looted some 'o f the lam U y for $2,000 in cash and
jew elry and then waited three hours ' fd r another m em ber ot the' fam ily
to come home'.so they could take
h er jeiOOO diam ond rtog. "W e w ant the emerald-<!Ut rtoe," they told
- M rs. Sadie M arcus. Then they left
q u le ^ / -
FORGERY IN GOLD
Nation's Busiest Forger Keeps
Out of Prison Only Block Away
;The buslM t forger in the country
Dlies his trade just a block from iow a's state penitentiary. B ut he
h as.n o fear his vocation w ill lead
h im behbid the grim walls as it has
htmdreds of other forgers.
MUd-mannered, 1 a w - a b id in g Jam es Jordan Is w ell started on a
career of counterfeiting signatures a t the age of 24. Already he has
forged m ore than 5,000 indudhig those of .Herbert Hoover and Gen.
Douglas M acArthur—but'he’s never been at^odds with the law.
Every day since October 1, 19S0, Jim has duplicated .about 20 signa
tures p er day, nearly three every
B y IN E Z O E R H A R D
IC R A B D "R B D " SKKLTON. the
^son of a fa m o u s Am erican
clown, launched his own television ^ o w just ten years from the day
when he stepped out as star of his
own radio program . The thousands
who have rajoyed h im hi fllm s and on the air now find hhn dohig some
of the sam e characterlzaUons th at
la m e s Jo rd a n .o t Burlington^, la .. Is shown **fergiog" tbe
5,000tb signature he has en- grfved on Sheaffer fountain
pens during Ihe past year.
hour.- And he iorges only
cisswoBo pyniE LAST WSK*S
ANSWER
ACROSS 4. Letnprey 20. One*spot '
1. Planter 5 Road card
6. confront (abbr.) .23.U kety10. Covered 6. Island in 24. Selectingwith Ivy Chino Sea 20. Bent tubeI t Coin 7 Hillside /or convey'(one G r ) dugout ing water
12. Tangle 8 Piece of (var.l13.Spccicsof money 27 NaturalirUroot 9. Otherwise environment14. Eye 12. Musical 28. Rodent
10. Starvation • composition 33.Hairems
Id Greeft letter 13 Tree 34, A ragout ’
17 Military lO.NovelUes 36. Showercap . (archaic) 37. Rautl>oyId Aw ing 18 Grass dried 38.C ^ne«
21. Indeflnite
article 2± American tndtons 20. Art of rapid writing29 Scope30 Muslenote31 Peak32. Vegetables 3B. BxclamaUon 36. Hard, amber.
(or fodder rigid hair
U a{l(4 kir.fUH H u tin ia n ra n n H EJUMH nriiQam i:! uuraF? nrau km H K RnuuniiR
RiaL4L51 [Jiiraiiiiin niauaraM izi nm nu fin[4 r^rr]Lin IlFUHmiiin Lim iiR Qpii[;^ri H [«R0 UH^n
N-17
40. Past part
of lie 42. Obstacle 44. Great Britain (abbr.)
. >». M r. a»iwcll.
«BCI>'* SKELTON
they enjoyed, but he plans to add
some new ones. In this new m edium he is,-of course, scream ingly funny.
H e is supported by D avid Rose,
m usical conductor and cbmposer,
and the Skylarks vocal group.
Jordan Is the signature engraver
a t the Sheaffer Pen.com pany, whose factory h i Fort M adison, 19 m iles
from here, is ju st a atone’s throw from the prison. Sheaffer products
include special fountahi pens, me-
chianical pencils a n d ballpoints w hich bear a gold band containing
the signature of the owner. It*s Jim *s Job to reproduce the signa
tures, engraving them on the gold bands. '•
H is kind of forgery is m ore difficult than the Illegal varieties that
land their m akers in ja il after d l^ covery by hawk-eyed bank tellers
or merchants. The illegal forger d o ^ h is signature Im itations bn flat
paper with* pen and ink. Legal
forger Jordan has to cut tils o n 'a
rounded surface of hard 14-K gold.
If you would have a hard-to^lupli*
cate ^gnature, Jim recommends
neat, com pact handwrlUng. It's
harder to duplicate than a signature
in'lo ng, flowing strokes. M ost dif
ficult for him to copy are John
Hancocks w ith m any loops and criss-cross lines. Cutting the loops
and crossovers Into the gold is a
tough job.• « *
JO RD A N ALSO does other kUids of free-hand engravhig on special
gold-banded pens. It w as he who
Stanley K ram er, who gave us "T he Cham pion” , . “Hom e of the
Brave” , “The M en’’ and ‘^Cyrano
de Bergerac^?, Is m aking his first
w estern in “ High- N oon", and In
siders say, it m ay.be his m ost brU- liant venture f.so far. The picture’s
entire action takes place in 90 m inutes. G ary Cooper, whom Zane
Grey term ed His “ideal westerner” , is starred, vnth an excellent cast.
Ja c k Benny.^does just a b it in “Somebody .I/Oves Me**, the film based on the lives of Blossom Seeley
and Benny Fields, the vaudeville
stars. Benny is an old friend of
theirs. The picture stars B e t^ H ut
ton as M iss
M oira Shearer expects to ar^
rive In this country November 12, w ith her husband, head
straight for Hollywood, and begin pracUeing her baUet rouUnes
for Sam uel , Goldwyn's “Hans Christian Andersen". ® te tovely
star ot **Red Shoes’^ w ill be accom panied by her husband, Lu- dovlo Kennedy.’P anny Kaye andr>
F arley G ranger wiU co-star in
•.w hat should be a dellghUul pic
ture. ? ,
gave the “ peace pens’’ used a t the
San Francisco signing of the Jap anese peace tr e a ^ their identificaUon
by engraving “Japanese Peace Pact, 1951!’ on thek. bands. Tliose
pens have become collectors’ items.
Forging signatures on w riting in
struments is Jim 's first engraving Job. He was born and raised in this'
city. After- four years as a shlpplnf clerk here, he studied engravm g .a<
K ansas City where he served his apprenticeship. In 1950, he joined
Sheaffer'a worWng under Ambrose Zelgler, perhaps the w orld’s m ost
prolific forger who engraved more than 40,000 different signatures in
his lifetime. W hen Zelgler died last
year, Jim succeeded him .
Jordan naturally prefers the title
'engraver.'* H is spouse balks a t ’behig known as “ the* Forger’s
wife.'*
One signature Jim finds just as
hard to duplicate as any is his own. H is im itations have satisfied m ore
than .5,000 “ forgees** including politicians,. actors, sports figures and
business "leaders. B u t when he attended a bazaar a t the State Peni
tentiary and offered to pay for his purchases, by check, he w as asked
to give cash.SW hy? His-signature
on .the check differed too m uch £rom that bn his driver’s license.
re^ns 89. Too41. Encourages
42. Inflammatory swelling43 ParUcle
44. Street urchin.40. Tidy -
49. Fetch
—r r r W/.T ra <»
tr
n 1 1n
a
m
—
I r-
i
P
zT
ir
i H-
m li
m to 1 il
i i r V,
ST17 If 40
? r ___1 iK-I
5T I ST I
•p H E R E has probably never been'
•L a greater hatred than that w hich
existed between Barney C raig and
D an Chester. I t a ll started because of Bamey*s eagerness to become a
m em ber of the .lo
cal lodge. As one
____ of ' t h r 0 e candi
dates he was Introduced to D an a t
the September' m eeting. Im bued
w ith the feeling of good fellowship
w hich the brothers alw ays em anated, Barney assumed, a t once a
fa m ilia r attitude and took llberUes. Jovially, he m ade a crack about
D an’s cars, w hich protruded from the Chester head horizontally, ta-
stead of perpendicularly, as is the
case in norm al m an. The blush to D an’s' checks pro
voked guffaws of am usem ent from
the delighted Barney.
A fter tho'm eeU ng in ,w h ic h B a ^
ney’s nam e was voted c>n, D an public ly announced th at he would have shot any m an who had blackballed
him . Every one knew w hat he m eant. Barney’s InlUation would
last for two m onths and would m- volve a good deal of horseplay. D an
w as out for revenge.
A nd he got it. Durtog the two
m onths of InlUatlon, Barney suf
fered a ll the hum niatlons, indignations and unrestrained paddlings of
b college fre sh m w . .W hen it w as over, the night that
Barney received the ritu al and becam e a full-fledged brother, D an
g rin n e d at him good-naturedly. “Y ou sure can take it. Brother
C raig. O f course It w as aU In fun.*’ “ Yeah,” said, Barney. “And now
th a t I'm a (uU-fledged m em ber
I'm as good as you? Is that righ t?" “Absolutely, brother." said Dan.
“ Good,” said Barney, “ because for a long Umo I ‘ve want-
I ed to do this.” A nd he hauled I off and let D a n have a sm art
GRASSROOTS
Peopli'^ank Herbert Hoibver Greatest Statesmaii
By W right A . Potterson
Th r e e 0R\ F0U R DATre.>efote
H erbert Hoover m oved from , the
W hite House back to his hom e-hi.
P alo Alto, Calif., I wrote h lm .a note
to w hich I said: “Regardless of the
result of the last election, the his
torians w ill classify you as one of
the g re a t. Presidents of America',
and toe people of the nation w ill
accept Kbe historians* verdict.”
The people did not w ait for the
verdict of the historians. O f their own volition they have accepted
H erbert Hoover as the greatest of present day Am erican statesmen. In every w ay they can show it they
approve his policies. They accept h im as an Am erican leader far
m ore than at any tim e to the past. They have written their o ^ verdict
W hile I was visiting w ith Repre
sentative Joe M ariln in h|s office
in the capitol building a t Washtog-
ton, a few days before the convening of the Republican national conven
tion a t Philadelphia, he asked, ••Who is your choice as a .Republican for President?”
**My first choice is Herbert Hoover, m y second Is Joseph M artto,"
I replied.’ “ I believe we could elect Hoover,
but I doubt if we could: nomtoate
h im . As for yoiir second choice, I
do not w ant to be P re s ld ^t; now. I do w ant to be speaker ot the
house of representatives first.” ..A t that Philadelphia convention
Hoover was sdieduled to deliver .an address. The W illkle m anagers were afraid of the result of that address.
Thay were-fearful it m li^t's w e e p
the delegates off their feet and result in a Hoover nom ination, w ^lch I believe he w ould'have acceijted
at that tim e.
Not necessarily WllUde, b u ^ b is
managers, ■ to an effort to prevent -•‘-^Mlbility, pulled the dirtiest , trick I have ever seen
. In any of the m ore than 20"
lal conventions I have attend
ed as a reporter.The instant Hoover stepped to the loud- speaker microphone, the sys
tem was put but of commission, and It stayed out until the address was finished. Hoover's voice w as not
strong enough for an auditorium ot that size, and no one of the dele
gates or the audience heard any
part of his address.
There'follow ed no demonstration
as there had been at'Cleveland four years earlier. H ad Hoover- not left
the convention h all the instant bis address w as completed, he would have been the nomtoee.. I know he
did not w ant It at that tim e; He had told m e s d 'a s he le ft the Phlladel*
l* ia convehtion hall. I t was- reported to m e, and I believe I t that
he sa id :/'*! w ill never agato be a
candidate nor w ill I accept a n'oml- natlon for any elective political of
fice.”
Today; If it were left to tbe choice of the R e p u b lic s voters,. Herbert
Hoover could be nom toated and elected President ot the United S ta t« . The people believe in the
policies th a t- «8 an elder statesm an —he enunciates fro m tim e to thne.
They would cheerfully follow his leadership, and believe he would get |
them out of the toflatlonary mess
in . w hich we are involved; would reduce the heavy burden of taxa
tion; would dispense w ith the larger p art of the vast arm y of bureau
crats, for .which we, are paying.
Today lie has the confidence and appreciation of the people as a com-
it leader, who could, and would,_____r than any other one m an,
solve our national dlSicultles. He
would keep us aw ay from any w ar w ith Russia, not by ony policy ot
appeasement,, but by a firm stand
that would be typically Am erican, and 4^nvtoce S talin'th at It is tim e
to stop Russian aggression, and- Russian propaganda.
B ut I am sure H erbert Hoover w ill not be the Republican nomliiee,
or that he would accept it if such
nom ination was tendered. I believe he m ade the. statem ent credited to
him a t Philadelphia, and if he did that statement w as final. I t m eant
he w as out of partisan politics and
would stay out. He Is not the ktod who changes his m ind, w ith e adi
change of the political wtod.
A groat character has passed from
partisan political life, m uch to the
regret of the A m erican people who
first elected him by a treme
Barney poked a neat one at
Dan’s chto and it connected.
one on the potot of his jaw . “ A ll
in fun, you know,” Barney grinned savagely.
D an picked hunseU up and nodded. ••O.K., Brother Craig, sup
pose you and I go outside,”They went outside and removed .their coats. Ten m inutes later Bar^
ney w as lym g on the ground storing up a t D an through the one eye thai"
he could still open a crack.
“A ll to fun. Brother Craig. Come
arotmd again some tim e w hen you feel to a playful mood.**
p A R N E Y spent m ost of November
" and December to a gym nasium .
Shortly after the first of the year he encountered Brotiier D a n agato; “Hello, B ig Ears,'* he remarked,
“suppose we go outside?"D an was wilUng. They w ent out
side, and in nine and one half mto- utes Barney decided that D an m ust
have practically slept to a gym nasium .
Barney went home and cursed him self to sleep. He decided that he'd lick Dan Chester if he died
trying w hich by the feeltog of his ja w he thought m ight happen any
m inute.Barney hired K . O. M cM anus to
tra m him . K . O. was pretty rough
and Barney suffered a lot, but he acquired knowledge. O n the first of
M arch he tovUed Brother D an “ out
side.The battie lasted 20 mtoutes this tim e.
Spring was to full bloom when B am ey^agaln sent w ord to D an
to m eet him outside. There was quite an audience on hand this
lim e.The fight lasted 25 mtoutes. Both
participants were protty groggy, ^ e y were swtogtog w ild .and with
out m uch zip. I t began to look like a draw , when suddenly it occurred to Barney that for the first tim e
D a n w asn't beating him . The
c l a s s if ie d ;
D EPARTM EN T
BUSINESS St INVEST. OPPOB.
DOG», CATS, PETS, ETC.
rAttM B AND BAWCHEB •
I. J. T. Cwrpenter,m M
HELP W AN TED^ M EN •
< «n« StaU»n. WiHiIpk. New
iN s n m c n o N ____________
Frc* iMoklet. VHow To-Write.SShT
METAPMT8.Cb‘K.. nirmlwcbam. Ala.
ipBttenibiifK. S»mh <OtSTBIlBO Dcrktliircs—B oan. Gllli. IVayland Oftrbjr, R«m(* 4, Fl«rcac«
MISCELLANEOUS
JHER-O.KI3B £ Unit order Wi - Alhcw
SEEDS. PLANTS. ETC.
U. s. SAVINGS BONDS
Are Now
U.S. DEFENSE BONDS
0 1 ^
cou>
S T U F n N E S S
WHH FASTmm achoh of
PtMETMNBSEDRIIfS
^Rm oohikbM By MaiQ UaUng
GHKTCOUS
M U ST Er o l EChiU'sMllil
lOOTABUTBOinEOWtf
O
B rig h ter Teeth
m ajority and then as ruthlessly'de
feated him , because they credited h im w ith responsibility for condi
tions which to re a lly he had no part to creattrig.
The effort to stop undesired legls-'
lation resulted to a heavy toeredse
for tbe post-office department. Letters from the folks back hom e .. .
thought gave h im a feeling of e1a<
tlon and a burst of energy. He poked a neat one at D an's chto and
it connected. Barney, throvm off balance, too weak to steady hhn-
self, fell across his opponent's prostrate form and lay there. •
• It took an-hour-to revive the bat
tlers. Barney carne to -first and
looked at D an thoughtfully:' Present
ly D a n stirred and opened his-eyes.
He saw Barney and propped him^
sell up on an elbow.••WeU, well, Brother Craig. Con-
gratu lationsl"'••Thanks,” said Barney,, and.
grinned too. VAll In fun you know.** • ‘‘Sure,’’ said D a n ,’’“ all to fun."
And he extended his hand. ^Barney gripped the hand and
started to m ake a crack about Dan's
big ears, but changed his m ind.
• - Y outh Recipe- History has it th at Queen Eliza
beth of Hungary, who possessed the original , recipe for .Hungary
w ater, became so beautiful, by its use th at at the age of 72, her hand
was a ^ e d iii m arriage by the Ktog
_<jf Poland. ••
J Iij Iniepadat
•dentifio ten. F.r clnner uttb, f« *
|n)|titer udle... Uy Oiloi jm in d ll •
C A LO X
A prodact «t MCKESSON a ROglOT
PAGE POUR THE UAVIE BECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. NOVEMBER 7. 19B1
THE DAVIE RECORD, gjg ]\^Qjiday ^ew Postmaster |
C. FRANK STROUD, EDITOR. A large crowd is cxpcctcd here] Mocksvlllc hiis a new postmas-'
— ...............................Monday, Nov. 12th, for the Ar- ter in the person of Miss Daisy
TEIEPHONE I misticeJJay celebration. iHoIthouser, who wasswom in on
-------- R»vGalIoway,formcrComman. Oct. 31st. Miss Holthouser suc-|Enter^atthcPo8tofflCB in.Mock.. der of the American Legion, will'ceeds lames E. Kelly, who has
""" deliver an addre„ a. 11 o-clock'
from a speaker's stand on the
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:square.
a i- J B v a g A - . -ta
’ "If MY PEOPLE, WhIcH «E CAllED BY , The King and Queen selected
HY H*HE, SHAU HUMBLE THIMSRVa AND ' ^
WAY. AND SEEK M¥ FACE, AND TOM AWAY ““ “P'’
niOM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEM Will I AH v « e r iL ‘’o f“w o r lH W T
2 CHROH. 7:R___________ | afternoon attraction will be
Senator Taft is makins a few “ football game at 2 o’clock b.*
speeches down in the land o( Dixie ^wcen Bovden High School, Sails*
Our Democratic brethren are and Lexington High School,
wedded to their idols and'mjking^ Take a day olF Monday and en*
Republican speeches in the South this program. Bring the wife»
is like pouring water on a duck’s children, grandpa and grandma,
back.
Some politicians say that Presi
dent Truman lost a million votes
when he appointed General Clark j
ambassador to the Vatican. Most, An event always of interest to
protesrants denominations do.j"t the townspeople, and community
thmkChutch and State should pe„„ral was the Hallowe’en
be mixed. Some think Truman |,y the students of the
has decided not to be a candidate Mocksvlllc schools on Wednesfor presidei>t acain. ‘Few office-' afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Par-
holdets die and none resign," is tidpatins In the parade were child- an old but true saying.
Halloween Parade
And Carnival
been acting postmaster for more
than three years. Miss Holthous*
er has been connected with the
local postoffice for the past 28
years, and is the first woman to
hold this position sincc 1897,
wh.n Edwin H. Morris succeeded
Miss Janie Austin. The Record
extends congratulations to Miss
Holthouser in her new position.
We are glad that Mr. Kelly will
remain with the postoffice as a
clerk. He.made a good record as postmaster. Our town is fortun*
ate in ! having such an efficient
corps of postal employees.
Our old friend L. J. C. Pickier,
who lives in the classic shades of
Rowan County was in town last week and gave our oflice a plea*
sant call.
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
Kirk Douglas and Jan Sterling
in "The Big Carnival,” with
^ Porter Hall and Bob Arthur.
Added News
The General
Awaits Answer
ren in costumes so manv and va*i
ried, they almost defy description.'
The floats were unique and colorful
First prize for the best flo..t wasj
won by the 4-H Club, and second.
Calling General Douglas Mac- placc was won by the Sophomore I
Arthur a liar is risky business even class float which featured King'
for a President, as Harry Truman, and Queen candidates Janie Col*
no doubt has already found out. lette and Jack Naylor as Hansel!
When the General was Informed and Gret^l, in an ppropriate set* that Mr. Truman accused him of ting- The Senior class float feat*
making a false statement In his ured King and Queen candidates!
Miami speech, which he’said Margaret Cozart and Charlie John* [
General McArthur knew was un- ion. Junior candidates for Kingl
true, it was a direct attack on the
honor of a great soldier.
General McArthur, as might be
expected, handled the matter In ;i
Princess Theatre
SATURDAY
Ovaries Starrette in **Prairie
Roundup,” with Smiley
Burnette.
Added Serial & Cartoon
MONDAY &. TUESDAY
'Fabiola, Goddess of Love in a
City of Sin,” with Michele Mor«
gan and Henry Vidal.
Added News and Cartoon.
and Queen, Carmen Greene and
Douglas Daniel, rode in style on I
the Junior floa^ and Freshman
candidates Ann Kurfees and Jack
WEDNESDAY
Van Heflin and Evelyn Keyes
in “The Prowler,” with John
Maxwell and Kathrine Warren.
Added Lartoons.
‘Whatever I Need, I Always Go First To
M a r t i n B r o s . ”
You've Probiably Often Heard Friends Says That
When Talking About Different Merchandise.
They've Learned That We Carry A Very Complete And Reliable Stock.
They've Learned By Comparison Of Both Quality And Price That Tliey Do Best Here
Complete Line Of
Hunting Equipment
Rifles - Shotguns
Guaranteed Famous Brands
Remington Savage
Stevens
REMINGTON NO. 550
Autonratic Rifle
Chambered for Short, Long, and Long
Rifle Without Adjustment.
Regular or Hi Speed
Complete Line Of
W ork Clothes
Work Pants Work Shirts
Jackets
Shoes
LOCUST POST ........
Men’s Work
And Dress Shoes
Complete Line Of Nails, Galvanized Roofing, Cement
Blocks, Cement, Fertilizer, Hydrated Lime,
Prestone and Zerone Anti-Freeze
Stoves Paint
Wood Heaters, Oil Heaters, Laundry
Heaters, Coal Heaters, Sheet Iron Heaters
■ Wall Fix Kover • Best
Inside and Outside Paint
COMPLETE LINE OF
John Deere Tractors And Farm Implements
MARTIN BROTHERS
Phone 99 Near Depot Mocksville, N. C.
manner befitting n great man and lollv were the center of attraction
a great soldier. He did not re on the ninth grade float.
treat from his position but, on the Carmen Oreene, of the Junior
contrary. han-Jed the Preslden a class, was crowned Queen, and
blow calculated to put Mr. Tru- .lack Naylor, of the Sophomore
man in a state of silence respect* class was crowned King.
First prize for individual • cos
tume was won by Yvonne Hutch'
ens, and second prize by Master
Don Marklln. Prize for the best
decorated bicycle was won by
Master J. J. Jacobs, a first grade
pupil.
The carnival was a big success,
with a large crowd present. The
proceeds amounted to more than
a thousand dollar;).
ing who was telling the truth.Genera] McArthu , in straight
dignified language, simply asked
the President to roll the American
people where he stands on the issues about the President said
General MacArthur made .'in un*
truthful statement. Mr. Truman
has not answered d'at one yer,
and he is not likely to answer It.
The best that little men can do,
when trying to conceal their short
comings and mistakes, is, as Gen*
eral MacArthur said in his Miami
speech, meet criticism with “vul
gar language.”—Davidson Record.
Sale Attracts
Large Crowds
Despite the inclement weather
Thursday, hundreds o f people.
from all sections of Davie and hout one gallon should be used
adjoining counties were here, to j^or each 500 square feet of space,
attend the opening sale day at Do Not Use DDT On Grain That
Sanford's Department Store, Eaten By Humans Or Fed
Many bargains were offered by To Livestock.
Farm News
Much small grain and corn are
lost each year due to rat and In*
sect damage. A good rat control
is warfarin, which sells under
various trade names. Befot;e stor
ing grain in cribs and bins, they
should be treated; the walls, ceil
ings, and floors should be sprayed
entirely with 5 per cent DDT. A*
this old established firm and crowds are visiting the store daily.
The sale will continue through
Com can be fumigated with va*
rious fumigating materials on the
market. One part of carbon di-
this and next week, with unheard sulfide and four parts of carbon
of bargains offered »lailv. Read' tetrachloride is a very effective
their ad which appears in today's fumigant to use. For best results
paper, and visit this big store dur-'fumigating should be done Ing the sale and save n’oney. ' when the temperature is above 65
~ degrees. Five to six gallons of theHalloween Parade «h°“'dbe used for e«hthousand bushels of grain. The
The Davie County Training grain should remain under fumi-
School, located in Booetown, pu. gation from 24 t o 36 hours, on a carnival parade last Tuesday CAUTION • I bis Material Is In-
aftemoon about five o’clock. TJie flammable.
parade came up Depot street to -After it has been allowed to the square and up North Main *'^1^ grain Is perfectly safe for street to the school. A band from as food or feed In order for High Po>nt, led the parade. There- fumigation to do much good, thu were many floats In the parade, s^o. age place must be made some of which were very attrac* '^ght. Thl^ can be done by put* tlve. .A largecrowd ofboih white ting building paper around cribs, >at)d colored people assembled a- or anv other material that w;ill round the square to watch the hold most of the fumigating :ma* parade, despite the Inclcmenc not allow it to escape,
weather. ' . F. B. PEBBLES, Countv Agent.
All Shelves
Tables On
3 Floors
Unload<^d
WE RE CAUGHT WITH THE GOODS!!
AND MUST SACRIFICE hT f
Overstocked! Overloaded!
Forcing Emergency Selling
This
Means
Values
For You
To Affect A Special Disposal Of All Surplus Merchandise At The Earliest
Possible Moment. Borrow The $ If Necessary. It Will Pay You
BIG DIVIDENDS. DONT MISS THE BUS !!!
Galvanized W ^l Bucket
$1.37
Spade Fork
$1,87
4 Strand' Clothes Line
$3.90
Aluminum Water Bucket
$127
ALL PRICES HEREIN
Quoted Represent Only A Few Of The Hundreds That
Await You On Three Floors____________
Anticipate Your Holiday Needs And Get In On These Timely
-SAVINGS-
____________You /Won't Be Dlsapointed
Marquisette Curtains
$4.87
24 In. Chick Feeders
Womens Unionsuits
57c
Were 98c,
No. Sleeve, Knee Length
Plastic Curtains
$1.87
For Bathroom or Kitchen Were $2.95
— c in r dT e7 s"~fo i ; — ■
27c
Wheel Barrow
$4.87
Reg. $7.50 Wood Box, Steel
Wheel, Removable Sides
Mocksville
H . c V . :
Children's Bathrobes
97c
Sizes 2 to 6. Soft and Warm
Paititers Overalls
- $3:45
Heavy White Drill
Securely Stitched
$2.67
Use as Snow Suit or for Play _____They're Dandy_____
"Knit Sleepers
97c
An Assorted Lot. Some Flannel l.icluded
Samsonite Luggage
$24:75
Pullman Case.All Other Luggage Reduced
' All Wool Blankets
ilO .9 5
. Cretonne
67c yd.
Reg. $1.00 For Draperies
and Upholstry;
Pillow Cases
69c
42x36 Excellent Quality
White Muslin
3 yds $1.00
80 Square, 36 In. Fine Quality
Baby Blankets
$4.95 & $7.45
All Wool •Size 36 X 54 and 42x60
B Ladies Cotton ^ f gkf%
Stockings 3for^i tfv
I 18 In. Cotton Napkins , 9c
Reg.'and Babv Ricrac 9c
C. SANFORD SONS GO.Mocksville
n : c
TBE DAVIE RECORD; MOCKSVILLE!. N. C. NOVEUBER 7. 1961 PAGE FIVE
No Liquor, Wme. Beer Ad. The cold wave
-----— ],!, Friday night.
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Duke
Ratledee, of Sanford Avenue, a
aon, on Oct. 28th. ' '
Attorney Avalon Hall spent
several days last week in Louis-
vllle>'Ky., on business.
Mt. and Mrs.- Robert C. Cald-
wdl and children, of'Winnsboroi
8. C., were recent guests of Mr.
and,Mrs. John Daniel, on Maple
Avenue.
.Mrs, Clarence James, Mrs. Chas.
McClamroch, Mrs. Robert James
and- Mrs. Everette Smith spent
Tuuday with relatives at Morgan-
• ton.
Miw Elva Grace Carter, o f
Thomasville, spent Tuesday night
and Wednesday in town-with her
patents, Mr. an d Mrs.' Hasten
Carter.
Mrs. J.W . Hill, who has been
taking treatment at. Rowan Me*
mortal Hf>spltal,'was' able to re-
tum home Thursday, her friends
5 glad'to> leam.will be I
All who subscribe or renew
thelj: .subscriptions to The Davie
Record will receive a brand new
1952 Blum’s Almanac. Come in
early and avoid the rush.
E. C Carter, who holds a posi
tion with Neaco Company, Muni
tion Matiufaccurers in Milwaukee.
Wis., returned to his home Thurs
day after spending two week with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C .
Carter on R. 3. His father has
been in Rowan Memorial Hospi
tal for the past three weeks, and
continues q lite ill.
Back in States
Gapt. Frank M. Hendricks, Sal*
bbury, N. C., has secently been
assigned to the Area Service Unit of the ^ e d 8th Division at Fort
lackson, S. C,
Captain Hendricks is a graduate
of Appalachian College and Em<
ory University where he holds a
DDS degree in Dentistry. He was called into dte Army in 1949 and
served for one year as a dental
surgeon in Korea. In his new as-1
signment he will condnue his du>
ties as a dentist. '
Captain Hendricks is the son of
Mrs. W. S. Hendricks, of Mocks
ville He is married to the form*
er Alice Carr Choate, of Salisbury who now resides in Columbia
with their daughter, Nancy Carr
Hendricks, age l i years.
Gospel Singing
There will be a Gospd Singing
in Mocksville High School Audi-
toilum Sunday afternoon, Nov.
11th, with doors opening at 1:30
o'clock, sponsored by Mocksville
P. O, S. of A. Gospel and spiri
tual singing featuring Sunshine
Boys Quartet and the Blue Ridge
Quartet. The public Is cordially
invited to be present.
The annual bazaar and chicken I
pie supper will be held at Liberty
Methodist Church on Saturday] evening, Nov. 10th, beginning at 5 o'clock. Tlte public is cordially' * invited to come out.
' Bobby O. Smith, aviation elec* tronics technician, second class, > USN, of Route 1, Advance, has returned from duty with the U. ■ S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterran*. ean Area, and is now stationed at' U. S. Naval Auqillary Air Station at Jacksonville,
NOVELTY SHOP
• Have just received new ship-
ment of Novelties, including
*’PuftN’ Tooe» Train, Child's
Make-Up Kil, Picture Blocks,
Balancing Bear, Scotty Figur
ines. Stop and Go Lapel Pins,
Bubble Gum Juke Box, Invls-
ible Frost Shields, Silver Cloths,
Liquid Stiver Replater, Ther-
moplexPitchet, Picturesque
Frame*a«Bowl, Auto Print Ash- Trays.
Christmas Card and Wrapping Assortment expected soon.
Be sure to come in and look
over our line of Novelties.
mrs. T w . h ill
HOTEL MOCKSVILLE.
Charlie B[town, of Route 2, has
our : thanks for a Thanksgiving
pumpkin. Now if some friend
will bring us a turkey we will be
ready for Thanksgiving.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bailey mov
ed Wednesday from *the Murray ,
house on North Main street, to
the Fred Long house, which diey
recently purchased on Salisbury
street;
Mr« and.Mrs. Luther Edwards,
of Gary, Ind.,-spent last week with
relatives and friends In and a-
round Mocks^^lle. They have many friends in Davie who are al
ways glad to see them.
L. H. Burton, of Route 3, who
has btien quite ill for the past two
months, and who spent ten days
at Rowan Memorial Hospital, is
somewhat improve, his fnends
will be glad to Jeam.
Raihny-Gay Wooten, son of Mr.
and Mrs^ R. G. Wooten', of Route
1, who has been stationed in Ko
since June, was recently pro-^
FOR PURE CRYSTAL ICE
COAL FOR GRATES, STOVES, FURNACE AND STOKERS
It Will Pay You To Call Or Phone Us.
We Make Prompt Delivery
Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co.
Phone 116 Mocksville, N. C.
WANT ADS PAY.
FOR SALE—106-acre farm with 4-room house and outbuildings, one mile from Smith Grove. See Mrs. J. T. Angell, Smith Grove.
WANTED—To buy corn, an^ kind, in ear, shucked or shelled Top prices paid.MOCKSVILLE FLOUR MILLS
I FORSALE-ThoroughbredGer man Shepherd (seeing eye) pup pies. KENNETH SHIVE.R. 3, Salisbury, ntfar Shupinc's Mill, or call Charles Woodruff, Phone nO-J, Mocksville.____
FOR SALE Complete stock and fixtures of the Davie Home &. Farm Supply Store on Salisbury street. A bargain to quick buyer. For full particulars phone 332, or call at store.
FOUND—Black cocker spaniel. Owner can get same by calling ar my house and paying expenses.ELDON WISHON, Mocksville, Route 2. Near G. I. Robert's Store
M o r e
s m o t e G A M E I
t h a n a n y
c ig a r e t t e
DR. CHARLES J. PHARR
OPTOMETRIST
Announces His Office Is Open For The
Practice Of Optometry At
Court Square ' Mocksville
Officc Hours Telephone 375-W
&30-5:00 Daily - Wed. &30-1 P. M. Nigfits By Appointment
Call at The Record office and get
1952 Blum’s Almana'.
THE BIG-
STQRE
Telephone 300 Southern Bank Bldg. Mocksville, N. C.
DR. RAMEY F. KEMP, CHIROPRACTOR
X-RAY LABORATORY
Hours: 9:30-12:30 2:30-5:30 Closed Saturday 2:30
' Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings—6:30 to 8:30
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
B A N K O F DA V IE
Of Mocksville, in the State of North Carolina, at the close of ness on October dO, 19S1.
ASSETS'
reserve bal-
busl
Cash, balances with other banks, including ances, and cash items in process of coll ctionmoted to ciftrporaL Congratula- U. S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed tions, young man. Obligations of States and political subdivisions. - - I Loans and discounts ■Bom. to Mr. and Mrs. Willard . Furniture and fixtures - - • -
C o n c b i n o n O c t . 2 5 t h , a t Rqwan 0«>>“ “ sets - - ■ - ■
Memorial Rospital, a fine daugh ! TOTAL ASSETS - , - ter, Anita Kay. Mr; Conchm is'. ( LIABILITIESpastor ofjericho Church of Christ. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships and cor-
$ 692,984.10, 5 1,168.592,94 218,03335 J 996,145.42 j 6,741.64.| 8,754.96)1
S,091,252.41
and ixxupies the parsonage on'_^
Hardison ssreet.Time deposits of indivi-Juals; partnerships, and corpo-
rations
— 17220366.25 •
ui. Deposits of United States-Government (including pos-Mr. and Mrs. Douthit Whitaker^ ^ tal savings) - • -
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. GriiHth and C. Deposits of State and political subdivisions ' V, Other de ' " ' ''a l d :
and officers’ checks, etc.)$2,805,515.81L. McCUmrock returned Sunday,
Oa.>28th'from Myrtle Beach, S.C wiieife they spent the week- Other liabilitieseild. fishing. They repart a catch ' TOTAL LIABILITIES (not including subordina-.c ion fi k > n 7Sr,.4.-Hill hmi-h I ted obligations shown below)of 19q,^h at Windy Hill beach. | CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
M.-Sgt. Claretice Craven, who Capital* ' - ■ - ■ . -
has bein'stationed in Washington . '
D. C.; is spending two. weeks i" Undivided profitt
town'wiiH his parents. Sgt.Crav- TOTAL C/
en w ili'go from here to Westover
Field, Ii^ss.; from w hich place he
w lit Irave for two and a half years
S (^lc c ip Greec^ • . '
Mt. and Mrs. Gilbert Reavis, of y^kinville, R. 3. are the proud
pairrais of a fine son, Randall Gil-
. b«t wfio arrived'at City Memorijj
al 'HoBpital, Winston-Salem, 'on Sunday, Oct. >28th. Mra. Reavis
before roanriage wja Miss Mildred
Dull of Roiite 2, Mocksville.
1,324.828.97,5
9,33^66 . 235,645.6111 15.136.42/ ■
23.308.25
$2,828,824.06
$ 50,000.00 150,000.00 62,42835
$ 262,428.35TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL LlABILITIES AND CAPITAL
ACCOUNTS- - . -
*This bank’s capital consists of common stock . with total par value of $5 ),000.00.MEMORANDA Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for . :.other puimses • - - - . $ 452,441.05(a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves of ' - ■(b) Securities as shown above are after deduction reserves of - - • : ' • 16,406.80
$3,091,252.41
22,700:97
L S. M. Call, Cashier of the above namid bank, do solemnly sweat that’the above statement it true, and that it ful;y and correcdy represents the true state of the'several matters herein contained and set forth, to the best of my knowledge and belief, v S. M. CALL, Cashier.Correct-Attest: ■ 'KNOX JOHNSTONE S. A. HARDING ; ■. R.B. SANFORD/ ' ' Directors.State of North Carolina, County jf Davie, ss: 1 'Sworn to and subscribed before me this 25th day of October,
Dr. f -W. Neill, of Charlotte,
has a^pied a position as phar-
macistwith the ;Ifall Drug Co-i
enter^'^pon his new duties Wed
nesday. The'Recprf l is glad to
welcome Dr. Neill to - otir town.
H)« wife, one son and tWo daugh- J1951 j i hereby certi^ that 1 am not an officer ot director of this
ters wttl tMnaiij to Charlotte for bank. . • MAE K. CLICK. Notary Public,
tte present. My commissioh expires Match 8, 1953.
S t o p ! L o o k !
L i s t e n !
Watch For One Of The Largest And
Best Selections Of
<(ji^ And Toys
That Has Ever Appeared Ih Mocksville
l^e Our Lay-Away Plan
For Your Christmas Shopping.
High Quality Reasonable Prices
Mocksville Home & Auto Supply
135 Salisbury Street . / Phone 36
t
Good VAHJE! Cfeoil «HIALITY! Good SERVICE!
You get ALL when' you buy your Piano or Organ
from
JESiSE G. BOWEN MUSIC CO.TEiKMSPRICES
to • Spinel Pianos , • HammomI Organs to
PLEASE • Craral Pianos • Used Pianos PLEASE
YOU 9 ' ■ in business'since 1902 •YOU
IM gS® B O 'W EN J ilJ S I C C 0 ..
. ‘ .i' W IH ST O M -SA tEM . N . C.H7 WpST FJITH ST.,
T H E D A V IE H E C O R D , M O C K S V IL L E . N . C.
m JIM RHODY!
Not Enough
Courtesy goes a long ways, where- ever U is applied, but there doesn’t
,eecm to be enough to go around. Constantly sportsmen In the field
.are reminded that the other fellow
is more conccrncd with his own .pleasure than the welfare of others.
There’s the hunter (at least one in every parly), who junipa the gun
when quail are flushed. That sam e fellow m ost likely w ill claim os
•many birds as he can ge aw ay with,
regardless of who fired the pellets that killed them. This fellow has lost sight of broader aspects of
'.hunting. He belongs to the category
of the game hog, forages through •the fields for the am ount of gam e ho
-can get. rather than for the sport of the hunt.
Then there is the constant joy rider on our rivers and lakes. That’s
:finc sport. It’wonderful to get out ’on the lake and glide over the
^waters, but there also is alw ays the other follow to rem em ber. H e most
'likely is a fisherm an. He m ay bo {casting the banks, or he m ay be
anchored and fishing w ith live bait. H e has as m uch right on the lake
Bs does the joy rider, and the joy -.rider should stay aw ay from h im as
,m uch as possible. The. waves in-
,terfere with his fishing. Often wo
[have seen the speed boat rider dash
[toward a fishing boat, cut sharply,
;to throw up huge waves, and then
jbounce around the bend, leaving
ibehind a m aniacal laughter and a
iflsherman battling tangled linAS and cursing his tormentor.A A ^
Hawks Protected
Hawks and owls have lots of
'friends In Connecticut, the N ational
Audubon Society reports.
That became apparent recently ;whcn Governor John Lodge signed :a “m odel” bird protection bill that m akes it unlawful to shoot any spe
cies of hawk or owl in the N utm eg State.
Approval of this legislation, which had been passed unanim ously by
both houses of the Connecticut Legislature, places the state am ong the
leaders in bird conservation.
A provision of the new law per*
m its farm ers to destroy those individual hawks ,caught In the act of
doing damage to poultry. Pointing out that only occasional hawks de
velop into poultry stealers, the N ational Audubon Society said this
provision w ill protect farm ers and at. the same tim e prevent m isin
formed persons from m eting out "vigilante justice*’ to all hawks and
owls because of the misdeeds of a few of them.
A public hearing on the new bird
protection law, h e ld before the G am e and Fish Com m ittees of the
Legislature at Hartford, brought out nearly 50 representatives of state conservation organizations w h o
testified to the value of predatory
birds. No opposition was presented.
A A A
Adore Funds?
A report Irom Ihc N ational W ildlife Federation states that the
House Ways and M eans Com m ittee in exeoutivo session has hiked the
«xcise tax on sport flshins tackle 4o 15 per cent from its original base
w 10 pot cent. This actually m oans
that the revenues arising from this source w ill be 50 per cent greater
than at present. This excise tax on rods, reels, and creels and on arti
ficial baits, lures, and flies was
earm arked for federal aid to state
fishery restoration by the terms of the Dlngell-Johnson Act of the last
session of Congress. The increase w ill be greatly needed, as the lax
paid into the earm arked fund has been relatively sm all. It was at first thought this tax on fishing
tackle would produce about $3,000,« 000. However, on the basis of the
first few months, if it does not ma>
terially increase, there would not
be m uch more available this com
ing year for allocation to the states
than a m illion and a half dollars.
Sportsmen who pay this tax arc generally in favor of the increase. On the basis of $1,500,000 ear
m arked into the fund each one of the JS million licensed fishermen
would pay on the average about four and three-quarters cents apiece
during the year. That sm all sum is
even less than chicken feed and will
•not cause a ripple of protest from anyone who replenishes his fish
ing outfit or adds a lure or two to his tackle box.
W ith the exception of a sm all am ount for adm inistration, the en
tire earmarked fund is turned over to the slates to m ake better fishing.
TOie states are required to pay 25 per cent of the cost of all fishery
restoraUon projects which are approved by the Fish and W ildlife Service.
A A A goatsucker, or nightjar, U a bird arouud uibicb a number of old -legends have been wovett. Tbe att- believed it suehed goats at nigbt, that tbe goats immediately ”dried tip" and lost tbeir sight.A A A
narwhal is called the sea uni-
eora because of tbe long, spiral and tapered'tusk that grows from its upper
jauf. This is sometimes as long as ten
feet. Its purpose has never been de-
iermined. .Jroaically, tbe tusk is often
fashioned info a harpoon used in tb* bunting of these sea animals.
C r i m e in A m e r i c a
By ESTES KEFAUVERUnitat Slates Senator
E ig ht o l n Scries
Brass Into Gold; The Black Marlcet
Black m arketing— ttie ugly racket th a t plagued A m erica In
W orld W ar I I — was threatening again to becomc a menace. There
w as reason to suspcct th at racketjtcering m oney once again wos in it.
tlons into *'the shame of the dties
' to this phenom enon of national
So— m idw ay in Its in
the Senate C rim e Com m ittee
scope.
W e singled o u t a particularly flagrant case» involving sugar operaUons, the shoddy story o f E atsum Food Products,
sum w as a candy com pany ow ned by a m anufacturer D avid (
Lubben, of W oodcliff, N . J .
Lubben went to New Yoric during
the w ar years to go Into business lo r him self as a candy wholesaler and m anufacturer. The Eataum
compoiQr w hich he bought had not benn in business long enough, un
der O P A regulations, to hae any
appreciable sugar quota.
illegal
Eat-
George
So Lubben. letting discretion be the better part of valor, walked out.
Then he m et W lUiam G iglla. a sm art operator, and Frank Llorsl.
an ex-conict. The paid had ac
quired a Jelly factory w ith a sguar
quota jot 14,000,000 pouonds a year. As Lubben told us, all he could
think w as that *‘14.000,000 pounds would m ake m e a t big as Hershey."
Boon the operator and the ex*
convict were his partners in Gat-
sum . and then cam e the Inexorable finale: Lubben w as out and they
were In.
Llvorsl. the 47-year-old ex-con>
vict, w as an adm itted friend of such undcrword characters as
F rank Costello, W illie M oretti. and others. H e had been arrested, ac
cording to his own recollection, at least 10 times, including twice on homicide charges. His only convic
tion, however, w as a two>ycar sen
tence for narcotics peddling.
Could Divorsi, we asked, think of any legitim ate business he ever
was in before he went to ja il? **I
can't think of any legitim ate busi
ness,” he suddenly replied. In 1945, Llvorsi teamed up w ith smooth-talk-
ing W illiam Glglio, then 30 years old They acquired Tavern P rult Juice, a jelly m anufacturing business.
W ith the company cam e the precious sugar quota.
Lubben m ade a deal to transfer
a 50 per cent interest in his company to G iglio and Livorsl; the sale price was around $40,000, but Lub
ben claim ed his new partners actually paid nothing until they had
drawn out enough prolits to effect
a ‘‘paper" liquidation of the purchase price. In exchange for half
of his business. Lubben said, hfs now partners “were to see that I got some sugar." B ut. he mourn
fully related, he “never got so much sugar that you could sweeten your
cofEee w ith."* * •
Lubben was no angel. He confessed that he set up arrangements
for buying com syrup by m aking
under-the-table black m arket pay
m ents to farm ers and selling it on
the sam e basis. Everything was done for cash and, in five months
of 1945, more than $400,000 in cash was received from these transac
tions, Lubben testified.
The money was kept in “ a little
green cash box'* hidden in "a panel in back of the bar in the w a ir' of Gigllo’s office. "The last tim e I
knew about it there w as $140,000 in
there."
B ut Lubben, after about nine
months, lost both his nerve and
his taste for the fantastic deal. He' had a harder tim e getting away
from G iglio & Co, than Br-er R abbit had w ith the T ar Baby. The business at that tim e, according to
Lubben’s. figures (disputed by Giglio) was w orth $040,000.
Lubben claim ed he took back the lease on the plant and machinery
he originally had in the Bronx and turned everything else over to the
G iglio group, w ith the understanding
“ that they would pay my Income tax for the-nine months in which I was
a partner.” " In fact," said Lubben, "they later on charged me back, about $23 because some
raisins I had in the warehouse
shrunk a little b it."
Senator Tobey asked Lubben if he had not had " a sense of a p p r^
hension and fear that if you did not play ball and do w hat they said,
they m ight do physical harm to
you?"
" I did, yes, I did," Lubben fer
vently replied. "T h at was the reason I wanted to get aw ay from
th e m ," H e had counted, he went on, on receiving h alf of the money in the cash box. B ut when he asked
G iglio about it, Lubben testified, G iglio coldly told him , “ Y ou know
we had O P A trouble.’*
" I said," Lubben continued, don’t know anything about it, but
certainly you bad not $140,000
w orth." / t
“In that office that day were
F rank Llvorsl, Jo hn .Ormonte and
a couple of other people. I looked around there, end G iglio said, ‘Y ou
are not going to get m y money.
T.AIV'R^CB CLEARED
w«i.vv» Vi vm ut, woukw
The final snapper w as th at he never got his Income tax paid by his ex- partners, either.
. W illiam Giglio w as evasive. But
step by step Counsel Rudolph H ailey led him through an absorbing recital
of his career.
His Tavern F ruit Juice Co. en
gaged In a sharp operation. The years before, G iglio explained, m an
ufacturers were bein^ encouraged by OPA to m ake as m uch jelly os
could: “In 1944 fats and oils
butter were in short supply and O PA requested of all jelly man*
ufacturers to m anufacture more spreads, more bread spreads."
Tavern m anufactured Jellies from
sugar It received under OPA allot
m ent blit, again in Gigllo’s own words, “all of our Imitation-flavored
jellies were sold to a very lim ited num ber of customers, only the top
customers in the country." These customers, it developed, were large cookie m anufacturers, short' on
sugar themselves, who were buying Tavern's products as “baker’s jel
ly " and paying, as Hailey charged, ‘‘prem ium price.”
A t the time he testified, Giglio (his own corporation In bankruptcy
and under investigation by the Internal Revenue Bureau) had found
a new position as general manager, be said, of a pharm aceutical firm.
All throughout our investigations, the committee discovered evidence
of infiltration of legitim ate business field by crimesters and their associates. W e saw it in Chicago,
where Joe Fusco, once labeled a ’•public enem y" by the Chicago
Crim e Commission became one of
the -city’s largest wholesale liquor dealers. We saw it In M iam i, where
hoodlums took over hotels. The committee found m ore than 70 sep
arate types of businesses into which countless hoodlums had infiltrated.
• • *
Tills pattern is a fam iliar and of
ten a vicious one. It begins w ith the hoodlum finding him self with more
money than he knows what to do w ith, accrued, of course, from his illegal ventures.
A good example Is Newark gang- ster Abner (Longie) Sw illm an, con
fessed rum-runner and strong-arm m an of tbe prohibition era, nam ed
by form er District Attorney W illiam O'Dw yer of Brooklyn as one of the
old leaders of “The Com bbiatlon" which ran “ M urder, Inc."
Zw illm an wound up the prohibition era w ith a fortune. Now he is
participant In a tobacco vending m achine company, a truck sales and sarts agency, a trading company
h a t buys and sells auto equipment and used m achinery, another com
pany that deals in scrap Iron, and
a com pany that places and operates some 700 w ashing machines in
apartm ent buildings.
He also has investments held for
him in the names of other persons. H e declined to give us information about these because “ sometimes m y
nam e kills a deal.”
None of us on the Committee
would deny the right of an honestly repentent wrong-doer; B ut there
was too much evidence, before us
of the unreformed hoodlum gaining
control of a legitim ate business,
then utilizing all his old m ob tricks — strong-arm methods, bombs, even
murder— to secure advantages over legitim ate competitors. A ll too often such competition either ruins lei
m ate business m en, or drives th Into em ulating or m erging with the
gangsters.
The hoodlums also are olever at
concealing ownership of their business investments. A legitim ate busi
ness is a very convenient front for a gam bler or crim inal. It can be used as a “ cover" for tbe profits of
his. illegal operations, enabling him to defraud the government of taxes.
Another draw back is the basic unwholesomeness of having .gang' sters in control of companies that
perform vital services or distribute necessary commodities to the pub-
Uc.
Next Week: Kansas City; Law of (be Jungle.
Condensed Irom Ui« bwrtc. "CrJin® America,'* by
Pittsburgli Mayor not Party to Deal
PIT TSBU RG H , Pa.— A grand jury
cleared Pittsburgh’s m ayor D avid
H . Lawrence of m isdem eanor In of-
fice in connection w ith the cify’s re
cent $3,800,000 street lighting scan
dal.iiie m isdem eanor had charged that the m ayor, a national Dem ocratic com m itteem an, had^ failed to
m ake a coal tenance
contracts w ith the city.
Four other officials of the city,
however, and three top m en of a Kew York m aintenance firm were
Indicted on dharges - ranging from misdemeanor to bribery and con
spiracy.
coal com pany and a maln- corporatlon live up to ttielr
The m en were charged w ith swin
dling the city on a street lighting system let to the Broadway M ain
tenance Corporation.
B Y D R. KENN ETH 1. F O R E M A N
Dr. FQremon
A People Delivered
Lesson for November 11> 1951
^ N B of the strange truths about ^ God— strange when we are not
used to it—is th at he can never be seen directly. N o m a n has seen him
nor can see him ,
the Bible tells us
(I Tim . 6:16). God
c a n n o t be photographed n o r tele
vised. The disc has never been m a d e
that w ill record his voice; It w ill not be
heard on a i^ tele
phone. Then how do leople know God? iy the eye of faith,
the ear of faith. The Bible suggests
that it ii God him self w ho opens m en’s eyes to his presence, opens
their ears to his voice,
G od in History
r ls so when we speak of “ God
in history." The historian can tell
us what 3)appened; but w hy does it happen? The last, the final, the all-
inclusive W hy? Is religion's question; and religion’s answer, faith’s answer, Is always: God.
Take, for example, the well know n story of the Exodus, when the Chil.
dren of Israel got out of Egypt where they had been slaves for
about as long as the Negroes were
slaves in A m erica before 1863. A ll
historians agree (1) that Israelites were in Egypt; and (2) that they
got out.B ut the history books do not read
like the Bible. In the “ Cam bridge Ancient History” or in any history
of the ancient M iddle East, you can read the account of the Exodus with te m iracles left o u t
Furtherm ore, the historians never bring God Into their tale.
All they can tell us Is w hat you
could have caught w ith a mov*
ing picture cam era or a recording m achine. But God cannot be
caught that w ay. The story of • the ISxodus, In the Bible, has .
anoUier slant. The Hebrew folk never said “ We escaped” or
“ It was a lucky break” or “ Moses took us out.” Tlicy always said, “ God brought usout.”
If you had been there w hen they
crossed the Red Sea (the original Hebrew in Exodus does not use the
expression “ Red Sea” in this story,
and It m ay have been one of the Bitter Lakes or even an a rm of the
M editerranean— it m akes no difference), arm ed'w ith your cam era
and sound-recording devices, you could have caught the roaring of the
wind and after long hours of the hurricane you would have seen the water level going back and back till
finally solid ground appeared. But
when your pictures were developed
you would not have seen God.
• * * J God in O u r H istory ^
r would not do us m uch good, in
deed, it would only m ake us jeal
ous or bitter, if we thought that God had a hand in the history of Israel,
but took no interest in the history of other people. M any centuries after
the Exodus, the prophet Am os said that God not only brought the Is
raelites out of E g ^ t , but he also brought the Philistines out of Crete
(Caphtor) and the Syrians out of K ir.
Still later on in the Bible God’s hand Is said to be leading the
great conqueror Oynis of Persia (Isaiah 45:1-4), even though
Cyrus knew nothing o f'it. God was there, but the eye of faith
was not. God Is always there; and someUmes ihc eye of faith
Is there to sec M m . '
In the history of England,tw o of tiie m ost fam ous events arc the defeat of the Spanish A rm ada, and
the retreat from D unkirk. In each case the English people were to all
appearances helpless, ju s t as the Hebrews were helpless at the Red
Sea; in both cases, as at the Exodus, '.‘the w eather cam e to their rescue.
A great w ind swept the Spanish navy to destruction; and a great'
cloud-cover kept the N azi airforce pent in until the B ritish arm y had
escaped from Dimklrk.The weather, say historians. God,, say voices of faith. Are not both
rig h t?’
Side of the Free
God bn the side of the little na
tion? .
N ot always. B ut taking history
as a whole, Christian people
have reason to believe as & e
people of the Bible did: .,Qiat
God hates oppression ,.asd' violence, and his “hand Is agahist’*
nations th at live by such m eans. O n this Arm istice Sunday it Is
w ell to rem em ber that. If our cause Is Just It.-ls^not because
we never lost a w ar.
O ur cause is just if and only if it
is the.qause of hum an freedom . We have no assurance th at God w ill
stand by us otherwise.
(Copyrltlit IM l tT ib« . Division ObfUUnn BdMMUAa, Natl»n»l - Cornell •t tb« Ohur«b«a o( Obrlst In Ch« UnlU< SUtM of Amerlen. nelcnicd *T WHO Vemtnn.)
Afternoon Dress Has
Lqce Yoke, Sleeyes
SOF.T, all-over lace Is used for
■ yoke and sleeves of this lovely
afternoon style for the slightly
larger figure. The scalloped closing
is a nice fem inine detail.
SEWINO CIRCLE FATTERK DEPT. SOI West AdMna SI.. Cbl««(* Enclose 30e in coin tor each pat. tern. Add 9e (or lat class MaU U deaired.Pauern Mo........................... Slt«........
Mni
Sucet Address
(Please Print)
P.O. Box No.
SAFE, EFFECTIVE
2W AYIIEUEF
FROM COWS MISEUK
otro oases____o tightnessoching sorcitess. ____:at«d vapors soothe I
Quick Acting R u b
It’S SO easy to.rella nd stuniness o f --------.h u rry th is hom e-proved way . . . w ith 2 spoonfuls of Vicks VapoRub m a vapor« Izer or in a bowl of boiling w aterasdlrectedlnpackage.
Ju st breathe in thesteam i i Every single breath carries r •'-“ — lb’s soothing medi- deep Into throat and : b ro n c h ial tubes. I t
m edicates irrita te d m em *
branes. helps restore norm al breathing. For coughs or ■ upper bronchial congestion ■ there’s no thing like using Vicks VapoRub in steam.
For continued relief al* ways rub it on throi ‘ chest back.
UNNC rOUR BEST
FEEL YOUR BEST
YOU'LL LIKE THEM TOO
Grandm a’s Sayings
S T R IK B S M E there’s nothin* bettor 'bout the "good old days'* 'coptlu' that we. was younger then, no ptid Um. C. a Rmon. Alhtiobt*, CtlU.*
I H A T B B A GRANDM A In years, but when It comes to cookin' I ’m completely modern. Tesslrl I alius uee Nu-Mald, the modorn yellow margarine. Nu-Mald Is modern In tasto—ao pure and sweet; modern In texture— 60 smooth . spreadln*. Suits me Dae!'.
N O TWO W ATS Twut it. the only, time It’s safe to criticize other; folks' younguns la after our own are grown up. ’ i . , ;tS ptld Mn. 0. T. Uom. IniBw. B. 0.*
o rW H EN I LOOK fer margarine, I ollus look for the. picture of Mias, Nu-MoJd on the paokajgre. And fOlhs \ there's a package that’s reallj^ sumpln’— modern In overy way. Seals in Nu-Mald's “Table^rade** flavor. And that churnod-fresh flai* ver makes a big .difference In-.my cookln and bakln'.
wtUbepalduponpubllcatlon to the first contributor of each accepted saying or ldea...)10U accep-' ted entry 1b accompanied by large picture of Miss Nu-lfcdd from the package. Address "Grandma" lOd Bast Pearl Street, Ciaclnnatl 2, Ohio.
ALWATB rO O R F O B . BWEBT*wfaolesomo Miss Nu-Mald on tbs package when you buy m argarln^ • Miss Nu-Maid Is your asrarfttice of the finest modem margarine in tbe floest modem package. ,
The best you
can buy
Phinto'iodized
yet costs oniy 2^ at^week
for the average family
f::
THE PAVIE BECOHDt MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
Fertilizing Important
In Balanced Farm Plan
lime, Feitilizer Pays
Gif in High Hay Yield
Farm ers in every p art of the
nation are realising more and more
the Importance of well-balanced
f^ lU z In g program s to buUd production’and soil structure.
. B en Vqssen. who form s near
.Watkins, M inn., believes his in i vestments in lim e and fertilizer
. have done m ore for his farm than
anything in his career.
' The results of one of his te-
vestm ents are shown in the above
picture. A t the right is a run
down field of bluegrass overgrown w ith buck grass. A t the left is a
field of oats after the buck grass . w as sprayed to kill it,
and plowed under.
F arm e r Vossen inspects his
field of oats. A t the right is
the field of bluegrass over
grown w ith buck grass. FerU-
lizbig has tum ed the oat field into a high producer.
Vossen lim e d and fertilized the
oat field w ith plant food carryhig
nitrogen, phosphate and potash be
fore he seeded it. He keeps the
f i^ d in oats two years, then seeds
down to an alfalfa crop. H e takes hay and pasture off as long as
the stand is productive. He helps
lengthen Its life by top-dressing regularly w ith manure*.
The use of lim e and fertUlzeit pays off ' in m uch bigger hay
yields. Vossen reports. H e harvested eight tons of hay on tw o acres
th at used to produce about one- h alf ton of tiqiothy.
Total Feed Supply Will
Be Higher Than Last Yeai
W ith the approach of the 1961-52 feeding season, livestock feeders
w ill be htterested to know that A e es^ected total supply of feed grains
and concentrates w ill be greater- than last year, according to the.:
bureau of agricultural economics.
The available supply of feed w ill
p erm it Uvestock to be fed a t about the sam e rate per im it as last
season. The num ber of •anim als to
be fed, however, is also expected to
be greater. A n estimated 174 m illion anim als w ill be on hand as
com pared w ith last year's 168-nUl- Uon.
A large acreage and a fa ir carryover is e je c te d to provide a larg
er com supply. About 4 bU ion ' b ii^ e ls is expected to be available
for the 1951-^2 season..
The total supply of com , oats,
grain sorghums, and barley for the
com ing season is estbnated to be
127.1 miUioh tons. This compares w ith last season’s total of 125 m il
lion tons of grafn^The departm ent reported total production may>be the second
in history in!l951.
Tractor Drawbar
A heavy piece of angle iron bolted to the rear of a tractor
and extendhig weU beyond the i^ e e ls m akes harrow ing easier
fastening the harrow w ith a long chain hitch, espeoiaUy
when m aking turns a t ends of
the field. Bolted 1
*lt can In use.
I to the draw bar rem oved when not
Iowa Tests Show Value
01 lUialfa for Swine
Everyone knows th at alfalfa
ire Is good for hogs. B ut Just good? . The Iow a experim ent
station thought that one w ay to find out w ould be to feed one batch,
of hogs on dry lot; and anotiier on alfalfa; •
They found that the biggest value inia lfa lfa comes ft‘om a saving in
high-cost protein m ineral sup-
zdement. Hogs g ^ e d faster
alfalfa.
V IR CIL
Kaesong Once Center
Of Koreon Power
Kaesong, the site accepted tot
truce talks between U N and R e d 'Jhlnese-Korean leaders. Is In line
te pick up again a long lost h i^ toxte spotlight. ■
Although left behind In m odem
tim es by many faster grow ing aqd
developing Korean cities, Kaesong
was once the ccnter of Korean
power and culture.
The town was m ade the capital of the K ^ryo, or Wang, dynasty in
the early 900's A .D ., and as such w as the focal point for the first
centrallM d control extended over the pcnlr,sula. Kaesong m aintained
its position for nearly 500 years; and ofter Its fall the dynasty nam e
was carried on In the nam e
*‘Koreo.”M eanw hile, toward the end of the weakening Koryo reign, -nu
m erous invasions by Mongols from /th e north had brought about for
eign dom ination of the entire country for the first tim e. W ith the re
tirem ent of the Golden Horde and the rise of ihc new Y l d y n a s^,
the capital, In 1392, was moved to
Seoul.
c a t c h B A B S j
"it's Wonderful the Way
Chewing-Gum laxative
Aefs Chiefly to
REMOVE WASTE
GOOD FOOD
■HJW^Uircrent! "Doctors say that m any oaction too so o n ..*___________where food is bota®.lATse doses of e uth laxatlvco. esUon, flush oway nourlsblns need for health and csetgy.'v w t dIgesUon, flush oway nourlsblnsfood you need for healtr ----------------.y o u feel weak, worn out.'snXH-A-MWT.----------_____worltB ctaleuy to-tho lowerwhere It remorea only wasto. not roodl Te u avoid that typical w '__________avoid t— , ---------worn-out fcellne. tTse feen-a-m in s;
" " ■ r a ' a f i
feen -a -m intfAMOUS CHEWINC-WM UtXWWt
"Hot nashes” Stopped
or strikingly relieved
lin 63 .^0 % *sfcate tInd «lan'M < l> '» If jo g ’re mtajraUi! Irom J- " ‘
you may be suiTcring
" f e f s s a s so63%and80% (re-,
> 8o...Bati*yaiaK .rm BDani's VMetaeie
m m CMUSTREMOVE EXCESSWAS1E
D o iii’s P il l s
PAGE EIGHT
*fiwSS
T B E D A V IE R E C O R D , M O C K S V IL L E N , C .. K O V E H B B R t , t«51
Walkinf Praserlbed Way
T* Kmp thi Ankles Slim
. IPuffy ankles may nol be the
■Iftla cause of blasted Sum m er ro- .■itAcei, but they ccrtainly arc no
M lp w hen you’re trj'ing to look tn d feel your best on the beach
• «r in that new sum m er ensemble
I t you ankles and feet have a tendency to swell with the onset
•(w arm weather, there’s good nc^vs you in the rcccnt findings of
'ft group of foot specialists.
H ia doctors advise you to do 1m8 ftandlng and more walking. AU
ttieufh this may sound paradoxical
th«y explain that standing on your
feet for any length of tim e causes fh« foot and leg muscles to com |raet and impede the norm al cir> •ulation of your blood.
Walking Is the perfect antidote
tor this condition. Foot muscles and ligaments are alternately contract* -
•d and relaxed as you walk— and yaur hard-working feet are mom entarily relieved of weight-bearing
after each step. W earing leather- aoled shoes w ill assure flexible support for the thousands of different
positions that your foot assumes
during your health and beauty
■troll.
Ta get full benefit from walking,
a t a m atter of fact, your feet must be shod properly, the experts warn.
Y ou should w ear shoes that really fit the contours of your feet and that are roomy enough to allow full toe action. Heels should be no
higher than an Inch and a half, and In order to balance foot struc
ture on an even plane m ake sure that your shoes arc equipped with
genuine leather soles.
Aside from wearing the proper footgear, the doctors advise that
you follow these simple rules, which w ill nol only help to prevent
puffy ankles, but also w ill keep your feet and general l>ody tone
up to par: Take regular w alkins exercises, particularly if your work
keeps you standing or sitting ir. one position all day. W hen resting
at hom e, elevate your feet and legs so as to relieve the congestion in
your lower extremities.
So, if you w ant to m ake certain that those slim ankles of which you're so proud w iil slay slim , hi!
the road, sister.
Poor Prlvah Wilbur Haiti
ButI* Call In Ihi Mornlni
' L et it be known that W ilbur just
hates to got up in the m orning and
if the Arm y buglers operate on
D aylight Saving Time, he m ay not
be able to stand it all.
His worried mother conveycd that
inform ation lo Gen. Lewis B. Her-
shey, D raft Director.She said that W ilbur, not other
wise identified, was about lo be drafted and she feared Utat he
would not faro so well with Arm y
'living.
**He never could stand to gel up
early in the mornings, and I no
they m ay them get up awfully early
in the A rm y ," she wrote. "A nd It
w ill be even a hour earlier if they
have daylite savin. So pleese Gen
eral Hershey dont let them hav daylite savin because I don't thin!
W ilbur coold stand getting up so
early in the m ornins aiid wonUlni do Justis to being a solder."
World's Oldest an^Biggest Tree Said In South Mexico
W ASHINGTON—The oldest, biggest tree in the world is said to be
the Tule cypress of Santa M aria de>
Tule, * six m iles from Oaxaca in
southern Mexico. It is a Taxodlum
m ucronatum , tiie same cypress m
the ones in Chapullepec Park in
Mexico City.
Thousands of years old, it is still
green and vigorous, and has a
roundncss suggestive of the oak
rather than the usual slim cypress.
" E l Tule,” as it is called, is so
massive that 28 people, touching fingertips and outstretched ar
barely can encircle it.
No M ore m is tle Stops!‘•It’s obvious lhat I ’m growing
old,” sighed the lady. "The conductor never helps m e onto the bus
any m ore.”
Uncle Sam Says
Saving Bones
A new method of bone preservation, which perm its bone to bo
stored in sterile containers at room temperature has been an
nounced. Tliis procedure is accomplished by freezing bone, which
stops the growth of organisms, nnd then drying it in a vacuum . The
method was ex'ilained by Capt. F . P. Kreuz, of the U. S. Na\Tr
M edical Corps, Bcthesda. M aryland. This new method, the doctor
explained, is another development
I in the establishment of bone banks. , Since the last war, bone banks have
been set* up in m any hospitals
throughout the country. The object
of a bone bank is lo have availahlu a supply of hur.'^an bone that m ight
be needed' in an emergency for grafting. The bone usually comes
from hum an, living patients. If a patient is scheduled to have a leg
I am putation, he is a^krd to donate the bone to the bank so that another
patient m ay benefit by it sometime
in the future.Preparalion of the bone for stor*
age is done immediate]:* after am
putation under sterile conditions.
The- common practice is to store
various lengths of bone in a deep
freeze cabinet on the surgical floor
of a hospital, close to tho operating
room.
ReprescauUvc clUus lo tlie United States have taken tbe initiative In dem- ;m str»ttn ; Co the nation what they ean . d* to help Is ihe national emergency, la eensequence these cUics are now tb<* proud possessors of a brand new U. S
Defense Bond Flacr. They foand tha( selling U, S. Defense Bonds is the onr
thhur everyone can do. They indiiccit mere than 80 per cent of the communl
ty*i employers V to install the Payroi* Savings Flan. Here’s a Joh everyone can tuidertake. u. s. TfMiy o»po/imM
Light Metals
There are m any m etals lighter than alum inum . The lightest is
lithium , about five lim es lighter than alum inum . However, like so
dium , potassium and calcium , which are also lighter than alum inum , it
is so active chem ically that It can
not be left exposed to the air. Of
metals that can be so exposed,
beryllium and m agnesium are both lighter than alum inum . The weight
of a particular volume of alum inum , compared with the weight of
the same volume of water, is 2.70'
and this is called its specific
gravity. The specific gravity ol beryllium is 1.85, while that of
m agnesium is 1.74. For lithium il is 0.53; that is, lithium weighs abou*
half as m uch as the sam e volume oi water.
IN S U P E R IO R C O U R T
N orth Carolina— Davie County
N O T IC E O F SALE O F L A N D
In the M atter of A . L , Bowles,
Guardian of CornelU Bowtes,
non compos.
Under and by virtue of an order made
in the above entitled cause by S. H .
Chaflin, Clerk of Superior Courc, and
approved by his Honor, J. A . Rousseau,
Judge of the 1 7 (h ju d id a l District, the
undersigned Commissioner w ill offer
for sael at public auction at the Court
house door of Davie County in Mocks*
ville, N . C » on Saturday, the 17th day
o f November, 1951, ac 12 o'clock M .,
the following described lands located
in MocksWlle Township on the road
leading from Highw ay N o. 64 to the
County Home road, and more particu
larly described as follows:
1st Tract— Bounded* on the N orth
by the lands of N . B. Dyson, on the
East by E. C . Kooncz, and on the
South .by J. C. Bowles hdrs, and on the
^ e s t by Center public road. Bcj;innlng
at a stake Northwest corner on \(^cst
side of public road and runs S. 87 degs.
E. 19.?0 chs. w ith J. C . Bowles heirs'
line to a stone, said Bowles hdrs* cor>
nerj thence N . J degs. E. 12.10 chs.
to a stone N . B. Dyson’s corner; thcnce
S. 88 degs. E. 25.08 chains w ith said
Dyson line to a stone, E. C Kooncs's
corner; thence S. 10 degs. W . 10 chs.
with Koontz’s line to a stone Koont7.*s
corner; thence S. 23 degs. W . <>.45 chs. to a staJte, Koontz’s corner; thcftce S.
50 degs. W . 5 chs. to a stone, J. C.
Bowles heirs’ corner; thence N . 89
degs. W . 20 chs. to a stone corncr of
Pool lot, J. C. Bowles heirs’ corncr;
thence N . 3 degs. E. 4.95 chs. to a
stone and Poplar, J. C . Bowles heirs’
corner; thence N . 89 degs. 10.90
chs. to a stake on East side o^ public
road; thence N . 4 degs. W . 4.90 chs.
to the beginning corner, and contain
ing 56 Acres as surveyed by A . L.
Bowles September £th, 1951.
2nd Tract— Bounded on the East by
Center Church Public Road, on the
N orth by Virginia Bowles, on West
by Bill Green, and on the South by J.
C. Bowles heirs’ land; Beginning at
an iron stake, Northeast corncr in Vlr«
ginia Bowles’ line and runs N . 87 degs.
5 chs. with said Virginia. Bowles’ liffc
to an iron stake; thence S. 42 degs. w .
5.75 chs. ro an Iron stake, Virginia
Bowles’ corner; thence S. 6 degs. W . i.16 chs. to an Iron stake, said V ir
ginia Bowles’ corner; thcnce S. 74 degs.
V . 10.10 chs. to a stone. Bill Green's
corner; thence S. 4 degs. W . 4.60 chs.
to a stone, J. C . Bowles heirs' corncr:
thcnce S. 89 degs. E. 11.90 chs. with
said J. C Bowles heirs* corner; thence
N . 3 degs. E. 5 chs. to a stone, Bowles
heirs* corner; thence S. 89 degs. E.
6.30 chs. w ith said Bowles heirs’ line to
it stone on W est side of public road:
thcnce N . 4 degs. W . 8 chs. w ith said
nubile road to a point in curve; thencc
N . 10 degs. W . 3.65 ch.<. w ith said pub-
He road to the beginning corncr, and
containing 15 and 35/100 Acrcs as
surveyed by A. L.> Bowles, September
6th. 1951.
Terms of Sale: One Hundred D ol
lars ca.<h and the balance on thirty
days time w ith bond and approved se
curity, or all cash at the option of the
purchaser.
This 16th day of October, 1951.
A . T . G R A N T ,
Commissioner
Walker' Funeral Home
A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E
D A Y O R N IG H T
Pho'^e 48
IMockiville, N C
FAR M
M AC BIITER 7
New Mowers, Rakes, Drills, Disc and Section Harrow*,
Manure Spreaders, Self-Propelled Corn Pickers.
We Have Sonae Good Used Farm Machinery
Big Line .Of New Parts In Stock
Don’t Purchase Your Farm Marchinery Until You
Look Over Our Stock
HENDRIX & WARD
N E A R C O R N A T Z E R
Massey Harris Farm Impl'ments
J. FR:ANK H E N D R IX M IS S C O L E E N FO ST ER O W E N W A R D
CITY CAFE
T H E H O M E O F G O O D EA T S
N O B E E R
D epot Street M ocksville»N .C.'
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
W e C an Supply ^ o u r Needs
IN G O O D C O A L ,
S A N D and B R IC K
C all or Phone U s A t A ny Time
P H O N E 194
Form edv Davie Brick & C oal Co
SILER
Funeral Home
AND
Flower Shop
Phone 113 S. Main St
Mockoville. N. C.
Ambulance Service
Boger & Howard
P U R E S E R V IC E
Tir^s Batteries A n d Accessories
Kurfees Paints
Corner N . M ain & G ait1ier Sts
Phone 80
Notice to Creditors
HnvUift qimliflAd a« Adin1ni«<rator of
Ihe nf Mnmie P. LUln. decensed*
iiotire is her«>hy glvfin lo nil personnhnid
ins elHlma n ainst said entaie to present
Ihe same, properly verified, lo the under
sisned on or befnre the I3ih day nf 0>:tn.
h*-r. 1952. or<tbls notice will he plead in
imr of thi'ir r< cnv«rv. AH p*'rs<.ns ii>d«*ht
ed (oiiHid • Miitc will cull iipon th*-«iiidersl(tned at Advnnitt*, Ruu:e 2, N. G and make prompt xKtiemeiit.This 13th day o/ Ocrober. !9.'>lW. J. KLLIS. Adnir. ol Mamie P. Ellin, decaV.
By A. T. GRANT. AiMimev.
Notice to Creditors
Having qualifie>l an Admini«iratnr nt
ihx estate of George E. Peebles, deceared.
notice U berehy given to all persons hutd
ine claims BgHinM theeiKPteuf said d
ceased, to present the aam« tn the iniiltr
vt'rifiecl. 0(1 iir pnfom tt>«
3iiib day,of Octobpr, 1052 nr this iintitK
will be plead in bar nf ih«ir tfciiv»ry. Al
oereon* Indebted to the eaid «>tu(«*, will
pleaea call upon the undersigned al Ciio-
leemee, N. C . and inakt prompt oetile*
m^ut. This tbe 30th d^y ef October, 1951
LONNIE M. PEEBLCS. Admr. of
George E. Peehlt^e. deck'd
Notice of Sale
U nder and by. virtue o f an order
of tbe Superior Court of Davie
C outitv made in the Special Pro
ceedin^ entitled: Dent (E . D.)
Ija n e s , H xecotor o f J . S . Parker,
deceased, ys M ilto n P arker, al.,
the noderslKned Com m issiooer w ill
on the I7tb d ay o f N ovem her. 1951
at tw elve o'clock, m , at tbe couit
house door in M ocktiville, Davie
C otinty. N o rth C art iina, offer for
sale 10 the hlKhest bidder (or cash
that certain tract of land ly in e and b<ing in C alabalii T ow oHbip. Da
vie C o u a tv , N C ., adjoioluf; tbe
lands of S. H . C baffio and others
and bounded as follow s, to w it:
BeginnioK at an iron stake, runs
S . 85 dei^s. .E . to a stone; tbe
South 37 East 6 00 ebs to an i
5t'bke Id road; ibcnce S. 84 East
?8.po chs to an Iron stake; tbeoce
N . 16 E<iHt 6..13 cbs, to a stone and
sw eetgum ; tbence N o rth W .
>6.63 ch«. 10 an iron stake; thence
N *ith\86 W est 33.05 chs, to a
• tone Qi root o f srcam dre -tree;
• hriice S o uth 41 W est 6.56 chs., to
lion h^akr; th«nue S o iitb 33 W ,
00 chs. to a 8tone;'tbeDce South
?0 E M g o .links to an iron stake;
tbeoce S o u th 10 WeM 3 oo chs to
au Iron stake; tbvnce S o uth 4.18
chs.'to tbp * egtnnin g, cnntalninK
eigbtv (8b) acfM , more or less.
T rrm s ot Sale; $50i>.00 cash and
thf'on thtnv days tim e
w '*h bond 'itd app'oved security,
or hII i;H5h at the dpti> n nf the puti^
r ha><er, iinon rooB rm at'on of . the
8 e. T his 15th dav^ o f October,
I0 5 I. A . T 6 RANT
ComtQls-iooer.
A TTEN TIO N FA RM ER S!
POULTRY LOADINC
W e W ill Buy Y our Poultry Every Thuriday M orning From • 8 A. M., To II A* M.
In Front:Of E. P. Fcter* Cotton Gin
HIGHEST Ma r k et pric es paid
W IL L P A Y M A RK ET -PRIC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H EN S
SAUSBURY POULTRY CO.
Saliabnry. N. C
The
Davie Record
Has Been Published Since 1899
52 Years ,
Other* hay^ come and gone-your
county newipaper keep, going.
. Sometimes it ha. .eemed hard lo
make "buckle and tongue" meet but
•oon the sun (hinei and again we
march on. Our faithful .ubKribert;
most of whom pay promptly, give u*
courage and abiding faith in our
fellow man.
' If your neighbor is not taking The
Record tell him to subscribe. The
price is only SI.SO per year "in the
State, and $2.00 in other states.
When You Come To Town .
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Headquarters.
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TH E DAVIE RECORD.
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♦ F O R RENT ♦
S P A C E I N T H jS P A P E R
: W i l l A r r a n s e T o S tilt
GOOD NEIGHBORS-Klds TO
i FIT ydUR^INESS
T h e D a v i e R e c o r d
■ D A V IB C O U N T Y 'S O I .D i: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 I .E R E A D
«HERE SHALL THE PP^SS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNA WED BY INPLUENCE AND ONBRIBCD BY GAm.**
VOLUMN LII*MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 14. iQSi.NUMBER j6
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
What W at Happenlnc In Da*
vie Betorai’P uktiit Malflr*^
And Abbreviated 'Skirtp.
(Divle Record. Nov. 15. 1933)
’ 'Cfasrlie Alien, ot Roule *. wM
in WInslon Salem Fr'diy.
C. T. W. Smith, of Woodleaf.
m n In town Satnrilar on limlnets G. L. White,' of Wln«ton.Salem,
spent Sttnrdsy In town sh.klnit
buds wtib old Iriends.
HI« Ssrafa Grant entered Bur.
ms Uemorlal.Hospital, HItb Point
last weeki where she will undergo
treatibeDt. 'Roliett Hall and Hack Camp
_ belt, students at N. C. State Cot.' leite, Raleigh, spent the week.end
In town with home folks.
Ur. and Mrs. Knox Johnitone
•nnounce tbe arArai of a son al
tbeir home In North Maeka.ilie on
Wedneiday, Not. 8th.
' lohn and BImer Dnnn, of Ad.
vaoce. Route t, are spending some
time at Mumfordyllie, Kv.. with their uncle. S. H. punn.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crotta and
tittle son, ot GrMuVllte, S. C.,
.pent tbe week.end lii town with
Ibeir Mrents,' Hr. snd Mrs. W. M.
Crotts. .Hr. srid Mn, C., R. Hom are
the prouii parents 'of a fine son.
Claude, Jr., . who arrived at their
home on Wllkesbofo street Friday
mo^ng. . 'I. W. Duud, ol near Hock’s
Ch.uteh, Is getting ready to move
<0 the Boyles farm near BIxby
which bad be« oceuided by tbe
late W. C. B6ser for the past two
ynn, 'Urs. Boee’r and family will
move Into the ; Dr. M. D. Kin - briniKb bou'ae at Smith Grove.
tleyl O B. Perreels at Thomas ,»lhe this week attending the Me.
tbodist l^otestaut Conference. Hr
Perm bn been pastor of the M.
P. l^iircbesia Dayie county for
tbf fovr f**” -. The :Coufe-.
enee.^11 coDtinue In session nnlil
Monday. '■Rev, R. C. Goforth and Rev. J.
O. Banka-went to Charlotte today to attend the Western Ndrtb Caro-
litis Mrtlodlst Conference, which
■ ^wtn remaita In session ibronKb next
^ Monday. Mr. Goforth bas con-.
' pieted bis fourth year as pastor of
the Moeksvilie Metb^isl church.
- ' l>a^e Couiity Commlmioners inaesslon last week decided that tbey
could liot.epipioy a farm' demon
atratlon agent at this time. Tbe
anniiai budget was made out tb.
pist summer, and no spDroprlatlon was made to take care of this ad*
ditional expense.Mr. and Mrs.<W. A.' Beach an-
ooutm the martiage of tbeir dan- gbtef Margaret Viola, to Mr. Den
nis A. Whitley, on Wedneaday,
' Nov. », 1933. Raleigh. At borne,
kamlet; N. C. Mr Whitley is the ' son of tbe late I B. Wbitiey, for
many year, a-resident of tbia city.
Mr. Wbitiey waa a member of the Record force for a number of yearn
'and bas many; friends here who
will be Interested In this announce
ment, '
The gold medal offered by Prof.
Hodises to the hov or girl- In the
public schools of. Davie county,
to the members of the, Sunday • Mboois of the i»nnty, adjudged, to
have made the best lemperanc.
apeecb at the varloM mass m«t , Inga held by the. United Dry Forc
es, was won .by Miss Faitb Dead mon, member of the Cmcord M
B Sunday acbooi, and a da^ghte
of Mr. and Mrs. H. M.' Desdraon.
/ DemocraU >i>d Repubiicana lo
bayie county marched to tbe path iaat Tnesdny and by tbelt votu
told! the world how they atood on
the wet and dry i»ue : The diy
forc^ figiir^ ou a. majority of «oo,
but when the votes , were counted
tbey but a majority of 2,6000.
Fountain Of Truth
Rm. Waltm E. iMshmir. TaWoimlll..N. a
Heavenly sweetness In tbe heart makes life much sweeter than sugar
In tbe stomscb.^ It bas always taken God to keep
men straight and always will. Men
apart from God can't help but go
wrong.The love of money puts multi
tudes of people in tbe wrong bMsi-
nets, aud ancb business sends mul
titudes to hell.
The wsy to success in life is never strewn with 6owers. Usual
it is strewn with thorns and
thistles, stones and stumbling-
blocksHe who.guards bis tongue, and
controls bia temper may have more real manhood and berolam about
bim than tbe general who masters
and controls bis temper may have more real manhood and berolsm n.
bout him than the general wbo
master and controls an army.
Tbe man wbo looks up and sees
gosl in life be wants to reach
must take the right road tbat leads
to It.
There la only one person In the
world tbat can defeat you In life
and you are that person.
Dou’t try to measure a man’s
success in life by dollars and cents,
but measure It by godliness and
saintliness.Those-who make a staltway ol
riches make it downward instead of
upward. Don’t envy them.
If tbe chief aim of .your life Is to
achieve eartblv honor, fame and
glory yon will stop far short of tbe
glory of heaven.Tbe liauor addict, dope fiend and
tobacco slave are bound with chains
tbat the'foundry can’t melt, the
blacksmith can’t cut, dynaiiiite
can't break, nor tbe snttalene torch can't unfasten. Only God can set
tbe captive free.Young mao. young^glrl, don’t
tbink it Is smart 10 form bad habits
aud go with tbe devil because
others are doibg this.
Beware of the glitter anid gleam
tbe world flashes before your eves
in order to get your money lest tbe
devil gets your soul.
The devil makes lb« road lo bell
attractive, but- all the attractions
will he gone when you get tbere.
Your conscience will be clearer it
yon give a pound to roucb rather
than an ounce too little.The man wbo oppose the Gospel
and tries to put down tbe truth of God reminds me of a little dwarf
who goes up to a mighty giant oak
of tbe forest and says, •‘I'll push
you oyer.”I bad ratber be In tbe valley of
humility sbouting ballelujab iban
on tbe devil’s'hilltop of pride wllh
God’s sentence banging 'over
bead, wbuli says. Pride goeth be
fore destriiciion.”
I’d ratber.,lean on .God’s truth
than on the devil’s errori
Better call at tbb dffiee
now and'gat your land poi.
lert b«(ora the (apply w ex-
hauited. Printeil on heavy
card hoai^. SOc. per dozen.
left.A few poitto*
T h« «v*r«s« conception of smoke bom ba used by the A n n y ia that
thejr; produce » blUowinf, white
•creen for advancing troopi. Smoke bombs, however, also w e. in bright
color* of red, green., tbltie'and yeU low . These are tised fbr ground«to-
a ir and ground*to*grotmd,tignaIlng w ith the^miessage for various coloi(8
differing teoin day to day; One day, a. green smoke m ight mean'**Have
spotted' a troop' concentration-lay 00 a-barrage/^ another day It nilght
be 'the> irignal to begin an attack. The colors are used In'varlous com.
binatlons to give a wide variety of
messagei.' H ie sinoke bombs are in
the form of hand grenades and artiUerr sheUp.
IT ALL ADDS UP
A w om an we know who could
kever keep her checkbook straight
las solved her problem very neat>
]y. It's an unorthodox m ethod, but
one that's enabled her to set u p a Christmas-shopping fund as w d L A ll she does la keep her chedc*
book'W ithout any cents. I f a bill Is for $7.20, she m akes out a check
tor that am ount, but In recording
t and subtractbig the am ount from her balance, she calls it $B. If the
am ount is for she enters
$11. A t the end of a m onth, alter
m aking out coutless household
and personal checks, she has a bal'
ance of about $20 that she thinks
she spent but dIdnH. And at the end the year, there it Is—her
Christm as fund.
' Now» Doetor
- Doctor—You've got acute appen*
dicltis.
Glamorous Patient—1 cam e in to
ba examined—not adm ired.
Amen
**8orry, old m an, that m y hen got loose, and scratched up your garden,” ^
“That's .all right, m y dog ate your hen.*'
"F ine! I just ran over your dog
and killed h im ."
IN CH ES T A LL E R
'B ut,‘m y dear,*' blurted the poor little hen-pecked husband, “ you’ve
been talking for half an hour, and
I haven't said a w ord."
"N o ," snapped his wife, "you haven’t said anything, but you’vr
boon listening In a most aggravate
.ing m anner, and I'm not going to stand for it."
Second-Story M an
"M am m a, w hat’s a second-story m an?”
"Your father is one, dear. If I don’t believe his first story he al
ways has another one
FainiQy Mystery Neighbor: '*Son, your father
comes home every evening and bathes and shaves and eats supper
and then leaves home, w hat does he do?”
Little Boy: "T hat's w hat m am a wants to feow .”
IN C ON V EN IEN C ED
The cam p counsellor was explain*
ing the rules of a new game.■ " If the enemy calls your num*
.ber from his side of the battlefield." she ‘said, "you m ust be a Mead
man*' im m ediately. Drop just where you are and lie still."
Ten m inutes later, came an agonized whisper from the youngest
cam per:
"Please m ay I move now? I ’m a
dead m an, but I ’m on an ant-hllU"
W hy, look here," said the busi*
M SS m a n who was in need of a
1 ^ , "arenH you Ihe sam e boy who
w as in hera a week ago?"
"Y es, sir,” said the applicant.
**I thought so.. And didn’t 1 tell
you then that I w anted an older boy?"
"Y es, sir. That’s why I'm back. T m older now ."
Brevity .
The doctor's new secretary, a conscientious girl, was puzzled by
an entry in' the doctor’s notes on an raiergency case: "Shot in the lu m
b ar region,” it read. After a m o
m ent she brightened and, in the in
terest of clarity, typed into the recard: "Shot in tbe woods.".
Absolutely Right
H ie preacher cam e along and wrote on a fence: '*I pray for^’all."The law yer wrote underneath: "1 plead for all."
The doctor added: " I prescribe §ot a ll." .
The plain citizen wrote: "*I pay ia r a lL "
HAPPY TO HELP
TICKETS
T H E R E 'S A LAW First Slapstlcker — «V y der
vay, didt yon knowed dot Id Iss
now der fashion to dress ae-
corting to der color of der hair?"
Second Slapsticker — "1 am
amazementt'*First Slapsticker—"Sure Iss Id!
A m a n ,Tleh has brown hairs shbnldt ought to vear a bown
suit. Synonymous. *a .m an vicb has gray hairs sbonldt ouj^ht a
gray salt t* vear.”Second Slapsticker-"Say, tell
me» bow shouldt id a baldt- headted m an dress?"
Share the Wealth Lucy; '^Nobody w ill ever care for
m e.”
Sergeant: "D on't say that, Lucy.
After all, in this world there's m an for every w om an. It’s a won
derful arrangem ent.”Lucy: ""Believe m e, I^ don't w ant
to change it. I just w ant to get in on it.”
- XRound-A-Bout
He m et her a t Friendship, M issouri, followed her to Love, Vir
ginia, and asked her to nam e the day a t Ring, Arkansas. "They were
m arried a t Church, Iow a, and settled down at H om e, Oregon, but
the tw ins were bom- at Boise, Idaho.
Our County And
Social Security
B v W .K . W hite. Manaecr.
In the carlv years o f the social
security program, some people in
terpreted (he law as just another
tax scheme and wondered how
actual payntents o f benefits could
be made. Over the years since
then, most people have learned of
neighbors, friends or relatives w ho
arc receiving benefits reffularly and
in substantial amounts. B ut there
is tin old saving that *'Proof o f the
pudding Is in the eating.** Let us
tel! vou about an actual case in
w hich a husband and wife have
been receiving checks every m onth
since Tanuary, 1950.
Lct*s call this couple M r. and
Mrs. Jones. T hat isn't their real
name, but social security records
are kept strictly confidential by
law. M r. Jones retired in Dccem'
ber, 1939. H e filed hts applica
tion for benefits late in 1939, and
Mrs. Jones filed her application in
January, 1940. H e was then al
m ost 66 years old, and she was al
most 69. From January, 1940,
through August, 1950. he received
a m onthly check of $33.02, and
she received $16.51. Altogether
in that period his checks totaled
$4,226.56, and hers totaled $2,-
113.28. As o f September, 1950,
the benefits were raised to $57.30
and $28.70 a m onth; under the
amended law. From September
1950 thro jgh September 1951,
have received another $1,118.00.
Altogether, thev have received $7,-
335 in total benefits. That*s a lot
o f money—b ut w hat did It mean
to the Jonses?
W h at do the, fonses think of
social security having been in be*
nefit status since January, 1940?
Here is what thev told the mana
ger o f the social security oflice.
For over 11 years they have le-
cetved their checks regularly on
the third o f each m onth. The
benefits, plus a modest company
pension, have made it unnecessary
to ask for welfare relief. Thev
ow n their ow n home, and their
health has been reasonably good.
They have been able lo get along
w ithout help from the children,
or w ithout going'into debt. The
benefits have helped to retain
their diEnit^’- know ing that social
security was reHrement insurance
sometbing/Bought and paid for
w ith their ow n money. “It has
been a w onderful thing,” M r.
Jones stated. “1 don’t know w hat
we would have done w ithout it.
W e haven't lived in luxury, but
we have lived comfortably.**
A representative o f this office
w ill be in Moeksvilie again on
N ov. 14th, at the court house,
second floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and
on the same date in Cooleemee,
at the old Band H all, over Led-
f o ^ ’s Store, at I I a. m.
Seen Along Main Street
By The Street Rntnlil«'r.
000000
SherilF Tucker looking around
the square checking up on what
was happening on M ain street—
Mrs. Eugene Seats taking tim e off
to do some afternoon shopping*-
Prospective bride looking at pretty
diam onds in iewelrv store win-
dow ^Som ebody spreading the re*
port that W ilbu rn Stonestreet had
shot and killed a deer-M iss M in
nie Tharpe and friend lunching in
Davie Cafe— Mrs. Lee Lverly hur
rying dow n M ain street— Miss
Alice Hayes carrving books across
the square—Mrs. Carl Richie d o
ing some Christmas shopping— .
Mrs. Oscar Keller and Mrs. Ed
Lagle shopping around in nickel
and dim e store-Sam m y Powell
on way to see Lum and A bnet—
Miss D con Lowery attending big
Saiifor^l sale-M rs. H . R . Johnson
looking for little red wagon— M rs,
Sherrill Godbey on wav to' dental
parlor Aged citisen being “set
up’* to coca*cola milkshake at
Hall D rue Store—Miss Jeanette
Sm oot selling drv goods and n o
tions in department store—Solo
m on Cook standing in front of
temple o f justice all dressed u p —
New bride hurrylnq dow n M ain
street wearing a big sm ile that
wouldn*t comc off Sue and Car
rol Forrest doing some pre-Christ'
mas shopping— Granville McCal-
loh standing on street corner on
cold, w indy afternoon—M rs. G ,
N . W ard and daughter-Miss M ary
Nell, doing some Saiturday after
noon shoppingi-Pink Ratledge,
o f W oodleah looking after some
business matters— W illard Con-
chin receiving congratularions—
Jim Bowles busy counting hen
fruit -Mr. and Mrs. Clay A llen
trying to locate voting place— Miss
Billv Sue Brown looking over n o
velties in’ H otel Novelty Shop—
Miss Geneva Bailey parting w ith
steel engraving o f Alexander H am
ilton— W illie Burton carrying two
gallons o f anti-freeze up M ain
street— Miss Betty L ou M artin
drinking large coca-cola In drug
store— Mrs. D . G . Shore buying
winter shoes on chilly afternoon
in dry goods store— M rs, J. H-
M arkham doing some afternoon
w indow shopping— Nancy Chesh
ire and Geraline Vick looking at
photos in studio w indow — Miss
Bernice Powell purchasing Blum 's
A lm anac- H ubert Lashm it talk
ing a liitle politics in front o t bar
ber shop w hile W ill M arkland
was working at furniture plant—
Harvey Blackwelder and ' Leslie
Daniel discussing com ing events
- Miss M ary H eitm an m otoring
across the square.
N E V E R D E SP A IR
""John D ear," said M abel, as her
lord and master entered the house,
**I've just had a letter from mother,
and she Is coming to visit us. It Is
a pretty nslve trip for littleexpeni
M uddy, and I wondered If we
couldn't help her out a little ."- '!0f oouhie we can,"’ said John, giving his wife a generous kiss.
"Ju s t you write and tell her that
I'll be only too glad to pay for her railroad ticket back hom e again as
■oon as she decides to go.-'
He Skunked ’Em
E zra Parsons, a M aine merchant, whose disposition was ruined per
m anently by the income tax and the N ew Deal, closed down his
plant for good and reinvested his funds in a skunk farm . "N ow ," he
reported w ith some satisfaction, *"^at danged government m ay keep
its nose out of m y business."
nonte isariy i
Officer (to m an pacing the sidewalk a t 2 o'clock in the m orning):
"W hat are you doing here?’ ^
M an: "'I forgot m y key, officer,
and I'm w aiting for. my^children to come hom e and let m e In.”
F IN IS H T HE JO B The tyro fisherm an, in the ex-
eltenient of his flrst cateh, kept on reeling the poor little flsh un
til his iaw s were pressing against the rod.
"A U you got to do now, neighbor," exelaim ed an old-timer. Vlt U elim b the polo and eboke him 16 death.** ,
The aipbulance was called to the
scene of an accident, and a young doctor, doing his first stint a t this type of aid, got out eagorly to help
those injured. KIs face fell when It was found that no one was in
need of m edical care. The am bu
lance driver, noticing his disap
pointment, . rem arked cheerfully,
"Never m ind. Doc, there's bound
to be another call. Why, we m ight even run into something on the
w ay back.'.' r
Had Brick in His'
Stomach 10 Years!
A man said for 10 yeara he fell
like ho had it brick In Ms stomach,
due to uiidlBostcd tood he always
had Inalde ot him. He waa weak,
wora-oul, headnchy and awollou with gRB.Recently ho got OEKTA.VIN and naya tho Icoling like a hrlek dlaaii- neared tho second day. This new
medicine la helping many Mocka- vllle BUtterers. It makes your load
digest taster and better. Taken before meals. It works w ith your food. Oaa pains go! Inches o t bloaUvanish I Oontillns herbs and Vitam in B-I Mith Iron to enrich the blood and makes nerves stroiiser. W eak, miserable people soon teel dllterent all over. So don't go on suCterlng. Got CBHTA-vm— W llklna Drug Store.
O p p o i t u n i t j ^ ^
K n o c k s
KEADihitAas a .
THE PAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
SC A N N IN G THE WEEK'S N EW S
of Main Street and the World
Congress Goes Home After Passing
$5.6 Billion Tax-lncrease Measure
CONGRESS— M em bers Of the firs.t session of^ the 82nd congress 'have deserted W ashington and w ill, belween now and January 8 when
|the second session convenes, try to convincc the people of the home |towns o£ their great ochievements. The fact rem oins, however, th at tlie
record is not too good and the prospects for the sccond session, because
It w ill m eet during a presidential election year, arc even worse.
The congress spent week in the M acArthur hearings, the Kefauver
crim e inquiry, probes into subversive activities and corruption In government. M ost of the im portant legislation enacted dealt with foreign
aflalrs w liile the domestic fleld was nearly forgotten. There w as no
civil rights progress; no marked advance In the Hoover plan for govern*
m ent reorganization, excepting reform of the R .P .C .; civil defense
rem ained a stepchild; needed amendments to the Defense Production
A ct were neglected; statehood for Alaska and H aw aii rem ain undecided.
The congress set another m ark, the longest unbroken session of any
^peacetime congress since 1013-14, with the senate in session 172 days
and the house 163. Tbo senate oratory flUed 7,927 pages of the congres* slonal record and the house 6,003 pages. A nd during the session 160
public law s and 338 privote laws wore enacted.
In the dying hours of the session tlte house and senate enacted three
bills authorizing the spending of $13,000,000, all aim ed ot etreniing the security of the U.S. at liome and abroad. It. swelled t o _________ .
.000 the appropriations passed during the year, of which $80,OGO,000,000 I w as for defense purposes.
T A X E ^ P re s id e n t T rum an signed the $5,691,000,000 tax-increase b ill, one of the last measures passed in the flrst session of the 82nd
congress, and on November 1 the average hom e towners w ill begin to pay it. Besides increases ranging from 11 to 12 per cent fi^r'm ost
taxpayers, excise taxes go up on a long list of item s Including liquor,' gasoline, and household appliances. Bigger Income and excess*pro(its
taxes arc in store for some industries.
: The President, however, was very definite in his opinion of the
.increase measure. To begin with, he felt it wos not enough Uie had asked
ifor $10,000,000,000 and indicated he would ask congress in January to
'im prove the tax law . He criticized it as containing too m any loopholes iand in some respects providing additional m eans by which wealthy
•individuals can escape paying their proper share.
He also criticized the Jenner rider perm itting states to publicize
|relief rolls w ithout losing their share of federal social security allot*
iments. This, he said, is quite unrelated to the purpose of raising revenue
|and “m ay well residt in unwarranted publicife'^ and personal Indignity and unhappiness for aged people and others receiving public assistance.*'
THE POWDER KEG— Tlie M iddle E ast hes become the powder keg w hich m ay blow the world into W orld W ar III. Since ordering the
B ritish out of the Suez canal zone and the Sudan, arm ed clashes havo occurred between forces of the two countries. Egypt has ordered general
m obilization of m an power in w artim e fashion and the British have •reinforced their canal forces w ith troops, planes and warships.
TJie Egyptian crisis is a m anifestation of the growing fever of
nationalism in the Mo'slem states which started w hen Iran nationalized
its oil Industry and kicked the British out..B ut unlike the Iranian question, the Suez and Its safety is of vital importance to the free world. On th(t
surface Egypt would seem too w eak to throw the British out, but thfe
west fears a scries of incidents that could set the entire M iddle Easf aflame.
Should the crisis reach to point of op e n. w arfare between the two
countries the Com m unists can be expected to step in and World W ar IH could start a t any mom ent.
VATICAN ENVOY— President T rum an nom inated Gen. M arl; W . Clark, chief of the Arm y Field Forces, to be the first United State^t
am bassador to V atican City. Am erican diplom atic relations w ith th& V atican, which Jiad been terminated by act of congress in 1807, were
resum ed twelve years ago by President Franklin D . Roosevelt.
Since early 1950, however, there has been no diplom atic relationship
w ith the V atican and President T rum an’s nomination of Gen. Clark was tuexpected.
Because of considerable criticism concerning the move, the President announced several days later ho had decided not to carry out diplom atic'
representation a t the Vatican until congress has acted on the controversial Issue. Congress w ill probably take the m atter under consideration
P o rtly after It convenes January 8.
FEDERAL DEFICIT— The government has operated in the red this
year. Next year it w ill go even deeper In the red and nothing that congress
has done or economies w ill prevent it.
Expenditure for the fiscal year 1952 w ill am ount to approximately
$70 billion, it is estimated. Receipts w ill am ount to $63.7 billion, leaving a deficit of $0.3 blUion.
In the fiscal year 1953 expenditures wlU am ount to an estimated
$85-$90 billion w hile receipts w ill total $66.6 billion. This leaves about $18.4-$23.4 bilUon deficit.
Congress Is not likely to increase taxes next year because it is . a presidential election year, m ost observers believe. The only, w ay to
cut down this deficit would be to reduce defense spending and foreign aid. There m ay bo some cut in foreign aid, but little, if any, in defense
spending. The “ pay-as-wc-go" policy expounded by the adm inistration seems extremely rem ote at this tim e.
Oblivious to tlic passage of U.N . and Com m unlst tnvesUradors*
two Korean wom en employ ancient flails to thresh grain on tbeir farm near Kaeson so iheir fam ilies m ay cafc And- w hile tiie harvest scene was taking place across 'w ar«torn Korea, Allied
and Com m unist negotiators were sclieduied tp resiuno peace
talks a t tlie sm all village of Fanem tinjom . tVheCfaer the renewed
talifs would bring peace w as anoUter question. M any Allied
olTicials believe tliat M oscow . and Peiping ' have been shadow
boxing and w ill continue to do so until they can m ake u p their
m inds on just w hat to d o»pcace .or all-out w ar. MeaoMdiile, fight
ing continues In Korea w ith a' m arked increase in a ir activity. One air battle Involved nearly 250 A llied and C om m unist Jets, lilstory*8
great je t battle. . .
. VNDISMAYED BY SCANDAZS
Pliilosopher Says U.S. ivtorals Unclianged
: H om e towner-s across the nation who have been depressed a t the
■ increasing reports of m oral de
cline in the country can relax ac-
' cording to one of A m erica’s great
est thinkers. Dr. John Dewey, dean
of A m erican philosophers and
/ father of tiie progressive.education
• system , says the nation’s m orals lare not; worse than they have ever
..’been.
Tlie distinguished educator, w ho is OS years ojd, did see a weakening
in fam ily relationships. A ny decline in m orality of youth, he said can
be blam ed on parents and not the schools, government leaders, or
religious teachers. As for the W est
Point cribbing scandal and ‘'fix'* cases, he said, *'As fa r as I c a »
Judge iVs very m uch the sam e from one period to another-,**.
Plot Strategy
K M A N who w asn’t there—G eneral
" Eisenhower — w as t h e m ain
topic of discussion a t a m eeting of Taft-for-Presldent advisers in W ash
ington recently.C incinnati’s B en Tate,, head of
Standord B rands and a top T aft bicke r, m ade it plain that T aft
forces w ill throw the book a t Elsenhower If he enters the G OP presi
dential race.
'R e m a rk e d the usually jovial Tate:
" If the general gets In the cam paign, he'll have to take It like any
other candidate. J u s t because he's been in uniform doesn’t give
h im a i^ im m im lty from the searching eross-examlnation of voters.
" In fact,” continued Tate, " I ’vem e t Republicans who said they had
inform ation about the general that should be m ade public. I didn’t dis
cuss it w ith them , but I Imow Republicans generoUy w ant to know
whether he really belongs to tlie party, and where he stands on is
sues th at are Im portant to Republicans.”
H ie question w as also raised as tor whetiier Eisenliower is
really a candidate.” I understand,” rem arked
D ave Ingalls of Cleveland, who is T aft’s cousin, "th a t he ha&
the bug.”
This caused Senator Taft to re
m a rk tim t the general sent word to him th at the* only thing th at coh-
com cd iiim about the presidential' election w as his program for E ur
ope. “He indicated,” contmued the senator, "th a t if he had assurance
ot a reasonable dcgi'ee of Independence in form ing policies for the
defense of Western Europe, he would not interfere In the cam paign and
election.”
Smear Campaign
Senator T aft probably doesn’t
know this, b ut some of his cohorts already have launched the smear-
Eisenhower cam paign hinted a t by B en Tate.
F irst attem pt to scare the general out of the presidential prim aries
cam e from Westbrook Pegler last
week when he reported Ike’s al
leged flirtation w ith an English W AC
durm g the w ar, and warned that
President T rum an would use this to w ipe' up the general.
Actually, certain Republicans, not T rum an, are m ore likely to use
this against Eisenhower. In fact, they’ve already started. It happens
that T rum an iand Einsehower not
only are friends, but T rum an w as
deeply grateful to Ik e for staying out of the 1948 race when Ike could
havo had the Dem ocratic nom ination for the asking.
So It Eisenliower really wants to run this tim e, It’s a fairly
good bet th a t T rum an won’t. M eanw hile, the Westbrook Peg-
lers and other smear-Eisenhower artists m ig ht look up the below-the-
belt tactics used against Grover Clevelond. They elected him .
Jessup and Ike
Those who w atched the senate hearings .on Am bassador P hilip Jes
sup detected a smear-Elsenhower undertone in th at proceeding also.
F or Jessup is a Colum bia University professor who not only served on
Eisenhower’s faculty, but received a letter from Ike defending him
against the M cC arthy pro-Commu- nist attack.
Seated across the table from Jessup during the senate hear
ings was a Republican who has vowed to stop Eisenliower and
wlio has staked iiis entire political future on Taft—Owen Brew
ster of M aine.It >^as Brewster w ho led the at
tack on Jessup inside the senate com m ittee.
Siassen’s Memor/
Senators who listened to H arold E . Stassen stum ble through the Jes
sup hearings say th at Stassen apparently didn’t count on the State
departm ent releasing the full, sccret transcript of the round-tablo con
ference over far eastern policy.- Stassen testified, for exaihple,
th a t Jessup brought up the question
of recognizing Com m unist China on
the t h i^ day of the conference, and th a t the State departm ent cam e out
in favor of recognition. The actual transcript, however, shows that tlie
estion of recognizing Com m unist _ Jna w as brought up, not by Jessup
b u t by the State departm ent’s Charles Butterworth, not on the third day but the first day. Further
m ore, Butterw orth set forth the State departm ent’s position clearly,
w hich w as against recognizing the R e d regim e.
Boyle Partner
It w as M aine’s courageous Sen.
M argaret Chase Sm ith who first asked the Hocy committee to in
vestigate a key associate of D em o
cratic eX'Chairm an B ill Boyle.
In a senate speech she said: "1
suggest that the subcom m ittee call M r. D aniel J . Hanlon and ask h im
il he w as in any w ay connected
w ith the legal controversy w ith' the government' ’ over t h e Am erican President Ihie.” Hanlon was a form
er la w partner of Boyle.
C r i m e in A m e r i c a
By ESTES KEFAUVERUnited States Senator
* N ine of a Series
Kansas City: Jungle .Law
M y first im pression of Kansas C ity w as of a place -struggling out fro m under the la w of the jungle.
It w as a staggering exam ple of a prosperous city, blessed w ith
m any industries and the same type o f good citizens found O'
w herei b u t w hich, through civic inertia, had fallen compl
under the thum b of vicious criminals.: The nlob, led b y m en higl
in the M afia, h ad ru n the tow n— and m ilk e d It: A federal grand
ju ry in Kansas C ity found th at the illeg al gam bling business had
grossed more th a n $34,000,000 a year.
T he mobsters could do this because they were able to '*buy”
m any sm all and middle-sized oM cials, a nd to influence some big ones.
Actually, the Kansas City policedepartm ent was headed by a good
chief and included some officers
w ho m ade an excellent impression on the Senate • C rim e Committee.
In the county, however, It was different. There the. committee found
Sheriff J . A. Purdom o "notably
lax.” ,
One fantastic facet was that Pur-
dome permitted a racketeer, WoJC R Im an, juke box and pin-ball king,
to hold a- deputy sheriff’s commission a&d to operate a cor equipped
w ith siren ond red light. B Im an wos m urdered and Sheriff Purdom e
m arried his widow.
• • *.•
No responsible person condones
m urder as an' instrum ent of social justice, but there seemed to be a
m oral lesson in the violent ond m etby Charlie Blnaggio, Kansas City’s
reigning evil genius. This conniv
ing, particularly courageous gangster, a fixer, rather than a muscle
m an, was m urdered in his political clubhouse. Dead beside him was
his lieutenant and "enforcer,”
Cliarllc Gargotta.
If ever a hum an deserved the
title of "m a d dog,” it was Gar-
gotta’. His record showed 39 arrests
on charges ranging from attempted burglary to m urder. Once he killed
a m an in cold blood on the streets,
but a corrupt police officer switched identification tags on the m urder
weapon, and Gargotta beat the homicide charge.
Blnaggio, Gargotta, Tano Lococo, F at Tony Gizzo and grizzled old Jim
Balestrere, reputed M afia chieftain
in Kansas City, were tmown as "the Five Iron M en." These five and their
henchmen controlled m ost of the im portant gam bling in the Kansas' City area. Blnaggio & Co. would
spot a profitable gam bling operation and decide they ought.to be
"Invited” in. If the operators were not sm art enough to issue such an
"invitation," their places of Busi
ness would l>e’ bombed, .robbed or otherwise harassed until they got smarter.• • •
Am ong other Btnagglo properties,
in partnership with Gargotta, Lococo, Snag Klein, and Eddie Osad-
chey, was the Last Chance Tavern. The Ija s t Chance was an Intriguing
establishment on the border be
tween Kansas and M issouri, with a thin w all right on the state line.
When cops from one state would come to "ra id ” it, the gam blers wtmld shift over to the other side,
and carry on. Cops from both states never seemed to arrive at the same tim e. . . .
Osadchey, Gargotta, Lococo, and
K lein m uscled in on Sim on Part, noy’s profitable w ire service in
Kansas City after the Chicago-Ca-
pone snydlcate set out to take over the nationwide race news racket.
Another tim e, Osadchey and Klein, wltliout putting up a dollar, moved
into Iow a to "m uscle” themselves 50 per cent of .a Council Bluffs
gam bling place called the Stork
club, in which the original owners had invested $90,000.
Eddie insists that there really
was no "m uscle.” It was merely a case, he explained, where, after
he and Snag offered to "buy” the .whole club for $20,000, the owners
countered with a proposition that they take half of it for nothing.
Jim Balestrere, tho old Slciliau-
born -mobster .identified as one of
Kansas City M afia leaders, played dum b. Ho represented- him self to
us as a poor, old jobless fellow who
lived, on a little income from a piece of business .property (otice rented
to a gam bling house) an^ on a few dollars given him by his children.
B ut he didn’t impress us as dum b at all. People in Kansas City rack-
ets.used to say th at "Balestrere has
a piece of Blnaggio.”* > a • .
Wo delved into the question of
how— and through w hom —he carried out his political machinations.-
Tliu gangsters themselves, of course, did their part. Eddie Osadchey
testlfied^hat "C harlie told m e” to travel around the state' and line up
his "friends” for Gov. F o r r e s t
Sm ith. Rum ors were prevalent that Biiiagglo had raised siims as large
as $150,000 to the Smith-for-Gover-
nor cam paign, ,but wo were unable
to secure any tangible proof of
large-scale contributions.
The com m ittee had a session with
Roy McKi.ttrick, form er state senator and attorney general of Mis* sourl, concerning his knowledge, of
the alleged tle>up between Blnag-
glo and Governor Sm ith. .
In January, 1946, M cK lttrlck decided he would be a candidate
against Sm ith. ;Q. D id you have any conversa
tion w ith Charles Blnaggio. about your candidacy? 'A. Yes, air . . . He wanted to
discuss w hat he thought the chances to w in were. It impressed m eiw hat
he m eant was the imt>ortance that he had to have a governor.
Later, M cKittrIck cohtlnuedi, the
Kansas City boss. told him he ought to get out of the.race. McKlttrick-
told us he said to Blnaggio, " If you have m ade up your m ind, I think’
the race Is over right now because you are going to elect whoever you support for governor.” Senator
H unt asked 'the witness w hy,he placed such confidence in Blnag-
gio^s ability to dom inate an elec-’
M cKIttrick: He had a lot of friends,
and supporters in St. Louis,- and he was the controlling factor in Kansas
City. He had good alliances at St. Joe. He w as very active. He was w ell supplied w ith money.
Blnaggio, M cK lttrick said, told him , " I have m ade a deal with Sm ith.”
The Kansas City police board was
composed of four m en, R . Robert
Cohn and Colonel Ham pton ‘S .‘ Chambers, both holdovers who had
been appointed by a previous governor, and two Sm ith appointees,
Jacob L . (Tuck) M illigan, a- boyhood friend of Governor Smito and
Sheridan E . Farrell, a Kansas City,
hotel m an. It look three votes o f the four-man board to effect' any
im portant p o lic y or personnel
changes.• • •
Cohn told as that M illigan and
Carrell were "credited to; the Charlie Binaggio group. ” iTiere- fore, it was necessary for the Binag
gio interests to line up either Colonel Chambers or himself. Cohn
testified that he was approached
several tim es by Binaggio and other
emissaries “who suggested that I
be on their team and to follow through the program they had
planned.” B ut all efforts to bring either Cohn' or Chambers into the Binaggio cam p failed.
The pay-oit for the entire board came after the’m urder of Blnaggio
and G argotta on. A pril 5, 1950. The eyes of Am erica were focused w ith
disgust on Kansas City, and decent
citizens there did not like it. •
Governor. Sm ith reacted by . call
ing for .the resignations of all tho K ansas City police, commissioners.
M illigan and F arrell resigned; but Cohn and Chambers refused to do so, forcing the governor to ",fire”
them ; th at was their Intention, they said, as they felt they were clean
and did not w ant to’ be in a position of quitting under fire. The present
Kansas -City police board, our re
port noted, "is m ade up of four m en of undoubted Integrity,” , and
the citizens of Kansas.. City have helped drive for better law enforcem ent by form ing a local crime
commission.. * • «
As. for Governor Sm ith, it seemed
to the committee, after he. had
testified before us concerning the
various allegations against him ; that he cither was a m uch lied about
person,-, or a m a n "o f exceedingly bad memory- Sm ith s'6ld he didn’t
even know Binaggio m y nam e until around November, 1947 (though Bi-
naggio’s nam e by then was a by
w ord in M issouri political circles).*Sm ith explained that Blnaggio
just w alked up to h im in a Kansas City hotel lobby and said "he hoped I-would run for govetnor, that he
was going to support m e.” • "W hen
he told you those things,’^ Coimsel H ailey inquired, "d id you ask him who he w as?” Governor Smitlt re
plied: " I did n o t” • . . ‘
The governor did-recall that Bi-
nagglo visited him-..several tinfies
at the state capltol. . !-
.N ext Week: St. Louis, Whet^e G am bling Is Big Business.”
Amorlea," by aates Kefauver. Cpr. 16S1. Pub.- by .Dcubteda^ lae. DIst. Oca«aal Fcotorca Corp.~WNV. . 1
STIRRED T O ACTIO N
Kentucky Studies Anti-Bribery Liaws /
LEX IN G T O N , K y.-T he 1952 Ken- lucky General Assembly is expect
ed to enact legislation covering liribery in a sports contest.
State Senator R . ,P . .Mahoney,' m ajority floor leader in the-upper house, said that he had m ade a-
careful study of a law enacted in New York in 1950, end felt it
would be adopted w ithout change In Kentucky.
Support for the measure . was
offered by Governor Lawrence W etherby, who 'said^he "wotdd be
in favor of a law w hich wotild tpnake>it very tough on persons
bribing athletes.” .The education committee of the Kentu9ky (C am ber: of Commerce
alM adppted a'.resQlution .urging the legislature, t o . consider enact*
m ent o f. "appropriate legislation.*'
BUBINESS A INVKBT. OPPOB.
neaa. Win n il at cobU Immcdlato poai^'neaa. Will n il a
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sTim’ WrHcTcaro* ----Titca. rctwncolft, Fii>.
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irom out..- '... .jKH-4-MiHT, taken da tee-
jT ffiS .W p ia S 'W iS .V 'S Sfa.<Mdl T ou avoid tbat tjpleal weak, ■ Oftes-A-MWT-
T H E DA V IE .R E C O R D , M O C K S V IL L E . N . C.
FORD'S THEATRE
Senator Young Wants Congress
Rehabilitate Ford's Theatre
| - W N U WasUington Durcau
I -i^nator M ilton R . Yoims of North
. Djakota is again tryin'4 tt> ^ct Icgis-
laition through congress tn rehabili
ta te ' historic Ford’s Thor.tre in
W ashington, D . C ., where A braham
Lincoln w as shot by John Wilkes
B w lh on A pril 14, 1805.
'^ te r an unsuccessful attem pt in Senator Young recently intro
duced a joint resolution asking that the secretary of the interior bo di
rected to prepare and subm it an estim ate of the cost of restoration.-
Estim ates in the past have been as high as $500,000.
In his . Statem ent to congress,
Senator Xoung. said: “E ach year, ihousands' upon thousands o t' vlsi-
.tors come to Wasihlngton, the most fbe'autifu! capital in the world, where
they view w ith pride m any m agnificent m onuments and edifices. U n
fortunately, m ost everyone who
visits Ford’s Theatre is dlsap-
:p6inted because of Its present state. 'In sharp contrast to m any well-
.preserved shrines, this one has degenerated to a point where a per
son m ust rely on his im agination alm o s t' completely to realize that it
ever existed as a theatre.**
Senator Young added th a t
^'through the ensuing years, little
has been done to preserve Hhis,
historic place. Tho property was
acquired by the government shortly
after the assassination and was u t illz ^ for a num ber of purposes
of no historic significance.” ■
The building now houses a muse-
entira effect Is a constant
to m ore than 100,-
By IN E Z G E R H A R D
Y ^ E O R G IB .P R IC E baa come a
long w ay'since, as a child, he toured'the country w ith a Gus E d
w a rd s 'u n it th a t included Eddie Cantor and W alter W Inchell. H e
becam e a stage star, a top radio com edian, then abandoned both for
iW all Street; he still works-titere days, as senior partner of a broker*
age firm : In his new Tadlo show, *’B ig T im e," on the CBS R adio Net^ work, he returns to the 1900-1930
period, bringing bade the songs ^ h ic ^ vaudeville m ade fam ous. A l
so, each week he. wiU sing a novelty num ber m ade fam ous in the m anner
of tiie person who sang It.
ED D IE CANTOR
Eddie Cantor»siicw.NBO show,
Sundays, “ Eddie Cantor—Show
Business” , Is som ew h:^ sim ilar.
H e 'd ip s Inlo’ hU experiences In
42 ie a rs of show business to re
late Incidents about the people he has' known, w ith recordings of fam ous voices and songs tak
en from Us private coUectloa of nearly 50,000 records.
u m , consisting of 750 relics of the
life of Lincoln, bought by the gov
ernm ent from Osborn H . O ld r c ^ ,
a native of Ohio and a collector of ^bicolh articles, for $50,000 In 1026.
Th.ere are footprints pahited on the floor tracing the path of Booth as
he ran across Vhe stage and escaped through a rear door to his horse.
A m iniature has been constructed the theatre as it looked that
jg ht, and Is displayed as part of the m useum collection.
In spite of a ll these efforts, how
ever, the disappoint
000 tdsitors annually who w alk In and ask “^ e r e * s the theatre?” ,
After^ the assassination, guards
were posted at the theatre and It
w as closed until the following June w hen It w as restored to. Jo hn T.
Ford, the ^wner. Ford then tried to reopen the theatre, but m e t.w ith
such public disapproval that the W ar Departm ent ordered It closed
again. Ford threatened to sue, after
w hich Qte government rented the building and then b o u ^ t U for
$100,000 in IBM.
The form er theatre was then used
for- a government office building. Another tragedy occurred in 1803
when the three floors collapsed following excavaUon In the basement
w hich weakened the structure. Twenty-two persons we^e killed and
68 injured. The building was restored the foUowtog year and w as
used for storage purposes. The present ejdilblt w as opened to tite public
In 1932.
T H E V ISIT O R is m uch more ea^-
1y transported back through the
years by view ing ttie house where
Lincoln died. Just across the street
fro m Ford's Theatre. Its appear
ance today Is substantially the sam e as it w as In 1865. Orighially the
hom e ot ^mnuiam Petersen, i ^ tailor, it w as built in 1849. Be
cause the three-story house had m ore room s than the f a m i^ re*
quhred, Petersen rented some of them . The room to w hich Lincoln
w as taken w as then occupied by a
young soldier. The Petersen house
w as later purchased by M r. and
M rs. Louis Sdiade, who for m any
years were constant^ asked by
tourists for permission to view the room in w hich U ncoln died. Long
before they sold the property, they h ad moved aw ay and rented the
house. The Governm ent purctiased the building from the Schade fam ily,
in 1890.
The house where Lincoln died was
refurnished In 1932 h y several w om
en’s patriotic organizaUons following as nearly as possible a diagram
m ade ^ r U y after. Lincoln's deaUi.
Several pieces of. furniture were
orlnglally ia the Lincohi hom e in Sprhigfield, 111.' - Both the exterior
and & e Interior of the*house have been so w ell restored that the ap
pearance is very , m uch the sam e as it was the nighty l^ c o ln was
shot. The Petersen’ house w as (Chosen as a place to' carry the dying
President because the doctor in atp tendance had asked that Lincoln be
taken to the nearest house th at had
a light.
H e had to <be laid diagonaUy
across ^ e sm all bed, tils extreme
it not perm itting any other .- A m eeting of the cabinet
w as h d d in the back parlor, where S e c re ta^ of W ar Stanton began his
investigation of the assassination. A t 7:22 the next m orning A pril IS,
186S - Lbicoln died whereupon Sec
retary Stantcni voiced the historic
words: ''N ow he be lon g to the
ages.'* ____________^
CROSSWORD PiZlE UST W£EK*$
ANSWER ■
ACROSS il. Flesh or
^ in e 6. One'who uses 6. Scope
no. Desert (Asia) IL W a lk heavily U . Per. to hours
114. Mulberry115. Simian17. Weight '’ (India)18. Leaves.
49. Streetcar 19. Similar I(Eng.) 20. Goddess .
60. City (Iowa) of dawnDOW N 24. Wheel->l.Falene8s shaped I2. Openings 25. Insect
(A n at) 27. Affirmative 13. Stayed reply i4. Greek letter 29. Dried fruits I 6. Exclama* of hop itionof plant; disgust 80. Grant
6. Chimney immunity to dirt 91. One of the7. lUvor (Sp.l tribes of *8. Theater Israel
district 83. Pieces orcollectively 11. Coffee-sltop .' rock21. Music note 13.P astp art^ 84. Droops In" ~ ' orile Q themlddie.16. Incite 8 7 .aty (It.>
iik'juiii'j N iis n RfZlLIUU 13 .1I3I1R
u n n c ia Hnaa
nP :i iisiu(114 lliiH'^ill I3HHlJi:iH WilHW M irn iH n iiu u i:j
riisriuia
K-M
39. Hindmost
40. Fbrearm
22. Ireland23. Medusa
26.LowUtand
28. Mate de- scendaat29. Took
noUceof82.Drinkhig
86. Farm animal
86. Arrow (K )
88. Republic (So. Am.)
41. Medieval boat42. King or Baahan (Bib.)43. Small
food-flsh
.46. Names of persons,
places or things
47. Glass o fa window
48. Voided
44.1sungod
rubber tree1r r -r r r —IIrio"
i r iT IL
w i IS 17irn1m 1tT
zT i zT ■»2&11W wi m isoS 's
is i 1s T
W i.w P5T
m i
3T
w W I m w
I «%n ” 1I4 f 1 m
THE
ncnoN
CORNER
P E iS O N A l SYSTEM
By Richard Hill Wilkinson
f E F F C H A P P E L L w as dum b. He
J w as a big. burly lad. Yoti couldn’t help lik ing h hn . B ut he v/ia dum b.I w as assistant coach that faU at
Redfleld a i^ I had a ll I could do to keep Je ff t in the
first string varsity. H ead Coach
Charlie Ju d d was im paUent about i t
•‘There's no place on this team for
a guy w ho can’t rem em ber signals,
CharUe said. “ We can’t afford to
take the chance. If you and I are gohig to keep our jobs we’ve got to d ia lk u p a few scores— after last
year’s record.*'
••He’s the best halfback Fve ever
seen w ork," I argued<^‘Y ou’U m ake a m istake dropphig h im . “H e s our
big hope for this year.** .
Charlie consented to le t Je ff play
in the first three games. After the
third he cam e stomping into m y
room , his face black. “Well,** he snorted, “W h a t you got to say
now? Y our friend lost today’s gam e. H e lost it because he.got his signals
twisted in the last quarter.”“ B ut how about the first two
gam es?’ I asked.. “It was that same I>oy that turned defeat into victory
for us. Two to one isn’t . bad,
C harlie. It’s better & a n any of those
other lugs are doing.”’*Nutsl” said Charlie.B ut w hen Charlie thought it over
he agreed. H e was still pretty sore. Any kid who couldn’t absorb a set
ot shnple signals ought to- have som ething done about h im . .1 tried to do it; I got.Jeff up to
m y room nights. W e w ent over
and over the signals.The next Saturday we played Herrick, and beat^'^em easily. O r
Je ff ChappeU be4t them . Y ou
GRASSROOTS
President If uman Will Be Hard To Beat in 1952
By W right A, Potterson ;
fO N A T H A N D A N IE LS , thfi J o« the B alelgb, S. C . Chronicle,• friend of P resident. T rum an, a
one tim e employee ia the WWte House, says in the August Atneii-
can M agazine that H arry S. T rum an ■will be the D em ocratic nominee for
' . President next year, and Blves a num ber of reasons w hy he w ill be
elected. No one of Ws reasons are
as potent as the one th a t l»e fails
):to m ention. ,
T hat Is tlie assured Im m a n
vote'ot the Dem ocratic arm y ot
- bureaucrats, n o w nnmberto|
g M llO O , and their relatives and
f r l ^ s , who w ant to sco tbem h oU onto their federal govern
m ent Jobs; In the days of Tam-
S a n y cwte®* N ew Xork city, the sachems claim ed that each Job w as good for eight T am
m any votes In any city election,
and freiuently demonstrated
• the correctness of , that claim .
B u t slionid each BurcaucraUo
job be'good for, onljr h alf of that
num ber, four votes, there, for.
the President, to start w ith. Is
m ore than eight mlHlon votes,
and that is some handicap for any BepuW loan nom inee to over-
come.EspeclaUy so, when the p a rty Js
tilv asainst w hat the^ppositlon has done, b u t for nothing w itti w h l^ to
only t"done', out ihimums »»*• . ^ appeal for votes, w hile the Dem ocratic , party stands for a. defiiJte,
and weU defined prograin. That program is one reason for the
D aniels assurance of T rum an sue-
T b0Rep»bticansean_tak»
f$ d l €redU for th a t 8,000,000;
boMdSeap they m ust opereome H
tb e ir eaadtdate is to w in: In the
8 0/* congrets, they b aa ■ a i& rity in b oth b o u s tt o f eottgrets,
a n d P lig h t have forced the d if b and ing o f th a t bureaucratic . army by not appropriating-
m oney to pay it , b u t 'they d id
n o t d o so, a n d now they m ust
face th e com equencet.
T hat arm y w ill bo larger, rather
than less, w hen the 1952 election
day arrives. For each new job there
w ill be, a t l e ^ four m ore T rum an votes. I would'^say th a t betthig
against tiie President is in no sense a sure win. A California state of
ficial, a Republican, said to m e recently: “ Unless W arren is the
R'eptibllcan* nominee, the state w ill be in .the T rum an column.'*
It hardly ' seems proboble<, but
Daniels could be r ig h t Anyway let’s
w ait until the votes are counted.
The people ank state officials . of Oallfornla think It Is quite
proper for the. federal governm ent to spend bUllons In build-
• Ing dam s. Irrigating land and preventing floods In California*
from w hich only' the people ot Oatlfornla benefit, b ut they seri
ously objeot to the same pro^
cednre in Arizona.
The central valley project of Cali-
fom la, is as m uch a state project
as is the central Arizona {project. The one d lff^e hce is the sthaller
cost in California. Neltiter project I w ill benefit any one outside of ^
state In w hich the m oney is spent.B ut it is the tax-payers in a ll tflie
states w ho w ill pay the b ill for both, and the people of both states
eventually w ill sacrifice m uch of their lo cal sovereignty through ac
cepting and usbig the billions the federal government pours into such
projects.nFor. those states it ■ means the deatb o f comtituHonal statifs figbtu Congress should stop all tucb appropriations, other than those that can be self liquidating over a reasonable number of years* The Hoover dam in the Colohdo river, ^b'Ae benefitting ttt one way or another five states and thOHgb bttiU with govern- men* money, was not a gift. -
The cost is being returned to the federal treasury, a n d .w ith in .a rea
sonable num ber of years it w ill all
be paid, plus interest. Oflhers should
be financed in the sam e w ay, in
cluding the central Arizona project,
b ut the w ealthy land owners are like a ll the other Indigents who wsint
their water-supplied to them at no cost. ^
W e pay a terrible price to dead
and crippled for each weekend hoU> day. Too m uch hurry to get there.■■
B ritish b o m Secretary of State
Acheson la ia heavy load to oarry into a political cam paign.
17ncannlly. Jeff, a lone figure*
w as there to stop him .
couldn’t stop the boy. The victory, gave us a lift, but behind It there
w as always th at haunting fear that next Saturday or the next or the
next, the kid would go hayw ire and
start running in the wrong direction,
or something.CharUe and I held our breaths all
fall. Figuratively, of course.
N O V E M B E R cam e around and
tim e for the all-important Huh* bard fracas. H ubbard was our tradi
tional enemy. Beating them was a ll
th at was necessary to m ake the sea
son complete.
Two days before the gam e Charlia
cam e up to m y room . “If we vrtn Saturday,” he said, “ we won’t have
to w orry about being in solid.” He looked tiioughtful. I knew w hat he
w as thinking.
“If you don’t let the kid play we
w on't have a chance,” I said.**There’s a bare hope of w inning
w ithout him .” Charlie scratched hla
chin. “If I put h im in there’s al
w ays a chance---
'’The kid’s got the signals down t,” I said quicldy. “He’s proved
Y ou know as w ell as I that without Jeff Chappell we’re licked.”
Charlie w asn’t sure; Y ou could
see he was scared stiff. He wanted
assurance, and 1 gave It to him . M y confidence in the kid settled the- J in Charlie’s m ind. H e agreed to play Chappell. Despite our rec-:
ord and the fact that-we had Jeff
Chappell the odds were on H ubbard. H ubbard had a clean record. Their,
victories had been won by big m argins.
The first quarter and the sec- •
ond ended w ith no score. In the
third, the H ubbard fullback snaked through bur Une and
sprinted 30 yards for a touch
down. They failed to kick the \
Kni^^ted Rug
2 6 3 5
Knitted Bug
T jE R E ’S a fast m oving knitting
" project for you. This p re t^
coble stitch rug is m ade on large
needles and heavy yarn In strips of
rust, brown, green and beige. A distinctive addiUon to any room .
Salvaging Cake
Everybody's'cooking goes wrong
sometimes, but there are ways to ■ •
salvage this food.. If your calce • burns, rem ove scorched area with
a grater and cover w ith a glam our
ous icing. It your cake falls, serve,
it as a pudding, heated, w ith a..-
sauce.• • •
Rem ove LIpsUck
To rem ove lipstick stains, rub
the cloth w ith vaseline or glycerine, then launder as usual.• • • .
Save A SplU . .
Providing, sm all trays, especial- ' ly when guests go from one room
to another or out-of-doors, saves m any a spIH and a cleaning prob-
lem . , .
Chipped Dishes A rubber guard on the end of
the kitchen faucet w ill help pro-., •vent chippcd dishes or glassware..• « •
Food In Freezer
W hen the electric power goes..
oH, food in your home freezer w ill stay frozen for several days i f ”
you don't open tho lid.• « •
Cake Icing Sprinkling a cake w ith a little
flour when it flrst comes fro m the oven, helps keep icing from run-
ning off.____________________________
^S’S!S. A ‘SS-
Patum N*. .................................
^ Kam« (Plcaae P m u
Street AddrtsB or P.O. Box Mo.
------smtoCity
F I R S T A I D TO 1HE
j j M , n i i i f i r i i m r r
■ |>y»OGEItC.WHITMAM
P ainting Fresh Plaster
QU ESTION : C an fresh plaster
waUs be painted during the first tw o months, w he n the plaster
dries? M ust the w alls be glue sized? O r can I use something
m ade a t home like flour, sugar •and w ater m ixed? W ill this do the
sam e trick?
A N SW E R: I have never beard
of that m ixture for a sizing job. and would prefer a com m ercial
product as beipg more satisfac
tory. I t is best to w ait a t least tw o
m onths to let p 1 a s t e r dry out thoroughly before painting. If you
w ish to apply a finish a t once, you can put on a resin base, w ater
paint emuUion paint without w ait
ing. Later, if you would 'like to use an oil paint, sim ply paint over
the water paint w ith vam lsh size and then paint with the oil waU
paint.__________________________________
The report of the Senate investi
gating com m ittee w as not specially pleasing to those responsible for — ....
the firing of Douglas M acA rO iu r._____I never td d ~O ia rlie j
pohitiIn the fourth the H ubbard left half cam e around right end on a;
trick play. O ur whole backfield w as
fooled. A ll' except Je tt Chappelil
Uncannily Jeff, a lone figure, was' there to stop him . That gave us the
ball. We m ade three yards in three downs, and then, instead of booting.
Cole, our quarter, gave Jeff Chappell the ball* and Je ff m ade as
pretty a run as you’d ever seen any
where. Cole kicked the extra point.
A m inute later the whistle blew.
After it w as over I got Je ff up toto m y room . “Listen,” I said “how
about It? T hat trick play of Hub-; bard’s was a corker. How com e ft;
didn’t fool you, too?’’H e grinned sheepishly. Aftei\
aw hile I got the story. Je ff never did get the, signals straight, b ut he,'
discovered a system a ll his own.< H e’d w atch the toes of the opposhi^
players. If the play w as going left,'
the m a jo ri^ of toes would pohit tha^ w ay. Instinctively. And the same,
applied to our boys. I t never failed. Je tt said he’d heard som ething like
th at on tiio radio.
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^ WITH NAME imprinted';;^'^^
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i O '
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An ideal PERSONAL gift for
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Fine quality smooth;writing pencils
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Il shipped 24 hours after receipt.. '
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distiBcftvedganltf win
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nicotine
Sftoo’s sdeotifie process cuts n lo > tino cooteot to htdf that of ordioory . dgatettes; Yee skillful bleodlng I Atikes ercrr puff a'pleasun» hI FLEUINO-UAII. TOBACCO OO.r IN a
■ I
PAGE FOUR
L .
THE DAVIE R I ^ R D . M O C K S V lu J. N. C . NOVEM BER 14, 1951
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C . F R A N K S T R O U D , E D IT O R .
G.O.P. Ifiiis
A Republican w on the ofiicc o f i
mayor in Indianapolis—the hom e,
TELEPHONE . I W w n o f the new Democratic Na-]
--------- ■ tional C hairm an Frank McKin-
Bntored atthePoatoffice In Mocks- ncy. A lex M . Clark was a handv vflle, N. C., Second'clftflii Mallivlri-np ckfrA» ^m .tte r, March 8.1903. | . ii a » in s t_ what he called “Trumanism .”
The House seat picked upSU B SC R IPT IO N RA TES:
ONE YEAR. IN N. CAROLINA $ L50 SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA - 75c. ONE YEAR, OUTSIDE STATF . I8.fl0 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE • $1.00
General Eisenhower has come
and gone again. Some think he
w ill accept the nom ination for
president if It Is tendered him -
others think not. From what we
can see and hear It is our opinion
that if nom inated he will be elect
ed.
In off-year elections last w e.k
the Republicans elccced three
Consressmen, one o f them dc-
featlng a Dem ocrat in O hio, and
two defeating Democrats in Penn,
sylvania. A Democratic Mayor
was elected in Philadelphia. Re
publicans elected Mayors in three
Indiana cities. Kentucky elected
V Democratic Governor,
Thomas A. Rice
Thomas A . Rice, 68, died Nov.
3rd, at his hom e in Fulton Tow n’
ship, after a short illness.
H e was a farmer and had lived
m ost o f his life in this county.
Surviving are the wife, two sons,
Charles W . Rice, o f Salisbury, R,
6, and Thom as Rice, Jr., o f Fork;
four daughters, Mrs. Harry Hart
ley, o f W elcome; Mrs. Paul Leon
ard and Mrs. J. W . M cClannon,
o f W inston-Salem, and Mrs. Doyle
Bean, of the home; eicht erand-
children, three nieces and one
nephew.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 1:45 p, m . at the honr>e, and
at 3:30 p. m . at Jericho Church ot
Christ, of w hich he was a mem'
ber. Services were condncted bv
Sam F. Binkley and W illnrd Con-
chin, and the body ]nid to rest in
the church cemetery.
Scrap Metal
Y ou have probably seen releases and heard over the radio, pro
grams on the subject o f scrap metal. You will recall the tre
m endous effort put forth during
W orld W ar 11 days to collect
scrap for military purposes. This tim e the collection is for both mlH-
tary and civilim neeUs. Y ou are
probably aware of the fact it re
quires prac:ically as m uch scrap
iron as new iron ore ro make
steel. Obviously, a steady flow
o f scrap metal is as im portant as a
continuous working o f the mines
if we are to meet the needs for iron and steel. '
The Period From October 15.
to Novem ber 15 has been set for
the farm scrap drive in N orth Ca
rolina, and ail agencies are work
ing for this program.
In addition to supplying the m uch needed material for ii
. by
the Republicans was in O hio's
T hird District. It went D em o
cratic in 1948 and 1950, but Tues
day elected Republiran Paul F.
Schenick.
The off-year elections have end'
ed 64 years o f Democratic rule in
Little Rock, Arkansas, where Re
publican Pratt Rem m el, was elec
ted mayor.
Referendum
The Nickels for Know-How Re
ferendum was h e ld Saturday,
Novem ber 3, 1951. Four hu n d
red and eighty-nine Davie Coun-
ty people voted in this referen
dum . T h ee hundred and seven-
tV'One voted for adding five cents
to the cost each ton o f feed
and fertilizer, and 117 voted
gainst it. There was one spoiled
ballot cast.
This m oney w ill be collected
by the N orth Carolina Depart
m ent o f Agriculture along w ith
the collections they make ^ o m
fertilizers and feed manufacturers
for inspection purposes. This
extra five cents per ton w ill be
turned over to the N orth Caro
lina Agricultural Foundation,
w hich w ill use the money for ex
panded research and educational
purposes. '
I w ould like to thank everyone
who participated in conducting
this referendum and the publicity
gtt’cn to it.
F. E. PEEBLES* County Agent.
Laying Hens
Profitable
It is about time for people w ho
plan to buy baby chicks next
spring to place their order togeth
er high'iqualitv chicks and be sure
of getting them when they w ant
them. Lots o f people w altuntil a
few weeks before the time that
they w ould like to have the chicks
CO place their orders, and conse
quently, quite often the hatcheries
are not able to fill' the order in
that quick a time.
Three weeks are necessar. for
eggs to hatch, and if the hatcheri
es know the approximate tim e the
people want their chicks, in many
cases they can schedule their
hatching to meet their dem and.
As a rule, early chicks are most
profitable. Bv early I mean those
gotten during the m onth o f March.
There are m any farms in Davie
County that could well use sm all •
laying flocks to produce eggs' fo r .
sale. 1 think that before too long
Father And Son
Banquet
The fourth annual Father &
Son Banquet was held Friday
night Novem ber 2, 1951, at 7
o'clock at the Farmington H igh
School.
The welcnmc was given by Billy
W alker and the response was giv
en T hurm an Howell* Toast to
dad by Johnny Boger. A poem
was read by H arold Gregory. A nd
accomplishments o f our chapter
by Sherrill Brinkley. The F. F.
*A* band gave a few numbers.
Leonard Seats introduced h i s
brother Harold." w ho spolce on
“Better W ays o f Farming.” A duet
was given by Ben and Grady Sm ith
Vestal R iddle told o f the dona>
tions, and recognition o f guest by
Clarence Eaton.
M rs. Conrad and the H om e Ec
girls prepared and served a deli
cious three course dinner.
In the basket ball game after
the Banquet, the dads beat their
sons 27-7.
T H U R M A N H O W E L L . Reporter
Football Referees
Present
A num ber o f prom inent foot
ball referees were here on A rm is
tice Day to take part in the Boy-
den H igh School and Lexington
H igh School football game played
at R ick Park. A m ong those pre.
sent were I. D . Roger, referee
Sugar Bowl; B unn Hackney, re-‘
refeere Orange Bowl; Joe Sink, ^
Dairy Bowl and Optoma^c Bowl;
Terry Husser, Burley Tobacco and
O ptom ic Bowl. ________ '
A few land posters left. |
Another Price Revision
DOWNWARD
SH OW S O U R DETERM IN ATIO N T O
UNLOAD
ONE-HALF OF OUR PRESENT
INVENT OR Y
If Y ou Have N ot Yet Been To This SALE Y our A re Missing A Great d ppo rtunity T liat
M ay N ot Occur Again. If You Have Attended. W hether Y ou Have M ade A ny Purchase
or not, A R E T U R N V IS IT W ill Reveal A PLEA SA N T S U R P R IS E
Yours For Values
C. C. SANFORD SONS CO.
G N T H E S Q U A R E
Serving Our Friends Since 1902
with dependable qimlity PIANOS and ORGANS
HAMMOND ORGANS
GRAND PUNOS
SPINET PUNOS
USED PIANOS
Reganllcss of the ]>rice you pay, yoti -
gel the BEST VALUE in a piano a l .
Jc0M G. Bowen Music Co.— In busi
ness since 1902.
JESSE C. BOWEN
217 W EST FIFT H ST.
EASY PAYMENT PLAN
MUSIC CO.
W IN ST ON -SALEM . N. C . •
We’re
keeping
our
iiiuwii iiccuuu marcriai ror m* «ti i j • . icreased steel and iron production, heanug a great deal »a-
the gathering o f scrap on the increased marketing facilities i
farm has m any other advantages. In the first place, it wiH help im
prove the appearance and reduce
the opportunity for accidents. O ld worn-out machinery concealed by weeds is the cause o f m any acci
dents to both hum ans and farm
In addition, the scrap is worth
for m any agricultural commodities
and poultry and eggs wifi certainly •'
be included. j
A few hens or a few hundred ,
hens do not require very m uch la
bor for the am ount of incom e
that can be derived from them .
considerably m ore now than anv Last year (from September. 1950
other «m c, and it,w.ll actually pay diroueh August. 1951) we had 6the farmer to haul a
the scrap dealer.
F. E. PEEBLES, County Agent.
5. Russell Bessent
demonstration flocks in the coun
ty. There was an average o f 163
hens per farm. There was an
average o f 174 eggs laid, per hen
11 The feed cost per 'form averaged
Samuel R. Bessent, 62, dcputv,*7l7-53. The feed cost per hen
marshal o f the M iddle District ot j averaged $4,39. The feed cost
f ' ‘‘” ?> C o urtand a member o f 'per dozen o f eggs laid averaged the A lcohol Tax U nir, died o f a
heart attack Friday afternoun at a ™ . . . ,N orth W ilkesboro hospital. | The highest ,rice received for
M r. Bessent was a native o f Je-'cgss d uring’this period was 80c.
rusalera Tow nship, but had been The lowest price received was 40c.
living in N orth W'ilkesboro for 10 and the average was 57c. The
value o f eggs produced per & rm
y.ars.
Surviving are his widow.Mrs.R u th Gr,ives|Bessent. w o dauch- ^>^59.53. The.average value
t« s . Miss Jane Bessent of N o * P " hen was
W ilkesboro, and Miss Nancy Bcs- .a^rase rate above
sci.t, o f Charlotte. ' c o « Per hen was $3.93.
Funeral services were held at 2 This period o f time was verv
p. m . Sunday at First Presbyterian profitable for the owners o f these
C hurch, N orth W i kesboro, and flocks. ' O ther people could do i
. the body brought to Mocksville »» well “ these, and others |
and laid to rest in Rose cemetery have done Just as well, b ut we do ,
w ith M asonic honors. -'Ot have their records.
M r. Bessent had many friends 'in Davie w ho were saddened by Now u the time ' to »ub-1 .news of his death. tcribe (or The Record. j
A Y EAR a u d a h a lf a g o w e m a iie a pro m ise to y ou
X \ in the advertisem ent reproduced above.
Since m aking that promise, we have bought
244 m ore new Diesel locom otive units at a cost
o f over $39 m illion. W e have purchased 2,350
new freight cars costing a b o u t$ l4 m illion. W e are
spending approximately $16 m illion for new yards
and yard modernization.
These are only a few o f the things we have done,
in the past IS m onths to live up to our promise.
M any other things have been done and w ill be,
done. Because our promise "to keep pace w ith tlie
increasing transportation needs o f the South"— .
and to meet the needs o f national defense— is a
pledge we are determined to keep.
President
S O U T H E R N R A I L W A Y S Y S T E M
T H E D A T IE R E C O R D . U O C K S V IL L B . N . C. N O V E M B E R 14.1961 Pa g e f iv e
IIH E DAVIE RECORD.
'Oldeil Paper In T^e County
.No Liquor, Wine, Befer Ad*
Ransome Yorfce, J r , -of Route n . t - V
is again w ith the'W estern A uto A c v . J . £ . r O l ^ € T
Store, after an absence o f several'
months. ,
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
M r s .W . B. Eidsoh, o f Clem;
m ens, was in tow n Wednesday.
H ubert Lashmit, w ho holds
position in Pornm outh, Va., was
in tow n one day last week greeting
old friends.
M rs. James Poole and little
.'daughter, o t Tipton, Ind., are
’ guests o f her parents, M r. and
M rs. W ill N . Smith.
Rev. J. S. Folger, 66, retired
_________ _ M ethc^ist preacher died at his
Mrs. Freeman D .S ly e , o f Tako^ 'ho m e in Decatur, Ga., N ov. 4th.
er. Mrs^ Z. N . Anderson.
M r. and M rs. James Latham
w ho have been living in the C oo
ley apartment on South M a in St.,
moved to D obson Saturday.
’ . Reuben Bcrrier, o f Jerusalem
Tow nship, has accepted a position
as salesman w ith the Shult'Bow-
den Firestone Store.
M r. and Mrs. Carrol Howard,
. o f A lbany, N . Y ., spent several
.days last week in town, guests of
hia m other, Mrs. D . C . Howard.
M r. and . M rs. Lonnie Gaither
and- daugh.er w ho lives in the
classic shades'of Clarksville, were
am ong the shoppers here W ed.
nesdav.
Rey. E. W . Turner is assisting
R ev,;H . W . Hutchens in a revival
m eedng w hich is in progress at
Sandy Springs Baptist Church,
Y adkin County, this week.
Forrest-Dunn I
W . D . Forrest, Jr., son of M r.
W . D . Forrest, Sr., and the late
lye, o f Tako* *n i-wuiiur, vu., I'luv. Twi. I Mrs. Forrest, o f Mocksville, and
m a Park, M d ., spent several days Mrs. Fo.'ger was pastor o f Farm-(Miss N annie Mae D u nn, daugh-.
last weeic in tow n w ith her m oth-! Ington M ethodist C hurch for four ter o f M r. and Mrs S. T. D unn,
'years.- Surviving ate his wife, two [of Advance; R t. 1, were united in
sons and two daughters, two marriage Saturday evening N ov.'
brothew and one sister. F u y r a l j o’clock at the Macedoniaand burial services were held at , . „ . ________iDecatur last W ednesday. M rs.'M oravian parsonage, w ith the Rev.
Folger had many friends in Davie J- G Browii officiating.
A . A . W agoner returned home
Thursday from Davis Hospital,
Statraville, where he spent ten
days taking treatment. H is friends
w ish for h im a specdv recovery.
D oily Stroud, w ho lives in the
classii shades o f East Iredell, nigh
u nto C ountyL ine, was in “ w " i ;|ue.“ ‘HirWends are’glad
one day last week on business and j,om e again,
has our tlumks for three frog s k i n s .-----
Friday m orning vras the coldest
o f the season, w ith the mercury
registering a low o f 22— 10 degrees
below freezing. Plenty o t frost
and ice w iu in evidence.
Two automobiles, a N ash and a
Mercury, were badly damaged at
■’HcH’s X Roads," on South M ain
Street Friday afternoon. N o one
seriously hurt. The N ash was an
Oklahom a cat and the Mercury a
Davie C ounty car.
H ugh Lagle, w ho has been w ith
the tow n o f Mocksville for the
past 23 years, looking after the
street and water department has
resigned his position. M r. Lagle
was an efficient worker and keep
the streets and water system in
good condition. H is place w ill
be hard to fill. The Record wish
es H ugh m uch success in anv
business in w hich he may engage.
M . Sgt. W . F. ' N ail, w ho has
been stationed in Germany forthe
past three years, arrived in this
city Thursday on a short furlough.
Mrs. N all, w ho spent m ore than
two years w ith her husband in
Germany, has made her hom e
here for the past six m onths. Sgt.
Nail w ill be stationed somewhere
in this country for the next year;
He is a son of Mrs. W . F. N ail
and the late M r. N ail, o f Mocks-
- A num ber o f Baptist pastors,
from Davie County are in Ashe
ville attending the Baptist State
C onvention w hich m et yester^y
and w ill ^ continue through to
m orrow.
w ho were saddened by news o f
his death.
WANT ADS PAY.
LO ST — O n street o f Mocks*
ville or near Murses Home* a Far
m ington H igh School Class Ring
1949, w ith J. C. G . Enitlals. Re
ward. Return to R e c o ^ office.
M r. and Mrs. Forrest will make
their hom e for the present with
the bride’s parents.
Do You Read The Record?
F O R REN T — 128-acre farm, lo*
cated 3 miles west o f Mocksville.
near Yadkinville Highway. Rent-
er m ust furnish farm equipm ent.
C all or phone B. C . Brock.
Phone 151. Mocksville* N . C.
W A N T E D —T o buy corn» any
kind, in ear, shucked or shelled.
Top prices paid.
M O C K S V IL L E F L O U R M IL L S
F O R SALE—Thoroughbred Ger
m an Shepherd (seeing eve) pup<
pies. K E N N E T H S H IV E .
R . 3, Salisbury, near Shuplm fs
M ill, or call Charles W oodruff,
Phone 170‘J, Mocksville.
P IA N O O P P O R T U N I T Y —
W ill sacrifice at once lovely little spinet Instrum ent plays a n d
looks like new. G ood m ake w ith
full guarantee. Party can take over
on m onthly installments w ith no
dow n payment if credit is 100%
e.stablish^. W rite:
Installm ent Loan Dept. S. N . B.
Box 725 Albemarle, N . C.
Princess Theatre
T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y
John Garfield & Shelley
W inter In
“H E R A N A L L T H E W A Y ”
w ith W allace Ford &. Selsna
Royle. A dded News &. Comedy
S A T U R D A Y
Gene Autrv & Gail Davis In
“IN D IA N T E R R IT O R Y ”
w ith Pat Buttrani & Cham pion
A dded Serial & Cartoon
M O N D A Y & T U E S D A Y
lo hn W ayne In
“F L Y IN G LEA T T ERN EC K S”
. with Robert Ryan
A dded News
W E D N E S D A Y
Janet Leigh In
“ ST RIC T LY
D IS H O N O R A B L E "
with fiiio Pinza
A dded Cartoon
FOR PURE CRYSTAL ICE
C O A L F O R G RA T ES. ST O V ES, F U R N A C E A N D S T O K E R S
It W ill Pay Y ou T o Call O r Phone Us.
W e M ake Prom pt Delivery
Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co.
Phone 116 Mocksville, N . C.
Telephone 300 Southern Bank BIdg. Mocksville, N . C.
D R . R A M E Y F. K E M P , C H IR O P R A C T O R
X -R A Y L A B O R A T O R Y
Hours: 9-30-12^0 2:30-5:30 Closed Saturday 2:30
M onday. W ednesday and Friday Evenings— 6:30 to 8:30
M r. and M rs. Fred Long, w ho
recently sold their new house on
Salisbury S orat to M r. and M is.
W . J. Bailey, have taken an apart
m ent in the D . lU Stroud house
o n Saisbury street. ’
J. D . Hutchens, S. H , 3, o f the
U . S. Navy, w ho is on the ship
799 Jarvey. Portsmouth, Va., is
•pending a 15-day I»v e w ith her
parents, M r. and Mrs. J. B. Hut-
chensl o n Route 2.
A n n Poston, a student at
Peace College, Raleigh, spent the
week-end w ith her parents, M r.
and M rs. H oy Poston. She had
as her guest Miss A m i Bulluck,
o f Rocky M ount, Her room-mate. _______________________________________
T he m any friends o f Roy Brown — = = = = = = = = ^
& Fuel C o., w ill be sorry to learii Poindexter^alker
that he is srill a patient at Davis
Hospital, Statesville, where he is
taking treatment for hean trouble.
H i» fH e ^ s hope for him a speedy
recovery,
Formal Opening
O F
NOVELTY SHOP
Friday, Nov. 16,
F R O M 3 to 8 O ’C L O C K .
The public is.coidially invit
ed to come in; and look ovct
the attractive line o f Novelties
and Christmas Goods now on
display. Refreshments w ill be
served.
MRS. J. W. HILL
H O T E L M O C K S V IL L E .
. D r. H . C . Sprinkle one o f
Mocksville’s best known ministers
left iast week for Charlotte, where
he entersd the M ethodist Home.
Dr. Sprinkle has many friends in
this city w ho w er. sorry to see
h im leave; b ut wish for h im many
happy years in his new home.
' M rs. I. W . H ill cordially invites
, the public to call at H otel Mocks
vilj* o n Friday afternoon from 3
10 8 o’clock and look over her
Novelty v hop. M any attractive
gifts wiU be on display. D o your
Christmas shopping early at the
Novelty Shop. Refreshments will
he served during the afternoon
C d evening.
Private Frank D onald Poindex-
ter, Jr., son o f M r. and M rs. F. D .
Poindexcer, o f Cana, Route l,a n d
Miss Pearl M ittv W allter, daugh-
ter o f M r. and Mrs. E. G . W alk
er, o f Mocksville, Route 1. were
united in marriage at Y ork, S. C.,
on Saturehy evening, N ov. 3rd, at
7:30 o’clock at the hom e o f E.
Gettys N u n n , w ho officiated.
Mrs. Poindexter holds a posit- ’
ion w ith Sanford’s Departm ent
Store in this city.
M r. Poindexter is in the U . S.
Army, and is stationed at Fort'
Jackton,^ C olum bia, S. C . Mrs.
Poindexter w ill m ake her hom e
for the present w ith her parents. .{
' T he Record loins their friends
in wishing for these young people
a long and happy journey along
life’s rugged pathway. ~ ' .
Toy Carnival For The Kiddies
USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN
Santa Has Loads Of Buys in Toyland
Make Your Selection Early
Santa Has Arrived At Toy Town
T he Quality Shoe Shop, located
o n Galdier street and ovmed and
operated by Oscar Lee Poplin and
le R o v Massey, has recently been
remodeled and presents a very at
S t ? n g T S “o fLe“^^^^
ingthey handle a line o f shoe polish and dressings, insoles, shoe
laces, bnishei, etc. They w ould
be d a d for you to call and look
:6ver'their shop any time.
Mai->r and Mrs. T-' A ndrew
Yates, w ho iiave bera srationed in
Korea for the past 20 m onths
sailed W ednesday for the Sdites,
are expected to arrive hom e w ith,
in the next tw o weeks. H e is a ^
son o f M rs. C . N . C hristian,- of '
this city. After December 5th he
w ill be stationed at Fort Sill, O k lx , X ■ Photie ' 99
sutioned in Texas for three years.^ C S C C -C -g -C C g C C C C -g S S
M a u r t i n B r o s .
Near Depot Mocksville, N . C . ,
V
T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M O C K S V I L L E . N . 0 .
S H O P P E R 'S
C O R N E R
By DOROTHY BARCLAY
CHEESE IT
WSAT'S the all-Ume favorite
lunch for dhild and adult alike?
[A chorus answers cheese sandwich! I There’s notliing like It for appetite
j appeal. There’s nothing like It for .nourishment. And there’s nothing so
{easy to put together on a busy day. 'Whether you pack a lunch-box for
your m an to take to
work, or the chil
dren to take to
school, or they
come trailing in at
different times for
lunch, you have the
all-time fa v o rite lunch-time treat
.handy as your refrigerator and'bread-bo.x.
So why not stock up at your
.grocer's, with all the various cheeses he has available, in bulk, in cellophanc-packed sliced time-
.savers, in sha'rcer form? And you’ll •be ready for lunch, or snack, yea,
'even for a casserole dinner you can
fix ahead of time, and just brown up when your long day Is over.
/ Combined with butter, cheese
gives you everything you need in
the way of proteins, vitam ins, min-
•erals and fats, as well as the tasti
est and m ost appetizing combina
tions you could find. M ake cream •cheese bulter for stuffing those wonderful big celery stalks your grocer
;has in plenty. M ake blue cheese, or
‘roquefort or parm csan butter for stronger-taste spreads. Y ou'll be
the talk of your club if you serve the ladies such appetizers as stuffed
celery stalks, thoroughly chilled,
sliced and placed on rounds of rye
bread.
GOME DINNER
And come dinner-time, do you know anything more appetizing on
a cold fall night than onion soup, liberally sprinkled with parm esan or
other favorite cheese? The French know a tiuifty buy when they make
it. They know a good thing when they taste it. And onion soup hails
from France, the land of thrifty and
tasty food. The French restaurant “ Soup a r oignon gratlnee" calls lor butter, onions, shallots, garlic
oelery, w ine and flour, to be sure.
B ut we can show ’em a thing or two by just translating the m ain in<
gredients—butter, soup, onions and cheese. And just as delicious, and
Hind to the purser*
..CHEESE CASSEROLES
And w hat we can do with cas
serole combinations is Am erican
£enlus. There's cheese-noodle cas-
•^erole, for Instance. For this easy-
to-fix, easy-to-eat dish, you cook 8
ounces of broad egg noodles in salted boiling w ater and m ake your
white sauce» with liberal lacings of shaker cheese. Then alternate lay
ers of noodles and cheese sauce in a buttered casserole, and bake
about half an hour. A dish lor a
king, and all your royal fam ily.
Or an egg and cheese casserole
dish makes an occasional hit with every fam ily. Call it scalloped eggs,
and alternate eggs and cheese in 'th e casserole, and drown it in your
special au gratin sauce, and bake it brown. And while you're m aster
ing that cheesy sauce, did you ever smother pre-cooked cauliflower or
broccoli in it? Try it—your fam ily
w ill love it.
Those Seasonal Pastries
Are Made to Order
For Luscious Deserts
T HIN K o r the word pic about (his
tim e of year, and some of the most luscious pastries come to m ind.
CanH you alm ost sm ell hom em ade
pum pkin pie, for instance, w ith its
spicy golden cus
tard baking in a
. tender crust?
There’s apple,
the m ost favored
of all pies, w ith so m any differ
ent kinds of pie apples in season right now. Custard types and m ince
m eat pies arc in for their share of the attention, too, a n d 'th e y ’re all
delicious if you m ake them cor
rectly.
. P ie m aking can be easy if you use a pastry m ix on hand on the pastzy
shelf. If you prefer your own, and
bake m any pics, keep a quantity of
m ix on hand w hich needs only the
addition of w ater. 'Cool fall w eather calls for a
hearty dessert such as pie, so start today w ith some of these delightful
pastries:
Custard P um pkin Pie
(Makes 1 9-inch pic)2 eggs, slightly beaten
2 cups canncd pum pkin (No.
303 can)
^ cup sugar
H teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon clnnam ou % teaspoon ginger
VI teaspoon clovcs
cup evaporated m ilk or light cream
1 unbaked 9-lnch pic shcU Combine eggs and pum pkin. M ix sugar with salt and spices and add
to pum pkin m ixture. Blend in m ilk.
P our into pie shell. Bake in a hot
(425*F.) oven for 15 minutes. Bc-
duce tem perature to m oderate <350*P.) and continue baking 45
m inutes or im tll knife inserted in
center comes out clean.
A C H IFFO N T Y P E of pum pkin
pic has been achieving popularity for some lim e now because it's a
light dessert suitable for a heavy dinner of traditional turkey or chick-
cn:
Pum pkin Cbirron Pie
(]\Iakc5 1 9-inch pie)
1 0-inch baked pic shell
1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin
M cup cold w ater
4 egg yolks% cup light brown sugar V/t cups cooked or canned
pum pkin cup m ilk M teaspoon salt ^ teaspoon cinnam on 14 teaspoon ginger
teaspoon allspice Vs teaspoon nutm eg 4 egg whites Vi cup sugar
1 cup w hipping cream2 tablespoons confectioners*
sugar1 tablespoon chopped nuts
Soak gelatin in cold w ater 5 m inutes. B eat egg yolks and brown
sugar until thick; add pum pkm , m ilk , salt and spices. Cook in dou
ble boiler until thick. Add gelatin softened in cold w ater, stirring un
til d isso lved. Cool. Beat egg
whites until stiff; a d d c u p
sugar. Fold into c u s ta rd . Pour
into baked p ie s h e ll and chill.
W hip cream and add confectioners* sugar. Spread over pie. Sprinkle
w ith chopped nuts.• • •
SQUASH P IE is m uch like pum p
kin pie in texture and flavor, and is
Improved Potato Crop '
Will Help N.Y. Town
H IV E R H E A D , L . I.— Improved
crop reports in Nassau and Suffolk counties, New York, was good
nows recently to merchants of Riverhcad.
Potato production, chief crop of the area, was estimated at 14,640,
000 bushels, a little over two m illion bushels more than produced in
1050. About 44,000 acres in ,the two counties was planted to potatoes
In 1051.
The total agricultural income in
Suffolk county in 1950 was approx
im ately $25,000,000 the New York state departm ent of commerce re
ports.
Arkansas Village Rules
Bicycles From Sidewalks
ATKINS, A rt.—The people ol Atkins have hod a traffic m enace in
recent months—bicycles on sidewalks. The following ad. which a ^
peared in tho recent edition of The Atkins Chronicle, wiped out the
problem : “From the constable . . .
There’ll be no more bicycle riding
on the sidewalks of Atkins. One big la t w om an has already been hit
and a window broken. E . A. Darr,
Constable.*'
Can you im agine the cheers of
delight from the fam ily when you serve this sweet and spicy
pum pkin pie w reathed with
whipped crcam around the
edge? Tender crust and corrcct
spiocs oontribuie to the good
ness of pum pkin pie.
LY N N SAYS:Here are W ays to Perfect Y our Cooking of M eats
Broiled steaks and chops are best
when they’re seasoned w ith salt and pepper after browning.
Kitchen shears, are excellent to have on hand for dicing bacon or
cooked m eats for casseroles and
salads.
Beef, veal, smoked pork and Iam b
do best when roasted a t a constant
tem perature of 300*F. Fresh pork Is best roasted a t a tem perature ot
359*P.
Pum pkin pie can come to the
table in several different cos-
tum cs. For a hearty dinner sim
ply sprinkle plain or toasted co
conut around the edge. It gives
a lacy appearance but does not
cost as m uch as whipped cream
or m ake the pic quite as rich.
LY N N C H A M B E RS' M EN U
Apple Juice
Pork Loin Roast
M ashed Potatoes
Buttered C om and L im a Beans
Tom ato Aspic Corn Sticks
*Squash Pie
*Recipe Given
SCRIPTUnCt Exodus 18<33. DEVOTIONAL READlNOt emy O:10>23.
All Iffen Need Laws
Lesson for November 18, 1051
Dr. Foroman
p r e fe rr e d by
some to the latter. If you have
squash available i i n q u an tity ,
you’ll enjoy us
ing some in this
way.
*Squash Pic
(Makes 1 8-bich pie)H cup brown sugar
2 eggs . 1 cup m ilk
teaspoon cinnamon U teaspoon allspice1 cup chopped pecans cups squash, cooked and
m asheda teaspoon cloves
B eat eggs, add spices, sugar,
m ilk and squash. Add nuts last.
P our into pastry lined pan and
bake in a hot (425*P.) oven for 10
m inutes, then reduce heat to m od
erate (350“F .) for 40 m inutes.• • •
Apple Pie
(Makes 1 8-inch pie)
2 cups sliced apples teaspoon salt
1 cup sugar Vs teaspoon cinnam on
1 tablespoon butlerFew gratings of nutm eg
2 tablespoons cold w aterM ix together apples w ith salt,
sugar, cinnam on, butter ond nut- m eg. Sprinkle M^th cold w ater if
the apples are dry. P lace' apple m ixture in unbaked pastry sliell and
cover top w ith pricked pastry. Seal edges. Bake 10 m inutes in a hot
(4 ^ * F .) oven and then reduce heat to moderate (3?0*F.) and bake for
25 to 30 m inutes or until apples are tender.• * *
H om em ade Pastry M ix
(M akes 8 single pic crw ts)7 cups sifted, enriched flour
4 teaspoons salt
l? i cup lard for soft w heat
flour, or
2 cups lard for hard wheat
flour
Add salt to flour. Cut lard into
flour and salt w ith a fotk or pastry
blendor until the crum bs are about
the size of sm all p'eas. Cover and store in refrigerator until ready to
use. M ixture w ill keep a t least a m onth if refrigerated. F or a single
pie crust, use Vh cu(^ of the pas- ry m ix and add 2 tablespoons
of cold w ater to it.
• « •
Golden Nesselrode Pie
(Makes 1 9-inch pie)
1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin
cup cold m ilk 4 egg yolks, beaten well
1 cup sugar.Vi teaspoon salt
1 cup scalded m ilk
H .c u p cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 egg whites, stiffly beaten 1 tablespoon finely chopped
m araschino cherries 1 0-inch pie shell, baked
Shaved sweet chocolate
Soak gelaUn in cold m ilk. M ix gg yolks, % cup sugar and salt.
_tir in sbalded m ilk. Place over hot w ater, stirring* and cooking un> til m ixture thickens slighUy. R e
m ove from heat, and add soaked
gelatin; stir, until d i^olve d . Add
cream and flavoring and chill until sirupy. Fold in beaten egg wi)ltes
and cherries. Pour into pie shell and
chiU until firm .
W hen you’re cooking m eat in liquid, for stews or soup, never let the w ater boll. It should sim m er
very gently so the m eat w ill be ten< der ratlier than stringy.
If you place m eat in the roasting'
p an on a rack w ith tlie fa t side up,
no basting is necessary. As the fat
m elts it w ill drip down and baste
the m eat.W hen pan-broiling, always pour
off fa t from the m eat as it accum u
lates. If this is not done, you are frying the m eat rather than broiling it.
W H Y do we need so m any laws?
W liy can't we trust people to
follow their conscience? There are two reasons why we can’t do that:
Some people w on't follow their con-
scicnces, and some
other. people have
crooked, inaccurate
a n d d u ll c o n
sciences, — if they did follow them they
would b e w rong most of t h e tim e.
\Vhy can’t we have j u s t the L a w of
Love? Love Is im
portant, .to be sure, but “love” by It
self doesn’t tell us w hat to do in any
concrete case. A nd besides, too m any people have no love to speak
of.• « «
A rc B ible -Laws O u t of Date?
WE L L then, can’t we get along
w ith the Ten Comm andm ents?
They cover everythfaig, don’t they?
They do, to be sure; but only in a very general way. W hat we need
is something that gets down to cases. Surely, you m ight think, the
ancient Israelites could have gone along pretty w ell without law s. B ut
God wanted them to have laws. They could not be a nation with
out them .
In Exodus 21-23 we have a
simple codo which is the earliest known group of la>vs applying
the Ten Com m andm ents to* actual conditions and situations of
living. Christians are not alto
gether agreed about whether
the laws In Ex. 21-23 (and'clse- w hcrc In the Old Testament)
apply to us today.
The m ajority of Christians look a t
it like this: The Ten C om m andments, as great sign posts and
standards, are everlastmgly in
force; the other laws (as those in
Ex. 21-23) were m eant for that particular nation. 'Wlien that nation
disappeared, the laws w ent w ith it, just as (for example) the law s of
Rom e perished with the Rom an Em pire.
G etting D ow n lo Cases
t j o w E V E R , while these laws were
^ not directly intended for us, and are not all usable by us, tliey arc
w ell w'orth our study, because they are examples of how the great basic
principles of the Ten CJdmmand- m ents were once applied* in prac
tical living and they give us valuable hints on the w ay to apply the
Ten C om m andm ents' in our o\vn
tim es. . ■
One illustration of this pobit can be seen In Ex. 21:28-36, ihc
Law of the Goring Ox. The C om
m andm ent reads sim ply: Thou
Shalt not kill. B ut w hat if tho
killing was done not by a m an
but by his ox?
The law goes into the question of
responsibility In an interesting w ay. Not m any readers of these lines
own oxen,—more likely tractors or
station wagonsi. B ut the principle of
responsibility for dam age, the
principle of* crim inal negligence, is
as go(^ today as it was in 1200 B.C.
“R ig h t” Isn’t a Sum
SO M E of these laws, indeed, could
be taken literally today'. F or to-
stance, take Exodus 23:2, first part
of the verse. This says pretty clearly something that m illions of people
to this day don’t understand. It m eans this: The num ber of people
w ho say a thing is right, or is wrong, has nothing w hatever to do
w ith the question, IS it right or
wrong? . .
•Most young people, a t least, have the notion that if "everybody does
it” it m ust ,be right. N ot, a t all. The Judge of a ll the earth is God,
not a m ajority vote. A thing can be
m ade legal by a m ajority vote in a
legislature, parliam ent or the like.
But not a ll the congressmen from
M aine to California can m ake a
thing right just by saying s o .'
Y e t how m any people in our
tim e settle the liquor question
(for exam ple)'by looking, so to
speak, a t tho score board! ' A m ajority of our law m akers,!
voted to m ake the sale of liquor legal; so *'lt m ust be right.’*
^Everybody I know” says it's
all right, so ''it m ust be right.**
Every once in a while it dawns
on some sm art person that the right and w rong of the liquor question
can’t be settled, for a Christian, by a sim ple counting of votes for .and
against.
The num ber of cocktail parties in
New York, W ashington or; Denver doesn't settle thC question. It has
to be studied from a C hristian point of view, and the big question is not:
H ow m any people do it? But, is it
right for those who are their."broth
ers’ keepers” ? Is it right for those whose bodies are to be tem ples for
the Holy Spirit?
(Oopyrlibt 1091 'b f the OivliUn «t
StatM »r Amerlea. n«U M «a br WNU
HEEDIEWOBK PATTERNS
Animal Trio Fun for Tiny Tots
Stuffed Toys
^ A Y little Stuffed toys that are
ju st the right size for a tiny tot
to carry around. The am using kitten, puppy and bunny arc, sim ple
to m ake from work basket scraps. F inish each w ith a ribbon bow.
* * *Pattern No. 6209 contains hot Iron transfer tor cnch toy. material require, menia. aewinc directions, color suftRos- on<t stlteh illustraUons ^ for an-
-*—.— for ntmbtc flnRcra: stccIoI fco* lUt pattern -printed losldo the tents.
8GWINO Cm C LE NEEDLEW OHK 381 tV«ft Adanui. St.. Chlesco 9. 111.
.cSS'SSJ “5”.'desired.Pattern No........................................
Name (Please Print)
Street Address or P.o7 Box Wo."
Noisy Place
Te&chcr— “W hat was the Tower
of B abel?”Student — “W asn’t tliat where
Solom oi):kcpt his 500 wives?'*
Too M uch Rouge
She— “ How do you like m y new coat?"
H e.(looking a t her face)— *‘Fine,
only you go.t it on too thlckl”
; F loral Design
“ Has^that florist any children?”
“ Two: a girl who Is a budding
genius and a son who is a bloom*
ing idiot.”— • —
• ^Wako Up I
“ W hat a horrible noise comes
from th at radio set!”“ W ell, I guess you would m ake
just as bad a noise if you were com ing out of ether.”
_ IP OR « A «
V Ivbrkate bikes, train*, skates ond
,w o9on>w llh3»IN-pNEOa
No Spirit
She— “ Your kisses are like i
liar drink.”:e— “ Pow erful?”
She— "N o, old fhshloned.'* ,
. W M E N , W H^p^S E W
SCOOP! First offering
WONDfR OUALItyi WONDfH f'HICE'
1 9 5 3 WODEl KLEENCUT PELUXF
PINKING SHEARS
IDDAY
FREETRIU
BMl., Onrrtl a«, MKb. Stnd_Plt>kln( SbMtt M '
You mutt b* 4«ll ■«t your inoaey b
ly m»llm*ii plut pMUff) I
ins-’^ v - .r !
Q U IC K ond
TASTyMEAI.1
V an C am p's
P o rk a n d B eans
in Tomato Savce
Cbolcc, plump, whole beaoB
'...a accrct aavory tomato
sauce...sweet tender pork...
.w ith flavor through and
through, Oal;^ Van Camp’s . .
.. .originator of canoed pork
end beans.^.^Tcs you.60',]
much good eating a t'e u ^ ;
Uttlecostofmoucyoodcffbrt^' i
THE DAVIE r e c o r d ; MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
OTMIUIONS
JOUYTIME
POP CORK
EAT ANYTHING WITH
, FALSE TEETH!
n rm b a n noiiU>.»lih p l.ln
---------
■upenoK..oeoilr ra yoiir.pUt«.R«»oej ■ndcefiuloon. S *l«e* in no powder 01 pMie csn do.
-s^lixnoBtlistotycBrertoagcr. v ou CAN CAT Simply lor strip ofPlsid* t M lower. Dlio^ iv - r r — M ft «trip ofplsid*• iiliw <w iroi>ble»me upper or lower. Dlio . If molds i^ e c tlr. Easy/* me, tutelesi,
!. «doiles«. harmleis to you sod yoor pistes. cRenqvable st directed. Money back IT 001 Ty ssdsBcd. jftA
CHEAPER by the DOZEN!
:■ Pure Warfarin Concentrate
W ilhdlrecUoastoiBalce2H lb9.Ite8hbBlt., Here is Ybut Rodent fasiutanco.
' M ad e bjr the m ak e n of O ae.Spet Flea K iU ei— so you know h*» tfte very best., f :SI«tye«tfI«ealilote«($8pKd«s.pe«lp<ldlraa.Mj.Oae.Spot Co., B. 23 , leewp, Md.
.Bin 'em the Safe, Oae>8pot way.ISave Money On
This Home Mixed
Cough Syrup
BlI Snvlne. No Ca.klne. So Eu;.You'll b..utpH»d tow<iufckl> ond mlly yoQ « n relieve eoushs.due to coMs, when ».3roti by this splendid rcdpe. It tives you ’§ abotit four times es much eotsfih .ncdidno ^{or your money, and you'll And It truly
M ake a eyrup with 2 eups of BnuwlaUd
auBtf and one «up of water. N o eooWnc needed. (Or you can use com syrup^r liquid bon^. Instead of auear eyrup.) Then put S M ounces ot Pinex (obbiinM from any
d ^ t ) In a nlnt bottle, and fill u p * 1 *This roakca a full pint ol medl.
jgcawjOubyltii^qM^^^
This timpio mbturft takes rlfibt hold of a cough: It foosena the phleRiit. aoothes the Irritated membranes, qtikkly eases soreness anddUBcultbreatbine. . ,Pbiex b a special compound ot proven Id concentrated form, well.
M ?Sr‘? e l3 d IMtdonn’t plme you in every way.
FOR EXTRA CONVENtEHCE GET NEW REAOY'llillEO.- DEAOV'TO USE PiNEXf
*‘MY CONSTIPATION
TROUBLES ARE OVER!”
•'For tlurty years, I took so many kmds of pills and laxatives to relievo conatipaUon: Shice 1 started e a tin g a l i.>b r a n . r e very d a y , those ! troubles ate overl”M rs. Fred’ B. Rei« snan, & 16tb S t,Botlumy, M o. Just ■, o tie o fm o ny unstd ic- : ite d k U e ra fro m ALL- ‘ niUN users. If y o u .'Buffer &OQ consti- ’ nation due to lack of dietary bulk, try this: E a t an ounce (about H
FEEL AWFUL?
666 symptorralic
RELIEF
^qntbly Pains” stopiied
or amazingly relieved
' In 3 oui ol 4 COM. in aMloK' twhl
p d n s,'C ra m p s and good**, feellnes a t m enstru “ jrdla
Bird Feeding Stations
Attractive in Gardsps^j]
Th e birds that do not gO'Souto
for the whiter w ill enjoy one ot
these feeding stations. These’ do>- signs arc easy to m ake. Just-trace
the Irregular parts on to the wo3d a n d x u t out w ith coping saw.iPat-
tcm 208 gives detailed decorating
directions. Price 25c. : ...j;
W O R KSH O P P A T T B R N S C n n ^
tedf»rd*niM«.Vew York . ..i- '
He Was Rlgtit ^ < ,
And then one day she turned
and saw that he was sm iling &t
herl She sm iled back a t h lm ^N o , he didn’t turn aw ay, he didn't, dis
appear—ho looked a t her more in- tently than beforcl
**Smlle like that agahi," he said.
She blushed and dim pled. And
he laughed and laughed. ‘ ■•'Just as I thought,” he said.
“ You look like a chipm unk.” •
You’re Welcome
She—“ Thanks for the hug.”
He— “Oh the pressure ’ was all m ine."
Speechless
He— “W hat would you say if I
kissed you?”
She—“ I wouldn’t be hi a position
to speak.”
fi/IC K S
^ . . . V Va p o Ru b
e n j o y
t h e b e s t
lioMON:
SALT
Costs 011^2^
aweefcforthe
average family!
RUB
CHILD’S CHEST <0010A "rub** fools best to
ASOOWWBDmSWQ;
A Three Days' '
Cough IsYovr
Danger Signal
[ybeuttse
0 trouble
Cteomulsion idievMpromptlyl
it foes r i^ t to ibo seat of ibeto help loosen and expel gera.__pUegm and aid aature lo soothe a— raw, teader, bOamed broacbial membranes. Guaraateed lo please you or money cefiuided. Creomulsioa has stood the test of millions of users.
CREOMUCSiONlellews Cemli*. Clxtt Celdi, Acaf BwotHtlsARRESTED
A Htadaohs Due To Cnstlpatim
/•TOril LIKE THEM TOO”'
NERATION Ati.> generation
Has used LANE’S PILLS^
f a Belp iUv up A lU ty U re r. :
m
PAGE EIGHT T H E D A V IE R ^ R D , m6cK 9 V IL Le N . d . R O V E U B E R U . t«S i
Mf R IC H A R D U IL L W ILKINSON
SO T H ERN waa desperately
•* * bl need of money, and go when
■ht c u n e across the Currier and
lre « print she thought right oft that
U m ight be possible to seU the pic
ture t« a collector for a considerable •u m . The painting was dusty ond
HjT'Spccked and encased in a heavy, antiquated gold fram e, but she
••T ried it down to the kitchen and le a n e d it as best she could, and
ttien called in Burt.
been in the attic for years,' ahe explained. “M other had it a • I n g tim e ago. And you know some '
C urrier ond Ives prints are worth
fortunes.*' iB urt scratched his chin and
•eruUnized the barely distinguish
able signature. He nodded slowly.
**You m ight get something for it at th a t," he said. ‘‘It’s a Currier and
Ives all right, and it's sure enough
old.’^' “Oh, Burt, wouldn’t it be wonder* fu l if wo could! Why, it would just
•olve everything!”B urt grinned. "W ell, there’s no
harm in trying. More 1 look al it
the more 1 think it m ight bring a
price. Tell you w hat I ’ll do: I'll call Moe Avery. He’s a collector and
he'll buy it if it’s worth anything.So B urt went to the 'phone and
called Moe A veo’- “He’ll be here
G RADU A TED SCALE
A B IG dance hall, located
across the way from a National
G uard encam pm ent In New Eng*
land, enticed trade from the men
In uniform with this sign t “ Come
and dance w ith our 50 beauUful hostesses — 90. Generals: 910.
Colonels: $8. Captains and Lieutenants: 16. Enlisted m en: $3.
Veterans of World W ar One: 28 cenfs an hour."
Idiom 's Delight
A Chinese gentlem an was trying to catch a train at Union Station
and a porter wos trying to locate his baggage. The Chinese got very
upset. Finally, as ihe train was about to depart he ham m ered upon
the counter and exploded in these
words:
"Pretty dam n seldom where m y
bag go. She no fly. You no more fit n m station than God's sake.
That’s all I hope.”
T HE ELASTIC F E E
The lawyer surveyed the tattered
client as he listened, and decided that he would be bJclQr to obtain a
ten-dollar fee. He nam ed that
am ount as necessary to secure the prisoner’s release. Thereupon, the
client drew forth a large roll of bills, and ^ e le d cff a ten. The law
yer's greedy eyes popped.
'•W hat ja il is your son in ? " he
inquired craftily.
" In the county ja il.”
" In the county ja il, not the cily
ja il!" was the exstnmation in a ton» of dism ay. "That's bad—very bad.
It w ill cost you at least fifty dol>
lars."
M rs. Southeni held her breath while he bent to study the
painting.
in an hour's tim e ," he told his wife
a m om ent later. “We’d better not get too optim istic though. Probably
turn out to be w orthless."
"O h, Burt, you don't think it
wilU” Why—why I ’d be satisfied if it brought $501"
"O ught to bring that," said Burt. **Ought to bring m ore! However, no
in getting optim istic."
' M rs. Sothern sighed. "F ifty dol- lir s i" she said. "Think of it. Just
think of the things we could do. B ui there. As you say, I mustn’t get
•ptim istic."H icy; talked about the prospects
and possibilities, both pro and con.
vndergoing various sensations of
hope and fear and optimism and
m isgivings, until finally the door
bell rang and B urt admitted Moe
Avery.
Moe was a brisk and efficient
little m an. He greeted them briefly, and then produced his glasses."H ow long?" he asked, "has this
prin t been in your fam ily?”
"O h, ever so long,” said Mrs. Sothern. " I—I've rather lost track."
"H u m ," said Moe. "Y o u ’ve been •aving it?’’
"Y e s /’ said M rs. Sothern, ‘‘we’ve
been saving it."
The collector removed his glass- rs, carefully returned them to his
case and put the case into his pocket. His face wore 'a docful
expression. He sigl>ed heavlJy. “I ’m afraid ," he said, “ that I can’t offer
you cjnnffh to ^ a lc e it.w orth your
P ut In Uls Place
M agnate <to poor suitor): "V ounr m an, do you know how 1 m ade my
m oney?"
Young m an: "Y es, but I cr.n‘‘
sermit that to stand in the w ay o
»4>irier.s happiness."
Uncle Sani Says
IN SUPERIOR COU RT
N orth Carolina— D iv k Gouhty
N O T IC E O F SALE O F L A N D
In the M atter ot A . L . Bowles,
Guardian o f Cornelia Bowles»
non compo$.
Under and by ^rtu e of an order made
In the above entitled Cause S. H .
Chaffin, Clerk ^f.Siiperior Cotu’c, and
a pp rov ^ by his H ^ o r , J. A . Rjousseau,
Judge o£ the 17th jTudicial District, the
undersigned Commissioner w ill olTer
for sael at public auction at the Court
house door of Davie C ountv in Mocks-
ville, N . C , on Saturday, the 17th day
o f November, 1951, at 12 o'clock M ..
the following described lands located
in Mocksville Township on the road
leading from Highw ay N o. 64 to^ the
C ounty H om e road, and more p.'irttcu
larly described as follows:
1st Tract— Bounded on the N orth
by the lands of N . B. Dyson, on tl\e
East by E. C Koontz, and on the
South by J. C Bowles heirs, and on the
N(^est by Center public road. Beginning
at a stake Northwest comer on >X^est
side of.public^road and.runs S. 87 degs.
E. 19.90 chs. w ith J. C . Bowles heirs’
tine to a stone, said Bowles heirs' cor
ner; thence N . 3 dcgs. E . 12.10 chs.
to a stone N . B. Dyson^s corner; thence
S. 88 degs. E. 2J.08 chains w ith said
Dyson line to a stone, E. C Koonts’s
corner; thence S. 10 degs. W . 10 chs.
w ith Koonti's line to a stone Koontz's
corner; thence S. 2) dcgs.^V. 6.45 chs.
to a stake. Koontz's corner; thence S.
>0 dcgs. V . 5 chs. to a stone. J. C.
Bowles heirs’ corner; thcnce N . 89
degs. 20 chs. to a stone corner of
Pool -fot, J, C Bowles heirs* corner;
thence N . 5 degs. E . 4.95 chs. to a
stone and Poplar, J. C . Bowles heirs’
corner; thence N . 89 degs. W. 10.90
chs. to a stake on East side o f public
road; thence N . 4 degs. W . 4.90 chs;
to the beginning comer, and contain
ing 56 Acres as surveyed by A . L.
Bowles September ith , 1951.
2nd Tract— Bounded on the East by
Center Church Public Koad, on the
N orth by Virginia Bowles, on West
by Bill Green, and on cIk & uch by J.
C . Bowles heirs' land; Beginning at
an iron stake. Northeast corner in Vir-
innia Bowles' line and runs N . 87 degs. 5 chs. w ith said Virginia Bowles' line
to an iron stake; thence S. 42 degs.S.7f ch*. to an iron st.ike, Virginia
Bowles' corner; thcnce S. 6 degs.
SA6 chs. to an iron stake, said V ir
ginia Bowles* corner: thence S. 74 dcgs.
W . jlO.IO chs. to a stone. Bill Green’s
corner; thcnce S. 4 degs. W . 4.<0 chs.
to a stone, J. C Bowles hrirs’ corner;
thence S. 89 degs. E. 11.90 chs. w ith
said J. C Bowles h«rs’ corner; thcnce
t N . > degs. E. 5 chs. to a stone, Bowles
• heirs' comer; thencc S. 89 degs. E.
6.i0 chs. w ith said Bowles heirs’ line to
. a stone on W est side of public rosH;
thence N . 4 degs. W . 8 chs. w ith said
public road to a point in curve; thencc
N . 10 degs. W . 3.65 chs. w ith said pub
lic road to the beginning corner, and
containing 15 and 35/100 Acres as
surveyed by A. L. Bowles, September
6th. 1951.
Terms of Sale: One H undred DoU
jars cash and the balance on thirty
days time w ith bond and approved se
curity. or all cash at the option of the
«purchaser.
I H iis 16th day of October, 1951.
A . T . G R A N T .
*' • Commissioner
Shoaf €^al &
SanS Co.
W c Can Supply K our N « d s
IN G O O D C O A L ,
S A N D and B R IC K
C all or Phone U> A t A ny T im e
P H O N E 194
Formerly Davie Brick & C oal Co
SILER
Funeral Home
AND
Flower Shop
Phone 113 S. Main St
Mockaville, N. C.
Ambulance Service
Notice to Creditors
Having gnalifted Admlnlairaior of
the eBtntfl nf IMnntie P. Llliii, (tcceased'
noiire in tierebVBivKn to nil peraona linld-
ins cinimii a alnM Anld eaiaie to present
the KnniH. properly verifi<'d. *n ih« under
on or before the I3<h d<iv of Ocio<
her, 19S2. nr thia noiiee will he plend In
bum f lh«>lrf>cnv«ry. All
Vour Serlea Defense Benda are belter than ever. Ton may now hold
them another 10 years which means that In 20 years you wIH g€t 77 per eeol more than your original Investment. For instance: A S7S Defence Bend pur- etiased today will equal SIM in 10 years > and In 20 years It will equal $133.33. In- < vest today for yourJutore flnaneial se- | eurlty by fiisnlncr up for the Payroll
I Savings Plan where you work. If yeu . ' don't save regularly, you don’t save si ■ all. u. s. Tfaturr 0*p«wA
Walker Funeral Hoi»e
A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E
D A Y O R N IG H T
P h o n e 4 8
M o c lu v ille , N C ,
FAR M
MAC BIITER T
New Mowers, Rakes, Drills, Disc and Section Harrows,
Manure Spreaders, Self-Propelled Corn Pickers.
We Have Sonne Good Used Farm Machinery
Big Line Of New Parts In Stock
Don’t Purchase Your Farm. March>nery Until You
Look Over'Our Stock
HENDRIX & WARD
N E A R C O R N A T Z E R
J. F R A N K H ttilD R IX
Massey Harris Farm Impioments
M IS S C O L E E N FO S T E R O W E N W A R D
Boger & Howard
P U R E S E R V IC E
Tir<.8 Batteries A tid Accessories
Kurfees Pallets
Corner N . M ain & Gait1ier Sts
• Phone 80
i>d to*i«id •'MBi*' will fiUniif* call upon th^
<ii(der«>itfi>ftd nt Advancn. Route 2. N. C
7hU 13th dftv o/Ociiitier. 19S1.W J. EIXIS. Admr.01 Man.le P. tlHe. deck’d.
By A. T. GRANT. Aiiorney.
Notice to Creditors
Havlns quRllAe'< »» AdmlnU'rAtor pi
the'eMate of Genrfie £. Peebles, deceased,
aotleo ie hereby Aiven to all pernona bold
ind clalmi aK8in-.i (be e»tete of said de
ceased, to preseoi the rame to (he under
signed, propt-rly verified, on nr before the
!MMh day nf Oeinher, 1952 or this notice
wijl bfl plead in bar of tbeir recovery. All
nerson^ indetued to the said e#fAie, will
piKNfle cftll upon the underalRned at Cnor
lemner. N. C . nnd iiiak^ pmmpt settle*
m-ut. This the 3ll(h d«y pf 0 :toher. 1951
LONNIE U. PEGBLeS. Admr. of
George E. PeehtKs, dec^’d
Do you read I'he' Record?
Notice of Sale
U nder and hy virtue of an order
of the Superior C ourt of Davie
C ountv made In the SpechI Pro
cc-clini*. entitled: Dent (E . O.)
Ijam es, Executor ot J . S . Parker,
deceased, vs Itfnioa P arker, et a l.,
tbe underslKtied Com m lssiooer w ill
on the I7lh day of. Novem ber, 195:
at twelve o’cltjck, m , at the court
house door in M ocksville, Davie
C onnty, N orth Car<*lina. offer fot
sale to tb«* hiehes* bidder for cash
that certain tract of land .lyinK and
beltig^ in C alabaln T ow nship, Dh
vie C ouotv, N C ., arijoininK the
lands of S. H Chaffin and otherfi
and br>unded a- follow s, to w itt
SeginnlDK at an Iron stake, r*in»>
S. 8s dek--4» K. to a »tooe; thence
S o uth 27 B^st 6.o«) chs to an iron
>,ke In m ad ; Ibtlice S 84 ESst
38.00 chs to an Iron stake; thetict*
N . 16 East 6.53 chs. to a stone and
sweeiRUOi; (hence N orth 15^ W .
16.63 chs. to an iron stake; thence
N 6tth 86 W *st 3.V05 chs. to a
»tone at root of sycamore tree;
thence South 41 W est 6 50 chs. lo
Hn iron Htakr; tbenue S o u th 23 W .
.^.00 chs. to a ^tone; theoce Sbutb
90 B St 90 links to an iron stake;
thence So uih 10 \Ve»i s 00 cfas to
au Iron sttkeV tbeiic * S o uth 4.18
chs. to (he )»i!>iining, cim taluiog
eight* ' (80) acres, more or- less. -
!»' Sale; $50 • op •'asbairf
th f on , thiM -y*!' time,
w »l bond' Mi.p'0'*>l .-rcuHty,
or nil ai the ni>iM n'of-.h*- pnr.
1 haxer, « on -r«iiili»ma"on« p f the
R e. T his 15th dvv bf ^betdher,
i9 5 r. '.A. t GRANT
Cntnml^^lnni'r.
R E A D T H E A D $
AJong With the New»
ATTEI^TIO N FA R M ER S!
.POULTRY LOADING
W e W ill Buy Y our Poultry Every TKurtday M orning Ffoin 8 A. To 11 A. M*
In Front Of E. I*. Foster* Cotton Gin
HIGHEST M a r k et pr ic es PAID
W IL L P A Y \CARKET P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S
SALISBURY p o u lt r y CO.
SalUbnry, N. C • .
The
Davie Record
Has Been Published Since
52 , Years
Other* ha,ve conie and gone-yoiir ,,.. ^
county newtpaper keep* going,
i'ometime* 'it ha* *eemed hard lo
make ‘'bueUe and tongue” meet but
>oon the tun *bine* and again we ^
march on. Our (nitliful subscriber*.
mo*t of whom pay promptly, gin us
courage and abiding faith in our
. fellow man.
If your neighbor is nut taking The
Record tell him to subscribe. The .
price is only $1.50 per year 7in the ,
State, and $2.00 in other states. i
When You Come To Toivn
Make Our Office Your
Headquarters. .
We Are Alwavs Glad To
See You.
LET us DO
YOUR ^QB PRINTING
We can save you money
on your
ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS;
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL
HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc.
Patronize your home newspaper,
and theireby help build ,up ,y.our
honie town and county.
THE DAVIE REeORP.
V 51
The Ricor^d hias the larqest
circulation of (my Daine paper.
♦ FOR RENT ♦
S P A C E I N t H I S P A M R
W II Arrange TW Suit- V
G O O D N E IG H E b R S - P W C E S T b
FIT V O U Ji BUSINESS
-I
' ' .if
•ft
D A .V IE O O trN X 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
HERE SHALL THE PT<SS. THE PEOi’Le’S RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNAWED BV INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY CAIN ”
V O L U M N L II.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 B S D A Y , N O V E M B E R J i, lo si.N U M B E R 17
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
: Wh«t W u Happening In Da-
' vie'Befora Pai king'Maten
And AbbreTiatad Skirts.
^Davlt Record, N o i. J2. IW 3)
J. C. Santord spent Friday and
Saturday at Roper.-
Attorney A. T . Grant made a
business trip to Statesville Friday.
G . F. Booe, of Yadkin county,
was In town Tbum Jay on husinew.
Miss Margaret Bell spent the
week-end with relatives at. Lanrin.
bnrR.
I. J. Larew returned home Pri.
day from a two week's business
trip tbmnKb Florida.
Prank Honeycutt and Aaron U.
James made s business trip to tbe
Queen City yesterday.
Mrs. Essie Byerly. of W inston.
. . Sslem , spent Ib e week end at b'er
hom e io tbis citv.
, Hanes Vales, a student at N . 0.
State. Raleixb, spent .tbe week-end
in town with home folks.
Mias Em ily Carr, of tbe Mocks,
ville Ecbaol faenlty, spent tbe week,
end wltb her parents io Cbarlolte'
Miss Jane Crow, a slodent a>
Salem Coilene, spent tbe week end
In town wltb bef mother. Mrs. E,
W . Crow.
Uts. K nox Johnstone and Infant
son arrived home from the Baptist
H otpital at WlnstoD-Salem last
Thursdiay.
Mr.' and Mrs, P. J. lobuson spent
■ Thursday and Friday in Cbarlolte
attending tbe- Methodist Confer
ence, wblcb adjourned Sunday.
Mrs. J. B. W hitley came over
from Winston Salem last Friday lo
spend some time w ith her brotbcr,
R . L. Walker.
< Mrii. Frank Clement spent Ibe
week-end in Durham tbe Ruest of
ber dauRbter, Miss Hanes, who is
a student at Duke University,
SherlS Smoot and Deouty Miller
relunied Thucsday from Goldsboro,
where they carried A da Campbell,
colored, lothe Slate Insane asylum.
M. B. Richardson, o f R . >, kill-
cd two M r boRB Friday, one weigh.
IBR t9S »>d tbe oiber 6io pounds.
W e will know wbere to go when
out ol-meat.
A, T. Grant. Jobn Sanford and
Alex Klmbrougb. Jr.. were among
tbosewbo attended tbe Duke.Car.
olina football Rame at Durham Sat.
nrday aftemoon.
; J T. Angell went to Sonttamont
Sunday morninR, where be filled
Ibe pnlptt of Rev. H . T . Penry at
Southmoni Baptist church.
Tbe Princess Theatre has resum
' ed business after telng , closed for
nearly two years. They are show.
In* two nights a week, Friday an<t
Saturday.
^ Deputy W ill McCulloh captured
a sleam blockade dislillery lo Ihe
Redland section Friday. About iso
gallons of beer was destroyed. Tbf
end of the sllH was labeled with
■ tbe leltera R N A . N o arrests were
made.
Rev. G . B. Ferree baa been re-
turneo to bis work In Davie coun'
ty by the M. P. Conference, which
was' in session at Tbomasville the
past several days.
W hile on tbeir way In tbe Bap.
tin State Convention at Greens-
'boro laat Tuesday morniog. Rev.
and Mrs. W . H . Dodd had the mi:^
fortune to get their Ford coupe
badly damaged and to receive more
or less painlnl injuries. Mrs. Dodd
suffered a' dislocated collar bone
and other Injuries, while H r. Dodd
CorrtdinK Mistimes
Rav. tValter E. h^hmr.-TajrlanvlNeJt. C,
All people are subject to mi«.
lakes. Some, In sll probsbilily,
make far more than others, but are
entlKly free- It Is human to err,
but Divine to forgive. Not only
does God forgive our mistakes, es.
peclslly when we call up H im , but
we are to do likewise .toward each
otker.
Mistakes are not only made lo
the educational, moral and solrl-
tual realm. To correct mistakes In
business is an absolute necessity,
and if one falls be soon becomes
dishonest. After a mistake Is made,
if It is willfully repeated. It be
comes an act and a sin.
Mistskes ought lo be carried
oftentimes In tbe moral and spiri.
tnal realm In regard lo our rels-
tionsbip o n e toward another.
Sometlmea we say br do sometbinc
In regard lo some one else that Is
not In Divine order, althoneh we
didn’t aim to do wrong, but find
that we are mislsken, therefore it
is Rood and well worth while to
make a correction. Tbis will keep us
on eond terms with God «nd man.
Never think it bellltling to cor
rect a mistake.. I t is ennoblinR.
On the other hand it is belittling to
make a mistake that oneht to he
corrected, when one. discovers it,
but fall or refuse to do so.
N ot long rince a man come to roe
In regard to a mistake be felt that
be bad made and confeswd it In
order to make adjustment. H e had'
been worried over that matter,
knew nottaing of the mlatakee tiniil
he came to roe. W e are tbe bent
of friends, and even Christian
brolhers. Naturally be waa re.
]ieved when he made known rte
mistake and I asaure him that he
bad done tbe noble tbing. and that
there was nothing to worry over.'
W hen anytbiuR Is , done that is
wrong toward anoiher. and this is
intentionallv, then it is more' than
a mistake— II is a sin. This must
l>e confessed and pardon siongbi,
both toward God and man, If one la
to retain bis fellowship with God
and m ankind. Fellowship broken
w llllully toward our fellow
broken with God. W e can't mis,
treat mankind and In tbe me;n.
time be in good standing wltb God.
When we are wllfnlly In bad stand
ing, w ilb God’s people we are In
bad standing with H im .
the pet store aalesm an assured his customer. "T hat dog Is the best rat
catcher in the county."A t Ibis m om ent the woman
screamed. A rat was strolling casu
ally across the store.
Minutes later, when some ol her
composure was restored, she asked,
■Why didn’t your dog go after him ?
t thought he was supposed to be such a good ra|.K:atcher.’’
"H e is,” nodded Ihe m an smugly! "Ju a t let a strange rat come ini—
World Digest.
Aw, Ahe The only pun .Abe L,ittcoln‘ ever
m ade was when he 'was splitting rails arid his boss criticised his
w ork severely.
"How do you feel now l’ 'asked a
fellow-workman,
Lincoln thought a minute and re
plied, “I feel I m aul rlgiit.’’
ThottqhtEx.pressed
Tbougbta“ expresaed in language
clean
May live on from age lo age,
And may help ibe low and mean
To become a salnl or sage;
Meanwhile they may help the weak
r ^ v i d a gash acrras bia forehead
and waa lirulaed up to some ex.
tent. Rev. J. L . Kirk^: an occu-
p a uto f the' car. ^ p ^ d Idjury.
The wreck orenrred In Greetisbdro
when a a r came out of a - cross
street and ran into'the car driven
by Mrs Dodd. " They were cariied
to the. Greensboro clinic, where
their woubd* were Riven inedical
attentidn;
To be stronger in the Lord, .
O r the great to become more weag
As they work for God's reward.
Thoughts expressed in language
vile.
O r in language, lo deceive,"
May Ibe hearts of men beguile
Till they never m ay achieve
W bal.tbey could across tbe years
That wonld'prove their manhood
great.
But may bring tbera down in-tears
To a tragic end or fate.
Then be careful with'your tbooghis
How expressed by longue or. pen
Lest you leave but empty naughts.
In tbe soul and lives of men;
For there’s power, right or wrong
In our tboiights expressed la
words.
That m ay underm ine a.tbrouR ,
O r Rive iruth that underglrdfc.
Your social ?ecurity account:helpa
to prolect you in yon in your aRe.
Better -caii. at'Ibis office
now and get jroiir land . po*.
ten befiwe the tupply U , es>
haiitled; Printed : on heavy
cMrd'hoarii; SOe.' per dozen.
PETS EX C LU D E D
'‘Dm i’t worry about rats, m ad
He ShotUd Know
A professor Is a m an who under
takes to tell his students how tn
solve i%e problems of life which he
him self has tried to avoid by bo>
com ing a professor.
I F air Minded
ATho introduced you to your
w ife?” > .*'We just met. I don't blame no
body.”
FA IU FIT
T H E P U B LIC PAVS
A sifort while after his marr&ge,
*ate in life, to the Baroness de
Reuter, eccentric publisher Jam es
Gordon Bennett received a biU
from his wife’s m illiner. One look
at the staggering am ount was
enough to make him see red. M arching into hia wife’s room, he
showed her the bill and demanded: '
"D id you order a ll these hatst^'
She nodded her head. Bennett,
furious, stared at her helplessly.
Then slowly he turned and walked away, m uttering to him self:
*'^ineone*8 going to pay for this
Someone's going to pay for this.*’
Suddenly an idea struck him
Sttmmoning the m anager of h‘-
newspaper, he ordered the price,»
the sheet to.be raised a penny.
Putting His Foot In It The old engineer pullqd his cngii
up to the water tank and briefed i*-
new flrem an, who got up on ti
tender and brought the spout dovi
all right. However, the new flr<-
m an caught his foot in the chsi
and stepped into the tank.
The engineer watched with j
Jaundiced eye as the new mo- floundered around in the water
“ Just fill the tank w ith water
sonny/' he said. *'Nb need to stamr
It down.”
W e’re K ot Bad The guys who think our joke.*? art-
rough iWould quickly change thoir views
If they’d compare the ones they read W ith those we’re scared to use.
Salt and Pepper
The only good thing that can be said about some of our roads is that
when riding on them it is never necessary to knock the a ^ e s 'off a
cigar.
Considerate
flature couldn’t m ake us perfect,
so she did the next best thing; she
made us blind to our faults.
LEND-LEASE
Little Henry wore his father’s
clothes, which his mother cut down
for him as best she could. One day. as .the little boy wos fletting^nto a vest that had been cut down from
a n overcoat, he began lo grumble.
‘•What’s the m atter now ?" asked
his father.
“Why,” - said Henry, “ thi.<j pockct ain't got no bottom lo it.”
"Pocket, nothing!” retorted his father. “That's a buttonholel”
Now Wc Know , •
Judging from sonie of the specimens they pick for husbands no
wonder brides blush.
Help, Please As the dog said to the leader of
tbe flea circus. “ I can't carry the slww akme.”
Lightning Sparl;s Llghtnhig is not just one big
electrical spark. There are m ary,
over the samb path. Before the m ain
stroke, the flash feels its way. In about .one two-^mllllonth of a sec
ond, a "leader” moves down from the electrically chavgud cloud' for
about 75 feet. Then it n\f>ves some
more, so that there m ay be ss m any
as 40 such steps. W hen this .stepped
leader .^reache8 - the- ground, having
ta l» n but a fraction of a second
for .the v^ole trip, a conducting
path Is established between cloud
and'ground. A discharge then moves
upward along this path, at a speed
of from 20,000 to 100,000 miles per
second. Then there may be m any m ore discharges, each started by |
a conthitious leader and followed I i
by a return stroke. The first up- • w ard discharges occur when the
leader is.w ithin a lew hundred feet
of the earth. A t this time the elec
trical charge at the ground is so
concentrated that streamers m ay
rise m any feet before the m ain
ilash.
A t a national Sunday scm>i>i v-s vention in New York, am?v.‘cr5 wp'
given to the roll call by slates. Wh
the state of Texas . was' calicd.
braw ny specimen of southern m u
hood stepped out into the olsle, and w ith a strident voice exclaimed:
“W e represent the great state o( Texas. The first white wom an born
in Texas is still living. She now has a population of over three m illion.''
There was^ a pause of bewilder^ m ent for a m om ent, and then a
voice from the gaUeriea rang out
clear and distinct:
“Send that woman .out to Wyo
m ing. W e need herl*'
Often Prime \— , /-* t s. —There’s only one thing standing to on the same date m Coolecmce, hurrying dow n M ain street
Our County And
Social Security
Bv W . K . W hite. Manager.
The self-employed person, i e.»
the small business m an, has never
been covered under social security
unless his business was ' Incorpo.
rated. O f cojrse he had to pay
social security tax on his employ
ees b u t he had no social security
protection for himself. As ol
January 1,1951, the self-employed
person was covered on a com pul
sory basis. This means he will be
able to build up credits for the
purpose of drawtnij social security
benefits in the same m anner as
any‘other worker.
Some self-employed persons w ill
not be covered. The largesr of
these croups is farm operators.
M ost professional self employed
persons, such as doctors, lawyers,
certified public accountants, and
funeral directors w ill not be cov
ered either.
If your net earnings from self-
employment in a taxable year are
le&s than $400 you w ill not be
covered that year even though you
are In the type otself-emplovmcnt
that would otherwise be covered.
“Taxable vear** means the year
used by the self'Cmployed person
for incom e tax purposes. O nly
taxable years b e^nning on or af
ter Jan/1» 1951 will be counted.
H ow w ill the self-employed rc^
port his incom e for social s ic u r
ity purposes? A very simple ar
rangement has been worked out
for him . W hen he files his in
come tax return, there will be an
attached blank which he w ill c o m
plete to show the am ount o f self-
employment for social security
purposes. O n this blank he will
also show his social security ac
count number.
N et self-employmcn. income up
to $3,600 a year w ill be counted.
T he social security tax rate will
be two and one-quarter per cent
o f such income.
A great num ber o f the self-em
ployed have already earned social
security wage credits as a result ol
having worked for some other
employer. These wage credits will
be added to their selt-employment
incom . in determining the
m ount of dieir social security be--
nelits.
A representative o f this office
w ill be in Mocksville again on
N ov. 28th, at the court house,
second floor, at 12:30 p. m., and
Seen Along Main Street
8y The Street R nm bler.
oooooo
Mr* and Mrs. D . C . Ratledfic
doing some cold m om InK shop!
ping— Doctor and barber talking
things over In postofHce lo bb v~
Mrs. Baxter* Y oung m ailing parcel
post package— Marsh H orn and
Bryan Sell discussing the state o f
the nation - G irl basket ball play
ers leaving health ofHce * N ew
bride carrying large bag o f grocer
ies across the square Mrs. James
Y ork and sons doing some after
noon shopping in dim e shop—
Mayor John D urham hurrying a«>
cross the sqnare— Lady in parked
auto giving gentleman bite o f ice
crcam out o fc o n e —C row d hurry*
ing dow n M ain street to. ^‘Hell's
X Roads" to sec tw o badly dam
aged cars, one from O klahom a
and one from Davie— B ill C o l
lette getting aftem oon hair cut—
Mrs. P.'G . Brow n purchasing sup
ply of week-end groceries—H enry
Davis walking around the square
greeting friends—Ransome Yorke
movinji television set—^Miss O p al
Frye looking at gray sweaters—
Miss Elisabeth K oontz buying a
birthday presenr for father—Miss
Martha Myers, of Advance, doing
some before Christmas shopping
--Mrs. O dell James carrying^^arm
load of groceries across M ain St.
— W ill M arkland buying poppy—
Miss Pearl ine Beck getting ready
for Thanksgiving -Mrs- J. B. >X^ard
and children shopping around the
square—Tivo prospective brides
sitting in parked auto in front o f
bank— C hap Powell walking up
highway w ith a foot long cigar
sticking o ut o f his coat pocket—
Carolyn Ferebee, Margaret Cozart
and Frankie Junker sitting in drug
store talking about high school
Seniors getting united in the holy
bonds of wedlock—M atthew M c
Daniel marching in big parade—
McKinley W alker doing some
shopping in apothecary shop—
Big dog following aged w om an up
M ain street -* Spectators looking
at beau’iful Christmas display w in
dow at Sanford's Dcpartm etit
Store—Four lovely Advance Se
niors busy w indow shopping a-
round the square - C harlie Vogler
enjoying m orning coca-cola—M rs.
E .W . Junker putting Christmas
decorations In display w indow —
Tom Meroney getting rainv day
hair cut— Everettc Dw iggins hur
rying dow n M ain ; ‘street—Miss
Berry Lou M artin banking cash—
Mrs. O . R. Allen doing some
m orning shopping— M rs. J. A .
the w ay of faster dr Whig, now: Pe
destrians.at the old Band H all, over Led-
ford*s Store, at 11 a. m .
, A N EW D E A L
The landlady brought in a iriatefnl of extremely IhIn siloes
of bread and butter, which rather
dismayed her hungry m*n board
ers.. .."D id you out these, M rs.
B roim ?” asked one.**Tes—1 cut them i” came the
stem reply.^*Oh,*' went on the boarder.
<*AU rig h t~ ru sbnfne and d eal!''
on rainy m orning.
Cooked Fine •
Dinner; Threw
it TO DOG!
Ono Indy used lo throw her own 4llnner lo tho dog most of the Ume. It made her sick Just to look at (oo<i. She wns swollen wlth gaa, full of bloat, felt worn-out.:Finally sho got CBRTA-VIN and says sho now oats everything In sight and digests It perfectly. This 1b the new mcVllclne that Is holplog HO many stomach "vlctlmsl’ hero in Mocksville. It helps you digest food faster and ' better. Taken before meals. It works with your food. Gas pains go! Inches ot bloat vanish. Contains herbs and vitamin B-1 with Iron to enrich the blood and make horves stronger. Weak, miserable people soon fool different all over. So don't go on suffering. Get C13R- TA-Vm—Wilkins Drug Stor. -
A spinster w as shocked a t the
language used by w orkm en repair* ing cables near her hom e, so she
wrote to the com pany th at owned the cables. The m anager im m edi
ately asked the forem an on the job to m ake a report and here’s w hat
the foreinan s a id :'“ M e and Spike W illiam s were on
this job. I w as up the pole and accid e n ta l^ let the hot lead fa ll on
They’re haolbig up a new Oag beneatti Old Glory to hundreds of American
oommonltles. It's a Treasury Department Sag awarded to cities for siwclal acUvlly In selling V. 8. Defense Bonds
under tbe Payroll Savings Plao. Where per eent or more of 9 town's business Arms Install tbe plan. Ihe town becomes a Flag City, entitled to fly this speolat flag. Let’s hope more and more towns get oa this bandwagon. Employes who
S 5 k e - in d it w ent down his rieck. have U.. ten.flt . l tM . pl.a w . ..v l.a
laie h Spike > o k e d lip a t m e and S i S j H
M id: “Really, H arry, you m ust be I m ore cateftil.*’ ♦ !
Opportwnitys
KnocksC
b e a d the iB S
M 'l
\
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
HELPS RELIEVE
EXCESS GASTRIC ACIDITY
IF YOU SUFFER
Iron MMitliei, MtkMbti, upitt Uaa« __to, MMl Miioiiatti. «bm McMi icliHt>Md {MHKwim *f» emtlMint Uetan. m nofM auto. pKtfiM 1*11(1 br ukU i cmm Waui
FINE-STRONG
CHILDREN
Vou'flbtptoudoi 7CUT atroae, liwky cliUarcn
wlicn yon sivo them Scott’s Cmulatoo every day I Scotl’a la a ’’sold mine” ot«o(ttra)A&D Vltnmlns ond energyoU. Help* children jrrow ricbt. develop sound teeth, itrons bones.3 BclpswardofEcoldswhcnthcj>lack enovBh A&D VltOMi'\ food.MonydocU)rarccominend ' It. BconomlMl. Buy today <rt }>our dng aterc,
lAORE thon jusl o ionic-
Jr« pow erfof/num hm enll
lirig lito r te e tli
SC A N N IN G THE WEEK'S N EW S
of Main Street and tho World
Churchill Wins British Eledion;
Civilian Group Proposes UMT Man
CHURCHILL— F or the sceond tim e in his life W inston Churchill
has become P rim e M inister ot G reat B ritain. As a result, m any U . S. officials are predicting closer Anfilo-Americon relations than existed
under the Lab o r governm ent ot C lem ent Attlee.C hurchiirs election^ however, gains importance from the home
towners point ot view for a num ber of possible conflicts In Anglo^ A m erican relations that m ay result and not from possible closer ties.
B ritain’s new P rim e M inister has long w anted a m eeting of top western leaders w ith Prem ier Stalin, but President T rum an has opposed such
a m ove ever since the Potsdam con
ference in 1945.Churchill, who once said he did not become P rim e M inister of G reat
B ritain to see the em pire dissolved, is expected to take a Arm stand on
the Suez and Sudan problem. In fact, he could defend the em pire system
w ith such tenacity that it could become a point of conflict between
W ashington and London.On the other side, of the ledger,
Churchill is believed in full harm ony w ith (he U. S. policy in E u ro p e ^a strong joint defense, constanQy in<
creasing economic and political u n i^ , the close association of B ritain w ith
the European continent as w ell as
the U nited States and the Common*
wealth.
C llU R C U IL L
The whiner and new Prime Miu- itler who said during World War n, *7 did aot become Prime MMt- ter to liquidate the British empire,"
UMT PROGRAM--T h e N ational Security Training Commission, a five-
m an civilian group formed last June after congress bad approved the
broad idea of universal m ilitary training, has m ade a report to con<
gross that w ill reach into every home and fam ily in the nation.
Briefly, the commission has recommended a U M T program that
could involve 800,000 youths annually and cost more than $4 billion
in the first year. Every youth upon reaching 18 would get six months
of training, then for tiie 'ne xt seven and a half years be In a reserve
component if the plon was put in operation.The commission had this to say about world conditions and the
future: “The clear prospect is that the present generation m ust live in danger for m any years" and therefore should "le an t to live with danger
calm ly and confidently” .Bccause today's m ilitary technology perm its an enem y to strike di- rcctly at the U nited States by sea or air, "the A m erican people m ust
be prepared, like their forebcarers who pushed tiie frontier westward,
to m eet a savage and deadly attack a t any moment.**
KOREA— Peace talks are underway again in Korea and rumors
circulate that this tim e they w ill not collapse. However, the m an on M ain Street still has the feeling that you can’t do business with the
Com m unists and expect littie of the negoUations.-Politely, but firm ly, United Nations representatives have told the
Com m unists they refuse to sn'ap hard-won ground for peace in Korea. The Reds insist on a buffer zone. 15 m iles wide along the 38th parallel.
The possibility rem ains th a t^ h e Allies m ay m ake m inor adjust
m ents in the present battle line that w ould be acceptable to the Com*
munists. An unusual note w as sounded when Com m unist correspondents, who usually have littie to say to U N correspondents, expressed opti
m ism : " I feel certain a few m iles are not going to hold up an agre e ',
m ent.” one is reported to have said.
POLITICS— P rank E . M cKinney, Indianapolis businessman, was
scheduled for tiie job of Democratic national chairm an, replacing W illia m M . Boyle, Jr ., who reccnUy resigned w hile under fire by senate
investigators. iM cKinney reported he had "agreed to accept” the §35,000-a-yeor
job and would dispose of his interests in a pipeline com pany w hich is
seeking a government certificate to get 100,000 tons ot scarce steel. He
w ill retain his radio and banking interests.In his announcement that lie had agreed to accept the job, McKin-
f>ey said; “I ’ll state here and now that so Jong as 1 am national chairm an, no company which I am affiliated w ith or interested In w ill ever
enter the doors of a government bureau or agency seeking favors or considerations of any type or character.”
IRAN CRISIS— Rum ors persisted^ during recent days that an agreem e nt in the British-Iranian oil dispute was near, w ith the U nited States
playing an Im portant p art in the negotiations.It w as rum ored the agreement would provide: (1) Britisli m arketing
of Iranian oil, w hich would be purchased a t an agreed wholesale rate and sold in consumer areas a t prices sufficient to assure B ritain of a
reasonable profit: (2) Compensation for B ritish properties already seized by Iranians; (3) A n agreement to assure success of Iranian pro
duction, probably providing for a "neutral” m an^ger under Iranian
government control.
era-
^estem
tive. R ich & Co. received 500 to
1000 telegrams a day. In M ay, 1950, alone, its telegraph bill was $28,700. The CarrolI'Mooney-Grady o p
tion was worth $77,749 to We:
Union in 1950.
O ur committee report said: “ One
wonders whether the Western Union’s oblivibusness to its public re*
sponslbility not to perm it its facili
ties to be used in violation of state law , was in part due to the fact W illiam M olasl^. of S t Louis, a well-
known gam bler, is one of its outstanding stockholders.”
• • «
The committee learned a great
deal about W illiam M olasky, the millionaire m agazine distributor,
whose finger was in m any pics. An ex-newsboy, M olasky publishes a scratch sheet for horseplayers, and
35 per cent partner in Pioneer News,, the bookies' racing news
wire. He and his fam ily own 18,050 shares of. stock in Western Union,
valued at the tim e of his testimony
at §783,000.
Amazing results proved by independent
acienilfio test. For clcanor tcelli, for a
brlglitcr smile... uy Cnlox yourself I
A prodoet of HcKESSON & noi^m
ATOM IC EX P LO SIO NThe typidtl coltima and mushroom of an atomic bomb exploiion />•>(& above earth at tievada test site, some 65 miles northwest of Las This shot was made from a point on Mt. Charleston 40 milesrises Vesas, away.
FARM ACCIDENTS— The com harvest is in fu ll swing in the m id
west and the farm accident rate w ill clim b accordingly. L ast year in Nebraska, for instance, the com picker toll w as two lives, 104. fingers,
18 hands, 10 arm s, one leg, four toes and two feet.The, National Safety Council estimated th at farm accident deaUis
are being recorded the rate of 48 a day, or 17,520 a year; disabling injuries now total 1,500,000 a year. The economic loss catised by farru
accidents is estimated-at $1 billion a year.
BIGGER CROPS— Although the government w ill not publish their
production giiides for 1952 until mid-December, - agriculture experts predict the government w ill ask for bigger crops. The big push w ill
probably be for higher yields p er acre, rather than greater acreage.The simple reason for the expected production increase is the up
surge in tho num ber of people to feed and clothe. Since the IS l m illion
U . S. nose-count of early 1950, census officials figure there’s been a 4
m illion increase.
CHEAPBR P O R K
Record Hog Crop Indicates Clieap Poric
C r i m e in A m e r i c a
By ESTES KEFAUVER .
Un/fed Sfofes Senofor
Ten o f a Scries
St. Louis: Where Gambling
Is Big Business
C rim e is.big business in the St. Louis area.M ostly, the section’s shadowy activities are centered on illegal
gam bling. How ever, the Senate C rim e Cdm m ittee found th a t this gam bling is not m erely the inn.ocent,. harmless "biological necessity”
w hich Jam es Joseph C arroll, tiie cantankerous multi-mllUon-dol-
lar-a-year bookm aker, called it. ^ •
In the past 10 years, there have been 25 unsolved gang m ur
ders in the M issouri-Southw est Illinois area of w hich St. Louis Is
the center— a studied p la n of assassinations to control a ll large*
scale com m erdal gam bling and vice.
D uring this tim e, live m ajor gOngs operated in St. Loius: theH ogan m ob, the E g an Rats, the * - ----------------------
Cuckoo gang, the so-called Green Dagoes, composed largely of Sicili
ans, and a ‘gang of Am eH cans of
Italian descent.
A n olf-shoot of the Sicilian m ob was the Pillow gang, so nam ed be
cause its leader, C arm elo Fresbia, once w as shot in the buttocks and
thereafter carried a pillow with
him to use when he sat. Eventual
ly, Fresina, an extortionist and
bootlegger, was dispatched with two bullets in the head and no longer
needed his pillow.
In Central and Southern lUinbis,
two Infamous mobs—the Sheltons and the Birgers— operated.
We gleaned an indication of the
magnitude of book-making from testimony of G am bler J . J . Carroll.
The 64-yoar-old Carrol], engaged in some form of horse-betting activi
ties since he was 12, adm itted that the CarroU-Mooney bookm aking op
eration—with huge w ire rooms in
St. Louis. M o., and E ast St. Louis,111— handles " in excess of $20,000,-
000” a year in bets. ‘Proflts come to approxim ately $750,000, and his
own take Js epproxim atejy $W,'
000 a year.
Carroll seemed to have a char
acteristic in com m on w ith Frank Cosleilo. Costello, a racketeer,
wanted to pose as a business' m an.CarroU, a gam bler, glorified him
self wiirt the title of “ betting com
missioner.”
It was Carroll who, In St. Louis,
bccame the first witness to decline to testify before the television ca
meras. '”Tiie whole proceeding outrages m y sense of propriety,” said M r. Carroll, w alking out. I prom
ised him I would recom m end that he be prosecuted for contempt. To
avoid this, Carrooll later came to Washington' at his own expense to
testify. We had m ore trouble there but managed to get it over by keep
ing the cam eras off his face.• * *
Another huge St. Louis operation
was C. J . R ich Se Co., a clearing house for bets on m ajor sports, op>
eraling under the guise of a gold-
bronzing com pany. W e questioned two partners in this outfit, Charles
J . (Kewpie) R ich and Sidney Wym an. W ym an w as a dark, heavy-set
m an who p u t on a great show of scowling ferociously as he ' taxed his m em ory for answers to our
questions. "K ew pie” R ic h . was a pudgy, round-faced, unhappy looking
soul, who in appearance lived up to
his nickname.
Neither would quite adm it they
were in the gam bling business. So we compromised by discussing their
business as "O peration X .” Their company is less coy. Am ong other
things, we introduced as evidence a circuiar openly distributed by R ich
& Co. which said: "W e do not re
strict our transactions solely to racing. We w ould gladly handle
wagers on all other sporting events, including baseball, football, fights
and elections . . . ”
W ym an started off by telling us that "Operation X ” grossed aboui
$1,000,000 a year; after he left the stand, he sent in word through his
attorney that he was w rong and the
oorrect figure would be $4,000,000
to $5,000,000.• « •
1 asked the Russian-born Rich
why he never had become an Am er
ican citizen. Ho answ ered he had
applied “m any a tim e” but had
been turned down repeatedly. T
asked why. He unhappily replied
"O n account of the business I participate in.”
One aspect o l both the Rich-Wy-
m an and Carroll-Mooney-Grady operation that gave the committee
particular concern w as the adm itted involvement of the Western Union
Telegraph Co.
A raid on the Rich com pany store-
iiouse turned up a card index of
between 100 and 150 nam es of Western Union agents throughout the
.United States who acted sccretly as
betting agents for tho Rich & Co.The Western Union, employees were
giyon ‘‘gratuities” to handle and, in some cases, solicit bets In their communities for .Rich. Some even
were paid a percentage of Rich’r winnings as a commission.
Western Union, o t course, found
the gam bling account highly Iucra<
The greatest num ber of hogs to
be m arketed in seven years w ill
flood livestock centers in the next few m onths and w ill result in a big
drop in pork prices across the re
ta il counter, producers report This year's pig crop of alm ost
106 m illion head is the largest lo r
any year in "peace-time” and is second only to lS43's staggering
record of 121 m illion. _______
The increasing num ber of ani
m als gomg to m arket has already caused a considerable* price slide.
In Ju ly hogs were bringing $23.99 a him dred pounds a t the Chicago
m arket. Last m onth the price was
down to $19.75. One official of- a big
packh)g firm predicts th at prices
m ay ^ e to $17 oir $18 per htmdred by the m iddle of N ovem ber or early
December.
CLASSIFIEDDEPARTMENT
BU8INEBB * INVEST. OPPOB,.
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FARMS AND RANOHEB
HELP WANTED— MEN
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SALESMAN
nEAI. E S T /m S ^
EXAMINATION
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YOUR ________room need extra caB»- with no dgwn payment t
ixnmined ti
How 'ro.Wrlle lets. Poems
r e s r " -
M lSO EU LA N EO D fc
Louisiana: Fantasia
In Law Enforcement
In Louisiana, the Senate Crime Com m ittee wrapped up a complete
history of local infiltration by the
national crim e syndicate. Through
alliances w ith home-grown" racket
eers, these big-town mobsters put gam bling and other profitable.rack
ets on a big-time basis.
New Orleans, though it has been cleaned up steadily since M ayor De-
Lesseps S. Morrison took olfice. in 1946, bccam e an im portant provinc
ial capita] of the East coast Costello- Lansicy-Adonis m ob. As his procon> sul, Frank Costello installed
trusted lientenant, Pltlllp (Dandy P h il) Kastel, convicted swindler.
Then through Kastel, he controlled an im portant segment of the area’s slot machine and gam bling casino
rackets aad effected a working part- nership w ith a local criminal.
Carlos (Little Big M an) Marcello. M arcello, reputed Mafia leader of
Louisiana, is building a crim inal
dynasty that one day m ay rival A1
Capone’s. •
In every line of Inquiry, we pur
sued we found M arcello’s'tro il. The Littie Big M an with some of liis
brothers and aides owned all or part of more than 40 enterprises—ail but a few of them illegal. These in
cluded gam bling casinos, an interest in the local wire service, horse
parlors and slot m achine com
panies.
O u r report stated: “The com m it
tee had inform ation that Carlos M arcello and his brother, Anthony,
owned a boat used in running narcotics into the port of New Or
leans." Carlos had been convicted In 1938 of narcotics peddling and had served tim e for it.
We also established beyond doubt th at the put>of-state gangsters whc
cam e to Louisiana depended on th« negligence, the active support, oe
the participation of some local law
enforcement officials.
On the day in 1948 that John J.
Grosch took office as sheriff of Or< leans parish (New Orleans), local
newspapers ran a picture captioned "Ju s t a G ift for Johnnie.? It showed the new sheriff standing alongside a
brand new Cadillac limousine ented him by "unnam ed friei « • •
We heard from the sheriff’s di*
vorced wife, M rs. Viola Grosch, a
w om an who holds a responsible position a t the Tulane University
hospital, that in the last six years of their m arried life together, end*
ing in 1940 when he was chief oi New Orleans detectives, Grosch had accum ulated $150,000 which h«
kept at homo in a steel box. She said she had seen him receive
money weekly from a local slot ma*
chine dealer, and another'character, who reputedly ran a house of prosti*
tution, bought a ll the food for the
week.
Next week: The Cleveland Areaj
"M iddletow n” of Crime.
'trom the book'. "CrtaiB ft
a i r i . . i “'ooSsisioWrllo Turner, 18K Komcry, Ala.
___ rostago
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a B A L E B T A IE ^O U S . P R O P .
_____ ...m ine rooms,
fnit, l«d 'T c n d «iK ^‘’“s m W h o f e w<^' tanitnRO ^cookcr., soiisnit*. hltolwn eqiijls cookcr. soiisnite kUohcn______ fltr stwtfer. silent cutter,srindcr. Seven ncrcs land. Priced Out ot stntc Interest reason £— - X*. O. B** 8R7 ___________OrtewvHle. Alnbwmft
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SERVICES OFFEUED
Ituun isit STAMV—Three , linos *
TO R E N T O R L;^A SB
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For the Future, Buy
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Amftriea." Ijy Estes Kctouvor. Cpr. 1051 Pub. by poubledoy. Ine. DIst. Ocneritf Features Corp.—WNU. •
N E X T YEAR , W'E EA T BETTER
Agricultural Bureau Predicts More Food
WASHINGTON— Pood supplies In
this country w ill be large enougn
next year to allow people, to eat a
iittie better, tho Bureau of Agricul
tural Econom ics has predicted.. The
Bureau also pointed out tliat the dietary average for the current year
is slightly above average. ' Consumers w ill probably p6y slighUy higher prices, however. In
a forecast of the 1952 outiook, Uie
bureau said it appears there virill b«
m ore poultry products, beef, fluid m ilk, ice cream , fats and oils, ex^
cepting butter,' frozen fruits and
fruit juices, frozen vegetables and dried fruits - avaUable next year.
Declines were forecast in the con- , sum ption of butter and sweet pota.
l-loes, w ith production of these tWQ item s on the w ay down. F a rm (teo
duction costs' also are going up.
E N G IN E ERS&
ARCHITEC15
Positiofis open fo r the
- foUovm ig:
E ngineers— C iv il, M e c h a n
ical, E le ctric a l, S truc tu ra l,
a n d A rchitectural.
Architocts— ^D esigning a n d
W o r k in g D ra w in g s . '
D ra fts m e n — E n g in e e r in g
a n d A rchitectural.
Im m e d ia te opportunities o n
, h ig h p rio rity defense p ro
je cts. O n e to th ree years
d u ra tio n . O v e rtim e a v a il
able.
Hayes, Seay,
Mattern & Mattern
128 A Camfhell Ave.y SW
Roanoke^ V irg m a -
P hon e 2-4370
GUABANTEEO. JVnleh ^rep^lr^
MIssourt.
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
CO M IC BOOKS
Educators Believe Comic Books
May Have Future in School Work
Comic books m ay soon be required reading for ctilldren.
Psychologists and educators have
been contending for some tim e that
com ic books of the proper kind
could be used to further the emo
tional, m ental and educational development of children. The only
trouble, they have added. Is that [sudi magazines would have to be
G e t W e ll
S t i Q t f C K E R
with the Sensational A-C Factor in theNewIntemi/ied. :
F O L E Y ’ SS.*:ii;«M ;.‘U «
AAUZINGtr OUKKR ACflNO' tNciiMUV Moii irricfivi
B y IN E Z G B R nA R D
I very British Jam es M ason
• seems to have developed a strong liking for anti-British Screen
Toles. H is two latest for 20th Cen- tury-Pox cerU inly indicate i t In
•The Desert Fox’' he gives a m agnificent performance as the late
F ield M arshal Rom m el, one of Eng
land’s m ost unrelenting enemies
during W orld W ar II. And he has
ju st finished w ork in "5 Fingers” , in which, as the highest paid spy
JAI^IES M ASON
in history, he does his prying at tl}c Britisli Em bassy in Jstanbid,
for the Nazis. But his next film w ill
probably find h i m playing a
Frenchm an; he’s pretty wdll set as
Tnsnpnirtr Javort in "L cs Mlser-Inspcctor ables.'"
M ason has tiie support of an
' outstanding oast in "Tlie Desert Fox” , which was produced
by Nunnally Johnson and directed by Henry Hathaway.
Jessica Tandy, Ccdrlo llard- wicke, Luther Adler and Leo
Carroll are a ll excellent.
M arilyn Monroe w ill be starred by D arryl Zanuck in "N ight Witik-
out Sleep” , plajring a baby sitter — w hich w ill be pretty easy, for
she was acting as a baby sitter when she was discovered by W il
lia m M aw6erry. She went to school on the lot. did "A sphalt Jungle” at
M G M , whereupon her own studio realized that she was really stellar
m aterial.
N BC’s E d H eriihy has been va
cationing in Berm uda with his wife and children year after y ear.. So
he’s finally bought a cottage there. M aybe he was egged on after a
recent storm fiooded the basement of his home in a suburb of New
Y ork. The basement is used as a ■ party and play room, and the house
hold formed a bucket brigade to
ball it o u t
"Tem bo,” a feature-length Aim dcaluig w ith Archer Howard HiH’s
b ig gam e African bow-and-arrow hunting safari, w ill be distributed
by R K O . ^___________
especially designed to m e e t psy
chological theories and still be en- terlolnlng.
One ot tho country’s lendlnc
oomlc book publishers, after a year of intensive rcsearcJi, has teBiin
issuing a com ic inaBazIno basea on the reoom m endolions of psyjAolo;
gists and edueaters as to the "Ideal comics m agazine to r children in
the Ihteo-ltMsight age bracket. He
is convinced th at It his now publi-
cation is a success, other com ic
book puMtehcrs wUl recM nlze the
need for really constructive comic
magazines and follow his lead.
The publisher, Leveretl Gleason, expecU the test to prove tiie
theories of autiiorlties th at the erful influence of com ics magazines
on children can be utilized in a constructive w ay.
Gleason estimates th a t 80,000,000 comic m agazines are p u rp o s e d
each m onth and th a t each oi these Has three readers.
p rom inent educators and psychologists have agreed ttiat comics
m agazines c an be u ^
pbasizo the m oral and ethical t e ^
toss ot parenU . They have advo- cated com ics m agazines as a
m eans oJ draining n o r m ^ a g g r ^ slons o l children Ib a t m ig ht othw -
wlse erupt Into outright aggressive acts. These auJhoritles see comics
as a m eans of teaching a child how to read, and tile use of good gram-
m a r .and a sense of artistic discrim ination. A nd they have a t the same
tim e com plained that the widely
distributed com ics m agazines are Sot accom plishing aU these objec-ti.ves»
"There is no
these objectives cannot be
In a com ics m o g a a ne th a t Is ^1 1
exciting enough to hold the yonng reader’s Interest.” Gleason said.
H e auoted Josette Frank, eduoa-,
Uonal associate of the O U ld Study Association:"'One must
m f e fte ir bpportonlUes for giving children m ore (han they do.
"The com ic m agazine has a high notential value not only beoause Its
?otm is so acceptable to < * lM « n ta t tjecause.it c an be *«M ly
tem porary In a w ay books r a w o t Here, perbaps, more
than clsowhere. we
ideals about the w oria they bve
to.”
OBVIOV SLH, no desirable comic book could portray sex, “
prim itive violence, “ " •B ut the findings showed teat m a w
other fa c to r s were of equal or greater taportance.
Perfect gram m ar shouW ^ by the characters so th a t cblM ren
can le a m through the exam ple of the heroes and heroines. Particn-
ter attention should be devoted to
the a rt w ork w h i^ T f h o t o l the quality com parable to th a t of tte best to chUdren’s hard;coYCT books.
A s with all com ic ^ k s , P 'f tures. used as a guide to the mean-
UiB of the words, should help the v(wng child le a m to read.
Six thousand schools already are
using com ic books In connectton w ith t h e school curriculum . Glea
son repotted. Ih e issuance of com ic magaztaies of superior q u a lity
m ig ht easily m ake them a n in- stiSm ent a ll s c h o o l w m ld w a n tto
use to further the teaching of young children, particularly as a m e sM
of teaching them to leam- to read and to like to read.
CRossiRD n m
i m ust regret that com ic mag-
have, In somo respects,
• ACROSS a P ant,
S. Furnished witbshoasr 9. Flavor 10. Inventor of
dynamite12. Pocketbook13. Make amends for
14. Past
lff.TiUeofrcspect17, Greek letter18. Feeler on leaf of a
plant (Bot.)21. Biblical
city22. Grow old23. Spun wool 25. Extra
28.US.sUver
coins
29. Search
ao.Paddle-likeproeess 31.aoseto 82. Coarse*
water-worn
pebbles
ST.InvaUd's
food39. Coin (Swed.)40. Part of “to be”41. Variety of
corundum .
48. Potato (dial.)
45. Division of
the calyx46. Step heavily
. " • S S n
Organs of
hearing
DOW N''10. Open fruitl.'An estimate pies
2. Protective 20. Ogling
garment 24: Part of i3. Distress “tobe”signal 25. Forms 14. Foretell 20. Fruit Slone5. Tangle /27.Jndennlte«. Torrid article7. Hautboy 26. An alcove |8. A set of dining roomfalse teeth 30. IHnaceousp. Young tree. oyster 33. Authority11. Acquires on cardknowledgegames' X6.ftozen 34. Tardierwater35. Silkworms
tA$T WEEK’S
ANSWER ^
u s u ia nmiia m\ia Hsuu ranuKu iDHiauin
HHUDUHri DU H jiiu j HsraraEii' a\i\n nuHH Buc<jiiiLinLi uaam una R iT i^nn ciwrniiM
iftU P lI' JlillilR
N.40
36. Plant ovulei 3S.Gourd»ke fruit 42. Rodent
44.CenslellaUon
i 1 r n 4 r r “r —I9§10 iltz
14 ■-i 16 IS i n "
IT !<}Zl
2Z a
25 2<WzTi I i IFiaS3W
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5 f I 33-
w m I 5T 44
w 1
1 w W M
THE
nCTlON
CORNER By Richard Hill Wilkinson
rANE w as a m em ber .of a large
' fa m i^ . There w ere lo u r boys and three girls besides Jane. The moth
er w as dead. T he. eight children Uved w ith their
father on a farm on t h e edge o!
Gransberry. Ja n e
w as the eldest of :s31 the children. W hen their m other
died Jane assumed the responsibilities of ih e household. She w as a
large f girl, very plain and rather d u ll looking.
I m et her and the rest of the fam ily last sum m er when vacation
ing In Gransberry. Slie faschiated m e because she w as so sturdy and
strong and uncom plaining. The longer I knew the fam ily the m ore I
cam e to realize how easy it was for
the others to lean on Jane. She did
two-thirds of the work.
It w as interesting (and a littie an
noying) to w atch. I soon cam e to
understand th at Ja n e w as the goat.
W hen one of them wanted a holiday he or she would pretend to be‘ sick. Jane' kept things going.
I t seemed unfair to m e. They
thought Ja n e w as dull. Th<^ took itage of her.
IRie m ore K talked to Jane the m ore 1 began to wonder If she
were roaUy dull. l e t someflmea 1 becam e disoonraged. S h t
seem ed absolutely, stupid.
"L a s t y e ar," I said to her one day, " I m e t a fam Uy nam ed Burdon,
down south; There were six children in the fam ily, and poor M i^. Burdon
h ad her hands fua She assumed a ll the responsibility and did a ll
the work. H er children had never
been used to anything else, so it
never occurred to them to pitch in
and help. The m ore she gave, the m ore they asked. It rcnPy' w asn't the children’s
G m S k O O T S
Nation Is Not Preparing For War That It Dreads
By W right A. Patterson
•■nOES T H E P R E SID E H T really
believe that we are desthied to file near future to be engaged to a
lu ll scale shooting w ar with Russia, • o r are his numerous w ar scares
m erely for the purpose of encourag-
i i g m ore and larger appropriations
and the levying of more and great
er taxes?
' His actions In connection with . our preparations for w ar would
. not indicate that he fears an ■immediate conflict. We are cer
tainly no t preparing for such an
H e announced a year ago that
R ussia had perfected a n atom
bom b. O n the basis of that state
m ent congress authorized an air
fleet of 75‘fighting groups including a larger num ber of bom ber groups, The President did not tixen think
such an air force w as needed, and Mbitranly r ^ u c e d the num ber to
62 groups, despite the verdict ot the congress and the air commission
w hich he hod appointed. .
Since then he has raised the fig
ures to 8S groups, but has not or
dered the planes or recruited the.
personnel for such a force. W e are
told that Russia has now an airforce
of. 50,000 fighting planes, and the President said th at Russ:a h as .the
atom bomb w ith w hich to destroy our ground forces and to devastate
- Ihe towns and .cities of our European allies as well as those of this
country. '
To m eet that force we have, including those of our European al
lies, som e 5;000 effective planes,
w hich include some 50 or 00 capable o t attacking Russia. W e are talking
of or planning for a fleet of from
50,000 to 75,000 w ar planes. B u t so fa r it is only talk, none ot them
have been ordered. ■
We have adequate faeilitles for bidlding tnch a forte, bttt the job. cannot be done overnight. Should Rjusia have the force she is credited with having, and if she has atomic bombs, at the President tells as she has, without oitr having, adequate protection for Oftr airplane plants, Russia could destroy . those plane plants, and there would be no Possibility of our meeting the Russian bombers.
We arc told we are building tanks, guns, and other equipm ent for the
ground forces. W e are recruiting, by
draft m ethods, an arm y of .3,500,000 m en, but such an arm y cannot hope
to alone m eet the som e 7,000,000 m en of the^ Russian R e d arm y. Ko
I ground arm y we can m uster, what- •Wver its s ize ,'c a n defeat. Russia,, ' w ithout a n adequate a ir force to
support and protect i t Such a n air force is the first thing needed
should w ar come, and it is seeming
ly the last thing being,provided.
Possibly those'W ho are directing
the preparedness program are listening only to *the top-brass of the
arm y. They would think In te rm s of
ground troops and their e q u ip m w t
To w in a w ar ground troops are
necessary ■ b u t Eisenhower know s
that a ir power id equally needed. Congress anthoiixed and
jvopriated funds for fhe eoa-‘
struotion of rad ar listening equipm ent for both the east ^n d
the west coast that our planes m ig h t have a n advance w arning
of Russian planes, should an a t
ta c k , eome< The President has
ignored that legislation. I t was
a la c k of rad a r th at prim arily
w as the cause of the P earl H arbor catastrophe.
A G erm an contractor lia d delayed the completion of the station,
and, because they did not know of the approaching Ja p planes, such
a ir force as w e h ad in H aw aii w ere caught on the ground and destroyed along w ith the naval vessels that
could have gotten out of (he harbor,
h ad their, com m anders know n w hat
was coming.
B ut w ith th at recent illustration
as a rem inder, the President has not taken steps to p r o t^ t our east
and west coasts, w ith a ll^ th ^ would need ^ o u ld w ar actually come.
It is such things that’cause me to think that the President is using his frequently repeated war scares for political purposes rather than be- castse, of bis actual b^ief in any threat of war. A fuU sc^e congres- sional investigation of our prepared- nest program and what it happeMng might be well worth while, U it too teriout a matter merely for the playing of poUtiet.
H wft are thxeaiened vrith w ar, we
m ust prepare both for offense and
defense, but w e m ust do it in a
*' I w ay, not m erely talk about ^ t o t tidngo J3rst
1 came to realize how easy It was for the others to le an on
Jane.
knew, anything different. Eventually
the inevitable happened. M rs. B ur
don wore herself out. One day She
w as taken sick a nd died. She w as only 51 years old." I shook m y head. " It was certamly a pity. A fter she
had gone the children discovered that they could get along very nice
ly by themselves. They found out th a t they could do the things they
1 heretofore always believed themselves Incapable ot doing."
I stopped talking a n d looked
steadily a t Jane. B ut she only re
turned m y look dully. "W asn’t it a
shamel** she said.
I didn’t see Jane*again that sum
m er. Three days after m y talk
witti her I went home.
Tills sum m er 1 cam e to Grans
berry again. One day I drove past
the Whitefleld farm and, acting on
Impulse, drew up a t the front gate.
Am elia, Jane's oldest sister, was sit.**-*-* on the front porch.
. Jane in?" I asked.
Am elia looked a t m e w ith wide
eyes. "Y es, but ^ e ’s not feeling w ell, a te ’s ^ in g down this, aftnr-
noon."
^ "Lying down? Jane? M ay I see
Am elia went Into the house. A
m om ent later she cam e to the door and beckoned to m e. I went into
the front room . The shades were draw n. I t w as qudet and cooL Ja n e
was lying on a couch. She sm iled up a t m e. She looked m uch prettier
than the last tim e I saw her.
"She’s been bavJog attacks/*
. Am elia explained. "She can*t go on for very long \rithout l : ^ g
down. We*vo been doing every- tiling to m ake her well. W e don’t
let her do m uch ot the work.** ' " I ’m sure I ’ll be a ll right very soon," Jane said.
. Am elia’s eyes lighted. "O h, I hope so!"
I didn’t say m uch. I m erely lis
tened. Prcsentiy I understood that
Jane was spending a good deal' of tim e on the couch- these days. Oc
casionally she w as able . to go out driving in the evening w ith a
m an from town who had an interest in her.
After a w hile I rose to go. **Take care of y o u r s e 1 f ," I told Jane.
"D on't try to rush things. If you started in.too soon you m ig ht have a s e tb a ^ "
" I know ," she said. **How are the Burdon children?"
"W ho?— O h t They're fine! Getting along nicely.’*
She tighed. "I*m ^ a d . M y sisters and brothers won’t le t m e w ork
m uch. W hen I get strong agabi they w ant tp be sure PU stay strong." AmA Jane’s right ^ d l d fluttered downward as she looked a t me.^
Drinking P lsii
Fresh w ater fish and sharks 4» b o t to n k w ater. 0 ^ il^l) do.
SEWIH6 CJRCLE PATTERNS
Two-Way Daytimer Fits Nicely
V O U can make this charm ing
^ daytim e dress several ways—
w ith or without the turn-down collar, and w ith short or wrist-length
sleeves. Note how well it fits, its youthful, confident air.
■leevcs.
' Enclose 30c In c«ln lo r «oeh pattern. Add 9e (or )0t C lass M aU 11 deslted.
P a lU rn Ko. .................. SlzO.....
Mam « tPleaao Prlni)
street AtUlresa or P .O . Box
City
Cooking Spinach The only w ater needed when
cooking spinach is that which clings to the leaves during the
w ashing process.« • •
Strawberries
H igh - q u ality straw berries
^ o u ld be firm , bright red in color, uniform in size, and free from
sand and dead leaves.
Market HintBeware of buying fresh pej
w ith surface blemishes, for m a y be m uch waste If the blem ish
, for (
extends through the outer w all,* • •
Russian Dressing Chopped green peppers can be
used in Russian dressing to be served on salads, or in tartar
sauce for use with fish.• • •
DaUy Quota One medium-sized pepper w ill
provide m ore than a person’s dally vitamin-C requirem ent, as w ell as
generous amounts of vitam bi A.
Good Source of "C**
Fresh ripe sti'awberrles, when
served whole or im m ediately after
being crushed, are a good source
of.vitam hi C.
BEHEIUTION a« .. eENEM TlOH
i»»used LANE’S PILLScut in haU ' -- - -
________■ AC*1
BUT T O D A Y , p.. B gH .iS ;",- ;.,...
SAFEI
EFHciltfll
3-WArilElKFI
vaptm sootiio Irritate
W QKub
DrFineCakes,
' C ifie c ia U if!
POUND
for POUND,
. M unt people
use mffU/
CLABBER
CIRL than
any other
baking
iwwder.
HUIMAH a COMP4HY. YMU HAtfft. INO.
om LEm i
rOREKTIlAr
V n .lL .
QUICK and
TASryMEAL^
V a n C a m p ’s
BEANEE WEENEE5
Plump, mealy beans.,;
generous slices of su
perbly seasoned Vienna
Sausage...oU enriched
witli a tasty tomato sauce.
Good—they’re delicious
;..a speciol favorite with
children. Makes any meal
a p icnic. . . grand for
picnics and parties.
Relieves d i s t r e s s
Babys Col
While HeS
- VMwrs tt PEN ETRATES to cold- irritated breath* Joe passages.
_________^^TES t - ^ .je s t a n d b a c k s u rfa c e s lik e a w a r m in g , com - . forting poultice.
For hours — even w hile your
are gone. Try l«
IF THERE'S MUCH OOUGHIHa OR SIUFFHIESS...
steaml— single breath relieves • o t Vicks m iserable e ou g b lng .and -----
PAGE FOUR THE DAVIE EEOiRD. MOCKSVilLB, N. C„ NOVEMBER 4l. 19B1
THE DAVIE RECORD. Stage Big Armistice Day Celebration
C . F R A N K S T R O U D } E D IT O R . A crowd o f m en, w om en and children, estimated at over 2,000i
—............. ■ — = gathered around the square in th b city on M onday o f last week to
1 see the big street parade and to hear Ray Galloway, o f W ilm ington,
former State Com m ander/of the Am erican Legion, in an Armistice
TC1.EPH0N&
SU B SC RIPT IO N RA TES:
0!0e YEAR. tN N. RAR0L1NA SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROtmA ONF YEAR. oirrsihE RTaTK Six MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE
S I.SA 7Br. <2. An $1.00
Entered atthe Postoffice in Mocks- Day speech.
’“ ■‘''l T he parade started « the high school building and arrived a t t h e
* ' ' square about 10:30 o*clock, where it disbanded. A t 11 o’clock Mayor
Jo h n D urham delivered the address o f welcome from a flac-draped
platform erected in one o f the small parks. R. S. M cN eill was mas-_
ter o f ceremonies and m ade a short address. D r. Lester P. M artin
introduced the speaker. J. R . Bowles is Com m ander o f Davie Coun*
ty Post N o. 17-|. Mrs. Ed Short, president of the le g io n Auxiliary,
. read a list o f Davie County^s G old Star Mothers. The address'^ bv I
t. **1.* r ^ ^ M r. Galloway has been highly com plim ented. He used some plain.
^ language and let his’audlence know just where he stood on sending!and the fodder in the shock. A ^ people's wars. I
pum pkin now cost, you a, m uch ^ h e parade was headed by Capt. Chas. F. D o m m and M rs. D om m .
^ * ocs COS n legoo . aiding PatfQimau T . Badge.t. Next came the N ational Guard,
old days. I foUo^vej by Siler’s station wagon o f G old Star Mothers. The Lex
ington H igh School band m atched in the parade and furnished mu*
sic for the occasion. Also marching in the parade were th‘e Boy
Scouts, students from the Mocksvllle schools and students from the
Davie County'TrainIng school and members of colored scout troop.
D r. P. H . Mason was C hi f Marshall. #
T he parade featured a nuhiber o f attractive floats, am ong them be
ing “The Spirit o f America.’* represented by P. O . S. o f A . float, Da
vie C ounty’s W ildlife C lub float w hich was apprcprintery entitled
'T urkey Shoot at T om ’s Lake.” First in the section endtled ''Indus
trial Progress” was the very attractive R . E. A . float, featuring the R. E. A . Queen. Following were displavs by Irvin-Cornatzer Pontiac
Dealers and Hahes C hair &. Furniture C o. The "Spirit of Beauty”
was very appropriately represented bv the Mayfair Beauty Shop float.
T he Sm ith Grove school float was next in line, followed by the
“Spirit o f Y outh,” featuring Mocksville H igh School’s K ing and Queen of the Halloween Carnival.
The Spirit o f Religion was represented in an attractive m anner by
a group o f Davie C ounty Training students. Also floats featuring
the class o f *52, the K ing and Queen o f the Halloween Carnival and
grammar grade Queen and N . H . A . from the Davie C ounty Train
ing school were present, followed by Dewey’s Cab.
The Spirit o f Peace was represented by the U . N . float and W alker’s ambulance brought the parad. to an end.
In the afternoon at 2 o’clock the Boyden H igh School football
squad o f Salisbury, m et the Lexington H igh School squad in -ni ex
citing ga ae iit Rich Park. W he n the smoke of battle had cleared,
the Lexington squad had scored 21 points, w hile the Boyden boys
d nothing but a goose egg. T he game was enjoyed by a large and
W insto n C hurchill is com
ing over to visit President Tru-
m an in Janu ry. W e all know
w hat he is com ing for. W ihston
is lookinc for the loaves and flshes.
H e w ill be our friend as long as
we continue to furnish Great Bri-
tian all the cash and supplies they
d e m a n d .__________ ____
The Record w ould be glad to
see General Dw ight Eisenhower
nom inated for president and Gov
ernor Earl W arren, o f California,
for second place on the ticker.
W ith two such strong m en run-
ing the Democrats w ouldn’t have
as m uch chance o f electing pre
sident next year as Pat had in the
army.
A Friend Passes
R. D o n Laws, 83. editor and
publisher o f The Yellow Jackct. a
paper w hich had at one time over
300,000 circulation, died at his
hom e in M oravian Falls, on Nov.
ILth. D o n Laws w s well known
■ throughout the entire country.
hji
enthusiastic audience.
The day’s events were sponsored by the American Legion Post of
this city, and was a decided success.'
Cotton Prices Ad- Whiiaker-Baka
nance Sapidly Mrs. BessieStewart,ofMocksvi[L.
Several weeks ago farmers were C. L. W hitaker, son
•ged to either hold their cotton o f Lonnie L- W h iak e r. also of
•o u t it under Bovem m ent loan. Route 2. vvePe m_arned at 3.p. m..
H is paper was a m onthly pub
lication and was unique in every
way. He devoted m uch space to
telling w hat he thought o f the R o
m an Catholic Church, and in
plain English let the folks- know
w hat he thought of the par^y who
**keptusout o f w ir " the New
Deal and the Fair Deal party. Ht
was an A be Lincoln Republican,
and wasn’t afraid to express his
sentiments. He was a friend of
The Record editor for nearly half
a century. N or Carolina has pro
duced b ut one D o n Laws. His
place cannot be filled. May he
rest in peace. (30.)
Mrs. McCullouoh
Mrs. Em m a Leonard M cCul
lough, 62. died at 4:30 p. m. Nov.
10th, at her hom e on Mocksville,
Route 4* She had been ill for
several m onths.
Born Sept. 28ih, 1869, in Davie]
. County, she was married May 5.1
1689^ to Charles M cCullouch. I
w ho died in 1&45.
She uas a m em ber of Liberty
M ethodist Church.
Surviving are s ix daughters. |(j "
urged to either
or put it under governm ent loan. . • ---1 realized at the tim e that lots o f -aturday. N ov. 3. in the purson-
people could not hold all their ®8e ° f Liberty M ethodist C ^^
cotton, but it was brought out by officiating,
a num ber o f people that by hold- T lic bride wore a navy suit with
inn cotton, the p Jee w ould go up. >^avy and white accessories and a
The local maket price opened at corsage o f white rosebuds,
about 36c per >ound. It has in- After the ceremony the couple*
creased some since then. Friday, left for a wedding trip-tO Western
November 9th. good cotton in Carolina. They are m aking their'
Mocksville was 41c per pound, honie on M ocksvili., Route 3.
Cotton went up 190 points per
pound Thursday, d le to prospects ffor 1,160,000 less bales o f cotton « / • i U U I v l I l a j I l l I C I I
_ _ „ _ _ f , ,.,n, , , I W4!St MocRHViiie ill osla p. iii. Miiv, IS.
or $°Srbi?Xcin/the H-h»,. ,1, t.,r. .h . p ..t
fo^.^'4s;e^d^.o^dr43m'’’^•••
Charles M cCullough, A f p r e c i a t i o n
(i..ii|ttiteKMrH Auhrey Mooka-
viii<. KiiU'e i>: Mk Z»ili<! Aiiii«*rMiin, uf
'M.wkAviiie. l:.virKT. A. ll.iichwel-
^ C f o r th r m a n y a«sshown us during the i!l-.viiDce.FiiiierHl BMrvieBs wer** lifld «l 3M18.W , A .F o s te ra n d M rs .G . C jn e s s a n d after the drath o f our «. ih« BHiiii^h«m Mh _____Swicegood of Mocksville; Route 3 .'husband and father. May the Lord Chunrh. with Khv Genru#-j. BrniMT nnri
and the Misses M am ie, A n n ie ,' V°“ “ “ r P™ver. R. v. Bruef R..iii-ri« oHIuinMiiB. aid ihe
S dle M - ae and E vaM cC uilo uB h of, Mrs. J. M . Sm ith and C hildren, .............
the home; 10 grandchildren a n d :
seven great-grandchildren. {
Funeral servictts. were conduct
ed at 3 p. m .. N ov. 12th at the
hom e by the Rev. ,G . W . Fink.
Grandsons served as pallbearers,
and burial was in the M cCullough
family cemetery.
Card of Thanks
W e wish to thank all our friends
and neighbors for the kindness
show n us during the illness and after the death o f our mother.
A lso .he beautiful floral tributes.
I h e McCullouKh Children.
Foster E. Johnson, o f Mocks
ville, Route 1. and lames David
Ellis, o f Advance, Route I. went
to Charlotte W ednesday for in
duction into the U . S. Arm ed
F o r c M ._________________
A ^ ic k e n pi^ suoper w ill b e .
aenred at D u lin ’s H u t on Satur-,
day* ISfoy. 24th. beginning at 5
o ’clock, by; the ladies of Cornataer
M ethbdistiC hurch. The public
ii'& rd la liy Invited.
For Dependability It’s
F a r m a l l
We Can Supply Your Epuipment
For Every Farm Job
Rankin-Saitiford
Implement Company
Phone 96 Mocksville N. C.’
Fo r Last M onth’s Rent
Isn’t Worth Anything
This Month!
. If you live In a rented house or apartment,' you
know just how true this statement is. Y ou could be
applying vour rent m oney to payments on your ow n
home, if you so desired.
W ith our Direct Reduction Loan Plan, the ' b u s l.'
ness of.paying for a hom e is a simple matter. W e do
not mean to imply that you can take your rent m oney
alone, and pay for a hom e in a short num ber o f years, ’
but when we show ,ou the actual iisures, you’ll be surprUed at how close you can come to doing just that.
W ith a little extra m oney applied to V o u r loan, oyer
and above your rent money, you can ow n your hom e
in a reasonable num ber o f years.
U nder our loan plan, payments are applied direct
ly aeainst your loan, and your pass book shows each
m onth and payments on principal iiicrease.
This is a m odern loan plan w hich has developed
w ithin comparatively recent years, and we’ll be glad to
explain it to you In detail. ' ^ '
I f you do not now ow n your hom e, you are a pros-.
pcct for one o f our direct reduction l.>ans. W he n it
you can buy or build a hom e.. O r If you ow n your
home, and would like to modernize it, we w ill like
wise be glad to make you a loan (o i this purpose.
Your
Savings
In
This
Association
Are
Insured
U p To
$ 1 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0
i‘i»' •,!
, W e W ant '
Every Family In . !
. Davie County To
. H ave A t Least O ne ' ■
S A V IN G S A C C O U N T '
W ith U s l
■ ■ Federal Savings A n d Loan Insurance Corporation
Mocksville Building & Loan
Association
Moc'KSville, N . C .
Get Ready For Wiiiter
If Your Tanks A re Not F’ull You Have
W aited Long Enough
To Fill Your Storage Tanks
For Winter
For Depend^b%,Service & Ribliable Products
Cali No; 31 —Mocksville, N. C.
Zerone, Aicohol & Prestone Anti-Freeze
Glass W ork A Specialty
Horn Oil Company
Distributors o f Cities Service Products
G A S O L IN E — K E R O S E N E - F U E L O IL
¥ . ; : M O C K S V IL L E , N . a ,
.................................................................... ..
HAMMOND ORGANS . . . NEW AND USED PIANOS . . . .
I f o r
Dependable Quality and Honest Value in
P I A j V O S a n a O R G A N S
• Y ou Can D epend O n •
EXTRA
GOOD
USED
PIANOS
JE S S E G . B O W E N M U S IC C O .
T In b a tb u a stn e e 1902
: , WmSTOH-SALEM. H. aai7 WEST FIFTH ST.
tMfe OAVIE RECORD. ilOCKSViLLi. N. d NOVEVIBBR 21. iMl PAGE PJVE
THE DAVIE RECORD.
' Oldeit Paper In The Counljr
r No Liquor, Wine, Beer AiU
Pfc. James C . C lo n ti w ho was .Mr. a iid M rs. W . D . Angel!, o f W A M T A H Q P A Y
:. 27th, Kaiinapolis, were Mocksville ^sit- ™ A l " 1 A L r O I A 1 •
ors Saturday.
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
M ia. Frank Poteat, o f near C ool
Springs, visited frieiuls in thiSL'city
last week.
> Atlas Sm oot and E. L . McClam-
lo ck m ade a . business trip to
■ R ichm o nd, Va., last week.
U 'E . Burton, o f Rou.te 3, w ho
has been ill^ for m ore, than two
: month's; Is iniprovinR, we are glad
to note.
Rev. ]. P. Davis, J. W . H ill and
M rs. W . H . D odd attended the
• Baptist State Convention at Ashe,
vllle last'week.
■ Eleveii Davie County m en were
sent to Charlotte Friday for pre
induction examination for the U .
■ S. Armed'Forces.
w ounded In Korea o n Oct.
' is said to be im proving rapidly.
M rs.H .C .'M e ro n e y , w ho has Thursday Nov. 2 2 ,'Thanlbeen 111 forseveral weeks is Im- « .P « l“ ta t R ow an MemorialHos- j . . . " V . , ^
M rs; E .H .C lo n t x w h o has been ^ e w ill n o t b u y jd ilc kens o h
. .. ,p ta ir ‘^ * ^ r r r ‘e m ft h ^ ^ ^provina her fHends w ill be glad Tuesday o f last week.
to leam.
The m any friends o f Roy Brown
w ill be sorry to leam that he con
tinues seriously ill at Davis Hos
pital, Statesville. A ll hope tor him
an early recovery.
Reavis-Jonps
Miss Tamie R u th Jojies, daugh
ter of M r. and M rs. J. C . Jones,
W A N T E D —T o buy com , any
kind. In ear, shucked or shelled.
Top prices paid.M O C K S V IL L E F L O U R M IL L S
Reavls, son o f M r. and Mrs. W .
L. Reavls, of Mocksville, Route 2,
were united in marriage on Sat
urday evening, N ov. 10th, at 6JQ
There w ill be a chicken pie sup
per and bazaar at O ak Grove. M e
thodist C hurch Satnrday, 'N o v . , , , , , — ,
24t6, beginning at 5 o’clock. The ° . A ° public is cordially invited. tag m injster, Rev. Alvis Cheshire, on Bmgham street.
Mrs. Reavis w ill make her hom e
w ith her parents for the present
W hile M r. Reavis is srationed at
Cam p Rucker, Ala.
The Record joins their friends
in wishing for these young people
a long and happy life.
M rs. Joe Graham , of Lexington,
spent' qne day last week in tow n
; w ith'her' daughter, Mrs. H arold
.'C . Young.
", J. C Powell, w ho is w ith the
•.D uke Power Co., at H igh Point,
/^^site d relatives in and around
1 M ocksville last week.
. / Miss Thelm a Anderson, R . N .,
■ o f the Lexington M em orial Hos-
’ pital staff, spent two days last
' , week in tow n w ith her p a ^ t s .
; | S C h a tlie BaUey left Friday for
D altoh, Ga., to be at the bedside
J o f atk aged aunt, w ho is critically
• ill, follow ing a stroke of paralysis.
F. A . Ireland and daughter w ho
lives in the classic shades o f
Clarksville, were in tow n Thurs
day and paid our office a pleasant
("i'calL _ ;
■ ^ Misses Frankie Junker and Glen-
da M adison spent the week-end
, at Greensboro College, guests o f
:' ■ M iss Jane Click, w ho is a student
I:’ '' '
, , . F O R S A L E - O n e
s ite 'p '"* ^ J-®*®neW piano, w ith new piano guM-
antee. Terms if desired. ). R .
• K luttz, Granite Quarry, N . C .
W A N T E D — Poplar. Maple,
Birch, Sycamore, Pine and O ak
Furniture C o. Elkin, N . C.k Z n
P.T.A. Meets
The Mocksville Parent-Teachers
A ssociation. m et in the high
school auditorium , M ondayeven*
ing, N ov. 12th. *
The meeting was opened w ith
prayer by Rev. Paul Richards
The program for the evening
was in charge o f Mesdames John Miss Betty Jean Dwigglns,
Durham , G ordon T om linson and daughter o f M r. and M rs. M . L.
M . D . Pope. G , H . C , Shutt, Dwigijins o f this city, and Pfc.
P. T. A . Program Chairm an, acted Charlie H . Lakey, son o f M r. and
as announcer for a radio program Mrs. H . A . Lakey, o f Mocksville,
over station P. T . A . w hich fea- Route 1, were united in • marriage
tured local talent, "nie program on Sunday, N ov. 11th at York. S.
included songs and rhythm band C., w ith E.Gettvs N u n n oiHciating.
Lakey-Dwiooins
L O S T - Somewhere on Wilkes*
boro street, a red bill fold con*
taining m oney and some receipts;
Reward will be paid if returned to
Record office, _________________
P IA N O O P P O R T U N IT Y —
W ill sacrifice at once lovely little
spinet. Instrum ent plays a n d
looks like new. G ood make w ith
full guarantee. Party can take over
on m onthly installments w ith r ^
dow n payment if credit is 100%
established. Writes « „ „
Installm ent Loan Dept. S. N . B.
Box 725 Albemarle, N . C.
numbers by the Happi-Tot Kind*
exi^rten pupils o f Mrs. D . J. Man*
M r. Lakey is stationed at Fort
Bragg. Mrs. Lakey w ill make'hcr
do and Mrs. G ordon T om linson.'hom e for the prraent with her
Acrobatic dances by Adelaide San-'parents.
forcf and M artha Rose W aters. Here’s hoping for this young
Recitation by Robert Row land, a couple a long and happy tourney
ballet dance by Karleen Sell, Su- along life’s rugged pathway,
san Hartman, Jane M ando and . _ _ _ _ , _■
Corliss W alker, vocal solo by Mrs.| ReeVeS~'Nriiht
Sue Short, toe dance by A n n Kur-' *
fees and selections by the Girls’ , Mrs. Estelle W right daughter
Chorus o f the H igh School Glee o f M r. and Mrs. John W right of
Club. - Mocksville. R o u tc l, became the^
Following the program, the pre- bride o f Pvt. W ade W . Reeves o f
sident, G . R . M adison, presided U . S. A rm y, son o f M r. and Mrs.
over the business session. Miss Charlie Reeves, o f H arm ony R . I,
Clayton Brown’s third grade w on “ 2:30 P. M .; Saturday, N ov. 10, j
the attendance award. A large at the Parsonage o f Uberty Pil-[
group was present. Brim C hurch o f Sheflield. The
I------------- Rev. Clyde A . Parker , officiated.Tennery~FoSter ■ 'Tl>e.bride .wqre a light blue suit.
Miss W illodean Foster, daugh.
ter o f M r. and Mrs. W . E. Foster,
o f Jerusalem, and Bobbie M .
Tennery, son o f Rev. and Mrs. .L.
M . Tennery of Fork, w ere, united
in marriage on Oct. 31st, at Spar-^ e fri?nds o f M rs. Charles F-. ^ where M r. Tennery
D o m m w ill be sorry to iM m that , j„ d e n t at Furm an University,
the Is quite iU at her hom e in
■ l^o tth Mocitsville. A ll hope for
, her an early recovery. I
•' M in Phyllis Johnson, w ho is '
e n g a ^ ini Red Cross ruxeational'
■ w ock at M em phis, Tenn., arrived
Friday, evening to spend a
m e k w ith her parents, M r. and
Wh*. p . J. Johnson. !
M r. and Mrs. Roy Brow n, w ho'
I dw ell beyond thJ turbid waters
o f the South Yadkin, ta the tlas--
•Ic iihades of <Woodl«af, were in
’ tow n shopping Friday m orning,
M rs. Brow n says'she enjoys read-
iog'T he Record very much- Roy —
- d idn;t saV: * = . ^ j
V Chevrolet sedan driven, b y ’
M r*.'Jack Pennington, and a Stu-
" d ^ k e r car driven by Harrison
tin ie r , "were both damaged to
(oA e extent W ednesday after-
■ n o o n at SaO o’clock, under the.
' ! s to p - lig h t'o n ' this square, Mr-
hiei: was stgrting to m ake a left
turn on the square, whe-> the cars
’ one was injured-
. M r. and Mrs. Tennery are m ak
ing, ^ e ir hom e at Spartanburg .
w idi naW blue accessories.
Mrs. Reevess is a graduate o f
Mocksville H i ^ Schbol.
M r. Re.ves ' attended Cool
Springs H igh School.
Following a wedding trip t o
Black M ountains. M rs. Reevls will
make her hom e w ith her parents.
M r. Reeves returned to Fort Ben-
tiing, Georgia, where is now sta
tioned.
P rincess Theatre
T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y
Fred M cMurray & Eleanor
Parker In
“A M IL L IO N A IR E F O R
C H R IS T Y ”
A dded News & Cartoon
S A T U R D A Y
Roy Rogers In
"SU N S E T IN T H E W EST ”
w ith Penny Edwards &. Trigger
In Trucolor
A dded Serial & Cartoon.
M O N D A Y & T U E S D A Y
G lenn Ford & Gene Tierney In ‘T H E SECRET O F C O N V IC T LA K E ” with
Ethel Barrvmore
A dded News &. C arb o n
SP EC IA L
CORDUROY
s •
^ Brown, Tan, Red, Yellow,
Pink, Blue, Green,
Shrimp
NOW
$1.29 Yard
First Quality j-
36 Inches Wide -:•% ' ’v;-
. V.
Mocksville Cash Store
' “The Friendly Store”
G E O R G E R- H E N D R IC K S , Manager
W E D N E S D A Y
George Brent &. Lynn Bari In®
•T H E K ID F R O M C LEV E
L A N D " with The Cleveland
, lndia.is Baseball Team
A dded Comedy & Cartoon
D o y o u r e a d I h e R e c o r d ?
Telephone 300 Southern Bank Bldg. Mocksville, N . C .
D R . R A M E Y F. K E M P , C H IR O P R A C T O R
X -R A Y L A B O R A T O R Y
Hours: 9:30-12:30 2:30-5^0 _ Closed Saturday 2:30
M onday, W ednesday and Friday Evenings— 6:30 to 8:30
j m BiB-
STDRl
D R . C , G . C U T R E L L
Announces H is Office Is O pen For T he Practice O f
C H IR O P O D IS T - F O O T SP E C IA L IST
118i N orth M ain St. W ashington B uilding .
■ Salisbury, N . C.
Office Hours Telephone 1615
9:00 to 5:00 - W ednesday A fternoon B y A ppointm ent
The
We Have A Store Full Of Christmas Goods
s ir. and Mrs. K nox Powell w ho
llM sfdh & ilsbury streeT are short, ...^
.'. Im ^ filie f ' roast as the o f
' turning a Hot plate. T he fire |
4 & i f ^ m t ' answered a call to
'lionie .at SKX) o’clock last
' V ^edn^day afternoon. N o other
d ^ a g e ivM done, b ut the loss o f
a IjS fto a s t w ith prices w hat they
^ t j ^ . : ! s a calamity.
■ ^ im k s g iv W g services witt be
heW (it the- Jiitst Baptist C hurch
Wednesday, evening, N ov. Zlst, at
7 i3 b fo ’aocjc..-'-Rev. A . J. Cox
p M ^ r i ’q f M ethodist
C is S ^ ^ .'^ lli ' ^ y V . .the. sermon.
A lj’^ u t ^ « . to ■ the city are cth
bi«rating in this servfce. A fea-
V w re of;the evening aMII be «pe>
ciai.mAsic rendered by the church
■cUWr-’ 'A ll are in v lt^ . f j •
■fhinkofyoyr-HiRwfe*.
Bicycles Erector Sets
Children’s Autos Dolls, Doll Cradles
Electric and Foiotballs , . ■
Mechanical .Trains Basketballs
Complete Line Christmas Tree Lights
And Decorations
A fte r all tlw M ild n e ss T e s fs ...
C A M iL 1 ^ 8 i
B Y M L U O N S
FOR PURE CRYSTAL ICE
C O A L F O R G R A T E S , STOVES, F U R N A C E A N D ST O K ERS
It W ill Pay Y o u, To Call O r Phone Us.'
JVe M ik e Prom pt ,Delivery .
Mocksville Ice ^ Fuel Co.
Phone 'U 6. , M odcsville, N . C •
For Dad and Mom'• •.yu,- ■ - , . .
Radios, Electric Razors. Electric Toasters, Irons, Etc.
HUNDREDS OF GIFTS FOR ALL THE FAMILY
Firestone Home & Auto Supply
G. H. C. SH U TT, Owner
Phone 132 Mocksville, N.; C.
THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
Designs for Toy
Railroad Builders
p A T T E R N gives tracing designs * for cutting out all the individual
ports oC everything illustrated ex
cept the train and track. A ll assem bling directions are included;
as well as decorating to get the m ost realistic effects. Price of pat
tern is 25c.
\V0KK8ll(>t\ t*ATT13_RN SERVICE
Dedforc
BetierCough Relief
When new dmgs or old fail to slop your couch or clicst cold don’t delay. Crcomulsion coniains only safe, help- ful. proven ingredients and no oar>tj colics to disturb nature's proecss. It Soes right to the scat of the Ifouble to aid nature soolitc and heal raw, ten- dcr, inflamed bronchial membranes. Qunrantecd to plense you or druggist refunds money. Crcomulsion has stood the test of many millions of users.
C R E O M U i^ S IO Nwllevii Couchs, Clicit CoMj, Acuto Drmchlllt
EAT ANYTHING WITH
f a l se TEETH!
U you hare trouble with plaiei tliai slip.rocli.causc try Urimms Pla/tM incr. Opc application nakcfs plates (uiuttgh ufithcutpouv/ererpaUt, bccaiitc Urimms I'lasti* Lincf iiardvns pcrma- ocntl>'_to your plate. Reliocs and rclitJ looso pJaics in a wav ao po\r<icr or pasii* can do. Evenoiioldrubbcrplaics you £cCfiood results eixmontlistonycarorlofiRcr. YOU can e a t ANYTHINCI Simply lar soft strip of Plastf. Uocr on t/oablcsome upper or lower. Uito and it molds perfccily. Host/o ute, tittclcat, ^oflcss. Iiarnikss to you and your pbtos. ItefDovablo as dircctcd. Money back if not completely satisfied./I,* J ' • *
“Hot Flaslies” Stopped
or strikingly relieved
in 63*80%* of cases in doclo'rs*lesls
* I f you’re m iserable from the “ hot flashes," and occoropanylng irritable^
restless feelings oC “change of life”— you m ay be sulfering tm neccssarilyt
*For...in tests by doctors...Lyditt PiDkhom 's Compound and Tablets J»rought relief from such functionally- caused suffering to 63% and 80% (re« spcctlvely) of the women testcdl Ow7^p^e^e or striking Telie/l Yes! Research bos provcti these motl> Iclnes thorotiglil}/ modem in action . . . Ima shown 70a whoro to took far r«il«f itom those dlstreeslne. norvoua. *^uc r sons'* IccllnitB of mid>llfe ’’chaDgf"!' So...BctLydlaE.Plnkhittn*BVceotnblo " mpfiund-^r iu:»> Improved Tablots, b nUdod tfoal (WonHer/ul. too. /or the fetloHal iMlns 0/ mcMtruol period}.)rn^imamimggm throueb i
awful “ heat wares'’!
Kidney Slow-Down
May Bring
Restless Nights
•mmroru it rcduecd Id^noy IntiMim L -Uae you down—doo to such common e aa alrou and AraIn, ovemarUon or ox- poniro to eold. Miner bladder IrrltaUona due te cold, dampneis er wronR dioe may cause gelUog up niehU er frcquant poaaaeea.
flush out tmle. Get Oeaa‘e I'iUs tedi^lOAM’S P i n t
It's Wonderful the Way
Chewing-Gum Laxafivo
Acts Chiefly to
REMOVE WASTE
- m
GOOD FOOD
• Here’s the secret millions ot ioiica Itavo tf lacovered about rmi-A-MiMT, tho moti- cro chewiag-Bum laxative. Tes, hero la ^ 7 rnn-A-Mnn's ootion la bo troador* ^ 1 7 different!
.. — a ftwsy nowlahiDB tor beaiUt and onergir. m o u t
Vatican Appointment
'p E P U B L IC A N pundits have now
had tim e to take careful sound*
ings on (he President's appointment of Gen. M ark C lark to the Vatican
and have concluded that political^ ly it w ill do the Dem ocrats more
harm than good.
A t first they feared the surprise
move would w in the blg-clty Cath
olic vote back to the Dem ocratic
party—a vote which, because of
M cCarthy’s semisuccessful cry of State departm ent Com m unism , was
definitely slipping over to the Republican side. However, they now
Agure that they can easily label the T rum an gesture as politics, for two
reasons:
1. Although the President had
talked to G eneral C lark a couple
of weeks earlier and got his. con
sent to serve as Vatican ambassa
dor, he did not send the appoint
m ent to tho Senate until late on the
last day congress was in session.
Thus, G O P leaders intend to point
out, M r. T rum an could not have
been too serious about getting the
new am bassador confirmed.
2. The further fact that General
Clark, a m ilitary m an, m ust get a special act of congress to perm it
h im to serve, gives h im a double hurdle to overcome and furtlier
postpones the date when he can take ofTice.
Hof Potato in Ohio
Buried in the files of the senate
elections com m ittee, however, is some anti-Catholic cam paign litera
ture which has Republican strategists m uch more worried. This is
the reason w hy the elections com m ittee has been teetering back and
forth trying to m ake up its m ind about a real probe of the Ohio election.
H ighlight of tills cam paign' w as a
letter, dated Oct. 3, 1950, signed by
Rev. P . R . Stonebumer, of Dayton,
a Lutheran, and widely circulated throughout Ohio. Zt read:
“D ear Brethren: Please accept this letter m erely as a m atter of
inform ation. It should bo known
that M r. Joseph Ferguson, who is running against Senator Robert A.
Taft, is Rom an Catholic.
"Know ing tlie efforts of the Ro
m an church to get an oflicial representative to the Vatican and its
efforts to gel public aid for parochial schools, I thought it equitable
to pass this inform ation on to you
for w hat it is worth.
“O f course you know that our congressman, Edw ard Breen, Is
Rom an Catholic and tliat he favors public aid for parochial schools.
“I t is a m istaken public idea that
Governor Frank Lausche is Rom an
Catholic. H e was raised in an orthodox church. H is fam ily goes to a
M ethodist churtfhv He has never
been a R om an Catholic. These are the facts as I have been able to
ascertain them.
“F or the authenticity of this Iet>
ter, contact the Lutheran pastor In your com m unity or Rev. F . R .
Stonebumer, 201 Com m ercial St., Dayton, O.
“If you wish the m em bers of
your congregation to receive copies of this letter, please send such list
to Post Office Box No. 224, Greenville, O.'*
Gillette Worries
W hen T aft first demanded a
probo of his cam paign, the S e n ^e elections sub-committee voted 4 to
1 for it, includhig the two Repub
lican mem bers. M rs. Sm ith of
M aine and Hendrickson of New
Jersey. The only m an who voted
against it was tim id Senator G il
lette of Iow a, Democrat.
However, , when the elecUons
committee picked Robert M urphy,
an experienced investigator and a Catholic, as its counsel. Rep. Clar
ence Brown of Ohio, a Taft leader, blocked the appointment. He would
not let a special b ill okaying M urphy get through the house.
F or weeks now the Ohio probe
lias hung fire. Com m ittee in
vestigators In Ohio have re
ported th at T aft forces ofClcial-
ly chalked up $2,060,592.14 as
their.to tal expenditure, b u t a sam pling has revealed addiUon-
a! amounts spent by county and city groups. One Taft organiza- '
tion, «*Labor*s League for Taft,” was organized not by labor but
by J . Eugene C arr, ex-prcsldent ot the Canton C ham ber of Com
merce and a radio executive.
W ith a full yeax passed since
T aft’s election, harassed and h arried C hairm an Gillette finlly set
Nov. 19 as the hearing date.
Washington Plpellna
A m ere clerk a t the A rm y hos<
p ital in Tokyo rides back and forth
to w ork every day in a N avy
Lim ousine. She is MoUie Joy,
d a u ^ te r of A dm . Turner Joy, chief
U .N . truce negotiator . . . Senator
Benton of Connecticut is one m a n
who never listens to the radio. Aa
an advertisbig executive, he in«
v ^ te d som e of radio's first tech
niques. including applause by a Jiv *
audience.
BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
Why We Worship
Lesson for November 25, 1951
Dr. Foreman
P E W B R than two out of every ^ three Am ericans belong to any
church or synagogue. Y e t tho trav< eler across A m 0 r-
ica is ne v e r long
out of sight of some
house of worship.
W ith or w ithout a
cross, w ith or without paint, every
few m iles there w ill
be a c h u rc h or chapel or m eeting
house. where like- m hided people meet to worship the One
God,• • •
V ariety
TT is am azing, the confusing vari-
^ ety of w ays in w hich God is publicly worshipped. Som e churches
arc liturgical; that is, the form of tlift service is prescribed, printed in
a book, used w ith little change from generation to generation. Rom an
Catholic churches are of this kind (though there is a w ide range of de
tail in the procedures of difTerent Cotholic churches): so arc the Lu
theran, the Reform ed and the Episcopal churches, am ong others.
Other churches are non-liturgical, or free, in their m ode of worship,
varyhig all tho w ay from churchcs w ith optional form s of worship bn
out to snake-handling sects like the
“ Church of God w ith Signs Follow
ing,” w here you never know one
m inute w hat is going to happen
next.
Tlie liturgical ehurchcs. too,
arc different as can be. Some
liturgies arc filled w ith chanting, Incense, Jong and not easy
for a stranger to follow. OUtcr liturgies are brief and* simple.
The insides of those various hinds of churchcs are just as
difTerent as the interiors of hotels—all tlie w ay from (lie
elegant Waldorf-Astoria down to the ram shackle boarding house
of a frontier to^vn. The leader
of the worship m ay be clad in
•vestments gorgeous in the extrem e, or in a plabt black gown,
or dressed in sliirt-sicevcs.
The “m a n from M ars” would be
so bewildered by all this th at ho would ask: Is there anything at all
that these different kinds of w orship. have in common?
• • *
Com m union
T ?OR an answer, we can go back ^ more than 3,000 years to the
tim e when Moses w as organizing his people's worship as he organized
the rest of their lives. You would hafdly have recognized th at little
“tabernacle’^ in tlio wilderness as a
place of worship a t a ll; it looked
like neither church nor synagogue.
And w hat went on in the tabernacle would look strange to a Jew
of today, stranger still to a R om an
Catholic, strangest of a ll to a “non-
liturgical” Protestant. And yet, w hat w ent on to m ake th at taber
nacle possible in the first place, and w hat went on in it afterwards,
:ive us the answer to the question: Vhat do a ll the innum erable form s of worship have in com m on?
F irst of all Is com m union w ith
God. In true w orship we become aw are of H im ! in the New
T estam ent phrase, we **ap- proach w ith boldness the throne
of G race." W orship Is right when it actually brings the wor
shipper into a cleansing con
sciousness of the nearness ot
God,— when, indeed, he feels and knows that it is “in H im
w e live and m ove and 'have our being.”
N ot every one reaches this divhie awareness in the sam e way.• • *
Consecration
Bu t there is another side to wor
ship: Consecration. However
varied the order of w orship m ay be, one p art of it w ill be found
nearly everywhere: the offering.
This is actually one of the
m ost im portant parts of tlie scrvicc*, Uiough it Is often neg
lected and <‘skim m ed.” F or (he offering is not only im portant in
itself, but It Is a great sym bol ot w hat worship ought always to
be, a call to dedication.
Into the offering plate go bits of
silver, green paper, checks . . . money? Yes, and m ore. Tills repre
sents something of the life and w ork of the worshippers. Every m a n has
some better, m om ents when he would generously like to do some
thing to help the w orld. O n Sunday the church harnesses his vague good
w ill. I t gives h h n a channel for his generosity.
W hat a m an gives ought never to be TO the church b u t T H ROU G H
the church; it would be an expression of gratitude to God from one
who knows that his w hole life is G od's gift. '
ot tba OhBrohM «t ObrUI la «ba United SU lM af Anerlea. Beleasei by WNV
W A N STU ART TRAHSFEBS
Orchid in Permanent Dye Process
Bunnies Attractive on Play Suits
Q R C H ID bouquets measure 8V4
inchcs, ore in dye-fast purples, lavender and yellow. No cm*
broidery is needed whatsoever.
Ihc _ _ _lels tPattorn No."38it trnnslcr'litid iaungi:rlnc inslrucllena. YOUn NAME. ADDRESS. PA 'ri'EnN NUMDBn to Joan S(lunrj^^Box^42jl^ fcladl.«ton- Sauore Station.
Ju s t iron them onto gifts for
children-play suits, bibs, quilts.
18 adorable bunnies measure 2 and
3 inchcs: brown fur, pink-lined
cars.
Stuort, Oox 434, Ml New Vork 10. N.Y.
THE ANSWER
DEPENDS ON YOU
If you want to help finish the im
portant job of modemlring our
government machinery, hece*s what
to do. Send today foryour free copy
of the bipartisan booklet, **WiU
We Be ReatTy?** Write to: Hoover
Report, Box 699, Philadelpliia, Pa.
W on't T alk . .
-Mistress (to new m aid )—*'Now, w hen you w ait on the guests a t dliv
nor, I w ant you to be very careful not to spill anything.’*
M aid — “ Don’t worry, I w on't say a w ord.”
NO CONSTIPATION NOW
AFTER YEARS OF MISERY
^Tor years 1 bod been taking man} kinds of laxatives. Then I tried ALtrOHAN. It not only keeps mo
p r a t a K f -----d a y !'* Rudy R .
Ai»L*onAN users.You, too. may expect to overcome I________ _coMUpotlon due to lack of dietary bulk If you folluw this advice: Bat
on ounce (ebout H cup) of crispy KoUogg’e AU/.URAN daily, drink p lo n ^ of woterl If aot completely satiafled aRor lOdnys, return empty carton to Kellogg’s, Bottle Creek,
Economical Cough
Relief! Try This
Home MixtureKo Coohtng. ' .hlakcB Die" Saving.
To get quick and salbtylng ratter from couRha duo to colds, mlx,thii rcclpo In your
. Fin btcilFirst, moko a syrup with 2 cups granu- ‘ Isugorond oneeupoF water. Ne cooking «d. Or you can use corn ayrup or littutd honey. Inatcad of sugar syrup.Then get ounces of I'inex from any
druggist This la a apeeial compound of proven IncredlcnU, In concentrated form,
well-known for its quick action on tiiroat and bronchial IrriUUens.
Put PInex Into a pint bottle, and fill tip wlili your syrup. Thus you make a full pint
of splendid medlclnc-abeut four times as much for your money. It never spells, and tastes fme.And lor quick, blessed relief, it is surprls- Injr. Vou can feel It Uke bold In a way that means business. It loosens plilegm. aoethea Irrilftted membranes, cases soreness. Makes lirenthing easy, and lets you get restful sleep. JtiBt try It. and If not pleosed. your money will bo refunde«i.FOR EXTRA CONVEtilENCE GET NEW
READY-MIXED. READY-TO*USE PINEXl
C H E A P E R b y th e D O Z E N !
PLACE IN OWE SPOT"
Puce Warfarin Concentratewith directions tomakoZj^lfas.fieehbait. Here is Youc Rodent Insnanee; Mado by the makors ol One-Spot Flaa Killer—*0 yow fcaow » 't tfc* very 6«(e. SI at rout local «<ot o et $8 pm doa. postpaid boa
One-Spot Co., R. 22 , lesaup, Md. Kill 'em the Sale, Oae-S|Mt way.
THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
vmciL L e n K ie i*
rrorf-TiwrYMMCSEU9HT-/V,.
WHKT PRIZE n
SUNNYSIDE lwCl.ilS.Mo.1.
_ RIMIN' TIME By POSEN
SiHENOOEBunZTAKESAflICKOIICKOUT,There'snota single palABO UT-^^
But WHEN SOME HOMELYCAME THEWHOUDASNWORlDISSUliE HASeOT’IM-p-j^^
lese Toddler Togs Grandma’s Sayings,
*rIN Y togs for the toddlers of (he
•* fam ily. D ainty flower-trimmed
dress for sister, sew-easy romper
for brother. Delightful sew ing
whether you’re a beginner or an expert, and a nlcc idea for holiday
tomocr. % yard: use scraps for nppllquo.
Enclose 30c in coin for each pattern. Add 5e for 1st aasa M all *lf <ie8lr«e. « Pattern No.......................... Size........
Name (Please Prtnti
street Address or P .O . Bern No.
- c i ^ State I
Keep Posted on Values
By Reading the Ads
» ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST
St.JosephASPiRiH
Slarte INSTftmY to relieve)
SffiHMilCaused by Colds
Just rub on Muaterole. . . it's made
dtwtoeolda. Muaterole aetuallybolps br«ak up loeaJ eonReatlon In tljo ui>. Mr bronchial traet. nose and Uiroat. in 8 atrensibs.
MUSTeroLE
LOOKS TO v m like the folks that, wake up to find themaelvea roachln* , a goal sure haven't been slcepln* loo long.tS iMkI Mr*. I.min« UVKteckn, D. a *
•>rTALKIN' ABOUT the "new looH? brings to mind the new package for Nu-&Iaid margarine. It’a modern In every way . . . seals Nu-
Maid's sweet, churned-fresb flavor. Ycsslree! I prefer -TaWe-Grade'' Nu-Mald, the modern margarine, for my cookin' and bakia'.
RE M E M B E R our deeds are only our thoughts hung out where folks kin see ’em—so. If we try to think good thoughts, we should surely do some good deeds.
ti pMd IreiM nibeir. QD«rad«t Kmm.«oV'n n s v SAY A WOMAN always has
to have the last word. Well, I know one MIbs who Is the lost word— .. tliat's Miss Nu-Mald. Yes. Nu-Moid Is tho completely modern yellW margarine. Nu-Mald la aweet tasUn; easy apreadin'. Up to the minute in every way!
will bo paid upon publication to the llrst contributor of each ao-copied saying or Idea... $10 it a<^i>-, ted entry Is accompanied by large!
picture of Miss Nu-Mald from thej package. Address *^randma“ 109
East Pearl Street, Clnelnnatl 2. Ohio.
ALW AYS LOOK F O R SWEET, wholesome Miss Nu-Mald on the pacliage when you buy margarine. Miss Nu-Maid la your assurance, bf tho finest modern margarine la (he flnest modem package, . f
THE BEST
YOU CAN BUY
—-------->—get costs only
2f! a week for
the average
fam ily!
- —m Fhlnor iodised
If PtTER Rvin k n o t s you u p w i t h
!.
PAGE EIGHT T H E D A T li; R E C O R D , M O C K S V tL L B N . G . N O V E M B E R 21. )«S1
. B j B IC B A B D H IL L tVILKlNSON
M R S . SO TH ERN was desperately
* •* in ne*a of money, and so when
cam e across the Currier and Ire s print she thought right oU .that
it m iglit be possible to sell the pic* lure to ■ collector for a conslderoblc
•um . The painting w as dusty and fl7>speeked and encased in a hoavy.
M tiquated gold fram e, but she
tu rtie d It down to the kitchen and •leaned it as best she could, and
Ihen called in Burt.
**It'a been in the attic (or years,"
■be explained. "M other had it a tang tim e ago. And you know some
O irrie r and Ives prints are worth Jiftu ne s."
B urt scratched his chin and
w nitinized the barely distinguish-
ib le signature. Ho nodded slowly.
**You m ight get something for it at ttiat,*’ he said. *'lt's a Currier and
Ives all right, and it's sure enough old.’*.
**0h, Burt, wouldn’t Jt be wonder- ful if we could! Why, it would just
■olve everything!”B urt grinned. "W ell, there's no
harm in trying. More I look at it the more I think it m ight bring n
price. Tell-you w hat I ’ll do: I ’ll call Moe Avery. He’s a collcctor ond
lie’ll buy it if it’s worth anything.So B urt went to tho ’phono and
called Moe Avery. "H e ’ll be hero
w hile to sell, i'm swi-s;-
C H E S A ID , .striving to keep h w
voice under control: **Just a
m inute, M r. Avery. W e do need the
money, nnd I ’v# gone lo the bother of carrying it w ay down stairs—*'
M r. Avery liesitatcd. *'No,” he
said presently. **I can’t do it. It w ould be robery. T ell you w hat:
I'll call a collcctor friend of m ine and send him out.”
M rs. Sothem felt a little panicky. W liat if the collcctor friend couldn’t
pay them anything? After all, M r. Avery knew them and w as bound
to be sym pathetic. The collcctor
friend m ight be m erely an excuse.
M r. Avery looUcd from one to the
other of them . “ W ell, all right,
since you inRl5:l. B ui don’t (cel in
sulted at m y fixture. I renlize
w hat you hnve a.\\ rijjhl. Don’t
mistn!:c that. l:.it rcsdy cssh is scarce. ;»nti It’s the best I con do.*'
Ivtrs. .^nf.icrn l*-id visions of .*3-
tven Vt. ‘I'bt* r;i: h t.s iv.akini^
i.ci* i.t rv. .ij. : hi* >f^itl: "'Veil, whai
•! -o- r I 0-. Avery.'”. :r I'. • breath.
**0.K. now , retrem oer miu uunt,
throw m e out. It’s a rare print,—
we all know that—>but the best I can
offer right now is |1300.
"Thirteen imn— “ Burt tried to
catch his wife before she hit the floor. But he missed. She was conscious again when the doctor ar>
rived.
*'She*U be all right.” the doc said *'in a few minutes. M ust have sot
a slight shock... Well, I'll be running aloni'. M eri^ Christm as.”
'*Thanks," said Burt. "Y oah,
K e rry Christmas. Yeah, M erry
Christm as .... Yowl M E R R Y
CHRISTM AS! You b e tl"
NOT EAST
••You know, politloiaas don’t have 1( so easy.'*••Why not?»»
**Tou try straddling a fence
and keeping both ears to the
ground.’*
Mrs. Southern held her breath while he bent to study the painting.
in an hour’s tim e,” he told his wife
a moment later. “ We'd better not
get too opUmistic though. Probably
turn out to be worthless.”
"O h, Burt, you don’t think it
wiUI” Why—why I ’d bo satisfied a it brought $50!”
"O ught lo bring that,” said Burt. ♦'Ought to bring more! However, no
«s t in getting optimistic.”
M rs. Sothern sighed. “ Firty dol- Inrsl” she said. "Think of it. Just
Ihink o( the things wc could do.
B ut there. As you say, I mustn’t gci •pUmisUc.”
They talked about ihe prospects and possibilities, both pro and con.
undergoing various sensations ot hope and fear and optimism and
misgivings, until finally the door
bell rang and Burt admitted Moc Avery.
Moe was a brisk und efficient
little man. He greeted them briefly, and then p r^u c e d his glasses.
"How long?” he asked, “ iios Ihia print been in your fam ily?”
"O h, ever so long,” said Mrs. Sothern. " I—I've raUier lost track.”
"H um ,” said Moo. “ You’ve been saving it?”
"Y es,” said M rs. Solbern, ‘V o ’ve been saving it.”
The collector ixmovod his glass
es, carefully returned them to his
case and put tlie ease into hi;:
pocket. His face wore a doefui expression. He sisJ’c*d heavily. ‘‘I ’m afraid.” he said, “ that I can’t offer
you e:»oiiRh tojr>a.:-.e it worth your
I «« 6rerh«wn<( be<iiui*
II'* •• CONVENIENT
I Go Greyhound because it’s
(Hkjtilndiwt
Muybc it’s bt-causi; of thu inieresiini; p«op!c
you mi‘ft when you travel by Greyhound — thcy'ri: all mi friendly! Or pvrhaps the hcl|v- fulne&s and courtcsy of Greyhound drix'crs is
tli« answer. One thin^^ sure, It’s the friendly wavfl. nnd / like it’
More Express ond Limited Schedules^
More ~hru Fuses, More Service to More ■
Placc^ Than Am/ Other Travel W tiy!
Buses Daily O n e W ay
Charlotte 10 $1-45
W inston-Salem I I 65
Greensboro 11
Charleston, W .V a. 8 7.10
A ugu ta>Ga. 6 5.15
JaKksonviUe, Fla. 2 9.15
R ichm ond, Va- 9 5.60
W ashington, D .C . 9 7*55
New York, N .Y . 9 11-75
Plus U. S. Tax
Save 10% each way with a Rd. Trip Ticket
W IL K IN S D R U G C O M P A N Y
Phone 21. Mocksville. N . C.
yMi raoHy tcc thr FALL
COUNTRYSIDE
I •* Gr«rh«and bccouM I Ilk* the friendly
PEOPLE YOU MEET
F A S I « 1
M ACH I 1 TBB 7
New Mowers, Rakes, Drills, Disc and Section Harrows,
Manure Spreaders, Self-Propelled Corn Pickers.
We Have Some Good Used Farm Machinery
Big Line Of New Parts In Stock
Don’t Purchase Your Farm Marchinery Until You
Look Over Our Stock
HENDRIX & WARD
N E A R C O R N A T Z E R
Massey Harris Farm Implements
J. F R A N K H E N D R IX M IS S C O L E E N FO ST ER O W E N W A R D
Shoaf Coal & .
Smd Co.
W e C an Supply lo u r Needs
IN G O O D C O A L ,
S A N D and B R IC K
Call or Phone U< A t A nyT im c
P H O N E 194
Formcrlv Davie Brick & C oat Co
SILER
Funeral Home
AND
Hower Shop
Phone 1 13 S , Main St
Mocksville, N. C
Ambulance Service
Walker Funeral Home
A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E
D A Y O R N IG H T
Phone'48
Mocksville, N. C
Boger & Howard
P U R E S E R V IC E
|Tir. s Batteries A nd Accessories
Kttrfces Palitcs
|Comcr N . M ain & G a irh e r Sts,
Phone 80
Notice to Creditors
Hnvlnft qunlifled as Adininis^tafor nf
the of Mnmle P. Kllla. deceased
t*er«bv riven to all pfreonshoW
«ne clHlntN R ainst xnld enlate- to prMPM
lb** RfliHG. propftriy verified, to the under
si n<>d on or before th<> I3ih doy of Octo*
1952. or this nniice will ^e pl«i*d In
h^f of tholr rrcftvefv. Ail peffii.nit jndehi
ed tOfl-«id will plf^nae caH upnn th«>(imlemitfmd at Advnnc^. Route 2. N. .C. a-Ml make i>rnnM»i Bfttlement.This 13tl> dny o/Om»her. 1951.W. J. ELLI.S, Admr. o» Mflirie P. E^ll^ decH’d.By A. t GRANT, Attorney.
Notice to Creditors
Havinit qun|ifieil h« AdminiMrainr ot
th« estate of Genrjie E. P<eble». deceased,
notice Is hereby gWrn t«i all itersons faokl
ins claims aitBinsi Ihe edt^te nf said il
ceased, to preitent thn same to ihe iiiider
signed, properly vertfierl. on or before thi'
30ih day of Ocio' er. 1932 ,or thin nnit<:<
wltl be plead in b.ir nf iheir recovery. Ail
person* Indetifed to the snl«< wilt
picRSPcnli upon the under«iitneil at i;oo.
ieemee, N. C . and make prnmpt settle*
meat. This the 30th d<ty ef October. 19SI
LONNIE M. PEEBLES. Arlmr. nf
■ GeorAe E. Peebles, deca'd
U ncle Sara Say s
UI oiMirse you know your ABO’s but do yon kaow your D^a and E'af Under present world coDdllleos, D standing fordefense and E standing for Series E nefense Bonds are Inseparahle. By buying nelcMse Bonds regularly, you help liulld the Kviion's eeonomio sirengib (ba( baeks up our defense effort. At Ike same time you are helping yourself.
ISvery Series E Bond you own auto<
matloally goes on earning Interest every year for 20 years from date of iiurcbase instead of 10 years as beforo. Tbb means tbat the bond yon bought for tl8.T5 can return you net Just |25 but as muoh as 133.33. A; ISTJO bond |M»ys tfSBM. And so on.U. S. 0*M>im«At
A TTEN TIO N FA RM ERS!
POULTRY LOADING
W e W ill Buy T^u^Poultty^Every "^ u rid iiy M orning Ptom
In Front Of E. P. Fotler* Cotton Gin
HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID
W IL L P A Y M A R K E T .P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S
SAUSBURY POULTRY GO.
. Sallsbniy. N .'c '
D A V I E O O U N T T 'S O L D E S T N E W S P A iP E R - T H E P A P E R T H E P e 6 p I< E H E A D
■WEIIE SHALL THB P F ^ . THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAINt UNAWEO BY INFLUENCE AND UNmiBCO BV CAIN.”
V O L U M N U I .
M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W B D N B S D A Y , N O V E M B E R s8 lo ^ i.NUMBER |8
NEWS OF LONG AGO. fountain of Truth
The
Davie Record
Has Been Published Since 1899
52 Years
. Others have come and gone-your
county newspaper keeps going.
^'ometiines it hat seemed bard to
make %ucUe and tongue” meet but
soon the sun shines and again we
march on. Our faithful subscribers,
most of whom pay promptlv, give us
; courage and abiding faith in our
fellow man.
If your neighbor is nut taking The
Record tell him to subscribe. The
price is only $1.50 per year "in the. <
State, and $2.00 in other states.
t * ,
When You Come To Town >
Malce Our Office Your
HeaLdquarters.T - \ ? ?
We Are Ajwavs Glad To
See You.
What Wm HapiMBfaic In D«-
via Batora'Parkini M alm
And Abbreviated Slcirtk
(Dsvie Record, N o». *9. 19.13) ,
Mr. snd Mrs. I. S. DatiW spent
Thnrsdsy sfterniHra tDTbamisvllle
J. B. -Jolllliitme sod Jske Hsiies
: were business visitors In Winston-
■S
L E T u s DO
YOUR ypB PRINTING
W e can save you money
on your
ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS^
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL
HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Et?.
Patronize your home newspaper
and thereby help build up yOur
home town and county. ‘
T H E D A V IE RECO RD .
Now is the time In
scribe for The Record.sub.
The Record has the Uifqi^t ufhite
circulation of any Davie paper.
t .
♦ FOR RENT ♦
SPACE IN THIS PAPER
I Will ^rran jc T6 Suit
GOOD NEIGHBORS-PWCES TO
Rf >'6ur business
S slc m P rid s y .
E d ito r P e in im B ryant, o f. th e
Ststesrllle D silv , w s s in tow n W ed-
nesday.on biislness,
R e v . e nd M rs. E . W . T a m e r
sKd 'a s u g h tW M Is r • H ie » i; spent
T hn rsd sy ^n W lnston.Sstem .
M iss M sry A d s D o n th lt, of Ad-
' ' ysnce, R . i , visited b er su n t, M rs.
P . S to n ^re e C tb e i» s l w eek.
M iss D o r ^ b y Lsm b e tb , o f M o o .
cn're. Is spendlnK som e tim e In tbls
e ltv , th e «oest of M r. snd M rs. A
T . D snlel,
T h m o f th e late Tim C am pbell's
eU Idren were csrrfed to tb e B<p-
^ list O i^liiin a g e at 'rbom ssville Isst
P riday.
M I m M srKaret W a rd and M ary
; W a rd Stonestrixt visited M iss A da
D o u tb lt, o f A dvsnce, R . t , over
t h e y e e k ^ d .
. Clarence W a ll wHo b o ld sa posit.
Io n la'W in sto n - S a le m , spent tbe
;w eelc,end . w lth b is o a re n u , M r.
s n d M rs. W . B . W a ll.
M r, s n d M rs. G le n n S m ith , of]
Kedli|nd,>,mre to to w n M oaday o »
- th e ir w ay to H om estead, Pl'a.. to
'.spend Ib e w inter;
H iss K athleen Crsvlen,
,ber o f Ib e Senior class a l G reens.
; boro CollcKe, w ill arrive to nl(’h t:io
; spend th e T b a o k s flv to e holidays
: w ith b er m other.
' T bo m as W . R ic h left M onday
.' n o ra to f- b y m otor for M iam i, Fla,
' w here ^ w ill spend the w inter.
H ere’s w IsblnK H r . R ic h a plesa
a n t sojonrn jo tb e Isnd o f flo m rs ,
M iss PraniEle.Craven, a u e m k r
o f Ib e P arin intjlon hlfh school fa.|
•.ra lly , w ill spend tbe T basksK lvln c
hoildays.'sl C bspel H ill, tb e Kuest
i f M lss> T i^e G riffiii. ■
M iss. B eteb F ay e B olthoaser,
; sttid c nt i t N . C . C . W .. G reens,
boro; win . arrive borne today to|
spend-Tb'soksKivinK w ltb ber p ar.
eiits, M r. and M rs R o y H oltbonF .
. er, on M sp le avetine.
. M rs. H . G . B liikley, w h o has
h m r n titd n K Ib e G oforth babe on
C h tirilr s t m t , for some tim e,
tu r n M to b ^ borne at H lE h S pring
D airy F a rm , Lew hvtllv, Sunday,
M r. s n d M rs. H . B . W a rd and
daiichtera, M ts sn T beoleae and
M arKsret, and M sry W a rd Stone-
" street visited th e form er’s snnt,
M is. ] . A. ila v llle , a t W inston
Ssle'm S a nd a y .
. : M r. a n d M rs. E n e e ue Brolcen-
bro ng h, of L ynchburiii, -V s., a n .
liotiiice the arrival o f a son w tbeIr
hom e o n .'T n M a y , N ov . s i. M rs.
B iokenbro ng b w as U lm -Elizabeth
( ^ r la lla a , o f th is city , before her
m arriage.
T h l e ^ broke th e lock on tw o
( f s ta n k s s tjfo c k fv llle M otor Co.,
and'-R. L . W ilk e r's , some tim e'
S A ^ a y n le h t. I t Is no t know ii
b p w ;m n cb gin w as stolen. T he
store o f R o b e n Ferebee. In South
HTCksvllte, wss brolien in to Siin
d s y n fn iit s n d some Roods stolen.
Farew ell services m r e held In
Ib e M ethodist chuscb S u n d a y even
ln ( for R e v . R . C.- G o fo rth snd
fa m ily , w.bp m oved to tb e ir new
' h o m e jn W lnston-SslV m -yM erday,
A la riw crow d w as pKteiit.' m<i
s b o n ts ik s were m sde b y . .M ocks
vllle.pastbra and others.. A ll 'of
o u r citizens were sorry to bid t b m l
C ^ , p ^ p l e xiHMbye,
W lllis m B a^'eycastle., 7 7 .' Well
know n fsrm er of ib e -Center com :
m tittlcy, d M Uthis borne e arly list
Rev. Walter E. tmmbm. TarlorsvlllKN. CL
‘Hollow, peace w ith a ll m en, and
holiness, w ithout w hich no m sn
shall see the L o rd .” — Hebrews
n :i4 -
* *Ble sed sre they w hlcb d o bnnv*
e r sod ib lrsl alter rlebteansness;
for they shall be Slled.” — M atthew
6s6. '•If we confess onr sins, be Is
fallhfaland jnst to forzlve os oar
sins, and to clesnse ns from sll nn>
rightness.”— John ijj,
1 beseech you therefore, b re lb.
ren, b y tba mercies of G o d . tbst
ve present yon r bodies s liv ing ss*
crifice, bold s m p ta b le nn to Ood.
w hich Is yoar rea.»nsble service ”
— ’R o n u m iB ;t.
For God hstb not called nsto
nneleanne^, hot anro holiness. - He
therefore that (desplsetb bollness),
desplsetb not-msn, bat God,. who
bath also Elven onto his bnly
Spirit.”.-1 Tbessslonlans 4:7,8.
"Blessed be Ihe God and Father of otir Lori Jesns Christ, who hstb
blessed ns with all spiritual bless.
Ines In heavenly places In Christ;
BccordinK as be hath chosen us In bim before tbe foundation of the
world, that we sbonlH be holy and
without blame before him In love ”
P ok b lf about in a public library
last week, a younn lady ran a c ro ^ a book that-aroused her im mediate
and intense interest when, on the title pace, she encountered tills en
couraging assurance: ! HOW : To Reach M en I
To Hold Men To Teach Men
To W in M en U Has Been Done Unfortunately she was considera
bly let down by a clum p of type at the bottom of the page; "Tells How
to B un Your Bible O ass. Published by- the Sunday School Times.”
Lifessver
M ost people can't stand pros- perlftr. But fortunately m ost people
don’t have to.
There’s A Ltanit How fa r a fisherm an w ill stretch
the truth depends upon the length
of his arms.
Ephesians 1:3.4.Abstain from all appearance of
levtl. And the very Ood of peace
sanctify you wholly; and I. pray
God your whole snlrit aod soul .and
body be preserved blameless . unto the coming of onr Lord Jesas Christ
Faltbfal Is be that calleth you. who
also will do lt.”—I Tbessslonia
8:32.34.' “if we walk In the llcht, as be
Is In the IlKbt, we have fellowship
one with another, and tbe blood
of Jesas Christ his Son cleanseth
as from all sin” —I John 1:7,
For this Is tbe will of Ood.
even yonr sanctlGcstlon, tbat ye should abstsln from fornication.
I Tbessalonlans 4:3Wherefore Jesns also, tbat be
mlRht saiicrlly ihe oeoole with bis own blood, 'salfered without. tiie
cste. Let ns co forth therefore
unio him wltbont tbe camp, bear-
In* his reprbscb.” Hebrews, 13;
i» . t.vThey are :ooi of the world,
even as.I am not of tbe world.
Sanctify them throuEh thy triith
ibir wb(d Is trnth. : Neither prav
I lor these alone, but for Ihein also
which shall believe on me Ihtongb
their word." John I7;l6.‘l7,30.
Christmas Giving
Aa yau think of <lyln| presanta
To yonr fclands on Cliristmaa dar*
ban*c foctfat tha t>onr and nesdv
TIibC you meat aton< Ufa’s way. '
Glva itiein aomathinit that Is M pM I.
T ^ t will tall tben of.yoor lava.
For atieb giviotl pleases Jesus
Aa Hawatahasfrom aba^a.
C hanclnr Custom
Faw er m en are tied to the*-
Wlvai* apron strings these dayi-
hccause fewer-wives w ear aprons.
Conspiracy
W hen two women bccome friend
ly it hi . a sign that a third woman
has lost two friends.
GivaaltttlaiikUlionBina.
IForaitttle<lvanilghily.
Wltb Hla bte^ncsof^the aama.
May ba bnad upon tba waters
You wili:flad atfsin sooia time,
Miiltlpliad to loaWs of blssslol
Tbat a n wundraas and abbttaia.
Civ* to llttta.arpbao cbiidiea.
, Glva to widows In tbeir naed.
I Glva tba aid and «lva tba helpless-.
Raar tbeir ery for balp aad baed;|Giv« tbe pdsanw io bis pciMn.
Give to shut-ins in b ^ .
|6iva the ctippled. bUnd a ^ alekly^
Qlva and k aaf that >ou*ll ba fed..|ut tba CtiriiMfDaatboQgbtaf givhig
Go with.you througbovt tin year,
I Than rbur Hta wUt.ba • Massibg>
Kia van’ll have a thrill of o b ^
For In making atbers happy .
. ' Vao wUi gat a great mpply;
As out U>rd wbo'want la hnVan
WiUtbiBn bless y aulnm tika ahy;
.-Rw .W ,;lJ.Isenbottr.
- W e dn^ay oiordliiR. followioE ;al 'o ffic a
ye«r*ii/;.H1tiess. vV ^Q iitral vierylceiilD O W a n d jE€|'^ir«rar la n d pCHh were held it Gebter M; Bs ‘ ' --Tbuirtdgy;..afteriiooo-At- s otdoek. cobdvete4 bf Reva. JItn O m aod
J. : ■■ ■
tar* before tlie tnpply i* ez;
.hikinled.- Printea oh beevy
|cMrd'bowr«i^"'SOe.^per.d«eea.
-'TWAS TOO GOOD
B E H IN D ON T H E N EW S
, K -gBy Edw ard L . V an Dyk*
FOROETT, I guess.
^ fhe December night when our
Am erican Legion post m eaiing was Interrupted by a knock on the door.
Cart Engler, our third vice com* mander, was nearest tha door. He
glanced a t the commander, then left the room. Out in the hall wc
could hear a high pitched voice saying something about “m am a
ond daddy.’* Soon Engler returned,
looking puzzled.
**Mlster Commander/* he said, **there*s a boy outside who sayr
he*d like to speak to the post. Say.« his nam e is D avid Cary and that
w hat he has to say ia m ighty Im
portant”H arry Brooks, our commander,
balding vataraa of both world wars, arose.
'^Comrades/' aaya ha. **rve an idea this lad la the son of V/ilson
Cary, up on HolUster H ill. Wilson’s a' veteran who's always knocking
the Legion—never would join the post. Let’s listen to w hat his f
has to say."Young D avid that night really
stirred up our meeting. It was just
four days before Christmas; not too m any memh*irs were present
and all were anxious to get home. They really perked up, though,
A salesm an in M issouri was held
up in a sm all town because heavy
rains had caused a washout on the railroad. “This loola like tbe flood,” ,
he observed to a waitress in the
local hotel.
"The w hat?" she asked."The flood." he repeated. *‘Y ou
know the flood when Noah saved
tbe anim als on the ark. You m ust
have read about that.'The waitress assured hini grave
ly, “M ister, on account of all1 ‘this1/ , w, uv«;uu«tv «sss <.ajia
rain, I ain’t seen* a paper in four
days.”
A VO -'It. ..»;-hnn lit:'’, hung up
nf.-'' n.t’f I.-- -M ;<!ast Side
•' . whstit ivUlcnt ap-
.H.J. suUerhM .a very bad■il, ,•Cm! vf»u cvi<*' this code?" .he
u'T-itiufiiy
The • ou»i« ''«'.»or thought hard
.nd. R»id. :*Gi>'.Kt>me. take a hot bath und . ilu-h ^stand naked I n . a
draft wUhoui drying yourself.**.
‘*That wld. cure m y code?** taM the patient doubtfully.
VI didn't say that,*', answered the
doctor. / ’B ut that. wiD give you
im eum onla.'and pneum im ia'I know
‘low to cure.**.
. Tlw Bard W ay
.R eader — .f*Dear .Editor: WKut's
tbe>best w ay. to And out .What a
^ m a ix thinks of you?*' IM itor-^^'M ariy her.!*
;Suoeess *
''Everybody' puts their nose into
mjr.btisiness.**. .. ’
. •‘C heer iip.*'
*T m not growling. I manufacture
hankerchlefs.'*.
W ith a graan lie raised him-
setf on one elbow and shook
bis fist.
when that boy stood gravely before us m en and .spoke his piece.
. W hen the lad had left, gravely saluting the flag, just as he had
seen- Engler do, the commander tunied to m e,
"Com rade . B utler." he said, appoint you chairm an of a com m it
tee of six to luok into this. WiU someone m ake a moticm that the
committee be allowed to use up to
fifty doUars. if it finds it proper
In this case?"
The motion wds duly made and everyone shouted "aye.”
I drove up ahead of the gang
that Saturday night— Christmas Eve. There w asn't m uch snow, but
the roads were badly rutted and
.m ade .rather, poor tim e on this,
m y second trip up the hill.
The Cary house was a neatl;
kept place, just off. the hillside roac W hen I knocked at the door. M rs.
Cary let m e in. She looked tired and
w oirled.
"O h. M r. B utler," she said, her
face brightening, " I ’m glad you
came.** S ie lowered her voice.
"B ill is pretty unhappy and bitter tonight->you know why. W alk right
in.*’
W IL S O N C A R Y ’S expression was
^ a m ixture o f pain and bitter-
ness. He didn’t even offer me his
hand.■ "N ow don't wish m e a M erry
Christm as," he said harshly, m a n can’t be happy when he has
broken hip; is dead broke on Christ m as Eve—and has a nice wife and
kid on his m ind."
I was thinking that, too. '*Where’s
D avid?" I asked.. "H e ’s asleep," said Cary.
. "Y o u Legionnaires with your
constitutional pream ble of prompt
ing peace .and good w ill on earth,"
he .snapped. "F ine words, sure—
. but words don’t help my wife and J kid. I'm sorry-glad you cahne,
‘ Butler—but I think you’d better go.'
Then came the knock on the door
— the sound I had been walUng-for.
j Y pu should have seen M rs. Cary when the gang tram ped in .. There
I was Engler, carrying so m any pack-
> ages he almost staggered and behind him cam e M cCarthy, Lepkow-
ski, Dunn and Epstein, aU with their arm a full, too. The boys, you
. Sm art Slugger ’
. The geography teacher .was qulz-dnig, her. pupils on the location of ......- - - .our im portant; cities. Suddenly sh$. see. had chipped in some of their
..........................• mV< own.cash.raid, "N o w ,; can anyone : tell
whera St. L o u is .Is ?"..,
" The her utter surprise,^T Im m y,. .the dullest boy In the .c la ^ raised
hla bond; Nodding to . the boy, she
said, **A11 rlglrt, T im m y, you m ay
Our County And
Social Security
W .K . W hite. Manaeer,
M any working women o f todav
\yhb are emploved In jobs covcr-
bv social security, are not
ware that thev are providine (or
themselves in their old age and
are also insuring their dependent
children, husbands or parents In
the event o f their deaths. O ther
women w ho have not worked un
der social security long enough co
Insured on their ow n account
I do not know that they and their
children are protected by the ear
ning records o f their husbands.
Through provisions o f the new
|Sodal Security Act, children un-
|der age 18 may now receive mon-
thlv benefits on either their m o
ther's or their lather’s work . c-
cords..
A dependent husband (who
was getting at least one-half o f his
support from his working wife),
may now receive benefits on his
retired or deceased wife’s social
security account. '
A wife, age receives an
m ount equal to 50 percent o f her
retired husband’s payments; a w i
dow receives 75 per ccnt. A de
pendent divorced wife under 65
may receive m onthly payments if
she has a child o f her ex-husband
in her care.
Parents may be eligible for
m onthly payments at age 65 if
they receive at least SO per. cent
o f dieir support from their sons
or daughters before their deaths.
The new social security law
provides also for lump-sum death
payments in every case, eyen tho
there may be a widow, widower,
parent or child entided to month-
Iv benefits. In the event neither
w idow nor widower survives,
the lump-sum is payable to the
one w ho paid the burial expenses.
A htisband m ust file proof of
support w ithin two yeass after his
wife’s death or entitlement; a de-
j pendent parent w ithin tw o years
of his child’s death.
^A pplications for paym ent o f the
lum p sum m ust also be filed with
in two years after death unless the
wage earner was in the military
services ot the applicant was over-'
seas during W orld W ar II.
A representative o f this office
w ill be in Mocksville again on
N ov., 28th, at the court house,
second floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and
on the same date in Cooleemee,
I at the old Band H all, over Led
ford’s Store, at 11 a. m .
Seen Along Main Street
By The Street Rambler.
Charlie W ard on his vray hom e
from Salisbury—M rs.Odell W o o d
waiting for transportation to visit
her father— David R ankin, hat-
less and coatless on w indy day
hurrying dow n M ain street sm ok'
ing ovcrslung pipe—W illard Con-
chin leading small boy w ith one
hand and carrying washtub in oth
er hand— Schoolmarm waiting a-
round trving to get some dental
w ork done— Misses Linda. Gray
Clem ent and W illie M iller doing
some late afternoon shopping—
Joe Ferebee trying to get out o f
the way o f a dog on M ain street
Kim brough Sheek and C laude
T hom pson having some tonsoral
work done - Harl Beck - hurrying
up M ain street on w indy after
noon—Jim Eaton carrying pack
age across the square—T w o new
brides and two new grooms hang
ing around stove in dim e store—
Cornelius Boon standing in drug
store door watching pare o f the
world RO by— Miss M innie Tharpe
leading small boy dow n . M ain
street— Hilary A rnold com ing out
o f drug store whistling rollicking
tune-M iss„B cttvLou M artin de
positing cash in parking meter—
Frank Fox trucking sport shirts to
posroffice * C ol. Jacob Stewart try
ing to open m ail box on chilly
m orning “ G . K. Husser sitting in
parked auto in front o f apothecary
sho p—Members o f Gossip C lub
wondering w hv o.ily two o u t o f
1 1 m en were able to pass medical
examination— Deputy W adeGroce
resting in SherifPs office-M rs. R .
L. Lyerly m aking bank deposit—
H . C . Jones hurryinR dow n M ain
street sm oking pipe— Haywood
Powell and young son doing some
before Christmas shopping.
Cary's Ups were trem bling. "How
did you know about it? " he demanded. When I didn't answer, he
spoke again."W hy are you doing this—I ’m not
a post member, you know ."
I answered that hi a.hurry.
"BU I," I said, "you mentioned
the Legion preamble a minute ago. Maybe you don't know, but
it winds up with these words—'and sanctify our comradeship by our de
votion te m utual helpfulness."M y commlttce m em bers were
grinning happUy. B ut Cary wasn’t —he was crying like a kid.
"C om e," I said to m y gang. "L e i’s get the heck out of here.**
Gas is OK in
Balloons, But Not
in Your Stomach
Some people feel like a swollen balloon after every iiienl. They bloat m il of BHS nnd rift up ncldous 11- quids for hours after eating.CERTA-VIN U helping ouch gas
“victims” all over Mocksville. This
now medicine helps you digest food
faster nnd better. Taken before meals it works with your food. Gas pains go! Inches of bloat vanish! Contains horbs and Vitamin B-1 wIUi Iron to enrich the blood and make nerves stronger. W eak, mis- orublo people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering. Get CBHTA-VIN— W llklns Drug Store.
N orth Cnm linn
O avie Cuunty
In The Superior Court
E aH b Studyif .you're looking for fiossils, «tart
In. your own backyard. Fossils found a t home can tell you>a great
deal about the earth some hun
dreds of m illions of years ago
These fossils probably aren't th
rem ains of dinosaurs or of larg
m am m als, but they are just ab
useful in telling w hat the earth was
like hi. this region 200 m illion years
ago, and also In teUing w hat is be^
like hi this 200 m illion years
W ilson C a ry : stared ' in amaze
m ent when we moved In. T h e packages, save those containing food,
we pUed near the foo t'of the bed. 'BUI,'* I said, "C a rl Field Post
.............. . i ju st learned the other day ^ about
"S t. Loiiis,** T inim y announced, i your being laid up. The boys just
plaiyihg. ill N ew York.*’- . w ant you to know ypu’re not for- • . I ip tte n ." -•* -
neath the surface now.. Some of
these fossUs m ay be only a tenth of an Inch in diam eter but v ^ n
placed ■ under., the microscope "will tell their story. A n d ^ ln c e them
fossils rnay be a cltie to the strata tbat lie beneath the surface, they
also be a clue to the locationm ay also I of deposits of coal er oU.
C . S. D u n n ec al
|The unknow n helrs.of Jo h n D u n n ,
deceased, W osh D u n n , deceased,
M itchell D u nn, deceased, and Se*
h i D u o n W iJiiam s, deceased.
Notici*, Serving Sum
mons by Publication
The defendants, the said u n
kno w n heirs o f Jo h n D u n n , de
ceased; W osh D unn, deceased;
M itchell D u n n , deceased, and
n i D u n n W illiam s, deceased, w ill
take notice that an action entitled
as above has been comm enced in
the Superior court o f Davie C oun
ty, N orth Carolina, to seli seven
teen acres o f land, being the land,
o f M ollie D u n n Sm ith, deceased,
in Farm ington Tow nship, for the
purpose o f sale and petition a-
m ong die heir^ and the said de>
fendants w ill further take notice
that, they are required to appear
at the office o f the Clerk o f iKe
Superior C ourt o f said county in •
the ,court house', in' Mocksville,
N orth Carolina,;W ithin ten days after the 4 di day o f January; 1952,
and answer or dem ur to the M ih '
plaint in said action, or the plain
tiff Will apply to (Hecotirt fo r" the relief dem anded in saidcom plM nt.
,11)is 19th day o f November, 15^1.
1/ S .H .C H A F F 1 N .C S .C .
; ^. Davie C o u n ^ ; N . C ..
B . C . Brock, AttomeVf . ::
- 1
-i
-■> J
THE DAVIE ttECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. G.
Political Plums
•T H E M O R E you look into the in-
^ come-tax situation, the m ore it
appears that some U.S. tax collcc*
tors, especially those w ith political
pull, regard their jobs as indirect
pensions ond spend more tim e on
private business than on Uncleprival
Sam ’s
Forlunateiy, there are thousands
of nonpolitical internal revenue
agents, but hci’c is an illustration of w hat has been happening at Nash*
ville, Tenn. Investigation of Nash*
viile's internal revenue office so far
has concerned three individuals:
1. Lipe Henslee. the suspended colleclor, who, following an illness
a couple of years ago, fell a vie*
tim ot narcotics. The narcotics bu>
reau sent two agents to Tennessee to sec wlierc Hcnslee was getting hJs
drugs, reported that nothing illicit
w as involved though lie is still taking narcotics and not spending suf
ficient tim e at his office. This was the reason for Hcnslee’s suspension.
2. Also under investigation is George W elch, Jr., assistant collec
tor, who has been criticized for spending too much tim e on the af
fairs of the Washington Realty com
pany rather than on collecting tax
es. The really com pany owns three
large apartm ent houses in Nash
ville. and the company is controlled
by Welch's fam ily.
Investigators who checked the
case reported that W elch is alm ost stone deaf, difficult to talk to, w ith
the result that his superiors by
passed him , gave him little work to do. Therefore, he devoted him self to his fam ily’s really firm .
3. Also under investigation Is
Chief Field Deputy Ira P arker. Jr., whose fam ily is connected w ith a
liquor distributing firm , the N ationa l Distributing company of Clinton,
Tenn. The company was organized by Parker’s nephew, Kenneth E .
Caldwell, and^ financed by a note for $125,000 at the Commerce Union
B ank of Nashville. U nderw riting the note are Ted M urray of the N ash
ville Baseball club and Joe Parker, brother of the chief field deputy.
W hat investigators are interested
in is whether Ira Parker is or was an owner of any part of the liquor firm . They found an arrangem ent
in the underwriting deal whereby
M urray and Ira ’s brother Joe wore
cut in on the profits until the $125,-
000 loan was paid off, plus another
provision whereby & e loan was
never to be entirely paid off, w hich
m ade his brother a virtual partner.
In August, M rs. Roxie P arker, wife of the deputy collector, acquired a
25 per cent stock ownership in the firm .
It has been reported that Deputy Collector P arker accom
panied representatives of the
on their visits, thus bringing Indirect pressure to Increase
the company's business. Caldwell denied this.
“Ira was down here on a visit and .Just happened to accom pany m e,”
he explained.■ Washington internal revenue ex
ecutives say they feel sorry for
Messrs. Hcnslee and W elch because o f their physical infirm ities. How
ever, it's admitted that the governm ent budget, already one of the
■biggest in history, should not be overloaded by paying salaries to
those who cannot give full tim e to their jobs.
British Admirals
A secret State Departm ent report
blam es the British A dm iralty for the crisis in Iran. The B ritish ad
m irals controlled the Abadan refinery, but were too blind to grant
the Iranians a few sm all concessions. For example, the adm irals
charged ihe Iranians the full price
for gasoline used In Iran, plus the
cost of freight from the Caribbean.
In other words, the Iranians had to
pay a phony freight rate, even
though the gasoline cam e from their own wells and was never shipped.
The adm irals also refused to allow Iranians to examine the books or sit
on the board of the Anglo-Iranian O il company.
Healtli Drive
The Am erican Legion and other ^et groups will get behind a physi-
caM itness program to counteractthe heavy rejection of d raft 4-F'
now running better than 60 per cent in isome big cities. The program is
spearheaded by Congressman E . H . H edrick of West V irginia, a doctor
ond long-time crusader for more outdoor exercise and better diet
education to improve civilian health. President T rum an has pri
vately okayed the idea.
Washington Pipeline
G O P Sen. Kenneth W herry of N ebraska is m ending after an oper
ation a t George W ashington U ni
versity hospital, where he paid the fd ll rate instead of accepting the
cut-rate accommodations for con? gressm en at Bethesda N aval hos
p ita l . • * W herry also scorns con- gressional junkets, pays his own
w ay w herever he goes . Another
congressm an who pays his own
w ay is J v m a n of Oklahom a, Dem o
crat.
H O U S t H O L V
M t M O S
Leftover Turkey Does a Delicious Encore (See Reeipet Below)
Serve Turkey Again?
H AV E O N E O F THOSE big tur
keys for Thanksgiving? There are
bound to be leftovers, but they can
be delectable m orsels th a t the
fam ily looks forw ard to having if
you'll use some ingenuity.
Turke'y need not get tiresome
on the second a n d third tim e
around if y o u prepare it dif
ferently than the roast bird
served original
ly. Dress it up, serve with different
accom panim ents and the fam ily
w ill be thoroughly pleased. So w ill
•you, when you see how your inge-
n u i^ has changed a leftover into
a real favorite.
Somethnes people get so tired of
leftovers, they ju st throw aw ay the last of them. Waste of food? They
get so bored w ith the same taste,
they don’t care. Don’t let it happen
to you.• * *
B IG , JU IC X SLIC ES of turkey
are first on the program , as long as you still have a half or m ost of
the half left. Lay those slices on your prettiest platter, all along one
side. On the o ^ e r side serve a new and different relish in pear cups
prepared like this:
*Pears w ith Cranberry Sauce
Cooked pear halves, canned
or fresh
1 cup liquid from cooked or
canned pears
94 cup sugarZ cups fresh cranberries '^ lem on, sliced thin
Few whole cloves
Place pear halves in refrigerator
to chill w hile preparing the sauce.
Com bine pear liquid, sugar, cran
berries, lem on and cloves in sauce
pan. Cook over m oderate heat until
berries pop, about 10 to 12 minutes.
Cool in saucepan,, then chill. To
serve, fill pear hollows w ith cranberry sauce. Spoon some sauce
over filled pears to give a pinkish
ttoge. Use a garnish and relish with
m eat.s • • •
Chicken Chow M ein
(Serves 4-C)
% cup shredded onions
4 tablespoons fat
2 cups diccd celery5 cups diccd cooked chicken
or turkey '
S cups bean sprouts
H cup cooked 'or canned mush
rooms VA cups oliiek stock1 teaspoon bead molasses
2 tablespoons soy sauce
3 tablespoons cornstarch % cup cold water
Cldnese noodles
, F ry onions in fa t until delicate
brown. Add celery and cook 3 m inutes. Add chicken,- bean sprouts,
mushroom s, chicken stock, m olas
ses a n d s o y
s a u c e ; Cook about 15 mitt’
utes. Blend cornstarch w ith cold
water .ind add to
chicken m ixture.
Cook for a f e w
minutes, stir
ring, unUl thickened. Serve on top of Chinese, noodles. Note.—Chopped
turkey m ay be substituted for
chicken.
LYNN CHAM BERS* M E N U
*ScaIloped Turkey Suprem e
•P ears w ith C ranberry Sauce
Buttered Asparagus
Carrot-Raisin Salad Hot Biscuits Je lly
Beverage
Lem on M eringue Pie
*Rccipcs Given
Turkey Puff
(Serves 4)
IH cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
teaspoon salt 2 egg yolks, beaten
1 cup m ilk1 cup turkey, cut fine
2 teaspoons grated onion
cup grated raw carrot2 tablespoons m elted fat
2 egg whites, stiffly beaten
Tuikey gravy
Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. M ix beaten egg yolks
w ith m ilk a n d
b le n d in w ith flour mixture.
M ix w ith turkey,
onion, carrot
a n d m elted fat.
Fold in stiffly b e a te n egg-
whites. B ake in buttered baking
dish h i a hot (425*) oven about 25 m inutes. ^• • •
•Scalloped Turkey Suprenie (Serves 4)
% cup turkey or chicken broth ^ cup cooked rice
4 tablespoons butler, m elted
6 tablespoons flour
114 cups turkoy or chicken broth IH cups m ilk teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper H teaspoon ginger
2 cups diced cooked turkey
M ix together % cup turkey or
chicken broth w ith rice. M elt butter, add flour and blend well. Com
bine 1% cups turkoy or chicken broth w ith m ilk and add to butter-
fiour m ixture and cook, stirring,
until thick. Add salt; pepper, ginger
and turkey. B utter a large casse
role and place a layer ot rice on
bottom, then turkey m ixture. If desired, s p rin k le w ith finely
chopped pim iento, sliced mush* room s and slivered, blanched al
monds. Repeat until a ll ingredients are used. Sprinkle top m th but
tered bread crum bs and paprika. Bake In a m oderate (3S0'*F.) oven
for 30 minutes.
• • •
Molded Turkey Salad
(Serves 8)ZM cups cold cooked turkey,
diced % cup diccd celery H cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons gelatin
2 cups turkey stock H cup m ayonnaise
H cup cream, whipped
M ix turkey, celery and pepper
Soften the gelatin in the cold stoc) and dissolve by bringing to the
boiling point. Add to the first m ixture and let stand im til it begins to
stiffen. Fold hi the m ayonnaise and whipped cream. T urn hito a ring
m old and chill u ntil firm.' U nm old onto a bed of lettuce hearts. F ill
the center with m ayonnaise -to which has been .added an equal
quantity of whipped cream .
LY N N SA Y S:.
Fresh or Canned Fruits
Yield Djclightful Desserts
If you canned a lot of applesauce,
try this: w hip % cup of heavy
cream , blend hi V* cup confection
ers’ sugar and 1 teaspoon vanilla.
Fold h i H cup applesauce. Chill,
then serve dusted with nutmeg.
This serves two.
Dice some oranges and m ix with sliced bananas. Place in serving
dishes and top w ith whipped cream
and a grating ot lem on peeL
I f your refrigerator gets cold
enough, or if you have a freezer, freeze fruit right in the. can. Open,
slice and serve w ith whipped cream and a sprinkling of coconut.
D o somethhig different witW your prune w hip: alternate layers of
prune w hip with sliced bananas in parfait glasses, top w ith whipped
cream and a cherry. - Peach halves th a i are good
enough for a party are^vfuied w ith
ice cream and topped with rasp
berry jam . If desired, place peacb
halves on a sponge cake square.
SCniPTUnB: Gxodua . 33) Numbora il-M.DEVOTIONAL nCADINOt 0«»teron- amy 11:13-21.
'There Is a Tide'
Lesson for Decom ber 2, 1051
'There is a tide in the affairs of men,Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune!Omitted, all the voyage of their lifeIs ,hound in shaltow and in miseries.*’
Dr. Foreman
count on it.
The Bible lesson for tho week is a
failure-stoiy, not a succcss-story. It
is the story of some
pe.rsons.who. con
tracted the .g cciss-
hopper complex, a
m ental disease that
still attacks people
today. The story is
from the w ild days when the Israelites,
now two years out
from Egypt, w ere
first knocking a t the doors of the P rom
ised Land.
The Israelites were land-hungry,
but the only land they wanted was w hat we now call Polestlne and it
w as not theirs for the asking. They
would have to fight for it, every
foot of it. They a ll knew this,
Moses knew it. There was no going back to Egypt and slavery. Noboc^
w anted to stay in the desert. The
obvious thing was to go ahead into Palestine. But there were two ques
tions filling the people’s m inds; (1) W hat kind of country is it, really?
and (2) can we fight our w ay into it?* • «
Investigating Com m ittee
G O a com m ittee of investigation ^ was formed, of one m an from
each of the twelve tribes,— grown
m en, trusted leaders, by no m eans ^'boy scouts.”
D on't think of these' m en as
sneaking through Palestine from
bush to bush; peeping out Indian fashion to sec w hat they could see.
They w alked into Palestine, not unobserved but tmmolested. They spoke Egyptian, of course, and could
easily pass as Egyptian traveling salesm en. They spent around six
weeks in that coimtry, visiting tho cities, no doubt talking w ith the
people.
In late sum m er they went
back to the encam pm ent on the edge of the desert, carrying
w ith them some of the fruits of the land. (Incidentally, those
pictures showing bunches of
grapes six feet long are a funny
misunderstanding. Palestme has
good grapes, but-not quite that
good! They carried the grapes
on poles because that w as the
best w ay to keep them from be
ing crushed.) ^
A t the big mass-meeting a t the desert cam p, the twelve m ade their
report. O n the facts, they were all
unanim ous. It was a wonderful
country, "flow ing with m ilk and
honey,” a great country for cattle
and bees. Palestine did-look m ar
velous to their desert-burned eyes. B u t on question num ber two there
w as a serious division: Can we fight our w ay in? Yes, said the m m ority
of two. No, said the m ajority of ten.
G ra
Th e m ajority put their reasonsfln
a single revealing sentence! We
were as grasshoppers in their sight, they said, and so we were in our
;ight.Nowa
■p U R N plahi Ihien handkerchiefs
* bito show picccs with - these-
lovely edgings th at are delightfully
scallops and lacy motifs.
Nowadays we call this state of m ind the “ inferiority complex” ; om*
nam e is a new one for an old trouble. Think of yourself as a . grass
hopper, and grasshopper is w hat you shall be. Take yourself a t other
people's lowest estim ate, and that is all you w ill be worth.
The trouble w ith the grasshopper complex is that It is catch
ing. The m ajority report was
wronttS as m ajority reports so
often arc. B ut the people be
lieved them rather than the courageous pair who stood up to
declare boldly, W o can do it. w ith the help of God.
W ell, w hat did God do about it? That is perhaps the saddest part
of the story. H e . did nothing about it. H e let the people, impose their
own sentence. Grasshoppers? Very well, so be it. Grasshoppers die,
they never am ount to anytiiing, no one bothers to k ill them , t h ^ . just
die. God was believed to ! strike
m en dead in anger, or com m and the
earth to open and swallow up the
wicked, or hurl lightning from the
skies on his enemies. B ut he ;Wasted no m iracles on these self-elected
grasshoppers. H e only let them die.
Ten, twenty, forty years . . . just
drlfthig about hi the wilderness, till
they all died, and a new gjeneration took their places. :
Opportunity did not knock twice. There was a .tide in those m en's
Uves.
(Oaprrlrht IMI br the niYlaUn OtirfiUaa edneadan.'^ Na<(aiial CeaneK of th0 Cbw«taea el. Olirlal In the VaUad.
Handkerchiefs
isy to crochet. Seven designs that
iclude shells, two-toned edges.
OIROLB^ NEEDLEWORK '*at AMma Si., CMew 9. 2JI..
NdRio (Plaaso Print)
street Addrcaa or K d . Box Mo.
Effective Cough
Syrup/ Mixed at
Home for Economy
No’CooIilne. No Work. Rca^ Saving.
Hero’s on old home mixture your mother ob^ably tued, end ta aKU one ol the most FecUve tor coueha due to colds. Once tried, you’ll awear by lu Make • ayrup with 2 «ups sranuhUd ausarand one eiip water. Mocoohine needed. Or you can use corn eyrup or liquid honey, instead of tucar 'ayrup.Now put 2ii ounces of Pinei Into a pint bottle, and All up with your ayrup. 'This inalcee i full pint of cough medicine, and cives you abottt tour times «a much /or your money. It keepa perfectly and taatea. fine.And you'll aay h'a really excellent for Quick action. You can feel It take hold •wittly. te ioosena phlcsm. aeothea irritated membranes, helps eloar tho air pnsuees. Thus it makes breathing easy and l«U yea set restful sleep.PInex is a special compound of proven Ingrcdlcnu, in concentrated form, well- known for lu quick oction on throat and bronclibl irrlutions. Money refunded If not pleased in every way.
FOR EXTRA COMVENIENCE GET NEW BEADY-MIXED, REAOY-TO-USE PINEXI
.. jsts with handy Cap Brush. Fumes rise,1cniins Iiceandreathcrcnitcs,whi]e------YOne ounceil o f roosis. - ............. Directionson package. Ask Tor Black Leaf 40. the dependable Insecticide of many uses.
J -Tebaeca By-Pteducta I Chemical ' I •RIehmsnd. Virginia
THE DAViE BEQORD. MOCKS
T H m V IE R E ^R D .
Paper liii' The County
No i^uor, Wine, Ad*
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
t).' o f S tite svllle ,
,.Vi«i»li<ock«villevbit6r Wednia-
■ d S
•^ te s Florence M ac k ie spent
‘n a n k ig tv in g w ith h e t b ro th e r
a t p h a p e lH Ul. . .
M r. a n d M rs. C . G . L each, o f
S tovall, spent- th e ' T h a n to g lv in c
h olid ay s to to w n w ith relatives.
M r . a n d M rs.. O . G . Sw icegood,
o f ne ar W o o d le a f, were sho p p in g
a ro u n d 'M o c k sv ille o n e d ay last
vi«k. .
. ';M i»» A n n P osto n, a ls ta d e n t at
I><ace C ollege, R aleigh, ,s p e n t th e
1 w ^ k - e n d in to w n w ith h e r par-
-'M iss M ary N e il -Ward, o f Greens-
th e guest
G . C lic k .
o f h e r sister, M rs.w!
G e o . R . B oger, F irem an , U . S.
N a v y , atatio ne d a t S a n D ie go , C a l
ifo rn ia , i:i s p e n din g a few days
w ith h is m o th e r, M rs. M a ry B o
lter, o n R o u te 3.
M r . a n d M rs. C A . M cA lliste r,
o f R o u te i , h av e th e th ank s o f th e
e d ito r a n d f im ily fo r a generous
V o f fresh sausage a n d liver
A c hick e n p ie supp e r a n d b a
zaar w ill be h e ld a t A d v an c e C o m
m u n ity B u ild in g , Saturday, D ec.
1st, b e g in n in g a t 5 o'clock, spo n
sored b y E lb av ille C h u rc h .
James-Waqner
T h e T urren tinc B aptist C h u rc h
w as th e sccne a t 5'p* m ., N o v . 17th
o f th e w e dd in g o f M iss M ild re d
P a u lin e W a g n e r a n d C harles |
F ran k Tames. M rs. Jam es is the
d au g h te r o f M r. a n d M rs. P a u l
W a g n e r, a n d M r. Jam es is the*
s o n o f M r. a n d M rs. C a rl Jam es,
all o f M ocksville, .R oute 4.
R e v . E . F. Eagle perform ed the
cerem onv. M iss F aith D e a d m o n ,
organist, a n d M iss R eba A n n Fur*
chess, soloist, c ousin o f th e bride,
presented a p ro gram o f w edding
m u sic.
i T h e b rid e was given in m arriage
b v h e r father. S h i carried an old-
M o n d a y m o rn in g o f last w eek fa ,h io n e d b o u q u e t o f w hite rosea
l t e “ X o r . " e r o . ‘“ ( 5 n X ^ ' tuberoses centered w ith a
day m o rn in g th e m ercury register* w hite o rc h id a n d show ered
w it h ' w h ite satin s tu m e r s . A
MUSTREIIIiOVE EXCESS W ftSlE
m e n kidney funcUen al felks complain of oagei—
D o M ’s P i u s
It’s Wonderful the W ay
Chewing-Gum la xa tive
Atts Chiefly to
REMOVE WASTI
- M :
GOOD FOOD
• Berd‘a tho secreb mlllloDS ot (olkB b a t* (Uscovered about netf*A*MzMT. Cbe mo>il« e m chewlng'Bum laxative. Yea. liere U w iw n cH .A 'M m T ’e action is eo vender* differenti . . .Doctors say that m any other InxaUres Btart their ’'auahlng'' action too-soon :.... righ t In tbo stonucn vhcre food Is bolns
To u feol weak, worn out.B u t genUe taken as Teo-onunendod, worka chleOy in tbe tower bowel whore It rompyea only waste, no# good foodl .You avoid that ^ I c a l vealc^' tlrod, worn>out feeling. Uso nzn«^>M iKZ' and feel your “peppy.’* oncrgotloaeUi ae«. rmr>A>MZMT) K o locrenso )n pilca— stin 35t, 50# or only 10#.
m KEN -A -M IN TrftMOUS CHtWINC»CUM lOKWlW M n
QUICK!
ROB IN _ _
i '4?. i m e
ed 16 degrees, w h ic h w as th e co ld
est m o rn in g registered this fall.
O u r o ld frie n d Jo e M assey, w h o
m o v e d som e t i^ e ago, fto m Ire]
d e ll c o u n ty t o S o u th D a k o ta ,
w rote us a few days ago a n d said
h e w as getting along lin e - to h is
stran d o f pearls w as h er o n ly or
n a m e n t.
M iss Letty M .e W a g n e rw a sh e r
sister’s m a id o f h o n o r. Rebecca
A n n Jam es, niece o f th e groo m ,
w . f r a w ? l r l .
Oklahoma Youth Is
U. S. Star Fanner .
Other Young Fanneis
file Honored by FFJl
Harold DcW aync Hodgson. 20- ycar*old farm er and Hereford cat
tle breeder of Freedom, Okla., was nam ed Star F arm er ot America
during the 24th annual national F P A
convention at Kansas City. He re*
ceived an aw ard of $1,000 for being named the outstanding future farm*
et of the country.
Three other young farmers re*
.ci&ved awards of $500 each as Star Farm ers of their respective re
gions. They are George W illiam s, 19, of N icholasville, K y.; Joe H ar
ris. 20. of Bagleville, C alif.; and Ralph G . Sanner, 21, ot Kutztown,
Pa.
Harold DcW ayne Hodgson, 20,
Star F arm er of America, owns a 3Z0>acre farm and rents an
additional 255 acres.
The Star Farm er awards are m ade annually and are the highest
recognition given to F F A members. The winners were chosen from 295 candidates. Outstanding . -accom
plishments in farm ing and rural
leadership, along with evidence ot
the youth’s successful establishm ent in farm ing are the principal
considerations used in determ inhig
winners of the awards.
Hodgson owns a 320.acre farm and operates an additional acres
of rented land.
Engineer Suggests Way
To Meet Labor Shortage
The nation’s farmers next
w ill be asked to m aintain a standard ■ of production and
again be faced with a severe labor shortage of several hundred thou
sand workers.
Here arc four' suggestions by
w hich production can be m aintained:
1. M ore elTicient use of m anagem ent and labor. There were a lot of
chuckles when the . efficiency experts started working for industry,
counting steps and clocking movements. -As a result of their work,
however, our industries ore the
m ost cfticient in the world.
2. Increase mechanization. In norm al times, the answer to labor
shortages has been increased mechanization. ir we got the machinery,
it^is still a partial answer.
.^3. Gfticient building arrangement.
Tim e and. labor required around buildings has changed little in the
last 50 years.
4 .'Survey of urban districts and
rural towns. You can often find laborers in rural towns. '■i
The farm er who surveys his
needs and acts on these suggestions
can solve his labor problems.
Record Price
eost%only 2c
a week:M the
average famny!
. t ]V h y n o t ■ ^ :
e n jo y i h e b e s t?
How To Relieve
Creomulsion relievespromptlybecaostt iteocs r i^ t to the scat of Ihe trouble to>elp loosca and expel g«rm ladennblegih a lical rawaad aid nature to soothe and____raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. Creomulsion has
stood tho test of millions of users.
CREOMUKISiONnun.. c«iil». Cli.it Crth, Aoit.
When Was liberty Bell Rrsf BmHi?
d iecH you r 1958 St- Joseph Calendar
■end W caUier C lta rt. Facts B D P I ! fjalorcl A t any drug conntcr
IKH rRIHTMUl OH vMVtnt ruMiiwt cma M l iniiariuit$foiuti
H E A D .c q ip
MINCEMEAT
BRAN MUFFINS
. . . with tcmptliis fruit; flavor.Mix all In 1 bowI.thlB KeUoee-qulckwayt
icupltollosg'i 2Vxt<(Mhlns P Vt Utatpoon rail
3 tobl«»poon«
•ofltherlonlfl9
evp milk
1% <«p pr«por«d mlneoniMt
1 cup sm«d flour
1. Combine All-Bran, milk, mincemeat In mixing tiowL
3.8irt together flour, baking powder, salt Into same bowl: add sugar; egg! shortening. 8tlr oia» unta eomhlMdi
3. FlU greased muflin pons % (uUv Bako in prdieated mod. hot oven (400*F.) tttwut 25 minutes. Yield: 12 medium muffins, 8V4 Inches In diameter.
' A new . world’s ' record price
*of $87^500'for a''purebred Hereford " bull, : 5-yeai^ia Baca
'‘Frine'e Domino'' 20th, w as paid
by A^ n . ’Karpe' dt hakcrsUeia, CaIif..Lat: the. sale or ihe Baca G rant herd'ai^;;Gtinnison, Colo.
Left (o,.cight: :Mr.. Karpe, M rs. Alfred M:.Coliitts»:\^dow of the
. late ovvner'.bf'the';Baca herd, B ill llutchflisbii,".bulldcr of ihe
■ Baca Grant* herd, and M lich
M inis, superintendent of the : show barn.'
Next Few Weeks Is Time
Foir Cattle Louse Control
. The next few weeks, is the Ideal tim e for cutting the life span of.
cattle-lice, that ; are a t their peak' during w inter m onths. It anim als
are not-treated for this pest'^aiid profit-robbcr, they , w ill ^eflect^po6r
signs of progress. -Matiire cattle on feed will-not gain properly, and
young stock, ando ealves w U r not
grow norm ally.. In addiUot
cattle w ill have a/geiieral'inii appearance.
More than just
a T O N K -
it’s Powerful nourishment!
M
■.-I
..V ^
PAGE FOUR t b e DAVIE BECORD.MOC „oCKSVILLB. N. C.
THE DAVIE REC*iRt). Early---Mail .
Early
W ilev Anderson, o f Calahain,
a patient at Row an M em orial
Hospital, rccovcrinj; from an oper _
ation w hich he underw ent las
week. .
a F R A N K S T R O U D . E D IT O R .'
TELGPHONE . I ' Postmaster H oithoiiser requests
•— ---------The Record to ask ail readers to jn SUPERIOR COURT
to te r ^ a tth e P o B to fflc e lnMock^ d o th e ir Christm as m a ilin s e ariv .' N ortli Caroiiiu— D .v ic County
m a tte r. M aw h“ . S !* ' '» o n e m o n th u n til N O T IC E . RE-SALE O F L A N E
...... — — Christmas. W rap your package In the Mftttcr of A. L. Bowles,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES* ^carefullv at»d address them plalti- Guardian of Cornelia Bowles,
., Jv so they w ill rcach their desti- compos.OMC 1TBAR. IN N. CAROLINA SIX MO?fTHS »N N. CAFOUNA ONF YEAR. OUTSII>E RTATF • SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE -
i p f f" “'’''Pf• Under and by y irtw of ,a order
n o n C h ristm a s cards can b e m a ile d fo r , j„ t|,j jt„v c entitled cause by S. H J
__ .. cents. D o your Christmas Chaffin, Clerk of Superior Court, and
m " I * | V • « ' m ailing early and avoid the rush, approved by his Honor, J. A..Rousscau,i
10 rronmhomsts
Dear Editor:— Please give space
to say a few words to all o f the
enthusiastic mcmbcis and friends •
o f the U nited Dry Forces o f Da-l a beef cattle conference for
v ie ^ u n t y . N orth Carolina people w ill beI know this will be sweet m usic j ___i,
to the cars oJ nil of the fine citi* ^ f *jcn» o f the county who arc clam- Raleich Thursday and Fri*
orinc for a chance to vote againsr
the legal sale.of beer and wine in
^ ^ jju u g c o i CI1C i/ c n ju Q ic ia ij.State Cattle
^ m court house door o f Davie Coun*terence Planned ty in Mocksville, N . C., on Satur»i
day, the 8th day o f December,!
1951, at twelve o'clock, m ., th e !
following described lands locatcd |
in Mocksville Township on the road I
leading from Highway No. 64 to the |
County Home road, and more particu
larly described as follows:
1st Tract— Bounded on the Nortlj ?
day, December 6-7.
-------------------- --- ... There w ill be a registration fee' , . , ,
Davie Countv: D uring the first o f $5 per person attending t h e B, Dyson, on the
three weeks of operation the wor* n j Koontz, and on thekers secured more than 200 more I “5* ® 1 South by J. C. Bowles heirs, and onnum ber o f room s available in a
the
j West by ^n te r pub
rates, at a stake Northwest corncr on Wesc
ublic road. Beginningsigners to petitions than legally. „ , necessary to call this election, a n d , coneR« dorm itory and
to d *te more than twice as m any are $1.25 per night w ith linen fur* • side of public ro.id and runs S. 87 degs.
as legally necessary have signed nished. Meals can be o b ta in e d ijr* J* C. Bowles heirs’
the petitions. u.. t____■ line to a stone, said Bowles heirs* cor-
Since all of our workers are verv * . .£ u* • * r a "®‘’’ ^ E* 12.10 chs.
busy, and vet have freely given o f to a stone N . B. Dyson's corncr; thencetheir time to do this work, w e,Purpose o f the program and they S. 8S degs. E. 2J.08 chains with said
feel that it will be more than are listed below: ^ v —
SCniPTUHB:1M4.DBVOTIOKAL omy 11:13-31.
'There Is a Tide'
Lesson for Deecmlier S, 1051
'There is a tide to the affairs cf tneu,
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortunes
Omitted, all tbe voyage of their lit*Is fiof/ttd in shallows and in
miseries."
SO Shakespeare said, and he was
at least half right. Opportunity aomoUmes knocks twice; but don't count on it.The Bible lesson for the week la a
failure-story, not a succcss*story. It Is the story of some
persons who con-
Handkerchiefs
>p URN plain linen handkerchiefs
r into show., pieces with these lovely, e iii^ s ^atiare.delightfuUy-
should be required of them to try
to see the many w ho arc anxious
to sign petitions, as m uch as they
Oyson line to a stone, E. C. Koonts*s
corner; thencc S. 10 degs. yff. 10 chs.
with Koontz's line to a stone Koontz’s
corncr; thence S. 23 degs. 6AS chs.
to a stake, Koontz*s corner; chence S.
30 degs. V . S chs. to a stone, J. C.
I. T o Rive the beef cattle pro
ducers an opportunity to review
w o u S /ik e V o d o “h i” ” i Z l the w hich has been
decided that for the next three done here at the College.
Saturdays we will hnvc workers at 2. T o bring to the beef cattle Bowles heirs' corncr; thcnce N . 89
the court house in Mocksville producers some outstanding ‘ nat'^® fi* * 20 chs. to a stone corncr of
w ith transcriptions o f all precincts jonal leaders in beef cattle breed- '“ j J , ■“ '" ’ " '" ''• io f the county, ready to assist U . j j thencc N . 3 degs, E. 4-95 chs. to a
w ho desire co sign these petitions. production. 1 p^pjar^ j. q Bowles heirs’
Beginning Saturday, Dec. I, at 9 1 hear practical, down-to-,corner; thcnce N . 89 degs. W . 10.90
a* m ., to 5 p. m., nnd Dec. 8 and | earth discussions by successful chs. to a stake on East side of public
Dec. 15, same hours. A ll register-! producers in N orth Carolina. thence N . 4 degs. W . 4.90 chs.
ed voters w ho come to Mocksville I a X o sAiriA rim » wirh to the beginning corncr, and contain-
either of the above days, come to ' f '"8 Acres as surveyed by A. L. Ithe court house and sign up. t demonstrating some o f September 6th. 19J1. * ' 1
Yours gratefully, I practices essential in beef cat- 2nd Tract— Bounded on the East by ’
G. W . F IN K , Chairm an. tie breeding and production. Center Church Public Road, on the
5' To hear the packers and slau- North by Virginia Bow/cs, on Wesc
ghter plant operators discuss the by Bill Green, and on the South by J.
type o f beef cattle the customers C. Bowles heirs’ land; • Beginning at
want and some o f the problems an iron stake, Northeast corner in Vir- ^
o f com m on interest to beef pro- ginw Bowles' line and runs N . 87 degs.
ducers and slaughter plants. S chs. with said Virginia Bowles’ line
6. To bring the breeders o f the “ «" *™ ce S. 42 degs. W.
different breeds o f beef cattle to- « «• «” =>" ■™ s'i^e, Virgm i
gether for discussions o f problems «<«>>ce,S. < J-com m on to all. clis. to an iron stake, said Vir-
Some o f the st.hjects to be dis-
cussed in the program are: The
Responsibilities o f the Purebred ‘'‘T r i
Breeders to Their Cattle, Custom iT n
nam eT^ P u r e b r e ir * H e r d ^ ° H o ^ 'l J-& ! c f m m e r c " r ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ V E. i cli. to a ston^ Bodiesn- p_,* heirs corner; dience S. 89 degs. E.
ludginB, Gradiug Dem onstration, «-30 “ iJ lj>wlcs hdrs'line to
Beef Trim m ing. Fitting tor Show V ' ”" ';indSale. Tattooing, etc.. Report tbence N . 4 degs. W . 8 clis. with said
o f Purebred and Feeder C alf Sales.
Some Results o f the N ational J*-T
W . c . A N D E R S O N . Sec.
U nited Dry Forces Davie County.
Preachinq Mission
A preaching mission is being
held at St. Matthews Lutheran
C hurch, at 7:30 P. M ., and will
• continue through Friday evening,
N ov. 30„ nccording to the pastor.
Rev. J. J. Smith.
“ Tlie guest minister will be the
Rev. David'Johnson, pastor of St.
M atthew’s Lutheran Church, Rt.,
5, Salisbury.
T he Rev. Johnson received his
early educatio.i in Colum bia, S.
C , having graduati'd from the
the University o f South Carolina
in 1938, and from the Southern
Ljtheran Theoloqical Seminary in
Colum bia, S. C-, in 1942. Frr»m
Tune 1, 1942 until Sept. 1, 1947 he
served as a mission pastor in the
Blue Ridge.M ountains ofV irginin.
He is also a member o f the
N orth Carolina Svnodica! com
mittee o n Stewardship and a
m etnberof the Synodical Com-,
mittee on Architecture.
The preaching mission being
held at St. Ma* thews^ is the Hfth
that he has conducted this fall.
September
Beef Industry as Viewed bv the -t, , ,N ational Packer. H ow the Beef . T he bidding ot^ the 1st tract a-
Producer C an H elp the N orth T V A j -
Carolina Packer Sell H is Product.. “ f ‘'l!;®on the 2nd tract w ill start at the1 know there has been consid
erable interest in beef cattle d ur
•ing the past two years. This con*
ference comes at a tim e when far*
mers are not so busy as they are
during other seasons, and I would
like to see a goodly num ber from
H is sermon topics will be as tol- Davie C ounty attend this confer
lows: Tuesday "The Church ence. Owners o f purebred and
a .d the Family.” W ednesday—
Sinful Living.” Thursday —“R ob
bing m an Stealing from G od.”
Friday— “Sowing ro Corruption.”
Th*e public is cordially invited
grade cattle are urged to attend
I w ould nfce for those, interested
in attending'to get i • touch with
our office as soon : s possible in
order that we m ight send the
vited to hear these inspiring mes-! gistration f«e and get room reser-
.a n d to jo in in the singing o f! vatlons before, the last m inute
familiar hymns in a Song Service ■ rush. I am planning to attend
before the sermon.
Celebrate Birthday
this conference, and I believe it
w ill be w orthw hile for m any oth
ers. F. E. Peebles, C b. Agent.#
Ben C. TeagueA num ber of relatives o f M r.
and Mrs. Baxter Taylor gathered |
at theii hom e on Route I, Mocks^' Benjanyn C . Teague, 72, died at
ville, Sunday. N ov. JS. and hon ;his hom e near Farm ington earh
ored M rs. Taylor w ith a surprise. P iday m orning follow ing a short
birthday dinner on her 61st birth-j illness. Survivors Include one
day. She received manv usefulldaughter, Mrs. O dell James, Farm*
. J. B.gifts. They have two
usei
children.ington; two sons, j .a . d C . D.
Alden Taylor and Miss Lucille Teague, Winston-Salem; one sis-
Taylor, o f Route 1. Mrs. Taylor’s ter. Mrs. B. W . Fassett. D urham ,
sister, Mrs. George Ijames, Lex- • Funeral services were conduct-
ington, and two brt'thers, Charlie ed at Farmington Baptist Church
Call. Lexington, and Tavlor Call, at 3 p. m . Saturday by Rev. ^Ivis
Route 4, Mocksville, were present Cheshire and Rev. E. W . Turner,
to help her enjov the happy occa- and the body laid to rest in Farm-
sion. O ther relat ves present were ington cemetery. • 1
Mrs. Alden Tavlor and children.
price o f $1,260.00.
This Itfth day of October, 19H.
Terms of Sale: One Hundred Dol
lars cash and^the balance on thirty
days time wiclrbond and approved se
curity, or all cash at the option of the
purchaser.
This 23rd day o f N ov., 1951.
A. T. GRANT,
Commissioner
Sale of Real Estate
Under and hy virtue of authority con- tnlned In a Di*«H of Tfo«i eKecuted by Wade McDiinirl ttnA w{f* E«slfl McDnntel.to B. 0. Bfrtch.^Truate^.whichDeMlnrTruittlArecArdedln the office of
of Deerfff for Cnunrv. Norrh
CnroKna. <n D«e<l of Tront Bnnk 39. pAfie m defnuUhavInd been made in the oav>
mrnta of th« not^ secored by aaW of Trust, nnd at th® reqiMMt of the hold«r •^f sAld OAIA. th« iindftrsltfn^d TruBt«e will
offw tniv Male and sfiU to tbe hl|lh«^Bi bid- 1#rforeA8b n t 12 nVlnck OAon. Di>e. 22. 1951. at the conn houae dnnr In Davie County. North 0*r.iHna, the following de- rm»I to wit;TbAim belntf Lnt« Non. 124. 118. 120 and I22.i«a h o w n o 'iih ^m «p o rp la t of the lub-flWlslon of the landd of Pennv Broth; • « . Inc, Burvi*vfd and platted hv C. A; WCdeohrtos**. Enfllnenr. wbleb eald map or i>l«r la dol» rworded In Book 23. pftge 594 RfofBr<* of ravie Countv. N.
C to which refer«>nc<» Is hereby made for
I pqrtlrular df^aorlptlon. This prop* nnv will be Rold <iuh|»-ct to existing en« cumh<T«nw and tax*>p.ThI* tb« d*y of November. I9SI B. (?. BROCK. Truntee. Moelt»vlHe. N. C.
Come To Our Big Store And Look Over A
Large Selection Of Christmas Goods.
A Gift For A ll The Family Can Be
Purchased Here At Prices'That
W ill Appeal To The Christman Shoppefrs
Floor Lamps Shot G iins and Rifles
Table Lam ps Living R oom , Bed Room
B ook Cases and D ining R oom :Sutts :
Electric B lan k e t : Dinette Suits .
Electric Irons < ^rd TablesElectric Mixmasters
Eieccric Toasters Platform Rockers
Pressure Cooke^f^End Tables, Rugs, Couches
Frigidaire Appliances Hoover .Vacuum-Cleaners
Ranges Pocket Knives . > V ’
Refrigerators Radios',.'
W ashing Machines W agons and Tricycles For ■
H ot W ater Heaters
The Small Boy . . ; .
Tcoy, Patty and Brenda; Frank
and Foster Call. Lexington. M r.
and Mrs. Henry Ijames and dau
ghter Beverly Kay, o f Lexington,
^ 2 J Mrs. Taytor Calf and son
Jim m y, Mocksville, Route 4; Gra
ham Call. Greensboro: M r. and
M rs. Clarence Call i.nd son Perrv,
Cpencer; M r. and Mrs. Charles
Call and daughter. Peggy, o f R, 3,
Mocksyilte.
Telephone 300 Southern. Bank BId(^ Mocksville. N . C.
D R . R A M E Y F. K E M P , C H IR O P R A C T O R
X -R A Y L A B O R A T O R Y
Hours: ^:30-I2:30 2:30-5:30 Closed Saturday. 2:30
M onday. W ednesday and Friday Evenings— 6:30 to 8:30
We Have Hundreds Of Useful Gife
A Visit To Our Store Will Be Worth
Your While.
........ III. ■ II _________
Farmtrs Hardware & Supply Co.
JU KER BROTHERS. Owners t
Pijqne 46 Salisbury Street Mocksville. N. C.
YouHl Get More-for Your Money
when you deal with JESSiE G. BOWEN MUSIC CO.
PRICES • HAMMOND ORGANS TERMS
. to •• GRAND PIANOS:■' to-' ■
PLEASE • SPINET PIANOS PLEASE
YOU • USED PIANOS
YOU
W rite for CaU logue. . .I Gladly Arranged
J E m m e . B O W E]^ M U S IC
217 WEST FIFTH ST.
............................................
WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
THE DAVIE MOCKSVILLE, N. C. NOVGUBBR 28.1951 PAGE FIVE
i W g O T R ^ i D .
the guest
G . Click.i Paper lii The County
No i^uor..W ine, BMi‘:.Ad«
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
a ; i). R a d e d i^ o f SlitissviUe,
^ a'&lodtsvlUe visitbt Wednes-
,M I»s Florence Mackie spent
Tbankagiving w ith her brother
« tp h a p « lH lll. . .
M r. and M rs. C . G . U ach . of Stovall, spent the -Thanlttllivin*
■ Holidays in tow n w ith relatives.
• M r. a'nd G .! Swicegood,
o f near W oodleaf, were shopping
aiibund Mocksville one dav last
week. _ _ _ _
;s^Miss A n n Poston, alstudent at
Peace College, R aleigh,,'spent the
w ^k-end In tow n w ith her par-
enits. _ _ _
•iil& sJ^iT N eil W ard , o f Greens-
bortir'spent thanksBlving ih town
wltK her paients.-M r. and Mrs.
Q ^ d y W a r d .
* T . L. Junket and daughter Miss •’ -’hkie.'todk in thetenoir-Rhyne,awba':Cbll%e football game at
• ctThutdav.:. .
: i l t . iiid> f«,c.'G ecn titd e and
little sort spent Tlianksw^^^
Bt;Lotav,’-gueJt«,t)f M r. Litde’s - s M « .n . R . Little.
Rev. E. F. Eagle performed the
ceremony. Miss Faith Deadm on,
. , . , . , orgahist, and Miss Reba A n n Fur-
^ S '’*■ < * « “ > of bride,laar w ill be held at Advance Com-m unitv Building. Saturday, Dec. » P rogram o f w edding
1st, beginning at 5 o’clock, spon-
sored bv Elbaville Church. ( The bride was given in marriage
— ■— by her father. S h i carried an old-
M onday m orning o f last week f^h io n e d bouquet o f w hite roses
it e 7 b ^ r f e l“on tu^N "‘‘- !day m orning the metcurv register. ;l«t8e white orchid and showered
ed 16 degrees, w hich was the cold- w ith white satin stu m e rs. A
■Mfi. Sherrill . Godbev, a sales
lady afiH all D rug .Co., was con-
lined.toPK er. hom e several days
lu t week w ffering w ith flu.
l B .I.' S m l5i, o f this city, and
E f. Fred A ndetron, o f W inston
S^lem, returned Fridav from a
hunting trip in South Carolina.
Route
. . _____________ ibury,
the guest o f her sister, M rs. W .
Geo. R . Boget, Fireman, U . S.
Navy, stationed at San Diego, Cal
ifornia, is spending a ' few days
w ith his m other, Mrs. M ary Bo-
ger, on Route 3.
M r. and Mrs. C . A . McAllister,
o f Route I , have the thanks o f the
editor and family for a generous
supply o f fresh sausage and liver
pudding.
James-Waqner .WANT ADS PAY.
F O R SALE'-'Nice boxwoods.
M R S . R . L. W A L K E R .
1
The Turrentlne Baptist C hurch
was the scene at 5*p* m .,N ov. 17th
o f the w edding o f Miss M ildred
Pauline W agner a n d Charles! L E A T H E R JA C K E T S O N L Y
Frank James. M rs. James is the D R Y G O O D S C Odaughter o f M r. and M m . Paul _ P A V 1 E D R Y G O O D S _ ^
W agner, and M r. James is th e ' *-OCT— Black aiid tan Beagle
son o f M r. and Mrs. Carl James, P"P- p f P “ >
all o f MocksvilIe,.Route 4.
est m orning registered this foil.Strand o f pearls was her only oc>
nam enl.
Miss Letty M-e W agner was her
sister’s m aid of honor. Rebecca
A n n James, niece o f the groom,
was flower girl.
O u r old fnend Joe Massey, w ho
m oved some tim e ago. from Ire]
del! county t o South Dakota,
wrote us a few days ago and said
he was getting along.fine in his
new home. H e w rit^ that the] e.M . James was his brother’s weather has been finethere but he1v^„^'
hopes it w ill snow so he can m ake. " T * . ^ .
some snow cream. | w ill graduate from
- • the Cooleemee H igh School next
Capt. aiid Mrs. Samuel W . Spring. The groom attended
S ,er M ™ s M M ^ M t ° L e Y l n Co°'==™“ H ieh School. H e is
Davie County visiting relatives now in business w ith his fether.
and fnends. Sam doesn’t like! The couple are at hom e in their
Massachusetts, aiid we d o n ’ t| new hom e near Mocksville.
blam e him . llie winters are cold —and the damyanks are not as* O liver Myers and L W . D u nn,
warm-hearted as the Southern w ho dwell in the classic shades
B IL L Y R A T L E D G E
W ilkins Drug Store.
W A N T E D — ^To buy corn, an^
kind, in car. shucked or shelled.
T op prices paid.
M O C K S V IL L E F L O U R M ILLS
W A N T E D — Poplar. Maple.
Birch, Sycamore, Pine and O ak
logs. See us about how to cut.
E lkin Furniture C o. Ell^in, N . C.
H O L L A N D B U LBS — Tulips.
Hyacinths, * Daffodils, Narcissuf),
Crocus. Plant N ow for Spring.
Flowers. Davie Feed &. Seed Co.
Checkerboard Store
Mocksville. N . C.
folks.
Honored at Party
Miss Linda Cartner, bride-elect
o f this week, was h o n o r ^ Satur
day evening w hen Misses A nn
and Delane Glasscock were hos-
. , „ , teSses at a canasta party at the
hom e o f M is. Delane Glasscock’s
giving hoi
p a in t s .
o f die Redland uam m unity, were
in tow n One dav last week.
lay nn’towb’w ith their W est M o c^ville . T h e two girls
are to be flower g^rls in the wed
ding o f their aunt, Miss Cartner,
and George Ranson McAuley.
which takes place in Clarksbury‘R oy Brow n, w ho has been apatient at Davis Hospital, States- - .. ----
^ e , for some time, is reported to M ethodist Church, near C ounty be slightly improved. W e are; Line, on November 30th^
slad to learn.
,-Mrs. H . W , Collins, w ho spent {
tw o weeks ip tow n with her par-j)
entt. C ol. and M rs. Jacob Stew;j| returned to her hom e at Sun-1
N .C ., the first o f this week. I • is *q>lanetlos** danEeroost
•.Dennis Silverdis. owner o f the ; Answer: Most pisychiatrists have
Chivie Cafe, is a patient at Rowan always said so, but fresh affirma*
M ^ o r ia l Hospital, where he w ill tion of the charge Is offered in aS D e n d s o m e tim e ta k in g tte a tm e n t. recent book by a p h y « c ia n who
I t o friends hope that he w ill soon
be 'able to re nim home.
D R . C G . C U T R E L L
A nnounces His Office Is O pen
For The Practice O f
Chiropodist-Foot Specialist
1181 2 North Main Si.
Wanbinaibn Building SBllshury.N.a
Office Hours 9:00 to 5KK)
i'elephone 1615
W ednesday A fternoon By '
A ppointm ent
...a j ■MCa 'StAi; ^ues> o u ’M. ■ - ------~i
truth about her m arriages—to ArUe Shaw. Steve Crane and Top
ping. There is the tale of her walk- across the stage and speakbig
line In her first picture; she
horrified when she saw haiself
the Dianetics Research Foundation; \ln “A Doctor's Report on Dianetics”
Dr. Joseph Augustus. W inter sayar D r. and M rs. Frank Stonestreet ^j,at the practice of laymen attempt-
and children, o f Albemarle, and jng to “ audit" one another (prol>e
M r. and M rs. W . D . Brooks, o f into one another's unconscious Winston-Salem, were guests o f minds) is so dangerous as actually Kffl^' and M rs M B. Stonestreet to have caused Insanity in dianetic 5 ^ % ^ h ^ ^ f i patients. And of course the dangerduring the Thanksgiving h o lia a y s ^ ^ ^ ^ greatest between married
\ J .j&eople. You have no more, businessT Here’s hoping this tow n doesntljojjjjjjg with your wife’s unconsci-
have any fires on holidays. A,Ions mind than trying to talce out her
giFaM fire occurred on L ^ing- ‘,appendbc.
ton street near the,noon hour
Thiinks^ving dav, b ut m ost
the firemen were Out o f town
eaiting'turkey.
O u r o ld ftiend George
w ho dwells beyond the c h k i.r^ ^-miters o f D utchm an C re e k , h a s * Barton
ou r thanks for a great long Christ* ^ Proteins
mas pum pkin. W ill W es Me-
?ur I
o f W . I
ns Are Daily Need
, K night bring
ciutbeet?.
along the ju g 'o f lo-
___________
?Davle C ounty schools suspend
ed classes fromnoo n at 1 o’clock until M onday
'for- the Thanksgiving holidays.
M ost o f the out-of tow n teachers
s p ^ t the holidays at their various
homes.
The Youne Married <^uples
C iub. o f the Presbyterian Church
, niet N Sveipber20th it^the C h u n *
' H ut. T he President Edgar D ie t
erson presided, and introduced
the guest speaker, Miss C a r
ter, case worker from Barium
Springs;'. Miss Carpenter gave
, some very interesting facts about
life at Barium . There were 'twenty six members present for
th e meeting.
Frank E ilv . o f San iFrahcisco,
and A rch Early, o f Raleigh, two
■ native Davie C ounW boys, werein tow n last week shaking hands
w ith o ld h ie n d s. They are sons
o f, the- Iate M r. and 'M rs. P. S.
Earlv, w ho ow ned a large farm
oaisnce w
the juice <
_________ (m eat, eggs, poultry,
tish) have, as pointed out by Drs.
Lusk and Bogert, also a stim ulathig
effect upon the ductless glands,
especially the thyroid in the neck which has been well nam ed the
balance ’ wheel of the body. I t is
of the thyroid gland that
the rate a t w hich the____ processes work, and as pro>
teins cause the thyroid to become m ore active, it m eans th at a ll the
body processes w ork faster, more m eat is m anufactured, and so m ore
fat melts away. Thus in a ll re- d ud ng diets, w hile fats and etareh* es .are always reduced, .m eats are
never reduced.
In his hodk, **The C lv iliz ^ Dls> eases," D r. Boris Sokolofl states. '*It is now com m on knowledge that
profein foods such as lean m eat are ■ slenderizing because proteins
b u m more calories In the body than they pro vid e r 100 calories of pro
tein cause the body to increase its heat by about 150 calories. And this exceas heat w ill b u m extra fat.**
NOTES
Instead of. just a d d n specialist studying a . s k in ' disease, a psy
chiatrist diould be present too.
cariv, w nu UVV..VU . — —-■. ' Tiie skin is an. o r ^ il and Just a i three miles south o f this city, ad- important to our. health as other ' . • « . ____^ --- A a.. wnA nAfl*joining the old.Feejpr ftrm . A n
other bibtheir. H arold Early, and
two sisters live iti Winston-Salem.
W e were glad to SM th a e old boyhood friends w ho,lefrDavie near
ly a h alf'c^'fu iS ago.
,
organs ot Ihe.body;
attack of ' corbnaxy tiurom-
bosis does not'm ean that the patient of: the AtUee labor Is doomed.taV.another attack and t ad
death.
Princess -Theatre
T H U R S D A Y & F R l D A Y
Jane Powell & W endell Corey
In “ R IC H Y O U N G A N D
PR E T T Y ” In T.chnicolor
A dded News & Cartoon.
S A T U R D A Y
A llan Rocky Lane In
“RU ST LERS O N
H O R S E B A C K ”
A dded Serial & Cartoon
M O N D A Y & T U E S D A Y
Vera Ellen In
. H A P P Y G O L O V E L Y ” ^vith
David N iv en. In Technicolor
A dded News &. Cartoon
W E D N E S D A Y
“T ERE SA ” w ith
A n A ll Star Cast
A dded Cartoon
Clock Repair Work^
Especially In Repairing Clocks
And Refinishing Clock Cases’ i
Dials m ade for old clocks. Dress up your old cloclc.'
♦Make it run and look like neiv. H igh quality work.
I Can Also Do Your Sign Painting
Commercial A rt, Signer, Gold Leaf W ork.
E X P E R IE N C E D IN B O T H K IN D S O F W O R K
Pick U p A n d Delivery O n W ork
W . G. POPLIN
71*6 M idland Ave
Mocksville, N . C.
LAN A T U R N E R
on the screen, but that appearimce shot her into fam e as The Sweater
G irl. She' pulls no punches, m akes no apologies; the result is a story
that holds.lnterest from beginnbig to
end.
amioife bdonging to Lincoln
Jalso used in the room , once •m* oln*s study and where he
sUgj’ed the'E m ancipation Prodam a-
tion.W hile the treatm ent o f the second floor for the m ost part ex
presses a spirit of inform ality, the third floor is even more inform al.
The third floor bedrooms-are sm aller and economy and sim plicity have
been sought in the process of their renovation. Theie are 17 full bath
room s and 16 h alf baths in the
house.
Tbe original kitchen, on the ground floor of the W hite House,
w ith its vaidted ceilings and stone fireplaces has been replaced by a
new and m odem Idtchen. The old kitchen w ill be used as a conference
and broadcasting room. Here w ill be sofas and lounge chairs of more
m o de m vintage but completely restored, together w ith an old pfaie
table and large hutch built from old rafters of (he house a t the
tim e the building w as reconstructed in 1815-17.
The m a in interior change is a
strengthening of color throughout,
and in contrast to this, the execu
tive m ansion w ill be a “ whiter**
W hite House.
case.**
D r. Hawes had been a psychiatrist
until one of his cases caused h im to
see the application of psychology to
crim inal detection.
'Xleutenant, don't tell m e only
the .commissioner. H ow about the business m en whose properties are
endangered by this flrebugt The Lieutenant's voice cradded.
**The busbiess m en tool”Doc suppressed a laugh. **The
case interests m e. B ut first, your departm ent lets the story out to the
papei^ that Doo Hawes has been
called in.’* The how l w as ju s t what Hawes ^p e cte d . ^’Listen, Lieuten
ant, I like publicity, as you m ay have heard, but that doesn’t m atter
here. I know these arsonists. P lay
ball or I can't be m uch help.'*
Hawes observed the pleasant reactions in his staff, w aiting for the
silence to break.“ Okay, Doe, 1 hope you know
w hat you’re doing.**
Stevenson had the tape recorder
ready; the front-page story in the
Chronicle was spread out.The w aiting was getting to be
monotonous. Doc eyed the phone
morosely. B ut this tim e it pealed.
Tbie s tra n g e r said, “ D r. Hawes, l*ve been an adm irer of
GRASSROOTS \
Great Britain Did Not Use Well Money II. S. Gave
By W fighr A, Pdfterson
■niORTY-PIVB B IL L IO N doUw s of
^.A m e rican tax payers* money
have gone down the rat hole of English socialism , says F ulton
Lewis, Jr ., after a careful and thorough investigation in England., H e
found every other war-devastated: nation of Europe well-recovered,
y^fully employed w ith, production at; prew ar figures w ith a m b itio n
aroused, both as to each nation' generalbr and w ith their individual
citizens, w ith the shops and stores w ell stocked w ith both the essentials and t i- of livhig.
by the people of Am erica. And we are urged to follow the example of
England, to follow the pied piper of socialism over the precipice into
tiie oblivion that is today the fate of E n ^a n d . ?
Tbe le^sl«aiott tbe. President has so ardently wged congress to enact
is but additional steps toward so* dalism. Tbe Brannan farm plan,
medicine, federal aid for fidaeation— tbese and others are but moves for a
centralized government that could
easily become as much of a menace
In England there was only austerity, meagre supplies, ra- n tioned food,' a lack ot ambition, reduced prodnetion. an ever-In- creasing bui^en of debt.. All of i fhat, regardless ot the fact that ■, this eonntry has contributed to ‘ England more than two and a , half times as much money as it j ' .has contributed to all the other < war devastated nations’' of En- t wpe. England did not use the money we geberously pirbvided tor the purpose for which we Intended. > the reconstraetion ot . the wai^devastated seetions of that eeuhtry, but did use It to finance the venture Into soelal- istie exi^ments which did not work. ■ -
. The wealth of England has beer dissipated without benefit to anj class. The ^'something for nothing*
Atlee government.
W e need
public office. H e does so only as a truly great A m erican interested in
the future of his country w ith the
hope of defeating that greatest of
a ll enemies that could threaten us
—socialism. M y guess Is Am erica w ill follow where he leads. I t ia our
last chance for a continuance of the
Am erica we know and love.
“I*ve come about your ad la "
Ibe Chronicle,'* tbe little m an
Doo knew who It.
im m e d latd y . “D o yon •
have any Ideas on nabbing the
culprit?**
To keep tbe m an talking. Doo
Hawes asked who w as calling and
w aved for Sadie to notify the Lieu«>
tenant to trace the caU, and for Stevenson to start the recorder.
• “.My nam e Is H arris,” said the stronger. “ Ju st an adm irer, you
see'*—“ Thanks for your interest, M r.
H arris. No. 1 don't have m uch of an idea. This arsonist is a very
clever m a n and is going to be'hard
to catch.”
Hawes heard a delighted laugh.
He fed. the conversation until Stevenson signaled “ enough.**
C T B V E N SO N p layed the tape
^ b a c k . “Definitdyt T hat's Lan
cashire, glossed over som e . Iqr residence in Am erica. A fraid that*s
a ll I have on this one. Doc.*' -1\
“Y ou m ean Lancashire, ■ Eng
land?** Stevenson nodded.
Sadie P ruitt said the call had fizzled. It had eome from 8. drug
store.'Is the Lieutenant still on? . . .
Lieutenant? Can you m anage to look like a law yer for a w hile tomorrow?,
G ot a slim lead. I*m going to try something in the Chronicle.** "
In the quiet office Lieutenant, Linstrum poured over a sheaf
stege-prop briefs,' uncom fortable in'
H e s ^ , “ Doc, this setup lookf
y. How you get any results, these gam es 1*U never
fa r as 4 t .ha6 .worked at. a ll,.h ai en' o n ^ ' possible*- ■ tK rdugh. the
m oney paid to the labor eoveniroent
; '*V
................ .....................ership that w ill
turn us aw ay from ihese socialistic dangers. N o political party w ill
provide such leadership, b ut there is one m an. one individual. In whom the people ot A m erica have im plicit
_____dence. That one m an is the dis
credited general of the A rm y, Doug
las M acArthur.
H is words ot w am hig against tiie socialistic advance are stirring m il
lions of his countrymen to the battle front to oppose th at m ore to be.
feared enemy than any other) socialism . Gen. M acArthur led our
forces to victory in a terrible w ar. H e adm inistered the defeated ene
m y,' starting the Japanese people in the w ays of peace and-instilling in them the desire for individual
liberties. B ut he w as not permitted nor invited to w itness' the final
chapter of those great events of
w hich he had been the central fig
ure. N ow he turns to another lead- , ersbip.^. B ^d o e s . not-.do so. as^a-
candidate for the nom ination to w
A ll of the w ild, reckless and needless . spending of the ta}q)ayers’
money is not confined to m em bers of the congress in W ashington. Some of the sam e disregard for the
interests of the people m a y be found in the council cham bers of our
towns and cities, in the court houses of our counties, in the legis
lative halls of our state capitals. It m ay not be in sums, of billions, or
even m illions, but sm all or large, as It m ay be, it is not the money
ot our elected olficlals th at is behig foolishly or needlessly spent, but ours, the people who elected them
to office. Congress m ay be too far aw ay for us to r e a ^ in any prac
tical, w a y .'b u t th at is not true ot our town, county and even state' of
ficials. W e see them a t frequent intervals, and should not hesitate, to
call them to account for hot seek
ing ways to economize, rather than
only ^a y s to spehA
screwy, pliaying
know.**A whispered “ Sbhbhhl** cam e
from behind the sUghUy open inner door. “ There’s someonb
The chiselers on the relief rolls are so draining 4lie w ealth of the
nation tliat it w ill not be long befo re th e re ^ 1 be ■ nothing w ith................. - : r ^ ^ v ’for:,those
consideration.
lorac.uieie- w m w
wlii^-rfi):. provide '.r reaUy ehtitted to c<
A litUe. mild-mannered man entered. “Solicitor Linstrum?’*
“ YesZ**“I’ve come about your ad in tiie Chronicle. I lived most of my life In Lancashire.** * ■'Doc Hawes stepped into the office. “Oh. it*s our ‘Mr. Harris*. How are you, sir?** ,The man was startied, ran.“Grab hfm. Lieutenant That'*' our firebug.** ..^•At police headquarters, tiie Liei^ tenant asked, “Mind telling me nowr 3, how you baited this flsh?'* ‘U'i Simple,**'SQid the Doc. smiling: “Few m ^ can resist the ^ance at' sonie easy;'mdney.-Here’s the SLd.Il. ran in the Chronide.**The UHle: rectangle read:. tomey. settling large estate. .r«i^. qiiiries point ot information that c£i^> be supplied only by- a former resi-'- dent of Lancashire, England. Mo^ • liberalTewaid;**. ^ .**How liberal would you say. Uttt v tenant?''* • . .y“About twenty yeare."
THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSViLLE. N. C.
WHO W ill. BE THE prgcnN n rH n irn NEXT PRESIDENT? PERSONAL CHOICE?
SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS
of Main Street and the World
Grassroots Poll Reveals Poiilkal
Thinking in Home Town of Country
THE BIGGUESS->W hat is the political thinking in the liome towns
of Am crica one year before the m ost im portant presidential election in
the history of the country? Who wIU be the candidates? W ho w ill win?
In on attem pt to answer these questions, The Publisher’s Auxiliary,
a weekly newspaper published by W estern Newspaper U nion and directed to the publishers and editors of the country’s sm all town publications,
recently polled C.444 editors. Replies revealed a trend o( political think*
Ing that has not been touched by previous national polls.
O f the 2.188 editors participating, w ith every state represented, 40.0
per cent believed that President T rum an would be reelected. They alsobelieved that Sen. Robert
A. Taft would be the G O P
candidate. The startling re*
suit of the poll, however, was that neither T aft or
T rum an were the editors' p e rs o n a l choice. Gen.
D w ight Eisenhower was the personal favorite by 30.4 per
> cent, w ith Taft second w ith 27.1 per cent. President Tru
m an polled only 8.6 per
cent of the votes on ttie per
sonal choice question.The poll gains added
-significance in that -it-re*_ fleets the thinking of editors
. who Imow w hat the people
of the home towns and cross roads are thinking. And unlike other naUonal jPolls it sam ples the rural thinking of Am crica, generally conceded as
Slaving been the balance of power in tiie last presidential election. A sim ilar poll conducted in 1947 by Tlie Auxiliary was 100 per cent accurate.
A brief sum m ary of the questions asked and the answers revealed this thinking a t the grassroots level:
1. \Vho do you think w ill be the next President? Percentage vote: Trum an. 40.G; Eisenhower, 24.9; Taft, 20.5; Undecided, 0.1; Scattered
(W arren, M acArthur, Stassen and other political figures), 7.9.
2. Who do you personally favor for the presidencyr? Percentage vote:
Eisenhower, 30.6; Taft, 27.1; Trum an, 0.0; Undecifled, 0.8; Stassen, 6.5;
W arren, S.l; Douglas, 3.7; M acArthur, 3.0.
3. In your opinion, w hat candidate w ill the Democratic delegation
from your state be pledged to a t the national convention? Editors of 42 states said T rum an, 4 states unpledged or rated undecided, 1 was said
.pledged to Russel, and 1 to Byrd.
4. In your opinion, w hat candidate w ill the Republican delegation of
your state be pledged to a t the national convention? Editors In 38 states
•believed Taft, 6 to Eisenhower, 1 probably pledged to Stassen, 1 divided
between Toft and Eisenhower, 1 to Warren, and 1 unpledged or unde
cided.
5. Which candidate do you believe will receive the national Dem o
cratic nominaUon? The consensus showed that editors in a ll states believed
it would be T rum an by 94.5 per cent
6. W hich candidate do you believe w ill receive the national Republican nominaUon? Taft w as picked by 57.S per cent and Eisenhower !
ond with 28.1 per cent.
A preaching mission is being
held at St. Matthews Lutheran
Church, at 7:30 P. M ., and will
■ continue through Friday evening,
N ov. 30., according to the pastor.
Rev, J. J. Sm ith.
" The guest minister will be the
Rev. David Johnson, pastor of St.,
M atthew’s Lutheran Church, Rc.,
5| Salishury.
T he Rev. Johnson received his
early educatio.i in C olum bia. S.
C». having gradunti'd from the
the University of South Carolina
In 1938, and from the Southern
L jd ieran Theolocicul Seminary In
Colum biii. S. C., in 1942- From
June 1. 1942 until Sept. 1. 1947 he
served as a m ission pastor in thu
Blue Ridge. M ountains ofV irginta.
H e is also a member o f the N orth Carolina Svnodicai com* mictee o n Stewardship and a
meniber o f the Synodical Com*,
mittee on Architecture.
T he preaching mission being
h J d a t S t . Ma-tbews/is the fifth
that he has conducted this fall.
I know there has been consid*
erable interest tn beef cattle dur
in g the past two vears. This con
ference comes at a time when far*
mers are not so busv as they are
during other seasons, and I would
- -- ....... .........— - like to see a goodly num ber from
H is sermon topics w ill be, as fol- Davie County attend this confer
lows: luesdav “The C hurch ence. Owners o f purebred and
SHOPPER'S
CORNER
By DO«OTHy BARCLAY
THOSE FIXIN*S
step up to the counter^ ladies— for cranberries ore pouring in to
your store, and you’ll have plenty for those fixin’s io r your holiday
turkey. Although production in high
volum e is lim ited to ju st a few
states, distribution is nation-wide, and your grocer is getting more
and more of these
gay r e d berries,
fresh, preserved,
jellied and juiccd.
O f course you’ll,
have ’em w ith your
holiday bird, but
w hy stop there?
T bat 8*a m e tart
flavor peps u p 'm a n y otiier meats.
Ever try 'cranberiy sauce with
pork, instead of the traditional ap- ple-sauce? Y o u'ha v e a tasty treat-
in store for you. O r cranberry jelly w ith Iam b or beef m ain courses?
W hy not? O r combine cranberries,
either-whole^.or-jellied, with such
things as ^m incem eat, or orange, or lem on, for a relish w ith any
m eat, or fish or fowl? There's one
relish so like a fairy-tale'thaf it’s
called H ans Christian Andersen,
m ade w ith cranberries, either whole
or jellied, m incem eat and chopped w alnuts, that’s delicious w ith any
thing.As for desserts, just to nam e one,
how about a C ranberry Noodle Cup
for that hungry fam ily of yours,
and a tasty, zesty and nourishing
addition to th ^ pudding fam ily.
Crime in America
By ESTES KEFAUVER
United Stales Senator
Eleven of a Series
Cleveland Area; 'Middletown' of Crime
M oc K leinm on's story is pretty m uch the story of the w hole
Cleveland m ob— from rum -running to gam bling to a noisy, fussy
show of surface respectoblllty.D u ring a single bootlegging year, 1929, Morris (M oe) KleJn-
m a n is said to have grossed alm ost $1,000,000. There were gang
w ith beatings, bribery, shakedowns, and unsolved kill-w ars then,
ings, a nd more than a few ho victim s were K leinm an's foes.
O ne of the form er pug’s proteges— a dubious honor— w as M ickey
Cohen, now of the Los Angeles police files.Eventually, K leinm an served a sentence for incom e tax evasion.
N ow he is esteemed by m any honest people in his com m unity. H e
disavows any link w ith ill-doing;
Jellied salads, cram m cd w ith vegetables o r other fruits, always
m ake a h it w ith your fam ily,
friends, and your club-Iadies. E n
closed in and smothered w ith cran
berries, your salad w ill add that
festive, holiday note to any lunch-
. . . ._________
STRANGE LAW — The strangest tax law in the hjstory of the United
_States is now in effect. I t Is the 10 per cent tax on gambling.
■ «.w .T his Jtederal tax levy presents a strange paradwc. It is supposedly a
M - ..................- . . .
duccrs and slaughter plants* 5 chs. with snid Virginia Bowles
6. To brine the breeders o f the “ ■r®" “ ■‘“i ‘*'R‘ .
different breeds o f beef cattle to-
gether for discussions o f problems then“ ,S; < dcgs. W.
com m on to all. “ '“I V"'-
ers and to the Breed,
nage a Purebred
■’ofrU O i * stone, j . Dowics ncirs corncr;
? ? thence S. 89 dcgs. E. 11.90 chs. with
S i , 7 X C. Bowles heirs’ cornerj thcncc
^ fll H e rd 3 ^ ®Manage a Commercial Herd, Se- [J; » chs; to a stone, jjo.
lecting Br eding Stock, Practice
ludglne* Gradiug Demonstration,^.50 chs. w ith said Bowles heirs’ line toiiiK, L/ciiiuii9ir<iiiun, ivr e i_i- j
Trimmini!, Fitting for Show w ' ? T ‘ u™ • j:ind Sale. Tattooing, etc.. Report / .*
of P ureted.and F f « !« C alf Sales, „ W .’j “
lie road to the bcgii
nB Pn^onm in containing IJ and 35/foO Acres as
The Southern A. L. Bowles, September
R «uU s o f the Narionai N-'» " “’’h'
Beef,Cattle Breeding Program, the
Beef Cattle Breedini “
N orth Carolina, I..,; c ju u ic n i , ,
Beef Industry as Viewed by the 11;, ’ ? ! j ,. , ,N ational Packer, H ow the Beef . The bidding on the 1st tract a-
Producer Can H elp the North T VCarolina Packer Sell His Product., P’’*“ *2.740 JO . and the bidding
a .d the Family.’^ Wednesday—
Sinful Living.” Tliursday—“ Rob
bing m an Stealing from G o J.”
Friday—’“Sowing to Corruption ”
grade cattle are urged to attend
I would like for those, interested
in attending'to'get i • touch with
our office as soon i s possible In
1 the re*
_________i inspiring mes-! 2>stration f-e and get room reser-
sages, and to jo in in the singing of; vacions before the last m inute
familiar hvmns in a Song Service la m planning to attendbefore the sermon. this conference, and I bdieve it: w ill be worthwhile for m any oth-
Th*e public is cordially invited, order that we m ight send
vited to hear these inspiring meS'! sistration f.e and get rooi
Celebrate Birthday ers. F. E. Peebles, C o. Agent.
Ben C. TeagueA num ber of relatives o f M r.
and Mrs. Baxter Taylor gathered. at theii hom e on Route 1, Mocks- • Benjamjn C. Teague, 72, died ai
vllle. Sunday, N ov. 18, and hon ibis hom e near Farmington earh
ored Mrs. Taylor w ith a surprise. P *day m orning foHowing a shori
birthday dinner on her 6Ist birth'j Illness. Survivors Include one
day. She received many useful' daughter, Mrs. O dell James, Farm*
gifts. They have two children, jngton; two sons, J. B. a *d C. ,D .
A lden Tavlor and Miss Lucille Teague, Winston-Salem; one sis-
Taylor, o f Route 1. Mrs. Taylor's ter. Mrs. B. W . Fassett, Durham ,
sister, Mrs. George Ijames, Lex-* Funeral services were conduct-
ington, and two brothers, Charlie ed at Farmington Baptist Church
C all, Lexington,.and Tavlor Call, at 3 p. m . Saturday by Rev. Alvis
Route 4, Mocksvillc, were present Cheshire and Rev. E. W . Turner,
to helo her cnjov the happy occa- and the body laid to rest In Farm*
slon. O ther relat ves present were ington cemetery.
M rs. Alden Tavlor and children, ^ - -
on the 2nd tract w ill start at the
price o f $1,260.00.
This I(Sth day of October, I9J1.
Terms of Snie: One H undred Dol-
brs cash and ,thc balance on thirty
days time w !tn ‘bond and approved se
curity, or all cash at the option o f the
purchaser.
This 23rd day o f N ov , I95t.
A . T . G R A N T ,
Commissioner
S a le o f R e a l E s t a t e
Under And hy virtue of authority con* talned in A of Tru>t ex«cuted hy Wflde MeDanift And wif# E«Aie McDAnlel. Anrt rtffllv^rftrt to B. C. Bmck, Truste^which Deed of TruKt In nicnrft«d lo the office of R«tflsier of De«da for Davh Caantv. North (lArolina. <n Df>e<1 nf TruM Bnok 39. pntfe 23t defHiiU hnvintf l>eea made In the oav. «n^nt* of the not** seeoreft by baW Deed of Trust, and At thA reqiiAat nf the hotder nf RRld nolA. thA nnd«ral«ned Truai«e will nff^r tnn «Ale and saII tA thA h ld hm bM W fore<tshAt 12 n'dnok nnnn. D«e. 82.
tftSI. ot the eniirr hnu«o dnAr in DavIa CnuAtr. Nrtfrh C'wrflna. the foUowint de- wrihMl r«‘Al eatAtp. to wit:ThAMA belnd Lola No*. 12-1. 118.120 and
122. Aa shown on th** map Ar plat of the •nib dWision nf iha landa of Pennv Broth- •ra. Inc. aiirvAved end olottfd hv C. A: Widenh<'iiaA. BnclnAAT. which said map nr plat ia dulv rAmrded in Book 23, patfA m R«lIatAr*a offlcA nf rsTle Cmmtv. N. ' lo which referAonp «a herehy mada nor« particular rlAArrlptlnn. This pi . Arivwlllbe.Mid Aub|<-et to existing en* cumbArAneAA and taxftii.Thia ihA U*h day nf NAvembar. 1951 \ B. C. BROCK. Traaiee. Mockavllle. N.^C.
his contributions to charity are gen
erous. However, the Senate crim e com m lltee gathered evidence which
* linly proved that he still is deep the gambUng combine.
This m old which K leinm an and
others In Cleveland lit so tidily— the picture of gangsters shifting,
when prohibition ended, from illic it liquor to illicit gam bling—was
one we found everywhere.. Yet, crime-wisei Cleveland is a city of dazzling Inconsislenclesf-a sort- of
M iddletow n of crime.
• First off, the area has been plundered for years by as vicious and
powerful a congregation of crim inals as the committee spotlighted
anywhere. But, ironically, the city is a cheering sample of w hat good
local and state governments can
attain when they really lash out at
the underworld.
The ex-FBI m an who now Is the
city's public safety director, Alv in J . Sutton Jr., listed for us the
m a in m em bers of the Cleveland
gam bling syndicate — Kleinm an,
Thomas Jefferson M cGinty, Samuel
(Gameboy)' M iller, Louis Rothkopf, M oe D alltz, and Sam uel Tucker.
The B ig Three in prohibition w hisky, he sald,.ha4 been K leinm an, Dal-
itz and Rothkopf.
Rothkopf is a marked-down model
, of K leinm an and, like him , served tim e for income tax fraud. The two
hid out from the .. committee for months.
F inally apprehended, they m ade a great display of refusing to test
ify. They would not look at our counsel when being interrogated
or, Anally, even voice the stock “I- refuse-to-answer*' refrain. Kleinm an
sat m ute when we confronted him w ith a printed card from the Bever
ly Hills Country Club, one of the Kleinman-Rothkopf enterprises. The
. -car.d Tft-sdJ. . . ^ - ..
any
Floor Lamps
Tabic Lamps
B ook Cases
Ejecrric Blankets
Electric Irons
Electric Mixmasters
Electric Toasters
Pressure Cookers'.-
Frigidalre Appliances
Ranges
Refrigerators
W ashing Machines
H ot W ater Heaters
After ho m ade even the counties
too hot for them , the Cleveland
syndicate moved Its operatidhs across the Ohio river into wide-
open northern Kentucky com m unities in Cam pbell and Kenton coun
ties' Covington and Newport, just across from Cincinnati, became the
big gam bling centers. There the casinos were so unconcerned with
police that they advertised openly in Cincinnati ne w spa p e rs, and placed stream ers, on . automobile
windshields.
The syndicate became so rich that when G am bler W ilbur C lark
needed more than $1,000,000 to complete his luxurious Desert In n in
Las Vegas, he obtained the money from Cleveland gam blers who, in
turn, acquired a 60 per cent interest in his gam bling.
Some m em bers also branched out to Florida., Gam eboy M iller, for
one, was a partner In M iam i's swank Island Club.
ClevelanJ itself, Safety Director
Sutton said, has erased virtually
all traces of gangdom . “Baeketeers still m ay m ake their headquarters
here,” ho declared, "b u t they have to set up shop somewhere else if
they are going >to make money.''
We ferreted out the case of racketeer who set up shop some
where else, and m ade money. He was a Cleveland hoodlum .who got
his start in gam bling and bootlegging, am iable Alfred (Big Al) Po- Uzzi.
Big Al loudly announced, in about IS40, that he was going straight.
He had plenty of money. He had been dabbling in Florida real estate
w ith Arthur (M ickey) M cBride, the Cleveland nUUIonaire who founded
the Continental Press racing‘ news service. Then, too, there was the
V j n breweries . ,; ac-
Living
a n d com-
Dinette f
. (^ard Tahwas • ap- Platform ured and.E nd TaVtion, .. ^Jon’t H oover Vhen
P o c k e tK " ”^"
Radios ^■ was
W a e o „ .^ « W
Tile ■ liad onist ,,;New'■■T, 'i his oimd
C L A S S IF IE D
CEPARTMENT
BUSINESS fl INVEST. OPPOB.
BacrUlca. e s ta m — -
- u g a. Aihena. Ocorgia; ^________
piirtor?for sate. Ont-Bt cnsh; or on terms.
r i . X M r x V . f f i :
T ARM 8 AND RANCHEB
CENTRAL FLA. GULF COAST
' acroi.* Fenced nnd ero88.fenced. Iiomc. Barns, cheds.. >A m l. rront ngreaaivo depot town.
ncnr .rlycr^
EN. IteaUor, Intlla, Flo.
.;TL13M13N'8 Forma. $350,000 and leaa.
iu^iiDMlif *A'|[flno7, WnyncahPto. Va.
H ELP WANTEU^MEN
P r «.u « , E » .ln ..r ,
HELP WAWTEU~-flIIgN. tVOMEN
DSLTA Air Lln«a hailno«ra> Stewnrdc
------ffiS f
jrdosscs.icrators, ------- -----— Company bonoflla — up insw ■
Knnrcliial Airport. AUntilt, G*.
N6TRUCTI0N
rOUiC Churefi, room need extra ...-to you with no down payment lo mal
AMERICAN Puttie Contcstanls^Be surel. . . ------Solutions. S5.0I>. Every. M eKEE CONTEST SERV- 17, McKeoport. Pi>.
iVIISCELLANE O P S
r orteV. Dccpi
RAL Btrenmerj
MTS_. Mnnulacli ................7SI1 Melroae Avc., nolljrwoad
l|OOW^.MONTIl hobby aI
ror Aye..
bomel No so-
SEEDS. PLANTS, ETC.
SERVICES OFPEIIED
OUABANTEED.,
U. s . SAVINGS BONDS-
Ar« Now
U. S. DEFENSE BONDS
We Have Hundreds Of UZ
A Visit To Our Store Will
Your While. V
tidedisey,
andlant.
hich1933
idly..per-the
own
Troy, Patty and Brenda; Frank
and'Foster Call, Lexington, M r.
and Mrs. Henry Ijames and dau*
ghter Beverly Kay, o f Lexington,
R . 2 ; Mrs. Tavcor Call and son
Jim m v, Mocksville, Route 4; Gra
ham Call, Greensboro: M r. and
M rs. Clarencc Call J*nd son Perrv, Cpencer; M r. and Mrs. Charles
C all and daughter. Pegev^ o f R . 3»
M ocW ville. •
Telephone 300 Southern Bank Bldg. MpcksvUle, N , C.
D R . R A M E Y F. K E M P , C H IR O P R A C T O R
X -R A Y L A B O R A T O R Y
Hours: ^30-12:30 • 2:30-5:30 Closed Saturday-2:30
M onday. W ednesday and Friday Evenings— &30 to 8:30
Farmers Hardware &
J U K E R B R O T H E R S , o B
P i i q n e 4 6 S a l i s b u r y S t r e e t M ou?
'alley
jrted
^ la r l
You’ll Get More for Your
i job
PMCES
. to ■
PLEASE
YOU
when you deal with JESSE G. BOWEN P
• HAMMOND ORGANS
• GRAND PIANOS
• SPINET PIANOS
• USED PIANOS
Hn-
torld
W rite for Catalogue. •
ortly
Demonstration G M Ir v^fSt'e
liling pro-
217 W EST FIFT H ST.
............................................
Jm ent
Creates Wmttfor
CHESTCOLDS
to reltove coughs and sore mnsdet
Musterolo InetanMy croatca a woo- derful protective warmth ilsht wlicro nppUed oti chcst. tUroftt and back. It not-only promptly rollovu-----* lng nnd InflammnUon but} up painful local congestion.
MUSTEROIE
Get Well
•f^i QUICKER
wM the Seusathnal A‘C Factor in the New lutemijied
FOLEY’Stt«‘.I.V.-.d
AMAZINGLY QUICKER A«TINO IMCREOIBiY MOM iPfiCTIVi
k ililV M - JiiiJH M
Toteltove dUtrau nib on etmfortlBt..
AN OLD STANDBY
G R A N D M O T iS ir r ’ MigTHER— . Gave >
yJuToo
m iU = 7
LIVER AILING
IfenPepindi
IVER AILING?b> brUht
on Lane’t
47-Sl
THE PA VIE RECORD. MOCKSVILtE. Nl C.
TfiE WHITE HOUSE
$5,761,000 Spent on Renovation
Of Historic Executive Mansion
M ID^EAST B O U N D . . . M embers of the 19th Independent
Infantry Brigade of the B ritish A rm y, m arch to an a ir field from where they wUl be air-lifted to m iddle East in biggest
air operation since B erlin air lift.' Rum ors * indicated these m en were bound for either Suez Canal zone or Anglo*EgypUan
Sudan as relnforeements.
MIRROR
Of Your
r MIND
Tot Sees Self
. In Animals
Gould
W N U W ftslilnslon Bureau
When President T rum an and his fam ily move bade Into their home
a t 1600 Pennsylvania avenue shortly after the first of the year, they w ill
find the historic old W hite House a stronger, safer structure designed
to last another century as the resld- enc'e of the nation’s presidents. -
D uring the two yeara of its renovation a t a cost ot w ell over
$5,000,000 the arciUtects and buUd- era have been careful to preserve
the traditional appearance of the W hite House both as to exterior and
Interior, so th at to ail intents and mrposes the old mansion, rem ains
he same as it always has been in the m inds and hearts of the Am eri
can people.
Four new bedrooms have been
added, m aking the total num ber of room s now 54. Only the strengthen
ing of the basic structure has been concentrated upon; there has been
no change in the architectural arrangem ent of the house.
O n the first floor, there are no
J reat dianges except in the state i ining room , used only for official
dinners. Form erly paneled in dark
oak, this room is now painted a
celadon green. An antique Hepple- white four-pedestal dinbig table
w hich seats 22 is a new addition.
The private dining room, used by
the President and his fam ily, has Sheraton and Hepplewhlte furniture
in the 18th century tradition, m ost of w hich haa been in use in the
B la ir House, tem porary residence of the T rum an fam ily during the
reconstruction, but w hich Is refin- Ished and recovered and placed in
the original location.In general, the first floor retains
its air of sim ple dignify, w hile undergoing a strengthening of color
throughout The blue room , fre-
Do ^ d r e n see themselves la autmftls?
tim e being by his sufferings, while
the sense of guilt on w hich the need is based rem ains and m ay
cause a fresh disturbance any tim e that t h e unconscious situation
changes. R e a l cure can come ozdy
when the p atirat has gained **ln-
sight."
..'-Answer: Yes, says Drs. Leopold and Stmya S. BeUak in tlie Journal
'of Pojective Techniques. They describe their new version for ehil-
of the ^'Apperception Test**
in.-which the subject is*asked to
[say w hat he **sees” In specially de- d pictures. In the Children's
rcepUon Test (CAT) the plc- are of anim als because the
• say a> child is likely to , him self m ore readily w ith
h an w ith adults or w ith other »n. The seem ing affinity be-
... c h ild r ^ and anim als 'm ay 1 be due .to the animals* freedom
Xtom inhibitions of natural instinct.
' m ,
1 ^ in a n ity »get weU of itself**?
Answer: Yes-^and no. There are types of psychosis w hich seem to
’clear up without specific treatm ent in w hat the psychiatrists call
**spontanebus- remission,** and the • patient in such cases may- rem ain
{comparatively well for years, or ftn-
tlie rest of his life. B ut
rule has really ha]
patient's
him selfr h ^ been
w hat as a
... is th a t the
need to punish
for the
"Dianetics** dangerous?
Answ er:-M ost psychiatrists have
always said so, but fresh affirm a
tion of the charge is offered in a recent book by a physician vdio
w as once the m edical director of
the Dianetlcs Research Foundation: In “A Doctor's Report on Dianetlcs”
D r. Joseph Augustus. W inter says that the practice of laym en attempt
ing to “ audit” one another (probe into one another's unconscious
m inds) is so dangerous as actually to have caused insanity in dianetic
patients. And of course the danger would be greatest between m anried
people. Y ou have no more, business fooling w ith your wife’s unconsci
ous m ind then trying to take out herappendix.
KEEPING HEALTHY . |
Meat, Other Proteins Are Daily Need
By Dr. James W . Borton
r W M T E O FT EN a b o u t m eat,
despite the fact th at it Is expensive, because a ll the new re
search w ork on food and nutrition establish the fact that it is now
known to be- the. m ost im portant food of the de^ly diet. This is because m eat is rich in protein, the
buUder of new and repairer of old > or worn cells of-the body.
I 'M e a t is im portant for every in-
’dividual, whether of norm al weight,
underweight or overweight. It
meets the needs of the individual
boy, girl, m an or w om an of norm a l weight because of its building
flind repairing of body cells. It meets the needs of the underweight
because it helps to m aintain any solid or muscle tissue gained, and it.nhelps to reduce w eight because
of its extra or dynam ic action inburning up~ fats and s ta rc h ^ and
preventing the storing of fa t in and ]on the body. Research workers
V ay e found that neither fats nor 'starches have so d ir ^ t a n d stimu-
Jlatfag effect upon our tissues.
DSjance -wnet the juice of i
regulates th< body process
Proteins (m ea^ eggs, poultry, have, as pointed out by Drs,
Lusk and Bogert, also a stim ulating effect upon the ductless glands,
especially the thyroid in the neck which has been w d l nam ed the
balance wheel of the body. It is )f the thyroid gland that
___ the rate at w hich theprocesses woric, and as pro-
tems cause the thyroid to become
.more active, it m eans that all the
body processes woirk faster, more m eat is m anufactured, and so more fat m elts away. Thus in all. re
ducing diets, while fats and starches, are always reduced, ^ m eats are
never reduced^ .In his book, ‘‘The C lv lliz ^ Dis
eases,** D r. Boris Sokoloff **It is now com m on knowledge th a ;
foods such as lean m eat
are ’ slenderizing because protebis
b u m more calories in the body than they p ro vid e r 100 calories of protein cause the body, to increase its
heat about 150 calories: And this excess heat w ill b u m extra fat.*'
A ny bendiJ)* exercise, taken regularly,, ii only for live m inutes. wHl
h d p keep fat olt'abdom en. '
The skin contains the- sweat i
glands w h ia i help regulate the Um-
periaiture ot,;the body.,.
A * overweight d e w not com e m
lit a m atter of a few weeks or days,
lit w ill take m w v months,, te get rid of ft safely.
Instead of ju s t a skin speclaUst studying a . sM n - disease, a ' psychiatrist ^ o u ld be present too.. • .• ,• '
' The sldn is an. orgirgan ai . important to our-health as otherm d ju st aa
o r ^ n s of tiie. b ^ y ;
' One attack-of- c o ro n a ^ tiinMB- bosls does not'tnean th a t the raU ent
Is doomed.. tO;;.another a t t a » and death.
By IN E Z G E R O A R D
La n a t u r n e r ’s autobiography,
in the December W om an’s Hom e
Companion, is one of the frankest and m ost honest life stories ever
w ritten by an actress. After telling hitherto unpublished facts about her
early life, she goes on to relate the truth about her m arriages—to Artie
Shaw, Steve Crane and Bob Top- f. There is the tale of her walk- _ across the stage and speaking
one Ihie In her first picture; she
horrified -when she saw herself
LA N A T U RN ER
on the screen, but ^ a t appearance shot her into fam e os The Sweater
G irl. She' pulls no punches, m okes apologies; the result is a story
that holds interest from beginning to
quently called the pretUcst in the
house, is a deeper and more vibrant blue.
The red room Is a lighter rod^
not as dark and brown as before.
The draperies ore red silk dam ask
of 16th century design, and the sam e m aterial is used to cover the
w alls. The only different note hi the room Is white dam ask used'on a
set of Hepplewhlte choirs and a Chippendale w ing chair.
The w alls a n d ' draperies ot the green room are the same shade ot
striking em erald green silk dam ask. M uch of the furniture hi this room
had been in use In the B lair House.
The green room h ad been redeco
rated and restored only a few
m onths bt^ore tiie house was vacated.
T H E EA ST R O O M , the largest hi
the W hite House, where A bigail A dam s, w ife ot the flrst occupant
hung, her washing, is used only for state receptions. A white and lemon-
gold sUk dam ask has been woven fro m an old docum ent characteristic of m any used in the 18th cen
tury. This m aterial is used for the
draperies, replacing the old cran
berry red silk ones. Here, too, hang
the portraits ot George and M artha
W ashington saved when the British bum e d the origuial building in 1812.
The grand stairw ay to the second
floor is entered from the m ain hall, rather than the secondary crossh all as before the restoration, ^ e
m arble floor, columns, pilasters, and w ahiscot of the m ain floor hall
are new. A set of w alnut fram ed Louis XTV benches have been in
stalled. The h all is somewhat sparsely furnii^ed, in keeping w itii its
essentially plain architectural nature.
The second floor is brighter and m ore Inform aL The Monroe room
is furnished w ith its restored and r e ^ s h e d origuial pieces. The dra
peries here are of an 18th century prin t of fruits and flowers in rose
and blue. This room is very sim ply furnidied w ith a d e ^ , bookcase,
sofas and loimge chairs suited to its historical background.
H aving imdergone a varied hls-
>ry and having' been rdegated to
Ifferent room s In the W hite House,
the m assive V ictorian bed in w hich Abe Lincohi slept is once again the
m a in feature of the Lincoln room on the second floor. Other pieces
of furniture b ^onging to Lincoln are also used in the room^ once
Lm colii’s study and where he
signed the-Em ancipation P roclam a
tion.
W hile the treatm ent tiie sec
ond floor for the m ost p art expresses a spirit of inform ality, the
third floor is even more inform al. The third floor bedrooms-are sm all
er and economy and s im p lic l^ have been sought in the process of their
renovation. There are 17 full bathroom s and 16 h alf baths in the
house.The original k itte n , on the
ground floor of the W hite House, w itii its vaulted ceilings and stone
fireplaces has been replaced by new and m o de m kitchen. The old
kitchen w ill be used as a conference and broadcasthig room . Here w ill
be sofas and lounge chairs of more m odem vintage b u t completely re
stored, together w ith an old pine table and large hutch built
old rafters of the house a t the tim e the building was reconstruct
ed in 1815-17.The m a in interior change is
strengthening of color throughout, and In contrast to this, the execu
tive m ansion w ill be a ‘‘whiter’'^ W hite House.
U ST WEEK'S
ANSWER - p .
ACROSS.1. Macaws (Braz.)
0. Boxes flden- tlflcolty10. C ^a U o n of life .11. Produce, as
an effect112. Value highly14. Couch t 116. Ignited
116. Loiter15. Registered MutM (abbr.)'lO.Bpoch 20. Faced
•23. No date (abbr.)26. An extended sea voyage 26. Radium
(aym.)
28.Pubtic notice 80. Type meoBure31. Pronoun32. Marbles
96. Board of
Ordnance(abbr.)3T. Lastly 39. Greek letter42. Foot (abbr.)
43. Sheltered side44. Organ of hearing.46. Tibetan
48. To g ^ tv contriving
60. Musical
study62. Revelries63. Bvll spirit
64. Male descendants
D O IW
1. Chief gods (Norse myth.)2. A palm used for
10.Brase(print)13. Refuse 01 grapes 17. Pierce with homs
21. Without . feeling22. Music note
wickerworic 24. Facts
3. Devoured 26. Sold, as
la m fju ri uaai.T ^LIMM HOr? WHD
•rariL'^WH
0^14 r:^rd ^ i4ii]i4[.^a 'fionum R F iw rjii, nriRM fn
4.Udg0 6. Antimony
(sym.)6. Foot-like
T.pSst8. Revise9. One who
chances 27.SUrup 20.ReUredgIen33. Indefinite arUcIe
34. Killed.
36.Paci0cMost state stands, as at 38. Periods of a theater Ume
N-SO
40. Stops41.MetalUo rocks46. Silent47. Fuss 40. Cyclades
Island 61. H alf an em
1 1 r i r -T"7 —? -
10 i P
i r
_1 l4 "
IS 17 1 1
is "
i i "I w u
i s '
iiiy M m m m m m m m mw34 15 56 P w
w 38 1 r So
I i 1 w
5 T w 47 I 3 T
So SI i s T
i s T i
THE
n c n o N
CORNER
THE FIREBUG
By Daniel Shifren
3 -Mlnule
Fietion
f x R . Hawes m ade whipping mo- •- 'tio n s his staff hiterpreted as,
"G rab the extension, quick!**
Sadie P ruitt lifted a phone; then
H ew litt Stevenson, D r. Hawes* expert hi things Un-
guistic.Lieutenant Lln-
strum w as saying, *'Doc, against m y better judgm ent, the commissioner
and the rest of the boys thought you ought to be called in on this
ise.**
D r. Hawes had been a psychiatrist
until one of his cases caused him to see the application of psychology to
crim inal detection.
"Lieutenant, don’t tell m e only
the .commissioner. How about the business m en whose properties are
endangered by this firebug?The Lieutenant’s voice cradded,
**The business m en tool*'Doc suppressed a laugh. "The case interests me. B ut flret, your
departm ent lets the story out to the papers that Doc Hawes has been
called in ." The howl w as just what Hawes expected. '‘Listen, Licuten
ant, I like publicity, as you m ay have heard, but that doesn’t m atter
here. I know th ^ e arsonists. Play b all or I can’t be m uch help."
Hawes observed the pleasant reactions in his staff. waiUng for the
silence to break."O kay, Doc. I hope you know w hat you’re dohig.*’
Stevenson had the tape recorder rea<^; the front-page story In the
Chronicle was spread out.
The w aiting was getting to be
monotonous. Doc eyed the phon morosely. B ut this tim e it pealed.Thie s tra n g e r said, "D r.
Hawes, I ’ve been an adm irer of
GRASSROOTS \
Great Britain Did Not Use Well Money U.S. Gave
By W right A. Patterson
•P H IR T Y - ilV E BULLION doUars of
■^.American tax payers' money have gone down the rat hole of English socialism, says Fulton
Lewis. Jr., after a careful and thorough investigation in England. He
found every other war-devastated nation of Europe wrfl-recovered,
fully employed with, production at.-
prew ar flgurei^ w ith a m b itio n
aroused, both as to each nation^, generally and w ith their individual
citizens, w ith the ^ o p s and stores w ell stocked w ith both the essen
tials and toe luxuries of living.
In England there w as only
austerity, m eagre supplies, ra- tioned food, a lack of am bition,
reduced production, an ever-in- oreaslng buH en of debt. A ll ot i
that, regardless of the fact that : this country has contributed to |
England more flian two and a ., hjftlf time's as m uch m oney as It i
%bas contributed to a ll the other ■
w ar devastated nations*'of Eu- i rope. England, did not use the [
money w e generously prbvlded |
for the p u rp ose fo* ^ U e h we Intended. < the reconstruction of ttO' w a r^v a s ta te d seetloiis of
that country, but did use It to finance the venture into soclal- Istlo experiments w hich did not
w ork. '
The wealtti of .England has beei
d is sip a te without benefit to ans elass. The '^something for nothing* of the Attlee-labor government, in
fld fa r as 4 t has .worked at. ell, ^has been' oh& * ^ ^ ib le - tKr6ugh. tKe
'^m o p ^ paid to tte labor govenun«i<
by the people of Am erica.' And we ;
are urged to foUow the example of England, to follow the pled piper ot
socialism over the precipice into the oblivion that is today the fate
of England.
Tb0 leghlallon th». President bat M ardMSly ttrg^ to Moait ^ut addithaal tt»ps toward to- Tbt Branmm farm plan, medicine, federal aid for edueatlott— these and others are but mopes for a e'etitralized sovernmeot tbat eoutd_ easily become as much of a menaee as the Atlee government.
W e need a leadership that w ill tu m us aw ay from these socialistic
dangers. N o political party w ill provide such leadership, but there
is one m an. one individual, in whom the people of A m erica have im plicit confidence. T hat one m an is the dis
credited general of the A rm y, Douglas M acArthur.
H ia words of w arning agahist the
socialistte advance are stirring m illions of his countrym en to the battle
front to oppose th at more to be feared enem y than any others so
cialism . Gen. M acArthur led our
forces to victory in a terrible w ar.
He adm hilstered the defeated ene
m y,' starting the Japanese
in the ways of peace a nd - ii...........
in them the desire for individual liberties. B ut he was not permitted
nor in v ite to witness the final chapter of those great events of
w hich he had been tiie central figure. N ow he turns to another lead- .
Ee-4oes. not..d0 8o. as-.-a.
for tlM nm ninatira to w t
public office. H e does so only as a
truly great Am erican interested in the future of his country w ith the
hope of defeating that greatest of all enemies tiiat could threaten us
-^socialism. M y guess is Am erica
w ill follow where he leads. It is our
last chance for a conthiuance of the
Am erica w e know and love.
A ll ot the w ild, reckless and need
less spending of the taxpayers’ m oney is not confined to mem bers
of the congress in Washington. Some ot the sam e disregard for the
interests of the people m ay be found in the council cham bers ot our
towns and cities, in t|ie court
houses of our counties, in the legis
lative halls of our stete capitals. It
m ay not be in sums, of billions, or even m illions, but sm all or large,
as it m ay be, it Is not the money
of our elected officials that is being
foolishly or needlessly spent, but ours, the people who dected them
to office. Congress m ay be too far
aw ay for us to reach In any prac
tical, w a y ,'b u t that is not true of
our town, county and even state'of- Acials. W e see & em a t frequent in
tervals. and should not hesitate, to call them to accoimt for not seek
ing w ays to economize, rather than only iii^ays to 'spezid^
*T ve come about your ad in ' the C hronicle." the Uttle m ao
yours . . .** Doc knew vidio It. •
w as Im m ediately. **Do yon •. have any ideas on nabbing the
culprit?**
To keep the m a n talldng. Doc Hawes asked who wfis calling and
w aved for Sadie to notify the Llet^
tenant to trace the call, and for
Stevenson to start the recorder.
'*My nam e is H arris," said the stranger. "Ju s t an adm irer, you
see**—"T hanks for your Interest. M r.
H arris. No, I don’t have m uch of an idea. This arsonist is a very
clever m a n and is going to be h ard
to catch."
Hawes heard a delighted laugh.H e fed. the conversation, until Ste
venson signaled "enough.** - -
ST EVEH SON p la y e d the t a ^ back. "Definitely! That’s Lan-
ca^hre , glossed over some by residence in A m erica. A fraid that’s
a ll I have on this one, Doc.** v” "Y o u m ean Lancashire, - E ng
land?'* Stevenson nodded.Sadie P ru itt said the call had
fizzled. I t had come fro m a. drug
store." Is the Lieutenant still on? . . .
Lieutenant? C an you m anage to look
like a law yer for aw hile tomorrow?,
G ot a slim lead. I*m gotag to try som ething in the Chronicle.** “
In the quiet office Lieutenant, Luistrum poured over a sheaf *<>1-
^g e - p ro p briefs, uncom fortable hi'
H e said. "D oc, this setup looks
screwy. H ow you get any results, playing these gam es r u never
know.”A Whispered '«Shhhhhr* came
brom behind the slightly open Inner door. "nieTe*s someon^
eomhig.**
A litUe, mild-mannered m an entered. “Solicitor Linstrum?**
"YesV*"I'v e come about your ad in tiia
Chronicle. I lived m ost ot m y life in Lancashire." * ’
Doc Hawes stepped into the of
fice. "O h, it’s our *Mr. H arris'. H ow are you, s ir?"
The m a n w as startiedi ran."G rab hfm , Lieutenant. That’s
our firebug." .,• •
A t police headquarters, the L le i^ tenant asked, "M h id telling m e now»>
Doc, how you baited this fish?"
"Simple,**-said the Doc, sm iling: “Few m en .can resist the chance a t’
som e , easy'm oney. H ere’s the ad t . ran In th e : Chronicle."
The chiselers on the r^ le f rolls
are so dratoing the w ealth of the nation tiiat it w ill not .be long be^
fore .there wiU be nothtog w ith
wlUcH provide . z ^ e f ^ f ^ ', those
really e m tle d to consideratlw .
.1.. •
The Uttte rectangle read: "At^- tomey, settlhig large estate, qiiirM po^t of information that cao^ - be mippli^ only by a former real-'; dent of Lancashire, England. Mo# ■ liberal rewa^;V. • -<.. '*Hbw Ub»al would you say, U a«' tenrat?'^ / ~ «"About twenty yaw."
If;
FAGG EIGHT tH E DATIG RBCORD, HOGKSVtLLG N, C. NOVOMBBR 28. («6l U K - -
Bj M ADD M cO U RDY W ELCH
p A T n WAS T R Y IN G lo forget it
* w«8 Christmas. Last Christm as there had been Jim m y and a ring
on her finger. Then there was a fir l nam ed Ann and everything was
over. Patti had packed up and come to this pari of the city to live.
So there were no holly wreaths
or Christmas trees in P atti's Pie
"an d Bake Shop just off one of the
bustling avenues. There w as only
P atti with her brown curls and
m tllow brown eyes and the long rows of pics and cakes in the
•how-cases.People came from ail over to buy
P atti’s cakes and pics and drink her eoffee. There was the little
old lady who sold mngazines on the comer, who came in every day.
She was the first to come in on Christmas Day, and she was lug'
ftng a big wreath of holly and
mistletoe. "H ang it in the window,
dearie,” she said.
P atti looked at the wreath and a
sick pain caught a t her heart.Then there was the telephone
operator who worked in a branch exchange, and later the little boy
who always stopped by from school. He had such sad blue eyes it
m ade Patti's heart ache. P atti always gave him a huge slice of pie
m t t i nKkmcQ iiKe ^ a d ana got a personal ad in the late edition of
one of the big dallies. I t read:
"M r. Thom as Baker, please call a t P atti's Pie & Cake Shop a t once."
p A T T I W A IT E D and w aited. The
* little shop .wo#! brightly II
and the C hristm as tree was a tiful sight to see.
B ut no one cam o. Everything' had been sold» so P a tti wos putting out
the lights when a tall young m an
w ant you to come
in. He sr.:d, " I m ay be the
Thom as Baker you’re looking for. O f course I don’t know ."
• P a tti Just felt It in her bones that
he w as the rifiht one. She said, “ Do you have a w ife by the nam e of M argaret and a little boy named
T om m y?”
‘"Yes, yes, 1 do.*'
Then you'i
Baker. They
home.**
"A re you sure M argaret wants m e too?" The. young m an’s eyes \v«ire suddenly full of hope.
I P a tti nodded. *'I'm very sure,"
I and the young m an thanked her, turned to go and alm ost collided
w ith another tall young m an who had just come in. H e w as looking
at PatU w ith his whole heart in his eyes. "T he m inute I saw that per*
sonal, I was sure it .was you. No one ever spelled Patty w ith an " i"
as you do." TJicn he reached for
her hands. "P atti..w on’t you forgive
m e for thinking 1 could ever love another girl? W on’t you let m e put
this ring where it belongs?"P atti was choked up with happi* ness as he slipped the ring on her
finger. "F inding you is like » Christm as miracl<»." he whispered
as he took her in his arm s.
Aftermatii
Alim ony is like paying off the installm ents on the car after the
wreck.
e d u c a t io n : B T T H E FOOT
lix ii
W hen he saw the wreath iiis
. eyes brighieq,ed. "G ee, that's
_ ^ 4 r e « y .’*^
and he ate it w ith relish, but the sad bewilderment of his eyes never
seemed to go away.
When he saw the wreath, his
eyes brightened. "Gee, th a t’s pretty. Y ou goin’ to have a Christ
m as tree too. M is' P atti?”P atti started to sny no, but
choked. Instead she nsked, "D on't
you have a Christmas tree, Tom*
m y ?"
He shook his head. Patti said, her voice still choky, "Then w e'll have
«ne here. You can help me trim it.”
In no tim e at all tlie tree was up and they were trim m ing it. In
tpite of her stern efforts, Patti was conscious of a slow excitement.
T om m y asked if she believed in that Kris Kringle stuff, and she
had to stop to think before answer
ing. At last she said, "Y es, Tommy.
1—I think I do. Ktjs KrinEle‘‘“may be just a s>’mbol. but he's really
alive in the hearts and sniriLs of
hundreds of people all over the world."
T om m y’s blue eyes grew bright,
"Then do you think if I told him
I only wanted m y daddy back,
and nothing else, he would bring
him back to us? M y m om m y told
him to go, but she didn't m ean it.
Now she's sick, but if Daddy would come back, we’d both be happy
and she'd be well.”
An idea was slowly dawning in
P atti’s m ind. "W e ’ll sec what we «Hn do. T om m v.” sba j>ron)t<5Cd.
Drunk-o-M«ters Tetline
Truth About Tipsy Driven
M achines are replacing police
m en in ''telling it to the judge" in
a grow ing lisi of cities and stales
and are achieving a record percent
age of convictions in cases involving drunken driving.
The International City Managers’ association reports lhat at least 180
cities in 31 state:? now use chemical
tests to determ ine intoxication of
drivers Involved in traffic accidents. Twenty>seven stale police or
highw ay patrol agencies use the chem ical te.st also, although only
12 states actually have laws defin* ing drunkenness in terms of the
alcoholic content of the blcod as measured by c):<7mical tests.
Definitions in each of tl^e dozen states employ-the same lim its: If
there 'is- .05- per cent or less by weight of alcohol in the subject’s
blood, it shall l>e presumed he is
not under the influence of alcohol.
If the am ount of alcohol ranges between .05 and .15 per cent, he may
or m ay not be under the Influence,
depending upon other evidence. If
the am ount Is .15 or more. It can
be presumed the subject is under
I ^ e influence of alcohol.
Poll Prbvtt Motl PmbIo
' Want Extra Hour of Slooy
If you hate to got up in th«
m orning, don't worry—you’ve got lots of company.
T hat extra hour or so of sleep In
the m orning is worth anywhete
from |M to $32 a year to m ost peo
ple. This is reported by Minne*
apolis-Honeywell researchers after
m aking a surve}» of living habits of
homeowners in towns and villages
ranging from 2,500 to 10.000 in pop-
- ulation.
The com pany retained two research organizations to find out.
am ong other things, w hat feature i of their electric clock thermostats
i its users liked best.
The fact that they didn’t have lo get up early to start the fum ac'
got the big nod— even over hi- other features as annual fuel v,
ings up to 10 per cent, rangii;
from $14 to $32.
When Thomas Edison was a young
m an, it occurred to him that he
was handicapped by the lack of, a
form al education. A person of great
determination, Edison decided to
teach himself, by reading the books
in the library.One day, a few weeks after he
had undertaken this ambitious tosk, the librarian noticed him at a cor
ner table."W ell, T om ," she asked, "how
m uch have you read?""O h, about 15 feet," he said. He
had started at one end of the library and was reading every book
on the shelf, regardless of the con- •— •«‘i______________________
P R IC E O F P EA CE
♦'What I cmH understond/' re
m arked a plain elUsen, **ls If this eongressman Is as unpopu*
lar and obnoxious to everyone as the newspapers elalm , how can
he get so m any cofteessions front
the Roose?"
"T hai's easy»" spoke up another. "Suppose you’re In busi
ness, and have a lot of Important things lo do, and a m an comes in
and sits down beside you and begins to file a saw. Wouldn't you
give M m anythfaig he w anted?"
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
W e C an Supply lio u t Needs
IN G O O D C O A L ,
S A N D and B R IC K
Call or Phone U s A t A ny Tim e
P H O N E 194
Formerly Davie Brick & C oal C o
SILER
Funeral Home
, And
Flower Shop
Phone 113 S. Main St
Mocksville. N. C
Ambulance S^:rvice
T HE OLD CODG ER
I seriously doubt that Benton,
Ihe town from whence came I, is blessed with any greater number
of characters than any other town
its size. Still, it certainly has had
its share of unusual personalities.
F or instance, there was the old storekeeper I rem ember. After
being a holdout for m any years,
this old gent finally bought him
self (me of those new-fangled con-
trapti<ms they cam e to call the
automobile. Ho learned to drive it.
b ut he never accustomed himself
to traffic rules. H e was more or
less a free-style driver and so his conduct in traffic was at best un
orthodox.One day, the story goes, he
drove down to M em phis and was
cruising down to a crowded strcst
going in the wrong direction. So
w hat did he do but stop and start
turning around right in the m id
dle of the street while traffic piled up for several blocks In all direc
tions. W ithin a few seconds the area was crawling with cops.
"D on't you know you can’t turn
around In the middle of the steeet?" bawled a burly bull.
"W ell, now,” the old gent drawled in a voice that twanged
like a loose guitar string, " I believe I can m ake it!"
Another tim e he had driven to St. Louis and there he created
quite a disturbance in that nar- row-mlnded city by trying to drive
on the wrong side of the street. Once again the cops appeared as
if by magic."W haVs the m atter with you?"
screamed a red-faced policeman.
"Y o u drunk?"
"N o ," noed the unruffled driver,
" I ain’t drunk yet—just got here!’;
FAZtM
M ACBZITER 7
N e w M o w e r s , R a k e s , D r i l l s , D i s c a n d S e c t i o n H a r r o w * ,
M a n u r e S p r e a d e r s , S e l f - P r o p e l l e d C o r n P i c k e r s .
W e H a v e S o m e G o o d U s e d F a r m M a c h i n e r y
B i g L i n e O f N e w P a r t s I n S t o c k
D o n ’ t P u r c h a s e Y o u r F a r m M a r c h i n e r y U n t i l Y < * u '
L o o k O v e r O u r S t o c k
HENDRIX & W ARD
N E A R C O R N A T Z E R
M a s s e y H a r r i s F a r m I m p l e m e n t s
J.. F R A N K H E N D R IX . M IS S C O L B E N FO S T E R O W E N W A R D
Walker Funeral Home
A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E
D A Y O R N IG H T
Piione.48
Mocksville, N O
Boger & Howard
P U R E .S E R V IC E
Tires Batteries A n d Accessories
Kurfees Paints
C o m er N . M ain & G aither Sts
P hone 80
Notice to Creditors
HHVinx qitnlified as Arlnt>nl->/rator nf
(hr e«iAte (if Mnniie P. Kliiii. deeee«'<d>
tinUc** i- «|v*n to all pKr«»nt bold
•ntf cltimp a-AinB( 8>i<t estate (n |irrn<>nt
thf sanie. properly v* to thu
oil or before tbp I3(b dnv of O-tn-
t**T. 1952, or tbls ntttlce **'111 fe plenri *n
b«f of lb»-Jr f#^nverv. All pi*rst.nii indr-bt-
I'd ins'iid ♦•niatr will |ika»e caU upon th«» tindtfrsfKnrd nt Aitvancp. Roofo 2. N. C. and make |.romi>i SHtilemeiit.Tbl« )3th day ol October. m\W J. ELLIS. Admr.01 Mamie P. Elib. decs’ri.Bv A.T GRANT. Altornpy.
Notice to Creditors
Hiivlnit qux|>6«^i Adinini«rMi«r n(
thf estate of Ge-rtfr G. Preblcs. dfceaned.
notice is hereby kivcm d> all pers<«ii» bold
me clnltns AtfainM ibe Rotpte »f itaid d<*
CRAflfcl, tti i/reNeni tbt* himow lu Milder
sirined. pron- riy on nr before tli»
3Hib day of Oct»iii*r, l9-')2 or thin' noiicr
will be plead in U>ir »f tn<‘ir recovery. All
Pfr«on> inrl*^'»e'l thi* sni<l estai**. wtil
cnil HVO'i llie iiiidt'rKiiined a( Cno-
leftntRr, N C . and tna>i» pr’iniU «a>iI«-
Mi'Ul Tbin ibe Sntb d4y «! Oitluber. I9SI
LONNIIS M. PEFTBLES Admr. nl
Genrup E. P«>vhl«‘s. ai-cti'd
Uncle Sam Says
Ol uouroe you know your ABC's t>«t do you know yovr D's and .E'sT Under present world conditions, D standtav for defense , and B standfoc for Series B Defense Bonds are Inseparable. By buy< Ing Defense Bonds regularly you help
build the nation's economic strengtb (iiat backs up eur defense effort. At the
aame time you are..helplnr yearself. Every Series B Bond you'own'aoto- 'matlcally goes on earning Interest every jrear for 20 years from date of purebase Instead of 10 years as before.
This moans that the bend you bought for SU.7S'«an return yen not Jiut m bvt'aa mueh as $33.33. A t3t.6« brad' pays f6<i.66. And so on.a. I traaiurr a«Mrlm*il
N(>w is «h«. time to ■ «uk >cribe for The' Rifcird. '
ATTENTION FARM ERS!
P O U L T R Y L O A D I N G
• W e W ill Buy Y o ur Poultry Every T h u M a y M orning From
S A t M*t To 11 A * M *
In Front Uf E. P. Foiten Colton Gin
HIGHEST Ma r k et prices paid
W IL L P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S
S A U S B U R Y P O U L T R Y C O .
• ____________ 5allsbnfy..N. C
The
Davie Record
Has Been Published Since 1890
52 Years
Other* have come and (one-your
county newspaper keeps goiiig.
Sometimes it has seemed hard to
make "buckle and tongue” meet but
soon the sun shines and again we
march on. Our faithful suhscnbm,'-
most bf whoin pay promptly, giye.,us
courage and abiding faith in bur
fellow man. ^ .
If your neighbor is not taking The.
Record tell him to subscribe. The
' price is only $l;iSb per year "in the
State, and $2.00 in other states.
W h e n Y o u C o m e T o T o w n
M a k e O u r O f f i c e Y o u r
H e a d q u a r t e r s . '
W e A r e A i w a v s G l a d T o
S e e Y o u .
LET US DO
YOUR »0B PRINTING
We can save you money
on your
E N V E L O P E S , L E T T E R H E A D S ,
S T A T E M E N T S , I P O S T E R S , B I L L
H E A D S , p a c k e t h e a d s , E t c .
P a t r o n i z e y o u i j h o m e n e w s p a p e r
a n d t h e r e b y ' h e l p b u i l d u p i y o u r
h o m e t o w n a n d c o u n t y .
T H E D A V IE RECO RD .
The Record hai jthe la rg e s t u fh ite
citC ttla H o n of a n ^ M tm e p a p e rs
♦I FOR RENT ♦
S P ^ C E ^ j N T H I S R A R E R ;
A rra n g e t b 'S i i K '
NEIGHBORS-tPWIS-TO
n T > b u R
D A V IE -C O U N T Y ’S O I,D X:ST N E W S P A P E K -T H B P A P E R T;BCE P E O P I.E H E A D
-HCHE SHALL THE THE PEOPLEfS RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNA WED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY CAIN.-
V O L D M N L I I.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 S D A Y D E C E M B E R s. i q ^ i.N U M B E R I!)
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
What Wm Happraing In Da.
*ie Befora Parking M rtm
And Abbreviated Skirta.
(Davie Record, D f t j , 1930.)
Uoekstrille seed coUoa 4c.
S ntar i« selling at s cents per
ponnd end coffee 19c. a ponad
H In Nell Hollbotiwr apent the
week>end III Charlotte witb (riendt.
Bruce Braxton,' a student at N .
C. Seale ColleKe, «pent tbe weelr.
end In town m th friends^
- -M r.-and-M r».-Ciln;ard-LeGrand.
o f M atthew s, apept .T hanksKlvInr
lo tow b w ith borne folks.
Mrs. E. C. Cboate and children
spent ThankagivInK wltb relatives
at S puta.
Miss Elizabeth Crouse, ot A d.
vance, was th e r e a t of M hs Amy
Hoore a few days Ian week.
Mrs. A. F. Duckett, of Ralejgb.
spent last week In town with her
mother. Mrs. W . K . Clement.
Mr. Slid M n . J. B, Price, of
Kannapolis, s ^ n t Sunday In town
the (oestr of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
W srd.
Mrs. I,eonard Ballentlne, of Car.
denas, apent _ Tbankaglvlnic with
her parents. Mr. snd Mrs. W . S.
W alker, on Route I.
H iss Kathryn Price, of Kannap.
: olla, spent iwveral days, last week
ill town, tbe eoest of Hiss Theo-
lene W ard. •
Mrs, G . G. panlel and daughter.
Hiss Pauline, spent several davs
last week in Stslesvllle with Mrs.
banlel’.a parents.
Fells H atdluK .. a student at
. W ake Forest Coltece, spent the
' TbanksKlvIng holidays here wllb
- bia parents. Dr. and Mrs. Asburv
HsrdlnR.
HIsses.Gllma Baliv and Sarah
Chaffin,: students .t H . C. C. W ..
Greeusboro, spent tbe week.end In
. town wltb tteir parents.
T bom aaW . Ricb left Wednes-
day altemobn for Miami Beach,
Flau, where be will spend tbe win.
ter ebjoylnR the warm sunshine,
M r. and Mrs. A ,-A . Holleman
, and cblldren, of Plum Branch, S.
. C., apent a few davs tbla. and last
week liHth relsiives and fi lends In
Ibis city. ^
" Miss Eva Call, who is teaching
tnasic in the Brevard schools, spent
• the “nianksRlvIng holidays In town
-with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
;W .L .C a ll.
’ . Ravm ond W taitakei, w ho was
: drow ned accidentally near Ralelgb,
: laat Friday, was brouicbt here and
. the tmdv laid to rest S uM ay after-
' noon.lii,Sm ith Grove cemetery. T.
I: Caudell conducted the funeral
nrvices,
. lobn P. LeOrand has purchased
. tbe.Allison & Clement stock ol
. goods and look charge Saturday.
: Mr LeGrand will operate Ibl.
' atora uader the old :Grm' name as
heretotore, and will continue his
a im store as heretofore.
Tbe first snow of the season fell
: here Isst Tuesday morning but
' melted as It fell. Snow also fell
! ' W ednndav mornlnR for a fe«'
' mlontes. ^Tbursdily morning ther
moineters In Mocksville registered
IS degrMS below freezing— which'
; waa the raidest morning Ibis' fs ll..
Rev. M. G . Erviri, the new' pas
torof tne Fsrmlngton Melbodlsi
d rc u ll, waa in town one day last
. Week. Mr. Ervin la. w ill'.pleaM d
w ltb bis new bonie'and his woik
■>in Dsvie cpunty,
\. T . K McDaniel, ol Edmonuon.
^ Maryland, apent taro davs the -psfi
week wltb'bome folks near Cornat-
zer. Mr. McDaniel la a railway
.mall cW k running iietween Wash.
' Ington a n j Hamlet. He baa many
Mends in and around Mocksville
■^ srbo'are always gisd to welcome
.. bitaj back to” .the good/ old - home
'.‘ cDUiity. ..-, '
Youth And Truth
Rav. W alnr E. l!i«ih«if. Taylora<illle.N. 0
I saw a y outh go forth one day
W h o m et the T ru th along the
ways
Said T ru th to y o u th , "C o m e go
w ith m e, 1
I ’ll m ake y ou noble as can he;
I ’ll lead you far from every wrong
A nd build yon up and make you
. strong
For God and H is eternal cause,
And keep you true to nature’s
lawa.”
S a ii youth to Truth, L’I ’ll go. wltb
you
And trust your strength to take
me through
This world of sin,-wllb ev’ry test.
Because I want to do my best
To live for God and all that’s right.
And be a burning, shining light.
So when my race on earth is run
I ’ll bear the Master say, ‘W ell
done.’ •’
I aa'w the youth begin to climb
A nd rise lo life to things suUlme
H is aims were blgb, his purpose
good;
tie used his time as each one
should;
He formed no habit had nor vile,'
Though others ssid, “ He’s out
of style;”
He pioved himself a noble youth
As on and on be followed Truth
H e lived ff life upright and clean,
A nd abunned tbe low ’ and vile
and mean;
He didn’t steal, be didn’t lie.
Nor serve tbe dAril on the aiy;
His face waa bright, his eyes were
clear.
As on he journeyed, year by year
Along tbe road lhat leads to God
Where blessed, saintly men bave
trod.
In after years I saw this youtb,
■Whose strength snd leader was
the Trutb,
Come up to grand and hoary age.
Like aome blest patriarch or sage
And looking back across the past
He said,. - I’m nesting home at
last;”
Then soon be went to meet bis
Lord .
A nd to receive bis rich reward.
Altbougb he didn't Kscb a throne
A nd caniie a monument of stone
To be erected to his home
T o long perpetuate bia fame,
Hia sons and daughters call him
great
A nd strive bis llie to , emulate.
W hile hundreds live for God today
Because' he led them In this way.
A young w oman on a suburban train looked up from her book and
gasped'in surprise. Perched on She
m ouldeis of the m an opposite were
a pair of plgeonsl The m an sat calm ly reading his newspaper, ap
parently oblivious of the birds.The girl restrahied her curiosity
until the train reached her station Ihen^ she could restrain herself no
longer.“W hat in the world a r e those
pigeons dohig on your shoulder?” she asked.
The m an looked up, shrugged his
shoulders and replied: “Darned If
I know. They got on w ith m e at
the station." .
Belter call at Ibit office
now and «et your land p ^
ten before the supply is eZ'
hausted. Printed on bea»,
card board. 50c. per dozen.
STOM ACH GAS
Taxes the H E A R T
A n aM umulatlon of gas In the s to m a l forma presBorOa CrowdB tbe
heart and results In bloaUnff, " g i^ ay*' catches, palpitation and short* nesB ot breath. This: condlUonm ay
vfrequenUy he mistaken for heart vtrouble.CBRTA.Vn, _ «vlcUms" « l 070C I
IN is t
dew modlolne is taken before meals. 00 it works irlth.your:food~helps you digest food taster , and better.
Gae pains gbi Bloat vanishes! Con*
tains Herbs and V itam in B*1 with
Iron to enrich the blood- and make
nerves stronger. Vealc. miserable people soon feel dltferent all over. So.don’t go on snttorlhg. Get OER* TA^vm>-W ilkins Drug Store.
M OST VNVSUALI Bottoms Vpl A flashy character barged Into a
Detroit saloon, demanded a double jigger of scotch, downed It In one
gulp, plunked a $5 bill on the counter, and walked out without another
word. The bartender" folded the
liver carefully, pocketed It, and re
marked to the bar-f ■.................. ir«flics. "C an youbeat a phony like that? Laps up a
double scotch, leaves a five dollar tip, and beats it without paying!*'
Definitions *
"W hat is a debtor, pa?”
"A m an who owes money."
” And w hat is a creditor?"
“ The m an who thinks he*s going to get it."
Frank Approach
b i a Chicago restaurant one woman was overheard isaying to an
o th e r:'“W hy don't you go to him in a perfectly straightforward way
and lie about the whole thing?''
W HAT X E SOW . . a
From Detroit comes a story ot
the day when a big m inister's con
vention and a powwow of automo
bile salesmen were held simul
taneously in the same hotel. The
salesmen were topping off a bi|
dinner w ith “spiked watermelon’ for dessert, but tbe bard-pressei
waiters served.lt to the minister:
by m istake. The m aitre d’hotel was
franUe when he heard' of the mix- up. “That watermelon is soaked In
alcohol," he moaned. “ G el it away from those ministers before they
run m e out of town^" '
The waiters returned to say It
was too late: the ministers were
busy chewing away a t the prized
w atermelon. “ W hat did they say?*’ asked the harrassed m aitre d'hotcl.
“How did they like it?"
“ D on't know ," was the reply,
**but they put all the seeds in tbeir
pockets."
Bad Hearbig Dialogue overheard In the office
of « small-town eye, ear and throat
•peclalist:.-•♦What do I owe you lor curing
m y deafness, young m an?"
“Ten dollars."••What's that? Twenty dollars?**1 aald $30, m a’am ."
. Right Crowd
‘Brothers," said the colored preacher, "The subject of m ah ser
mon today is liars. How m any in
dis congregation hove read the 69th chapter of M atthew ?" Nearly every
hand went up.You is' de people ah wants to preach" to ;"- th e ■ reverend- -said;
'Dere is no such chapter."
First of All
Romeo was the first quizmaster. Remember his declaration that hi>
had a lady in the balcony?
THANKS. T EAC H ER
Sir Oswald Motley, leader of the
British Union of Fascists, had marched at tlic he.'ul ^of a great
procession to A*vorl Hall in London. where a lar^e crowd awaited
him . Witlj dram atic effect be mount
ed the rostrum under Ihe glare of
spotlights and raised, his arm in the Fasciist salute. The effect was ruined
by a voice from the gallery callin'*.
“ Yes, Oswald, you m ay leave tin-
room l"
And W ith Glasses The girl who Is a vision in the
moonlight m ay be a sight in the
sunlight.
V nnaUerbig PortraU
At the height of his trust busting campaign, Theorore Roosevelt
had his portrait painted by an artist friend. When he saw the fin
ished work, he shuddered. A ll his un> flattering features had been exag
gerated.“ Do I refilly took like that lo
you?" he said.The artist nodded.
“H m m m ," muttered T. R . “Now I know why I have so m any ene
m ies."
Unde Sam Says
R E M E M B E R S W H EN
Our County And
Social Security
Bv W . K . W hite. M anaeer
A re you employed as a maid?
Cook? Gardner? LAundiress? Chu>
ffeur? O r baby sitter in a private
home? If you are, the work you
are doine nnay be covered by the
n e ^ social security insurance pro*
ccam. M any o f you already know
this. M any o f you already have
had waces reported for you as a
domestic worker. If you are cm
ployed as a household ■ worker in
a private hom e o n at least 24 days
this quarter, that Is October, No«
vember and December, and are
paid'at least $50 in cash wages,
your earnings w ill be credited to
your social security account.
I f you worked on at least 24
days for one household during Ju
ly. August, September doing do
mestic work in a private hom e
and you ^ working for the same
people this quarter, you only have
to be paid $50 or more in cash
wages during this quarter by that
employer for those earnings td
count toward your social security
benefits. If you did not work 24
days last quarter, you m ust work
on at least 24 days this quarter for
the same employer, as well as be
ing paid $50 in cash wages.
Remem ber, you m ust be a
gular** domestic worker for your
earnings to' count under social se
curity. Y ou are a “regular” do-
mestic worker if you are paid at
least $50 in cash wages in a quar.
ter and if you worked at least 24
days for the same employes dur
ing this quarter or during the pre
vious quarter. A n easy way to
remember this ts to think o f it as
the '*24-50 test**. 24 days this quar
ter or last quarter and $50 in cash
wages this quarter, all from the
same houtehold employer, gives
you credit in your social security
account.
A representative, o f this office
w ill be in Mocksville again on
Dec. 12th. at. the court house,
second floor, at 12:30 p. m .. and
o n the same date in Cooleemee,
at the old Band H all, over Led
ford's Store, at 11 a. m.
Quartermaster Corps
W hen the Ihiited States began
sending its troops into Korea, the A rm y’s Quartemaster Corps, which
had reduced its . personnel and
facilities to a pattern commensu’-
rate with the requirements of the
post>W orld, W ar II arm y, was
ready for the task. The entire organization was so constituted that
it could readily expand to meet any eventuality. Proof of the Quarter
m aster Corps* ability is in^ts World
S e e n A lo n g f M a i n S t r e e t
By The Street Rambler.
000000
M rs. John D urham on her way
to gift shop— Miss Carolyn Fere-
bee waiting on bus— Girls in bad
hum or because they have been
put on retired list until after the
holiday8-*Leslic Daniel carrying
turkey across M ain street— Miss
Frankie Junker eating candy bar
— Miss Nancy Cheshire looking
at Christmas display w indow at.
Leslie's Men's Shop—P h il Jo h n
son getting late start to work—
Congressman Charlie Deanekeep* ~
ing company with M ayor D urham
and Boyce C ain—Reuben Berrier
pasting Santa Claus pictures in
display xVindows at the Firestone
store ^O ld citizen looking at re
volving Christmas tree, playing
'Jingle Bells” - Rev. A. I. Cox in
tonsorat parlor getting hair cut—
I. Sm ith buying heavy winter
garments on chilly m o rn in g - R .
Randall getting before Christ-
nrias hair cut - W om an leaving lo
cal cafe smoking big cigar—Miss
Floiencc Mackie trying to get into
bank on W ednesday afternoon—
Harley Sofley paying for Christ
mas seals-M rs. J. W . H ill busy
decorating dining tables—Y oung
matron from Cooleemee remark
ing lhat m ost people talked too
m uch—Spencer Hanes conversing
with legal light— Bill Sofley sitting
in drug store (holding small baby
on his lap— Phil. Godbey buying
dieatre ticket—Miss Deon Low
ery and small nephew doing some
after Tlianksgiving shopping—C .
F. Meroney, Jr.,. loading heating
stove into auto trunk- H fteen *
clerks and one customer busy in
local store— Miss Ossie AlHsc^h
m ailing thousauds of Christmas
seals— M r. and Mrs. R alph W alt
ers m otoring dow n M ain street—
Arm y recruiting officer talking
w ith high school boys in front of
court house— Ed Sanford getting
ready to make a run o f locust
beer— Members o f Gossip C lub
wanting to know w hat had hap
pened to the town's Christmas
lights w hich once decorated the
square during the holiday season
— Miss H ilda M arkham walking
up M ain street looking at bank
deposit book W ill M arkland try
ing to locate Hubert Lashm it—
Lee Craven buying cocanut pie—
Mrs. W ayne Merrell and -Mrs.
Vera Dwiggins doing some before
Christmas m o rn in g shopping in
Cash Store. ,
inalon In 1945 w ith 54 30,744 other of-
During the quail season Bruce
Cooper m et an old farm er hunting
with an ancient pointer. Twice the dog pointed. Twfee his m aster kick
ed a t the m atted growth, wheeled sharply and fired tato the empty
air. When 0 » p e r saw no birds rise, he asked the farm er for an
explanation.. "Shucks,** grinned the did m anr
knew there w am 't no birds in
that grass. Spot's nose a in't w hat
it used to be. But him and m e have
seen some wonderful days together.
He’s stiU doing his best-and U*d be
mighty little of m e to call him a
liar."
This being November, let'etalk tnrkey.
And turkey in Ihtn eaiie ineiinB wbat*e good ror.yoo and all of O. 8. allkei In
abort. II means greater Individual and oatleaa} eeonrtty. By pitrebasliig Do*
~ ~ •egularly through the Payroll Savlngs Plan where you . work, or tbe:Bond-A-Montb Plan where yea bank, you ean ayslemalloally build up flnaaelal leenrtty for youradf and your family. At the same time you oan be. atrengthenlng America’s seeu^ against aggression and eemtohilo dla- iMers
ALMOST CONVINCED
Jeb, accused of stealing cblek-
ens. was taken before the Judge.
His lauy* made such a stirring plea that Jeb was aequitted. OuC
sme the courtroom his friend turned to him arid said. “ Jeb,
did you or didn't you steal those ehlekens?" “Well.** replied Jeb.
•«to teU the trulh I thought 1 did. but after hearing that there law
yer, l*m dum ed if I know whether I did or not."
applause, Garry-. : Unappreciative“How was the applaui
m ore?" .
“ Teddible. It sounded like a'eater-
pUlar in sneakers stom ping across,
a persiiui rug."
W ar I I record. The Corps reached
in 1945
general officers. 3 llcers. and 467,286 enlisted person
nel. Between December 7, 1941, and
August 1, 1945. the Quartermaster
purchases totaled more than 20. bit'
Uon dollars not including petroleum,
oil and lubricants. On August 14,
1945—V J Day— the Corps w as in
the process of buying, storing, and
issuing * approximately 41,000,000
pounds of foodstuffs per day. or at
the rate of 15 billion .pounds a year.
FORB?ia;<
Ono sum m er morning, v *
▼ acation, Norwegian drsn>>i!
H enrik Ibsen called at thv h'jroc •
a fellow artist and asked to $oc Uu
U tter's wife.“ A button has come oil my cutu.'
Ib s to explained to. her. “ and
m ust sew* it*-on again Would yoi
pleaso titread this needle for ntc?
M y eyes are not strong."
H e banded her a needle and spool of thread. She completed the
task in’ a moment, and Ibsen
thanked her and departed.. Several
weeks later, the two m et again.
"H ow i s . your sewing coming
along?** she asked. •'Have you been threading the needle yourself
since I last saw. you?" .
“ Oh no,", replied Ibsen. made sure then that the thread would be
long enough to last m e a ll sum*
m e r." .
North Carolina
Davie CnuiUv III The Sup eilor C«urt
C. S. D u n n et al ■. -
vs .’ - '■
The unknow n heirs o f Jo h n p u n n ,
deceased, W osh D u n n , deceased,
Mitchell D u nn, deceased, and Se-
n i D u n n W illiam s, deceased.
'lofice, 'Serving; Sum-
moDS by Publicatioa
The defendants, the said u n
know n heirs of John D u n n , de-,
ceased; W osh U unn, deceased;',
M itchell D unn, deceased, and Se- '
nl D unn W lJIiam s, decewed, w ill
take notice that an action entitled ;
as above has been comm enced in V
the Superior'court o f Davie Coun- *'
tv. N orth Carolina; to sell seven- i
teen acres of land, being the land i
o f M ollie D u nn Sm ith, deceased,
in Farmington Tow nship, for the , .S
purpose o f sale and petition a-i ','
m ong tlie heirs; and the said de-1
fendants will further take notice s
that t h ^ are required to appear J
at the office o f the Clerk o f the ■
Superior C ourt o f said county in
the couirc house in Mocksville,-.?''
N orth Carolina, w ithin ten davs i-
after the 4th day o f January, 1952;K and answer or dem ur to the com-; :;
plaint in said action, or the plain-*
tiff w ill applv to ihe court for ,, the;;
relief ilemanded in said com plaintvj
This 19th day o f N ovem ber, 1951;* S. Hv C H A F F IN C S C
Davie C ounty. Ni'vG.
B , C . Brock, AttornCT,