10-OctoberV
PAGE EOUB
OEVOrU'^VL ^UuVT^'AV. /s-.tM •.*.
Glory Is Brittle
Les4ioa for Ti. V.‘f^
^ A LL :h« rcU -;t lix<nan’.« ar.y sLn jici^i cr j ?%•■..know of. :ha: cr-.'-s ir.<-v xt-:.
ROW is bu: du#;. Yi-'u ii you knw ts.417 ai4%'7>-. •Jr.ji:-ruin began j«*. afv ___er a pericc of #?•«- cial brilUanc«. I: as U the old proverb were reversed, and the brlghest h o u r came }ust b efo re the dark. Why L« this? One reason is that the glamor and the glory were not what they seemed Ot.ferm c, to be. Beneath the glittering surface of thangs. the foundations were rotting away. Glory, personal or national, is a brittle thing.
Bong! Want the Empire
VO U do not have to poke abou: in large x'olumes of history to find this out. For a small sum you can buy a book that tells the storj of the most famous nation of ai; lime,—namely, the Bible, giving the history of the nation called Israel. Israel was a remarkably short'Ilved nation. Three kings’ rcifrns spanned its whole his* tory /rom beginning to end. A lter, that, Bang! it split into two picccs, indeed into more than two. For not only did it divide into the t\vo kingdoms of the nortli and of the south, but it disintegrated everywhere.All the-, conquests of David were undone. The Empire ol Israel (for , empire it was) simply went to plece.^ : at every s6am. What had been, for a time, the greatest and 'only em* pire between the Nile and the Euphrates, fell to pleccs fearfully fast. , And all that crash occurred inmicdi- ately after the death of Solomon, that king whose reign is still rr memembered for its wealth, glamo and magnificance. How could such things be?
Glamor (or the Few
p A R T OF llie answer is thnt the ^ glory didn't spread around ver: far. There was no middle class. an<^ the gap between Solomon and Iv crowd at the top. and the peasant, on the bottom, was enormous.Solomon’s only known son, Reho- boam, told a mass-meeting of citizens shortly after Solomon’s death. ."My father beat you with whips.’* Rehoboam was not trying to blacken his father’s memory; he wcrs stating a simple fact. The common man had indeed taken a beating under Solomon.To build the king’s great pub* l|ei\rorks cost money, and need- eV:->(!ii those non-mechanical days) armies of laborers. Tl^erc was the immensely costly Temple, and thea (here was the royal palace, larger than the Temple, requiring nearly twice as long (0 build and no doubt oorrespondingiy e xp e n siv e ; there were other temples, pub* lie buildings, p o o ls, wafer works, fortifJcathss, royal stables .at Negiddo and what not. King Solomon lound It neccs* sary to work thousands of his people, without pay, one month out of every three.The fact that about nine tenth of the people were ripe for rebc' lion within months after Solomon' death, shows that, to say the lea.-;; they were not contented and happ; Nations often do die, or blov.' u - just after periods of “ prosperity.’ but it will generally be found th: - the prosperity was quite badly d'; • trlbuted. There js little true gloi- in a nation where a few grow ric. upon the poverty of the many.• • •
Ttigh Income Bracket
lUT THAT Is not the whole story Even if every one in the country were equally wealthy, it might n r bo good. Strange as it seems, th Bible is full of warnings, not s- often against poverty as agnins- wealth.The truth about Israel Is not that Solomon and his friends prospered while the rest nf the nation decayed; the fact Is. Solomon and hi« set were dreay- Ing (00, not in spite of their wealth but because of It.The king's annual income hrir. been computed at some ninetnrn million dollars of our money. Wn hear that he built templeR to other gods besides the true God. all he. cause of his wives’ influence, if he had been a poor man, he could not have married those expensive imported princesses. A man with e:c- cess income w ill often mis-spend it, ninety*nine times out of a hundred; and Solomon was not the hundredth man.• Today in A-.nerlca every dollar soent on drink, on gambling, is a surplus dollar, an uneasy doIJar, Net that you can in any way wipe out r;n by eliminating excessive wealth; l.ut you might remove a lot of lcmDtatlons.'<
Methodist Ministers
Suggest Smoking
Eon Be Discarded
f-VS rS.<.N V ;S.V - Mi-llimiist sir .'.r ;>-f Ktn m
.■•/.•VI., vr.-’*'»Vinc its first
whrn r. ih.tlSf f*.-*s-,V't;ric iV.-s-ipr n.' l.%nrfV I'c oi.n.-.viMf's fAr ;hr min*
A :.*■>;! .•'Ar.’X' .i :rinjc of'b.'iip.-.T 4. rc^'ort on
A JV^k.<k»n. N .Y..
t rt?.rf?fr.t.r.f the Xow.w.frrcnof ;hf i-’-.urc-h, a': rfifrrni-'c :ho per- Sa?. « .,-4 r.-.i-.-.s-try bo Ac-
i't'i. fr,‘.r,*. rc:v7t beJ«>re it? rrp.' the
7:.-e he &ssserttvi.
•w'.f i.v r T^rrMx mir.isitcrsi to
4^* u?? & habit th.it: ctvck*? •*
Mr. was .'.efea;cf!•v<r.vhf*^.-:ifly Vy a show of h.-.nd:*
.Kz *j:fc7r.*.4l ?«oU of 5ever.ni con- U7tT.:^ csJSdaif after the vote in- •i-.cate-i tha; th# repcvrt had a poor chdr.ce ci firs’, passage later in the #e«icr. ^
At preseat candidates for th* •Vet-hccisc ministry are required tr file satUiactory answers to sever.'i* questieas. one of them being: "Will you abstain from the use of tobacer and other indulgences which may injure yoxir influence?”
According to the report, this requirement ''seems to single out onr indulgence and leaves unmenticned any number of weighter matters It raises to central importance ar. indulgence which does net merit such a place of honor.”
•Noting that many Methodists are opposed to the use of tobacco, the report declared:
“ Therefore, we are recommending that w^e hold our standards oi personal discipline as high as always, but that we place this mattei on a higher level than the legal. W« recommend that no man be requirer to sign a promise that he will not smoke.”
It added, however, that each pro spective clergyman be asked ”10 make a complete dedication of himself to the highest ideals of the Christian ministry."
TBE DAVIE KECOKD, MQCKSViLLE N. C,. SEPTfiMBBR 24, IM2
B
YOUR
c h eyh o u n d a g e n t
for BEST BUYS
I N T R A V E L
T O A L L A M E R I C A
You’ll find him at the sign of
the running Greyhound in
7000 towns in oil 48 states
. . . and around Ihe world!
EASTBOUND
E«so« Lcova;
(0.*00 a. m tZiSO p. m 2:05 p. ni 4:45 p. m. 6:45 p .m . 9:15 p. m
W INSION-SALEM f 6i
GREENSUORO, N. C. 1.35 RALEIGH, N. C. 3-25NOKFOLK, VA. 8-10
WESTBOUND
Bwtos Leovet
7:45 a. ni. 9:00 a. xn- 11:20 a. m
1:00 p .m . 2:45 p .m . 5:50 p. m
STATESVILLE $ (>o
CHARLOTTE i a-,
D A VIDSON I
ASH E V Ij.IJi 3 ^*^
Flus T n . Ssfr« StwlaH ca Rwmf Ttfpt
W IL E IK S DRUG 00.
Phone 21
Mocksville, N. 0.
GREYHOUND
C B O i l i O P i l U L
DOWN
l.lkflthen
10. C iy tn
Turkey11. U'toae, llowittg
gnnnent13. BUghl13. Otrus fruit14. Male sheep
IN. Place of
w'orchtp 16. ao»e to IT. Wen done?
19. Faculty of sight ^l.O ose to
2i. Harden
tvar.)26. A door Joint27. DUpateh
2S. Principalmountain mass (Ccol.)29. Be still!31. Music note
32. Bungled S5. River (Pot) 36. An airplane(P.)S7. Subside30. A game at cards40. Famous mission
(T«c*)41. The Orient42. Tardier
ACROSS1. Palatial2. First maa tBIb.)
S. Fuel 4. Emmet
5. Sodium
(sym.)6. Forewarn7. Play
hofsterously
a. Ancient coin (Gr.)S. Sanily tract
(Eng.)12. Oarea13. Monetary
unit (Butg.)
15. Convert into leather17. Plant
of the pea family
18. Spawn
of Aah30. Source of light22.Ha{/«ms
23. One who agitatea24. Purify2C. Owns
25. W et earth30. Female fowl32. Manufae*
ture - •
33. Pigmented layer of iris94. Paddle*like
procesiei
u s r wfiK*&
ANSWER ^
IDEnUULi □□□n in a a c io □ □ b q □□□□ [IQDnE] l3l^ u a o H B iiiB n Qi:i c!mDi:i cinQQrsQ B a o B Lim nciii n iS E n ri □ Q uri D aaE !n D i Qi::!□ nun lu n ii d q Um'SlU] □ ODQ LUUDQ □nnnnu QQQ QQORQ
0*33
9». Identical37. A wing3 8.au b 40. Man's
nickname
I
1
I
i
P
i
m .
Please Help Us!
W e have lost tlie names of a
few of our sokiii-r bt.vs whose
pictures appear below. Ifvou re*
c tinisc om* or more, Dleasc ad
vise us, and wc will appreciate
very much:
FO R PU RE CRYST A L ICE
C O A L FO R G R A TES, STO V ES, FU R N A C E AN D STO K ER S
It W ill Pav You To Call O r Phone U s. ■
W c Make Prompt Delivery
Mocksviiie Ice & Fuel Co,
Phone 116 Mocksvlllc, N. C.
♦ F O R R EN T ♦
SPACE IN THIS PAPER
Will Arrange To Suit
G O O D NEIGHBORS--P5ICES TO
FIT yOUR BUSINESS
NFW MONEY FOB
VOl'K OLD THINGS
1«v Ui*««rd«4P(»A*, tleyefe. Tcaia.1«# n«\. b« wM «HN
* AV IH
The Record has the larqest white
circulation ot any Davie paper.
THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD
TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE
FOR ALL YOUR FARM AND HOME
NEE DS UNDER ONE ROOF
Shop Here
(Complete Line O f -
W O R K CLOTHES W O R K SHOES
W O O L A N D COTTON BLANKETS
Dan River Plaids
G E l READY FOR COLD W EATHER
See O ur Complete Line O f Stoves
Coal Stoves, Wood Heaters, O il Circutators Famous Seigjer O il Circulator
Use Decorated W alnut Enameled Stove Pipe
. ELECTRIC PAINTS H U N TIN G SU PPFIFR
Mixers Kover • - Best Remington,
Irons an d Fox &. Stevens
Lamps W A L L -F IX Rifles and Shot Guns
Toasters Inside and Outside Peters Shells and
Hot Plares Paints Ammunition
C EM EN T, M O RTAR M IX , A SP H A LT RO O FIN G , CEM EN T B LO C K S,
C O N C R ETE P IP E , TE R R A C O T TA P IP E_____________________
Royster Agrico Scoco
FERTILIZERS
JOHN DEERE FARM IMPLEMENTS
M A R T I N B R O T H E R S
PHONE 99 N EA R T H E D EPO T MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
J 'v The Davie Record
D A .V IE C O T J N T T ^ S O L D E S T N E W S P A P E K - - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E K E A D
V O L O M N L I I I
M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W H D N B S D A Y O C T O B E R i . iqss N U M B E R g
NEWS OF LONG AGO. Rich In Godliness
W h a t W a t H A p p « n in s I n Da<
B a ^ o r9 P iif k iii^ M e te r s
A n d A b b r e v ia t e d S < iru .
(Pflvie Record, Sept. 21, 1937)
C otton Is worth 8 cents n pound.
M r. and M rs. W . E* S m ith •onjl
E . H . S m ith , of H a rm o ny . R , 3.
were in tow n Friday*
M rs. S. L* H ill, of near Ashe-
horo, la visiting relative.*} at Ibe
ttome of M rs. P lo k T urner, on
R o ute I.
M esdatnes W . F . and W . T .
D w lsg ln s spent T hnr^eay w ith re*
latW es and friends at B ethenla.
M any people from th is sectloti
are expected here this week to a t'
tend the D avie C otinty Fair.
■ M rs. T. P , L e G ran d left Wed-
oesday for A llendale, S . C .. where
ahe «rl]| speod three weeks w ith re.
latlve^ and friends.
E . H . Frost, o f th is city, has nc-
cepted a position as salesm an In th r
r e n t's fnrn lsh ln e departm ent of
G ilm e r’s, at W inston-Salem .
A rm and D anlel 'le ft W ednesday
for C olum bia, S . C .. w here he w ill
re e n te r Ih e U nlversU v of ^ South
C aro lina and resume his studies.
*rhur«dav was one o f the hottesr
days th at th is section has exoerl.
enr«d In m a ny vears. T herm om e
ter« registered around 95 decrees
in Ihe shade w ith h u t little breeze.
Officers from A lainance county
cam e to M ocksvlUe and carried se«
ven D avie f>rlsoners,"to Alam ance
c o u n tv chain e ane, four w hites
a«<1 three blacks. \ ;
M r. and M rs. H o n t, o f C har,
lo tte. are stonplne here .w ith M r
■ anH M rs, J; h- S h e e t. M r, H u n t
Is a landscape ea-idner, is now con.
nested w ith the H , C lay W illiam .*
farm .
Sherlflt Cope and Det>nty W ad^
E flton meandered dow n Into F u lto r
tow nshlo M onday n ie h t of last
w eek and captured a hlc' 60 traitor
eanaeity hlockade distllH oe outfit,
t ^ e t h e r w ith m uch beer. T he stil'
w »s o n 'tb e H airston farm . A rnn
!:1i«d heen m ade before th e officer*
lit, snd nrepam tlons -were b e lnr
m ade to tu rn out another sUDoly of
w ater.
Tn addition to pavlnff and ciirK
in e the t>nbilc square and the most
. a*»ractlw In th is section.
M rs. T hom as M cp a n le l (lied a>
her bom e near M t. V ernon 1a«l
T bu w d ay m o rnlne of cancer.
a»eil 66 venrs. T he bodv was laid
trt T^nt In C orinth eravevard Ftl-
d a v . R e v . M r. Bflrnea, of Coolee
m>e condnetln? the funeral bnrlsl
s«*rvlce*. M r. M cD aniel la aurvlv
ed b y her husband, three sons and
tw o dauehters. S h ^ was a daueb
t»r o f the late Tftth B verly. o f near
K ap na. M r*. M cD aniel bad 3?
erandchlldren, 3 «reat erand chlld-
reu.
- M rs. fane Strond., w idow of the
late R ichard Strnod. died at th r
- bom e ot her dsu ch tp r. M rs. A . A.
C a.tner, near C ounty L in e Sundav
evenlne. aee 90 years. T he funer-
al and b«r»«l services were held al
; Society B aptist rhw rch M onday
- afternoon, R ev, M r, Price conduct.
' in e the serv|-es. M r. Stroud Is sur-
vtved b y three daughters and one
son. '
F orm er coun ts are n t G ^oree
E «a n s has moved his fam ily from
his farm rfn R . S. W nilam s
farm near H a ll's F erry bridge, and
M r. E vans has entered noon his
new duties a« nyinaeer of the WII-
. ' lU m s fa rm T he R ecord Is sivrry
th at these eood neople have left
o n r section b u t elad th at they w ill
. rem ain in D avie. N o cou n ty agent
has yet been selected to fill the va.
eaucy caused h y M r. Evan** re-
aitm atiou.
M r. aod M rs. C harles F ly n n
M eroney, « M ocksviiie announce
t}.« m arrlaee of their dau^ter,
D orothy, to M t. H ltto u L am ar
Rev. Wittrr.R. lunhour. Tavlornvllle. N. C
It is erent and w tm derfni to ne
io V* d ’ines*. T'* s •i-'iHe
novwiM.. I»v nnr Lord Jesus ChYlSf
w ho left j^ is riches lo glory and
come toTearth to save us from all
o ur sins and to clease our hearts
and souls th rouch H is precious
Mood^ Praise H is holy and m atch,
less n a m e .'
It Is G od 's w ill th at we betrodlv.
H e m ay perm it us the m ateiia]
thIoKS of th is w orld, and does, In
proportion to our tem poral need,
b u t godliness Is to be desired and
sousht after m uch m ore'than m at.
eral thines.
Jesns said, “ seek ye first the
kiofirdom of G od. an/| his riehteous.,
ness; and all these thln^Es shall be
added u nto you.'* (M att 6:33).
Tt Is m y sincere believe th at everv
person w ho w ill obey the M aster
In this respect w ill be taken care of
in a tem poral, m aterial w av. W e
don’t have to w orry over w hat we
«ball eat or d rin k , nor how wc
ehall meet exnenses. if we measure
tip to this Scripture alone llfe*s
journey.
T o be rich In crodllness brines
sweet peace and jo y to one's heart
and soul. T his Is not m erely for a
little w hile, b ut It Is forever If we
stav «o a lv . W e k now the heart
and soui of m an desires jvace and
jo y , b u t the sad th in e is the vast
m ultllud as seek snch In sin and
wlckedne««.^: T hey turn to the
world Instead of G od.
A m an ttiay be rich In money,
stock and hbnds. bouses aud land,
h u t If bis soul Is destitute of
ness, and the-of erace, h e Is far
from b elu? a hapov m ao. H e mav
he miserable. M en o f earthly
w ealth aud riches feho are sinners
certainly are oovertv stricken In
their hearts and sonJs. S piritual
ooverty Is far worse th a n m aterial
onverty.
A nyone th at Is rich In eodllness
has found life’s true riches. Such
riches are not on ly blessed .and
w onderful to life b y , h u t they are
Indeed elorlnus to die by. Men
have to part w ith their earthly,
rlcbes at death and the erave. but
those w ho are rich In eodiiness
carry th e ir riches w ith them Into
the heavenly w orld w here they
«hfll1 enjov them forever and . ever.
Therefore elve m e the riches of
^ii^liness Instead silver and eold
itid the m aterial thines of earth.
— ---- --------------->
R u th , of Sallsbnry, T hursday,
Septem ber the fifteenth, /
W . L . C all has returned from
Greensboro, w here he spent a we^k
in a' hosoltal b a v ln e one .of- *‘bls
eyes rem oved. H e had spent sev.
.eral weeks In a*Bsltim ore hospital
try ing to .save hU eye, b u t It failed
to respond to treatm ent and had to
be taken out,
SEE US FOR
T RA C T O R O AS
or Deisel Pow6f U-
nits. Mowers, Rakes
Plow^ Harrow* am
Anything you need
in ' the Implemen
Line.
For thB'BEST ta Quality, B « t in
Price, B e.t in Service.
Hendrbc & W ard
W IN STO N -SALEM H IG H W A Y
T IM E M A RC H ES ON
The daughter o ljh e household was
very enthusiastic about her new boy friend. “ Oh, mother,” she
sighed, “I just know Gregory ia dreadfully in love with m e. Why,
when he takes m e in his arm s and holds m e close, I can hear his heart
pounding and pounding."“Let's not jum p a t conclusions,”
the mother cautioned. “Your father fooled m e the same way with a
cheap w atchi”
Sound Logic
Two motorists m et on a bridge
too narrow for two cars to pass.
“ I never back up for an idiot,*'
shouted one driver.
"T hat’s a ll right,’* replied the other quietly, as he shifted into re*
verse. " I always do." ,
Verbal Duel r g u m ^ t ]is where two people
are trjring to |(et in the last word
first.
The Difference
A w om an driver drives the same
w ay a m an does>-but gets blamed
for i t
Always Works
One of the best face-saving idea$ is to keep the lower half of it shut.
Light Answer
A youngster w as asked to name the principal cultural contribution ot
the Phoenicians. T h e answer:
•Blinds.”
CIRCUM STANTtAL E V ID E N C E
H er brow pockered In vexation, wee Joan sot^bt out her father.
'•Daddy,*' ahe loqulred, “was m am m a a m l naughty girl
when she W M mj age f^ ChuokUng, «Im father shook his
head. don’lt tln k so. Why?'*•' *Caus« If riM waan*t/* Joan
persisted, •how would she know exaoUy w hat ^seadons to ask
when she w ants to know whether I've bee&naiigMyT**
T o n g b lM m Ink is blue hoeause lt*s in a par
finishing out a aantence.
Bury M e Not Passbig out dirty digs is the best
w ay to bury friendship.
OALLAN T KN IGH T
As a N ew Y ork taxi dodgud daringly through ccmgested tratfic, the
driver startled his passenger hi .saying, “ I've been watching you in
(the m irror ever ahice you got in.” '■t “ Yes?*’ she responded uncertain*
ly.“ Yep. And w hat I w eiit to say.
la'am ,” he continued gallantly, certabxly ride a taxi w ellt”
C ^ e a i Home
M an is that peculiar anim al who gets a hearty laugh out ot an old
fam ily album and then looks in the
m irror w ith < ^'so m uch as a grin.
' ^ ' E a rly Training ••Jack, dear," said the bride, •‘let
us try to m ake the people believe we've been m arried a long tim e.”
“A ll right, honey,*' cam e the reply, “ but do you*'think you can
carry both suitcases?’'
N U M B E R , P L E A ^
Sam e Shape
Tourist <ln village store): “ W ad
dya got in the shape of automobiU tires?”
Clerk: “Funeral wreaths, liic pre
••rvers, invalid cushions and dough
•uts.”
More U.S. Life Insurance
Fundi Go Into Real Estate,
More than a quarter of a billion
dollars of real estate was ncquircd
as an investment by the U.S. life
insurance companies during largely as a result of the acccierated
activity in commercial and indus* trial rental properties in the latter
part of the year. A targe part of this new real* estate investment was
in facilities for defense industries.
The year's new investment totaled
$274,000,000. of which $195,000,000
was in commercial and industrial rental properties. Purchases in 1050
had been $161,000,000. Total real estate holdings at the end of 1951
were $1,617,000,000. of which $B18,« 000,000 was in cninm crcial and in
dustrial rentals. Company-used real
estate accounts for $382,000,000 of
holdings and rental housing for $352,-
000,000.
Beautiful City
B y the time Charlemagne sent the first missionary to Christianize the natives in 727, Bremen was already
prospering as a G erm an market and
trading town. Jn the centuries that
fo llo w ^, the com m unity became a great religious center — a second
Rom e to the powerful princes of the Church who ruled vast estates from
their Bremen palaces. Before the 15th century Bremen had achieved
a degree of self-government rem ark
able for the times. Its elected town
council exercised the supreme legis
lative power in .civ il and crim inal
cases. Later, m erchnnt groups
gained control of the council but individual enterprise was allowed to
flourish and the city, as a member of the Hanseatic League, became
rich and influential. Before World W ar II Bremen was considered one
of the roost beautiful of German cities. Its famous old city hall, rich
w ith aristic treasures, fronted a
m arket place lined with medieval
homes of the Hansa merchants,
guild-houses and churches. Not far from the old section the visitor
K.could see the great Descbimag ship- j.building yard—birthplace of the lux
ury liner, Bremen, and biggest pro. ducer of the Germ an U-boat.
In China when the subscrJber rings up exchange the operator m ay
be expected to ask:“W hat num ber does the honor*
able son of the moon and stars desire?”
“ H ohi, two-throe.’*Silence. Thea the exchange re*
sumes.“WUl -Ibe honorable person gra
ciously forgivo the inadequacy of the insignificant service and perm it
this hum bled slave of the wire to
inform hiin that the never-to-be-
stifficiently cenm red line is busy?”
D o you read The R ecord?
More Paper
The Am erican consumer u s e
about six times as m uch paper as the European, according to the re>
port of 34 European pulp and paper experts who v isited . the United
States under thev pi-oductivity and technical assistance program of the
Economic Cooperation Adm inistration. The team 's findings were pub
lished in a 378-page report.
Our County And
Social Security
Bv W . K . W hite. Mai^aeer.
Social security checks mailed
rhis month to the 334 people in
Davie County amounting to $10,'
065.00, were the last under the
old rates of pavment. Payments
due CO the same people early in
October w ill amount to about
$11,410,00.
As a result of changes made in
the social security law in Iuly»
nearly everyone receiving old-age
and survivors insurance benefits
w ill get higher payments. Most
retired workers w ill receive in
creases ranging from $5 to $8.60.
Increases for dependents and sur
vivors w ill be less chan chose for
retired workers. In most casesi
these increases w ill be about $2.00
to $5.00.
For example, a retired insured
worker whose August payment
received this month was $40, has
ed on earnings received since 1936,
w ill get a September payment of
$45; a worker who got $68.50 in
the current check w ill gee $77.10
the first week in October.
It tvilf not be necessary for per*
sons now getting old-age and sur
vivors insurance payments to call
or come to the Winston-Salem
social security ofHce to gee chc in'
cceascs. T lie checks they w ill re
ceive early in Octobcr w ill auto*
matlcally carry the increased
mounts.
A representative of this office
tvil! be in Mocksviiie again on
Oct. 8th, at the court house,
second floor, ac 12:30 p. m ., and
on the same date in Cooleemee,
at the old Band Hall» over Led
ford's Store, at 11a. m.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
W c Can Supply Your Needs
IN GOOD CO A L,
SAND and B R IC K
Call or Phone U s A t Any Time
PH O N E 194
Formerly Davie Brick &.Ooal Co
Nniih Citnilina
Davit! Cnuiity III The Superior Court
Dent (E D .) Ijam es, Bxecutor of
J. S. Parker, deceased vsM ilton Thomas Parker, et al
Notice of Publication
NeW' Gadgets 'The Society ‘of the Plastics In
dustry has welcome news. It is showing off a variety of new prod
ucts designed ..to m ake life ca.sier. A total of 135 firm s have exhibits.
A prime eye catcher is a catsup dispenser, the size and sliu|)e of a
prize winning tomato. It is designed
to do away with tliat iiusiness of
pounding the bottom of a bottle which so often results only in a few
wayward squirts of catsup. All ynu do is remove a sm all plug, then
squeeze the dispenser.
'F ly in g High
You've heard the popular saying: “ I'm flying high,” often used to ex
press a feeling of well-being? While
that's in the nature of folklore,
nonetheless scientists have discovered that high altitudes apparently
do exert some beneficial effects on certain diseases. F or example, ex* perlments In San,Antonio, Texas, re*
portedly show that m en and mice, both, at high altitudes are less like*
ly to get pneumonia. The higher up you go, tests indicated, the higher Is
the num ber of red cells In the blood. And both m ice and men become
.more resistant to pneumonia, after
undergoing this “ reverse of anemia' process.
The unknown children of Mil*
ton Thomas Parker w ill take notice that an action entitled • as a bove has been commenced in the Superior Court of Davie County,
North Jarolina, by the Executor
of J. S. Parker, deceased, praying
che Court for advice as ro what disposition he should make of
the funds in his hands belonglni
ro the estate of said deceased; and
said cliildren w ill furch.r take notice that he, she, or they are required so appear at the office of
the Clerk ot Superior Court of
said County ac .the Courthouse in
M ocksviiie. N . C ., on the 25th day of October, 1952, and answer or demur to the Complaint In said action or the Petitioner w ill a
dIv to the Court for the relief c manded in said Petition.Th is 15th day of Sept., 1952.S. H . C H A FFIN ,
Clerk of Superior Court.
Seen Along Main Street
By The Street Rnmhler.
000000
Deputy Cook and L . F . Wagon
er talking things over In front of
court house-M isses Sadie and
Eva McCullough doing some bc'
forebreakfost shopping—Atcomey
6 . C . Brock scanding in postoffice
lobby drinking bottle of coca-cola
—^lerk of Court talking over te(«
ephone while Sheriff Tucker lin
gers nearby—M rs. W . M . Long
and M rs. Ted Junker talking a-
bout daughters being away at col*
lege—Turner Granc and Grant
Daniel engaged in scrcec corner
conversation-M iss Lockc Lons
on way to postoffice—D r. Garland
Greene discussing coming elec*
tion—M rs. Jack Sanford diking
about her old Kentucky home—
Phil Johnson letting down win*
dow awnings—George Rowland
greeting friends after three weeks
tlliiess—M rs. L . T . Hunter doing
some early,Christm as shopping
in Men*s Shop—^Mrs. lohn Smoot
shopping around town in early
morning hours—Mesdames Dud
ley and Donald Reavis walking
down Main street in the rain—
Arthur Daniel standing on Main
street holding small dog in his
arms—George Shutc getting rainy
afternoon hair cut—^Lloyd Farth
ing sitting in drug store chatting^
with pretty high school lass - Hel
en Poston and Janlc Collette'get
ting ready for winter—Rufus San
ford, Jr., Marsh Horn and Ben
Boyles talking about flying sau
cers and other things—Clarencc
James hanging around tonsoral
parlor like Grant hung around
Richmond—Miss Jo Ann Call
looking for new half dollars—M rs.
Henry S. Anderson and small
daughter shopping in grocery shop
—B ill Ratledge and Robert Kur*
fees leaning on parking meter on
M ain street—M rs. Eugeue Scats
hurrying out of postoffice-r-Mrs.
Gilm er Hartley shopping in de
partment store—Miss Hilda Mark
ham mailing letters—^Mrs. Jimmy
James and Miss Cam illa James
doing some window shopping -*
M rs. B . 1. Sm ith and M rs. Rose
Kim ble buying week-end groceries
-D ic k Brenegar gaiing at picture
of General Ike in office window—
George D ull taking time oft to get
hair cut—^Mrs. Pink Gaither and
daughters shopping around town
—^Mrs. Frank Brown calking a-
bout voting in the November e-
lection—Rev. W illiam C . Ander-
son carrying small daughter up
Main street in the rain—Tom Me-
ronev standing in score door
watching world go by-Law rence
Career looking over maiPin pose*
office lobby—D r. Ramey F . Kemp
getting ready to go home—Iames
Ihom pson walking around town •
wrapped up in big overcoat—Ger-.
aldine Boger eating pimento cheese
sandwich after hard day*s work—
Theodore Greene and small son
on their way to movie show.
1
Ii
Mrs. Julia Tayes
M rs. lu lla Stevenson Taves, 63,
wife of A . W . Taves of Mocks-
ville. Route 1, died Sept. 21st at
the home of a dauehter, M ts.
Frank Potts, M ocksvilleJ Route 1.
She suffered a heart attack and
her death was unexpected.
She was born in Davie County
A pril 7,1889, and had spent her
entire life in the county.
Suivm nf! are the husband; two
daushters, one son, four erand-
children and one ereat grandchild.
Funeral seyices were held at
Center Methodist Church, last
Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock
and the body laid to test in the
church cem etw , with Rev. Hugh
lessup officiating.
A few land pMten left*
~7~
/
PAQETWO THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, 8. C.. OCTOBFR 1, >962
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C . FR A N K STR O U D , E m T O R .
TELEPHONE
Bntered attfae PontnRice InMnckB' vllle, N. C .. sa Second-clnnp Mall m atter. March 3.1908.
SU B S C R IP T IO N RA T E S:
ONE YEAR. IN N, CAROLINA t 1.SC SIX MONTHS IN N. OAROLINA 7Br. ONF YEAR. OUTSlnE STATf - *2.110 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE - *1,00
"IF MY PEOPLE. WHICH ME CAUED BV
MY NAME SHALL HUMBLE THEMSELVES, AND
PRAY, AND SEEK MY FACE AND TURN AWAY
FMM THEIB WICKED WAYS; THBI WIU I
HEAt FtOM HEAVEN, AND Wia IQIiGIVE
THEU SINS, AND WILL HEAl THEIR lAHD."-
2 CHROH. 7 |R ______________
One of the finest speeches wc
have heard since the davs of Bry
an and Borah, was that delivered
by Senator D ick Nixson on Tues
day evening of last week. A few
more such speeches and D ick can
Ret ready to spend at least four
year.« in the vice-president’s chair.
' Nixon is a more forceful speaker
than either Eisenhower of Adlai
Stevenson. ‘
From Sweden
Stockholm , Sweden, Sept. 22.
Dear M r. Stroud;—Have had
wonderful trip driving my car
more than 15,000 miles through
all the countries of Europe, ex
cept Russia. However, in Fin*
land on a train, 1 did pass through
a Russian sector. When we en
tered, Russian officers entered the
Ike Passes
General Ike passed through our.
town Friday at 10:40 a. m ., at not,
less than 60 miles an hour. In -’
sccad of slackinR up, the train
seemed to take on. extra speed.
About 200 people were at the de>
pot, but no one caught«) glinipsc
of General Ike. More tha^i 20^,’
000 people heard him in Char*
lotte early Friday morning, and
more than ten thousand heard
him in Winston-Salem at noon.
We were sorry the train could not
stop here a minute or two.
Empty Buildinqs
There a.e a number of store
buildings and houses for rent
in this city. Th is is something
unusual. For the past ten years it
has been almost impossible to find
a residence or business house for
rent. Many new houses have
been built here in the past few
years, and several new business
houses. If you are looking for a
good place to go into business,
why not come to M ocksviile.
Rents are chcap, water good and
taxes arc the lowest of any coun*
ty in this section. W c have room
for more good people, more fac
tories, m ills and other enterprises.
F. H. Bahnson
Funeral services f o r Francis
Henry Bahnson, 79, of Farming I___________L - I J C_____•_____ «ton, was held at tlie Farmington
Methodist Church at 3 p. m.. last
Tuesday by Rev. G . C . Graham
train, locked the coaches and pull- and Rev. J . W . Vestal. Burial was
ed the shades. Finland is a won- Farmington Cemetery w ith
derful little country, fine people. Masonic Rraveside services,
hard workers, very industrious ! M*** Bahnson died unexpectedly
and honest, and now very pros- at 8 a* m., Sept. 22nd while tend-
perous in spite of what they have. »ng his cattle near home. He was
had to do. H elsinki was almost a membet of Farmington Metho-
completely destroyed by Russia, Church for almost 70 years,
but now almost completely re- and for 50 years had served on
built and a really modern city, Board of Stewards, and was
Finland, since the war, has made for vears Sunday School Supcrin>
and given free to Russia, 600 wd enr. He was a member and
ships, 2,000 locomotives, hund- past master of Farmington Ma-
reds of freight cars. 17.000,000 sonic l^dge No. 265. He had
f je t of copper, enough lumber tor ® member of this Lodge for
407.000 houses, and many other 54 years.
items. I uskcd several why ihcy He was married June 3,1896, to
had to do this. The answer each Miss Matti Rich who survives,
tim e, “ We don't know, except Also survivir.g are three daughters
that Rosevelt &. Co. said so.” M rs. Lester Martin of Mocksviile,
Arrived back in Stoakholm Sat- Mrs. A . A . Holloman of Kinston,
urday from Helsinki.' Sweden is and Mrs. R . D . Shore of the home;
also a good country, very fine peo* sons, Charles F. Bahnson of
pie every way and very prosper- Cooleemee, Frank H. Bahnson Jr.,
ous. Many Davie County people now with the armed forces in
with Swedish ancestry; at least France; nine srandchiid'-en and
10.000 Andersons in local direc- five great-grandchildren.
tory. In the death of M r. Bahnson,
It did not take me long in Hu- Davie Countv 'has lost an ou^
rope to discover that nothing standing citizen, a gentleman of
wounds a European more deeply the old school. His death has
than an American displaying an brought sadness to the commun-
attitude of superiority. The peace- ity where he spent a long, useful
ful Swedes for vears have been ac. life. To rhe wile and children
customed to seeing Royalty stroll The Record extends sincere sym-
casually and safely among them, pathy in t eir great bereavement.
Yesterday at the horse races here
1 passed Princess Margaretha, age
19, with her three’ vounger Prin
cess sisters and litiJe Crown Princc
brother K a rl Johan, age 7, unac
companied by any one. Margaret Community in Davie County,
Trum an blew into the city a few died Sept. 21st.
weeks ago surrounded by gun-tot- M r. Dayw^lt was a native of
ing *‘tojgh guvs,*' with their left Davie County He and his wife,
arm pits and right sides bulging the former Elizabeth Smoot, wore
with artillery. Later ihe artillery both life-long residents of the com'
boys proceeded to block all en- *nunity.
trances to city hall, (Stradshuset) Surviving, in addition to his
while Margaret Truman had a wife, are four childten, Ted and
look. Local Swedes were refused Samuel L . Daywalt of Mocksviile,
entrance, bccamo nngrv, [ater li M rs. Joe E . Johnson and
newspaper men, then many po- Mrs. Milton Cleary, both of Sta-
licemen, almost a Jirtle war, sev- tcsville; three brothers, Robin
eral licks being passed by the gun Daywalt, of Landis; Joel and W .
toters. Alm ost the same thing T . Daywalt. of M ocksviile, R . 1,
happened at Drottningham Cas- and a sister, M rs. Richard Mc-
tle. More damage was done to Daniel of Statesville, Route 5.
the U . S. A . good w ill of Sweden, F««eral services were conduct-
than Eisenhower or any other at 3 p. m ., Sept. 22nd at Salent
man could restore in four years. Methodist Church, with Rev.
M iss Trum an moved on, peace Hugh Jessup officiating and the
was restored and Swedes again body laid to rest In the church
were able to enter their town hall cemetery.
and theatre when they pleased. M r. Daywalt's death brought
The Swedes hnpe that MissJ Tru- sadness to a host o f . friends
man w ill not come back and they throughout Calahaln Township
do not believe she w ill. where he spent a long and useiul
W ill be back in States in a cou* To the bereaved wife, child-
ple weeks. Respectfully, ren, brothers and sisters. The Re-
A R M A N D T. D A N IEL, cor^ cxiends sincere svm patln......... ... Another long time friend has p. s-
-Your neighbor reads Th e ged over the river to rest under
R e co rd . the shade of the trees*
A. L. Daywalt
A . L . Daywalt, 68, well-known
retired farmer of the County Line
FREE--$5.00 BILLS GIVEN A W A Y -FR EE
AT AUCTION
T . S . H E N D R I X H O M E P L A C E
Consisting of good 8 room house, with bath; 1-smail 4 room house;
1 choice building site and 40 acres of good land, located 1-2 mile
from Moclcsvilie on hard surface road leading to Bixby.
S a t u r d a y , O c t . 4 t h . 1 : 3 0 P . M .
Also 300 acre dairy or cattle farm with two houses and two barns,
p l e n t y of water, lo.'ated 2 miles from <
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
Also The Following Described Personal Property;
6 Head white Face Cattle
4 Milk Cows
1 Turner Saw Mill
1 Minneapolis Moline Power Unit
1 Turner Edger, Practically new
1 1947 Ford ? ton truck
1 Allis Ciialmers Tractor, with Mower,
Planter and Cultivators.
1,500 Bales of Good Hay
Term s of Sale: On Land 309S Down, Balance In 5 Years. Terms On A ll Personal Property: Cash.
For Any Information See Or Call
Phone 196 E. C. MORRIS Mocksviile, N. C.
Sale Conducted By
CLARK-MENDHALL AUCTION COMPANY
118 W . Washington St,
Phone 4953 High Point, N . C ,
213 First National Bank Bldg.
Phone 8902 Winston-Salem, N . C .
GET READY FOR ELECTION RETURNS
FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL GAMES.
Z E N I T H T E L E V I S I O N S
Prices Range From $199.50 Up
Zenith Radios, A. M and F. M. from $24.50 to $89.95
Admiral Televisions Only $189.95, including excise tax
We A l s o Carry R.C.A And Hallicropters Televisions and Radios.
We Carry A Line Of
Quality Furniture Al Reasonable Prices.
We Can Furnish Your Entire Home From Cellar To Garrett'
COME IN AND LOOK OVER OUR LINE OF
Frigidaire Electric Ranges, Refrigerators, Home
Freezers, Water Heaters and Automatic Washers.
W E ALSO CARRY
Speed Queen Conventional Washers
And Bendix Automatic Washers
J U N K E R B R O T H E R S
F a r m e r s H a r d w a r e & S u p p l y C o .
Plione 46 ' Salisbury Street
m
THE DAVIE RECORD, M OCKSVILLE. N. C. OCTOBER 1.1962 rA G E TBRG
THE DAVIE RECORD.
relatives here,OMett Paper In The Counly _ — ^
M 1 1_____n . . . A J . —M r. and M rs. |. B . Howacd, ofNo U q iio r, W m e, B e e r A d i ciem m on., were •hopping around
tovim Satutdav.
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
C . G . Sweaiingen, o f Salisbury,
w ai in town Thursday on buslneu.
Attorney Avalon H all made a
business trip to Greensboro Wed
nesday.
M rs. R . S. Meroney and daugh
ter. M iss Phyllis, of Asheville,
were recent Kuests of Miss Lillie
Meroney.
lune Meroney, of Lenoir, spent
Thursday in town visiting his
mother and having some dental
work done.
M rs. L . E . Feezor returned last
week from a visit w ith her daugh.
ter. M rs. Jack Ellio tt and Mr.
litoti o f Shelby.
J . W . H ill, o. Hotel M ocksviile,
spent last week in Wilmington
looking after some business mat
ters and visiting Mends.
M iss L illie Meroney spent sev
eral days last week in Leinngton,
the guest of her sister, M rs. John
Hodge and M r. Hodge.
M rs. W . S. Hendricks soentsev-
eral days in Lexington last week,
the guest of her son, Glenn Hend
ricks and M rs. Hendricks.
Most M ocksviile stores w ill be
open for business all day Wed
nesday. The afternoon closing
w ill be discontinued fcom now un
til after Christm as.
Hundreds of out citizens from
Davie County were in W inston'
The soldiers whose pictures ap>
peared in our last issue were Oscar Poindexter, Ernest Fry and Paul King.
C p l. J . C . Clontz, son of M r.i and M rs. E . H . Clontz, has a rriv j ed home from a year’s service in ,
Korea, and has received hig hon
orable discharge. He is happy. |
M r. and Mrs. John Butler, ol^
Miami, F la , were Saturday guests
of M rs. W . C W illson, of Mocks i ville. Route 4. j
Miss B illy Sue Brow n,jtstudent.
at Lenoit'Rhyne,Cotte'^ Hickory, spent the week-end with her parents, M r. and M rs. Roy Brown.
M r.and M rs. Harry Venable, Jr.,
of Charlotte, announce ythe birth of a son, Christopher M cCall, on Sept. 21st. M rs. Venable was the
former Miss Dreiser Aun Holton,
(hughter of M r. and M rs.,,Dewey Holton, formerly ot this city, but
now ot Charlotte.
Teachers Meet
Davie«Rowaii Home Econom ic
Teachers met Wednesday, Sep^ 17th m the Cooieemee Home Eco>, nomics Department with Miss N a n c y Koihcock, Cooleemee
teachetf as hostess.
The program centered around plans fo r D istrict V II Futune
Homemakens of America Rallv to
be held in Me. A iry O ct. 7. Clubs in each school w ill seud delegates
to die rallv.
A ll teachers of Vocational Home Economies m Davie and Rowan Coimties attended the meeting'
Price Endorsed
Davie County U nits of the
Princess Theatre
TH U R SD A Y & FR ID A Y
Peter Lawford & Maureen •
O’Hara In "KA N G A RO O "
InTechnicoIr Comedy & News
SA TU R D A Y
Lash LaRue In ■
•T H E B LA C K LA SH ”
W ith Fuzzy St. John
. Serial & Cartoon
M O N DAY & TU ESD A Y
Gregory Peck In
"T H E W O RLD IN H IS
ARM S'* W ith Ann Blvth
In-Technico^r. News
W ED N ESD AY
Frank Sinatra & Shelley
W inters In “ M EETD A N N Y
W ILSO N ” \
Little Rascals & Cartoon
DAVIE COUNTVS BIGGEST SHOW
VALUE . ADM 12c mil 35c
P. G. Byerly Frank Ijames
Paul Glerin Byerly, 55» died at
his home In Davie County at 7 p.
m ., Monday.
He was the son of the late M r.
and M rs. N . G . Bverly and was a
native of Davie County, although
he resided in Winston'Salem for
many years until his heath failed
about a year ago.
Surviving are h i s wife, Mrs.
Blanche Sain Byerly; one son
Paul W illiam Byerly of Winston*
Salem; two sisters. M rs. Grace
Burge and M rs. Hector Perrault,
both of New York: four brothers,
W , C ., W . D .. K . M ., and F. L .
Byerly» all ef Winston.Salem.
Funeral services were held at
Fork Baptist church at 2 p. m.,
Wednesday.
Funeral services were held at
Fork Baptist church at 2 p. m..
Wednesday. Rev. L . M . Penry
officiated. __■ _
Dewey Felker. who lives In the
classic shades of Calahaln, has our
thanks for one of the largest
pumpkins we have seen since
Heck was a pup.
HERE’S GOOD
N E W S
N e ^ S in T e r^ skiing W ANT ADS PAY.
M ach ine
C .I.™ hear Gen- Notth Catoluia Education Asso-S a lm Friday to see and hear Gen endorsed Curtis Priee
eral Ike, whom many thmk w*!' Davie County SupLrintendeut of
be our next president. j Schools, for the presidency of this— — 'D istrict, which is compored of
M rs. W . A . Hendricks, of Ad- Davie, Yadkin, WUkes, Watauga,
vance, M rs. Glenn Hendricks, of ^he* Aliegl.m y, D a v id s o n ,
»nA M r and Mrs Boh Forsyth, G u ilfo r d , Randolph, t^ ln g um . and M r.jm d M rs. Bob gtokes and
Hendricks, of Raletgh, sp e n t SurryCounties.
Thursday in town visiting reUtives
and shoppme. here for the past seven years and
. . ^ - , , , ^ has been very active in school andJohn Q . Coble, ; community work. He was <^air^
second class, |U S N , of Route 4, i man of the Uavie D istrict Boy
M ocksviile, N . C ., is serving a-'Scgut Committee for several years,
board the destroyer minelayer 1 served president ot the Rotary
U SS Sliannon participating in an | clu b , now Chairman of the Davie
NfROTC midshipmen’s training Chapter of the American Red
cruise in the Caribbean. | Cross, and a leading church work-
’ w J w \ x j X w in the First Methodist Church,M r.m d M rs. W 'T He is well qualified to head d>e
u J ' K I I N .C .E . A ., and The Record isdaughter. Miss S a ^ ^ u is e « ^ hoping that he w ill be elected to
yealtest Products
Roy Brown, of the M ocksviile The Southern Dairies, of Wins-
Ice & Fuel C o .. had a narrow es-l‘o» Salem, who put out the Seal-
iape Thursday af.emoon „hen'test products, have put on a d^
^ h a n d came in contact with a l«ery service in Mocksviile and
live wire w h ie working at ,he w«l »«PPlv‘^e public wjth homog
pUnt. He was knocked down,' m ilk, butterm ilk, chocolate
« d remained unconscious for a > « k . butter, margarine, cottage
short dme. but escaped serious in-'«l>«»'* other dairy products
jtity , we ate glad to say.
As Low A s $92.50,
Liberal Allowance For Your
Old Machine.
Easy Budget Term s.
Special terms to tobacco and
cotton farmers, Buv now and
pay one>thind. Pay one-third on
your 1953 crop, and one-third
on your 1954 crop. Ask to see
the new Singer Vacuum Clean
er with the magic handle. W rite
or phone for free demonstra
tion in vour home.
It Pays. To Buy The Best.
Come By, Call O r W rite
» FO R S A LE — Barbe W ire &
Galvanized Roofing.
( M ilie^Evans Hardware Co.
Anyone wishing to work as
nurse's aid. between ages of 18-45, whire, write Z. Care Davie Record for appointment.
O P PO R TU N ITY F O R A
C L U B -A n y club, church auxi liary or other organization interested in selling the new Beth Tartan Cook Book contact Beth T a r
tan, Journal and Sentinel, W ins
ton Salem. The first group ac* cepted w ill be given the exclusive
rights in M ocksviile. -
W A N TED - Experienced ma
chine operators. W ill traino * aa I • chme operators. W ill train gooi O lll£6r tjC W lD f M ftC h lD 6 reliable girls. Also like to hav
orkiixuAXTv one good voung man to train ae. CO M PAN Y cutter and pattern marker. AppI1 1 s . Mam St. Lexmeton, N C . M O N LEIG H G ARM EN T CO .
Phone 2238 M ocksviile, N . C ,
Funeral services for Frank S,
Ijam es, 79, of Guilford, were held
at 11 a, m, Saturday at Center
Methodist Church, and burial was
in the church cemetery.
M r. Ijames died Thursdav in
Greensboro nursing home. Sur*
viving ase two sons, four daugh
ters, one brother and one sister, M rs. W ill C lick, of Cooleemee,
Fish Supper
Employees of the RankIn.San>
ford Inplement C o ., together with
their wives, enjoyed a delightful
fish supper at Rich Park last Wed
nesday evening about 30 were pre.
sent for this happy occasion.
Edgar C lick, of near Woodleaf,
was a business visitor here one
last week.
T o O u r C u s t o m e r s
We have secured the services of
Fred C. Wall a first-class shop
man who will be glad to serve you
any time. He can furnish you
Window Frames, Door
Frames, Mantels, Cabinet
Doors and Drawers,
Telephone Booths, Etc.
We Carry A Full Line Of
BUILDING MATERIALS.
See Us When In Need Of Anything
In Our Line.
C a u d e l l L u m b e r C o .
Phone 139 M ocksviile, N . C .
They w ill make house>to-house
deliveries; or you can purchase
The Macedonia M o ra v ia n 'fro m vour local grocer. Watch
Church, announce their autumn for their big ad in next issue of
revival, which begins Sunday, Oct. The Record.
rSth through I 2th each night at
7aO o’dock. EvangeliBt C . M .
H edrick, of the Admore Mora-
Stroud Reunion
^ Church, Winston-Sdem, wm hefd at So cia?“Bapttat
conduct these services. The pub- a ,u rd i, on the Statesville High-
lie is cordially Invited to attend,
; I . G . Sheets, of Roanoke. V a.,
who'came to Davie last week to
•ell the Welters property in Oarks-
iille township, spent a day or two _ _____________
w ith his sisters and brother, in the h „„d,ed foot table. After all had
Fork Com m uiJty. M r. Sheets is eaten . to their heart’s content, a native of Davie County, but;m any baskets of fragments were,
jp entm anyyearstath^ fer^ w ^ .
He is now in th ejeal wtatc president. C . Frank
Stroud; president, W . W , Stroud; vlce-ptesidetkt, Dolly Stroud, M rs.
way on Sunday. Sept. 21st, The weather was ideal and about 250 relatives and friends were present. Attorney Monroe Adams, of Stat
esville, delivered the annual ad
dress. A tthenoonhouraboun- teous dinner was spread on the
tion business in Roanoke.
M r. and M rs. S . A . Turrentine, XouJJrt Stroud is permanent sec-
of Taylor’s S. a . were in town retary; D . R . Stroud is permanent
o n .d ayrecend vo n their way to treasurer. Miss Louise Stroud,
relatives in Winston-Salem. piaiiist, and M rs. Bobby Honev- ^ it relatives tn winsron^Bi^^ cutt, choirester. Two quartettes
lw S to **th i Palmetto State for were present, together with odier lived in tne raim much singers, who rendered several
S " S .V ^ ? ‘ two years In Moun- 'election during the afternoonV . K—--------..In Home, Tohnson C ity, Tenn., «<>«- .S d a Government hospital at Relatives tom maiw coundes
^ lu m b ia, S. C . but his health is some from Virginia and one from ' miich Improved. Sam is a W orld far-away Totas, were present for
■ W ar 1 Veteran. th h annual reunion.
W I N S T O N - S A L E M
FAIR
O C T O B E R 7 - 8 - 9 - 1 0 - 1 1
In New, Wonderfully Improved Fairgrounds
Dixie Classic Livestock Exposition
North Carolina’s Outstanding Cattle Show
With Premiums Totaling $12,164.00
AGRICULTURAL AND COMMERCIAL DISPLAYS
W. N. Reynolds Stake For Purse Of $52,000.00
HORSE RACING 4 AFTERNOONS
E N T E R T A I N M E N T
I n F r o n t O f G r a n d s t a n d
Afternoons and Evenings
Wednesday is “Cpunty School Day”
Thursday*-Farmers’ Day and Livestock Parade
Friday Afternoon - “Hell Driver*”
Saturday Afternoon—Motorcycle Races
FIREWORKS - - - EVERY NIGHT
1 '
W IT H BA RN ES B RO S. C IR C U S
V -•
PAGE EOOR
IONAL*'^VE'ADtNG^ Jo ih u t U l
Dedicating Life
Lesson for Octobcr 5, 19M
Df'.Fofcmon
r E R E A H E two classes of per
sons in this w orld; the drifters and Ihc dedicated. Drifters become
driftwooC. cum bering a barren ehore, or they float, waterlogged
and h e lp l e s s , a
m e n a'c e to m ore
im portant t r a f f i c .
T h e dodlcoted, on i^ c other hand, have
purpose in t h e i r
m inds, they have a course and a com*'' pass. They h a v e
somewhere to go,
some reason for going Ihere. B u t not
all t h e dedicated
are alike. The vltnJ question is: To w hat is a m an dedicated?
Stailn is a dcdicatcd m a n ; so are
O irisU an m issionaries; so are pol
iticians good and bad. The bijj ques*
tion rem ains: Dedicated to what? to whom?
Dcillcaiei) to God
tJ iG H E S T object of all dedication
^ is G od; this ahvays includes de
votion to his cause. To be dod\cn‘.ed
to God m eans fo be devoted in purpose and in acUon, in every vfay
that is possible, to m alting this world—bcfivnnirvg w ith one's own
self—come Into line with the praj'- cr. ‘‘Thy w ill be done.”
The young m an Jesus, whose
stoty the Sunday school lessons w ill he following (hrough ih«
Gospel by M atthew for the next six months, w as ol a « ncrsons
the topmost exam ple of a Ufe
dedicated to God. Jesus did not
d rift Into this. Deaieation was
not auiom atlc, inevitable.Jesus, not less than those he
calls his brothers and sisters, hn(^ to m ake up bis m ind to the ancient
demand*. Choose this day w hom you win serve,
•
The Po^ver /
7 E SU 5 W AS not a late com cr to Ws
decision. Once or m ore it. has happened that a young m an who de
cides to enter the m inistry w ill surprise and even starile fam ily and
friends by this decision. B u i when Jesus “ entered the m inistry" (as
we m ay rightly say ho 'JId, after Ms baptism ), it could have sur
prised noi\e w ho had know n'him . Ho
had always been aw are of being "about his Father’s business." He
did not pass from drifting to dedica- tion, as m ost m en m ust; he passed
from one stage of dedication to another.
W hatever questions the story of Jesus' baptism raises, one
thing Is certain: from and after tirat even Jesus knew him self lo
be God’s special Beprosentallye,
endowed w ith tho Holy Spirit
for the w ork he was to do.
O ver and over in the New Testa-
m ont we hear o( the "power ot Ihr
Spirit," for the divine Spirit both brings power and is Pow er Only th'
life dedicated to God has the power ot God.•
The P toW cm
r ' IS a m islalw to think that th«
dodicatod W e is free Irom prob
Icm s. God w ill not wealten us bj m aking our choices for us. ISvery
tem ptation is a n opportunity ti choose, between Ood's w a x and
some w ay that is not God’s Temp
tation m ay also present a choice not
-so m uch between black and white,
wrong and right, as between good
and better, right and more-right.
One m eaiung ot Jesus' temp- (allons w as lu st th at In Ihem he
M d to thlnit tlirough the how ol bis aedicated IHe. lie was In- ' deed Ood’s M lov cd Son; H I*
ivorlt w as M e e d to save tli« world for' God. ■
B ut the question was, How? B y
turning stones tnto breadt By as* tonishins people w ith m iracles saoh
os ju m p in * unharm ed off the Tem
ple top? M o) these w ore no t G od's
w ay. The last tem ptation was not
a? absurd as tt sounds. Whenever nien have saiiJ, “L e t us do evil that
good m a y «o o m «." w honevot they have said th a t a noWe purpose glort-
fles any m ethod used to attain It, they have don« w hat Jesus was
tem pted to d o ,—w omM p S&tan.
Mystery M ount
M ystciy shrouds the rccord. as clouds obscure the peak of M ount
E>vcrest>~thc H im alayan giant that tops nil other m ountains of tlie
world. Rising o UtUe more than 29,000 feet along the Nepal-Tibet
border, Everest has been assaulted m any lim es by expeditions. None
has reached the lop and come back to tell the slory. Tl»e unsolved mys
tery of whether the m ountain has
been scaled grew out of the 192J
expedition. At that lim e, two m em
bers struggled ahead of the rest of the group. A third, fo lW ln g far
below, caught, a glim pse .of two figures near the final sum m it.
Then the mists closed In again. The two men never returned, and no
one knows whether they m ade the goal.
THE DAVIE RECOHD, MOCKSVILLE W. C. OCTOBER 1
•-•.TT -7 .-
The Fractie* ,
*»J0, DEDICAOTON does not free
the dedicated from problems. B ut when life is p ut a t God's dis
posal, w ith e a«^ problem comes tho I row er to avoid w rong choice, to
) m ake the right ooe. Yet again there ' is a condition: God w ill not resist
our tem ptations in our place. There
is som ething we have to do for our*
rolves. There J» a practice required. Is It likely that Jesus had
never In Ids llfeUme been
tem pted before (hat day in the
wilderness? No. he resists with
the sIdU of long practice. The weapons he oses is stm onrs to
use: the W ord of God.
Doe's that weapon lie rusting un- • *r the dust a t your house? Keep ii | - ^:ht b y u siiur ,iL *« I
Cows That Choke May
Have Rabies—Warning
ALBANY-»The slate health dc>
partitient w arns farm ers not tt> doctor cows that appear to be
choking, im t to get professional aid.
The departm ent said th at inability to swallow was one of the
m ajor sym ptom s o l rabies and farm ers had been bitten while
attem pting to aid rabid cows.
W hen a cow appears to be chok
ing the departm ent said, a farm er frequently believes It has an
apple or some other food stuck in its throat, and he attem pts to
remove the object by putting his hand down the anim al’s throat.
While he Is doing this, the departm ent warned, the anim al's
teeth m ay cut or scratch him ,
m aking a wound through whicit
(he rabies virus m ay pass.
The departm ent also explained i that indigestion w as another j sym ptom ol rabies. j
POTEN T ST U FF •
A farm er dashed into (he hard- t
ware store, gasping, ''G ive me nnoUier pound of your anl powder.” I
“ We’re glad to know you like the powder,** said the clerk.
“ Thanks/* snapped (ho customer, **with ttie llrs( pound I
got one ant nneonscious. With tli^t.
ncxt^iwund X hope to be able
DOW N I.U f t
a. Hike ll.Vegctabl«
rcain
Cod of the sea (Teut myth.)13. Flavor
14. Smoothing toolJ9. Be/ora
16. Visionary17. Whether 1«. Ridge or
sand In a
river
21. Hall!
22. A wheel groove
In earth15. Cbffln
24. or bees27. Sounds, as a cat28. Company29. Fuel
3d. U nit of work 31. Preneh.painter 39: Music note30. Loose hangw
Ing point37. Skill
38. Prince of
apostate
angels
(Amb.
ReMff.)(0. Sctflrmly42. Slumber43. Fat44. Plant ovules
45. DoorkeeperACROSS 1. Prices
34. Never grow*
Ingold
25. Narrative with a moral t«. Low^ pastum (Eng.)
2. Beetle
3. Nortv’cglan dramatist4. Place 6. Before
ft. Candlet.T rust iiwiK.i
a. Moslem title 27. Caress
». Plain white lightly
Kit Choking bit10.Choojca 31.Stinglnii
I«. Plump Insects
l».H aulalons 3 J,A rtljf.SO. A kind of roll atand J I. Brceie 33. Ascend 33. Piece of atSpcnk
sculpture 36. Periahco
N U B U n UHCOU' n g t r a a naiiit u n n u D n u tD E n
□ U [H D 13 [:2 Q D II EiR nonoo a n n u a u ] [iiiL iu
S H S S '’ n n n a ii □ u n Q c n u Q n ij
E w a r a a a q d " i □ isiiH a n n u Q aaaa d h d e h M o iin H u u n u ,
CK34
3». CVnfedenli g c n tn l40.KelU«41.Japane«s
n ?
P
n r
Please Help Us!
We have lost the names of aj
few of our soldier boys whose
pictures appear below. I f you rc-
coKnizc one or more, please ad-
.'i.sc us, and we w ill appreciate
very Jn u d i;
Springs (tun ftHt tn Dry
Season In Land
Farm wotkt s m ay get aching
backs on B tib ad os, but not from pulling weeds. I'o r there are proc*
lically no weeds on this tiny sugar-
producing B ritish possession, east-
cvnmost o l the Carribbean islands.
More than 303 y e a n of cultivation of alnooai every bearable
.<;quare foot of Barbados has virtu
ally elim inated sutlve weeds and
wccdseedi expW tis Charles AUmon
in his article **Barbados, Outrider
of the AntiUe*,'* in the National Geographic Magaaine.
Despite thiis intense coltivation, AUmon says, A m island's Ihin soil
has not b ^ d e le te d . Crop rota
tion and carehfl tise of fertilizer,
:^m e provided by unused portions of the la r g i^ “crop, sugar .cane, as
well as a fortUBHte l a ^ of erosion have preserved tite earttt lying on iBarbodos’ llm estoce bedrock.
The porous Umestone itself ex
plains ttie absenoe of erosion. Halo,
railing moat hwfUy from June to
November, doM vat ru n off, but seeps into fiie bedrock and perco
lates slowly, em erging in bubbling springs near A * coast Since this
pt-ocess takes about six months, the springs flow n e n t abundantly in the dry season.
fo r B EST BUYS
IN T R A V E L
T O A L L A M E R IC A
Yotf'li find him o t the sign of
Ihe running Greyhound in
7000 towns in oil 4® stotes
. . . ond around the world!
EASTBOUND
Buses Leave:
'C;00 «. m 12:50 p . m 2-.05 p. »
M5 p. m . 6:45 p .m . 9:15 p. n
\-lNS) ON-SALBM $. 6'
3RKE:\':I30R0. N. C. I.^ iALKIGJi, /v V . 3.2'
v 'O K l'O L K . V.A. 8.j<
WESTBOUND
Buses Leave: J
7:45 a.m . 9:00 s m 11:20 a.m .
:00 p. m. 2:45 p. in 5:50 p. n
S T A T E S V lLU i $ 60
H A K LO IT*- 14OAVIDSON I
.^SH liV liL li X4
PIui Tsi. Extra SaWrtl* an Rouncf Trip*
W IL K IN S PJlUC OO.
Plione 21
» Mocksville, H. O.
g r e y h o u i v d
Vlas Thl( FIm ft Butlness
The Manufacim of VteeT
M ADISON , Wto.—Em ployes of th<^ secretary of slaters office are uncertain ct v bftt Is going on at Or- lordville <R odi s o u n ^ ).
Under the M vised corporation laws, a new corporation is not required '<to rev e tf tiie nature of its
business. M ost erganization papers
dimply atate thS'M siness as “any 'nw fui purpos*.**
Tl\at is o aly explanation given (or the lo rm fttw of the Combina
tion Vice St J l ( Co., with headquar
'.ers a t Orfocdvffle and Lewis M Larson as a fc n t
Larson wsis I t d r w ith an expta-
nat’on, how ertr, tfce company vvii: make a new d sM ie to hold tools for grinding.
Sun Tanned
Wliy is it that people who live in ■ tropical countries where there is
much 5unshine are goncraliy dark*, skinned, when it seems that a light
skin would reflcct tlie rays? Apparently the black or dark skin acts
as a trap, catching the incoming heat a t the surface and thus pre
venting its penetration to deeper b ^ y tissues where it m ljjht cause
damage. As perspiration forms, on the surface of the skin, it helps to
remove Ute excess heat. In very sunny regions, dark clothing may
actually be bettor tiian white, reflecting clothing.
^ I D o Y o u R ead T he R ecord?
^EW MONEY rO R
YO llR OLD THINGS
t , . . . r w a ll M
P k M . lUdta, t» l> ,
» « . M l W mU wUt
4 VAN T t 9 IH
T M f H E v w « r a *
"Hried manydiflerent
dgareffes.lchoseCAMBS
•forfhetr flavor and-fer
the way 1116/ agree wffh mytiiioahr
FO R PU RE C RY ST A L ICE
C O A L FO R .G R A TES, STO V ES, FU R N A C E A N D STO K ER S
Ic W ill Pav You To C all O t Phone U s .
Wc Make Prompt Delivery
Mocksyille Ice & Fuel Co.
Phone 1J6 Mocksville, N. C
Your sons or daughters who are away
di college would like to read The Davie
Record. Only $1 for the school term.
♦ FOR RENT ♦
SPACE IN THIS PAPER
Will Arrange To Suit
GOOD NEIGHBORS-P«ICES TO
FIf YOUR BUSINESS
The Record has the largest white
circulation ot any Davie paper.
D a v i e R e c o r d
Has Been Published Since 1899
5 3 Y e a r s
O thers have cotti« and g'm c-your
county new sp ap er keeps
5-ometimea it has seem ed hard to .
m ake “ buckle an d tongue** m eet,
but Boon the sun shines and we
m arch on. O ur faith fu l sub icrib ers .
- m ost o f w hom p a y prom ptly, give us
courage and abidin g faith in our
fellow m an.
If your neigh bor is not taking . The
R ecord teil Him to subscribe. The
price is only $ K 50 per vear -in ihe
State, and $2 00 in othnr slates.
W hen You Come To Town
Make Our Office Your
Headquarters.
W e Are Al wavs Glad To
See You.
Davie Record
D A V IE C O U N T Y ’S O D 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 lfE A I>
«H EIIE SHALL THE THE fEO PLE’S RIGHTS M AINTAIN! UNAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GACN
V O L U M N L I I I .s \ m o c k s v il l e . N O RTH CAROUN A» W EDN B8DAY OCTOBER 8 losa m fM BKR lo
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
W iial W a» H a p p e n in c J In D«-
. T|.? Betor®' •’ •■kint M eiers
' A n d A b b rev iata 'l S k irti.
• Rftrord, O cf. J. 7930)
. ‘M ocksvflte seed c n iio n 3;^ cents.
/A ito rn e v W . A . Brfstnt, o f Sta-
tesyUle, was a business visitor here
lost week.
■ M . B , Bnffey, o f IN irnersbnrfr,
R . I i was In low n Friday lookfnir
a*:reV;some bnslneM .
'^^v. E , M , A veU and Dr. T . P .
■ of Alhem«rle, were Afockii.
rltfe visitors fast week.
. j^ r . and M rs. C laud Plcfeler. or
,.NcF^.port N ew a, V a ,, spent a short
‘ whUe In tow n Wedn<;sdav,
■ M iss Hazel-^Kntfees spent W ed
n ig h t (it W {nslan.Sii(eni,
o f H G .
T . G ra n t spent M veral d»vs
,I» | l ,week B ififne lo-JKe W t waves
ofjtbe A (l»n t)c o e M n o e a r O cracokr'
W « o d . » , .
■ M rs, O,- G . D ahferftm )'daiiehf^r
M h s P n m ln e , spent FrW av niitbt
«"() SalM rday w ith M rs. b a iiitl’s
parents In Statew ille.
A tto n ie y and (Ifrs. B . C . B rork
are th e prond parent)! o f a Sne .9.
t>opnd snn w ho arrived^‘at thei'|
h o ^ e on Sept, a4ih .
M rs. }am es Ranrklhs Was carrier*
to a .C harlotte bnspllaf T hnrsdov
evenlae w here she w ill nnderpni
H e r friends hope for
her a »,peedv - recovery.
Mi . and M rs. D . S . -Grant w in
have heen nccnpvlne one of th'
G aith e r coltaees; a ri ' W IticK hnrn
atreel, have miiveil Into th e C all
htinealow , on M anle Avenue. "
M iss W llU e M ae Foote, of Crewe
, V a ;,j;h a s re ttirn e d to Woctcsvdle
and her posltlnn w ith D-.
P. A . Ita fd lm !. H e r m any frien'*'
are s)ad lo welcoine- her hack to
M ocksvllle.
A h on t 70 memhen; Af the BaptI*)
‘’ tlttday school. to e A h er w ith their
friends, enjoyed a welti'e roa.st and
”nd picnie on the M asonic p'cnlc
erounds T ^nrsday " e v e n ln ^ r ." A '
Kood tim e was h a d .h v .a ll.: .,
C lara, th e little, j^e a r- o ld (iaiieii
ter of M r, antf'^Trs. ’ B eniietl W f',
!i»ni«. of jernsalem , died Friday
m o m ln e as the reMitt of v e ltln e or
aeron or m iisradlne lodjred In he*
w indoloe Death w as al«o sndder
(rom ,stran*ol»flo» The' herenved
nnreots have the sym nathv o f a host
of friends In the sad death o f the!
dan n h te r. T he funeral and hnrlnl
to ok Plorp at Ternsalem R nndav.
M Im K »shrvii,;jtro st snent the
week w ith r e W J v ^ 'and friends at
V aldese.'
Aaron tmlnadftn*-
W r r ^ f v ^ •
rut on h<V'‘Wf«^H.*-.nr, W . C:
\fartin dressed tKe wonnd. ■
B ill, the of M r an**
W r«, J . S . Dan(»(, h sd fhe tnfisfor^
t»n e to hrenk hf« rlp h t a rm while
ttlAvfniF on the school Krm inds one
day th e n a s i.y e ^k .
C aw R >W.; O ow ans, of,<.Knox.-
vftle, T enn.V si>ehf .eev«rfl('rfnvs Cs‘ t
week in tow h w ffh hl« h>6ther. 5
,C. G o w a n. -'^Cant. O ow Sn wa«
hl« w aya hom e trow the ConfeSe
rate Veterans'at .WltiiTtot*.
Satem . H ^ f<86 yesrs v«>S,ntrT-.hfl5
heen a imllQemen fn KnojcvHli. '.rnr,
the nast 43 year«. Tfe teif Oavl*.,
rotintv n e ailv a h alf cenfnry «ffo
and settled jn-fhe V ofnuteer State,
C apt G ow an'V eporia a fitie ♦i®#'
at>ent fn th e *tw fn C lfv w>f{i ntenfv
to eat and drfnk.
M rs Q ^ n ^ B e ^ K e nn e n. Dav}t>
Cow nty’s W Ifa V e officer, h a s ; ^
celvek a Iett^T.4roni M rs. iv . B.
W »d d ni» PresM rat o f th e N m th
OaroHoa AssocfaHnn o f S « ^ r l'n
. tendents of W elfare asking her lo
serve on the Leelslative c o r a ltte e .
Great, Graces And
A Greqt Man
Rev. WaherEelsroboar.Jaylorsvnie
In^PlrRt Corlnthlaiiii'tiSJlb the
Apostle Patti sava, “ By-the- Grace
of God I am wbat lam .*’ We be
lieve, this expression of the Apostle,
relating • m arv^ous''truiK, ac
connts for the uprleht, eodly, no.
bte, ifsef.il life of many a man. No
ooe h trnly stronelnchatacterand
Wctorfons in soul apart from the
erace of God Great learning ean.
not take the place .0/ God's grace
Many people are hlebly educated,
hut lack God'.5 crace In their hearts*
and sotils^. therefore they are un*
snccessfol In life, when, we think
of Hfe from the standpoint of eoA\h
iiess and 'trne ewatnes.<t.
P ’tn l w af InHeed a frreat m an, hut
It was not doe to his learnine. a l.
.tjifonffh he- was h le h ly edticated
H e w as ereat hecause he had C'reat
Brace, w hich'<w s elven h im from
fio m G od. Before P aul became a
follow er of the Lord Jesns C hrlsi.
and before h/*ohtafned the ^race
o f G od . he wa? • nsloe his k n o w .
IW c e In 9 des»rtj.ctlve w ay, as he
was tremendottslv opposed lo C h ri«t
and the C hristian rellelon. and was
w orklne to no t dow n th e apqstoHe
chnrch. H ow ever,.w hen.he tijrn.
ed to C hrist and accented H im as,
fals Savlonr'. then he obtained ereat
crace for t^e|'remalnder of ear-
t h l y c ^ r . V , . , ;
* A n vh od v ran have ereat era«»e
th at w ill pay Ihe price, and th<*
price Is .that o f .a life fwllv and ,«‘n
re.«ervedly.ylel<iisd wnto G od , So?pe
of the e re a t^ t saints o f the
were not h le h iv edncated M anv
o«ithem ha«f n o e d tira ^n .;K t}t they
had great ir r a ^ , '''*Tfiev knew g Ai
as a' 5?atflo!!r from ' all sin, a ^ a
sanctifier. as a leader and enld e a
to n? the^ ionrnev o f life- ,con.se*
qnenttv were tiurjrine and.-^sbinine
llebts to ih c w orf^. • V - •
■ G reat crace w ill niake V creat
m an. a .firreat w om an. N o th in ?
else w ill actnallv d.-> It; .w hen we
oim e^ to th in k o f . erea^«.«s from
the'*^'andooltit of noble ^ a n h o n d .
IVnspolted'-snti^and charac»er and
trne w orth. G od can i^ek tip a
little m an 61* h im w ith H is erace
ane send h im forth to .^ e s s his
coftntrv and the w orld: whereas the
erpfltlojtajented and h l^ l^ y eln-
<'ated m an . w l»hptit. the ?f^ce of
G.od: m avv ,n ew r acc.^mollsh ativ.
t^jnst ,§»’nr!!,b whUe. O rest ^ersee
and «r<*ai learning., how ever,|inavi
*a k e .o n # m lehtler^than he otifier.
'■-’Ise '■
^ all at this
novr and|^l^et vour land. piw ,
ters W o riiith e snpplv is ex^|j
.haust«da fceayy
card b ’o ard f 50c. p er dozen.
READ THE AD$
Along W ith the N«w»
North Carolina
Oavla Cmtntr j lo The Suiwrtor Court
Dent (Be D .) Ijam es. Executor ofl
' J. S. PatW^ deceased
V8’
! 'M ilton ^^oWas Parker* et al
Notice of Publfeafion
The unknown children o f M iK
ton Thomas Parker w ill 'akc no'-
tice that.an dction entitf^ as ..,a'
hove has,been .^m m enc^ in the Superior Coutt.^CT^avie : Coun^,
North r!aro11na» bv the Executor
of L S. PaH^er, .deceased, pravin^
the C b u rtjo r M vke as to what
‘dispoaitiofi he' should make of the funds in his hands belonging, to the estate of said d e ^ ^ ra tfd ]
said children w ill (urth;,r take no*'
jtice that he» sh e;o r they ^ are re* (4ired so appeSi^t'the office of.
rKe O erk of Siioerior Court vof ^ said Conntv at the Couhhouse in ' M ocksville, C .; oh‘dt%25th day
of October. 1952, and answer or
demut |U> the Comp|aint in^ said action o r the PetidoA^ ; Win»^ao* ply to the Court for die relief de>
jmanded in said Petition.Th is 15tb day of Sept., 1952.S. H . C H A FFIN . Clerk*of Superior Court
C U B IO V SLA D
Three bright little boys entered
the MetropoIUon M useum one day, and m ade for the SgypUan exhibits,
where U^ey told the attendant they
hod coifie to see "the dead m en.”
He told them where the m um m ies
were, and they stood* in front ol them for about IS' minutes. Just
looking. As they were going *out
one of the innocents approachcd the attendant and asked^ “you kill them
and stuff them -yourself?”
LUtteChange
l/Ove*making hasn't changed in 2,500 years. Greek m aidens used to
sit and listen to a lyre all evening, too.
K ind to Children
Doctor (after ^i^rfmining patient): >**I don^t like the looks of your hus* band, M rs. Adamson.*’
M rs. ■ Adamson?! “1 don't either. Doctor, hut he's so kind to the chll*
dren.” ■ *
Pep Talk Coming upon a football which tir
farm er’s son had brought back fron- schoolp the rooster, promptly calicd
the hens around him .
*'Kow, liKlles,!’ he, said diplomat*
Jeally, “I don’t w aiit to appear ungrateful^ or raise any unnecessary hiss, bat I do w ant you to sco wbat
to being done in other yards.”
T H A rS W HAT Y O U THIN K
The white'coiiax girl fipi>m ice ciiy
had just begun her Vacstipp at a
dude ranch and was despeiateiy
trying to. motmt her horse. A coW’ hand, who had been observing her-
rem arked sm ilingly, “ Y ou’re got*
ting th a t. hoss backwards,iria- a^v
.“That’s w hat you think, sm arty,”
the city m iss r e lie d , “how do you know w h it* w a y I ’in.going?.’-’ •
•f .' , U s i^ Perform ance - ■.
'.A 'bore isbn^'Vfho opens his mouth
and puts, his feats in.' . ;
’ ' ■ 1ta .,T e n a ,i. ;
Ordeal->What an ideaK b'ecomes
after you m a riy him . —
True Attalysls- i.-, F latte j^ is 90 per cent soft soap,
l^ n d soap Ja IN> per cent ly e l.
T H E P R O P B ttH R E S S
.. .An enthusiastic.a^iateur gardeno spent a ll his spaM tim e puttering
around the yard in his oldest clothes. One Saturday './hen his w>fc
was givlojg a v eiy form al tea, ishr gave h im strict orders not to gar*
den, saybig he w as Just too disreputable-looking. He took it very
meekly, so ;Ae w «a cMnpletely be* wildered w hen guests looked
out the window aiid began shrieking with laughter. There on the front
law n, pushing the law n mower in prectoe lines, turning square comers
with a click of bis heels, was the
head ot the fam ily— im m aculately
el ad in white tie and tails.
D o you read The R ecord?
School ?lews
D>irin(; the first three weeks ofj
school rhc Davic County school
people have hccn mectini* with
the County Superintendent and
Supervisor formutatlnK plans for
the vMr's work. Tliose attend*
ing the meetings were the Super'
intcndent, C o u n t v Supervisor.
Principals, Teachers, the Cafatcrla
workers, janitors and maids.
Guidance: One representaflve
or guidance director from each
school was present. The oblec*
tives of this sroup for the vear
are:- Tliorouph studv of cumula
tive records, study of drop outf,
providins Information on colle
ges and trade schools, personnel
guidance, and a studv of the gra*
|duatcs over the past three vcan:.
Th is meetins included all teacher,
librarians from both eleracnrarv
and high school departments.
This vear the State Department
of Public Instruction has Issued a
new iibrarv handbook. The group
discussed various phases and chan*
Bcs of the handbook and outlined
plans for our countv-wide pep*
cram. The libraries are meetinft
State standards but some addit*
ionalwork w ill be necessarv to
meet our standards.
Home Economics Tcachers.—
Each of the Oavie County High
Schools offer Home Economics to
the Virls of their respective com-|
munities. It was brought out that
prncticallv every girl in the ninth
and tenth grades arc taking at least|
two years Home Economics ivork.
The group agreed ro follow the
plans and outlines made bv the
Rowan-Davie Home Economics
teacher croup, and a specific pro
gram was outHfied for Davie,
Agric.iiture Teachers; T h is
group discussed new rviiuh tions
released from the State Depart-
mentconcemiog Vocational Agri-
'cti|ture teachers and their woik.
Thc'^rbup agreed sthat for grade
nine, two projects must be earned
on bv (he boys enrolled; for grade,
ten, three projects,’ for 11th and
I2th or Agriculture III, four pro*
I'jects. The teachers were instruct*
ed’to follow the State program and
make the Agriculture program ac
tive and worth while to the boys
of Davie County. ,
Social Studies Workshop; This
meeting was plan.<ed for all teach
ers in the countv. The purpose
was^to present the new Social
iS'tudf^ handlxjok. Suoerintend
erit Price presepted the new h^nd*
fbook and spoke on die importatit
rolcrsocial studies teaching plays
in our. social and ecoriomic struc'
n re.,$,Then Miss Mariola Ctaw-
f -spoke to die group 00 the
actiial vvork of making the new
handbook. Miss Crawford was
on the committee that helped \Vith
the fifth grade part. A number
of teachers in the Uavie County
school system have been recogniz
ed for contributions made to the
bulletin material. A fter lemarks
by.D. F. Stillw ell, Supervisor, tlic
grade groups met by rt^pective
groups and outlined the iiocial
Studies program for the dilTerent
grade levels.
N . C . E . A .: The teachers met
with retiring president. The fol*
lowing oflicers were elected for
die I952*53 vear; President, M rs.
June Hicks; Vicc-presidenr, J. *H.
W ishon; Sec.-Trea»urer, Miss Eula
Keavis.
Eighth Grade Teachers: This
group met and discussed plans for
the vear. The group agreed tliat
this particuiur grade would be an
excellent place 10 make an exhaus
tive studv of North Carolina and
Sout.iern States using Davie Coun*
tv as a centrtil focus point. Th.ey
agreed to use the following out*
line as a gnide: 1. Tilings in which
North Carolina ranks first in the
Our County And
Social Security
B v W .K . W hite. Manager.
When the body of a service*
man who died overseas after June
24, 1950, Is brought to the United
States for reburial, d)e Social Se*
curitv Administration may repay
part of toe cost of the reburial In
certain cases.
Ordinarily, a claim for the so*
cial secoritv lump sum for burial
expenses mu.st be filed within two
years after doath. Recent amend
ments to the s >cial security law.
provide an extension of the time
lim it In eases where «he body of a
serviceman who died after June
24. 1950, Is returned to the Unit-
^ed States for reburial. In these
cases the reimbursement may be
applied for within ten years of
the date of burial or reburial rath
er than within ten vears after the
date of death.
Where the serviceman is sur*
vii’ed by a widow this provision
w ill not ordinarily apply, since in
these cases the lumivsum is paid
to her regardless of who pavs the
burial expenses.
A representative of this office
w ill be in M ocksville again on
Oct. 8th, at the court house,
second floor, ar 12;30 p. m ., and
on the same dare in Cooleemee,,
at the old Band H all, over Led-
ford*s Store, at II a. m.
nation; Z. Resources of State; 3.
Trade and Industrie 4. Education;
5. Conservation; 6. Producdon*
The group w ill also make a studv
of the interesting historical devcl'
opments in Davie Counry. As
this is made a summary w ill be
added to from vear to year.
Cafeteria W orkers: AH the ca-
fateria managers, principals. Su
perintendent and Supervisor met
in the M ocksville cafeteria with
Miss Cobb, o f the Division of
Lunchrooms, and M r. Fer.ell from
the Commodity D ivision. Many
new regulations were discussed
and plans were outlined fo r the
year.
Janitors and M aids: A ll jani
tors and maids met in the Mock»-|
ville gymnasium to get ■ instruc
tions on the year’s work. Supr.
Price emphasised the Importance
of proper schedules for each wor.
ker and 'he Importance o f their!
ji^bs. Materials and tools to be
used by the {anitors were shown,
and sevcial demonstrations were,
made on Iiow and wht of janlto*|
rial processes^ A number of meet
ings are planned , for the year. The
next to follow w ill be a workshop
for commercial teachers, followed
bv an A rt workshop for all ele
mentary trachers, Science, Physl*
cal Bdticacioa and o th ers as deem-
ed wise.
Seen Along Main Street
By Tlir Stri>(>i Rnmlitpr.
' 000000
Charming young matron from
West Virginia declaring that Ike
was welMiked in her State, and
would get lots of votes—Claude
Dunn parting with some filthy
lucre—Cecil Peoples telling what
he was going to do election dav—
M rs. Velma Snow sitting in cafe
waiting for something to eat -
Nurse and beautician talking over
coming events while doing some
after dinner shopping—Miss Betty
Spencer and Llovd Farthing con
suming refreshments In apothe-
carv shop—Lady wanting to know
if anyone saw Ike when he pass*
ed through M ocksville—M rs. C .
J . W ilson doing some early Christ
mas shopping—Snow Beck dis
cussing the coming knock down
and drag out affair In November
'—Capt. Chas. F . Domm talking
with friends in front of drug shop
—High School students advertis
ing coming football games—Rov
Holthouser mailing large package
|—Miss lane Marktin on her way
dctwn Main street on chilly after
noon—S. H . Smith passing thru
town with big load o f cutton—
Mrs A . J. Cox telling friends that
she was moving to Monroe—Miss
Mary Foster doing some morning
shopping—George D ull trying to
get a shoe shine—Miss Lois W ill-
[son getting ready to leave town—
Frank Hendrix hanging around •
bank like Grant hung around
Richmond —W llbum Stoncstrect
telling about seeing the biggest
crowd of folks in Charlotte that
he had ever encountered—Post
master and officer tacking up plc«
tures af crim inals in postoffice lob*
by Farmer standing on street
corner declaring that he didn't
take or read any newspaper, and
that newspapers never printed the
truth —Roy Brown buying provis
ions to last over the week-end —
M rs. P . W . Hairston and daugh-
ter-in*law doing some Saturday
shopping - Man declaring that he
had been trying to get a , shoe*
shine for the past three weeks—
B ill Ratledge walking around the
town on crutches as a result of
rheumarism—Stacy H . Chaflin re
ceiving birthday presents In hts
office in court house—Miss B illy
Sue. Brown alighting from Grey*
hound bus—Roy Dixon leaning
on parking meter alongside bank
- Bunch of statesmen standing in
front of department store discuss-
ingw hatis going to happen in
Novembei—Miss Carolyn Fere,
bee hurrVing down Main street
Ion wann afternoon—Johnny Naylor and Joe Murphy home from college to get a few square meals
Shoaf Q>gl &
Sand Co.
Wc Can Supply 'io u r Need.
IN G O O D C O A t,
SAN D and B R IC K
CU l or Phone U« A t Any Time
PH O N E 194
Formerly Davic Brick &Coal Co
like mothers cook.
M r . F a n n e r !
SEE u s FOR
Self-Propelled
Corn Pickers,
Drills,
Used or new, or for
anything you need
in Farm Machinery.
W e can save you
money
Hendrix & W ard
W IN STO N -SALEM H IG H W A Y
PA'IE TWO tHE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C , OCTOBER 8. 19B2
THE DAVIE RECORD. Register! Register!
a FR A N K STR O U D , E D IT O R .
E ntered at the HoBfofflce In Mockfl* ville. N C .. as Second*olnRp M all
m a tte r M arch 8,1903.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE VKAR IN N. HAROI.m^ - % IM SIX m o n th s IW N. CAROLINA • 7Sr. ONF YEVR. OUTRUiE RTATF . t2.H0 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATR . <100
A MocksvUle Democrat savs
the Trum an speeches are causine
Adlai to lose votes. . We think he
is rtgHt.
The election this fall may bie as
close as that of 1912 when ic took
three davs to find ouc^ who had
been elected president.
When the chamelcon is in Yad
kin County he is a red-hot Demo*
crat. When he is In Davie Coun
ty he Is an Independent. W c
wonder what he is when he is in
Mecklenburg County?
The liars arc abroad in the land.
A big Democrat, hifih in political
circles, says General Ike is sure of
only 30 electoral votes. Another
lia r from Georgia says that 90 per
cent of the voters in Geotuia w ill
vot* for Ike.
4-H. Meeting
■Do yo u . want to vote in the
November election. You cannot,
vote if your name is not on the
registration books. If you have
become of age since 1950, or
If you hava moved from one pre
cinct to another since the last
election you must reeister in the
prccinct where you are now liv
ing. Registration books w ill be
open O ct. llth'throuBh O ct. 25th
from 9 a. m .. to 5:30 p. m . Sec
your .regiistrar at your precinct on
Saturday, O ct. I I , 18, or 25th and
register.
Two f^ew Pastors
Davie County gets rw j new
Methodist pastors following the
Western N ortlj Carolina Metho
dist Conference appointments on
Sept. 29 h . The new pastors arc
Rev. W . Q . Grigg, who comes
from the First Methodist Church
at Monroe, to the First Methodist
Church in this citv, and Rev. H.
C . A ustin, who comes from Fair-
view charge, near Mooresville, to
tlie Cooleemce Methodist Church.
Rev. A . J . Cox, who has been
p-stor of the First Methodist
Church in this city for the past
three years, goes to the Fir»t
C hurcltin Monroe, and Rev. F , J.
Shinn, who has been pastor of
the Cooleemee Church, goes to
M t. A 'ry.
The following pastors have been
returned to their work In Davie
Cou.ity: Rev. G . C . Graham to
Furmington; Rev. W . C . Ander-
son to Mocksville Circuit; Rev.
W . E . Fitzgerald to Advance; Rev.
G* W . Fink, lo Liberiv-Concordi
Rev. Bruce Roberts to D ulins;
A
I T S
H E R E
nnouncin
MILK
G
I T ’ S
H E R E
M ocksville 4-H Club members
held their meeting Wednesday af
ternoon, Oct. 1st, at 1:30 o’clock
in the High School auditorium.
Miss Mackie introduced the new
assistant farm agent, A . G . Sm ith,
from Rockingham County. Evona
York led the group in singing “ A ^
merica.” Donald Smith presided' Rev. Hugh I essup to Davie Circuit-
as the president for the coming' The Record is sorry indeed to
year was chosen. lose Rev. and Mrs. Cox and little
The following oificers were e- son, who have been residents of
lected: President, R . C, Dyson; this city ft'r the past three years,
Vice-President and Program Chair, ai'd who have endeared thtm-
man, Ivey Nell Bowles; Secretary ^ selves to all of ou“ people, regard
and Reporter, Keba Ann Furches; Jess of church a/Sliations. We
Treasurer, Aubrev Fleming. The'shall a'l miss these good people,
officers appointed two song lead-.but wish them well In their new
ers, Evona York and Janie Mae | home to which they moved ves-
Collette. The Club pledge was terday. The Record is glad to
repeated, af er which the meerinu welcome the former pastors and
adjourned. a^so the new pastors to the best
—---- 'county in North Carolina, and
R«'’-M r. Shinn and (ami.irnuer s Daroecue ,h ,;b « to ( everything in thdr
C . V . M iller and son Sheek now home at Me, A iry.
M iller, have nj-ened their new bar* . ^
becce shop in >«st M ocksviiic. RecreoHon Report
They a re ;erving their famous ■ j
hickory vvoi>d, pitr cookeJ barbe* A t a meeting of the Recreation
cue, sand\\iches, all kinds, ice Comn>ission lust week Jim Wall
cream and cold drinks. Chal has submitted a report on the Sum-
been in the baibecue business mer Playground Program conduc*'
for 15 years and knows his busi- ted for the first lime the past
ness. When vou are hungry or Summer bv the Town of Mocks-
thirsty visit “ Pop’** as he is fami- ville.
liarly knpwn. His barbecue can’t Records kept on the playground
be excelled. showed a total re-............................. gistrationof 110 children, with
an average dailv attendance of 48.
The plavground for the colored children at D.ivie County Train-The F. F. A . members of Mocks- ing School, directed by Rev. R.
ville are going to do everything A . Massey, reuisivred 01 childreit
that they cm to conserve the Wild- nnd showed nn avL-rage daily at
' lifcofD avieCounty. The effector ‘>.1 - I < Ih e Kccreatton Lommtssionthe W . dl.fe resours.s .s best ex. „nd Directors would like to take
plained as a favoiable biological this opportunity to thank every-,
balance. If there is no rabbits for one who contributed time, labor
■ faxes to eat; they tend to botlier a«-d interest toward making this
your poultry for ;food. If there P'^Rram a success._____
are too fesv foxes, there may be A U ' f IJI *
many field rodents which'could i • JL * I T in S
. destroy m iicii of the field forage ^ , -r-i. 11 i
needed for c.ittle H,.rmfuMnsects Textile “ workers '(A .F .L .) wo^'i
are destroyed by buneficiul insects landslide victories in representa-
and birds. Blmu fidal ponds help tion elections a t Erwin M ills
by eatina the n oaquito larvae. plants in Durham and Cooleemee
W ildlife resources arc an asset but a runoft between that. 1 1 i j u I union and the C IO Textile Work-to any farm and should be taken o f America w ill be|
into considerarion in farm plan* needed .fbr employes at p lan ts-in -
ning a n d farming operttions. Erw in. •
Your farm can'be mnde ii more W ith today’s elections some^
favorable plncc for wildlife by the 4,200 works stand lochange theirV following ways; affiliation from th.- C IO textileJ. , J I 1 i . union to the A . F L..counterpart.1. Seeding field borders to bt- , ., , e, . , , < In Coole mee 1,324 vote<i were’colar and Sericea Uspadew. the A . F. L . getting 792 '
2. Planting mul iflora rose a- or 70,5 per cent. The C .I.O . re-|
long fence row'S. ceived 170 voces or 15.J per ceni;
3. Property inanaging hedge and 162 worken» or 14-4 per centvoted for no union.
4. PlantioR food patches such The mercury drooped' from a
as an old tobacco beds. • |,ig-, reading of 84 degrees Thurs*
5. L.eaving unharvested strips, day afternoon to a low 44 degrees
6. Desking for natural foods. Friday morning. A fine tain fell
For more information consul.
the countv agent or local vo c- mercury dropped to a low ,of
tJonal Agriculture teacher. 73 degrees on M t. M itchell Friday
K EN N ET H LA N IE R , Reporter., morninj^ ‘
W e A r e G l a d T o . H a v e T h e O p p o r t u n i t y T o
S e r v e M o c k s v il le A n d V i c i n i t y W i t h
S e a l t e s t M i l k P r o d u c t s
House T.o House Delivery, Or At Your Favorite Grocer.
W E CAN FILL YOUR NEEDS W ITH
Pasteurized Milk Homogenized Milk Guernsey M ilk Buttermilk
Lactic Acid Milk Skim M ilk Chocolate Drink Heavy Cream
Light Cream Buttfr Margarine Orange Concentrate
Cottage C heese ' Devon Style Cream
____Watch For Trucks As They Pass Your House
Southern Dairies^ Im
S E A L T E S T P R O D U C T S
^eJIfysi Wonder/id Miles ofMBwrLife!
Great Gcncrat Motors Valuef
Endorses WildMe
M ore G o !
I m G a s!
Drive it Yourself!
The most wonderful miles of your life start the m inute you get bohind tho wheel ot a new
Pontiac and drive it yourself!
Come on in any tim e, It’s a pleasure for us to Introduce you
to this great new performer.
G et a ll tho wonderful things you w ant in a car—including low price! The perfect way to get th is done Is to come In and look at the great new Dual-Range* Pontiac,
then get behind the wheel and drive It yourself. You’ll see w hat we m ean!
Pontiac is big, d istinctive and fam ous for dependability. Pontiac gives you spectacular Dual-Range performance — to m atch your power to tralH c or to the • open road, au tom atically!
And w hat economy th is car w ill show! In Cruising Range, en g in e re v o lu tio n s a re
c u t 30 p e r c e n t—fo r m o re go o n le ss g a s!
• •O ptim al at
l^ o lla r ib irl> o ]]a ir
y o i u c a i i ^ l » e a i ; A
WATCH THI'TV fO O tSAU OAME OF TH* WB£K 6V6RY SAtO«OAY ON NBC TBieVIStON-.STArjUNIO .M iH .Hm M AH HI.CK«)AN:». ?ONFtAC SHOW AFTfR I V « Y OAMI
IRV IN P pN T lA C C o i w i ^ Y { V
W ilkeaboro Street v j / :, M ocksville, N . C . ■
THE DAVIE RECORD. il6c!K3ViLLE. N. U. OCTOBER 1 1962 PAGE THRE
THE DAVIE RECORD.
OMeit Paper In The p>unty
No Luiuor. Wine. Beer Ads
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
Kenneth Dwlg Guv Collette anc ;lns, J . C . and Norman Rum*mage spent the week-end fishlnt carMorehead City.'
— -■
The mercury dropped to 37 de- Rrees above lero Saturday morning. Frost was reported In some sections of the cou.ity.
M rs. J . C . Harpe, o f near Pino,
was in town shopping Friday.
June Meronev, of Lenoir, was a
M ocksville’visitor Wednesday, j
Ransome York Ir., made a busi
ness trip to Greensbon) Wednes-
Iday. I
'■ M r. and M rs. Harley Sbfiey
spent several'days last week visit
ing at M yrtle Beach, S. C .
. Miss Ruby FleminR, of Boon-
ville, was the Wednesday afte •
noon guest of M rs. Leslie Daniel.
. Attorney Avalon H all left Sat
urday for Gulfport,, M iss., where
he w ill spend this week looking
after some legal matters. |
M rs. N ell Holm an 'and child
ren and M iss Cam illa Tames re
turned last week from a visit to
.relatives at Portsmouth, Va.
A . A . Waenerand-Macvin Waters, two well-known Mocksville cidzcnSp remain in a serious con* ditlon at Davis Hospital^ Statesville, where they have been pa*
I dents for nearly two weeks, fol' lowing heart attacks. A l hope their lives w ill be spared.
I Fred Long, Jr., who has served for two years in the U . S. Army has received his honorable dis* charge and arrived hon\e last week.
Uurinc the past 15 months he has been stationed In Gertnany. Fred says he is. mighty proud to be In civilian clothes again. \Ve are all
elad to welcome him home.
James'Davis Move To Wfilkes-
Chester H . James, son of M r.. Ik A V A
and M rs. Clarence James, and V V T V
Miss B illy Ann Daviadauchter o f' p. e . Pe..bles, for five years
M r. and M rs. H . R . Davis, both Qavic County Farm Agent, has
of this citv were united In mar- 'moved to W llkesbeto, where he
fisRe in- a double ring ceremony j, pidd Man for the Yadkin Val-
on Saturday afternoon, Sept. 27th Q j,jry Co-Operptives. The
at 5 o’clock, at the hom of the Record is sorry to lose M r. and
c h 'u trs S ^ r .. V eyoung couple left Immediately well in their new home,
after the ceremony for a short The latch string w ill always be
wedding trip. ' | hanging on the outside should
M r. and Mra. lames are making they ever decide to return to the
their home in the Holman house county In North Carolina.m West M ocksville. The Record _ __joins their friends In wishing for "
through li e.^ ^ y ADS PAY.
Gentry Reunion
S .R . B illy H . Carier, son of M r. and M rs. S* C . arter, and Route 3, is home on a 14*day furlough. He has been stationed at ^an
Diego, C alif. B illy says he likes the Navy fine. He w ill wUi return to California and then to Seatde, W ash., from which port
he w ill leave for foreign service.
The annual Gentry Reunion w ill be held at the home of Dorse Koontz, near Davie Academy, on Sunday, Oct. I2th. A ll relatives
and friends are cordially invited to come and bring well-filled baskets.
FO R SA LE — Barbe W ire & Galvanized Roofing.Milier-Evans Hardware Co.
M r. and M rs. Eevrette Black
wood, of Salisbury street are the
h^ippy parents o f a datighter, Pa
tricia Lynn, who arrived at Rowan
Memorial Hospital Wednesday,
Oct. 1st.
Sgt. Lester Uwiggins, son of M r.
and M rs. M* L . Dwiggins, of this
citv, who has been stationed in
Pennsylvania, has received an hon
orable dischat;ge and arrived home
Thursday after serving two years
in the U . S,* Arm y. .
M r.-and'M rs. J . R . Siler and
daughter. M ite Mona fo , who
have been residents of this city
for the past nine years, moved
Monday to their new home at
Thom asvilie Th eir many friends
in this city wish them well in
The old Brown hoiise, on Salis
bury street, now owned by R . B.
Sanford, h a s been painted throughout, which adds much to
its appearance. This is one of the
oldest houses in M ocksville,
thought to be about 150 years old. M r. Sanford's mother was bom in this home 108 years ago. The building is In a fair state of
preservation.
Three Injured
M r. and M n. John Barber and little son, of Cooleemee, were all injured about 5 o'clock Friday afternoon in South M ocksville, on
die Salisbury highway when their
car collided with a truck driven by Arthur Jones, Negro, of Salisbury. M r. Barber received slight
injuries, while his wife suffered a
broken leg, cuts and bruises, and the son was injured about the face and head. They wer • carrled^toin d iis city wish them well in Rowan Memorial Hospital,
their uew home. truck driver escaped injury.
Princess Theatre
TH U R SD A Y & FR ID A Y
Ginger Rogers & M arilyn Monroe In **WE»RE N O T Mamed” with David Wayne
Eddie Bracken
News & Cartoon
^ FO R S A L E - Fo x 16 guage dou
ble barrel shot gun.Phone 301-W • Ceorge lames.
( Anyone wisliing to work as a nurse’s aid, between ages of 1845, white, apply at Mocksville Nursing
Home for interview.
SA TU R D A Y
Charles Starrett In
CYC LO N E FU R Y " W ith
Smiley Burnette
Serial &, Cartoon
M ONDAY &. TU ESD A Y
■XYDIA B A ILE Y ” In
Technicolor with Dale
Robertson &. Ann Francis
New &. Cartoon
W ED N ESD AY
Fred Astaire &. Vera Ellen In “T H E B ELLE O F NEW Y O R K ” W ith Marjorie Main Keenan Wynn
Comedy &. Cartoon
DA V IE rOUNTVS BIGGEST SHOW
VALUE > ADM JScandSik!
T o D a v i e C o u n t y V o t e r s
1 am a candidate for Register
of Deeds of Davie County and
would appreciate the votes of
all the good citizens of the coun
ty, in the November election.
Your Friend,
CHARLES W. WOODRUFF
(Political Advertisement)
.V
Experienced . Custom Quality Leather Top Table men wanted.
Applv in person.M O DEL FU R N IT U R E, IN C .Lexington, N . C.
W A N TED — Experienced ma-!
chine operators. W ill train good reliable girls. Also like to have one good young man to train as
cutter and pattern marker. Apply
M O N LEIG H G A RM EN T CO.
M ocksville. N . C.
Notice to Creditors
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of F. H . Bahnson, deceased, notice is hereby given to
all persons holding claims agaii.st said estate to present the same, properly verified, to the under' signed at Cooleemee, N C ., on or before the 30rli day o f Septem ber,
1953, or this noticc w ill be plead
in bar of recovery. A ll persons indebted to said estate w ill please make prompt settlement. Th is
30th day of September, 1552.
CH A S. F. BAHNSO N,
Exr. of F. H . Bahnson, Decs'd.
T o O u r F r i e n d s I n
D a v i e C o u n t y
This is to express our sincere and deep appreciation for
the loyalty and devotion of our many friends in Davie
County. We cherish the-.friendship displayed by you to*
wards our efforts on both a professlo.ial and social basis.
/
We would like very much to express • this appreciation
to you personally. However, since this is not possible we
are taking this opportunity to publicly acknowledge your
friendship.
Stncerelv,
R a y m o n d & F l o r a S ile r
W e A r e C e l e b r a t i n g O u r
n r m
T H E G I F T S H 6 P L E S L I E ’S M E N ’ S S H O P
We Appreciate The Generous Patronage You Have Given Us During The
Past Five Years, And Hope That You Will Continue To Let Us Serve You.
- L O O K AT THE E X T R A VA LU ES W E A R E OFFERING D U RIN G THESE D A YS
O c t o h e i r 9 t h ,l O t h , 1 1 t h r
Nylon Slips • " $4.50
Hose, 3 pair for ^ ' $2.00
Fall Gloves, all colors - $1.00, $1.25
MEN’S PANTS
A D V ER TIZ ED BRAN D S
A ll Wool Gabardine, Reg. $17.95. Sale $14.95 '
A ll Wool Gabardine, Reg. $12.95, Sale $9.95
Rayon 15 oz.Garbardine, R ig $6.95 Sale $4.95
All Jarman Shoes
R td u c ^ For Thif Event
Reg $16.95 Sale $1?.95
Reg. $14 95 Sale $11.95
Reg. $12.95 Sale $10.95
Reg. $9.95 Sale $8.25
Reg $8.95 Sale $7.25
Regular $12.27 Crystal Value, Only $8.95
R^egular $8 83 Crystal Value, Only $6.50
All Gifts . Reduced
Blouses Reduced - Dresses Rediiced
1 LO T M EN’S
Van Heusen Shirts
Reg. $3.95 - ■ • • Sale $2.50
SA V E $1.45
I Group Sport Coats - - iO F F
Y O U SA V E
W e Carry Over 600 Different Fabrics For
Custom And Stock Suits. Advertised Branids.
Fit A nd W ear Satisfaction Guaranteed
T H REE D A Y S O N LY
OCTOBER 9-10-11
■
P#GE FCCR THE UAVIE RECCIItP, MOCKSVIU,^ N. C. OCTOBER 8 t9SS
U;S. 'Firemaster'
Blows Out Flames
At Italian'^Wefl
R Q M E —One of the m ost eostty
(iros' ih a l ever burned ,in titHy waB
blown out lilte a candle- recently by a blasl of 550 pounds o( TNT.
The fire was a high colum n of
flam e gushing from the; ground at/' Bordolano, 12 m iles north of Cre*'
mona» where a natural gas w ell vfaa
ignited by unknown causes and burned for l\vcnty>lwo days. Flam ba
fed by gas at a pressure of more than 200 atmospheres shot skyv/ard
to a height of 250 feet, and, although they later .«ul>sldod their glare could
still be seen at night in Brescia,
Pincenza and M antova .^30 i;niles
aw ay. ’
The fire caused dam age estimated at more than $600,000 and foiled all
attem pts of Italian technicians to ex
tinguish it.
The hero of the exploit was M yron Kiniey, “ firem nster" (rom;.' Tulsa,
O kla. He was flown to the scene.
H is body encased in henvy asbestos clothing, be placed the explosive
charge w ithin 400 feet of the flro and then ran to safety topethcr with
Italian workmen who had helped him in (his dangerous o p c ra t^ ..
The flick of an electric 'switch caus<id a charge to explode ^ ^ h 'a
roar that was beard m any .miles around. When Iho thick clottd of
black smoke cleared it was seen thai
the pillar of (lame had disappeared
and had been replaced by a .tal)'
colum n of m ethane gas spotiting
harm lessly into th e a it. Ti^ousandl
of people, kept bock by police cordons, broke into cheers.
The fire started at well No. 3 in the Bordolano area, considerodlthe
richest natural gas field in Europe. The w ell had been drilled to o deptU
of 5,600 feet and was nearly completed when a sm all explosion ibok
place. Pifleen men working at., or
near the well head had o n ly ’jusi
tim e lo escape before the .well caught fire, blasting away most oi
the well-head structure and adjacent ■ machinery.
Oddities In the News
Make Funny Reading
A 99-yeBr-oW m an In Silver Creek, Ga., joined a lonely hearts ‘
club and wooed and wed a 70* year-old Texas miss.
A m an who wished to give his
house In W arw ick, R .I., distinc-
tion spotted it all over with varlr. colored polka dols five inches in
diam eter. ; 'W hen a robin in Donchcster,
England, made her nest fast in the saddlebag of a workm an’s^
bjcycle, ihe w orkm an walked^to" work every day until the eggs'
were hatched.
A girl in Cypress, Calif., ^ n t
her flancc, wlio was slntioned
w ith the U nited Slates Arm y In
Japan, an average of four letters per day for five consecutive months.
Does Anyone Want To Go
Inside a Swiss Qlacier?
JU N G FR A U JO C H . Swilz. - You
can go inside a glacicr at offe^cnr of a railroad hero, the station' oi
which is built on the edgcr of a*gla*
cler U.333 feet high in the ^Swi.s.'s Alps above Wengen. It is iocaic<< only 2,309 feet from tht» top of the
fam ous Jungfrau peak.
You can clim b all day or ride ih Jungfraubahn—a cog callw as wUic.
ranks as an engineering marVct.
The train goes up, around iin<
through m ountains for nearly twi
hours to clim b less than a mile ii
height. Y ou step out of it inta:^ mnd era hotel—or into a glaciei*:*
The glacicr is honeycombed witr-
an intricate system of tunnels borec into a thick sheet of Ice. ti-
One of these tunnels leads lo lh< **ice palace,” deep inside the gla
cier. It is well nam ed, it wnulc m ake s fitting palace for a falri
tale snow queen.
The “ palace” contains long pas-
. sages, big halls, little rooms-^all of
gleam ing blue-white ice. Even Iht furniture is carved from ice. Tljcre is a complete ice bar with ice tables,
chairs, a piano (being ice. Ti won’t
play) and a stove which of courso w on't bum ). In one niche dug into
the glacier sits an ice automobllo.
There is also a scientific observa
tory up here, where important
studies of cosmic rays have p|en in
progress for several years.
This entire strange comrpunity,
spread vertically along the faCe of
• steep cliff, is linked by a^series
of lifts and tunnels. There is Uittle
jpace to move around outside.'
TOO MUCH SERV IC E'
A good little ijirl was h u rtlin g
to school in a slate of extreme agitation. „ '
“ Please, God don’t let m^*- be late,” she m urm ured as the school
iTell began to ring in the distance, i At that mom ent she tripped over I a stone and fell flat.
“ Please, God,” she exclaim ed,ln
an injured voice,- as she got up and
dusted h er s e 1 f, “ I didn't say
•push'l” 7
Rules Is Rules G U EST - “H elpl -NlgJit clerks
There's a burglar in m y room l"
N IG H T C L E R K - “ Throw him out, or we’ll have to charge you'tor- a double room /*
,Christians Differ
L e n o n for October 12, USit
« T W njL OtVB YOU the secret ol
^ true liapplne,,/' II b m an
■tarli tellclns In that vein he nrlU have Ustenera at once. Jesua be*
gan his famous sermon on the
mount with that m a g i c w o r d
"happy." It Its
uniortunate that most of otir Eng'
Ush Irau s e th e w ord
••b le s s e d " be
cause lor moat people ••blessed"
Is a church-wotd.
■They don't Itnow Or. Foremoii w h e th e r th e y
w ant lo be Mossed or not they
have no doubt about wonting to
be happy. K l» uiUorlunate
that Jesus' meaning has '> «“ « * • den under an even m ote forma- .y dtng word, ••Beatitudes." W hat we
:.hBve here Is a series of one-sen-
tence pictures ot tn iy happy
W h a t C h r is tia n s A i«
In these sentences Jesus • ''ft® '*
fb t Kind ot person who ••»>». ^ ) t to say. belonea to. the Kingdom
of H e a «n . « Cod " f t throw away some ol the h u m w
race and keep others, these aM
the people he would keep. Jeaus
in these short sentences is plctOT-
ing the Chrlst-llke. He Is not talking. !»bout what they beUeve but
about what they »re. There is all
the dUlerence In the world between
, Idea ot a Christian a ^
SMB. Ol the popular Ideas t^ a y . Po> example, many persons t h i^
of a Christian as • pcraon who kee^s a certain number ol rules,
o r believe* a certain number of things, or belongs to a peculiar
Tcind of club caHed the church. But
a club member m ay be exactly like the people on fUtsM c ex
cept that he has paid his dues
and they haven’t; and some churcn
members are Just Ifee wMV-chutch
m S S e » except that they have
paid Ihelr dues (or at least owe
them) whBe the outsiders have
» « • . . . ’
F ta d ta g T ru e H a p p in «..
*Let us venture to put the mean
ing o( Jesus Into simple words ot
today. The tollowlng sentences arc m eant to suggest only some ol the
means wrapped in these tniths-»or-
JIfe. . . Do you want to know the
secret ot bapptacss'! Jesus aste. 1
wtU tell you. The happy are those who know how little they know
and how far from good they arc. These are the real people. G ods
PMS4*. The happy are not alw ayr
the gay; the happy are the serious. tliose who feel » sincere sor
row lor Ihelr sins and shortcomings. sorry enough to turn away
from them. The happy are those who do not insist on their own
riigMs. who carry no chip on their
shoulders, who are more interested
in justice for others than for them
selves. After the proud have destroyed the pcoud. these are the
people to whom the earth belongs. The happy peopleiare those who
w n t to be good mote U^an any
thing elae In the world. This is the one desire that God always .fulfils.
Hiippy i^ople’ are thOse that And
their happiness in helping others;
tb S ^ a re Ihe people who will And
' helj^rs in their own time of need. Happy people aw those who are
pure, not In act alone but In Inner
thoughts and desires. They are the
ones who have any eyes for God.
Happy people are not only peace- themselves but help others lo
live in peace as well. These are the people who are reaHy God-likc.
Happy people are not always free
ftom trouble- .titit their troubles have been caused chiefly not by
their sins but by the fact that they
are good. They have their heaven
In thel&hearts.• » *
Q^rUtinns Are. .Different
■ You are happy yourselves
(Jesus concludes) when the hard
things said about you are lies. You »te happy, when you sutler as I
suiter, on behiUf ofe others. God wUl reward you; you belong to
a»e glorious company of the best m en of all tim e, tor there never
was s good friend of God who was
not misunderstood and slandered.
Jesus never explained all he
mejsnl. (“He who has cars, let him hear,*^ be used to say.) But what
ever may be puzzling, one thing Is
clear: Christians are dlffftrent. It
a m an flts these descrJi>tions over
partovax. ho is noticeably different from thl; ¥un-or-mlne human...be-
Ing. We cannot water down Jesus*
Ideas, lor they are really, radical We should not try to make It sound
easy; he did not. But let us be as
frank »*\he was: If ydu want to find real'happlnoaO f you want to
belong to God’s people. If you want
to be a real Christian, this Is H.
M an y Recrufts Q lva F a U t -
N am os W h e n E n U rin g A rm y
WASHINGTON—A m an Jn every 100 entering Ihe arm y, d raft or vol
unteer. eoes itt under an assumed nam e, often one that belongs to
I somebody else, the adjufont gen-
crnPs office stales. U sually h.*
m akes up a fanciful history, forget* ting 0 ja il acQtence, or a wife or two.
Som etim es he adopts anothet
m an’s previous service record, oi
m okes up one /or him self, complpi- w ith m edals and cUaUons.
Almost invariably, t h e arm> catches up w ith him . and kicks him
out. In m any cases «uch a m an w ill brush himself off and go right bacK
into the arm y under a new phony enlistment.
The records provide a variety of answers xvh^ t h ^ d o it. Sometime-
the rcc^iiil wants to shed, under t. new identity, the emba^rassm entl^
sometimes crbninal, thtiV he encountered in civilian life. Som etim e ■
he genuinely likes the arm y, bu* can't enlist under his own nom e be
cause he was in oncc, and was dis- honprably. discharged. Sometimes lu
is just plain bored, and enlists onlv to desert as soon as his new name
is on (he roster.
Entering the service under a false
name is not in itself an offense, far as the arm y is concerned, U
John Doe wants io call him self Rid',
trd Roe when he puts o n 'the ‘ um ‘urm , that’s a ll x l ^ t w th ihe arm,- provided bo doesn't do it for
raudulent purpose, or to cof»ci*a
i-om the autiiorlties informaiiftn hat m ight affect his eliglblity f •;
crvice, such as a crim inal rccoiu
'»r an undesirable discharge froui ‘revious service.
i Calculated lo 2040
Decimal Places In 70 Hrs.'
How accurately has the value of
pi been calculatcd^ P I is the.num- her by which the diam eter of a c ir
cle m ust be m tiltiplied to get the cir
cumference. The figure commonly used is 3.1416, but It can be calculated to os m any more declmalH
as one cores to take the trouble to go. The record l i now held by a
group of m athem aticians .at the
Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Working over the Ju ly 4 weekend,
and using a m odern electronic computing m achine (E N IA C ), they cal
culated the value to 2040 decim al placcs. This took about 70 hours.
Such a num ber is not used in any practical computation, but it is im*-
liurlant in m athem atical theory, particularly in regard to the dis
tribution of the d l^ ta It containa. P I to Id pfeces Is *.14150265358971,
P O U n C A L V IEW
*'Dad» w lu t Is ■ iraltor in pel' Uics7*» *
traitor^ ion, Is a m an who leaves M r party and gees
o v e rto tb e o lh a rs td c ."“ Then irtuki t i a m an who
leaves (be otkar party and eomex over to our
**A eenvletr mj boy.*’
'W oiiO llifC M icerii
A model m a n ltffe is one in whici
the wife is trtaffure and the hus
band is a treasuqr.
It’s Exasperating
Calling m y wife b a the telephone Is a task lh a t m akes m e dizzy. W hen the w lM is clear, she isn’t
home». And fAM liMM, H*f bu^.
Please help Us!
Wq have lost (l»e ns^mes o f
few o f o u r sol.licr bovs w hosu
pictures appear le lo w . I f voii'ro-
cognize one or m o re , nlcasc a d
vise us, a n d \v<i w ill ‘ sipprect.ic;:
very m uch :
f
Memphis Couple
Rears Children
BytheDozens
• M EM PH IS; T EN N .-*‘Loved eVft.v m inute of it." That Is the reaction
of M r. and M rs. J . L . Craig to heir- in ; rear 39 yoimgsters. including (5
of-their own,
“ Once there w e r e no childriin
around for two weeks, and the quiet
alm ost drove Us crazy.*’ M rs. Crnlg
s.nys.
• The Craigs began taking core of
children from • broken homes af p:
M rs. Craig’s son returned home from the servire and got m arried
They couldn’t stand having childrrir leaving for good and none coming;
in. so they asked Children’s Burcc»u Inc., for a boy to replace the m »r rled son.
Two More r
M rs. Craig found out that the'littl'i
boyxhad a brother. She didn’t want to separate them , so the took both
children. It was only a few days later that the bureau told her th^y
hnd two si.«ters.
Mr. and M rs. C raig have been tak
ing care of children from the bureau for five years. The young^ers have
ranged in age from 9 days to 11 years, ' - .
It’s only a tem porary home for t.he youngsters though and they’re
returned to their parents when the homes' are mended.
"W e feel bad when they go, but we try to hide our feelings.” M rs.
Craig said. “We*re happy to know that they're being reunited w it h
their own people.’*
M rs. C raig said her. .husband Rovi so attached- to :lhe first two.! boys
and their sisters that “ It hurt worie
for him than tt did forr-me” when they wereHr'etumed to their parent.<.
H er form ula lo r rearing children Is simple.
“Give them plenty to ' eat nnd ! plenty of loving/'sh<b> said.'
. N eed M ore Love
M rs. C raig said a child requires more than the ordinary am ount of
love when it comes from a broken home.
She cares for the youngsters Just ,.ps though they were her own, cor-.,
reeling them when necessary, but never trying to take them aw ay trom
the patents.
?'We never try to steal their iove,”
she said. “ We try to teach them to love their parents."
The couple, w hich has six children 'with them now , said they’re all fine youngsters.
^‘They’y^e norm al a n d healthy.
They argue back and ..forth, give each- other black eyes and are al
ways ready .to dem and candy and
cookies.”
NEW MONEY M N t
YOUR 0 U > THINGS
T w p ia«> 4 «
lucAUvn. Nat
i i . ' f i . i t e u -
^ L o Y . u '- C - d T h e R i c o r d ? .
r i m R .* k H q r d k T « l»
IM B «h « ■ k . « M wMb
4 W A N T « • < i n
Loteil publlthsd'flgurei ihow
t W Cornel ll Ajnerleo'i molt popular elgorelle by the wldeit margin In
clgorene hliloiyl Tty Comeii for 30 doys
and » e lor younell why Cornel leads all
oltier brondi-liy blMlonsI
FOR PUKE CRYS l A L ICE
C O A L P O R G R A T E S . STO yES, F U R N A C E A N D S T O K E R S
It W ill Pav You To Call O r Phone U s,
.W e .Make Prompt Delivery i ...........
Mocksville ice & Fuel C o r . /
Phone 116 ; ’ M ocksvillc, N . C .
Your sons or daughters who are away
dl college would like to read The Davie
Record. Only $1 for the school term .;
♦ FOR RENT ♦
SPACE IN THIS PAPER
Will Arrange To Suit
GOOD NEIG^80RS~Pi<ipES TO’ '
, Fir YOUR BUSiNlESS
The Record has the largest white:
circulation of any Davie papim «
- D a v i e R e c o r d
M is Btlen Pu^i&hed Since J899
5 3 ¥ e a r s
^ O thevs hov€.cpm C;and g-^ne-ydiir
.county , new spapcj keep* Roing.
it U»fi seam ed hard to
n^aki; “ buckle and toiigu«** m eet,
but soon the n .r ^hin^*8 and we
m arch O ur fa ith fu l 8ub»crib ers
m ost of whom pay prom ptly, fifive us * '
courage a n J | abiding faith in our ']
(ellow m an.
|( ynu< ni'iKhbor is nul taking fh e
Record'^ ell him to ftub&c>'«be. T h e . >
p rice is only $,^.50 per v«*ar in th«
■ S tat*/, a n d 0 0 in o th e r et& tes. ^
- W hen You Come To Town
. Malce Our Office Your
Headqimrters.
W e Are Alwavs Glad To
See You.
i
’'V ..The Davie Record
D A .V IE C O u i v 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 K E A D
-HEUE SHALL THE TO.fSS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN! UN AW ED BY INFLUENCE AN D UNBRIBED BY. G A IN '"
VOLUM N L I II
M O C K SV ILLB . N O RTH C A R O U K A , W BPN BSD AV OCTOBER 15 iq «N H M B B R I I
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
W kat-JV ** H appeninn In D a-
»is B afor« “ ..h in t
Anit A bbravi tie I S tirtt.
■ R*co-d, O.ttober 8. 1930)
C. C Stnnesfreet, of Kflnnxpnliii.
7 K-»ir «*}.9)»/>r Thnrfufoy.
'V . T, of Hickory, was
ft Moclcsvllle vjsltor Tbtit&day.
: fl. C. Austin, of Statesvltle was
ht tnwn last w ccx f/>r the bJit'^avIc
Fair.
Mr«. W . H . H arris and children
C atAw ba. visited friends In tow n
Uitt^week.
W . G . A llen, of A dvance, R . i,
Jip e n t 'several days last week In
linwn w lib relatives.
L o nn ie H . Laoler underw ent a
to n s il operation at Long*s Senator.'
Siatesvllle, M onday.
B nrk 'A llison, of W ilm in g to n ,
borne folks In M ocksville
lla ^t week.
M r. and Mrs< Frank Reece, of
Itredell C oanty , soent last Friday
. i n tow n ta k in g In the Fair.
John- B row n and Boone R u m .
m aee, spent T hursday In Coolee.
. mee shopping.
Mr.«t. Id a N a il returned hom e S s t.
uVdaT from a vlalt to her son a.nd
dan ?h te r at H ickory.
. M rs. J . L . Sheek reltirned hotre
‘the past week from Dallas^ T exas,
■ W h errsbe visited her sister iiVs.
B e ia ^ iiilth .
A n u m b ar o f Davie Repifbllc^ns
atlended th e 7th D istrict R e p nb ll
c^n C om m ittee m eeting at L e x in r*
.'to n T hursday.
M r. atid tfrs . Charles H e n d r
.o fM » r lo n , V a .. spent , the w eot-
> n d w ith their grand-m other. M rs.
G o S b M k .
■ tones a rd
'^ IW re n . of Tbom asvltle, spent the
w e e k e n d In 'to w n w ith relatives
and friends lo and aronnd tow n^
M iss S arah G aither w ho teaches
In (he G astonIa< dly schools, soet't
the week-end In tow n ^ t h her p ar
ents, M r. and U G aither..
G »U he-.
M iss M ary Nelson Andersoni a
«t»dro> a t Salem A cedem v,^.spent
th e w e ^^n d - in - tow n' w H h her par
ents, M t. and M rs. Z . N . Ander
A Man Without
A Purpose
Rev. Walter E. lafinhmr. TaviorKVltle. N. C
A m-»n ‘vithont ^ purpose said;
*Mt matters little what T do.
Or how T cel my dallv hri>fni
As llfe*8 hard nnthwav I m**soe.
rv e nothing much for which to live
And so 1*11 while away tny ttme;
It matters little wbst I'glve.
For life’s a drudge and jio t sub-
llroe,“
Another said; ‘ T il drlnk~^nd eat
And live a life that’s free from
care;
IMI congresate with those '<j^ho
meet
That have no aim to .do and dai^;
IMI sine their sones and plav their
games
And thincs that thrill me l shall
court;
I ’H. g o. where world|r ,ptea.sure
flames
And laui;h and talk and be* a
sport.*'
Anolh^at^hed bis lustfni ije s
Across .the evil, sinlnl.J^rongs. „
And «nld; .**It might be good lo
W h i c h Is T h e W a r P a r t y ?
'i ______________________
I^t^s Look At The Record
i' “"REPU BU CA N B A T T LE C A S U A LT IE S IN 50 YEA R S
TH EO D O R E R O O SEV ELT . . . ; 0
W ILLIA M H . T A F T ........................................................... 0
W A R R EN G . H A R D IN G ........................................................... 0
C A LV IN C O O L ID G E .......................................................... 0
H ER B ER T H O O V ER .... ^__________ 0
T O T A L f>
D EM O CRA TIC B A T T LE C A SU A LTIES IN 50 YEA R S
W OODROW W IL S O N ........................................................... 334,734
FR A N K LIN D . R O O SEV ELT . . . 994.893
(W orld W ar II)
H A R R Y S. T R U M A N ...........................................................117.973
(Korean W ar to Sept. 17)
and that the Republican pattv Is the one,chat gives us peace
w ill give us peace again.
V O TE R EPU BLIC A N IN i952.
The first frost of the-season V«9
seen In ; thU ' Mctlon Thursdav
momlne. Temperature : reRlsti^i •
ed around 44 degrees Thursday
and Friday motn)ug«i
Bsxter.l. Jordan^ o t Cooleemee
who play^ short for Newark, K
J ., iij;international Levene will
plsv l^ tfi Washington Senstoi.s!
next His hatting average for
sc^soiiJwasTi^i He‘led his tean’,
Mr.^Hartey SoQe>;..ot;:thls c i^
and M j$|^ssIe.-:Be«eV|i^en^
^e.imlted In ma'friaep
Toesdi^Ja?t«|nMn,
how ep;^ ejtfl^ V :L. Barnes, tbi
offi<?ifl|^^cIwBi^nian,;a^ Hoi.
ly . ar'e'; ex'
pec»e<^ac^t^orrpw.^^]^^T w ill
rpslde^’'srfut!h;:fc|kinfs^^^ The
Record jolnrfith^jnY^^
wlshlne for ;j&ng, haopy
•ltd prosperou^llfeii^^'"'
'Trs, Rnth Rich and W. P. Cor.
nntzer.^hoth ot Moclesvllle. motor*
ed over to GHinvllle, V a., W«dnes
' dav, ^ pt 34th. and were married
In a simple hut He'auilfUI ::eerethonv
performed bv Rev. • J . B .': W ltiiir
pastor of a Methodif^t. church In
. that city. They spent their hon
eymoon at Virginia Beach and oth
er pointa of Interest fn Vfrelnla.
gepSbll^canirhave noinlnAted the!
fol1owli|g.'oonnty,'.tlckeit Represen-I
tatlye,^A. T . Daoiiei; Senator. A .'
T , Grsnt; Sherlf!.* C. W. H all; Re
gister. E . D. Ijaui.es;. Clerk. U .. A
Hartman; Treasurer, S’. C. Stone
street; Coroner, Ray I#«gle;. Swr.^i
veyor. M CJ Ijames; County Com.^|
tuisslouers, H. M; Oeadmon, O. L ,
Harkey, R . P. MBrtlu.
rise. y
Aliove th e ir follies and thefr
wretoR.*:
But thev have found-the easy w ^y
T o eratlfy their flesh and pride,
I Therefore I m ig ht as welt be gay
A nd follow w ith the drlftlnel
tide.’*.
A h , vast the m ultlnides we see
T hat have no pnrpose, plan norIS .. ' "'W ho never have desire to be
G reat m en of usefulness and^j
fam e;
W h o only eke their lives away
A n d die ynhonored and
■ .2.B ut w ho shaii give account some
daA
T o G od n p on H is blazing throne
The Statue O r
Liberty
T his statue repreeents the best
A n d ereatest .I nd pn earth"-.
T he ttatlon that we love the njos\
W here freedom had tt^ hirth
It represe ts our liberty
T o w orship G od abovej’'-^^
T be fre ^ o m th at all men should
T o live and learn and lo v e .". .. >»•It holds th e to rth o f ktiow leee blsjh
T hat, m en should strive to reach.
It stands, for freedom of the press
A n d llh e ri^ ,of spet ch. •
iSuch Uheny^alLl. men should love.
W hich' glves‘'««:<*qual rights,
ITo cnUlvBte o h r nijtids and hearts
^A n d resch life’s Rreatest heights^
;I^ iig inay onrflatt of )^eem on;^ave
••?^Fjrt>^mo»filain lo p > lO iS t« ;'..
t^ne may ihlv«-»atiieJtft Its hsnd
To-show th |t we are free.
T h m ,« ^ sboftfd lef no en^icR L
T b ’G.pd and’H is.great cail^^::
» n » :to;^U ^'.«bores 'fromr4b.<
And.'crnsh sweet (rcedom*s .la ^ .
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Can Supply Tiour Needs
‘ - '® d iO .O D C t M L ,
^AN D;, iind‘ B lS ^ K ,
C^l,/9C Phpne.U. A t tin(.e
PH O N E 194
Fotm erlv Davie Brick &.Coal Co
T O T A L 1,442.470
This is the cold ptoof that the Democratic party is the War par- year of the war.and
Oar County And
Social Security
Bv W . K . W hite. M anner.
Many survivors' o f debased
farm employees are now getti >g
social security benefit payments.
These arc eases where the farn)
employees had some social secur*
i<y credits earned in previous jobs
covered by social security, o r
World W ar II .icrvicc which could
be credited to his social security
accounr.
As an example, let us citc the
case of a farm employee's young
widow and three small children
now gcttlnc monthly benefit pay*
ments. The father was in active
m ilitary service during the last|
When he re*
<*1NT0XICA.T1NG** M ILK
Pauperi Would Go
. To Birthday Fetes
And Return Rich
N EW HAVEN, Conn.- How wonlri
you like to go to a binhday partv a poor m an and come honit'
wealthy?
An aging and fading Clcopa>i‘:*
threw just such a grand pony fi>r M arc Anthony on one of the loiter’.-
birthdays. Plutarch left nn accmim of the parly and said it was ob*
filh
ceived his honorable discharge, he
took a job on a farm. As he was
a regular farm employee for one
employer, his work came under
social security at the beginning ofj
1951. He had one year of farm
work credited to his social secur*
ity account when he suddenly
died in January of that year.
His young widow had read that
at least six quarters of coverage—
a year and a half of work'**~werc
required to b^'comc insured under
social security. She did not think
that she and the children were
served *‘wUh t*ic utmost prod(guliiy entitled to survivor’s benefits. Herl
An old m an’s cow got loose,' vi^*
lied a neighbor's sUll, and aU so much ^ u r m ash that she died. T))C
old m an put Ih a. claim againstyihe neighbor for the cost of the coiv.
‘T il n e v e r pay It,” said the neighbor. “M y wbisity masU didn •
kill your cow. She gave eggnog, a r.:
jyo;ii m ilked her to death.’’
W hat Fools le only persons on earth who
c l r ^ to have more sense than
women are men.
Favorite. '* ^ m n ”
Teacher asketf<ali;the children .write down the nam e of their fa
vorite hyznn^ •Ji EveryohH ' wrote .e x c e p t little
M ary.“Come on, Mary,-write it down."
coaxed teacher.80 little M ary blushingly wrote.
'Johnny Brown.*’
--------- -------- %. Short and Sweet %And we’ve heard, a woman’s club
meeUng described .as—Gabble.'*gi6*
gle, gobble and get.
Comparison
Love m akes a m a n thinlc alm ost as m uch of*a giri «s he does ot him
self..
of splendor and ma»jinc*cnce.
that m any of the gucrts sat down ip want and went home wealthy men ’*
Ralph Linton, professor of nnthro
pology at Vale, and his wife, Adcliri h^v'e probed the origins of birth, days and have come up with'this an<i
other entertaining accounts of th*-
history ot these “special days." Tbe r ^ l t of this research Is the book
“The Lore of Birthdays."
"O ne’s own birthday is a red let
ter day,” say the I4ntons, “for it is the tim e when all the presents anti
good wishes are for oneself.” Tliey add that “other holidays lift the
heart but birthdays w arm the ego. '
The U nions have traced birtlidnys
from their prim itive bcginnin,«TS down to present day celebrations.
They write that the iceeping of birtn records. Was im portant in ancient
times principally because a birth date was erscntial lor the.casting
of a horoscope.
The Lintons exnlain the origins
such modei;n cCiebrations as chil-
litre husband’s employer, however*
suggested that she inquire at the
social security officc. She did.
and it was explained to her chat
her husband’s one year of work
as a regular farm employee, plus
his W orld W ar 11 service credits,
made him fulhr' insured at the
time of death. Both she and the
children ate now getting monthly
social security benefit payment
checks.
A representative of this office
w ill be in- M ocksville again on
Oct. 22nd, at the court house,
second fioor, at 12;30 p. m.« and
on the same date in Cooleemee,
at the old Band Hall» over Led*
ford’s Store, at 11a. m.
’u u
TH RW Jre M dN
dren’s birthday parties. This parens w ith y ou . W e have several plaii
be h ap p v to explain to y o u a t abs
p'a^tfef I ' r - / by seeking th e inform ation]
''memorable feature of G erm an famt ' Iily life. The authors also tell us that n ______1 T * ^ I I ________
ttii^candle-llt birthday caks is an-J K O f t C l 1 O l l O n I G V . I W 1 othetj G erm an import. They point
' out, however, that the custom ol ■ lighted' candles on cakes started
The Luitons tell us that on t h e c i a t e Y our Confidei
sixth day- of each month, which was ., the birthday of Artemis, goddess-o!
“"“the'Tnooh and the hunt, the Greeks 1 1
used lo place “ honey cakes round a.<jQ O n Y y 1 1 I 1 ]| l l l l S ' J
the moon nnd lit with tapers” on the altars-of Artemis* temples. They
add that .they could find no ovidenee ■ _ _ ,% .ol> biiHhday candles in use between
4i- the tim e of the Greek moon wor- ; • — • ^ ■ ■
iS c ^ a n c^ebration. - "siets Are Ov^r $i HERE’S GOOD
Seen Along Main Street
By The .StrMt RnmM«r.
0O(K)ll0
S. M . Brewer rambling around
town on sultry day-^Capt. Chas.
Domm lighting big cigar In front
of bus station‘-M arsh Horn and
W ill Markland hanging around
drug store watching bait game—
Miss Sarah Gaither doing some
earlv Christmas shopping Mrs. J.
T.AnfScll mailing lettcrs—Mrs. J.
R . H arris making bank deposit—
M rs. Nera Godbev carrying trav
of hot coffee down Main street—
M rs. W . M . Long doing some af
ternoon week*end shopping—W .
M. Cartner leaving town with
truck load of Mascot lime—Clar'
cnee Carter transacting business
in bank on busy morning—Mrs.
Rufus Beck and daughter leaving
court house on chilly morning—
Wes McKnight hanging around
town waiting for bank to open—
Hubert Lashm it walking around
town wearing black derby decora*
ted with Eisenhower badges—Sam
Allen walking around town in
shirt sleeves on frosty morning—
Woman and children standing in
front of dime store with hands
fu ll of toys—Ransome Yorke, Jr.,
wearing one of the reddest shirts
ever seen In Davie County—Son-
ny Sheek and small boy and girl *
hurrying down Main street—Mrs.
jCeoree Rowland busy eating be*
fore dinner pear-Ben Boyles and
Roy Brown coming out of cafe
Mrs. T . J . Caudell on her way to
market, accompanied by her dau
ghter, M rs. Sheek Bowden, Jr.—
Mrs. Jack Daniel and small son
m their way up Main street—
Mrs. J . S. Braswell carrying arms
loaded with packages up Main
street—Frank Fox and C . A .
Blackwclder holding ECt*together
meeting In front of postolRce—
M r. and M rs. Tohn Cwing doing
some Saturday morning shopping
-George Hendricks busy wrap*
ping up winter shoes-Jack Fos
ter hurryinc across Main street— J.N Smoot distributing campaign
cards around the square - Gilmer
Hartley buying pair of trousers
while B ill Howard negotiates for
a white hat and pair or shoes -
Miss Margaret Ann farth er look
ing at big red rose .corsage in dime
store—M r. and M rs. H . R . Hen
d rix, Jr.. anJ babe, gettinR ready
to go to Salisburv—M rs. 1. C . Col*
lette carrying arms loaded with
merchandise down Main street—
M ts. John Eaton doing some af
ternoon shopping—Game protec*
tor Woodruff taking time off to
Iget a hair cut—Peggy Beck busy
[counting new half dollars—^Mrs.
Bryan Sell and small daughter en
joying refreshments In drug store.
Ir
^<In folk belief, birthday candled
are’ endowed with special m agic for graiiting wishes,” the Lintons con-i _tinu^i “ and the candles are an honor • • • B u t, M o ne y T o B u ila . . . M '
J , m anner of celebralKm varies’
| r^ i^ rln g <lUs ^ gobs around the gJobe.” th/-h/s association is h ere to h e lp a n d se|
Vusiitt^'paste, WS*^sticKlng ; authors say, "b u l everywhere the I
humbtacks. % ,|^blrthday is a meaningful annualw atdihig him , askcdM festival, interwoven with folklore'
|;>What*s the idea o' the tacks,! and legend, and looked forward to b7“ I with gaiety and excitement as on^’s“Lodi, mou," the Scot snapped, “ye surely dliuia tiiink Im to stay .her^ aU.mjr j^ y s,^ .
^^;'i»Alw»ya-Happens
1* ‘J!®*?; erey is'fini^Brtipsgrow sore,.
- r^tf-sbme W and ^M is b o lW !•,
” Xi- ve heard that joke before.”
ilns Ey^gM )inr
r ju s t:h ^ td < ^ | k £ e l-
— . J l asleep In the back seat.”
Prie'iids>~Pei^on8 who stick to
gether until debt do them part.
own special day.”
Pr^are F6r Tlie Future
By Saving
n 't tan Without Water,
Woman Not a Bit Thirsty
B RA IN A RD , N eb.-A t the start
Of fhe 104th. year here, Mrs. Barbara Plisek said she feels
line nnd isn’t a bit thirsty.Slie hasn't had a drink of
•v'lter since she was 91.! Her -daughter, M rs. August
Hernis, said M rs. Plisek's diet (bnslsts of bread, eggs and cof
fee.She is bedfast but has an ex
cellent • meinory and a strong voice;' $he was bom in Czecho
slovakia and cam e to this country in 1804 after her m arriage to
Frank Plisek.
N E W S
YO U CAN B U Y A
New Singer Sewing
M a c h in e
A s L o w A s $92.50.
Ltbeml Allowance For Yout
O ld Machine.
Easy ^ d n et Term s;
Special terms to tobacco and
cotton ^rmers. Buy now and
pay one-thfnd. Pay one-third on
your 1955 cro p , and one-third
on your 1954 crop. Ask to see
the new Singer Vacuum Clean
er with the magic handle. W rite
o r phone fo r free demonstra-
^tio'n in your home.'
It Pays To Buy The Best^
Come B v, C all O r W rite
Singer Sewito; Madiine
CO M PA IjlY
11 S . Main St. Lexington, N C .
Phone 2238
I
PAGE TWO THE DAVIE RECORD. M0CK8V1LLE, S. C , OCTOBFR IB. 19SS
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C . FR A N K STR O U D . E D IT O R .
Entered atthePoetofflce inMncke- viUe. N. C .. ae Second-p.lRBf Mali m atter. March 8.1908.
S U B SC R IPT IO N RA T ES;
ONE YEAR. IN N. rAROI.INA ■ » 1..W SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA ■ 7Sc.
ONE YEAR. OUTSIIlESTATt- • 12.00 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE .STATE - $1.00
"IF MV PEOPlt WHICH ARE CAlltD BY
MY NAME. SHAll HUMBLE imSElVES. AND
. PRAY. AND SEEK MY FACE, AND lUPN AWAY
FMM INEIR WICKED WAVS.- THEN WIU I
HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND Will FOROIVF
IHtIR SINS, AND Will HEAl IHEIR lAND."-
l CHRON. 7i14.
The Record Gets
Around
Love to Speak R. M. Sherrill
R . M . Sherrill, 81. retired farm
er, died at liis homc» Mocksvitlc,
Route 2, at 4 a. m., W^ednesdoy
after a onc-dav itlness.
Survivinu are the wife; four
daughters^ six sons and 10 grand*
children.
Funeral services were held at 11
a. m.\ Friday at Chestnut Grove
Methodist Church, Rev. W . C
Anderson ;.nd Rev. B illie Sides
officiated. Burial was in Saint
Michaels cemetery at Troutman.
The Allison • Iphnson grocery
store and market are moving this
weelc from the Horn butldine on
. North Main street, to their new
buildine next door to the Good
rich store on Salisbury street.
They have a mordern, up-to-date
Hon. W . B. Love, of Monroe, store building with plenty of park-
Republican candidate for Congress ^ jng space. Call and look through
, their new store when you come
to town.w ill speak at the court house in
M ocksville on Friday, O ct. 17, at
7:45 o’clock. A ll persons inter*
ested In the welfare of their coun
try arc urged to come out and
hear this gift'eJ speaker.
Safety First
The Record is just a small
weekly neM»spaper but it gets
round. In looking over our books
we find that folks in the ‘ follow*
Ing states and counties get The
Record:
Texas, Indiana, Virginia, Mlchi-
gan. Florida. Canal Zone. Ccnncc- Modern drivine is so complcx
ticut, Pcnnsvlyama, Arkansas, that ,ve sometime., are in darser Wyommg, South Carohna, Geor-
fiia. M ississippi. Tennessee, West
Virginia, Louisiana, California,
New York, M issouri, Maryland,
Arizona, Washington, D. C .
Germany, Japan, Howaiian Is'
lands, Korea and Grcccc.
W e still have room for a few
more names on our .ubseription ■
books.
of over-emphasizing one import
ant safety rule to the exclusion of
othe.s. For example, we all know
that it’s dangerous to pass anoth
er car if the road ahead is not
clear of oncoming traffic within a
safe passing distance. So the ex- t t r \ 1
perienccd driver always J'ssurcs*
D o n ’ t M is s I t !
Oct. 15,16,, 17,78
R E X A L L
Original ic. Sale
Two Identical
be-
I fore he attempts to pass another
j p . f C» vehicle. But, If he fails to ob-
A mJ C I H O C Y Q i t i a y s s«rve side roads, and the law
„ „• ^ which p.ohibirs passing r inter-Governor James t . Byrnes, of he is not doing his full
South Carolina, former Justice ot ^ should broa-
the Supreme Court, and famous situation to !
srill earlier as Assistant Presi- d j,io „ <,f
dent” to Franklin D. Roosevelt, ^^ead, but the pres (
For The Price O f
One, Plus Ic.
has announced that he w ill vote j„,„sce tin roads as well,
for General Eisenhower. He de- jo high speeds and ever in -'
dared that as an American first „„„b e r of vehicles on
and a Democrat second, he must ^ ghways, ihe modern driver;put the welfare of his country
bove other considerations,
you want more of th
Adm inistration, vote for Sreven
I f ,
must be alert at all times. It may
rake only a second to mean the
TVumnti be.ween a fatal accident
and a near miss. Driving too close
son", was his pnrtinK shot to the „no,her vehicle at bigh speed
W i l k i n s
D r u g C o m p ’ y
Phones 21 and 400
MoclfsvilV, N. C.
FREE- $50.00 IN CA SH GIVEN A W A Y -FREE
At Auction
40 Extra Large Choice Homesites
Close In To The Heart O f Mocksville, N. C.
JUST OFF C H U RC H AND W ILK ESB O RO STS.
S a t u r d a y , O c t o b e r 1 8 ,
2 : 0 0 P . M .
This Property Is Situated O n New Re -entiy
Opened Street Known As The Munford Subdivision.
Mocksville’s Only Exclusive Restricted Development
For Homes. Lots Have Plenty O f Beautiful ShadeTrees.
Homeseekers Builders
You Cannot Afford To Miss This Sale
Terms: 1-4 Cash-Balance 6 -1? And 18 Months.
FO R ANY IN FO RM A T IO N SEE O R CALL
E. G. MORRIS
Phone 196 Mocksville, N. C.
’ SA LE C O N W C T E D BY '
l l a r k - M e n d e n h a l l A u c t i o n C o .
118 W . Washington Street
Phone 4953-^HIgh Point, N . C.
213 First National Bank Building
Phone 8902—Winston-Salem, N . C.
party he has served so long and
so prominencly.
Startling as Ic seems, we do not
expect this dr.unuilc declaration
w ill make •■Jimmv" Byrnes an to remember that driving is outcast, nor force upon him the ,
role of a hermlc In the h ills. In
South Carolina anJ
out the South, are thousan.ls and
thousands of si.iccrc. earnest
mericans whose traditiohal tics
the Democratic party have wo
thin through yenrs of disappoli
, ment and disapproval at shiftu
party policies, and whose sple
d iJ loyalry has been strained
the breaking point by repeati
snubs and the cnim assurance
the high command that whatev
the platform, the South would
along.
It could well be they now ha
the leader they have been walti
for. -The Lincoln Tim es.
From Texas
Corsicana, Texas, Oct. 2.
Editor The Davie Record,
M jcksvllle, N. C.
Dear M r. Stroud:—-It was
much interest tUat I read the
ter written hy M r. Daniel
published in a recent .issue of yo
newspaper, li’s unforVunat th
Armand bbuld't't take adv<i
of the free e**'*cfnment sponsor
trip to Europe In 1944 and 19'
but it is fortuiute that Armat
has the buslncs<; ticumcn plus
Democratic regime that has
may be fatal. Always remember
to stay at least one length of your
car for each ten miles per hour
speed. When driving. It is well
full
the
, , wheel. Drive well and keep drlv-
throughout lA M ES R . W A TER S.
row lor their sins and shortcomings, sorry enough to turn away from them. The happy arc those who do not insist on their ovm rights, who carry no chip on their ihoulders. vrb» are more Interested In Justice tor others than tor them- aelvei. After the proud have de- rtroyed the proud, these are the people, to-Whom the. earth belongs.The happy’ people^re those who want to be good more than anything else In the world. This is the one desire that God always .fulfils.Htfpi^ ^dpVe'are thbse that And their happiness In helping others; are the people who will find Jn their own tlhie of need.
Happy people are those who are pure, not In act alone but In Inner thoughts and desires. They are the ones who have any eyes for God.Happy people are not only peace- a£}e themselves but help oUiers to live In peace as jyeW- These are the people who are really God-llke. Happy people are not always free from trouble'; M their troubles have been caused chiefly not by their sins but by the fact that they are good. They have their heaven In thelsjJicarts.
Be Sure You Get the Deal
Ybu Deserve!. fe"*^yo»sig„a„,rJer^ See Hie fine featn», .l_* . .
f our prices provide
.1
J'ouVI *now B./.V 'vfca, j,<.„ ^ vhat
iristian s A rc .D ifferent
...... .(Jesus concludes) when the hard things said about you are lies. You |d are happy, when you suffer as I |
' “® '.^..?^.«'i°B ^t.8 & ‘^l^llW•co°n"ducred
a* New Union Methodist Church
ableJ him to nffor.l s j:h a tour ol’
foreign soil. Under Huover, »
tour of Davie County would haw
been Impossible.
If the sudden urge for travel
at II a. m , TKursd.iy by Rev. W .
C . Anderson, Rev. Foster LoHln
and Rev. M r. Poole; Burial ivas
in the church cem et.ry.
In the death o f M r. Gaither, wv
^ , have lost'another long-time friend,occurs to Mr. Daniel ,n ,he near ,h „|l m i„ this mod citizen
future. m;w I siig «suh e all esc- . i,...-«..«rl«whom
a century.
e have know nearly half
To the bereaved rel.i-
future. m;w I suggest
pense p^d’’ tour of Korea On'
d o e sn 't have to ,^isit E^.ope in ,y m p a th v.
order to view rovMliy. The rrciit • ■ --------
line foxholes in Korea are full of Big speaking at court house on
American rpvaity—God’s finest. Fridav evening, Oct. 17th, at 7:45
' .Sincerely, o’clock. The public is cortlially
(M ajor) JO H N A . Y A T E S . invited to be present.
SEE WHAT YOU GAIN
WITH THESE BXCLUSIVE
CHEVROLET' FEATURES
SEE WHAT
YOU SAVE
WITH THE
More Powerfui Valve-in-Head Engine
with Powerglide Automatic Transmis- -
sion (optional at extra cost) • Body by
Fishet • Centetpoise Power • Safe^
Plate Glass sll around, with E-Z-Eye
plaie glass (optional, at extra cost) •
Largest Brakes in its field • . Unitized
Knee-Action Ride.
h
PENNINGTON CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC.
p h o n e 156-J M OCKSVILLE, N. C.
THE OAVli! RECORD, MOOKSVlllLE!. N. C. OCrOBBR 16. I PAGE THRG
THE DAVIE RECORD.
OldMt Papw In The County
No Liquor; Wine, Beer Adt
M r. and M r*. Russell Barber
tire repainting their house
which adds (o 'its
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
M r. and M rs. Helard Cantei
. appearanec.
W . G . and G . F. Booe. who re
side in the classic shades of Yad
kin county, were Mocksville visi
tors Thursday.
froin Tipton, In d ., spent the week
end with M r. and M rs. lames
Poole.
M r. and M rs. G. G . Swicegood,
Roy Brown and E . P . Ratledge,
of Woodleaf, were in town shop-
C . P .'K e lly, of Lillington. N . C .’ Pln* Friday,
apent several day* last week In L
town w itii his brother, ) . E . K e llyl ..Rpbert Whllaker^ o f W elch,
and M rs. iCelly.
The new home of M r. and Mrs.
lack Daniel, on South Main street
is near completion. M r. and Mrs.
Daniel, who are now living In the
Dodd apartment house on North
Main street, w ill move into their
new home the first of November.
IW . V a., dropped Into our print
! shop.one day last week but found
M rs.M B . Stonestreet is a pa- nobody at home. He left a note
tient at Winston-Salem Memorial saying everything was O . K . in
Hospital, recovering from an op- West Virginia, and that It looked
eration which she underwent last
week.
like a good.old Republican victory
this timer
Prof. and M rs. R . S. Spear and
daughters, Gwyn Victoria and
Karen Denise, of Durham, w ill
spend this week.«nd with M r. and
M rs. Craig Foster.
■ M r. and M rs. Lester McCul*
lough and children of Salisbury
and M r. a n d M rs. Theodore
O ’Neal of Pittsboro were receent
guests of M r. and M rs. Grant
Sm ith. _____
M r. and M rs. Richard O rrell
moved Saturday from the Clar-
’ ence Elam house oti the States.
ville Highway, to the Myers house
' on Sofley avenue. M r. and M rs.
Myers moved to Charlotte a short
time ago.
M r, and M rs. Wayne Lakey
who have been occupying one of
the Cooley apartments on South
M ain Street moved last week to
Aiken, S. C ., where M r. Lakey has
a position. We wish them' well
in their new home.
SALE DATES
EXTENDED
Oct. 13 thru Oct. 20.
W E A R E CO N TIN U IN G
O U R
SALE
FO R O N E M ORE W EEK .
W e have more val
ues thanever
to offer
The G ift Shop
AN D
Leslie’s Men’s Shop
Frank W alker has purchased
from his mother, M rs. R . L . W alk
er, a large lot on Cherry street, on
which a house was almost totally
destroyed by fire some time ago,
M r. W alker has tom the house
down and is cleaning up the lot.
D . F . W inters, who has been
jailer and deputy for the past year
or more, has resigned and has
moved his fam ily from the ja il to
North M ocksville. He has ac.
cepted a position with the Her!
tage Furniture Co.
■ The M ocksville Presbyterian
Youth Fellowship is sponsoring a
Halloween party th e night o f
October 25th at 7:30. It w ill be
held a t the Presbyterian H ui.
Wear Jeans. A ll people who dii
not go to any church anS all Pres
byterian young people are invited.
, C arl E . Shell, M rs. Edith Chapel,
Miss Jessie Libby Stroud and Miss
Helen Hayes of the D istrict Health
Department, attended the Con
vention o f the N . C ., Public
Health Association In Asheville
last Thursday, Trldav, and Satur
day.
I . F . Garwood, prominent Coo-
.ieemee merchant, returned home
last week from Davis Hospital.
Statesville, where he spent 17 davs
taking treatment for an infected
foot. Mr.-Garwood has been in
the m^rt^ntile business for more
than 50 years, and is more than 80
years of age.
The 79th Annual South Baptist
Association, w ill meet at t h e
Mocksville Baptist Church, Thurs
day, O ct. 16th. About 300 mem
bers ate expected. Dinner w ill be
served by the ladies of the local
church. The se«nd day’s session
w ill be held at the Western Ave
nue Baptist Church, Stasesville.
The sessions . w ill begin at. 10
o’dock and adjourn about
o’clo ck..
Register I Register!
Do you want to vote In the
November election. You cannot
vote if your name is not on the
registration books.' If you have
become of age since 1950, or
if you have moved from one pre
cinct to another since the last
election you must register In the
prccinct where you are now liv
ing. Registration books w ill be
open Oct. 11th through Oct. 25th
from 9 a. m ., to 5^0 p. m. See
your registrar at your precinct on
Saturday, Oct. 11, 18, or 25th and
register.
Business was brisk among the t n C r a A i t n r eS a tiird iv . I W llC K W \0r K a ilV T S ■
R . B . Sanford and D . C Rankin I M r. and M rs. C . P. Johnson I
Spent several days last week at and little daughter, who have been I M ocksville merchants Saturday*
Myrtle Beach fishing and listening | living in New Bern for the past it pays to advertise in The Rccord Having qualifii^ as Executor of
to what the wild waves were sav-* four years, are moving back to . _ _ j t .. i the estate of F . H . Bahnson, do
ing. Bet they didn't catch a fish 'their house on the Salisbury high- ce^ed, n o ti« is hereby given to
“•»” s s 'is S L .'; .- before the 30th day of September,
W ANT ADS PA Y I “ •!*“ / ”" /nL” f*^™ove?,'1lH'’peKf T n n 1 e w *3 in t . and get your land poc indebted to said estate w ill please
ten before the tuppljr it ex- make prompt settlements^ This
FO R SA LE — Barbe W ire & 30th day of September, 1552.Galvanfeed Roofing, hausted. Printed on heavy C H A S. R BAHNSON.
Milier-Evans Hardware Co. card boara. 50c. per dozen, Exr. o f F. H . Bahnson, DecsM.
FO R SA LE - Fox 16 guage double barrel shot gun.Phone 301'W • George lames.
★ YOURG/tBYHOUND ACMT
fo r BEST BUYS
IN TRAVEL
TO ALL AMERICA
You'll find him at the sign of Greyhound in
7000 towns In all 48 stales . . . and around the woridl
EASTBOUND
.gusMleavst
10:00 a. in , 12:50 p. m. 2:05 p. m;
4:45 p. m . 6:45 p. m. 9:45 p. m. W IN STO N -SALEM $ .65 G REEN SBO RO , N . C . 1J5 R A LE IG H , N .C . ' 3
N O R FO LK, V A . llO
WESTBOUND
• m . U erat
7=45 a, m . 9:00 a. m. -11.-20 a. m.
IKX3 p. m . 2:45 p. mj. 550 p. m
S ife ife ". MD A VID SO N j ,0A S H E V IL LE
n » r u . « ■ » « » < » * •
-IMarvin Waters and A . A . Wag
oner, continue quite ill at Davis
Hospital, Statesville, where they
-.hiive been taking _ ««tm ent h>r[
the past three weeks. M r. Wago | pione
ner was reported improving some, MoeksviUe, N. 0.
but was reported worse Saturday.
■' M r. Waters was thought to be
. slightly improved. A ll are hop
ing they w ill recover.
GREYHOUND
GIFTS
For A ll Occasions
1 Have A Nice Line O f
G IFTS FO R YO U R
IN SPEC TIO N .
A New Shipment O f
Merchandise Is Expected.'
Look At Display In
Hotel Mocicsville
W indow
The Novelty
S hop
Anyone wishing to work as nurse’s aid. between ages of 18-45. white, apply at Mocksville Nursing Home for Interview.
FO U R ROOM H O U SE FO R R EN T, on Hardison St. Water, lights, and wired for electric stove.
$26 per month. Phone 6617, or write ' R . M. H A R D EE,310 N . Highland Sc, Gastonia.
Experienced Custom Quality
Leathei: Top Table men wanted.' ppiv in person.M O DEL FU R N IT U R E, IN C .Lexington, N . C.
FO R SA LE—Five-room house I
and 27 acres of land, with some
timber. Good outbuildings. Lo-1 cated in Fork. Call and look over this property. A bargain. IH . W . B A IL E Y . Fork. N. '
Princess -Theatre
TH U RSD A ^ fi*. FR ID A Y
Audie Murphy In
D U EL A T S ILB ER C R EEK ”
W ith Stephen M cNallv
In Technicolor
News Cartoon
SA TU R D A Y
Buffalo B ill In
‘TO M A H A W K T E R R IT O R Y ’
W ith Clayton Moore &.. '.Thundercloud
Serial & Cartoon
M ONDAY &. TU ESD A Y
Abbott & Costella In “LO ST IN A LA SK A ” W ith M itsi Green. Cartoon &. News
W ED N ESD AY
■-V. June Allyson &. Arthur Kennedy In ‘‘G IR L IN W H ITE” W ith Gary M errill Cartoon
W A N TED — Experienced ma*
chine operators. W ill train good
reliable girts. Also like to have one good young man to train as cutter and pattern marker. Apply M O N LEIGH G A RM EN T CO .
M ocksville. N . C.
T o D a v i e C o u n t y V o t e r s
I am a candidate for Register
of Deeds of Davie County and
would appreciate the votes of
all the good citizens of the coun
ty in the November election.
Your Friend,
CHARLES W. WOODRUFF
(Political Advertisement)
DAVIE COUN: Y’S BIGGEST S»tOW
VALUE ADM 12cand3Sc
M r . F a r m e r !
SEE u s FOR
Self-Propelled
Corn Pickers,
Drills,
Used or new, or for
anything jrou need
in Farm Machinery.
W e can. save, you
money.
Hendrix & .Ward
W IN STO N «A LEM H IG H W A Y
is Y o u r R e n t M o n e y
B u y i n g Y o u A H o m e ?
Your Present Rent Money Plus Small
Savings Can Mean Home
Ow^nership For You!
Did you eve.i stop to think about that ■ • - Yes, you can buy a home or build and pay for it
just like you are now paying rent. If your present money Is not buying you a home now
why not consider letting us do so - - - Come in our office anytime. O ur officers w ill be'glad
to discuss your building plans with you. We have several plans, including the direct re
duction loan, which we w ill be happy to explain to you at absolutely no obligation. You
can’t lose, and perhaps, you’ll profit by seeking the information* which is waiting for you here
- -Get On The Road To Home Ownership Today!
W e Appreciate Y o u r Confidence, Loyalty,
A n d G ood W ill In T his Institution
Our Assets Are Ov^r $516,000
• I . ■
Not ju st Monev To B um '. . . But, Money To Build . . . Monev To Build Your Home.
$516,000 is a lot of money and that means we ate in a posltioni to help many, manv people
own th tir own homes. So if you are pondering over finances to build, remodel or what
have you, see us today. Th is association is here to help and serve you! M A KE U SE O F IT .
Savings Accounts Arc Prepare Pdr The Future ! Our Curreiit Dividend
Insured Up To ..JBy.._Saving Rate On
$10,000 „ TO D A Y! "Savings Is 1^%
M o c k s v i l l e B u i l d i n g & L o a n
A s s o c i a t i o n
Phone 8 Mockfville, N. C.
1
___i...
PAGE EOUR THE OAVIE UECOHD, MOCKaVlLLE N. C. OCTOBiSR 16 >95t
<er Spaniel Is
ired For Sound
k>y Loving Master
: LO S A N G E L R S - W o’vc heard • '
Jot of shngRy do« slorios, but this one lops them all. II seems. Phil
Savage, an clcctrlcal enslnccr \n Los Angeles, owns a black little
cocker spaniel by the nam e of Lad* die. Rcccntly, Lnddic be^an to show
signs ol old age. It was to be ex*
pcctcd because the poor old doj? Is 14 years old—or really 98 if you
figure the canlms way.
A few months ago M r. Savage, and his son Phil, Jr ., a); ft rn engi*
neer, noticed tlml LaddU* v/as ignor* ing their com m ands!' At first they
Uiouglit the dog w as ju st Joeing stub* born. Then the real truth‘.'dawned.
The fact was. Laddie was growing
deal.
Instead of letting their put live
out the rest of his life In a aoundles.« world, they did wliat few dog own
ers would have Iho Im agination tc do. They built Laddie a hearing aid
The device funiHtons like a miniS'
ture public address system. It i.s oI simple construction and is batter^'
operated. Sound is pickcd up by » “microphone” (sim ilar to 'a n 'o rd i
nary telephone operator’s mouthpiece), ampJI/ietl by a two tube r«'
dio circuit, and transm itted to the dog’s ear thi*ough a standard head
set earpiece. The whole unit if
housed in a wooden keg which Lad., die wears under her chin— in much
the sam e w ay a St, Bernard wears a
barrel.
The Savages consider their dog*
aid a success, but predict a blenli
com m ercial future for it. Laddie— and, presumably other dogs, too--
ju s t won’t learn to turn the aid off
and onl
' DR, KENNETH J, FOREMAN
r..i» «f>
C O M E say an insincere person
O iin * ‘
Bottled Good Will N;»ars Coast ol Chinsse Reds
H IC K O R Y , N.C. — "Oporntion
Bottles,” designed to bombard
the Q iin a coast line with him* dreds of plastic bottles, contain
ing a greefing In Chinese and an Am erican -souvenir, is underway.
Students at Lenoir Rhyne college, w ho' originated and placcd
the idea in execution, said they had received notice that (he bot
tles were on their way to the area where ; w ill be released.
The bottles, they said, left San Francisco aboard the American
President liner Lightning. The Lightning’s master Capt. Orion
Larson, w ill drop them in the entrance to the China sea near
Pusaii, Korea.Favorable winds and tides are
expected to carry the bottles to
the C h in a m ainland between
Shanghai and Tsingtao.Yellow balloons have been 'at
tached to the bottles to speed them through the sea.
The students at the sm all Lu* theran college here undertook the
project in an effort to ‘‘keep a spark of freedom " burning in’ the
hearts of friendly Chinese in the Com m unist dominated country.
Isn't w h it he seems to be. That
It not quite true. An insincere per*
«on Is what he seems to be, only net »U the way through. He is
what he seems to be, on Sundays,
or part of the
time, or when
he’s feeling lust
right; or perhaps
he is what he
seems to be, but
only on the sur* face. The rest of
the time, or un*
deraeath tb a t ^ Foremon surface, be issomething quite different. Every*
body Ukes sincere peopler nobody wants to have much to do with the
Insincere.• • •
GetCing: Down to Cases
Jesus, of course, demanded sln> cerlty. “Jesus would rather be de*
nied by a true m an than confessed
by a liar.” He did not use the word ./'sincere’* or "sincerity,” but <as
* was his habH) he came down to cases. He first shows that a gen>
erous giver, and a praying man,
may be insincere. When is gener>
osity sincere? When is a m an all*
>the*way generous and when is he
only top«layer generous? Jesus suggests that it isn’t what we give,
but why we give, that points up a test for sincerity. It is very doubt
ful whether Jesus meant to say that any one ever hired a trump
eter to toot for him when he
dropped some money toto the col
lection plate or wrote a check for
the Red Cross. What he means to
say is that when a man gives with
the hope that his gift will attract
attention and produce applause. h«
is not really generous. He doesn’t
have the recipient's Interests at
heart; he is thinking only, "How weU people w ill think of Met "Or
again, that odd saying, “Do not let your left hand know what your
right hand Is doing” suggests that sometimes you are generous in
order to please your favorite audi*
ence; You. You are senerwit lo
order to feel self-satlsfled, your
right hand (so to speak) brags about your left. The sincerely gen.
erous person Is the only truly gen
erous one: and the only sincerely generous person is the one who
wants to clve, not to be compli
mented, even by himself. ,
W h a t to S ta c c tc P ra y e r ?Anoth«r concrete ease Oial Jesus takes »p Is prayer. There Is a story that once a minister was told a«cr
servlee: “Doctor, that was the most eloquent prayer ever deliv-
ered to a Boston audience." Jesus would say that a prayer delivered
to an audience—Boston. Bombay
or Barber Junction, no matter where—isn’t a prayer. It’s just a
way of showing off. A certahi professor of English used to quote
famous authors in his public prayers: "As Shakespeare has said, O
Lord . . . Thou rememberest what
the poet Browning hath said . . .
Now there's no use quoting poetry
to the Lord; that s suited to a
speech, not to a prayer. Of course
Jesus did not mean that we are
never to pray in the presence ol
m m m unit
12. Girl’s name13. Scold constantly14. Ruler of an empire18. Attempt17. Anguish18. Plumlpronoun 1&. Gang20. Knight of the Blephant (abbr.)21. Performers 24. Blaze26. Large yellow flower
29. Lampreys29. A blue mineral30. Stm god31. Measure32. Afeasure (Chin.)33. Feathers from the o-oS4. Fold over 37. Grants Poem40. Shade of purple41. A book of theApocrypha43. Change44. MarksmenDOU’N
1. Lingo2. Listen
Follow Th*
C R O S S W O R D
P O Z Z L G
E v ery W e e k
FOR PURE CRYSTAL ICE ;
C O A L FO R GRATES. STOVES, FURNACE A N D STOKERS
It W ill Pay You To Call O r Phone Vs.
W c Make Prompt Delivery . i.;
Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co.
Phone 116 Mocksville^ N . C.
Your sons or daughters who are away
di college would like to read The Davie
Record Only $1 for tha school term
Please Help Us!
W o have th e nam es o f a
Ur\v o f o u r sv»UiitT huvs w hose
pictures appear b i’low . I f v o u ri*
cotinlze om- o r m«'ri% please ad
vi 0 us, w c w ill appre.:iate ii
ver\' m u c h t
Quacks Are After Your Bankroll If You Ail
The quacks are after your money
Often as rot, they w ill offer to cure whatever ails you for a price. They
claim all you need is one simple de
vice.
Oliver Field, Chicago, director of the Am erican m edical 'associa
tion’s bureau of investigation, de
scribed some of the devices his bu-.
reau has run across. ^ j
Field demonstrated one device •. that looked like a searchlight. It did 1
not light up, but plugged into an electric outlet, it produced a ma-;
netic field. A thum b screw at ihc back controlled a h um —you couhl
have it loud or soft, ^ e instruction ^ ...........
sheet told how, by, pointing the (hinp j others He**himself prayed in pub-
at yourseU, you could cure ailmenUi |, occasions. Lesdlngfrom A to Z - lt took two-thirds nt ^ gilt andpage of single typing just to li.st - ..... «...
tiiem.
A sim ilar device was what Field railed the “ h one collar.*' A lar^e
padded coll, containing about a mlk- of copper .wire, was supposed to bo.
slipped over (he shoulders to “m ag netlze the iron in the blood" and
cure an assortment of ills. . "
, . 1
Field said m ust of the-quack dc
vices his bureau had investigated
were sold by "prom oters who an>
'out foi; all the traffic, will bear.*’ A -rare few', he smd, m l^ht be *>!d by
persons acting in good faith. Action l>as been taken against sellers of all |
the dcvices Field,, described.; j
should be cultivated. But while
^ prayer, sincere prayer, can be with
6thers and for others, It should -,
never be to others. Some preachers "beat the congregation over
their heads with a prayer" as the
saying is. Some deacons have been
known to put long and dull pray< r-
: meeting talks into the form of a
prayer. One elder well-versed in<
Scripture used to go through the whole story of the Bible, in out
line, every- time he was called on .
for a prayer.
I Statement of Ownership
Management Etc., Of
The Davie Record.
^This si tlehient is made, once
year to com pty w ith a law passed
bv an act ol .-Congress of A ugust
24th. IQ12.
T he Davte Record, published
w eekly «t M ocksville. N . C.
T hai ihe iiflnwj. and addiess of
the publisher and editor is:
C F . S tro ud. M .m ksvllie, N C ..
K now n hondljo’jltfr?, holding
pe rcent or morv* of total am o.int
of bonds, n o tgnges or othei mcu"
ntics. None.
Thwt rhc «ver.<Ke num bei’ <»f co
pie.s of iBQii issne of th is publica*
lion dl^tllbule(l ib ro u gh ibe m aiU ,
lo he pni'l M ihscnhers d u ln g the 13
m onths proc.ecding.ihe date is 1140.
C. H. S u o u d , E ditor O w ner
Sw orn 10 and .subscribers before
me this 2nd lU v of G ctoner 1952.
M A E K C L IC K , ;
. Notarv Public.
Mv cunimissiontfr expires Mar,
LLTU 5 DO
l Y Q U R ^ O B P R I N T I N G
j We, can save you money
on your
ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS,
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL
HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc.
Patronize your home newspaper
and..thereby help build up your
home town and county.;
THE DAVIE RECORD,;
♦ FOR RENT
SPACE IN THIS PAPEI^;’
W i l l Arrange to Suit ‘ .
GOOD NEIGHBORS-^PUICES TO '
Fir VOUR BUSiNESS .
Pay Wives Wagts, Says iBritish Association
LON DON —Proper division o( lh<-| fam ily purse keeps a m arriage
happy, says the M a r le d Woman*! Association. ' I*
■ The asscolation, form'ed In t93& u-l
'*end dictatorship by husbands." of ;
fered its views to a royal commlR
sion trying to find out why an In creasing num ber of • British ^^mar
riages clog the divorce courts.’
The women 'm ade these sugges tions for m arriage w ithout teaft:If the wife does the hoiiseworK
she should be paid the same Aiug.- a servant or housekeeper would get
The wife's allowance from her
husband m u s t- b e a reasonublt-
am ount of the fam ily income an^
there should be do strings on ii^v she spends i^ e x c e p t for “ excesslvi.
. addiction to -ganjDUng, smokirtg • o
'rlnking."• Debts should be disclosed bemt»
-larriageu.aBd. ^ I n Ih'-vi.nohlhs a te - th « * e Jif6mony.
S in c e r ity in .D e v o tio n
Jesus points out where sincerity
is most Important of all: in our de> >
votion to God. We cannot serve
God and Mammon. God does not
want part-time devotion. By serving God; Jesus means living by
God's side, under God's orders.Serving *M4ittmon means, more
than simply-scrying money—most Mammon-worshippers would deny
tJiat they ‘‘serve’* money. It means
living your life not as God would
have you but in order lo "get
ahead,** to make money,-to standft..
well with people who have money.’ ^ >
Serving God means living as
Jesus Uved, for others; serving-
M am m on means trying to be
served by as many persons as
possible. SucMss, In M am m on’s ' terms, is measured in terms of
how many people work for you; success in God's terms, is meas
ured in terms of how much you have helped others. Sbicere devo
tion to God must be devotion all
life through. I — -----
M I r>o Y i u r.c.d The R .cord?
Japi Want T« $l«<7
Th* ChlnoM Ctaulu
TOKYO — The . J apahete w a n t
Chinese classics . ta u fh t again in Jap an’s public schools. M inister of
Education S a d a ^ e Am aho has
proposed it.
The statem ent a t a news confer ence was a sly dig a t the occupa
tion regulation lim iting to about :^,000 the num ber of K a n ji charac
ters—the ancient symbols that arc
com m on to C hina, Ja p a n, and Ko
rea. ^
Chinese classics cannot he read
withoyt knowing'-'at least 10000 c h a r a c t e r s ..; T h e Alliei*. orders
stream lined education, but it wast costly to the classics^ and on par
ents w anting to nam e ^children.
Teachers objec|ed beqpuse most
of Japan's ancient teachings, ^Ihics. and rules of conduct are' in classic
K anji.. Parents ot^ected because by tradition their children's name.*:
m ust' be w ritten in K anji.
And a lo t ot p o i^ a r nam es were
not Included in th* allowed 3.00H characters. This is the Y ear of Tho
, Dragon, for exam ple, and lots oi '' children w ould.be nam ed Tutsukl-^ which m eans Y ear of Thk Dragon
I liu t me two X a o ji charactcrs re* Quired tor Tatsuki ' are taboo.
D a v i e i R e c o r d
Has Bern Pubiished SiDCe)^!:
‘"5
’ ’.i- '
N K V M ONBY PO R
YO U R O ta TH IN G S
t m t n « > M r — m w i
■ « . W « M « • *
* « * H T « • M
Ot(iei;» have com e and gone-you r
county new spaper,, keep * going.
S-)m elim e* it has seem ed hard tn
n>ake “ buckle and’ ton gu e” irte^ jV
,, but lOon the tunf>.hin(s an d w e-
m arch on. O ur faith fu l su b icrib erV
; - moBl of whom pay/prom ptly, “ s
co u rag e and abidin g faith in our
'■'■■'fellow mans ’■ '■ "■ 'J■ i, ■.■■ •! .-f :> .i- ■ ■ ■ V ' '. I '; ' - ' ' •• -I'
;.lf ypur.;n**igh(j(or, ia,..not,?l«king>.Thtf ^
R ecord :tell
."price 18 o n fy^ il.S b p e r •
i5tatc‘» and $2 OOnn^othcr: sU tes;' '
-VVh^en youfjCome T o Towtt '
Make Ou? Office Your
H e a d q u a r t e r s . V
We Are Aiwavs Glacl To
See You.
3:<-
■.I.'.-* M")
■ -u-:'h
-..IT
!?;ti
.vs
.fivivi
■d i\h
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■ .-J*;..!
■ V'-yft:
The Davie Record
D A V I E C O U N T Y ’S O I - 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 I - E K B A B
-HERB SHALL THE PP«?8S. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS M AINTAINi UNAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN ’-
VOLUM N L m M O C K SV ILLB . NO RTH C A R O LIN A , W ED N ESD AY, OCTOBER 73 losa NTTMBBR 12
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
What Wai Happening In Da.
vie Batora Paifcint Malara
And Abbreviated Skirts.
(Davie Record, Sept. 30, »9i4)
Mrs, J . B. Penry, of R . 3, Is
very 111 w ith beart trouble.
I. F. O w en, of Slatcfivllle wns
In tow n a few days Iasi week.
M r. and M rs, L . H Clem ent, of
Salisbury, spent Sunday in tow n
w ith relatives.
C . I Penry. of R . 3, has enter,
ed K in g ’s Business College; > t
C harlotte.
M r. and M rs. R . J . B row n of
W a ln u t. Cove, visited relatives lo
D avie coun tv Iasi weelc.
Born, to Mr- and M rs. G eorge
W a lk e r, o n W eddesday, a fine
daughter,
R* B. Santord went to H ig h
Point itfonday to gel a supp ly of
ford autom obiles.
J. P. C loaninger and babe, of
W inston Salem , were visitors here
last week.t
M rs. M . D . Pass returned W ed
nesday fVom a visit to her parents
at Statesville.
Mr.s. J A . D aniel and tw o c h fld .
ren left T hm sd a y for W ashington.
D C , w here they wlll^spend a few
days w ith Mrs D aniers hrolbet.
G . A . A llison, deoot agent. Is
off on a.fiKeen days vacation. H e
is beloi; relieved by M r, Stew art.
Mrs. H S. S troud, of States-
ville, spent T hursday nig ht in lo n n
w ith h^r son, the editor.
M rs. Janies Coley left T hursday
for In d ian a, w here she w ill spend
several inonlhs w ith ' relatives and
friends.
M rs. R . S M ason and daugbter,
Mi.ss M arietta C oin, of S alish jry ,
spent S aturday afiernoon in tow n
M r and Mrs. J A . Craven and
cb ild rfn , w ho went to L a Tuntti,
C olo., last A p ril, reiurned home
Su u d ay .
M rs. ^ c a r AM en, of near F a rm .
in «ton/re tw rtie d T hursdav (m m a
visit io relatives and friends in
Io w a a n d 'In d ia n a
M rs 1. F. Clem ent and little
daughter, of T hnraasvilie. cam *
dow n T hursday to sf>end a few
davs w ith relatives and friends.
B orn, to M r and M rs. G . A .
Carter, of near B ixhy, a few davs
ago. a fine daughter, w hich m akc'
tbeir dfteenth^chiid.
H erbert C lem ent returned W ed
Fountain ot Truth
Rpv Wtthn R. Is^nhmir TflvloravUlf. N.
. T he ripp lin g of the brook i
sweeter to the ears of a C hristian
the jazz of the w icked.
T o apofeciate, and adm ire the
beauties o f nature as we should re.
quires us to love G od suprem ely
w ho Is tbe Creator ot all ih st
oeautlful and good.
I believe if every editor and pub.*
lisher of the new spaper of our na
tion w ould come out definitely
ealnst liquor, and w ould fight It as
ladles and gentlem en should, and
as true citizens o f . our great re.
public w ho ought to be tremend..
ousty Interested In the welfare of
our people sbouid, we could a
gain have national orobibition.
I have never seen a truly great
m an that beat, cheated and de.
frauded his w ay Into greatness.
Y o u m iv not know b ow to pre
sent vour petitions aem rdlng to the
rules of gram m ar, hut If pray earn.
estiv u nto G od H e w ill under.^tand
your language, and know s the sin
cere desire of yonr heart, there.
H e wMl answer w ith outpoured
blessings upon v our life and soul,
and w ill bless others th rough your
prayers.
If you like m v F ountains of
T ru th , also m y articles, poems and
messages, w rite me a letter and teli
me so. Tbere is fotnething about
encouraging letters from our read,
ers th at is quite u p liftin g. W e are.
told, **A word fitly spoken is like
apples o f gold in pictures of silver.'
(P fov 25:11)
Y o u never hate anyone into tbe
C hristian religion, hot vou can love
them . Dray for them and lesd them
tsnto Chrst and into C hristianity.
T he world m ay call y ou sinart
because iyou h:ive gone through
collre« and mastered a few hooks,
and have a few degrees, but if vou
hava left G od ou t o f vour life ,y o u
w ill go to hell w ith the most IHlt
«rate ihat-.serve the devU,
Did yotr ever see a m an thal
owned a lot of property, lived in a
fine hom e, had plenty of money
and luxuriated lu the things of
this w orld, but d id n 't have teal
ailv aiio n , that you th oug h t w h>.
tru ly bappv? I never d id S» me
tf the most mit^erable people in the
w orld are the wcalthie.st.
W hen the righteous are in
auth ority, the ptb p U reioict'; but
w hen the wiclced bedretb rui.% tbe
nesday from a fortv days ana forty P«opJ® m o u rn.” (Pruv ^g:3).
nig b 's sojourn at A tlantic C ity and N o donbt we have yotm g people
points in V irg inia H e reports a woul l lik^ to <>e-:oiue nohU
fine trip Atid great, l ut iht-y art on the
H L . C ook, of M am thon, P .ai I"
who h«8 been *lsUlni! reUtlvM »nd °
Iriends In this county, left last
for
week for G reenw ood. In d . whvrt*
he w ill spend th r/V weeks before
returoing home
their m ark in lif<- tot their ow n
hlitiLseduess and for the good « l
.ih e ir lellon-men: *Remeiti >er now
U bou'O reator in the days of tliy
M rs. R f B . E arlv and children, y om h. wUlli: th f < v l d .ys .:om .
o l W ld slo n, w ho nave been v is it.’ uo,, nor the years draw nigh,
In g her father, H . C . H olm an, on „h e n tfaoa shall sav. I have no
R f2, returned hom e Snnday. |pleasure In them " (Eccl. 12 i).
jMlssea E dna Stew art and 'Gelene Before some people can eei >al-
Ijj^mes left T uesday'for Greenville, vation they shall have lo lav tl.rii
N ,»C .. w here Ihey entere** the N . pockethook on the altar first. In
C. T eacher’s T ralninK School, other words they shall h.ive ti> be
Prof. W . P M errell, of Fork ^ wiljli-K lor G o d 'to take the love of
C htirch. am i Miss M allle Patteiim n “•“ n e y 'o n to f their h ja ri. 'T h e
’ of Statesville, were united in. roar.'lo ve of m oney Is tbe toot o l all
rlage last T uesday m orning at the e v il." (I T im , 6; 10)
hom e of the bride. Dr. Charles A s loui> as G od has a m an's.
Annerson. pastor of tNe Baptist'•■ ‘■"rt ihe devil has no power over
church, perform ed the eeremony. I"m . "K e e p ih y heart w l'h all
Mrs. H . J. Beeker, ace 70, died <*>IUe"ce. lor u o i o l it are the i.<.
sues of life " Prov, 4:23)at tbe borne of her son, W . A .
Ueeker, at .Jeru'ialem , at few days
ago. M rs. Beelcer was the w idow n .
of the laie Rev S A . Beeker, a
noted BaptMt preache.7.
Fietcher W h itake r and Miss Le-
la H u tch ins were m arried -Saturr
day n ig h t at the hom e of the
groom 's parents, M r. and M rs. T ,
P W h ita k e r, in C alahain town-
abip. M ay they both live to be a
hundred yeari old.
Y o u r neig;hbor read s T h e
m u c h O H B A PE R
A n upstate New York veterlaaiy got a call from a local store. A farm ,
tr there wanted him to look at a sick cow. The doctor pickcd up the
farm er and drov« over winding
country roads. As they pulled up,,
to the farm er’s house, the farmer opened the car door and said: “ You
can let me out hero. Doe. I haven't got a sick cow. You see, you charge
only $3 for a visit when a taxi would
cost m e $5.**
Longer Training •
OM fools are the biggest fools.
This la quite natural because they have had more practice.
Good Trademark
Custom er: *'Wby do you have an apple as your trade m ark? You’re
a tallpr."
Tailor: "W ell, if it hadn’t beer,
for an apple, where would the cloth
ing business be?"
I A M auer 01 AimingBy the tim e a m an cun afford to
lose a golf ball, be can't hit it that ' far.
His Checkbook
It's nothing m uch to think o f»
B ut every now and then I wonder where a nudist
Carries his fountain pen.
- Second Best It Is said that atom ic energy i;
the most powerful force known tt m an. Except woman.
Swell Start
M other: **What did M am a's little
baby learn a t school today?”Sonny: " I learned two fellows noi
to call m e 'm am m a's little baby’."
Strong Foree Glasses have an am azing effcr‘i
on vision—especiaUy after they hn\ s been filled and emptied sever.i- times.
Could Be-
Arithm etic Teacher: "Johnny. If your father earned $40 a week, and
gave your m other half, what would she have?"
Johnny: "H eart failure."
A BLOW F O B LIB E R T Y
The other, day a local; candidate >r sheriff, w ith the reputation o<
evev having pushed him self awa>
from a bar, called upoii a ministci for support.
"Before I decide to give you my support," th *‘ m biister said,
woukl like to ask—Do you partok<:
of intoxicating beverages?"
"Before X reply," the candidate
said, "is this a n Inquiry or an invi* tation?"
N early Always
Description of a sm all town—A
com m unity'w here everybody knows
whose check Is good and whose hus* band isn’t.
How Tm e
’Every one of God's creatures li^
here for a tiseful purpose. Now what
do we learn from the mosquito.
W illie?"
W illie: "W e le a m from the mosquito how easy It is to get stung."
GOOD H A IK A C K , TOO
A woman drove into a service station to compUiin that her car
was using u p too m uch gas. The at
tendant pointed to the choke lever.which protruded from the dash, board. "D o you know what gadget is fo rt” he asked her.
"O h, that,”
know w hat that
•asked her.
; the w om an airily. "It's not M od for anything, so
I keep it pulled out to hang my handbag o n l" ,
Slight Im provem ent
Golfer: ‘.‘Notice any. improvement since last year, son?"
Caddy: "H ad your clubs shined
up. h av e q 't^6^ sir?"
H E STAYED F O B D IN K E K
it happened on a Vermont wccJ>
end. As the party was breaking uj) everyone said good bye lo one 0
the guests, a sad*faced,elderly mai. who hod kept them laughing a"
through dinner and for sevcrrl
hours afterward. After he lefi; on
asUed his hostess, "W ho is tha.
m an? He's the m ost entertainin;; fellow I ’ve ever m et.”
“ Why, I really don't know,” sh<- said. "H e cam e to fbt the furnact-
this morning, and he’s been hcrt ever since."
Speaking of Stalin
• Two Russians were riding nn r
.streetcar. Suddenly one turned Ut the other and asked:
“Tell me, Comrade, is tuberculosis fatal?"
“ Nevf^r m ind." replied the other, •‘be hasn’t got il."
Big Jig-Saw Puzzle
Confounds Trustees
Of Peoria Temple
P EO RIA , 111. - A 25,000.pouP
jig-saw puzzle with 7fi pieces, mo?
of them weighing from 300 to 4l>i
pounds cach, ts worrying the trus tees of Donmeyer M emorial Temple hero.
The m arble and bronze pieces are parts of an elaborate statue more
than 12 feet high, but no one knows how to put them together, as both
the sculptor and Mrs. Ellen Marlon
Donmeyer, who ordered the statue
more than years ago, are i>oth dead. '
Frederick E. Triebel. Peoria, who made the statue for §15,000, then upped the fee $10,000, disassembled
the statue in 193g when Mrs. Pon- meyer refused to pay the higher fee
and stored it in a warehouse—tu n
ning up storage cosls for 51,440.
Under terms of M rs. Donmeyer’s will, the statue must be assembled
and displayed in the temple. The temple has been dedicated for the
exclusive use of the Order of the nSastern Star of the Peoria area.
Several weeks ago Charles G.
Cisna, Peoria county probate judge
and. president of the trustees ob
tained a court order for rem oval ol
the statue pieces from the warehouse. .
There were no directions, but a faded photograph gave a clue.
The photograph was of a statue
dominated by a large figure of a veiled woman. AI50 shown were life-
size statues of the Donmeyers, a
bronze sarcophagus and m any fine
Italian m arble and bronze pieces,
elaborately engraved.
However, the photo wasn’t too
helpful because design changes ap.
patently were m ade later.
invtntor Com** Uti With Devloe To Stop Skiililing
U JS A N G E L E S — A device to
prevent autos from skidding was described here by an Inventor.
Dr. W ilU am Ross calls it the gyro-skid control. The device, weighing 45 pounds, is placed on the cro5;s rear member of a car, parallel with the rear axle.
It consists ot a steel tube 36
inches long and Z inches in diam eter. Inside the tube is a 3S-pt:;und
sliding steel bar weight. The bar is free to slide back and forth
laterally on ball bearings. There
are springs inside each end of the tube.
"Since skidding Is a result of
t h e lateral displacement of weight the counter-centrifugal ac
tion of this device, replacing that
weight, prevents skidding," P r. Ross said.
Dr. Ross said the device w ill
even cut down skidding on a fast stop. The gadget acts to "dam p
en a ll horizontal vibration and m aintain equal distribution of
weight on the rear wheels."The inventor said Frana Hanel,
84, of Baden-Baden, Germ any,
had the ctriginsl idea back in 1929. D r. Ross said he developed it and has patented the present
device w hich he is now selling locally, .
Our County And
Social Security
Bv W . K. White. Manager.
Every wage earner should be
sure that if he l^as nothing el.se In
his purse, he at least has a social
sccurltv card there. This is espcc
ialiy true when he is seeking cm*
ployment.
This card represents the work-
er'.s old>age and siirviv«>rs insur
ance accoim . It may be worth
from $5 to $25 thousand or more
ns survivors* Inscre to hts amily.
Seen Along Main Street
Bf Thr Siri^et Ramhler
ofHinnn
Charles Tomlinson eating early
rainy morning breakfast at local
cafe—Mrs. Blanche Clement com
ing out of Dostbfiice with hands
full of mail ~Ann Owing.<« doing
a little rainy day shopping—Her
bert Eldson In postoffice lobbv sc-
perating the wheat from the chaff
—Woodrow W illson trying to get
fitted in some new clothes—Ran*
some Yorke loading up television
ser to carry out to install—W il
burn Stonestreet sitting in chair
in postoflice lobby smoking pipeOr, it mav represent from $20 to^
$120 a month as retirement pav*|—Clarksville ladles soliciting pri-
ments to himself and wife. hcs for W m. R. Davie Hallowe'en
To be assured of receiving the
full value of his social securitv ac
count, it is necessary that all wa«
gcs paid to the worker from em<
plovment covered bv the law be
credited to his account. That is
where the social security card be
comes a necessity.
Bach worker should have but
one number assigned tn him. The
employer reports the wages to the
Government every three months
under the worker's name and
number. In order for the Go'
ernmenc to keep an accounting of
the work.Vs wages, these emplov-
er reports must show the work
er’s correct name an J number.
The amount of benefits payable^
at c*cith or retirement is based on
the wage account as maintained
by the Government. Therefore,
it is very important that the so
cial securitv card should be read-
ilv available to show to any new
employer. W ith the higher be*
nefits payable under the recently
amended Social Security Act, It
is most Important that ^vage earn-'
crs be assured that all wages a'-ei
being proocrly credited to the old
age and survivors insurance ac*|
Icounr. •
A representative of this office
will be in Mocksville again on
Oct. 22nd, at the court house,
second floor, at 12:30 p. m.. and
on the same date in Cooleemec,
at the old Band Hall, over Led*
ford's Store, at 11 a. m.
_________ A»«B^uiBC«a<frttbMdMflowttltMU
T* ««rdiall)r larlt* jou l« m tbtt
Hallowe'c
oarty ~ Mrs. George Rowland buy
ing big bag of chicken feed—Man
and woman stopping in town on
their way west under the Influ
ence of products sold bv the fam
ous ABC stores— Wade Groce tak
ing look at stack of old guns—
Miss Sue Brown trying to cross
highway through heavy traffic —
Miss Mary McGuire making bank
deposit—Crowd of folks looking
at great big fish caught bv local
nimrod—Miss W illie Peoples try
ing to open mail box—Ladv from
Wisconsin trying to get parking
meter to swallow nickel—Clyde
Cook rambling around town on
rainv morning—W ill Marklin out
jsearching for mao who pinned an
Ike button on the back of his
^jacket Snow Beck with a delega'
tion of Sheffield land tillers, com
ing down Main street-Tommie
Hendrix paying his county taxes
— Mrs. Avalon Frve on her way
to postoffice with handful of let
ters to mail—Dave Rankin mak
ing some pre-election predictions
—Mrs. B. E. Seats hurrying down
Main street-Mrs. Ray McDaniel
talking about selling big load of
tobacco—Mrs. Jimmie Nichols do
ing some rainv morning shopping
—George Martin going to movie
to see *‘We'rc N ot Married" - Roy.
Brown, of Woodleaf, walking a-"-
round the square wearing pair of
big rubber boots—Misses Ca«man
and Edria Greene getting ready tu
leave town— Mrs. Floyd Naylor
chatting with friend in front of
banking house— Motorist from
Memphis trying to find his way
loutoftow n— D. K. Furches and
two daughters on their way to
Princess Theatre to see a good
movie show— I. N. Ijamcs and E.
E. Hunt sitting on bench in front
of bus station watching the world
go buy— Rev, W . Q. Grtgg, Me
thodist minister, shaking hands
with the Street Rambler—Duke
Smith discussing the coming elec
tion C. P. Johnson searching for
an Ike sticker to paste on his car
—Gossip Club wanting to know
when the high cost of living was
going to begin tumbling—Misses
Geraldine Ijames and Cornelia
Hendricks talking over good old
times— Miss Geneva Bailey doing
The Gift Shop
MRS. CHRISTINE W . D ANIEL
^TH EY C A N T
T A K E
I YO U R
A D
some before Christmas shopping
lohnnv W hite testine in park
ed auto on the square- Frank Sain
talking to hungry man about eat
ing a fine 'simmon pudding—Rev.
H. C. Sprinkle drinking hot cof-
ffee on warm afternoon—Taylor
sisters playing with vow-yows on
Main street.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Can Supply liour Needs
IN G O O D COAL,
SA N D and BRICK
Call or Phone U s At Any Time
PH O N E 194
Formerly Davie Brick &.Coal Co
1
,
PAGE TWO THE DAVIE HECOKD. M OCKSVILLE, N. C . OCTOBER 42. 1
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C . FR A N K S T R O U D . E D IT O R .
TELEPHONE
Entered atthePostoffice inMoeka* vllle, N. Cm as Seconri-dnRP Mall m atter. Mareh 8, 1903»
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE YEAR. IN N, ^AR0L1N^ • % IM SIX MONTHS »N N. CAROLINA • 7Bp. ONF YEAR. OUTSIhESTm • t2.00 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE • $1.00
Love Speaks
Hon. W . B. Love. Republican
candidate for Congress from this
district, spoke to n small audlcncc
at the court house Friday even
ing. There was no barbeque, fish*
es or loaves. M r. Love presented
plain facts and figures, and his re*
THE OAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE N. C. OCrOBGR 22. 1962 PAGE THRE
11 Inducted Register IReqister!
Eleven voune men from Davie | Do you want to vote In the
County went to Charlotte last i November election. You cannot
week for induction inio the Arm* I vote if vournam e is not on the
ed Forces. They were{ {registration bonks. I f you have
David Roscoe Stroud, Jr., of become of age since 1950« or
M ocksville; Ray lones. Advance.' if you hav«s moved from one pre-
R . I $ Mack K elly Goins. M ocks-*cinct to another sincc the last
marks were enjoyed by those pres, ville; Lewis Ray Spry, M ocksvillc,
“IF Mr PEOPLE. WHICH ARE CALLED BY
MY NAME. SHALL HUMBLE THEMSRVB, AND
PRAY. AND SEEK MY FACE. AND TURN AWAY
FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN Wia I
HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND >WILl F0R6IVI
THEIR SINS. AND WIU HEAL THEIR lAND.*’- .
2 CHRON. 7:14.
C ar! Goerch. editor of The
State, says he w ill be glad when
this campagin comes to a close.
To which we say amen
*fo h n Roosevelt, son of the' late
New 'Deal president, says he is
going to stump seven states speak'
ing for General Ike. Th is is bad
news. _________________
There remains but one Satur*
day in which you can register if
your name is not on the registra
tion book. Better look after this
matter before It is too late.
W e wish every voter in the
United States could have heard
Senator Richard Nixon’s speech
over radio on Monday evening of
last week. He presented some
facts that cannot be disputed.
O ur candidates for the various
county ofHces'are alt busy shakmg
hands and urging their friends to
come to their assistance on Nov.
4th. Ih e y have less than two
weeks left in which to do their
campaigning. May the best men
w in.
Three Democratic ladies told ua
last week that they were going to
vote for Eisenhower on Nov, 4th.
One lady said she hadn’t cast a
ballot since 1928, bur was deeply
interested in this election. Wu
trust that every qualified voter in
Davie county w ill go to the polls
on Nov. 4ih and vock for the men
of their choice.
The campaign in Davie Coun,,
ty has been very quiet and the
men running on both the Repub-:
lican a n d Democratic tickets
haven’t called each other iars,
thieves, incompcrents. or accused
each other of stealing their . eigh*
bors hogs or sheep. The boys are.,
conducting a clean campaign fo r’
which we are all thankful. |
Alger Hiss Is novs* scrvmg a
term in the Federal penitentiary
for giving Information to th e
Russians. His was a member of.
the Communist party, but held
high offices in our Federal Govern
ment. Gov. Adlai Stevenson,
Democratic candidate for presid
ent. was a witness for Hess and
vouched for his integrity a n d
honesty. How the mighty have
fallen. ______________^
Wf. Frank Vogler
W illiam Frank Vogler, 45. well-
known Advance merchant, diud
Saturday ut 5:30 p. m. at his home.
He Laad been in bad health for se
veral years, but his deaih came as
a severe shoi.k tu his family and
the entire community. M r. Vo
gler spe it his entire life in Davie
County. He w is a member of
Advance Methodist Church.
Survivtng are the wife, two
sons, B ill and Dick Vogler, one
daughter, Nuncy Vogler. all of
the home; five brothers, C . R .. A .
E ., Jack, N . S. and E . E . Vogler,
all of Advance; two sisters. Mrs.
M . A . Hartman. Winston-Salem,
and M rs. 1. H . Jones. Advance.
Funeral services were held at
the home ac 2 p. m. Monday, and
at Advance Mcihodlat Church at
2:30 p. m., wlrh Rev. W . E . Fitz
gerald and Rev, R . J. Starling of
ficiatlng. and the body laid to rest!
in the church ccmeterv.
The Record extends heariich
sympathy to chv bereaved fam ily,
brothers and sisters in this hour
sadness. Another rriend of ihu B
editorhas gone to hi^ reward.
R . 4; James Low Ratledge, Ad
vance; Peizo M iller. M ocksville
R . 1; Silas Fletcher W hitaker. R .
2. M ocksville; Kenneth E . W hite,
R . 2. Yadkinville; Garland Edward
Rattz, R . 4,‘ M ocksville; Laurance
Gray W aller, R . 2, Advance; Er
vin L . Chunn. transferred to Gary,
Indiana, for induction.
Floyd S. Stroud
Floyd S, Stroud, 79, retired far
mer oj near County Line, died at
his home Tuesday, after a brief
illness.
7,-;' . . . J , I , Surviving are three childien,
R » v.o fn e a rC o „„,v Lino, Rob-
Funeral services xvero held of Uncaster. Pa., arid Miss
the home at 3:30 p. m. Sunday, R«by Stroud, of the home; one
with Rev. W . Q. Grigg and Rev. brother, Frank Stroud, of Route
\V. E . Fitzgerald officiating, and 4, Statesville. His wife died three
the body laid to rest with full mil-
& s ' ’ c i r h ‘"cem «e.^ ‘'crp '.“ l - r e held at .1
cnt. We arc sorry the crowd was
not larger.
Capt. Chas. Domm
Capt. Chas. F. Domm, 80, died
at his home ii* North Mocksville
Saturday morning, following a cri
tical illness of two weeks. His
wife,, the former Miss Anne Tal
bert, died May 18th. Surviving
is one daughter, M rs. Ru h Phel
an, of Pomona. California.
Capt. Domm was appointed to
West Point bv President W illiam
M cKinley, and was a veteran of
both the Spanish-American and
Domm had many friends in this
city who were saddened by news
of his death.
a. m. Thursday at Pleasant Vien
Baptist Church, with Rev. Cald'
well Henderson, Rev. Irvin W al
lace and Rev. Wade Hutchins of
ficiating, and the body laid to rest
in the church cemetery.Wm. C. Pierce
W illiam G . Pierce, 67. retired -------------------------------------textile worker of Cooleemee. died, >-. •':i? ;.':X !'k '"^ ^ ^ o tic e to Creditors
seriously ill for some time. : „ . nc i ^ r
d ® 7 " t r o '5 ,r r d B a & n “ 7 j° ” ^ceascd, notice is hereby given to gr^dchi . all persons holding claims againstFulicral services were held at said estate to present the same,
Woodleaf Methodist Church at 4 ,properly verified, to the under-p. m. Wednesday bv Rev. I. C .; „ Cooleemee. N C .. on orSwaim and Rev. L G. Robertson. 30,h day of September,
Burial was in the church cemetery. | ,953 this notice w ill be plead
Geon-e Hendricks, B ill M errell,' J’ "'' " f A ll peraons„ P . J I o Q1..1. __mdebted to said estate w ill pleaseFonccFerebeeand L .R Sink re settlement. This
turned Friday night from a fish-, 301I, day of September, 1552.
ing trip to Mvrtle Beach. They! CH A S. F. BAH N SO N ,
caught many fish Fxr of F. H Bahnson, Decs’J .
election you must register in the
prccinct where you arc now llv
ing. Registration books w ill be
open Oct. 11th through O ct. 25th
from 9 a. m ., to 5:30 p. m. See
your registrar at your precinct on
Saturday, O ct. 11, 18. or 25th and
register.
The Davie Furniture Co., has
rented the Harding-Hom srore
building on the square, formerly
occupied by the Duke Power Co.,
and w ill stock this store with a
full line of electric appliances,
radios and televisions. They w ill
operate two stores In this city.
M r . F a r m e r !
SEE US FO R
Self-Propelled
Corn Pickers,
Drills.
Used or new, or for
anything .you need
in Farm Machinery.
W e can save you
money
Hendrix & V^ard
W IN STO N -SALEM H IG H W A Y
“Whateven ! Need, I Always Go First To
Msirtin Bros.”
You’ve Probably Often Heard Friends Say That
W hen Talking About Different Merchandise.'
They’ve Learned That We Carry A Very Complete And Reliable Stock.
They’ve Learned By Compirison O f Both Quality And Price That Tney Do Best Here.
Complete Line Of
Hunting Equipment
Rifles - - Shofguns
Guaranteed Famout) Brands:
Remington Savnge
Stevens
REM IN GTO N NO. 550
Automatic Rifle
Chambered For horr; Long, ond Long
Rifle W ithout Adjustment.
Regular or Hi Speed
Com pit te Line Of
Work Clothes
W ork Pimts W ork Shiits
Jackets
Shoes
LO C U ST PO ST
Men’s Work
And Dre?s Shoes
Compltte Line Of Nails, Galvanized Ro »fing. Cemeirit
Blocks. Cement, Fertilizer, Hydrated Li roe,
Prestone and Z«rone Anti’**reezi.
Stoves
Wood Heaters, O il Heaters, Laundiy
Heaters, Coal Heaters, Sheet Iron Heate.s
PAINT
W all Fix Kover • Best
Inside nnd Ou'side Paint
C O M P L E T E L IN B O F
Jcl D Dfeif’ Traclor-f And Farm Implements
T o D a v i e C o u n t y
Voters
I Wish To Announce To Tlie Good People
Of Davie County Tliat I Am A
Candidate For County Commissioner
On The Republican Ticicet.
If re-elected I pledge myself to render
the hest service possible. Youi vote
will be very much appreciated.
Your Friend
Clarence R. Carter
(Political Advertisement)
M A R T I N B R O T H E R S
Phon? 99 M ocksville. N . C .
T o T h e V o t e r s O f D a v i e
C o u n t y
1 A m A Candidate For Re>EIection
O n The Republiblican Ticket For
Register Of Deeds .
A nd will appreciate the votes of all
the people of Davie County in the
coming election. If re-elected I
will continue to serve the people
courteously and friendly, in the
future as I have tried to do in the
past.
Thanking You In Advance For Your Votes.
Charles R. Vogler.
(Political Advertisement)
F o r C o u n t y
C o m m i s s i o n e r
I wish to announce to the voters
of Davie County that I am a Can
didate for County Commissioner
on the Republican ticket, and
would appreciate your support in
the November election. If re-elect
ed to this important 'office I will
render the best service possiUe
to the entire citizenship of the
county. 1 wish to thank all those
who have given me their support
in the past.
^ Your Friend
R . P . M a r t i n
' (Political Advertisement)
T H F D A V IF RECORD ®*"‘* Speneer and M rs. IH t t U A Y IE ^ W In.ton.Salem , were
B _____. T k . " ’eek of their sister,Oldatt Paper In The Coun^ ^ ^
No Liquor, Wine, Beer Adt —.—
________________ "'T!r— = -| Rev. and M rs. George Dollar,
o f Columbia, S. C ., spent Thurs
day with M rs. Dollar’s parents.
,M r..and M rs. T . C . McCIamrock,
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
L . S . Shelton spent Tuesday in on Route 2.
High Point on business. I|l|T h e W .S .C .S ., is
Mis. j. a . Daniel spent last a bazaar and chicken pie supper
week at Indianapolis, In d ., w ith ' at Oak Grove Community Build-
her sister, M ts. Maggie Morgan, ing on Saturday evening, Oct. 25,
who is seriously ill. , beginning at 5 o'clock. Everyone
Attoroey Thomas W . Sprinkle,. ' -
of High Point, spent Thursday in M r. and M rs. J . G . Jolly and
town, the guest of his father. Rev. son, who hxve been living in this
H . C Sprinkle jcity for some time, moved lust
1 ■ J I "'“ I' St. Louis, M o., where Mn^ Nera Godbey. a sal«lady ^^ey „m „a k e their home. The at H all Drue Co.. WM able to re-
sume work Friday after a hveJay diem well in
Illness at her home. their new home.
W . M. "Buck” M iller has open*
,ed his new place of business five
miles from M ocksville, where the
Winston>Salem and Farmington
highways meet. The new build
ing is modem and up-toKlate, and
‘‘Buck’’ would be glad to serve
you at all times with fine barbecue,
sandwiches o f all kinds, Sealtesc
ice cream, etc. When you are
hungry or thirsty call at “ Buck’s’?
Ba.becue. A hearty welcome a-
waits you.
m tP n T s c h
Marvin W aters, who has been
seriously ill at Davis Hospital.
Society Meets
Farmington Methodist Women’s Society of Christian Service met '^ im day at the home of Mrs. G . P . Cash, who, wirh her
mother, M rs. C . C . W illiam s, were hostesses.
The meeting dpened with . the singing of **The Kingdom is Comint*. ** nnil «tAA I... \if-_ f‘>
Association Meets
M t.a n d M » . W . W . Howell
are the proud parents of a fine son
who arrived at Rowan Memorial
Hospital on Oct. 11th.
Wade W . Smith spent Thurs
day and Friday in Washington,
N . ,.C , looking after a sawmill
which he operates there.
M is. Heniy Poplin and daugh
ter, G all, spent the week-end with
her patents, M r. and M rs. 7. E .
Livingston, near Smith Grove.
M is. Roy lohnson, of Char
lotte, spent last week in town,
the guest of hei sister. M is. Qui-
* ence Powell-jnd M is. Powell. ________ ______—
Jack A lliso ^ i^ h a ilo tte ,
ped in Mocksville long enough on I ‘"“P^ve-
Th u isd ayto tellu s that Geneial,“
j Statesville, for the past .our weeks.in the Queen C ity.
M r. and M rs. Leo. Cozart are continues in a serious condition,
erecting a six.ioom house on the we are sorry to leam.
Yadkinville Highway, two m iles'
west of this city, which they w ill
occupy when completed.
M r. and M rs. R . S. Spear and
little daughters, Gwen Victoria
and Karen, of Durham, were
week-end guests of M rs. Spears
parents, M l. and M rs. Craig Foster
.Register of Deeds Charlie Vos-
ler is a good farmer as well as a
good Register. He has our thanks
for a ^ pound sweet potato,
which w ill make a lot of potato
pies.
The Horn Bible Class of the
Firat Baptist Chuich enjoyed a
fish fry at the D r. l« sie r Martin
home a t Faimington Satuiday
evening. A fine time was had by
all present.
Master Philip Rowland, son of
M r. and M rs. Geo. Rowland, who
underwent an appendicitis opera
tion at the H . F. Long Hospital,
Statesville, early last week is get
ting along nicely.
Smoot Shelton and M r. and
M rs. Joe Shelton returned last
w «fc from a week’s visit with
th eii brother, Vander Shelton at
Tulsa, O kla. They had a wonder
ful motor trip through the mid
west.
' * YOUK . eUYHOUND AeiNT
, « v
M r. and M rs. T . I . Caudell mov:
ed last week into their modem
new home on W ilkesboro street.
M r. and M rs. H . R . Johnson, who
live on Wilkesboro street, pur-
chased the Caudell house o n
North M ain street, and m ill move
this week into their new home.
Mack Kimbrough, who is a sales
man for Sanford Brothers through
Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and
Arkansas, is spending three weeks
in town with his fam ily. Mack
■ says a hot catnpaign is being waged
in Texas, with Eisenhower forces
w ell organized.
■hie B r& F . Manufectuting C o ,
manufiicturors of sport shirts, are
now working six days a week in
Older to fill all of their oiders.
Th is company has about 45 em
ployees, and turns out an attrac
tive line sport shins. C . A-
Blackwelder and Frank Pox are
the owners of this plant. The Re-
cotd is glad that such an enterj
prise is located in our town.
for BEST BUYS
IN T R A V E L
T O A L L A M E R IC A
Yau'll find him at the sign o(
fh« funnlng Greyhound In
7000 towns in oil 48 slotes
. . . ond oreund Ihe world!
EASTBOUND
■h.m L..V.1
10:00 a. m. 12:50 p. m. 2:05 p. m.
4:45 p .m . 6:45 p .m . 9:45 p. W IN STO N -SALEM $ .65 ' G REEN SBO RO , N . C U 5
R A L E IG a N .C . 3.25
N O RFO LK, V A . a io
V/ESTBOUND■ an. U .V .I
7^5 a. m. 9.-00a. m. 11:20 a. m. 1:00 p. m . 2:45 p .m . 5:50 S T A T E S V ILL E
C H A R LO TTE D AVID SO N A S H E V ILLE
p. m. t .601.45
1.10
3.45
MM T u . Zrira *«•!< • • • IH .*
About 300 messengers from the
3o-odd churches in the Suuth
Yadkin Baptist Association, were
In attendance at the first day’s ses
sion of the 79th annual meeting
at the Mocksville Baptist Church
______________________ Thursday. An Interesting program
ing,” and was led by" M rs. G . C .,w as presented. A t the noon hour
Graham. J i e program chainnan « bounteous dinner was served in
'’'“ P™*- the dining room of the church.5 I. -5 conclude T U . ______J J...*. ..M by reciting In unison the 23rd Psalm.
M rs. Leon Foster, president, cal
led for the items of business. M rs.
B . C . Brock, secretary of spiritual
life, spoke in behalf of the Week of Prayer, which is to be a world
wide observance in late October.
Several other business matterswere taken up, the most important of which was the Annual Bazaar and chicken pic supper to be
held at the high school lunch
room on Saturday. Nov. 15. M rs. Ben Smith was elected to repre^ sent the Society on the local
church board of Christian Educa*
tipn. M rs. Smith was also elected as secretary ot student work to replace M rs. G . P . Cash, resigned.
The Society reported two new
members added to the roster. Mrs.
Ben Smith and M rs. I. E . Sherrill. the latter a recent arrival In the Farmington community.
Adjournment followed the singing of the prayer'song benediction. During the social hour the hostesses served sandwiches, pump
kin tart and other delicacies, carrying out the Hallowe’en motif.
Princess Theatre
TH U R SD A Y &. FR ID A Y
"ISLA N D O F D ESIR E” W ith
Linda Darnell & Tab Hunter
In Technicolor
News &. Cartoon
SA TU R D A Y
'M Y FR IEN D F L IC K A ,” with
Preston Foster & Robby
McDowall. In Technicolo.
Serial & Cartoon
M O N DAY & TU ESD A Y
“ H IG H NOON*’ W ith
Gary Cooper & Lon Chaney
News & Cartoon
The second day’s session was
held at Western Avenue Baptist
Church, Statesville, on Friday,
which was also well attended.
Presbytery Meets
The Quarterly meeting of the
W inston-Salem Presbytery was
held at the Mocksville Presbyter
ian ChCirch last Tuesday. The
meeting opened at 10 a. m ., and
adjourned about six o’clock in the
afternoon. About 50 were present, representing 25 churches in
Presbytery. The ladies of the lo
cal church served the visitors a
delicious turkey dinner In the hut
at noon, which was enjoyed by
those present.
WANT ADS PAY.
FO R SA LE — Barbe W ire &
Galvanized Roofing.
Milier-Evans Hardware Co.
FO R SA LE—1 pq|r good rabbit
dogs, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op-
posum dog. Sec Jack Feimster,. Harmony, N . C ., R . 2.
Anyone wishing to work as a nurse’s aid, between ages of 18 45,
white, apply at Mocksville Nursing
Home for interview.
FO R SA LE—30-acre farm, with
4*room house. Cood water anil
b irn . A ll land in cultivation. 2 miles north of Mocksville, on Mud M ill road. T .. P. Dwiggins, __________M ocksville. N . C.
Experienced C.istom Quality Leather Top Table men wanted. Apply in person.
M O D EL FU R N IT U R E, IN C .Lexington. N . C
W ED N ESD AY
•*JUST A CRO SS TH E
S T R E ET ” W ith
Ann Sheridan &. John Lund
Little Rascals & Dirtoon
DAVIE l»U N IT'S BIGGEST SHtlW
VALU£ ADM 12c anil 3Sc
W I N T E R N E E D S
For The Entire Family
Children’s Shoes
Endicott-Johnson «...
G irls Oxfords
Brown ....
■Boys Oxfords
Brown ....
Junior Misses
Dress Shoes
W olverine Pigskin Shoes
Free Box Shoe Grease W ith Every Pair
$3.98
$3.48
. $4.99
$6.95
Ball Band Rubber Foot Wear For The Entire Family
$5.48
$4.98
. $5.98
$2.98
. 48c
Visit Us Often And Save
The Difference
W e Sell The Best For Less
5% Wool
Double Blankets
Blankets Lined 25^ Wool
Zipper Jackets
School Jackets
Zipper Satin Black & Gold
Mens
8 O z. Overalls
Fast Color Prints
Fast Quality
I M o c k s v i l l e C a s h S t o r e
'T H E FR IE N D LY STO R E’'
FO R SA LE—Five-room house and 27 acres of land, with some timber. Good outbuildings. Located in Fork. Call and look over
this property. A bargain.
H . W . B A ILE Y . Fork. N . J .
W A N TED — Experience ma
chine operators. W ill train good
reliable girls. Also like to have one good young m an, to train as cutter and pattern marker. Apply
M O N LEIG H G ARM EN T CO .
Mocksville. N . C.
S e t h T h o m a s
W a t c h e s
The Newest In Fine Watches By
The Oldest Naim^ In Time.
Five New Designs In
SETH T H OM A S LINE
We Carry A Complete Lin
Of These Watches
Prices Range From
$30,00 to $7L50
T o D a v i e C o u n t y V o t e r s
I A m A Candidate For County
Commissioner O f Davie County
And would appreciate your vote on
Nov. 4th. If elected I will fill the
office to the best of my ability.
Your Friend
W. M Langston
M O C K SV ILLE. R O U TE 2
(Political Advertisement)
•rd’s Stored at I I a. m.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Can Supply Your Needs
IN GOOD C O A L,
SAN D and B R IC K
Call or Phone Us A t Any Time
PH O N E 194
Formerly Davie Brick &Coal Co
F o s t e r W a t c h S h o p
C O U R T SQ U A RE M O C K SV ILLE, N . C-
' W e Carry A Line O f _ = =
Rings, Brace!3ts, Ear-Rings, Bill C o llC O r tG
Folds Arid Many Other Items.
Our Repair Shop Is Equipped To Serve
You At All Times.
Good W ork Moderately Priced.-
When In Need Of Repair Work
Give Us A Call
le Gift Shop
C H R IS T IN E W . D A N IEL
ing pre-election caucus in front of postoifice—M rs. Charles Vogler
and daughter enjoving sundaes in
drug store—D . C . Ratledge and
Rike W illson talking things over
in court house—Young politician
wanting to know which was worse,
getting hungry with Hoover or
getting killed with Truman—Miss
. M ildred Sherrill talking about at
tending big political rally.
' here ’s good
I NEWS
YO U CA N B U Y A
New Singer Sewing
M a c h in e
As Low As $92.50.
Libentl Allowance For Your
Old .Machine.
Easy Budget Terms.
Special terms to tobacco and
cotton farmers. Buv now and
pay one-thind. Pay one-third on
your 1953 crop, and one-third
on your 1954 crop. Ask to see
the new Singer Vacuum Clean
er with the magichandle. W rilc
or phone for free demonstra
tion in your home. *'
It Pays To Buy The Best.
Come Bv. C all O r W rite
Singer Sewing Machine
CO M PAN Y
I I S, Main St. Lexington, N C .
Phone 2238
PAGE TWO THE DAVIF. RECORD. M OCKSVILLE. N. C . OCtORFR 29. t96fe
THE DAVIE RECORD. |/oo Per Second 1953 4?ri«iltBral
C . FR A N K S TR O U D , E D IT O R , i During the twelve months enct-j P T O ^ T Q U l
Entered attbe Pastoffice In Mocks* ville, N. C .. 88 Seeand-elflRC Maf) m atter. M arch 8 .190S,
ed June 30, 1952 uur federal aov*
I cmment went Into debt four h il Farmers in Davte Countv nrc
lion dollttrs, or $456,621 un hour, being coiiMcred by their commun*
Evcr» time the clock ticked 24 itv committecman for the purpose
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
ONE YEAR. IN N. CAROLINA • I I.RO SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROl.lNA • 76c, ONEYEAR, OUTSM'ERT^TI • S2M Six MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATR . $100
hours a day, the national debt in*
creaied $126.84.
A t $2.00 per hour If would take
“IF MY PEOPLE WHICH ARE CAllED BY
MY NAME. SHALL HUMBLE THEMSELVES. AHO
PRAY, AND SEEK MY FACE, AND TURN AWAY
FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN Wia I
HEAR FROM HEAVEN, AND WILL FORGIVE
m SINS, AND WILL HEAL THEIR lANO.”-
2 CHROH. 7!l4;_____________
**Now is the time for all good
men to come to the aid of their
party,” including the Chamelcon.
Every voter In Davie County is
urged CO go to the polls and vote
next Tuesday. Don’t stay at home
and then cuss because the wrong
men were elected
The Chamelcon has been asleep
for nearly 80 years. He flctually
thinks General U . S. Grant is run- vici-s. G aithjr SaiVforyw iir lead
of givlnt; d>cm a chance to co-op*
ernte In the aKricultuml conserva
ii4)n program for 1953. It is the
^ envelope Intent of the program to makeo f 19.178 wage earners working
fifty 40 hour weeks to pay the in
crease in the national debt for
one week.
better use of the funds Congress
has authorized for thiit purpose.
During this contact fam^ers w ill
the practices most
farms for 1953,
accordinff (o R . G . A lien, Chair
man o^ the Dovic County PM A.
The program, which is entirely
voluntary, Is offered ro all farm
ers In the county, and was devel
oped co-operatively through the
pardc pation of all agricultural a-
gencies In the county.
Th is contact w ill be the only
chance that farmers w ill IVave to
sign up under this program, as re
ports cannot be made at the office.
Farmers are urged to give a com>
V txj, 1 I bepiventhe c pponunity to re 1 pictu list of the practices to be
Maybe Karl M arx, the father of qut-st assisinnce lo bear a part of carried out on fheir tarm forcommunism, knew what he was
talking about when he said: “The
surest way to break down a coun
try is to squander its wealth and
natural resources.”
Our country isn't broken down
yet, but at this rare it w«m't be
long until it is. That’s for sure.—
National Small Business Men’s
Association, Evanston; Illin o is.
T O T H E PEOPLE
O F
Ifottth Sunday
The Presbyterian young people
w ill lead the morning service at
the Prerbyterian church on Nov.
2nd, and the Ilth o’c b .k ser
ninE for President this vear a- ,he program, assisted by Moilv
gainst his friend Adlai Stevenson, Lee Anderson.
We have decided that General ®f «h<-' proBr.iin is
Ike has a good chance ot beingl Christ Is Life." l our talks w ill
clectedon N ov. 4ih. Th is de-.“ made Edwin Waters w ill lead
cision was made after hearing that "> “ '•“ Jv ol the Celtis Cross.
John L . Lewis had declared that Sue Rankin w ill develop
he would vote for Stevenson. i ' ’’ ' 'heme “ Christ is Lite.” Dean-
|n« Silverdis w ill talk on Our Wit-
The Record w ill not be printed ness a n d Survice i n Christ,
u ntil Wednesday of next week, “ Prase God not only with thy
when we hope to be able to print lips.’’ Jean Robinson w ill show
General Ike’s and D ick Nixon's how the Youth Fcllo.\ship is at*
pictures. We have our sick roos- tempting to serve God through its
ter held in reserve, should Ike a d activities an 1 projects.
D A V IE COU N TY
I Am A Candidate For The OlHce O f
Register O f Deeds
Cn The Democratic Ticket.
If Ekc.ed , 1 Pledge Myac f To Serve A ll O f The People
A ll O f The Tim e, Rendering The Best Service Possible.
1 W IL L BE G R A T E FU L FO R A N Y SU PPO R T
YO U M AY G IV E M E.
S iN C E R E L Y ,
Charles “Buddy” Woodruff
(Political Advertisement)
Nick be defeated.i Coming HomeIs this Cam M orrison, who is
out speaking for Governor Stev- t , , , , , , ;enson.the satne Cam who was Wuh The 25.h Infant^. D .v. In
wearing a r^ shirt and carrying a Korea-Sgt. Herman H .Vog er Of
.hot-gun 50 odd vears ago to '•
.hoot the Negroes if they tried to ' “ " ’ •‘'B «<> U . S. from Korea
vote in North Carolina? How “ " ‘ler the Arm ys rotation pro
times have changed In the land of f"*"-
the long-leaf pine. combat .-.rea, ?
------- ■' He served !n the 25th Infantry
Have oar good farmer friends Division, now the senior Am erl'
forgotten about the pamphlets the can division on the peninsula It
Department of Agriculture distri- landed In July 1950, ahortly after
buced in 1914t showing a bale of the Communists attacked the Re*
cotton with this caption: “ Buy a pul^lic of South .vorca. )
bale of cotton for 4 cents a pound Sergeant Voglcr, who entered
and save the farmer.” Farmers the Army in November 1950, was
had no real prosperity under the a squad leader in the division’s
Democrats u jitil 1940, n war year. 25th Reconnaissance Company. »
Farm prices for principal crops In He formerly was employed by
1930, under a Republican Ad- by the Heritage Furniture Co., in
m inistration were hlRher than In Mocksvile, N . C . Sgt. Vogler is
1940, under a Democratic admin- the son of M r. and Mrs. Charlie
tration. We are all prone to for* R . Vogler, R . 1, Advance,
get. , -----------------
In Japan
W ith the X V I Corps in tapan
- Second Lieut. Calvin L . Jones
whose wife, losephine, lives at
Mocksville, N . C ., recendy gradu'
ated from the X V I Corps Lead
er’s School at Camp Matsushima,
Japan.
The school gives intensive train
ing in Army tactics, osganization
and administration.
A platoon leader with Comp.my
L of the 5th Cavalry Regiment,
Lieut. Jones entered the Army in
August, 1951. ,
He formerly received his Bache
lor of Science Degree from the
North Carolina A . & T . College.
Greensboro, N . C .; and is a mem*
ber of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fra*
ternity. His father is Rev. N . V .
which they wish to get assistance
on. The closing date for taking'
these reports Is Nov. 15, 1952.
Please review th e following
practiccs and be ready to make
your report when you are contac
ted: Limestone; using slag, phos*
lihate or mixed fertilizer on eligi-
gible crops; seeding vetch, A i W .
peas or crimson clover; lespedeza,
cowpeas or soybeans to leave or
turn; alfalfa; terraces, contour
scrip cropping; seeding lodino, or
chard grass or fescue In pastures;
plandng or thinning trees, and
turning red or sweet clover*
Do you read The Record?
T o D a v i e C o u n t y V o t e r s
I A m A .Candidate For County v
Commissioner O f Davie County
And would apprieciate your vote on
Nov. 4th. If elected 1 will fill the
office to the best of my ability.
Your Friend
W. M Langston
M O C K SV ILLE, R O U TE 2
(Political Advertisement)
F O R PU RE C RY ST A L ICE
C O A L FO R G R A TES, STO V ES. FU R N A CE AN D STO K ER S
It W ill Pay You To Call O r Phone U s.
W e Make Prompt Delivery
Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co.
Phone 116 ' M ocksville, N . C
W e are not making any wild
predictions as to how the country
is going on Nov. 4th. Seems like
we did too much predicting four
years ago. We w ill stick our neck
out far enough to predict that
Norch Caroll la w ill go Democra
tic and Pennsylvania iv lil go Re
publican that Chas. R . lon.is has
a chance of being elected to Con
gress from the 10th D istrict and
that Davie w ill wind up in the
Republican column. We could be
wrong in all these predictions.
W e w ill hope for the best but
prepare for the worst.
The Record editor is a Republi*
can regardless of which county he
happens to be in , and is not
ashamed co let the pei>p)e know
where he stands. Wehavehund*
reds of good friends in both par
ties and have always tried to be
fair and honesi with till. W c do
not pose as an independent co get
business from members of any
party. When a m.m or woman
subscribes for T iie Record, they
know they are gettins a Republl
can paper. A Democrat came In*
to our office a short time ago and
said he wantckl .to subscribe for
Thd Record. We told him iie
was in the wrong pew, that our
paper was a Republican rag of T . Leonard, Sal'sbury, aad I. C .-
freedom; He remarked that he Leonard. Kannapolis,
k n e w our politics—that he wane Funeral services were h eJj at
ed a Republican paper. We have Liberty Methodist Church at 3
hundreds of Democratic subscrl- p. m ., Saturday, with Rev. G . W.
bers, but wc didn’t get them Fink officiating, and the body laid
through false pretense. lo rest in the church cemetery.
lones, of Charlotte.I
Mrs. S. C. Phelps^
M rs. Conrad Phelps. 63. of Je-|
rusalem Township, died at Davis ^
Hospital, St tesvlile, Thursday ev*.
ening, following an illness of some
dme.
Siirviying are one adopted dau*
ghten one sister, M rs. O . W . Fog
ner, of Salisbury; three brothers.
W . S. Leonard, China Grove; C.
S I O P
I t ’S a big day in town.
Everybody is "down >t the station" to
see and hear the man who m iy be the
next Piesident o l the United Stales. .
Cariying the campaign to the people is
a custom in this countij as old and as
hoDOted as America itself. For that's
the way folks get to see the candidate
face to fiice. That's the way they heat
at fitst-hand what he has to say. Thai’s
the American way.
It's goisd to know there w ill always
be freedom of speech in this countiy,
as long as a man can speak his mind,
uncensored and unafraid, from' the
platform of a railroad car.
It's good CO. know that dempciacy in
America w ill always work, as Ipng.as
you can cheer or jeer "down at the
station"—obi/ govtlt m jcapliiitt.
S O U T H E R N R A IL W A Y S Y S T E M
THE DAVIE RECORD, m60K3V1lLe. W. C. OCTOBER 29. 1 ^PAGE THRE
THE DAVIE RECORD,
o u « i w i . T i - c « j y
Mo Uquor, Wine, Beer Adt —
..........__________________ Joe M urphv, Johnnie Navlor,
-NEWS A R O U N D T O W N . V T *5®*"I Arthur Woodward, students at
N . C State Colteee, Raleigh, spent
the weck*end with home folks.George. Rowland made a busi*
ness trip to Greensboro Thursday.
M r. and M rs. E . C . Morris spent
several days last week in New Bern
and Morehead C ity.
' Lester Shell, o Jonas Ridge,
spent Wednesday In town with
his brother. Carl E . Shell. '
M r. and M rs. Jack Black, of
Rockingham, were the week-end
guests of M rs. Ruth Bessent.
Miss-Jean Blanton, of Washing*
ton, D . C ., was the week-end
guest o f ; M r. w d M rs. Gaither
Sanfbra^
The new T . S. Hendrix brick
store builditifb 30x40 fee^ on the
Winston-Salem Highway in North
M ocksville has just been com
pleted. M r. Hendrix w ill handle
a line of meats, groceries, gas and
o il. and hope« to have , his store
open for business the latter part
o f this week. Call and look over
his new store.
Mbses Margaret Cozart an d
Nancy Latham , students at Ap
palachian State Teachers* wollege,
spent the week-end in town with
their parents.
M r. and M rs. Bickett Steelman,
o f Baltim ore, returned home
Thursday after a visit with M rs.
Steelman*s parents, M r. and M rs.
Fred R . Lakey, near Farmington.
Boone Hudson, colored had
the misfortune to fiaH a few days
ago, injuring one eye. He was
carried ro Rowan Memorial Hos
pital, where the eye was removed.
A . A . Wagoner and Marvin Wa
ters, who have been patients at
Davis Hospital, Statesville, for the
past m onth, are reported much
improved, their friends w ill be
^ad to learn.
M r. and M rs. J. Arthur Daniel
left yesterday for New Port Richey
F la., where they w ill spend the
winter. Please think of t h is
Boribe when the temperature gets
down to zero up here.
Thurmond Chaffin,-r who
has been visiting his parents, M r.
and M rs. Sv^H; Chaffin, on Route
1, for a month, left Friday for San
Francisco, C a lit, from which place
he w ill sail for Toklo, Japan. He
has been stationed at Camp Gor:
don, Ga. Vote for General Ike on Nov. 4th, so our boys can return home before too long.
Forty-two bales of cotton was badly damaged by fire at the Foster coston gin in South Mocksville Friday afternoon. Flames
from a grass fire near the ginnery,
blew under the m'etal wall o f the building, where the cotton was scored, sertlng It on fire. Fortu
nately no damage was done to the
building or machinery*
Princess Theatre
TH U R SD A Y & FR ID A Y
Dean M artin & Jerrv Lewis In
“JU M PIN G JA C K S” W ith
Mona Freeman & Don Defore
News. & Cartoon
SA TU R D A Y
Tim Holt & Richard M artin In
“ D ESER T PASSAGE”
W ith Joan Dixon
Serial & Cartoon
WASHINGTON, D. C.
M r. and M rs. Roy Collette car
ried their son B ill to Greensboro
Cotiwlescent Hospital Wednes
day for a check-up. B ill was a
vicdm of polio a year or two ago,
but ia getting along fine.
The chicken pie supper and ba-
taat held at Bethel sdiool house
one night te ^ tly , was enjoyed
by a laiRe crowd o f h un i^ folk?.
W e understand that more than
$200 was cleared after all expen-
8es were paid.
Thousands o f pounds o f cotton
U being sold daily in M ocksville,
and the big Foster gin in South
M ocksville h a s been working
ovntlm e for the past two weeks.
The cotton croD was extra good
in Davie this year.
P vt. D . R . Stroud, Jr., who en
tered the U . S. Army two week
aco and was sent to Fort Jackson,
S. C ., spent Wednesday in town
widi^Mrs. Stroud and his parents.
He was on his way to Camp Pick
ett V a., where he w ill be stationed.
The first blasts of winter greet
ed early risers last Ttiesday morn
ing when the mercury took a tum
ble to 26 degress above zero, six
degrees below the f^ in p ! point.
W we are not mistaken, on Oct.
23,1911, the ground in Mocks
ville was covered with snow. |
Virginia Dianne, the 2-year-old
daugliter of M r. and M rs. Bob
M cCulIoh, of R . 4, is a patient at
Baptist Hospital, Winston-Salem,
suffering w ith polio. If we are
not mistaken this is the fourth
case of polio reported in Davie
.County this vear.
Charlie Stroud, 79, died sud
denly at his home near Kinston
Friday, morning. M r. Stroud was,
the Rtandfather of W . A . Stroud,
o f this city, and a cousin of Mt«.
J.W .H U l,o f Hotel M ocksville.
A son o f M t. Stroud bas beeii in
this city for seveisl weeks work
ing on a new house whfch his
son. W . A .. Ir ., is building. M r.
Stroud and son and M rs. J . W . H ill attended the funeral which «ws held at Woodington Metho-- d^t Church, near Kinston, bn
Sunday.
M ONDAY & TU ESD A Y
James Cagney & Don Dailey
In “W H A TP R IC E G LO R Y”
W ith Corinne Calvet News
W ED N ESD AY
Ann Blyth In "S A LLY AN D
SA IN T AN N E” W ith
Edmund Gwenn,
Litde Rascals & Cartoon
DAVIE COUNTY'S BIGGEST SHOW
VALUE ADM tZcniiSSc
Latham-MarkUn
In a beautiful ceremony at the
First Baptist Ciiurch, M ocksville,
Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock.
Miss Jane Frances M arklin b^rame
the bride of Samuel W ilson' ^La-
tham. Rev. P. Davis, putor of
the church, and D r. H . C . Sprin
kle officiate at the double ring
ceremony.
Prior to the ceremony, a pro
gram of wedding music was ren*
dered by Miss Louise Stroud, or.
ganist, and M r. Dale G rabill, of
Cherryville, soloist. Traditional
wedding marches were used. **To
a W ild Rose,” was played during
the ceremony and. M r. Grabill
sang *'The Lord’s Prayer” as the
benediction*
The bride was given In marriage
by her father. Her'weddinggown
was white satin. Her bouquet was
centered with a purple throated
orchid.
Bridesmaids were M rs. Johnson
M arklin and M rs. Leonard Mark*
lin , of M ocksville; M rs. Paul Mark
lin , of Cherrvville;. M rs. Frank
Bryant and M'ss Opa Lashm it, of
Winston-Salem, and Miss Nancy
Latham, of M ocksville. Little Miss
Am elia M arklin was flower girl.
Master Jerry Shore, of Winston*
Salem, was ring bearer.
M rs. Mary Pesaro was her sis
ter’s matron of honor.
James Latham was his brother’s
best man. Ushers were Johnson
and Leonard M arklin, of Mocks
ville; Paul M arkJln,of Cherryville;
Robert Latham, of M ocksville;
Francis Shore, of Winston Salem,
and Robert Honeycutt, of Colum
bus, N . C .
Immediately following the cere
mony M rs. Mary Pesaro entertain
ed at a reception In the Fellow
ship hall of the church, honoring
the bridal couple.
, Following the reception M r. and
M rs. Latham left for a wedding
trip, after which they w ill make
their home In North Augusta, S. C .
M rs. Latham Is a daughter' of
M r and M rs. W illiam Marion
M arklin, of this city. She is agrad|
uate o f M ocksville High School,
and attended Catawba College,
Salisbury. For the past several
years she tias been employed in
the office of the Selective Servli.e
System.
M r. Latham Is a son of M r. and
M rs. Samuel Rowe Latham, of this
city. He is a graduate of Mocks-
.v ille High School and Catawba
College. A t present he Is connect'
s.d with DuPont, at Aiken, S. C.
Following the rehearsal on Sat
urday evening, Miss Opa Lashmit,
of Winston-Salem, entertained the
wedding party a n d additional
guests at a cakc«cutting In the Fel
lowship h airo f the church.
Capture Liquor
Patrolman Green and Inspector
Roy Fisher and C . M. Greeson captured a 1948 Ford truck togeth*with 342 gallons of white liquor
on Wilkesboro street Wednes
day evening about 9 o’clock. Fred Johnson, of Ronda. was driving the truck. He was arrested and placed under a $1,000 bond, and
the truck and llquorjronfiscated. |
Hon. Chas. Reavis, of Yadkin-'
ville, Republican candidate f o r ^ the State Senate, was in town one
day la s t week shaking hands
with friends.
D a v i e C o u n t y V o t e r s
I Am A Candidate For The Office O f County Commissioner
On The Republican Ticket And Would Appreciate The
Votes O f A ll The Citizens O f The County.
If Re-Elected I W ill Serve A ll The People O f The
County To The Best O f My A bility.
J o h n M . G r o c e
(Political Advertisement)
WANT ADS PAY.
FO R SA LE — Barbe W ire & Galvanized Roofing.Milier-Evans Hardware Co.
FO R SA LE—1 p«iir good rabbit,
dogs, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op- posum dog. See Jack Felmster, Harmony, N . C ., R . 2.
Anyone wishing to work as a nurse’s aid. between ages of 1845, white, apply at Mocksville Nursing Home for interview.
FO R SA LE—30-acre farm, with
4*room house. Cood water and
barn. A ll land in cultivation. 2
miles north of M ocksville, on Mud M ill road. T . P . Dwiggins, M ocksville, N . C .
FO R SA LE—Five room house and 27 acres of land, with some timber. Good outbuildingit. Lo
cated in Fork. Call and look over
this property. A bargain.H . W . B > ^ E Y , Fork, N . J .
W A N TED - Experienced ma
chine operators. W ill train good ^reliable Rirls. Also like to have one good young man to train as ! cutter and pattern marker. Apply
M O N LEIGH G ARM EN T CO .
. M ocksville, N . C .
J . N . S M O O T
Republican Candidate
F O R
N. C. Stale Legislature
From Davie County
Farmer.
Member 1949 N . C . State Legislature.
. Chairman Davie County Soil Conservation
Commmiti'ee.
Member N . C ., State Grange.
■ Member Farm Bureau.
W ould Appreciate Your Vote In
The November Election.
(Political Advertisement)
D e m o c r a t i c C a n d i d a t e
For Davie County
REPRESENTATIVE
In N. C. General Assembly
J . G .
C r a w f o r d
C^ualifield
To
Serve
You.
Activs In Field O f Soil Conservation For 10 Years.
Member O f Davie County W elfiire Board 12 Years.
Member O f Board O f gtewards O f Methodist Church.
Supt. of Sunday Cchool Fo r 20 Years.
Member O f The Masonic Lodgei
A Life Long Farm er, W on State' Cotton Growing
Championship In 1949.. , '_____________
Your Support W ill Be Appreciated
(Political Advertisement)
T W I N B R O O K F A R M
Producer And Distributur Of
G U E R N S E Y M I L K
I n D i o p e C o u n t y F o r O v e r 3 0 Y e a r s
O u r P o l i c y I s . . .
To Provide A High Quality Guernsey Milk
Displayed In A Container So That The Deep Cream
Line Is Visible.
To Give Y»u Regular And Courteous Delivery Service.
We Appreciate Your Lovalty And Sincerely Hope
That We May Continue To Serve You.
T W I N B R O O K F A R M
Phone 94 Modcsville, N. C.
PAGE EOUR THE DAVIE HMViil), MOCKPVILLK N C. OCTOPBR 29 1968
This ProfeMor Need* Your
Old Whale Hairs, PleaieAny old whale hairs around th« house? Qr. Leon A. Hausman, Rut* sera University professor, would like to have them.Dr. Hausman, orintholostst and national]y>famcd hair rescorcher.
confessed to Watson DaWs on CBS’ "Adventures in Science'* program recently that his hair collection Is •fresh out” of whale hairs. It seems that they are extremely bard to find, even on a whale.The whales, even the 100>ton variety, have only a few. That’s part of the problem. There are Just a few around the huge mam« mal’s mouth. Then too, there Is the difficulty of collecting them. ^Having so few, whales won’t peacefully stand around while their hair is pulled—that is, if you could get that close.Whale hairs occupied only part of Mr.,Davis* Interview with the noted Rutgers University scientist.
Dr. Hausman's long-standing pre« occupation with hair began when he was assigned to compare mi* croscopically his own hair with that of a 6,000*year*old Egyptian mummy as the subject* oC his Cornell doctoral thesis.Since then his reputation In the field has taken him into law courts as an export witness in cases rang> ing from hlt>and>run driving to murder. He has established In court whether a fur coat was a genuine $7,500 mink or a $1,200 dyed imitation.He has worked with archeologlsfs who found Indian robes in Arizona caves. Whether they were made of hairs of bison or of sheep could solve the date of their manufac* ture since sheep were known to have been introduced by the Span* Ish at a certain date.
Plants, Like People, May
Store Up too Much Fat
Plants, like animals, store up large amounts of fat for the fu> ture. Acetic acid, a major con* stltuent of vinegar, plays an Im* portant part In the buildu p of this fat supply in peanuts, according to recent experiments by P. K. Stumpf, division of plant blochem* Istry, and Guggenheim Fellow Eldon H. Newcomb. University of California college of agriculture.Acetic- acid molcculcs, two*car* bon units, are converted into longer fatty acid chains. Fatty acids, in turn, are built Into 16* to'18*car* bon fat molcculcs.Immature, living peanut seeds were sliced Into thin sections and bathed in different radioactive compounds for several iiours. The radioactive compounds chosen were various carbon-containing materials that might be converted into fatty acids. 't
By measuring ihc radioactive fatty acids formed In the seed sections, it was found that acetic acid contributed most to fatly acid for* mation. Such sugars as glucose and fructose form the fatty acid precursor—acetic acid—which is then converted Into the fatty acid chains.These experiments show that both plants and animals use much the same methods of building up fats from smaller carbon mole
cules.
She Will Cry Probably only one woman In Australia will shod tears when the atom bomb experts blast the Monte Bello Islands from their coral beds some time this year. She’s Mrs.J. C. Taylor of Parkerville, Western Australia. To Mrs. Taylor, the supposedly bare, bleak Island group is a tropical paradise of colorful coral reefs, alive with fish, turtles and tasty oysters, “I’m not a nrst*ciass flsher-woman.” Mrs. Taylor maintains, "but on Monle Bello you just can’t help catching them. You toss In your line and pull out a schnappor.” Mrs. Tay. lor’5 visits to Monte Bello usually Involved anchoring off-shore In luggers or fishing vessels, as the Islands have no fresh water. Ono time, however, the Parkerville woman and her family did camp out on the now famous atolls. “Crawling turtles and rats woke us up,” she recounts, "and we end*. ed up sleeping with our boots on.” The Monte Bello Islands, off the north*west coast of Western Aus* tralla, have been named by the Australian and BriUsh Governments as the site of atomic experiments to be carried out later this
y « » r . ______________________
How You Sec It you are to see an object, tight from that object must enter your eyes.'Some things are luminous, or llgbt*glving In themselves—the
sun, the stars, a lighted electric lamp, a firefly, a bonfire, for ex* ample. But most objects simply re* fleet light from the sun or some other luminous body. When you see the moon you'are really seeing reflected sunlight. A book, a chair, a building arc visibl. by virtue of the light which tails upon them and Is bent back to your eyes. |
False Teeth for Baby
A group of dental researchers, working on the theory that many dental problems can be traced to defects starling In babyTeelh,-T»re- diets there will be more false teeth, bridges, ^crowns, fillings and even plates for babies. The scien* i
tists say that growing mouths.c'an ; become deformed when lost infant teeth aren’t replaced with false wi'esi-Sfacty per cent rf^adult-tooth * deformtfes result from 'hf* earJy neglect, they estimate.
Dr. Foreman
u .u b ,
Power for Need
. Lesson for November 2, 1953
npHEIlE %re various kinds of A power, and this lesson is not about most of them. For example there Is mechanical power, and atomic power, and electrical power, There Is armed force exerted by a nation, and there are all the forces of nature. We are not concerned directly with any of these. We will think not of one
particular kind of power, but of any kind which is personally controlled and used, the power that every one has. Practically all human beings exert some kind of power. It may be the power of influence; it may be based on money j It may be pollt* ical or social; It may be power to command, such as if held by sea- captains and labor bosses and office managers. The reader Is invited to reflect on his own situation and concentrate his mind on whatever power, be it ever so small, which he hUnseU exercises or can exercise when he pleases. Very few persons are complete Zeros.
w ♦ • •
Purposes oC P rayer Is it wrong, that is to say. un- Christian. to wish to be strong? Of course not. There Is surely no virtue in weakness. To wish to bo weak, or to be content with weakness, la no sign of a Christian. It depends on the motive behind the desire. Now power can be had. or wished for, for various reasons, bad and good. Some people like to be strong Just to show off. A boy goes around bending his arm nnd showing the other boys what big muscles he has. just bragging. That may be all right for a boy (though the boaster Is pretty sure to bMhrown sooner or later). But when a grown man does the same tiiing he is just being childish. However, this Is harmless compared with another common mis* use of power; that is. using it to
build op more power. We can sec It In politicians who hold on to important^ positions even though they could be more useful In pri* vate life and though a dozen other men could do their job quite well as they can. We can see it even In the church, where some men like to get on and stay on important committees because then they can “crack the whip" over their brethren. Worst and meanest of all mis-uses of power Is using it to burl and crush others. We can see examples I of this on the na* , tional scale, all through history. It. scales all the way down to the blackmailer, who uses some bit of scandal that he knows about to ruin the lives of perhaps much better men.-• • •
Jesus and H is Power Now Christians have always before them an example of tremendous power, gently and generously used. Readers of this column will be divided into two classes. Some will take the stories of Jesus' miracles quite litterally. Others will suppose that some of these stories may have been exaggerations of
Joyal memory. Let those who aroy skeptical about the miracle-stories give a thought to this: Even grant
ing. for the sake of the argument, that every one of these miracle- stories is a ••made-up’’ one; they surely would never have been invented about a weak man; and they never would have been told about a selfish one. The historians who are most full of doubts about Jesus agree and admit that he was a man of extraordinary power.
And even If you thought <as this writer docs not) that most of the tales of Jesus were wonder-tales and no more, the fact remains thut these tales, every one of them, shows a Jesus who never ^ses power to show off, never uses It “just because,’’ and seven times never uses It to hurt any one.
Power fo r Need
Jesus gives us the right Christian line. “As he Is. so are we in this world,” said one of his friends.. Power Is given us. as all the gifts of life are, for use In the name of God and the help of man. What- ever power we have, we possess as stewards. It makes no differ
ence how obscure we may be. every one of us has some degree of power, of some kind. It may be a mother with her.chl^rcn, a teacher with his pupil's, :>n older child with younger children, a business man with many employees, a Judge on the bench or an officer In a 4-H club—if our decisions affect the Ufe of even one other,person, then God will ask us: Did your power hurt others, or help?
0. Kept10. One who tunea12. Metal13. Ripe11. Work out, as a planIG. Mother 17. Put In a niche 10. Layers (Gcol.)22. Type of short tale23. Sesames (var.)24. Marble26. Sen eagle27. Semblances 23. Originaldraft of a (louument31. Hebrew letter32. Kaiivcs of ancient Ihcrla36. ?4uslcal studies as. Pl.’ice 59. Ren-.ovcs (mint.)40. Concise41.Foi>42. Pause
l.Gaiuo of rhance r. r.tvcr
<Enpr)3. Esrhange opi*r.ntor
25. Northern division of Palestine 27. Frosta 29. Helped over dlfncultUa 13. Transparent 30. Fat silicate 33. Mannen 15. Soaks. 34. Coay retreat asllax 33. Prosecute 18. Dross Judicially
JT. Curved knlfa
<Eak.) 4aTyeasurer
(•W>r,)
Please Help Us! Notice to Creditors
\Vc hnve l<»si the nnmc.s of a
of i»iir solJicr btw-s xx'ho''
pictures sTpcar ticlow. If vmi rc
c Bniic one or more, please m’-
vlse II', siiul we will appreciate ii
very much:
Having qualified as Exccutor of
the estate of F. H . Bahnson, ’ de
ceased, noiicc is hereby given to
all person.s holding claims against said estate to present the same,
properlv verified, lo the^ undcr-
siened at Coolcemee, N C ., on or
before the 30ih day of September 1953, oi this notice w ill be plead In bar of recovery. A ll persons
indebted to said estate w ill please
n*ake prompt serilenK'nt This 0th dav of Septim bir, 1552.
C H A S . V. H A H N < 0 .n .Exr. of R H ^i1hn^o », Decs^d.
mer
S E E U S r O - i
Self - Propdled
Corn Pickers,
Drills,
Used or new, o>’ for
anything you need
in Farm Machinery.
V/e can save you
m o n e y
hendrix & W ard
WINSTON--ALEM HIGHWAY
MUCH THEAPER
An upstate Nciv York vcterlnolT got a call from a local store. A farm* er there wanted him to look at a sick cow. The doctor picked up the farmer and drove over winding country roads. As they pulled up lo the farmer’s house, the farmer opened the car door and said: ''You can let me out huro, Doc. I haven’t got a sick cow. You see, you charge only S3 (or a visit when a taxi would cost me s-V*
F o r C o u n t y
C o m m i s s i o n e r
I wish to announce to the voters
of Davie County that I am a Can
didate for County Commissioner
on the Republican ticket, and
would appreciate your support in
the November f lection. If re elect
ed to this important office I will
render the best service possible
to the entire citizenship of the
county. 1 wish to thank all those
who have givf«n me their support
in the past.
Your Friend
R . P . M a r t i n
(Political Advertisement)
0 o Yio ' • I'.o To c rd'j
NtW MONEY MM
VOUR OLD m iN M
U im m M r m m ,
PU S*
h» On, « ■ «M A *
t W A R T * • IN
n v t i E v t P A m 0
T o T h e V o t e r s O f D a v i e |
' C o u n t y
I Am A Candidate For Re-Election
O n The Republiblican Ticket For
Riegisi^r Of Deeds
A nd will appreciate the votes of all
th^ people of Davie County in the
coming, election. If fe-elerted I
will continue to.serye the people
courteously* and friendly, in the
future: as 1 have tried to do in the f ■'
pa?t.
Thanking You In Advance For Your Votes.
Charles R. Vogler.
(Political Advertisement)
t o I ^ v i e C o u n t y •
V 01ers
1 Wish To Announce To The Good Pedple
Of Davie County That I Am
Candidate For County Commissioner
On the Republican Ticket.
If re-elected I pledge myself to render
jlhe best service possible. Your vote
.will be very much appreciated.
Your Friend ,
■f'
) Clarence R. Carter
(Political AdvertlsemenO ,
The Davie Record
DAVIE OGUNTT’S OIiDEST N EW SPAPER-THE PA PER THE PEO PI,E REA D
“HERE SHALL THE PP«4S, THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBHIBED BY C AIN “
VOLOMN L III.M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L tN A , W B D N E S D A Y N O V E M B E R s
NEWS OF LONG AGO
What Wat Hai nine In Da-
vie Before pArking Melert
And Abbreviated Skirls.
(Dnvlp Record, O ct. a.s. *933).
A «ort»ey A T . G ra o l m ade
business trip to W in s to n ^ a le m on
Thursday*
B uck AlH son, w bo listens to the
w ild waves at W llm inK to n. spent
the w e ek e nd here w ith hom e folks
T. P. B urton, of oear H ickory,
was in tow n last w eek Rreetluft old
frtends. .
M rs A . T D aniel, M is. M . D .
Pass and M iss M ary K a th ry n W al
ker, spent F rid a y in W inslo n.S aU
em shopplnK.
M rs. Isaac Booe, o f IClnt;, and
M iss A m y M oore, of P innacle,
spent the w eek end in tow n w ith
th e ir parenis M r. and M rs. \, F,
Moore.
M r. and M r i J . F . A dcock and
little dauRhter, of C um nock, spent
th e w eek'end In tow n w ith M r.
and Mrs. W . L . C all, parents of
M rs. A dcock.
J . C Saurord and L P. C artner
of this city, and N oah G rim es, of
Cooleemee, spent T hursday In the
G ate C ity, atteiif*lne a m eeting of
th e N . C . D a iry Association.
M rs. W , V S herrill and son
C linton, left S a tu rd a y for Paynes-
vllle, M ictf., to be at the bedside
of her m other, w ho Is seiiously 11]
and not expected to live.
I ELlttle M iss H elen D obby Q le nu,
daughter of D r. and M rs. T . L .
G le nn, of th is city , underw ent
operation for appvudicitis a t Davin
H ospital. Statesville, last week,
and Is ge tting alo ng nicely.
Thieves entered th e store of A .
J , Anderson, near C alahaln, one
n ig h t last week and carried off se.
veral pairs of overalls, some hosi*
ery, sm oking tobacco and other ar.
tid e s E n trance was m ade oy re
m oving some p lank from the rear
o f the b u iM ln ?. T he e n iliy |
ties have not b?en apprehended.
M r M elvin G illespie and Mii<s
B va C all, o f Brevard, spent th f
week-end in to w n, quests of Mr
and M rs. W . L C all.
M r. and M rs. R o y H o1lhous4't
soent Sunday w ith th e ir daughter,
M iss Helen Faye, w ho is a student
at N . C . C . W , Greensboro.
M r. and M rs. Francis A ngell and
tw o sons, of P lains, Kansas, spent
a short w hile in tow n last Wedne«>
d ay w ith th e ir cou.sln. J. T . A n .
gell. M r. A o ge ll and fam ily vlst.
. ted relatives in Y a d k in and For
syth connties w hile here. H i s
grandfather m oved from Y ad k in
county to K ansas about 50 years
affn. H e has 535 acres In wheat
th is year, w hich Is already up. In
good crop years be m akes around
30 000 bushels of wheat.
N ew s was received here Saturday
ntorning te lling of the death of
M iss M arietta C am pbell, w hich oc>
curred at Her hom e at lerseyvlile,
Illinois, on W ednesday, O ct. iit b .
Miss C am pbell was about 85 years
of.age, and leaves no im m ediate
relatives. H e r parents, M r. and
M rs G eorge C am pbell, left th e je
richo section of D avie county '57
years ago and located in Illinol'i.
N U M B E R 14
Be SHU
Rev Wetter e. ruenhmir TnvioMvllle.N.C
**BeStill and, and know that I am
God.**— Psalm 46:10.
G o out somewhere and meet w ith
G od
W here throngs o f people do not
rrod;
W here distance shuts away, the
sound
O f m an, m achines a n d things
around;
W her9 crystal steams reflect the
sky
W ith clouos that float so calm ly by
W here masses grow along their
brink
A n d you m ay sU and deeply th ink .
Be still and let G od speak to you.
By eooling breeze and sparkling
dew.
W here flnwers bloom and birds
sweet
A w ay from noisv tow n and street
But if yon cannot glee from these
A nd find the quietness of the
trees.
T hen seek a room , where all alone,
G od pours out blessings from H is
throne.
Be s till. O weary heart and m ind,
O soul that tongs sweet peace 10
find;
T ake God*s good W ord, and page
by page.
Read w hat bas m ade the saint and
sage;
T ben in the stillness of th e night
A sk G od to m ake your pathw ay
b lig h t.
O r in the day w hen duties urge
A sk G od to keep yon in the surge.
Be still, for noisy Is the w orld,
W hose business banners fly u n
furled;
W hose modes of traval bid for
speed
W hose games excite, w hoie plea
sures th rill.
So traveler on the shores of tim e.
Be still and seek G od ’s grace
sublim e.
Be^still and m edidate and pray
A nd rest your nerves from day to
d a y ; .
R e n e w y o u r strength, refresh your
soul.
W here Itaffic's noise« do not rol’;
W here G od ft*veals bis holy w ill
For in the secret place of prayer
G od alw ays meet;i H is children
there
IKE WINS
f H'c Could Feel
Another^s }/\foe
I f we could feel another's woe
T hat's sometimes hidden' in his
breast,
We*d he lets critical. I know ,
O f w hat we th in k should be bis
best;
A n d tben walk*^ u p and lake his
baud
A n d w ith a k ind and friendly
sm ile
Assure him we w ill help h im stand
For G od and all th at is w orth
w hile.
W e’d orav for h im , whereas we
talk
O t w hat bis faults and failure
are;
O ne brother, N eelv Cainpb«H , W e 'd tellp^hlm w llli more (« ilh lo
burled n the old fam ily graveyard '
w alk
T he path' id heaven's goal afar;
W e’d love h im m ore, yes, more
and more.
A n d m nnilesi G o d ’s spirit sweet;
W e’d help h im in his trials sore
T o lav h|s cares at Jesus* feet.
near Je ric ho .,
B W . T atu m . 58, prom loem
Salisbury citizen, died at his hom e
In th at city S aturday afternoon,
follow ing an extended illness. F u
oeralw rvlces were held Monday. *“ '»»®>'>er's woe ^
m oroloK. conducted by Rev A rcb T h .i no ore know s on earth bnt
e ie e , p .r to r o t . |he First B a p ti,. O n r sym paihv lor bin. w ould grow ,
church, and th e bodv laid to rest whereas
In C hestnut H ill cemetery, S u rv i. we nod.
v ine are the w idow and several W e ’d weep (or h im deep In oor
cbiidren. M r, T atu m was a native . , * , -
i f b .» le couotv. a son of the lite ’
M r M d M rs. S am uel J . Tatum. strengthen b ln. in e V ry part
of Jerusalem . Hie was very active A nd liless h im on life's rugged
ID eburch w ork. racel
‘ ' • J
G r e a t R e p u b l i c a n V i c t o r y
W ith returns incomplete it appears
that General Dwight Eisenhower has a
majority of about 5,000,000, and will
have about 450 electoral votes.
’ General Eisenhower and Richard
Nixon, Rcpubllcnn candidates for
President and Vice-President of the
United States, are leading in 39 of
the 48 states, with a po.ssible electo-
rial vote of over 430. * It takes 266
electoral votes to elect.
The solid Sou h is no longer in
the bag as Virginia, Florida, Tennc
s.see, Texas and Mnrvland seems 10
be safely Republican. General Ike
rcciiived a maioritv of the votes in
South Carolina on the Democrats
far Ike ticket and the Republican
tickct, but Stevenson got the 10 elec
toral votes.
It is thought that the Republicans
w ill have a small mnjoritv in both
Senate and House.
North Carolina elected one Republican Congressman, Charles R'
Jonas, of Lincolnton, who defeated his opponent, Hamilton Jones,
by a majority of 12,000. Jonas carried all the six counties in the
lOth Congressional D istrict.
The Repitblican landslide was the biggest since Roosevelt defeated A lf Lnndon in 1936.
Republicans Win
Davie County voters went to
the polls yesterduy from early
mom until dewey eve and cast
the largest vote ever recorded in
this county.
W ith returns complete from a ll.
11 precincts, except for the Presi-;
dentlal ticket in M ocksyille town* •
ship, Eisenhower had a majority
of 1403 votes over Stevenson.
Ike's majority in this township,
w ill be around 1,000 ic is choughtj
The m ajority fo r the Republl-
can County officers were as foU
lowsj .
Senate, Rcavis Republican 826;
Representative, Smoot, Ropuhli
can, 869 over J. 0 . Crawford; Re*
gtster of Deeds Vogler, Republi
can over W oodruff. 778; M artin,
Carter an d Groce, Republican
candidates for County Commiss
ioners, defeated C all. Langston
and Deadinon, hv majorities rang>
ing from 808 to 892. Talbert, Re
publican sun'eyor, had a majority
of 836 over Bowles.
In Florida
U . S. Naval A ir Station, Pensa<
cola, Fla., (FH TN C )—Attending a
special five-months course in Ad
vanced Training U n it is Marine
Pfc. Eudeil Barnhardt, son of M r.
and M rs. George Barnhardt of
Route 2, Advance, N.' C.
Do you read The R ecord ?
Our County And
Social Security
Bv W . K . W hite. Manager.
Old-age and survivors insur-
ance now pays hiuher "dividends"
because of the lu ly 1952 changes
in the law.
Congress has recognized that
incicasing basic living costs caus
ed a shrinkage in the dollar value
of monthly social security benefits.
Bv providing a more liberal for
mula for calculating the benefits
of those now retiring, they hove
restored a measure of their poten^
tial purchasing power; by increas*
ins the amounts paid ro those aU
ready retired, they have made it-
less likely that these persons w ill
have to seek public aid in the fu'
ture. A il fam ily members enti
tled to share in old-age benefits or
death benefits w ill generally re«
ceive proportionate increases un
der the new legislation.
Self-employed persons who re
tire before the end of this year al'
so profit from the increases grant,
ed bv Congress. They w ill be el
igible for fu ll benefits even tho
they retire this year.
Persons having questions about
these or related matters should
consult the Winston-Salem, N . C
office of the Social Security Ad
m inistration, located in Room
437, Nissen Building.
A representative of this ofiice
w ill be in M ocksville again on Nov. 5th, 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
ford's Store, at 11 a. m>
From Iowa
M r. and M rs. Floyd A llen, of
Marshalltown, Iowa, are spending
two weeks with relatives an d
friends in Davie, Rowan, Yadkin
counties, and in Richmond, V a.,
where they have a son living. M r.
Allen is an old Davie County
man, a son of the late M r. and
Mrs. Gaston A llen. M r. Allen
migrated to Iowa 42 years ago. He
is in the catde business there, and
has done well in his adopted
stare, He comes back to the old
home county rtgh. often. He and
Mrs. Allen have many relatives
and friends in Davie who are al
ways glad to see them.
Mrs. F. Foster
M rs. Frances Hinkle Foster, 88,
died Saturday a t a M ocksville after the election—Aged citizen
nursing home. She had been CH wearing Panama hat around town
Seen Along Main Street
By Tbf Roinhler.
nnnoou
Big man disturbing the peace
with loud haw-haws on Main
street Ineberat-d citizen trying
to find the door to local cafe—
Preacher and manufacturer pass
ing a cold chisel on Main street
just before the election—D r. Gar
land .Greene and Milton Call sit
ting on bench In front of bus sta
tion talking over the situatioti—
Young man from Arizona leading
big Irish setter into local cafe,
but wasting no time in making a
hasty retreat—B ill LeGrand get
ting ready to leave town—Local
barbers may have to raise prices
on shaves since there are so many
long faces since the election—Ben
Boyles doing some early cam*
paigning—Smoot Shelton listen
ing to some campaign hot air—
Farmer wanting to know why the
price of cotton always drops be
fore he gets his crop picked and
sold—Housewife declaring that
somebody was making too much
profit on hen fruit—O rrell Etchi-
son rambling up Main street—
Lena Comatzer and Carrol M iller
pausing in drug store for refresh
ments—M rs. Lawrence Smith do
ing some morning shopping—^Mrs.
Ted Junker reading letter from
absent daughter-Jim Thompson
and Kimbrough Sheek discussing
coming events - Congressman C .
B. Deane doing some last minute
handshaking—M rs. R . L . W alker
shopping in dime shop—Charm
ing young lady sitting in parked
auto with ferocious looking bull
dog^Mr. and M rs. Henry Taylor
eating chicken and dumplings in
l-)cal cafe—J. E . McDaniel wear
ing Ike badge as large as a saucer
—Miss Pearl Tatum doing some
before Thanksgiving shopping—
Prospective groom buying new
suit just before wedding bells be
gun to ring—M rs. B . 1. Smith do
ing some dime store shopping—
Lady declaring that she was glad
that the election was over so she
could become acquainted with
her husband again - D . 1. Mandu
modeling new fall coats- M rs. D .
EL Stroud, |r.. having perculator
repaired Ann Owings and Betty
Messick walking up Main street
diinking large coca-colas—M rs.
Vera Dwiggins standing on Main
street waiting for way to go home
—Zanie Davis and , Durrls Jones
running foot-race up Main street .
' Country lass declaring that the
price of cotton would go down
for a year.
Bom Nov. 15, 1864, in Davie
County, she was a daughter of
George and Susan Dwi gins Hin*
kic. She had been a resident of store,
die North Cooleemee community
for the past 35 years, and was a
member of Cooleemee Methodist
Church.
Surviving are o n e half sister,
Mrs. J . A . Boger of Greensboro,
one half-brother, P . R . H inkle of
Advance, Route 2; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 2:30 p. m ., Cunday, at Cen
ter Methodist Church by Rev.
Hugh Jessup. Burial was in the
churcli ccmetery.
on frosty morning—I. H . Eidson
getting warm morning hair cut—
M rs. D . C . Kurfees reading news
paper and drinking coca-cola In
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Can Supply Tiour Needs
IN GO O D C O A L.
SAN D arid B R IC K
Call or Phone U s A t Any Time
PH O N E 194
Fonnerlv Davie Brick &Coal Co'
I The Gift Shop
M RS. C H R ISTIN E W . D A N IEL
■}