04-Aprill>AQB IOOR1 BM P iV tt UMOBttlliOCKaYIIXE M. C..,MARCH M..- IIW
B I ^ R a KENNETM j. f o r e m a n
The Cost: A Gross
L«!iraii lor Aprn J, 19S!
N T,.
> s ,
l> '\
P ’^OPLE who don’t know the
1 ioBst thing about Christian re.
ligion do know this much, that it
has something to do with a cross. You can t go into a church* without
seeing one. Many churches are
even constructed in the shape of a cross. You can see one above
the door or on the steeple Ai this time of year it is
a rare newspaper w hich does not
carry somewhere
the p ictu re of a
cross to go with
Good Friday medi- “
tntions or a Good Prid.oy editorial.
But if tiic cross Is
knc-u'n oven Co per*
sons alto g eth er Ot. Foreman
o*jt*:idc Ihe Christian faith, it is
inOnttcly bolter known to those on
the inside. The deeper one pene
trates into the meaning of the
Christian faith, the more luminous
the cross becomes. One might say that Ihe ci-oss is both in the pre-
school' nnd the post * graduate
courses in Christian growth and
knowledge.
SaerlJico Unlimittd
The frmniar cross of Christian
art nnd architecture is a prettified
veisioii of an ugly thing, a cruel
instnsmont of torture and death used by Romans only in case of
exL'cutfng slaves and the vilest criminals, Jesus was neither the
first nor the last to be enicifled.
Thv're ar.e people who would call
the cross itself an "iUstorical ac-
tiid ni.*‘ Tiiat Is to say. it Jesus
ttp i lived in other eras or in other
<i::natvs. he might, have been killed by being frozen to death or
buried iilivc or hanged or gassed. But that is neither here nor there.
TJio meaning of the cross is not
In Ihj shnpe of a certain wooden •iiinis that wn.s u.<^ ’ to kill people
in n painful an. ^ .lorrible way.
Th» meaning of the cross is simply
this, in two words: Sacriece on- llmititd. Paul puts it as simply
as possible: “Christ died for all.”
lie taught all, He set an example
(nr all, II2 challenged and inspired
all—that is, all who as He said “had an car.“ But the cross re-
. minds us that He died for all.
“For their sakes.” Jesus himself
said. “I dedicate myself." How
far would that dedication go?
Many a person will say sincerely,
' “I will do anything in reason, to help you." Christ went farther.
It was not “reasonat>le'’ that He
of all persons should give up His
life for lesser men; but the kind
ot dedication that was His, did not stop at the limits of the re
spectable and reasonable.
W kit OhrliHaM n m w k ^ r
One might suppose that the
Christian church would have liked
to hush up the story of the cross,
especially after the resurrection.
It was a very ugly tact and as
such was a handicap to the early
Christians. Both among Jews and
non-Jews, the cross was a kind of real curse. When the Christians
preached Christ crucified, many a
Ustemr’s reaction was: “Ask me to take for Master and Lord an
executed criminal? Neverl" But
the Christians went i:ight on with
the story of the cross. The gospels give that story more space than
any other event in Jesus* life. And
tbe Christian chtirch has never
. forgotten nor tried to forget it.
For what it means to us is that
God in Christ was far more than
the fabled Greek gods who some times took human shape, some
times shared with men theii
Olympic wisdom, but never suf
fered for them. It is known to
Christians that the cross m.iasurc» Ihe immeasurable love of God lo.
us and for all men.
What ChrtsttiM Fon«t
What Christians too easily for
get Is sometlilng' Jesus set In tli
centcr of his teaching. Hs spukc*
ot His own ci-oss.’ but He in .the same breath would speak of th^
cross of His followers. Tbe crus,
does not stand alone for one past
event. It is intended to stand as
a pr^»hecy and pattern for every
Qu-istlan’s life. One modem trans
lator ot the Bible, coming .to the verse. *'l<et him- take up his own
cross and follow me.’' boggled at that word “cross** and translated
. It “Let him take up his own yoke
. . .** No, there’s no bypassing the
intention of Jesus, one who meant
what he said. And what he said amounted to this: For the Chris
tian. one who wants to be a fol
lower of Jesus, there must bo no
limit set on love’s devotion. The
Christian cannot say. if he really follows his Master. “I will do any
thing—in reason . . . 1 will make
any sacrifice—that d<*«s nut cost
me too much . .
WOMAN'S VIORLD
Lunch or Snacks -
Mean Tangy Salads
In Lenten Season
A CUP tomato Julee healed with herbs, a salad, hot bread
and beverage make a d^lghttul
lunch for one. two or six. 11 you have company coming for an eve*
ning, try a salad as a chanie la
snack-time ideas. *
Both of the recipes given here
wUl be In that class of something
special, something different but
still easy to pr^>are:
Maeareiil.Tma SalU <8enres9)
1 toblespoen aaU t quarts belliDf water t .dms elbow maoanml ^
Scald milk. Cool to lukewarm, then add yeast, Blend In sugar and
1% cup dour to make a sponge.
Beat weU. Add unbeaten eggs and
soft butter, mixing welL Beat in
remaining flour sifted with salt and
cardamon. Knead on lightly
ftoured surface until elastic. Twirl
In lightly greased bowl, cover and let rise until doubled in huifc.
When light, knead and divide
dough In thirds. Roll each piece into a long strip, then braid to
gether. Let rise untU doubled In
bulk, brush lightly with egg yolk or egg white. Bake in a moderate
o n * F.) ovenfor30to3Smlmi«M.
H cap seedless ralslM . a cup walnuts
1 medlitmHiteed red apple» cored and diced
' M cup chopped celery
H enp evaporated mUk U cop French dressing
H cup cnt*nbled btoe cheese M i and pepper to taste
Add salt to boiling water, then
macaroni gradually so that water continues to boil. Cook, uncovered,
until tender. Drain, rinse with cold water and drain again. Chill.
Add tuna, raisins, walnuts, apple and celery to macaroni, mixing
lightly. Combine evaporated milk,
French dressing and cheese. Beat
Ibve yonrseH a refreshing
salad bowl of foods that are hearty as welt as colorfal. Tana
and macaroni are used wllh red- skinned apples, celery, raisins
and nuts to give flavor aad tex-
unta blended. Add to salad mbc- ture and mix well. Season to taste
with salt pepper. Chill thoroughly before serving.
Salmon Salad
(Serves 4)
1 Impound can aalinoB, drained,
flaked
K cup chopped sweet picktee » cop chopped celery
t toblespoons chopped green
H teaspoon salt
1 Ublespoon lemon Juice
H cup mayonnaise
Toss all ingredients together
lightly. ChiU and serve in lettuce cups.
What Appetites
With Yeast Bread
Any woman can fill the house
with the tanUlizing armna ot
home-baked bread or coffee cake
made with yeast. Little or 00
kneading is required wiOi these
newly developed recipes and
they’re certain to be a big success.
Easy-De Oatmeal Bread (Makes t loaves)
tH cops rolled oata K cap molasses
H cup shortening 4 teaspoons salt
t cups boiling water t cakes or packages yeaal
t eggs
4 cups sifted flour
Measure oats, molasses, shorten
ing and salt into large mixing bowL Add 1% cup of boiling water, and stir well. Cool to luke warm. Crum
ble yeast with, remaining yk cup
water which has cooled to lukewarm. Let stand. Blend the two
mixtures together and mix weU. Blend in eggs, then flour and mbc
until dough is weU blended. (The dough will be slightly sticky). Turn
dough on well-floured pastry cloth. Shape into two loaves; place in
weU-greased 8%. x 4% x 2K-inch pans and cover. Yet rise in warm
place untU doubled in bulk. Bake in a hot (375* F.) oven for 1 hour.
Cterdamon CofTee Cake (Makes 1 cake)
t c«p mOk 1 cake yeast
» c
m < .; t- eggs
a cnpI . 1
l O M r a z t f
'-W
ACH088
LPW innbont’k
: Cun«rale . «. Chatter UMore;.
t9.N ai^W ^
lS..Catcndac
V bfofllMsand feasts
litC C h .)
4. aheltered
IS. Kind or
shrub 14. Conscious . lfl.Cry.aa acow
I# Beard of rye tfl. Garden
tool.It. Reptile 21. Any bodily
disorder
84. Slopes \
38. Mine ^ entrances 89. Guide 30. Greek
letter t l Barly se«.ffoinfl . vessel
S9. Rope with
running knot S4.Char|^fer
services 97 Feline 88. Observe 41 A sudden
swaying 4S.Bskimo boat45. Debate
46.aeanse ^ofsoap47. River (Ger.)48. Bordered
DOWN r Streetcar (Eng.)
IC irclc •flight
».trips
Cin-tem - . percd, grouchy
person t Humble 8. Oriental
nurse
t. Short for . Caroline 10. U g Joint t7. Method 1». evil spirit >0. Roman
magistrate
91. Qiieen . of fairies
22. Any fruit drink
23. Ignited
25. Sick 20. Author> of
•The Pitand
the
Pendulum" 27. Pig pen
29. Gracing
land 31. Black* Uiled '
gazelle (Tibet»
83. An ore of iroiV
lAST W IIXl
a . w a Cia ssB
P-123
34. Defect
35. River In
France '
36. Units of . work '38. Warble '39. Comfort
40. Pieced out 42.Hlnt>44. Middle
%
THEY W O U U ) READ YOUR AO
TO O , IF IT APPEARED HERE
♦ FO R R EN T ♦
SPA C E IN THIS PAPER
Will Arr«i,« To Suit
GOOD NeiCHBOR$-«MCES TO
Fir VOUR BUSINESS
IF YOU HAVE-
bm ona itip ^
celebrated ■ bli&&v
CMi^t a big fish ^
moved'' ' , .
::r\ , doped
had a baby;
b c e n ln a fi^ r , '
•old your bop
; had an operation
b o u ih ta a r > .
painted vouc. house '
btm tnattled ,
cut a .new tooth
beenshbt i ' . ■ . ■
stolen anything .
b m cobbed
•old out ■
lostvourhM t.
'..been arrested
Or Do^e Anything At AU
Telephone, Or Drop a Ppate^nl, Or Come In,
Or In Any Coilvement Way Inform i ..
THE DAVIE RECORD
1 F T I IQ n n
YOUR JOBPRINTING
W ecan save you money
bn your
ENVELOPES. LETTER HEADS,
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL
HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc.
Patronize your home nevirs|;laper
I and thereby help build up your,
I home town and county.
I THE DAVIE RECORD.
A demon^ration drive
can help you
one of 102 riew '
C H E V R O L E T S l
plui a <1,000
U .S . Savings Bond
' m e
motoramie Chevrolet
urbig
M IR A < |;L £ M IL .E
c 6 |t t e s t
. and You’i! have the
driving tiripe of your iife!
Come In and
Chevrolet just
, wbm you do.
. that can help
Minute MUe
you'll .notice
braking
,tess lurctunt
Andyou’l
sponse you.,
..the accekrator.
Come In I
of your
Chevrolet!
Contest,
and you
ChevroleU
life
ive -tbe Motoramie
the fun of it And
['m ake;dis^eriu
be'a win'nw in our .
itest. For :ii(ample,
eulusive Anti-nve
lets you stop with far
I diving.
■ to tlie pepi>ery ro:
» your toe nudgn
have the dtMng time
the, wheel of a new
big Miracle
cost ,oit obligation,
e of 102 new
away.
lUS<«l«lullC«»i »««*<»«« **»*'*'
STEAUNC1
HICB.PMCED <
ir R O M T H E
COMPLETE AND O FnclA L figuM show that agdn in 1954 - for the 19th sttaight year-h
~ - j - . CHEVROLBTS THAN ANY OTHER CAR!“ ,
PENNINGTON CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC
PHONE 156 - M 0CK SV IU ^;N ,C
- m
DAVIB OOUNXT'S OI.DBST N B W SPA PBR-TH B PA PBB THB PB O PL E KB AD
u n B S H A LL T H E w w m B P E b n r s n a irr s m a i n t a i n i.u n a w e d 'b v n m .u EM C E a n p u n b r ib e d b y g a i n .*
VOLOHN LV.MOCKOTItLB; NORTH CAIROLINA, WEDNEgDAY APRtt6 t«ss. NDHBBR .^5
NEWS OF LONG AGO.
^ i ^ ’W M ilh p iM lliilg h
.via. BoTm Parliiiig M alM
A i^ A b b re ^ te d S lrirlik
(Dsvle RfcoM. Apr.: 3,'>8iS)
Mr. airf Mil. w : t ' _Poster. of
Cooleeio)ie,'«ere In Iowa Friday
' Mlss . .pal^ .Ramvimi bis re.
tm nal from in extended vMt to
reiatlvM and Mindi In’ WInstoD'
^lieni spmt i diy or two In town
lu t W k with friends ind rela.
tiveo. ' ., •'
Mr. ind ^rs. B. P. Hoopn
aoral Thnradiy In Winston bavlni
a.ome dental worli done.
n MarKiret Mnonev, of, L*'
r spent B iR ^ ln.town<wlt1i ber
; Mr. ind Mm. d-p.--M e.
I Miss Umle AlHsod' Is stwndliK
I line In Chiiriotte the ctiests
kfher Mster. Mrs PMI Tohnson.
/ Cedl Morris. • stndent at Oik
/Rldce tnslftvle, spent'Bistrr'In
/ town with her mrents.
'Bllnlieih. (he little danthter of
Hr., liid Mrs. 'Riy .Clement, o|
Mmho; died liM week of pmnmo.
all.
Dr. Lester MirKn. o I Wilt»
PaiesI Cotlece. sti«H Bssler to
.town with his. pirents. Dr. ind
Mil. W. C. Mirtln. -
Mr T«bn Leieli. of iMselty. ind
Mbs Ida renklns, of C<
w et* united In m irrlice h it T « « -
d iy evening It tbe home o fB iq V .
B . S w iln . who tied Ike knot, M r.
Le ie b left M on diy morning for
C im p Jiekson. wliere te goes Into
tn ln in g is one of ,'Unele. Sim 's
b o y s .. ■ ,
. Prof, R . W . Holm es inent Bast,
"c rw ltb hls.Qiranti i t b rih a in .
B . b ; H ii!iir,~ K . . and. WIijlam.
. Straekton qxnitB iileir w ltb .f^ n d s
at Durham .'
Miss Velm a M artin, who te M h n
at H lekory. spent' Bister. ’ In, 'tnls
city w ith h w iMiinils.
C . L Tbompson and % m Allen
M Is k i Ssroh q r a w t in d .<^1
eoe Dim es spent Bkster in: W ins.
ton.Silem ,
. M bs M irg a n t N a llr e ln t^ S a t.
niday from an ratended visit to re
latlves at W alkertow n. !
M rs. lam eaiKlrkinan of.Oicens-
. boro, spent id a V 'O r tw o, In.- town
lilt week w ith ner m oiber. IT n
I . M . C ilh .
. Mrs. R . P ., Andenon cirrl«d her
S n n d iy SelionI Cliss to Cbarlottr
M ondsv. in d tbe.yonng boy* b id
the Hme o f IhetT Hvci.
M r. in d R «m Mllto in d III.
tie daughter i ^ M lss.Psnllne.Hom
V Statesville, and M r and Mra.
i BvenM e H o rn , of W inston., spent
Bssler In town w ith ie li‘ lves.
B . R H iin t. J r .; M lisej. A lw r ti
and Tnlla H n n t. Miss Lonlse R od .
well. M rs; t>. A ; Pirnell iiid yaed
Itor n o to i^ over io ihe ib e p v old
town of'VHnM on W ednesday,
B . L Sm itb. Clyde Ijamee, & P i
Binkley and-W^ F . SMmeslreel left
S n n d iv ,fo r F lin t,'H le h .. where
they go to bring b K k r ftonr Bnlek
anlm nAllei Ihrongb tlw
Th e y wfll letnin aboat the 6n t of
neat week, .-ii..,,:;
D a J W . Rodwell Is a arigbty
good doetor b a t» bettw 6aberiaan
H e w n i fis til^ M ^ iy ? « moittliig
and esngbi a 14 pound eer^
o f the lirgest ever' eingbt out irf
H unting Creek. ■.■8. A Tnrrentlne. an old O a vh
boy. who lias been In California fbr
several yeira, but 1A 0 Is now oneof Uncle Sam’a bmrs:: and who b
atathmed atfCamp: Oreeiie. :Cbar, Mte. apenl a «sW dnya. la a^ round town' last i. wieki? ibiMng hindi wlib Old frieadi and
Fied Brack, o f)rf«U SMW*i a-»»aa»ans»»n»»f wvw^
ialblcd In the... g ; S .. Navy. Iiit
year, b anenainc a few dava witb
bw iaM kai''
m u fm u M
After sstsn bas,biwn ehaluM and
oril in the oit spoken of by John in
Revelillon: tbero. will not be. any
lemptitlon npod the earih lo lead
min istriy.' There will be no
xaoti wsr. murder, and all ^iieh
e^niM committed noon the earth.
We will then live under peieelnl
eondhlms. The wicked 'having
been wiped ont while the esnhwas
undergoing It's chinge when ihe
heivim melted with' fervent belt
like Feler dtserlhies 1‘hen when
tbe rlgbleons retnns to- live upon
ihe eerth for tbe thonsind yeira
t^ e a l of the sibbitb of the Lord-,
when Jesns'reigns is I.ord of Lord’s
and King ol King's The feet of
the righteous will sgein walk npon
tbe esnh where the wicked
lived and were'consumed , bv fire
when Ihe Lord csme end -cleMsed
eirtb end Hie wicked were. nnmed
isslnhiesnd ssMilsChl sisled tb<v
wonM treed nmn Ihelrsshes under
tbe soles of their feet. To other
words the wicked will he hutnt
end became ssbes while Ihe esrlb
Is ming throneb'tbls great cbsnge.
ind the riehleons 'wl1l,bc tiken'np
in the b'svens to remain with ihe
lord nnlll Ihe cbsnm his been
completed then retnm with hll^to
live npon Ihe earth for j thomand
yeais while the spirit of the wick
ed remains In tbe prison house 1^
Peter and Isslih and otbeis
erlhed; aod as Tobn states In
velation that the deid In Ch
rose end tbe ^ ol the desd II'
not. These rorthnite souls
1(ve I n richfpoueiteiM I tipmi
earth for Ihe thonssnil ywrs. 'Then
the prophets dbcrlbed 1 few of Ibe
tovslo be had by tbeie'
Isslib Slid one will not, bnlM. ind
another In h iM t.' th a t ■ la 'every
w litlM isei the: eirlb irithoot
h ivin g to bnv or lehi f ^ the
rich (all will he eqoll).’ Th e |wo.
bhM biHberelates that they, will
live to iba age of a t m or to be a
hundred. vear» old, and as Paul
slates^then jWin he changed f ^
m ortality ts Im ortalllv. In a
ent ln. the twinkling of an eye.
T h li Informs us there will _ be; 00
deiths during this era. .no under,
takers,, no. celneterlu to tnar the
iiapplness of the neoole. John said
Christ shall wipe sway all tears;
there shall be no weening, n o r 'w .
Children shsll.bii 'born snd
rsbed to the age of 1 hnndred is
ove withont sickness.
f ALL INCLUDED ,
'Have voii said voiir pravers,
w in ier
.■•YwVmon.’’
Did you ash to be,made.a better
bovr
“Yei.; Ana'l also put In a good
word fo; you and dad.” : ‘
■ NO SOUND
Lady—Piilniei'i I’ni paying you
isy the'hour. 'Are you working? .1
don't hear a sound..,
Painter-I’m.puiting the paint
oii wlili a'bhish. but i|' it’s noise
you'want. I'll halr'it.'on with a
lijimnier.
TO HIGHEST BIDDER
T o what do you attribute vcur
long life?", the- reporter asked the
ce^nterarlan.
“I don't rightly know^ .vet,” re
plied" the old timer, buffiing biilv
at his . pijie. ‘Tin still dickering
with tw6.-breakfost-food compan
les.” .
NO, YOU DIDN’T '
“IJl^altet’! a n irate .cuscomet
Itomiied, "there’s no chicken'at all
in thb chicken soup—not a bit!'
"Of course not,” the waiter re-
plied. *!Did you ever seS a horse
inhotsetadbh?"
TAKING NO CHANCES
. A small bov, leading a donkey,
strolled by an .Artnv camp. A
pair of soldiers stood grinning at
him.f What are, you bolding onto
your brother so tight for, sonnyr’
one of them call^ Out.
The small bov replied, “So he
j^ n ’t loin the Aimy;’*'
D iiJN T WAOT THE JOB
A teadin, who w u giving the
childreii w^tteh exercbes. wrote
out this ‘.'Wairted" advertisement:
: "W ahted-A Xllilincr; Aoply
by letter to Miss Smith, io Blank
Street."
The children had' to .'make ap.
plication for the position in writ-
ini;-;'";'"-"
. .One youniptet wrote:
' “bear Miss Smith--I saw you
want a milliner. I hate to trim hats’. Can't vou . get somebodv else? Please let me bnow at once.
Edith BroWn."
READ THE AD$
Along VVilli the Newa
TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as administra
■ e estate of S. ,C. Carte^
late of Davie; Counttors of the estate of S. C. Carter, deceased, late of Davie; County, North Carolina, this is to notify’
all persons holding claims against
said estate to present .them to the
undersigned'. withili 12 months
from date hereof, or this notice
Will be pltad in bat of their r«ov-
ery. All persons owing said es-
ate » ill make immediate setile-
ment. This March 16, 1955.C. R. CARTER,F. M. CARTER,
, Admrs. of S. C. Carter, Decs'd.
j George W. Martin,-'Atty,
lecident. .Cohseqvently there will
be no oed foi bospHals, Dr's be,
John said Ihe leave* of Ibe
irees will he for the healing of Ibe
nallom. Dnriag thb time there
win not he pomicianaatoroplngth;
nation making promise! etc . there
will not be court houses filled with
olfieen demanding taxei from, the
cltltens. • Every bnslness will lie
transarted under tbe. authority of
H im wbose rigbi It la 10 re in as
king of kiug's and Lo rd of Lord 's;
even Christ the Lord Enem ity
w ’ll not relgii In any p f the Loril's
creatlnn. There will not be Ibe
meal eating animals; Iiilih sild
the lamb and tbe'tldn will lie down
T b e Han win eil’ ttriw
l ^ t <he <n etc . .Vhe . b ib y will
^ l y w Uh'the in lm ils and aerpanli
siilljiput h irm ' K v ity man will be
• f i ^ d and in irin iiow the; knee
lo c b rlil, in d ^11 cmfess wlth the
ioiigne ih it Je *«s Is. the Cbrlat.
Afteir an the statem enu from the
p rail^ts we afin do not have com.
prebeualon regarding the qppenu.
blHea available to those
in tbe earth during' this tllana.
■ad yors' whra the eirtll win. ttst
ignlzn Jm a aa .thie
ChrlM. Lord of hnven aiia eirtb.
1.1; BENNETT.
N.c!
W a d M t lilw m tiu
■mtIm afto ry w ir m om .
Dress Up Foi'
Vatt Heusen Century, Shirts
$a.95
Mallory Hats r $7.50 to $12.50
Hubbarid Pants - $6.95 to $14.95
Botany Ties $1.00 to $2.50
E ^1fire Striech Socks - $1.00 Pair
pioneer Belts - $1.50 to $3.50
Andover Suits - $39.50 to $65.00
jEteckray Jackets - $5.95
G o ^ 1^; And Look QyerOur Large
: Men’s And ^ y ’s Clothing
if • And. Aixessories.'
Can Saw Money By Doing
< Your Shopping With Us.
2 « 1
s
MOclaviDe, N. C
Our County And
Social Security
Bv Louis H. Clement, Mmaser.
Question: What Is the ^first
date a &rm operator who al*
readv 65 years old or older ^ may
file claim for social security month’
ly payments?
Answen April 1, 1956 is the
first date a claim could be filed
under the most favorable condit
ions. A farm operator who did
not work in a job covered Ipy-t-the
social security program wifbre
January 1, 1955 has'no eamlngp
credited to his social security ac
count. Hiis account must be
credited with at least six quarters
of eamings before he can file
claim for benefits. If the farmer*s
net earnings for 1955 amount to
at least 400, he may ^file a social
security claim as soon after April
1956 as the gross eamincs in
that year amount to $600. (H\i:
a special provision of the new
security law.) For further iafor-
matlon, contact the Social Secur*
ity Office, 301 Postoffice Building.
Salisbury.
If vou have any question con
cerning your social securitVi you
might write us nr 361 Post Office
Bjilding, Salisbury, N. C., or see
our representative who visits the
Court House, Mocksville N. C ,
on the first and third Fridays of
each month from 12:30*U30.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Catif Supply Your Needa
'INGOOD COAL.
SAND and BRICK
Call or Phone Us At Any Tinie
PHONE 194
Formetlv Davie Brick &Coal Co
Seen Along Main Street
Br ilie Stfeel Raaibiar
qooaoo
‘ Clarence Hartman drinking ■
arge chocolate milkshake In drug
St. re—Carl Eaton wending bb
way up Main street bareheaded
on sunny afternoon—Miss' Faye
Allen waiting for time to go to
work—Joe Perebee andaon Rich
ard. doing soine trading around
toyra on sunny morning—Hayden
Climient gteetlng old friends a.'
rofi.nd'the square—Kim 'Meroney
driiiklng mioming coca-cola in a-
potbecaryshop—H. R. Johnson
shopping around in dime store—
Tiller of the soil driving a two>
horse mule-drawn wagon down'
Main' street—Miss Daisy Holt-
houser looking at picture ot aged
couple who had celebrated theit
56th wedding anniversary—Young
lady looking longinglv at costume
jewelry in Angell’s jewelry store
window—Ladies carrying arms
full of wrapped gifts to Eastern
Star hall--Sheek Bowden taking
time off to rest in drug store—
Cecil Leagans hurrying up Main
street on fine spring momingrr
Mrs. Lee Lyerlv talking about. go
ing to preaching—Miss Josie Fos
ter on her way to beauty shop lo
get a hair wash—Young lady re
marking that she was out doing
her Christmas shopping—Lonnie
Dwiggins trving to locate Milton
Call - Mayor Tohn Durham talk
ing about hearing a good. sermon
—Oscar Driver browsing around
town on warm day—Misa Nell
Holthbuser buying white cap in
Sanford's Department Store —Mbs
Ruth Foster doing some sunny af-
(^mioon shopping—Duke Univer.
sity professors taking time off to
lundi to Davie Cafe while head
ed for the mountains—^Mrs. Clar-
epce Hartman and three small
laughters pausing fo r refresh-
NOnCE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as executor of
the estate of Charlie Hege. deceas
ed. late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said
estate, to present them to the un-
deisigned within 12 months f<om
date hereof, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. A I persons owing said estate will make immediate settlement Thb
March 21. 1955.
BOBBY CLAY HEGE.Exr. of Charlie Hege. Decs'd.
B. C. Brock, Attorney.
ments in driig store—Mrs. P. G.
Brown qiitvtng. bunch of pretty
flowers down Main street—Betty
lo Foster looktog at Enter greet-
togcards—Nick Mando hurrying
to tonsoral parlor to get a late af-
tetnoiyn hair cut—J; N. Smoot on
hb'way across Main street in the
rain—Two Mocksville salesladies
celebrattog their birthdavs but not
growing older—Mack 1 Kimbrough
Nanb CsidiDa
Oavie County to TbeSopsriorCouct
Norn Stanley Creasoii
vs
R. C. Creasoo f
N otice of S e rv ice o f P r o c e n
Bjr P u iilication
To R. C. Creasoo:
Take Noilce ilial
a olesillnK seeking relief ^siiKl you has been filed la tiie a
<ove vntltled aeiloo.. ..f,
Tht nature of lUe relief beiog
nought is a suit for divnr'se by said
plaintiff, Nora Stanley Creason, a
esfnst said deleudani, N: C rCtea
n ' . , "
You are req'tired to' make- de-
fense lo such pleading not iatci
than May 13. I95.'i. and up'».i von'
failure to dn lio tne parties' slicing
service against von will apply to
the conrt for the relief dematided.'
This ibe 8tb dav nf March. 1955
S. H. C H A F F IN .
(Clerk of Sni'frior Court.
greeting friends around Itown' o n '
rainy dav—Pretty coimtiy lass
standing In fiont of dieatn paint
ing her ruby Ups—Mrs. I. D. Fur-
ches buying story books for small
n^hew In dime store—Mrs. Har
mon McMahan doing some be
fore ^ t e r shopping—Mrs. .Gra
ham Madison maktog purchase in
dime store—Mrs. Harry Murray
shoeing around'ln Gift Shop—
Mrs. Roy Collate sitttog in park
ed car to front = of drug store—
Rev. jimmy :Gi6ce staiiding in
drug store tating candy bar—Mrs.
Georai; S hu ttlo < ^g over display
of spring dtisiei-^Mts. Fletcher
Click and daughter lane-dotog
some before (Easter shopping-A
Senior boy and Senior girl passtog
love licks in drug store on chilly
afternoon.
Opportunity^
K M t e lu t
hilltop
Service & Supply '
HOPES T O ’ SERVE YOU
' EVEN BETTER IN 1955
Gm , CO SuniUeg
Abo A Nice Line Of
Vegkddeg,
And Staple GirbceriM
We Anireeiate Your
J . W : H IL L
'Owner
. [ |
-irjl
■
PAQBTWO m pAVnS RBCORD. HOCKBVIU^ H. 0 . AfBlL 6. IKE
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C. FRANK STROUD. EDITOR.
TELEPHONE,
Interal atthePoatoffleo InMoekt-
Tllle, N. C.. u Sseond-BlM* Mill
nwtter.HiiTOh’l,190lt.
IsinsciurnoN rates;
ONE YEAK. IN N,.CAROLINA ' % I.M SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA • 7Sc. ONE YEAR. OmsmE ST«TF . »!.00 SIX MONTHS. OUTSIBE STATE . $1.00
It is a long time until the next
election but the Democratt are a^
teadv btinfiing out their favotities
for the pre>tdencv* It doesn’t
make any difference which one of
the bovs the Demoaats nominate
for it is a fact known of all men
that Dwight Eisenhower will be
the next president of the United
States.
Hospital Plews
Mr. Frank Ceruzzi has accepted
a position as Hosoital AdminUtra*
tor of Davie's new hospital, and
wi|l enter upon his new duties on
April 20th.
Mr. Ceruzzj is 32 years old,
native of Port Chester, N. Y., and
served in the U. S. M. C. from 1942
to-1945. ■ He graduated from East
Carolina College in 1950 with
B. S. degree, and has been teacher
and coach iti Grcenu County. He
took a course in Hospital Admin
istration, ill Medical College of
Virginia, Richmond. He is pres
ently Admitiistracive Resident of
Norfolk General HospiCiil, Nor
folk, Va. His wife is the former
Miss Edna Squires, of Kelly, N. C
Three /n/ured
A 1950 CUi ole edan, diiven
bv Mrs. Joe Jones, of this citv, and
a 1949 Lincoln car dr ven bv Rov
R. Phelps, were damaged about
$900 shortly afcer noon last Wed>
nesdav ac Greasy Comer. The
Tones Cur was dKven by Mrs.
Joneii and Mrs. J. P. Davis, of this
cicv» was with Mrs. Jones. Mr«.
Davis suffered a bursted knee cap.
Mrs. Tones received a cut on her
head. In the Lincoln Cdr Mrs
Phelps received a cut on the leg.
Mrs. Davis was carried to Bap*
tist Hospital for tteatmenr. Mrs.
jones and Mrs. Phelps were given
medical at ention at Dr. Henry S.
Anderson’s office. Pacroltnan W,
A. Cox investigated the accident.
Revival Services
Revival services begin at Liberty
Methodist Church, Easter night
with the Rev. Paul A. Burton,
pastor o f Trinity Methodist
Church of Lexington as the evan->
gelistic speaker.
Mr. Bruton is an honor gra*
duate of High Point College and
Court Adjottvns Lions €luh To Con-Bi^ Day At Fiirk
The March ternj. of Davie Super*
ior court adjourned Friday after
noon following a five day session in
which many cases were disposed of,
a great miyority being for traffic
law violations. Judge H. V, Barn
hill, ot Clinton, presided, with So
licitor I. AUie Hayes, of Wilkes*
boro, prosecuting. Among the cas
es disposed of were:
Roy Brown, assault on female.
Judgment deferred one year. To
pay costs.
Joe Russell, a.w.d.w. State pris*
on for nine months.
Frank Hairston, possession of
whisky for sale. Two months on
roads.
Walter Griffith, breaking and en
tering, I. and r. Entered plea of
forcible trespass, Fin^ $25 and
costs and go into service.
Walter Lee Boyd, non-support of
illegitimate child. Pay into office
of C. S. C. $35, and the sum of ^
per week for support of Annie M.
Wood.
Royal Gray, non-support. To pay
into office of C. S. C. ^ per week
unUl the child is 18 years old.
lean H. Shinault vs Esker Shin-
ault. Divorce. Granted.
A. W. Broadwell, breaking and
entering. Eighteen-'months in State
Prison.
Wilham E.Patton, abandonment.
Two years on roads.
William S. Pierce, a.w.dw. with
intent to kill. Defendant pleads net
guilty for the reastjn of tempi'.rary
insanity. Put on probation fur
years and to pay costs. , (
lames <A. D.) Smith, larctny.
Action dismissed. Def«;ndant con
sented to turn over to James Nash
the ^ 0 in defendani’tj possession.
Revival Meeting
A revival mceling will begin it
Farmington Baptist Church next
Sunday evening, and will con
tinue through April 16, with ser-
vices each evening at 7:30 o’clock.
The pastor. Rev. C. E. Crawford,
will 1^ assisted by Rev. E. K.- Sel
lars, pastor of lerusalem Baptist
Church. The public is cordially
invited to atiend these services
OnTluitidav night April 7th
195S the memben of the Modta-
ville Lions Club will have for aale
just what vou : need lot spring
cleaning. .A good quality w.:ll
made Braipm ahd a nkx Rubber
Foot . , .
Now ia a good time and a won
derful opportunity to help vout
community in this moat wo.thy
cabse. Be expectltm a member of
the Lions Club to yisit yoii. You
will .lOt be disappointed."
Mrs. R. L Baker
Mrs. Nancy Hendren Baker, 82,
che widow of R. L. Baker, died at
the home of a son. Mack, on Ad.
vance» Route 1, March 26th after a
long illness.
She was bom March 22 1873,
in Grayson County, Va., a daugh*
ter of Oliver and P«k v Ann Hen
dren. Her husband a farm.*r of
th e Union Chapel Community
of Davie Countv, died in 1940.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. Olive Cartner and Mrs. G. B
Rollins, both of Moclcsvitle. Rou:e
5. Mrs. Hubert McClamroch of
s« uu M.U Mocksville, Route 3, and Mrs. M.'now completmg !,« fifth sue e. Flint of Winsion Salcm, Route’ cessful vt:nr as pastor of Trmitv . . i .. . t '■L u • - L. Ijsjxsons in adutttuti to MackChurch: He is noted for his warm « , , „ , /• c. * n f , , i-. •« . , Baker, Lee Baker of Statc&villc,for h 8 waim. friendly, tnspira- ^ V , /■ ., L 1 . Tally Baker o f Winston-Salem,tional messages that enable one « ,7 ,, .a ^ _ ___..__ . a . Robert Baker o t Sacramento,},to find the true meamng of hi. Ca,jf.. ,„hn and Arthur B,fcer of
duct Sale
We dQn't like to
marka afler jrour mme.
heiv Department
StoreThe Fork Civic Club Is spon-
soting n alMaventeiMlnmentan.
Saturday, April 9th, at Fore Com , B. C Moore & Sons, whoss
muuity Building to ralM fu n d s fo r headquacteis are at Wadesboto,
the Fork Fin Departmrat. A l3 wiUopena department store in
foot deep freeze will be won by 'he remodeled Hefner & Bolide
building on the square, as soon as
w ort on the building is completed.
the one holding the lucky niim>
bcr. Other smdl priws will be
given away during the day. Bube-
cue and,cold drinks will be on
sale, ^Muslc will help enliven the
day. ; Come,out and .eAjov' W r-
•df and'help a gjcid cause.'
READ THE ADI
A lo ^ W Mi & e New*
life Special evangelistic music
will be featured each night. Ser*
The
Mocksville, Route 5, and Raleigh i
Baker of New York City; 20
grandchildaenand eight great
grandchildren.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at 3 p. m., Monday at Union
Chapel Methodist Church by Rev.
. . j T e -I. William Anderson, Rev. W. E.Mr. and Mrs. Uster C. Sp.ll WenddI Davis and
nan. of Route 4. a« the parent. p . Burial was in
of a son who arrived a, Rowan churA cemetery.
vices will begin at 7 p. :n.
public is cordi»lly invited.
REV. B. C. ADAMS. Pastor.
hew Arrivals
Buford A. Smith
Memorial Hospital on Marqh 29th
Mr. and Mrit. Hugh E. Partin,'
of Advance, R2, are the parents
of,, son who arrived at Row,m ^
Memorial Hosplta on MjrchSls. M„cksville. Route 2, xvas fou..dMr. and M«. Wayne Eiton. of ^ „ ^arch 26.h. i
this dty are ri.c proud parent, of body in .be!
L t n t t i , r ' S o ; 7 t * J ‘'o " vard w here he had W n w orlcing-l
Tuesday morning March 29.h. He had apparently been m his
Mr and Mrs. Tohn T. Godbey. usual hMlch;.nd deaUi was un- ofMock«vllle,arethe parents cf expccted. Dr. G. V. Green, D.ivie
a son who arrived at Rowan Mem- coroner, said death was due to na- onal Hospital on March 28rh. causes a he«rt attack.
M r and Mrs. Russell “Hucky” ^ He is survived hv hi.4 wffe, Mrs.
Barber, who live on Maple Ave- Mat ie Howard Smith} four sons, nue, are the proud pw n « of a g-andchildr o; «i»J three
fine’ son. w ho arrived at Rowan brother.. ,
Memorial Hospital on March 29ih. Funi.ral services were coiiductrd Mr. and Mr*. Biliv Mv«rs, of at4p. m, March 28, at Beililc-
n e a r Advance are ih* pmud par- hem Methodist Church bv Rfv. I
cuts of a son who ardved at Rn- George E. Smith and Rev. A. C.
■iian Memorial Hoqdtal on Match Cheshire. Burial was in th e
27th. chun*
BOB POOI& popular ndh> star of WBIGaiv«, "My w»a Ins
otoqv used SgM Kan cooltin0 ...am l on Mia toble-irs
dark Karo for me, the best>tasfing
•ating syrup af ’em all"
Vest im)aad...blacuiti go like hot eakea when you pour on j^nty of deUcknia dark Karo... time’s nothing like it ibr good eati^. Satia- firin’ flavor. So ridi it atanda right up on top of bbeuita (keeps'«in ligiit luid iiul^). Keep Kara on your taUe moninft noon and night ...it topa anytUngl
Afk yewgrMer for DARK Kara, in pint ami qiiOft bettte*
The Moore chain(of atotea num
ber nearly fifty, wid are locatediti ;
North and South Carolina, Ala-;
bama and Georae. The store will -
carty a full line of meii’s, boya ,,
women's wearing appearel. ahoea,
and home-fumishings. Watch
Moeksvillegrow. ,
Do You Read The Record?
Sale of Personal Property
Under and by virtue of the power and audiorlty invested In the
undeiv^ned Bjcecutor of J. V. Wooten, Dec’d. the undersigned will
offer at public sale for cash, on
SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1955,
Beginning at i0;00 a. m., at ihe J. V. Wooten Homeplacf in Eagle
Mills Township, Iredell Countv, N. C., the following described per-
sonal property: ‘ ‘ .
1 1936 Model Chevrolet Pick-Up. 1 Hay Rake
2 Ttirning Plotva I DouUe Plow
2 Set* Hames* - 1 15 Gij. Waihpot
1 Wood HeWter 1 Old TaUe
Varioui other articles of houaehold and kitchen fumi>i
turte too tediou*'to mention.
AT 2:00 P. M., ON SATURDAY. APRIL 9, 1955,
* The undersigned wilt also oifer for public sale the lands of said
J:'V. Wooten, at thepremises. These lands consist of about 140acrea.
with 2 acre tobacco alliitment. . Tlie lands will be. surveyed and aub-
divided prior lo the sale and will be offered in various tracts and also
as a whole, the best price to be accepted. ■ ' , ,
This ti e 3rd day of March, 195S.
SAMUEL WOOTEN,
Executor of J. V. Wooten, Dec’d.
HALL & ZACHARY, Attorney*
YadWnxaW. N. C '
Food And Drinks Will Be Sold On The Grounds
LOWEST- PRICE CAR
IN "ALL 3** TO GIVE YOU ALL THIS IS PLYMOUTH!
TOP SIXL J
The Ikr^tiesl, smoothest six in the
low-price 3—that’s Plymouth’s Power-
Flow 117! Ilahigh coihpressionratio,
combined with exclusive Chrome-
Sealed Action, gives you more powier
from less gas, and velvet-smoplh per
formance. You’ll enjoy lightning
acceleration, thanks to, a special
metering system in the cittburelor.
And the PowerFlow thrives on regu
lar, not preteium grad^ {ueL
TOP SIZE
The biggest, longest, roomiest e n of
the low-price 3—that’s Plymouth!
' Brilliant new foniurd /[.ooi styling
gives y<iu more gbtiior outside, more
luxury inside; plus the new FuH-View
windshield, swept back to give the
greatest visibility in the low-prjce 3.
And'Plymouth’s big size means you
' and your passengers will enjoy Ihe
smooth, steady ride that only a truly
big cat can give you.
TOP VALUE
Plymouth is the only low-price car
to give you at no, extra coh auch
extra value features aa; electric wind
shield wipers,'Safety-Rim wheels and
an independent parking brake for
greater safety.;. Oriilow shock ab
sorbers for a smoother ride...an
OiUte fud filler ahd oil bath sir
deaner for lasting economy. See and
drive a Plymouth today—se« why itU
your best-bay Um-price carl
WHY PAY OP TO $600 MORE FOR A CAR SMALLER THAN PLYMOUTH?
Don't be fooled by the claims'of aoHsalled medium-
1 cars that they cost .practically the same as
When you compare price tags yon’ll find
that, model jor^model, Plymouth seDs lor much,
. much, less than medium-price cars, and ^vea you
more car for your money! • '
K S t b u y; NCW; b e t t e r TRAOE'IN, t o o
All -new P lym outh
SEe»PLYM OUTN NEWS CARAVAN"
W ITH JO H N CAMEROON SW AVZEI:
Al>m>aet«al Hyiiwuth MmlsnClukMan.
V .AskyaurnirmauthiaalarfartlwlMiwia*•* thla and atlwr smart nymauth -risfstt
DAVIB RSicpRb, MOQgCTlLtR lt. C.. APRIL <, 19B5 PAGE THBEg
THE DAVIE RECORD.
Oiaatt Pkpw In The Coun^
No m oor. Wine. Affb
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
Mia.. FniiU Stroud, lr.,ai^ Mias
JeasieUbbv Stroud made a buai-
ntaa'lr^ to CharloNe Friday.
- Mta. b ^ e r Ward; of Goldf-
boro, apcnt one night last week in
town the ipiest of Mrs. S. B, Hall
and Dr. Hall. ,
Mi*. 7cAii O. Myera, of W<i>a-
ton-Calem, spetit . one day ; last
week in town, the' gutat of Mra.
aL S m l(h,S r;
A revival m e ^ n g w d l-b ^ at le Firat Baptist . Chuich -n<an inday momtaig,«ey. I. P. Davla
the' pastor, will be asalated by Rev.
a W. Ballard, pteaident of the General Board, Baptlat State Convention, and paator of-the Temple
Baptist Church, Raleigh. The meeting will .continue - thtouiA n ^ w<ek, with services -ea<A evening at 7:30o!t:1ock. The pub
lic is cordially invited to: be pre*'
aent and hear this tffted apeakCT..
8am W.Latham, of the Daniel
Furniture & Efecaic Co., spent
semtal days last;week in WiAita,
' K ans^ on busineas
J. C Chaffin, of Route 1, spent
seveial .daya last week with his
daughtn, Gordon :Gilmote
and Mr. Gilmore, near Siler City:
and Mr& Philip Tohnaon re
turned Monday nil^t from Wil.
-where (hey visited lela. took in' die Aaalia Festival,mu
fives
ington.
nesaiid
Mrs. Dennis Silverdis a n d
daughter. Miss Deanna, ,wlll leave Saturday for Richmond, Va.. to
apend the i^ te e holidays with re
latives.
Rev. and Mrs. R. M. Hardee and
little aon, of Granite Falla, were in
town Friday greeting their many
frienda who are' always glad to
stt them.
a 'Leonard Sain and femily, who
lost their hotisehold goods in a H ie on Hardison street recntly. have moved into the Bagwell
house on Miiple avenue.
rch<
^ Be gins
Sunday
MocMl^Higb
Sdiool News
DEANNA SILVERDIS. RaporUI.
Qdrk-Lon^
Dr. and M n. W. M. Long, of
thla dtv announce the marriage
of their daughter, Edwlna Habaus
to Mr. John Kenneth Clark; son of
Mr. and Mrs. H. Glenn Clark, of
Luniberton, (). C . on FriJay
M aiA 18th, at Chapel Hill, N. C)
Surpri^ Party
Min. L W. Hill and Mrs. Nor
man Smith gave a surprise birth
day par^ for Mrs. Robert Janies,
at the hpme' of Mrs. Smith on the
Tadklnville Highway last Tuesday
Graduation is. in the back'of al-
titost every mltid ,at. M. H. S.
this la espedally true of the - S^
niors. Last Friday the Seniora
met in the auditorium to discuu
aitd order those important gradu-
ation invitationa and calling carda
•];he Marshals, who always play
an important role.in the gradua
tion exercises have beeii selected.
This honor is based on the. scho-
evelng. Guests included Miss To;
Cooley, M^s. James York, Mrs.
Rov Cartner, Mrs. Sam Waters,
ss Julia James, Mrs. Frances'
James; Mrs. Gilmer Hartley, Miss-
Nell and Daisy .Holthouser.
Mrs. Paul Grubbs, Mrs. Paul
Richards, Mti., Jim .Poole, Mrs.
Helen Wrenn.
Cake, C^oca-Cola, nuts a n d
candy were served the gu^ts.
Games were enjoyed and priies
given lo'MIss Jo Cooley.Mrs. Sam_
Waters and Miss Julia James. The^
hostesses.presented the honoree-
vnth a corsage of red carnations.Mrs. lames received a number
of gifts on this happy occasion. ,
Fiddler’s Gonvention!
, Tommie S. Hendrix .
the Modnville Hardware _ Com;
panyatock of goods which was
aoM at auction' Saturday. /The pricc paid win $1,500.
T. W. Ctookr3oi«envllle.8, C,
apent a short while recently in
toiMwithirlcnda. W M lw b,*" old Davie County Iw who has made good In the Palmetto State.
Dr. and Mra. R; S. SpMr and
little dai^teia, Gwen andiKaren, of Durhaih, will attive here &t-
urday to spend the Easter holi
daya with :Mr. and Mis. Craige
F b ^ .
Mr. and Mra. I. E. Scobn, Jr.,
D. C , were wedc-end gueata of
M r.andM ta. A. L. Bowka, on
Route4. .
Hansfold SamTjr., of Decatur, G a, want a short while in town laat week with hia fathei4n,law.
R. B. Sanlonl. He waa on bis
. wav home from a busiiiess trip to
NewYoik.
Billy V. Athan. fireman, USN,
aon ol Mr. and Mrs. Fred Athan, of Route 5, Mocksville. la aetving
in the Far East aboard the heavy
, iiuiset USS Los Angeles, aagship
' of Cruiser Division S..
lasticachievement.of the students.
This year Co Chief Kibrshals are
Henry Shutt and B«tty Edwards.
Others who were cKosien' are:
Gaither Sanford, Alton Sheek,
Johnny Etchison and Lynda Craw
lord.
W ^nesday at Activity Period
the Beta Club met to elect officers
for the ensuing year. Next vear’a
leaders are:
Pteaideht—Henry Shutt.'
Vice-President-Julia Allen.
Se^y-Christine Beaiichanv.
Tieasurer—Anne Richardson.
' Thursday,the F.H . A. miet in
the Home Ec. LaB. The presi
dent, Marcle .Thomas, presided ,at
thia meeting. A meeting will be
held in'Rockwell to plan for the
There Wm Be An Old Time
Fiddler’s Convention At
Shady Grove High School
N. C. '
EasierMoMay N^ht, April 11^ 8 P. j l .
Prizes W ill Be Awarded As Follows:
STRING BAND CONTEST
dtotrict rally which will be held In
the near future. Our chapter waa
to elect two representatives to be
preaent at thia meeting Chosen
were; ' Deanna Silverdis and Mar
cle Thomaa. The State Rally and
F. H. A. Summer Camp were al-
• discuswd* J
BasebaU la certainly goi£g fuU
Mast at M. H. S. Last Friday th
*CatiSii«t Milb'Home h en and
den ted them 1^2. "Lefty’- H ^ ell pittbed thia thriller. Tuesday
the Wildcats played Rockwell
leie and Uterallv^canover thetn.'’
The score waa 17-0. BiUy Sell
p itte d thia sensi^nal winner..
FIRST PRIZE -
SECOND PRIZE
THIRD PRIZE ■
FOURTH PRIZE
FIRST PRIZE •
FIROT PRIZE
HRSTPRIZE > - • •
DANCING CONTEST
FIRST PRIZE - - - - '
SECOND PRIZE - • ■
■ <;, .THEPUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED
i5.00
VIOLIN CONTEST
BANJO ‘ CONTEST
GUITAR CONTEST
$15.00
- $10.00
$5.00
$5.00
$5.00
FOR EASTER
We Have A Large Assof tment
■- O F
Hollingsworth
And Whitman’s Candies
111 Attractive Easter Boxes At
Prices That Will Appeal To You.
Attractive line Of
HALLMARK EASTER CARDS
Bill Folds, Cosmetics
Fountain Pens and Pencils.
Sunglasaea for Latlie^ and Men in Alt The Lateat
Stylea and Colors at Gready Redut:ed Price*
G|et Ready For The Hot, Summer Days Ahead
When In Need Of Fresh Drugs And
Anything To Be Found In
A First-Class Drug Store
VISIT US
Let Us Fill Your Prescriptions
Hall Drug Co.
We Give S. & R G n ^ Stamp*
A Good Drug Store, In A Good Town
Phone .141 N. Main Street
A revival meeting is ‘n progress atRedland Pentecostal flpllneM
C hurd and will continue through
Aptil'16th. Servicea each evening at 7:35 o’clock. The public is
cordially invited.
' Mis. W aitjM aitiit went to Ra
leigh on Match 2 6 th ,U present at the wed^ina of her btother,
Ted Neily. t o Mias G ^ e n
Clements which ««* pj«|“ « H*yes-Batton Mediodist Churah at 4d0 o’clock.
Thomaa leffe>aon Beck, o f
Routt 4, l» a hoBgmwCT. A few weeksacoonVof hh TamworthLaat
xs
Printed Theatre
' WEDNESDAY
. Mickey Rooney In
"DRIVE A CROOiCfcD ROAD" W ith Marilyn Maxwell
Cartooti & Comedy
THURSDAY &. FRIDAY
Anne Bannoct In “GORRIL- LA ATLARGE’ In Technicolor
With Cameron Mitchell
' Cartoon &. News
SATURDAY
John Derek & Joan Evans In
“THE OUTCAST" With Bob
Steele & Ibnmy Davla In
Color Cartoon & Serial
MONDAYS. TUESDAY
JudvCanovaIn "CAROLINA
CAKNONBALL” With Andy
Clyde Cartoon &. News
■ ~ Plus MINBTREL DAYS
DAVIE COUNTY^ 'BIGGEST SHOW
VAUDE AOkllOe and 3Sc Nd iitlier low-priced car even comes close
sowa gave birth to .19week anotherTanawiu..
birth to 14 pigs, 10 of atill living. New. ^ ,
Mr. and M n. Otant Oraiel
, S ^ o i^ & u S '* S s J n Stiwt t^
I l S . 'S f c ^ M ^ ^ & d M r .
and Mr*. V. G. have Joat,completed on Saliabuiyatfcet. i
Ml. and Mis. Lee ^ l e f c o»
R o u t e 4 , lecendy moved into dieirn r» 7-> ^ ,b o im m die
iowL TheBowleahouae .cuplcdfor nuny Vea^ about a half a mtte off the bighwav. ia *- bout 120 y ^ d d . ; It was k n ^
H the old Keller plaa Their
new home ia modem and .up to
diM lneniyw ay.
» ANT ADS PAY.
um aMm *e » l » e W th m th l n im lo tu
1 will'buy poulntv <m Thuisday morning, but, will leave at 10 a. |n.' U E. FEEZOR,
H y o v 'w plonntns to biiy a naw^'cer, « »
« n yau iu il con't offord to m isf s s rtn s «
C lw v ra lel-fer 1 ? s U ils h l y e a n A n w iin •
b a rt-n llin s cor. Th« M storam lc O n v n le t
1 m uch m ore th a n Hw olh«r
Plano* tuirned, tepalr^;’ie b u ^
ie6nish^ or .restyled. Free esti-;
mates.' . New and used pianos. Aiiythin* musical., Eaay terms.
Write for p rie ^ 'Starling-Thomas Music Co.
(09 HT. Trade St. Winaton-Salem
i hordly Mr la , Ihe M gb-pri^
S 'a id iM lh a :'H « * w L
heater in baaement. Living room, (wb taige bed rooms, ditiing room, kiticHen with built-in cabinetu
R dor finnace. Frlw $6,800. See
eohipan them. And m n . . .
ca ts d o a 'I h m a all Ihe o d vanloges th a t
to d ay 's C havtoM oller», you.' . ■ • ..
J h * h tm H y ‘ % ta ll! to-noV b o llsd onl
Chevrolet’s beauty is inherent in the basic '
contours Of mpinl aiid gtass. Tlicre’s no
excessive boltcd-on omiimcntation to go out of style overnight. '/
The lady’s by Hihatl
You see Body by Fisher on lots of the high-prked cars-ind only Chevrolet has
it jn Ihe low-price fieldl
Tadoy-s most m odem onglnetl
That goes tor Chevrolefs new V8 anil . two new sixes as vvelL All bring you a
.modeni 12-volt electrical syslQtn^double the volla^ of other low>priccd cars. Then
Chevrolet’s new “Turbo*Firc V8" has the
.shortest pbton stroke in the industry!
A drive to tu il your driving!
There*s silky, peppery Powerglide (even
better this year!), new Overdrive (both
exiru-cost options), and a new Synchro- Mesh transmission that’s as smooth as
they come.
All \i.yetf wont!
Windows, seal, steering, brakes-all ate
available with built-in “muscles” to make driving as elforUess as you wish. They’re
optional at cxtra-cost-and worth it!
Come fa!«o th e keyl
Tlicre have never been so many, good
rcusons why you should drive a Chevrolet!
Over Ten Midha Chevrelet owaers-Two Millsoit mare than any car!
PEl«4lNGTON CHEVROLET CO., W C
PH O N E ISiS - - m o c k s v ille ; N . C'^
i ■
m
rA Q B ro u n nift iioonviuB m. c.. apsil «. iwt ^
'ScrtptHte: Mark John lliSMT:U:l>2 Corinthiana 18. _t n«v«lation »:M .
Shall Live
Lesson for April 1», 19SI
♦«r'TERNAL Life" has two mean.
inss in the New Testament One meaning refers to life beyond
death. And yet this meacinf is
never applied to all human beln^.
It is eithor taken ter granted or
Uught outright In the Kew Testa*
ment that all per*
sons survive what
we coll dsalh. But
“eternal life" re*
fcrs in this sense
only to the survi*
val of those who h av e a c c e p te d
Gcd's ?race. never
to those who have rejected it. The
other monning has Foreman
lc» do with a quality of life Itself, hev3 and now. In this world, this
side of xvhat we call death.
Evorh^Hng LH« Can Bi Ttrrlbit
The* point is that if this quality of lifo is lacking in this world,
the prospcct of immortality is the
most diRmal that can be Imag* inc'J. A modern pessimistic poem
ends with the thought that in our
whole universe we find everything contcrhpUblc,—there is noth*
ing tu iii'aise. not even ourselves.
Suppose a person who has comc down to that wretched conclusion
So<fs on out through the curtain
of denih into the beyond,—facing
th? pro.4pcct of endless existence,
still seeing nothing but the con*
' tempUble within and without?
Whal worse hell could be needed
than that? So in the New Testament. immortality, as such, the
mere piospcct of personal survi*
vnl nfici* d.:ath,—is never held out as si.»mcthins to be desired in
itself, eternal life, life that en*
dures l)eyond death, is desirable only when the person who look*
forward to already possesses eternal Ji/u, .j a changed and
. new life. To i)ut it another way:
Only those who have been born
again can be happy in looking
forward to their' "birthday in
heaven." A corpse lying in the
baggage car does not look for*
wurd to the train’s arrival at its
desUhation; only the Uving may
have that pleasure. The corpse exists; the passengers live. So the
Christian thought of Life—beyond
Js not '‘We shaU exist” but ralher
“We shall live/*
ehrltl U vM Acaiii
Perhaps Christians believe in eternal life, in the sense of tliir
on*going through '‘death'* of thir
present eternal life, less because of arguments than because of
some inner certainty. :iumc whid*
per of God within the heart rather than some .argvmenl of Io*iic
knocidng at the brain. Still, if
one can speak of arguments, ihei*- are two which specially appciil to
Christians in all a>>cs. is ih:-
Christ lived, and lives, auain. Th first Christians told tha world
about a risen Christ. It is trui>
they ^oke of Christ cruciilcd; bui
a crucifix docs not u.tpress Ihi-
whole Christian message. ThV
dominant note of the N-:w Testament is not death but life. Pai;l
appeals to the resurrect i«m of Christ in this famous cliapier ol
his letter to the Corinthians it
that story is not true, he says we are simply back where wc
were, the whole Christian kith is
pure delusion. Every once in a
while, and In our times niore than twice in a while, people will try
to tell us that Uie r^surrecUon c;
Oirist is a story you can “tak ■
or leave, that you con cut oJT Uu-
gospels with the burial of Jcsuj.
and still be a Christian. No. if
that wore so Christ would bs no
more than another duad draamur.
The resurrection sheds a brJUiant light on everything that went be
fore it and everything tiiat cum.*s after it.
Ckrlst UtfM in Ma
The other argument which lies
at the heart of the Christian'^
faith in a "life everlasting” which
is worth looking forward to, is based on personal experience.
'‘Christ lives in me'' was the testi
mony ol Paul first, and it echoes from the hearts ol Christians ever
since. When a man honestly thinks
himsell over, and asks. ‘*What have I done, what am I, that God
should trouble himself about me
any longer? What right have t to expect, much less to demand,
life everlasting?" his answer will
be a melancholy '‘Nothing." Life
that has no present rtteen' or
strength of eternity about it or In
it. has outlived itself in less than
three score years and ten. But
if tbere is anything in a man that Christ haA touched, if there is
anything in a man that warrants
Mjring. "Christ lives here," then he will dare and rejoice to say
■ Chrlat. “We sbmU Uve/*
MBiD mm
ACItOSS
9, Fragment t.ToaUp to, Natural
II. Veinllke deposit 19. Flounder about 14. Bveninf <poet.)
t».Vex le. Plural pronoun
IT or the
west 19. Wine receptacle to. Owned
91. One who Ilea 99. Bndured
99. Ftowerlesa
planta 9«.Uaten 9T.8prlU 19. Writing
fluid ' 99. Diaturb. ance
99.Musi«
note
94.1rritat. inslyself. aufflcient person
99.Amrma> tfvevoU 99. ESdible
roots of taros 99. Discharge ikgun
99. Drench40. Vexed41. Places
43. BotchDOWN
l.Aspi«e
9.Ubom e i 11. Remain*’ I
3. Poem Ing4. Hebrew 32. Coun> 1
letter ties •
5. A series or <Bng.l
connected •23. Ancient
llnks"TurkMi 1
0. ACon>Island 1
federate in
genera]Aegean
7. Sick sea
S. One who 34. T w
operates 35. Ensign
a plow 87 Ancient
0. Killed country
11 Declares 39. AmcHcan
solemnly Indians
IS. Promise ^30. Appcn*
IS. Peruse dagcs
18. God of 31. Joui*ncysthunderIna
10. Breese circuit
utr.wnc:.
3 a j aauu'jj
i j Q3 m ayaHDLaca
□LijaSQa s n n u aa•t»i;3nr3[a
92. Bamboo*
llk e g ^ i 34. Pole
37 Owing 38. Exelama* tionof
40. Ream
m !—I—5 "c s -r~
e iT^
ie"IS
IT"(IT"
”1$te
n z*| M M*5-
*51 ”H V "
m m m m m m m m ■ ■
S6 n 37 n ■ ■55”
i
eo 1
i
3P"
i
3z“
1 1
We:have*em!
'^ t h e g e n e r a t i o n o f t r u c k s x v ith o v e r S O O i m p r o v e h u n t s l
The Davie Record is owned and edi
ted by a native of Davie County.
♦ FOR RENT ♦
S P A C E »N T H IS P A P E R
W ill A ira n je To Suit
GOOD NEIGHBORS~P«KES TO
Fir VOU? BUSINESS
N-
# SiiMit |MaMi|ier*car loob and comfortl
# Ntw V8 Mtlnw—pliis 6-cylimlMr hoiM|wwer tamuMl
# Relwd^adiwrii^ald gbuwide-lioilienvitiUlM^
# 5 dm «f TniA Hydn*Molic’^ for greafar optraHng tconomyl
# SlwAirfhiiiiMand oxksl
'i
IRVIN*PON11ACCO.
Wllfcnboto St. . Moclnville
- In omI $0e the now Sfue Cfifp GMCs itowl ■ ■■—
, . f'' " - . l.,’ '■v V'I,-
■ ■■ ■ ■ '5-. ■ r-
If you want
the real faction
W h » you compare automobile valuai, one
plain and easily proved truth becomes evident
—Pontiac given you more for your money than
any other car in Amertedt
' Keeping in mind that Pontiac is priced within
the reach of any new^ar buyer, coodder theaa
three very important facts:
Pontiac w a Ug cor! Pon«ac-s 122' or 184'
whseUnse is 6}^ to 8H inches Imger than any
new-
see
PONTIAC dealer!
of ihe "low-priced thiw”. It’s the biggest o»
at its price.
' Pontiac it more ptmerfuU Model for model, its ’
big Strato-Stieak V^8 deltven more power ^
dollar ihan any car in iU field! .
Pontiac it the mott dittinOivdy beautiful car at
, any pricei No other car can match the individu
ality of Pontiac Twin'Streak styliiMt and Vogoe
Two-Tone colon.
there are three big fvatont why Pontiae '
talei are at an all-time h i ^ Come jn and get all
the factt—for final proc^.
IRYIN PONTIAC COMPANY
W ilkM boro SiM et Moek»*aW. N. G.
The Davie Record
D A V IB OOUiNTY*Sf/b^DBST NiBW SPAP!BR--THE PBOPI^iB RSA1>
' ; ‘w n M l ^ n i i P * ^ i m K O n.E ’S nC H tS MAINTAm; tlNAWCO BV INIiUieiMX'ANn IINBimED BT GAIN."
• ; . • • ■ '
VOLUBfN LV;^ " V ;.'n': flfO CtSV ILLR NORTH CAROLINA, TiraDNBSbAT APRIL I3 t q « .NUMBER 36
NEWSt)F LONC AGO.
wiMt;Wm H a n M d iit h W
via Balara fM liiiii M aton
. A a d A U m w ia l^
' (Davie Iterord,' A ^ . 9, .
C. V. Renkd and D. J. Cral*.
of Staleavll le, were.bnalness visltois
here last week.' ? - '
R. A. Kohlass of Sslliiniry snd
■ E.; H. Holison. 6f Silver SItM ; ^
C.. were In town'Mondav,/ '
. llr. . aud Hm Prrf CnAts, of
WlaMpa-^tem spent ihe week-end
. here with Mr Crotls parents.. :\
Bsikv, of Blkl^' was In
town a short while Satui^av shsk.
lact bai^s wKb oM friends.
. . Rnfos B ^ w a has opened a groc.
ery and'feM . sl^re In the bniUIng
asirt door lo itIw Ssntord M otor Co.
' SavenI DavIe RepoMlcans win
' travel to Tsdkln^lle Saturday'
attend the Republican SenatoHal
'Co«ivMtlon:‘ ^
; J., P. Mooreretnrned 'l ^ wMk
from a ien days trip thranih South
Ca^llna; Oesmle. Alabama, T « -
■ a < ^ and Keniuekr.
Rev. and Mn. J. T. Sisk, of
North Msin street. san««nee> Ihe
arrival o< s line . t»ponnd dauKb.
ter PiUaT.moniIng,. April 41b.
TIie jMM netnlncs the past week
' did some damsse lathe fruit"crop
allbmth It is thoncht that' If no
miire frost .comes this spring tbei*
will be plsntv^ of fruit.
Clarksville iimsblpettliem cp.
' peai^ before'tiw BoM ci-lUnn
' :ilen Kondav and ssked fwan elee
tion to be;«IM In tbst tewMUp
to lasne ^45,000 lii bonds for a eon-
solidMcd high school. V
. Meat ihievn are b^n h iraun i
_ enus.; A supply of mestwu atoto
■' (rom Henry SboK, unr Faming.
tou| and about ajbaais.were'slo^
from R. L. WIlMa, uesif Hoeita-
vllle Sunday algb^; J , ;
H r..B ro w n , who Is lii.charge
■the balM Ing o f the new., hard.aur-
face mad :oM of .;V o e k M lle . bss
■ o v ^ ’H s fam llv ill town and tbev
arC; OKUprioK m e o f the -B orn
, bnaialows on Manle ayeade;'
P. S, Stroud, of HarmonV.jR. i.^
was In town one day last week. Mr.
Stroud told us that, be.; had .^ton
up and la w enongh to chop out.
I Par. full .parifculars write or phone
."him." ■ ' ■■■ ■ ' ’
Masle Swkegood had the mlr.
v.fortnnetairustUn'ptlnful Injurln
Friday. ■ ^He had left h tt'n r In
gmr and'when be Ms^t<& to crank
It the car knocked him down and
, run over him. The accident oe
^rred ai.Hardlsonr^. ; '
' Tohn R atledge,V Cans, .w et In
town Itrt w edr, and showed a s a
copy o( his grandfalhe>*ii\anrv^.
or*s ^ k , wblCb be ’ 'used . d oting
the csrly ^ r i 'of th e nineteenth
. eebtu^,.from 181410 I8i6. -T h e
bork.ls In goM shape and th e w rit
log In e fn e atate of preservation.';
. Aady Poster wbo'wys badly In.
jured In a soMmoMe . wreck In
North Mcakmrille Isst Vedoesday
night. Is getting akng' nlcely^'^ -A
esr driven bv a Hr: Wagoner Had
the ear driven bv: Mr. Penw w m
both hadiv ^damaged.. Ilie ocen.
: paots of the Wagoner car men pot
m m F ^ M
In thii heartbeat ' the soul of
ererv hums'n being there lies .a re
lative degree of passfon; for p^e»,
tIoD. It Is tbe Platonic dream of
beanty In the nltlmste, of truth In
the absolute and of natnra hi Upo.
^a. 'These sa^ratlon of the bu.
nan Intellect^ ate .•perpMnallv en.
dowW with hope, tbaf '.sometlme,
r,''a perf^ order of heaven
^w ealth will be Mtsblhbed where
in. sll tilings :wlll mirk togelbn In
a symphonic barinnnv, forever. In
•lit j cMlnrles of .msn made his
tort tbe lineal d^mdsnta of Ad.
am and Bverbave struggM towaid
tbis.destlny. That thire shall -be
.ndian era, , the Lori assotn us:
snd the pi^bets' both' in the old
■peak of with s
nMe ofVssplrstlon. However be.
fore we' are able to reach .this era
of Mill perf^tlm tiiere will coim
phlslcsl. chance's npoo . tbe earth
that, will elemlnate tbe fricknl
from the face of the earth,
ontv Ibote'prepared for . this event
through righteous living wlir.be
apersd by tbe 1.0^ from connmp
(ion phlslcally Iw'theJntlgeMt to
be poured ont npon t lie earth.
Why must the apacalvpHc murgea
of disease, famine, LpeMllejwe,
floods, ball, earthquake,, wars and
finally a conflagration of tl:e; very
elei^ts themselves, sweep tbe re
bellions tnbsbitants of the ^rtb
Invplunt'srilyjback Into the spirit
i ^ d f i ^ wbenM., they
Why must the .whole earth be
changed the seas drivsn: ba^,
ands made Into 'one and evenr
.mounuln lUd low? W hy,
modem dtln becme
and kingdoms be tom uniiderl
Prom the word of the lord m
leam thst It Is to prepsre the earth
for^ibe end of the temporal, exist.
«nce.The, winding up sceMS for
men Immortality are upon tn; The
Whole bnnian race mtist be sifted.
Hlgbwwy B nglb^ (M l T. Pciis
' tells os that ail ttaflle on Rente 6s,
' Mocksvllle to Wiiirtaa-Sflem. must
aowdetonr vla' Psi^^'gton This
road'has b en drsgii^ a n d ^ t. .lit
. goad eondttion TIk dlMance'la
, . several mllM farther .but V travderii
r will b m .to nse this detoor antn
. the b M Mirfeoe road ls>.iidiabcil
wMch win lie seantlpa.la tte M k
' P. W. Hsltsioe ind Mniily,''iMb
Hiss Rntb Hslrstba/ rMiimed
.t Moodsy frra; a 'week’s atay at
: Sanratowu: Stofcea caoiity. . '
Miss ifaliel B anban h u bad
nwasles but Is doing aM y^ ^
,A'
D o 'TIm
More Farmen Now
Gmwing Treeiii
; thousands of Acru ;
: ‘ Addisd During 1954
More farmers are srowJng trees
as a crop tban ever before Inibe
nation's history and the American Tree Farm System .reports Ilie
■greatest progress in 14 years took
place durini 1954.
A totd of 3,sn.70B acres ol tax
paying woodlands were brought Into ATFS during the year to .bring
Mk total tree (arm acreage op to
33,et2.Mt. It has been predicted
that M5S wiU see Sve million addi
tional acres added.Texas continues to lead the pa
rade of tree farm slates, with
;TW 0 DIVISIONS
.A small boy hurtled home from
school one afternoon'and announ
ced to his parents that the class
he was In was about to split up
into two divisions. - '
‘Tin In the top onV’ he «*•
plained, “and the other one Is far
backward readers."
But,** he went on confidently
we don’t know who is goi^ to
be in the other one. because diere
is not a kid in the room who can
read backward."
sorted and assigned their sepersta
stations. T h e atonement o f Je a »
Chilst w ^ ld be of no avail wbat
t m and the earth wimid l « atterly
w ast^ lti the.endir all the looee
t b t ^ a o f six tbouMnd v n rs of
hnman< life upon tb e 'a r ib were
bbt gnfted together and bound np.
B vety pers.m, whether living or
must hsive an ooportnnlty to
hear end accept dr;re]M t the g »
Por all « c e p t '‘ibose 'who hive
eommltted the unpsrdonable - rin
win have .the snving plan of sslva.
tion taught.', to them during this
grea era of peace and rlgbteoua-
n e s su ^n .the esrth .when. Christ
Wlli rdgn ss king of Icings end
Lo rd .o f L o rd 's .. iThe tssk of- uni.
fylng and preparing the human
iam lly.fbr eternity w ill be • ■ tre .
a d d o n s undertakin;. Consider
tbe ebasms wiilch separaM tbe n a.
lions e ^ individiials wbetber llv.
.iog^ar .deadl since the days of
Abak the strang bsye tabbed, rev-
iiig M " ^ kU h d T h e y have niund.
ercd the poor pillaged the
T h in k o f tbe panlon for
which' e fU ts In the
brcastsof'the'w traged. those wbo
have been cheated of hapdlness, 'o f
their esitlilv' p a iw ^ o u s , who have
in d ibW r lives shortened 'or sear,
red b r the Indecenelies of the. pim.
erfni. grasping f^low . belniti
T h e n will have demands, to, mske
u|ion jiistice .pressing p u n m b m ^
ib .the illerm osl farlbl^^^ ■
will t ^ b charity and forglveneM
ftom the woitnded and 'the 'rivis h .
M to Mend w itb the sorrow
repent^aiM o f the guiltyr In tbese
queries:we behold th e . litanic,, task
of Oodhood to brlbic to in n repent
a im and forglvenein aasonr al|.;aa.
tiana, c r M s end pedniea, to n ltl.
awtely achieve an actual, llteralal
bietherbood o f man and ptepere Ike'whole h'nntaB race, for the great
flual ludgaw at. T h I* la this work
of tbe Hllenaloai.
I. U BENNETT.
N .C
above are belac ased • mere Amerkan farmers. Ca- . pable of ptaatkv 1*,0M te IMN freiet per madUne apeaa a
«4mIi tep furrow to. apread aw- plaat roota away from «ea>
line while aiMOiidanr plow ft u m w « r IMMli (tench hi
whl|sh Ihe MftiHBC la plaeed.. ^
3.42ft,363 aeiresi This weU^managed,
erop-produdnB i io ^ o d repi«>
•ehta 63B ownerabipa. Washington,
the etate whew the Tree Farm •
program began in IMl, la seeoadwitb 3.259,806. Oregon* passed Ar-
kanaaa during 1054 to take third
place with 3.231.3B8 .acres. Arkatt-
saa la fourth wHh 3.136.948.
; MlsBiMippl aUnda aeeood to Texas In number of tree farmer*
with 520. Alabama and Arkansaa ace third and foorth with. 477 and
404 units reapectto^
D u i^ S^ar G eor^;
ed the f l^ a t^ g ^ oC any stat*
,when it- brought more than one
and a balf .mllltoD acres of land -taito .the Ti«e Farm 'proA am .
more ihan doubUngr its .ceMaed. acreage. This, boosts it to aev«
enth plaee W acreage irtaadings
'just behind FloM a and Alabama.
To quidify Cor certification as a
tree farmer, a woodland owner
must demonstrate ability and will*
■ingness to manage'.-hls land for
contlnuhig wood erops.'This means
he must protect his woods fcom Are. destructive grazbig and dam>
age by in ^ ts or disease. At ttie same time he . must harvert r ^
timber so that his land will cofto
tittue to produce new crops.
W OULDNT BEUEVE
Desk Seargeant-Didn*c j tell
you the last time you nyete here
that 1 never wanted to tee you be*
fore me again?
^Toodles—Yes, yer hqnor._That*9
what l,told the cof^ but he woul
dn’t believe me.
KNEW tH E M ALL^ ^
lt:Two acquaintances met outside
a polilns place during a recent e-
lection.in the west and bqthstart*
ed tolj^k about the list of candi'
dates for the various offices up for
election'. Finally they came, to
several men who were' listed
caiididuces for the office of mayor.
'*Beii.“ remarked one voter,
don’t want td vote foranyofthese
men: Why, I don’t ktiow a one
ofthem r' .
*'rm i(i;the um'b position. Bill,'
replied the o'her sadly. • **1 know
them all." ,
Ottir County And
Social Security
By Louis H. Clement. Manager.
Qu^tlop;' How much work
must an individual have to inture
liat social secufity benefits an
payable uvon reaching age 65 or
upon death?
Answer: The required amount
>f w o^ is measured In ‘*quarten,
of coverage." A quarts of cov^*
ase correspo.tds with a calendar
quarter. A calendar, qunrter Is a
three-month period begiuning on
January 1, April 1. Jalv 1. and
O ctobn 1. A self-employed indi
vidual is credited witK 4 quarters
of coverage for each year in which
he has $400 or'roore hi net earn
ings from self-employment A
^rm worker gets rpne quarter of
coverage for each $100 he *is paid
a farm employee. For ail ^»ther
kinds of employment, one q\iarter
of covera^ Is 'credited for each
calendar quarter in'which die in
dividual Is paid at \lcasr ^ in
vrages. An individual is fully in
ftured when he reaches age 65 or
dies if he has at least 1 quarter of
overage for each 2 calendar quar*
ters that have passed since De
cember 31.1950. up to the quarter in which'he reaches age 65 or dies'. For further information,
contact the Social Security Office,
301 PostoHJce Building. Salisbury,
If vou have any question con
cerning vour social security, you
might write us at 361 Post
Baildinc. Salisbury. N. G.. or see
out representative who visits Ae
Court House, Mocksvllle N. C..
the first and third Fridays of
each month from 12t30>l:30.
SeeoA loogM aio^et
Bf The Street Rambler: •'
Unique Treaty
Colls Indians Bock :
.FR A N K FO R T . fC y .-^ n e o f th e
m ost unique tre atie s e v e r s ig n ^
b y tb e fe d la n s a n d w hite m e n Is
eom m em oraited onde each y e a r-ln
th e little e a ste m K entvcky tow n of
B arbourvltle. ; / - •
U nder te rm s o f th e .a g r e ^ e n t.
ib e C herokee Indians a re entlQ ed
lb ta k e aU th e cane they w ant
ttiet K nox C o u n ^ b reak s w hich
use In m aking b ask ets and.
a t. th e ir trib a l s ^ l In
• North C a ro lin a .: In,'r
l^ v U eg e . th e Indians
t u n onee e a d i year-j
pald^to: visit tte y Bjuitousvasf-
(rlMid^,:-ln Octobe) their ;^tumCmarics0(tW9daysCe......
Osnltel B o o n e__________
ekeea beeauae of tribal claim
ewied . tbe area'unta WTO whaB
Boone, and Richard Beiuterua
bou^t aU of tbat part of X eatueb
<utt o fjte Keatuckr R in r b a a . ; vneroBeea.
this'
to te^
expenses
HARD LUJK -
An Irishman coining out of
ether in the ward after an opera-
tion, exclaimed audibivi "Thanl^
God!" That is oyer!" “Don’t lie
said die man in the next
bed. -Thev left a sponge ,in me
and had to cut me open asain.'
; ^ d the,p^ent on the other aide
said: “Why they had to open
me, 6>o, to find one of their in
struments.” Just then the aur-
granw hohad operated on the
Irishman stuck his head in the
door and yelled: "Has anyone
seen my lut!” Poor Patrick feint
ed.~^change. \
As the lady said when she
up
<^n‘c
mole hi I.’
tr^ng to write essays: T’You I’c make a Montaigne out of
NOTICE TO CREDiTORS
kaving qualified as executor of
the-estate of Charlie Hege, deeeas-
ed,.%te of Davie County, IJorth ■ linai this ia to notify all per-
holding claims' against aaid
!, ta prnent them to the un-
jned within 12 months from___hereof, or this notice will beplrad in bar of their recovery. A I
persons bwirig said estate will
make imni^iate setilement. .This
Marc)i 21. i95S.
BOBBY dLAY HEGE;
: Exr. of Charlie Hege, D ris'd
B. C.£rock, Attorney.• - ... • ; r ..........
V fO pC E TO CREDITORS
’ Having qualified as adtainistta
tors of the estate of S. C. Carter,
dece^ed, late of Davie Counn,
North'Carolina, this is to notif all W ires' holding claims against satd wiate tp.ljresent them to the iiridecs^ed within 12 months
; from date'hereof, or this notice
I will lie plead in bar of their recov- erv.' All person, owing said ea- .dif . vlll make immediate aettle-
mSiit. This March 16,1955.C .R . CARTER,
.H ■.'•‘7 . P.M.CARTER,
' Admta. of S. C. Catter, Decs’d.
George W. Martln, Atty.
‘Destitute' Refugee
Loaded Down Witb Cash
BRAMPTON. Ont. - An appar. ently destitute refugee from Oar*
ricane Hazel applied for admlulon
to the Old People’s Home.Then In an old leather purse
among ber belongings, an offida)
noticed a bulge in the .lining.
The refugee. Mrs. AUce Barlow, said. .*'It*s Just some stulRng I sewed in.*’
Tbe stufllng proved to be $16,•
000 In $100 bills. Also* there was a bank book showing more, tban $4,>
OpO deposits.was saving for my old age
end for a trip to England,’* the TS-year^old Mrs. Bariow said, “but
1 didn't thtak I had enough money/'
n The SuM or Court
Nofih Cecoline j . _
DHvie County \ ^
N o rn S ta n le y C rea so u
vs.
R . C C re a so n
Notice of Service of Procew
By Publication
T o R . C . C reo so u :
Take Nouce ihat
a Dleiitling Making relief a«
you hus iieeu filed in the
ove vntlUtfd action.
T h e n a tu re o f U ie re lief. bci«u
‘io u e h V is a s>uii fo r d iv o jc e b y said
p la iu tifft N o ra S ta iile y C reat-on,
^ n in tu t>Bid (d e fe n d a n t. K . C . C ie a
«0M
Y o u a re re q .iire d to m a k e de.
(e n se to su c h p le a d in u n o t In ter
th a n M a y 1 3 . 19 5 5. a n d u p o n vo u i
fa ilu re to d n so tb e o a rttp s tieckinv
<iervice a ( d jn s t y o u w ilt a p p ly to
th e c o u rt fo r th e re lie f d e m a n d e d .
T h is Ike S ih d e v o f M a rc h . 19 5 5
S . H . C H A F F IN ,
< ’ Clei k of Superior Court.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co.
We Can Supply Your Needs
IN GOOD COAL,
SAND and BRICK
Call or Phone Us At Any Tim e
' PHONE 194
Form eriv Davie Brick &.Coa! Co
Sidewalks full of school dilld-. .
ren on their to gef typhoid
vaccinations—Mrs. M. J. Luper
and Miss Roberu Bowles doing
some nitty afternoon shopping in
drugand dime stores—Guy Stroud
hanging around the court house
like Grantbiftw ground Richmond
—Joe ChafEnl^edatine that he
walked ^ i n Sinitb Grove M
NoriA) M o^yille.and that seven-,
tV.five'cats passed him and not a
one even hesitated—Mayor John .
Durham looking at pipe laying
femmst bank building and won
dering it it belong^ to Robert
Baaslnger or David ' Rankin—Mr.
and Mrs. HarmoA McMahan shop
ping around towtt—G. K. Husser .
on his way from ^octo^a office—
Three Advance ladies walking a-
round the square on sunny after
noon—Miss Flossie Foster testing
drugstore after lunch Farmer
looking for some one to : fill out
his income tax blanks—Mrs. Da- -
yid Koontz and small son doing
some dime store shopping—Frank
Fowler and Guilford Miller busy
popping popcorn-Spurgeon An
derson and'Rufus Sanford. Ir., get
ting 75 centhair cuts on Thursday
afternoon—Dick Breaegar wend
ing his way up Main street cairy-
ing small packqie—Frank SmiA
busv sweeping up popcorn in drug
store—loe Pitner and George W .
Rowland talking tilings over in
front of auto store—June Greene'
wnwniing large coca4;ola in drug
store--^ W. Jones rambling over
th e 'to m b in g to get a hair ciit—
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Howell and
children doing. some afternoon
shopping around town—Miss Ann:
Qwlngs talking about .]unlor-S;n-
lor banquet—M«- James . Foster
standing on postbffice cbmcr wait,
ing for wav . to go home—Gwyn
Roberts looking at elect^ pillow
in furniture store on warm alter,
noon—Frank Honeycutt carrying
long fishing pole across the square
-Mrs. George Hartman doing
some wa rn ^trinoon shopping in
lontT-A nn^niiiioh
her way ddwii'’ Mai.i-' street enjoy- -
ing cold drink' -Mr. and Mrs. Bill '
Ratledge talkjng with fnends On
Main street—Fred Wilron getting
tonspral work bn Friday afternoon
—Miss Edrie Willaon doing some
early momiug shopping—Crowd
of solely dirappointed shoppers re
turning hoihe sadder but wiser— '
Mrs. B. T. Browder and daughter
doing some rainy aft^oon shop,
ping—Mrs. Floyd Naylor trying to
cr-iss Main street through heavy
traffic-Mrs. WUI Keller trying to
find some bargains-Dotiald Reavis
wanting to take time oR to dritOt,
a coca«>la—Mrs. S B. Hall taking
time off for refreshments in drug
-M i^ Sadie and Eva Mc-
Culloh buying spring shoes in de
partment stole-riohnny Smith on
his wav out of bank'with handful
of currency—Miss Flossie Martin
chattmgWith'fiiend in fiont of
bus station. ____^
HILLTOP
Service & Supply
HOPES TO SERVE YOU ^
EVEN BETTER IN 1955
G u, Oil Sopplie*
iUio A Nke liae Of
V^ietalilM,
And St^4e Gntcwiei
W« AwMciUe Your
BlldiMM
X w T h il l
' . „■ Owmr,
I
vf'il
^ >
' i
■ ■ir#.',
PACKTWO
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C. FRANK STROUD, EDITOR,
TCUSPHONe
■ntond ittha PMtofflce'in Modn- vfll*. N. G.. u S«ondM!l«M Mill
niktter. Harch <1.1908.
:suB Scn rn oN r a t e s:
ONE YEAR. 1M N, CAROLINA I I.M SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROUNA ■ 7Be. ONE YEAR. O insm e STATF - >2.00 SIX MONTHS. ODTSIDE STATE • (1.00
How about a clean up and a
pavup w«ek In Mocksville; We
don’t knowwhldiisneeded worse
Only two tnontht until we will
be eatlns blackbetty pie provided
we are alive at that time.
AU the bootlemeta and block-
aders in Dayle County are not
dead, neither are they In jail.
The Record just learned a few
davs ago that Averv Foster, color
ed who has be.n a policeman in
Mocksville for several vears, was
appointed a deputy sheriff , some
time ago.
98th Birthday
Isaac Sanford "Sant” Reavis,
weir-known retired farmer of Yad
kin County, celebrated his 9Sth
birthday on Tuesday March 29th. Mrs. Reavis died In 1940, and Mr.
Reavis makes his home with a
daughter, Mrs. Eva Thompson,
near Counnew. Mr. and Mrs. Reavls were the parenu o f 16
children, 13 of whom are living
and three dead. All of the child
ren were present for his birthday with the exception of one son who
lives in Los Angeles, California.
Mr. Reavis is in excellent health
for one of his age. The Record is
hopine that he will live to cele
bratc his one hundrcth birthday.
A bounteous dinner was enjoyed
all present on h s birthday, and he
received many Rifts on this happy occasion.___________
Farm flews
Notice has been received that
Cotton farmera will not Increase
their 1956 allotment by over-plant
ing thia year's aiotment, according
to O. E Driver, Chairman of ihe
Davie Jounty A8C Committee.
Many fahnets in the county have
the orinion that overplantine their
allotment crops will increase future
allotments; however, there is no
basia for this beliefin the case of
cotton or wheat. Present law un
der certain conditions provides for
an increase in tobacco allotme.it
up to one-fiflh of the amount ov-
ver-planted. Howevc-r, thia pro
vision on tobacco is In .the process
of belttg eliminated hy the Con
gress; On March 24, the House
voted to eliminate any credit for
planting on tobacco. In ad-
Leo. F, Brock
Leo F. Brock, 74, a retired farm-
er of Farmington, died April 2nd. He had. been in declining health
for several months and serioualy
ill for three days.
His wife. Mrs. Norma Flowers
Brock, was killed in an automo
bile accident Aug. 28, 19S1.
He is survived bv one son, Billy Brock of the.home, and one sister,
Mrs. Ora Seamon . f Orangeburg,
5 .C
Funeral services were conducted at 3 p. m., April 3rd at Farm
ington Methodist Church by Rev
6.• C Graham and Rev. J. W.
Vestal. Masons had charge of the
graveside rites in the cemetery.
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and bv virtue o( tbe power of asle coouioed in a cettalD
deed of trust executed by Boooe
Poster and wile Sally Poster, to
Robert S. UcNeill, Trustee, dated the 33rd day ol May. 1953, and re
corded in Book 42, mge 13, in tbe
office or ibe Register of Deeds of
Davie County; and under and by virtue oi tbe auihorlty vested in tbe
uDdersignsd as substituted trustee
byan instrument oi writing ddted
tbe 4tb day of April, 1955. and re. carded in Book —. page —, in the
oifi: e of Register of Deeds of Da
vie County, default having been
made in the payment of Ibe ia- debtcdness thereby secured and the
■aid deed uf trust lieing or tbe
terms 1 hereof subjeet to forrolosure.
•nd tbe bolder of the lodebicKneia thereby secured having demanded
a foieelosnre tbereof for tbe pur.
pose of satisfying said indebtedness,
tbe undersigned substituted trustee
will offer for sale at puMIc aueilon to the hlgtaesi bidder for casta, at
tbe rouTt bou^c d •or in Morka-
ville N. C , on the.. 7th day of
May, 195S1 the land conveyed in
S lid <ieedof Irnst, tbe saint lying and ^etne in Je raile-n Town^bh',
Davie Con ty, North Cainllna,and
more p^rtKi larly described as tol-
lom;
. Belar lota Nos 6$. 64. ’65,
66 67, 68. 69, 70- 7» 7J. 4«, 42. 4,^ 44 and 45 ot Ihe Sim Fu». ter Sub-division, at per survey and
plai P a e hv A, L. Bowles, Snr-
T yor. May, I9S.'. And aald plat rrcorded lo Map B n>k N.i. 3, twge
• I s. lu Ihe Registei of Deed« fffice
of D O'ie Ciinnty, North Caro'ina,
to which rdeteuce is hereby made
* for a more particular descript joa
For title see deed from E C.
Hoiria to Boone Poster and wife,
Sally Foster, dated May ao, 1953,
and,dn|y recorded In said office.
Thia lat day o( April. 195.5.
. CLAODB HICKS,
aabitilnlcd Ttnaice.
t if t OAVIB BBCOIlb. MOCKBTIUJ. H, C . Al-B|t » , 1968
Mte Carter
Henty lotw k (ioe) Carter, 78,
formerly of Elo^tvitl^ died «arly
Tuesdsy at • Gteeniboro hospttal.
Mr. Carter wat bom in Davie
County^pril 4 ,1877» ton of Ab*
ram and Emily Garv * ^
He>
___ G m ood Carter.
ployed at Hanes Chair
dldon, there is a Marketing Quota
penalty for harvesting an excess
of the alloted acreage of ' any of
the comrooditieii!
The penal y for over«pIanring
cotton, tobacco or wheat amounts
to approximately 50% of the aver*
age marker price, according tu Mr.
IMver. Tbe penalty will be a-
round 17^ cents per pound on 15-
16dis inch middling cotton, on to*
Imcco the penalty rate will be a*
round 26 ccnts per pound, and on
wheat it will be around $1.03 a
bushel
Farmers would have to produce
a mightv good cotton yield, and
spend very little for Insect control,
in order not to lose money on
over planting cotton. Farmers are
cautioned that by over*pl»nting
thia year they onlv make them*
sel«^ liable for marketing .tjuota
penalty and at the same they are
adding to our already excessive
supplies.
Revival Meeting
A revival meeting will begin at
the Firat Methodist Church in this
city, next Sunday April 17th, and
continue through Friday with ser.
vices'each evening at 7.30 o’clock.
Rev. Jack Page, of Raleigh, will be
the guest speaker. The public is
given a cordial invitation to come
out and hear this gifted speaker.
and Noiieltv,.Comptnv hete uutil
last Janua^ relli«d. He
m oved'to Greenaboto then to make ItUfhaiae with a daughter.
He waa married to Mias ElUa-
betbHodgea. She died in 1942.
Surviving are two daughtera,
Mrs. S. Q. Powell of Greensboro
and Mrs. Roy Johnson, Chariotte.
■ Mr.- Carter haa been a consist
ent member of the Mocksville Me
thodist Church for many years. His death has brought saoneaa to a hoat.of friends in this city.
Funeral setvlcn were held at 3:30 p. m.. Thursday at Mocksville Methodist C hur^. Rev. W. (J Grigg' officiated. Burial waa in
Rose Cemetery.
• ' I.' I
Foster Comihiended
William L. F«ter, son of Mr.
and Mta. J. L. Foster, of Route -3,
who has been M the Armed Forces
for two y e ^ and who Is servlnf
overseas,' haa been highly «im-
mended by Jamea J. .McMullan,
Qommander o f . Amphibious
Group One. Commander Mc>
Mullan sent the followlng,endorse-
ment to FoatCK ‘In forwarding
thia correspondence. 1 wish to
add my sincere thanks and ap
preciation for the ^mmendable
manner in which you p e rfim ^
your duties during the Tachen
Evaeuation .Opetatioiu It ia a
pleasure to know that fsetsonnd
of your calibre are rantlnually
striving to uphold the'tradition
land spirit of the Service; Thanks
' for ene more job'well done.”
Do yon reati The Recomi?
Garden Seeds
Hybrid Seed
Plants - - hisecticides
Baby Chicks - - Purina Chows
“ YourFrieodly
Checkerboard Store^
Davie Feed & Seed Co.
Phone 17 Depot Street
MocksviUe, N. C.
We Have Jiist R i^he
installing A Large
Hammermill
Which Is llte Ur^est iDDe^
Of Its Kind In North Carolina.
This Mill Has A Capacity Of
300 Bags Per Hour
Which Enal^les Us To Give ,Our
Hundreds Of Custoiriers Quick
Service At AU Times.
We Are Prepar^ To Crimp Your
Oats, Pul Molasses 6'n Your Feed
And Supply Your Needs In
Feeds Of All Kinds.
When You Come To Town GaU
And Look Over Oiir Equipment
We i4re Better Prepand Than
Ever To Give You Good Service
Hiipp Feed Mills
Phone 95 Salisbury Street
Pataronize your home merchant^
America^ G im M Buy
a n d f o u c a n
la SvH iM t MmIimiIm ■! M y nKwl
Watdi tto cars pass and note that
only Pontiac s t ^ s out aa £ur aa eyes
can aise. Naturally—
/uAin—and only ^ tia c baa ,
2 e StM totl Pm ratal H« »rfMi ,
, Pontiac, with tbe optional- power- '
package, ia the kiweet-prioed car
deU ve^ 200 borae^wer, because
only Pontiac has the Strato-Streak
V-8, with performance aa advanced
as Pontiac style.
3 a S n ita tl S ig * •! lit iiiImI
Pontiac has more road-leveling wheel- '
base and big-car stability than any
- car priced ^ th the lowest. Drive it
and feel.the seii^tional diffetencet '
4 .
* 2210.45 *
M h Im Ikw M qr HmIwifMHiiiMd tm and MHt bi* Hmi
■Iftopod MMraay. B tM t «f Ik* ■ipOTff^iiiMi ■nvai
18 VIN PONTIAC GOMFANY
W akM bore SlTM l M oekw au, 1^. C.
didwt !■ TKe
n e W s ^ r o u n d t o w n :
Miaa'Mattie SttOud, of StMe>‘
vilk, «m die week-end gum of
Mr. and Mia. C F- Sttoud and
famUW .
U t. iind Mra. Clark, of
C b ^ HUI, w e« Eaater gim tt of
Mra. QarkV paM ti, Dr. and Mrs.
W .M^Long.
Mr. and Mn. J. Arthur Daniel
anfived home Thutaday from New
POrt Richey, Fla., where they spent
the winter.
Mr. :aiid U o ! Wallace, of
Route K .are the parents of a soil
who •friyd at Rowan Memorial
•Hoapital on AniJ Sth.
Miaa Edna Justioe renicned to
hM hom« at Gand|et Thursday
after spending a wwk inr town^
.diegueatofDr. atid Mrs, S. B.
HalL■ • ' '
■■ Mr. aiid Mrs. Cleorge Rowland
and daughter latte, apent the E n
ter hiblidava w l* Mr. Rowlsipd’s
mothCT. Mrs. Hester Rowland,
W ar«Shpab,S-C . '
Miaa iiiartha Call returned laat
week (tom a three weeks viaityrith
. her niece, Mrs. R. R. Cardenaa
andMr.Cardeiia^at San Anto
nio, T em . - .
Miaa Mary Sue'Rankin, a atud-
ent at Woman'a Co lege, 'Greens
boro, apent die Eaater holidaya
wiih hCT parenta, Mr. and Mrs;
D .C . Rankin.
Misa Nancy Cheahire a atudent
' at GatdnetWebb CoHege, Boiling
Sprta^ spent the week-md in
towti with her fwreiita,; Rev.: and
Mra. A. C )3 icahitc. .
,, Sgt. aud M ^ K en n ^ Dn^iglns
, and litde d a r te r Debby. ot' Co-
lumblii, S. Ct’ apent dte wedc-end
widi Mta. Dwigglna* parenta, Mr.
atid Mra. Frank'Honeycutt,
PookrlM ney
jit.and M ri'^ Dv-Foole* of armoinr, C» ahnoniice dieen- ragoiient of Uieir dau|^t«, Mi^
dred Louise^ to George: B. liney,
of Charlotte, N.C. Mr. Lahw la thei son of Mr. and Mia. D. I. Lan-
N. C A M l wed
I Mn Bloiant
^ rs . Jqlm Myers Blount Sr.. of
Spenm, died April 1st at the Ro
Menu>tialHoapitaL
Krill be heldV revival meeting , _ . at'the Ailvance Brprt,t Church beginning Sunday, April i7d>,
and conthiubig dirougb Aptll Z3rd
with services’each evening at 7:45 o’ckxk.. The paator, Krv. C. E.
Crawfiwd, will be assisted by Rev.
W. C. Reid, General Superintendent of Orphanage work in Nordi
Carolira. The public ia cordially
invitd to come out and hear diis•—a#. - a - .1._giifeo apeaicer.
MocktviU« High'
School News
OEANNA SILVeRHS.
A native of I^vie County, Mrs.
Blount waa the daut^ter of the
late Simeon Clay, and Lucy ^Ann
B o i^ Gowaii. She was educat.
ed in the Daide County schools.’'
A member of St. LukeV Episco
pal Churdi, she also belonged to
the Women’s Auxiliary o f the
church.
H e r iiustnnd,.. John Myers
Blount, Sr.. whom, she married on
Nov. 4 .18M, died in January, 1915.
She la a u rv )^ by one son, John
M, lUount Jr„ of Spencer; two
daudtters, Mrs. Osborne T. Smow
of Speneiet and Mrs^ C- E. Diilanev
of A^eyille; one sister, Mrs. J. S.
Walki^of Mocksville; two grand-
^ildren; and three great-grand'
children. i
Ftineral services were held April.
3rd at ,3 o’clock at St. Luke’s Epis-1
Perfect—that’s the only wav to
describe the Junior-Senior banquet
which was hdd Saturday evenlngl
April 2nd, at the Vance. Hottl in Stateaville. The turkey dinner waa delicious and . the
Mlaa M arr Kiser, a atudent at
Metedidi Colleae. Raleigh, and
KOss Carmen Greene, a atudent at
d o m ra 's Collei^, Greenaboto,
apent the Eaatn holidaya w
tFoik. .
FOR SA LE-3 0 0 halea Aoatrian
, winter p n clover, hay, and t«m
tnctu^ and one Famuli SuperC,
BCW,and one C H I^ .m w«h e-
, Miaaet Frai^e Junket, Caiotyn
F eret^ Gersidine York. Johnny
Jtriuiatone dU c James, and Ralph
Bowdens atiidenta at State Univet-
: aitv, Chapd HIU, spent the Eaater
holidaya widi theit parentt.
M i ^ Lettie !md Betty:
lane Robinaon, Margnet
Nancy Latham, . BUI SoAct
BiU Beoaon. atuden» at Annala-
chi«> Stale T en ets
Boone, spent the Eaatei holidaya
witkdietoparcatt.:
w hl^ followed this meal was ex
cellent. A dance which really topped off the evening was held after
wards. Many ihanka to the Ju
nior Class who made all of thii
possible.
Anodier big night was Friday,
April lat, when the Seniors pre
sented theit play. Ann Owings, business manager of the' play, re
ported to the dass diat over t200
waa takeii in. The play was a tre
mendous success, thanka to Mra. Cicnabaw, Miss Turner and mudi
hard wore on ihe partofmembers
of the class.
Friday die Wildcats, who have
won every game since the first one,
battled Advance and came out on
top, 6,5. -Tuesday the boys travd- led to GrifiSth, whetc they were gain victora IM ..
TryoutS'for the luniorplay w _ held Wednesday. No definite date
las been set for tbe presentation
of **Peck*s Bad Boy ” ItadntecM
ate Mr. Leonard Crotts and Miss
Turner. .
Afeshiondiow waa the center
ofattracdonat,P. T. A. Monday
night GIrla from the first, second
and dilrd year Home Economlca
classes modeled die drenea whichthey had &ade. Reft_______
wmaetved ihthcH om eEc. U b a ( ^ the program.
Eaater broudit a wdcome vaca
tion from schooL Friday and Mon
day wete set aside as achool ftee daya tai ohaervance (»f diia holiday.
ISdi will be die
for dietdiiit t o t^iT “Smoke
P o w e T b i^ of «»e V. F. W . at ? a a . a^lto «»IU b• •y«Iy •ll^lpo^^
ant meeiiiig. 1 wish ail ^ poa-
CLAY A U fW.
Mra. J . d Jonea airfMifa^.'nwi
int (0,Uie of their
Mr. and Mra _ .________hear County: line, tot
Tuesday ind Actemodi
cdebtate hetnBtd bbihdav. A bouaicoua dinner was apread for
t t i i a h ^ o i m i ^
Mr. and Mth Lem/ i chOdren who have Jbeen Jiving op CItde Dtiw.mbved to : S t t t ^ le Friday. Mr; a iu lM t s .y e ^ DuU have purdiued^die Bcdt house,
iiriiiidi d inh n e had bad » a p a .^ n t with
M ^«nd Wt%:.lyn ^ Pw i«i» l«> Waat Mo^yOle.
o»dedbvM r.iM I tte ,(fe m o « ^ ^ !b
'S s J tv i
siTafts:,buiUta>f on
THE DATIE I ^ B D . MQiCgSYtfLE. B,C.. APRIL l3. 19SS PAGETHREE!■in
Ratledqe-Chaifin
A, C. Radedge, Jf- san of Mr.
and'Mr<- A- C- Radedge, irfRoute 2. and Miss HcIot loan (^a<Bn,
dauehter of Mr. and Mrs, J. B.
Chafiin, also of Route 2, wete
united in marriage at the home of the groom’s patents Saturday even
ing at 7 o’clock. The doublering
ceremony was piarfotmed bv Rev.
Mr. BaSsett in the presence of the imtnediate families. Mr. and Mrs.
Ra'Iedge will iiiake iheir home for
the present with the groom’s pa.-
ents. '
Mrs. Ratledge is a graduate o
Mocksville Hiidi School and has
held a position with the Mocks.-
ville Laundry for some tirhe.Mr. Ciiaffin attended' Fai
ton High School and is
in faniting.The Record wishes for this
young coupSe a long and happy
journey through life with their
pathway strewn with inanv roses
and few thorns..
Price Re-Elected
copal Church, Rev. Thom Blair,! The Davje County Board of
offidated. Immediately following* Education met last week and re*
the sendees* the^bodv was moved elected Curtis Price S up^ntend-
to Center Methodist Chuccli *in ent. of Schools lii Mr.
^vieC ounw w herea short - T h ? p „ ‘r e ^ h t \ 'e ^ * A . '^ ™
w»» held B u ^l w.s in the; that he will con
Center Mediodist Church ceme-itinue as head ofthe Davie Schools
for the next two years.
Gel Ready For The
Planting Season Now
SEE US FOR
Cole Planters and Distnbutors
Complete Line Of Repairs
Princess Theatre
, ' ■—— —
W EDN^DAY
-CAPT. JOHN SMITH &
POCAHONTAS” In Color
With Anthony Dexter & Jody
Lawrance Carlwn fit Comity
THURSDAY & FRIDXy'
“FAR COUNTRY” InTedini-
color W ith James S tm rr &
Ruth Roman. News
SATURDAY
Roy Rogers In “ON THEOLD
SPANISH TRAIL-
Cartoon & M a l .
MONDAY &.TUESDAY
“SHANGHAI STORY” With
Romaii & Ecfanond O’Brien . .CartoOn & ,N on '
DAVIE VOpNTrs,BIGGBSrSIKIW
APifc.liie at>> iSe
I^ANT Ads PAY.
W A N T E D — iWhii*. aetded
bouaekeeper. full time. For parti
cular call MRS. G.M . H s ^ n .
Phone370J '..Mockaville
Rankin - Sanford
Implement Co.
Your. International Haivester Dealer
Plibiie SO ' Mockavine, N. C
To The Fii bli&
1 Wish To Announce To
The Public That I Have
Purchased The Stock Of
Hardware and Faint
Of The
Mocksville Hardware Co.
And Will Be Located In The
Meroney Store Building Until
May 1st
If You Are In Need Of
Hardware, Paints, Stoves, Etc.
Call And Look Over
My Stock.
1 Can Save Yon Money On
Many Articles
T. S. Hendrix
Patronize your home merchants.
Come in and see *em!
a whole tndttoad o f new advmtag/es for you! Hete’$ what,
lu^ipeiis when, ^e ric a ’s No. I truck buiUer pulls out alt the stops!
Here are some of Ae new advances ready to work for you right now.
. Droach to»tnick designi
Two distinctively dilfer- styling treatmcnls- one in light- and medium*. duty modelsa another
inbeavy-dutyl .
M j railable
5, i d ' ^ ZSc
aibiif' «iU bmt much moteSSSr«p«Sbidi(lriia«qaM ata.
Pianos turned, repaired, rebuilt,
tefinisb^ or reatyleil. Free esd- inaies. New and used pianoa.'
Anydiing muaical. Eaay terma.
Write for p riw . ' "StMing-Thomaa^usic Ck
N. Trade St. yfaaton-Sdem
5 ^ l ^ a S ba?ha;K Hot water heater in baaemeiit. Uvingroom, two lawbedioonia,diniog,taam .
kitdiiEti Widi built-in cabineta.
Floor furnace, ptke $6,800. See
Phoncafter5p.!n.,r7045.
Soudt Boaton, Va.
with roew Power Steering!
N w Chevrolet Power SteiNiog cuts turning effort lo «0 per ccnt .. ..cushions road shock;' Optiooal at extra cost.
Six powerful new,
With a modem 12-volt clcctrical system for in- .creascd generator ca- pacity->plus many other new advafices.
You can have new Over«
drive or Hvdra-Maticf*
Overdrive'is. optical on r V4 -tOLn 'models; truck Hydra-Maticoni^-. 'and 1-ton models at
. extra cost »
The last word in cab
comfort and safctyl
New Sweep-Sight windshield for increased visibility. A new concealed Safety Step that stays clear of snow or mud.
Power Brakes standard
on 2»ton roodelsl ^ ••
this gr^t power helper
is yours at no extra cost on 2-ton models! Optional at extra cost on .aU other models.
New capacity—up to '
18.000 lb. G.V.W.
Offered in 2-lon models! This means you can do a lot more work on heavy hauling |obs with
real savings.
. Tubeless tires standard
on ^-ton models!
New tubeless tires give you greater protection * it~a blowout . . . B more slowly when piinctured!
New more durable,
slandard-wldth tramest
New frames are of 34- inch width to accommodate special body installations. And 'they're more rigid!
Comem and th^newtHtkmgf
mtmek$t
i
A
■ 1
PENNINGTON CHEVROLET CO., INC
PHOrtE 1S6 ; - - M(XaCSVILLE, N, c .
PAGB'IOUR lO A ^ ^ l
m 'm
N oiac8ytu< N .« ; APRitv It. iiKt!
I'.' .
K ': I
¥
|i
DcvsUonnl nc»4lBKS Prov«fba S:l>tO.
Ho Greater Fool
Lei.*n (<>r AprU 11, UIS
IT WAS the day of the great
roass-mcoting. The now admin*
istration was meeting the voters face to facc. At least, the man
who hoped and expccted to be the
ndmini^tration was lacing the pieo>
pic he itopcd to rule. The right
word is “ rule/*
for tliis was in the
days wh'n kings
iverc kiHes and
not mc<.‘« signers
. of oth^r m en’s
docum ents. And
IhiS's, p a rticu la r
kin? w as none
othir Ihinn the son.
the one and only son, of iho famous Of. Foremwi
Kinr; Solnmon. His name was
Rchnbaam, and if ever a greater
f*M>l lived on this earth, history hns lost record. As a matter of
fact he cculd not be king auto>
ma'ically. The nation had not be»!i a kingdom very long; there
had b.^cn only three , kings in alt
Satil. Dn\'id and Solomon. And In
every ca.se. the king had been'
clcctf^d by vote ot the people. It
\va.^ whiit wc would call techni*
cally nn clcctivc monarchy* not
yyt a hereditary one. So Reho> ho.im had to persuade the people
tliat he- '/as worthinR electing. He
could not be king of any tribe if
that tribe did not vote for him.
A Eoyal Pool
• Rehohoam now proceeded to do
evetylhfnR wrong. The people a.'iksd him the perennial question:
What .ihniit taxes? Solomon's reign
had hccn inngnificent—if you lived in Ih.^ i)nl.*}ce. If you lived out in
the vllln:;cs or on a farm it looked
diffarcnt. The royal officers were
evcrj'whivo. bleeding the people
' for all the taxes and all the forced
labor that the royal magnlAcence
required for Its upkeep. The peo
ple told nchoboam tliat Solomon's yoke was si‘l«vaii&; ;hey begged
him to innl:c it lighter. Rehoboa'm
a?J:s f:ir 'iv.J--* to think.,He spends
that time advice. The older
ca<nv£el!oi’t. ins father’s trusted wise men. tpll him to go light on
the people, in fact they give him
the whole theory of good govern
ment in a nutshell: “If you wiU
be a servant unto thto people . . .
then they will be your servants
for ever.” Then Rehoboam' asks
tiie younger men. his own con
temporaries. what he shall do.
They give him the completely
foolish advice to bear down on
the people.' treat 'em rough, tell
(hem nothing good. So the feckless
Rehoboam goes out and says In
effect. ’'You took a beating in
my father’s time—but you haven’t
seen anything yet. If he beat you with whips. I’ll beat you with
scorpions.”
ilM HMiirti Mi Nlnily-IIlM
H tp m tilitnOf course Rehoboam lost the
election. Only one tribe stood by
him. The rest went oft and elect
ed another king of their own. A
kingdom that David had won by
courage and Solomon had held
by wisdom, was kicked away by
Rehoboam out of sheer foolishness. What made Rehoboam such
« fool? It was not his youth. At
the time of this episode he was
forty years old. and If a man has
no sense by the time he is forty,
it is too late to hope. Part of the trouble may have been his 999
stepmothers. Solomon was mar
ried a thousand times,. but we
have no record ot any children
except this man Rehoboam. Con
sidering what harem intrigues
are like In the Orient, and con
sidering the fact that most if not
all ot Solomon's immense harem
were heathen women, it would
not be surprising if Rehoboam's mother (who herself was a heath*
en from Ammon) was over-sup
plied with bad advice from Re-
hoboam’s nosy stepmothers. Some
fools are born, some are miid
They are home-made, many «f them. One of the best ways to
produce a fool in your iaihily is
to listen to all the s ^ i d advice
the neighbors can five you.
T te V«lN iM ip irfiiM
Another thing wiis wrong with
Behoboam, and lor this we can
not blame his mother nor bis con-
- gregation of stepmothers. It was his own fault that lie preferred
to Ustm to the men his own age,
men who like hlnwelf had grown up in the luxury of the court, men
who knew nothing of practical af
fairs, preferred to listen to them,
the vetoes of inexperience, ratti
er than to the older men. whose
advice Solomon had tried aitd pre
sumably found good. Rehoboam
' being himself without experience
could not tell, of course, before
hand. whether the older nr young-
cr men were right.
Scientists Study '
Camel's Ability
To Witiistand Fever
DURHAM. N.' C.—Two Duka University sclenUsts who headed
an e}q>edltion to the Sahara Desert .
have returned with'new knowledge ot one of the world's most astound*
ing beasts—the eamd.The zoologists are Dr. Knui
Schmidt-Nielsen and hia wifie Dr.
Bodil Schtanidt-Nielsen* who took thehr three.children with them on
an expedition to a desert oasis
900 miles inland from Algiers. Hie
undertaking was financed by the'
Guggenheim PoundaUon. UNESCO
and the U. S. Government
Dr. Schmidt-Nielsen says the ex
pedition gathered'extensive data
on the camel's heat regulation mechanisms, water conservation
and kidney function.
; The camel can stand increases
in body temperature of as much
as 11 degrees Farenheit. he says, an increase equivalent to critical
fever in man and most anim ^.Perspiration in human beings
keep b ^ temperature at constant level, the zoologist explains, while
the camel begins sweating only
after a considerable increase in
body temperature and even then
does not v drip with perspiration. This stinginess with body moisture
is one ot the reasons camels can
go for weeks and months without
a drink of water.
The camel does not have a spe
cial compartment in his stomach,
hump or elsewhere for storing wa
ter. Dr. Schmidt-Nielsen says,
pointing out that the hump con
sists mostly of fai
The experimental work includ
ed weighing camels by means of a
massive scale and canvas sling; analyzing blood and urine sam
ples; and dissecting camels for
study ol stomach, kidneys, and other organs. . ,
Remote 'Uncle' Not
True Missing Link
WASHINGTON--An extremely remote **uncle” ot mammalf and
man stm survives after at least
300.000,000 years.
Such is the codacanth. the an
cient fish abundant as a fossil
coeval with the earliest dinosaurs,
two living specimens ot which .have
been found in the Indian Ocean.
. When discovery of the first living fish of this supposedly long-
extinct group was announced a few years ago. the creature was
widely described as a “missing
link.’' This is far from true, says
a report issued by the Smithson
ian Institute. While they may
repreMDt a infesing link to sense (they are close to the orlg-
inal condition from which the land- dwelling back-boned animals
arose) and they do Breathe air.
they leek one important feature—
the ability to breathe air through
their nostWs. They could not adapt
themselves to the land when their
habiUto started drying up and
icmnd shelter only in the sea. In
dications were that they v ^ tu r^ into deeper and deeper water with
the millenniums but underwent no
major physical change. The r e ^ of great, depths probably enabled
tham to survive.
Water Heater Potential
Bomb If Not Protected
CHICAGO - n » caretal moto^
1st. fully alert to the hazards of driving In heavy traffic, may, with-
out knowing it. be runntog a far gceater risk to life and limb when
relaxing in ttie comfort of his
own living room.He may be sitting over a potential bomb in the basement it the
water heater is overheating and
•building up latent explosive en*
•W -Most ex(dosions are caused by lack of the proper safety controU
in ttie form ot pressure and tem« perature relief valves. Some **pro.
tected” heaters may explode U the temperature safety valve has not
been checked periodically to Insure
OMSt-to-Coast Air
Miles Shortenefd'
WASHINGTOM-On Sentember 30. New York and San Francisco
stood 3,000 air miles apart Now
the •traight-line flying distance is only 2.360 mites.
Bast and west coasts have not
moved closer together, nor have
the airlines fotmd a shortcut The
difterence lies in the word “miles.''
, After five years of preparation,
civil aviation in the United States has officially switched from statute
or *1and" miles to nautical miles
and k i ^ in reporting distances
and speeds. Pilots, tiower opera-
tors and weathermen now tise sea
language, as miUtaiy aiimen ct
all branches have d < ^ since 1M7.
MoHling the Mosher
TORONTO—A 72-year-otd grand- ipbther told poUce how to handle
men who accost ladles on the street at night
Mrs. Tonette Pontatae said that when a “heavy - set fellow ”
grabbed her by the arm as she
w aited fo r a stre e tc a r, she
grabbed a rock and hit him *'a
iriiack oa the bead he won't Ibr- get" and Ibe^ got oo bar street-
ear. .
tebHe
S.KindoTportableetalr
«.Mait*a
M-Buro*
■ pean -coimtry <poaa.r
M .A kind of
'•.A n ear
•rpriiitcd wwrti
tiOiirae .
(Oolloq.1ll-PnaaIH IM h
93.Marry ,
S3. ArmMfCd < carM. Paper tube forslpplac
liquids
If. Matted
fabrics 3«, To look
lt.Buehariatle
8<kft^ure 11. HI (prefix)
3I.IrrigaU
M.V^ect
groove ST.Frlar'a title
S»..Wavy
(Her.> Sl.Fun • of
31. Church '
way
betwceit
HL-ji-! :l[^
;ii'iL-xoio j ijnii
jj JLici:-5 'Jnii
;-i:-:?]rr.i Liuaau Ml uii-j :zi: inpi
M .Oeverei
with
3T. Hebrew month 3».8eed
41. Snare 43.War Depait- ment labbr.)
39. Vase with afoot 30. An aerial 3 l MeasuN <Anc.
Arab.)
39. Neuter pronoun36.Colorau2^;i %
37. Sacred bull ^
lEgypt)
33. Pinch
40. Serbian43. Winter precipiU.
tion <pl.)
44. Betimes ‘
4& Whirlpool 46. Woodyperennial DOWN
1. Friction match2.BurHronh
3. Melodies
F
~
r
i :
P
!7
P
iP
Tuberculosis Cost
Great—To f 31
And to Taxpiiyers
NEW YORK—To the icxpayer,
tuberculosis means 3^00,000,000 a
sfear. That figure represents the cost ot findbig the cause of tuber
culosis. of caring for. the tuber
culosis patients, ot public health
nursing for the tuberculous, ot
healQk education. rehabHltaUon.
medical resisarch, pensions to veterans with tuberculosis, and as;
sistancb to famlUes .whose wage
earner or homemaker bas tuber-
These expenditures, are largely
from public funds, but also lnch:de
expenditures of private, voluntary
fagencies engaged in the fight
against tuberculosis. They do not
hichide the cost of hospital con
struction or ttie cost ot training
professional personnel to care fur
the sick. ^
To the nation, too. tuberculosis means the loss of 1.000,000 work
ing years' each year.
' The objective of the NaUoifal Tuberculosis Association and its
3.000 affiliated associations (located in the U. S., Alaska, C ^ l
Zone. Guam. Hawaii arid Puerto Rico) is to prevent tuberculosis.
With funds raised from the an> nual sale of Christmas Seals, tlw
tuberculosis associations are try- hig to make.it as difficult as pos^si-
ble for people to “catch" tiU>er-
culosis.One difficult is'that many peo^
pie with active tuberculosis do not know they are 01 and may be
spreading the disease without even betaig aware of their own illness.
Appiwtimately 400,000 persNis
in this country are estimated to
have tuberculosis but only 2S0.000
are known to liealth authorities.
liverinc morf^ than 29>>)n9 i)Iows - each socond. TJie blows are only
1/1000 of »r inch.in depth stm the
tremendous spcc-d «>*! '-lie blowr and •
relatively lifiht tov.cl- o£ thr drill
is rcspcnslblc for the painlessness
of the operation
Radioactive P. !ls Among
Future Atomic Wonders
NEW YORK—Doctors of tite fu- ture Will carry radioactive piUs
in their littie black bags to treat a
variety of diseases.
Such is the prediction made by
Dr. Willard P. Libby, recentiy ap
pointed to the Atomic Energy
Commission.
17»e study of radioactive mate-
. rials has occupied most of the professional life of Dr. Libby, who In
vented the '‘atomic time clock*’ radioactive dating method. Among
the first things Dr. Libby dated
by the new technique was wood from Egyptian tombs. He has
dated hundreds of samples, rang
ing from human iialr to skin, lotus
seeds and Biblical scrolls.'Peacetime applicaUons of atom*
ic energy will repay us for some
o( our worries. ?ay.s'Dr. Libby, who' also predicts new methods
for improving plastics bytirrida* tion. harnessing of the atom for
electrical power, and control of /
normal day-to-day operations ot
industrial plants by applications
of radiochemistry. ' -:
Cose of Smuggled
Whiskey Is Costly
SAJJ FRANCISCO - A c«K of
tax-free whiskey Herbert L. fing*
Strom tried to smuggle in from
' a foreign country cost much more
tb^n thp local product
" Engstrom,. 59. marine engineer ' on a freighter, paid $22 for a ^ase
of whiskey in a foreign port and
tried to br^ng it Into the U. S.
A (ederol-Court assessed the fol-
iowiug levies after he was caught: '
$m.3n tax on the whiskey. 316.33
pcubUiiis, ISO fine; $104.00 fine for
the ship’s captain for ^rm ittlng .
him to bring the whiskey ashore,
’ $300 tor the return of EngBtrom's
confiscated eutomoblle. Total' cost:
liSUl.ie.'plus lawyer’s fees. ^
No Star Qnz’nflWBST DES MOINES. lowa-The
ceilins i« the new l.West Oes
Moines Methodist Church Is made,
of-'standard acoustical board, but .
the holes aren't ri a -tra.lghfltoc
.—they’re scriticved ,Explains . Tl^e R» v. H Henry
New Dental D rill
Truly'Painless',
NEW YORK~The old gag about '
the so-called “painless dentist" is
DO Imger' a gag for nillUons of
Americans, thanks to a new pre-
cision dental drill.
The new ultrasonic drills does not cut or drill In the usual sense'.
of the word, but removes the solid
matter with mlscroscopic precision
—drilling by souijd wave.'The absence of pain is prob
ably expUined by Uie fact tiiat . . the drill never gets hot when It is ... Tee»e: The coin'fll ^ee- chose the
driUing the patient's teeth. Much . kind twlth the . ho es spattered
of the pain caused ^ standard ro* .-.cross U. Now, nobody who hap-
tating dental drill' «'attsed by\' pon^ to gi?.nce'up- ^vhen he> in
‘ heat from friction. v ..hu:*ch wlU begin to co-mt the
The new dental drill nas p metal | nK« of t^ei-fora^ ons and forget'tv head that moves up and dovm de- ' l-st'jn to my serntMm.'*
♦ FOR RENT ♦
S.PACE IN THIS>APER
; y / i l i A i t « , 9 . t « 'S u »
6 0 0 0 NEIGHBbltS^'-NK£S TO. nr yoim tusMESS
IF Y O U H A V E^
.'been oh ■ trip'
.ciiMtMlhed guMU
cd cb n ^ ib ttth d n
eaughta bjg fi.h
moved '
eJoped
h»d*b«bvlrbeeninafi^t
Mldyoiithoc. '
tudanopmtton
bought a cu . '
pfdnted Tirar houK
'been i^ariri;^, ’
ciit a niew nolb
been .hot' :
•tolen anv^hing
been tbbbed
•old out '
lo*t your halt '
been aireNed -
\
. Or Done i\nything At AH
Telephone,r Or Drop a PoitraH, Or Come In,
Or In Anj; Convenient Wajr Inform .;.: -
THE DAVIE RECORD
V
}
Dskvie Record
Has Been Published Since 1899
55 Years
Otheii have come and (onc^jrour
countir newapaper keepa Roing.
Simetimea it iiaa aeemedjiard to
i ^ e "biiekle and tongue” meet,
but ^ n the aun ahinet and we
^ m^ch on. Our faithful aubaeriben /.
auMrt of-whom pay promptlv. give ua r.
eourage and abiding faith in our. -
<: fellaw nian...
r j lf your , na^ b.^ talcmg The
R ^ rd tell him to aubaeribe. The :
prke iaonlr^^SI.SO/per Tear in , the :
^ ^ t e . and $2.00.i;t'other atatea. .
Ybu^^ C^ To Town
» |la^ Your
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. . •The Davie Record
, DAVIE C0 trNTT?Sv0 1 .DBST N EW SPA PER -TH E PA PE R TH E PE O PL E UEiLD
y .
-H Cn SNAU -.IIB K ^ THE p conxv M tam MAINTAiNi tJN A ^^ - '
J
■
v o tp tm Lv. f \' MbCKSVILLB. WORTH CAROLINA, WHDNESDAY APRIL ao, |<HS. ; ;NUMBBR ,17
m
NEWS OF ip G ACa
WkM Wm H a p p ^ f in Di.
vio B o ^ 'i^ k to f Mater*
; And Abbravtaiod %irtk
. (Dairle Record, Apr. 17. I9I*)
H Ira Bertlia te e ipent W edaea-
day In yrin'ston shopping;
. G . ' Angell j made a
■ ;frtp_«o n ^ a to n h r t week.
. M n /U t^G aitber. and dangb^
> ter, MIm Sarab, apeni T b n r ^ a r In
WlnMon sk o i^ n g .
N oab O r l i ^ o( C anp Seirler.
.'ap en tafew dava M week iHlb
/ b l i . i ^ i m a n d 'trie 'd . at Coolef.
B. i. S n llb , Clyde Ijam ea; S
F . I^ k l^ :> n d W (;F. Stoncalreet,
w lm lim V ;' io
'brlug •M e a o to eio M ln o m to
Sanrord‘a> G a r ^ , arrived bere
: aafe v^nd aonnd lait; :,vWedneriav
<>««ing' witb Ihim .Vnleka. and one
v l^ c e . The bijra were on the
• road.seven'Jays, and covered a.
.-bsnl eleven bnndrcd miles. Tbev
say tbe roads, wim fine nnHI tbey
'strtick the v i^ a l* . The trip was
. rn.de w itb^t mishap, except tbst
Ston^reet'itot'lcat a time or two
while ps^ng throagh the village
of Plttal^rg,.Pa
Uias Ssrnh C lie n t spent Sat
aiday;ln Winston sbopplnK.
Mr. Jake Douthit has been over
for a week or so with bis .sister
Mra. B. H. Morris.
Mrs. B. H; Morris and Miss Os.
ale Allison spent tbe'week.eud wItb
Mrs. Doutbll at Idols.
- Mrs. JoKn anble and mother,
H n Ottffin, aM little grandson.
WIIHam' Kerr. o( Hickory; are
apending this w «k with relatives
In Winston.
Hits Mary SanloMVretnmed
Snndarfrom a n e x t^ M vtMsIt to
. bet brother In Chattanooga,
waa aecomosnled home bv Mr. and
Via. H. A. Sanf6id.
Jasob Stewart, .. jr :;, one of onr
aoMler boys at Csnip JaekaM, bad
the misfortune to gat . . ^ of hla
. fintgera badiv shiaahed .'lait .Tne».
dav. wblie working with •....motor
. truck. The Snger had to he am
putated. A
-bim Satnrday'savs he l« wtting a.
long all right.
J. W. and J. C. Wellmaui who
•ra in the Field Artilleiy, Camp
McCMIand,‘Alabama. Rev. B . M.
: Wellman; of Stonewall. N. C „ and
end, B . W, Wellman, of Wllming;.
toii, Pelawsre. spent a few daya
last week with their brother and
!r. at Cooli
i-
M
^ f . John Minor made a bnsl
' nen'tHp to WInslon-SaJem the Erst
of the weeit. ' ' / i
MUs iHargaret Meronev. who
has held e' position a pasltlon In
: Lenoir for some time, returned
home Satarday. ;
Fred Lanier snd k. X . Chaffin,
both of the Calabaln .•action, pnr.
ebaaed antomoMlea Isst week. 'An.
tomoUIesare gating as coasmon
aa wheelbarmwii la Davie.
Revenue officm visited the Y.d
kin Valley aectlon lii Davie Friday
evening and destroyed tb m Mock,
•de dlatineriea. The,operator made
thelr.'eaeape. '':' '
MiasBesle Wood,Ief R. 4. left
Monday for WInstotf Salem.'wbere
abe wni'teaeb for a few. sn»k In
the absence of her sister, MlaaBaU'
lab' Vernon, who undenm t ai
oparatioii a fewdays ago. '
• Mr. and . Mra. I. R. Bolling, of
Wloaton.SalemV came p*tr. I a at
vKckto apend several daya sHth
nlathwa near Coanty Lliie. Mr.
Belling returned lo ;Wtaatpe the
fitat of the week, bullitnk. BblllBg
w iUM iale (or aome time. - ;
F lw .yo u n g;m .w lll leave tor
Camp .fackaon an 'PfMav; April •*6th. and tee eoloMd !|uen artll
leey^ tor lb* aamejeaaqi oe AVrll
■' «iib. -iThe namea-bave. not, yet
ail ilite puhlle.. It h tboutbt
at juibthat baueb 'of boya will
;iain« b«l|Nn w y lad lotb.
OPEN FORUM
In order to perform the work of
tbe Milleninm in the «IlotlM< time,
many remsrkeble chanw will
inangnrated. >The physical im>
provement of the earth Itself' win
be one of the changes. At present
nearly three.foiirtbs of the earth>
snrfece, la submerged under. water.
The remainder is broken up into
frsgments of ^nd Islsnds and Irre.
enlarcnnUnents'wsehed by vsst;
restless sess and corrugated' with
oerpendlcular monntalns. broad de
solate desert, and deep Mhal mO:
lasses o t. swampl»od. All Ibis
must make wsy for the Milleninm.
In that. aweJnsplrltie moment of
convulsion and conflsgratloh 'which
will accompany the appearance ’ of
Ibe Lord on the Mount of Olives,
He shall command the great deep,
and It sbull he driven bsek Into Ibe
north conntrle., and the Islands
shsll hecome nne land. John, tbe
Revelstor, described It as a -great
earthquake “ such as was not since
1 were upon the earth.” Rev.
16. And he ss(d; “ Every moun
tain and Island were, moved oat of
their olam .” Referring to the
le thing, Isaiah said: "Everv
yalley shall'he exalte snd every
mountain and'hlll shall made
low, and the orooked shall he msdr
stralebt.and the rough places plsln
Isaiah, 40, Tbe sno<r.^Dped peaks
of mountain chains will nash from
their pinnaclcs In the sky and the
de^ valleys of desert snd marSb.
land will fill themselves with the
debris. The description o f this
psst event gives literal significance
to leremlab’s prophetic account of
that future event when not only
thia continent bnl the cruat of the
whole eaith will roll, and quake: VI
beheld the eartb,. and lo. It 1
without form and void; and tbe
heavens, md tdey bad no light. ..I
beheld the mohntains, and lo th ^
RepoH
KeMI trade has always beeu eX'
euipt from the provisions of the
frferal mlnlmnm wage law. Non,
It li( teported| an effort is to be
made both tici Increase the wage,
and'at the same time snbject fe.
tnlliogtottae law.. .
The case against doing that Is a
powerfnl one, which sboi>Id be geo
erally understood—sod It 'concers
the welfere of the worker and the
consumer, as well »»the relall'e'm-
plover.
For ooe thing, retailing Is es^en*
ilsllo S' local .bu!iuess. Even
though a store mav be 'a cliafn
system, 0 ' aiEIialed with other
stores In buying gronps; it must
adlust to the coudltions In the spe.
cjfic ahopping arae'ln which It Is,
iwated. Ita wage, scales innst be
cothpetlve and fair.
Second, the amount that can be
spent for payroll In any store must
Iw relelM to the volume of busi
ness. In a small town lorexampfe
a aalesperson caa*t sell as mticb
rchandlse In a given peHod of
time as her connte'part in a bust
ling blg.dty slote. Yet the per
cent of payroll co t to the volune
mnat he relai Ivelj equal every
where.
Third, legislatively, forced in
crease In retail operating costs, nn.
ompsnied hy increases in pro
ductivity. cannot help, but raise
pricea and reduce sales.^al tl«e ex.
pense of farm and factory produc.
era as consumers. ,
Fourth, local compelition be.
tm n buriness of all types In ob.
talning workers assures tiiat wages
«rtllbe(alr. •
Finally, the people coveied by a
Inlmum wage are those with: the
READ THEM AND WEEP
Sign In a Broadway' store in
New York: “Wanted-salesglrl.
Must be respectable until after the
holidays."
Sign in a lau.idrv: “No machln.
cry used to tear vour clothes. We
do It by hand.'^
From a newspaper: ‘'Pue to
the sho tage of newsprint, a num
ber of births will be postponed un
til next week.”
Sign In window of a fur shop^
Fur coats made from your own
skins." ;
GOING ON A TOOT
The pupils of a school were giv
en a holiday because'of the teach
ers' institute. One aeven-year-old
youngster startled hia ‘parents bv
aimouncine: **No school tomor
row. The teachers arc: going on
an innocent toot” .
HELPING ALQNG
She; Arc you doing anything
for that cold of vou s?
He: Well, I sneeze whenever It
want's me to. ^
I all 'th e bllla moved
lightly I hii>held and lo; 'th e trnlt.
ful nlace w u a w H deirm ^ and > «l|
t h e cities thereof m re broken
dikwu at the prearace of the L ord."
'John tb i ^ m la to r ’also n id ; " t o
t)iere was a great eartbuuarke. and
'tiiT ran iia6ame black' «a 'sackcloth
of .halr. V Rev. 6; All of this ele
mental debacle designed M t o
one purimae 10 reatore.tbe earth tb
Its fbrm er perfection. T he result
will he the replacement of uatitreN
ho^lle liirrlers w ith the graceful
contour of broad meadows and rich
plaina, broken only b y shallow
valea or gentle slop^ and ex trad .
Ing to th e rim .o f the horlzlon In
every direction.'* Four generi.
tions alter the great'flood, the
earib waa "divided.'' (Gen. 10;)
It'w onld -appear that this event,
which tm k pisce In the days of
Peleg, waa caused by the'.sinking
of cert.ln ponlons of the'-’earth's
surface tjiereby perm itting vast re
gions to be-fliroded' by the ses.
Ho longer was,, (han’a haM iatlob
••one land" but It w m divlded-'inr'
alanda and «»nllnents and Am eri.
ca thereby liM Its form er ceonec
tion arlth the malnl,and of SUraaia;
Today only >8% of the earth's'anr.
face is ahove aea level and alode
m uch o f th e terrain la difficult
eulilvate; th e present popnlatiein
potential of 'the.eailth Is greatly r ^
alrteted. ' This will b .e Change'.
N ot.only will the'existing terrain
become amooth a n d prod^tlvir,
(see L uke j:s) but the greipl deep
sbail te d r l» ^ back tetd the nBrtb
eountrr. and tbe ialanda .abMI-
come one land an d the n r tb
beH lie •a’lt.w .s.ln il» d a y ^ t|e i
it WM d ivldi^.^ ^ I t i mnat all : be
don* l ^ rjiW I th e p ro p h e c y ;^
M e r to tbe.m'uttltdde'' that' - tb m
will be a 'M ittitla n o f all tbinga.
(see A cta 3:3 1). I ; ,
- . M. t . HtiMNETt.
•. D u ^ N . C .
I fewest akilla and tbe least experi
!.' They are a very ii-.ited value to tbe employer. Tlios, II
tbe.arblnary wage extended to re.
tailing, atore onerstois woold be
face^ 10 reduw this tind ol em- iloyment to ^he bare mlnlmnm. There would he fewer jobs open—
and fawer opporfnnltlas for people
to get the training tjiat leads. 10
better-paid noslllons. — Lincoln
TImea. '
Under and by.ivirtue of the i
er of aale conialned in a cei
NOnCEOFSALE
pow-
certain
deedof trpst executed by Boone
Foster and srife Sally Foster, to
Robert S. McNeill, Trustee, dated
the J3rd day of May.; 1953, and re
corded in Book 41. osge 23, In the office 01 the Register of Deeds ol
Dave County;.and nnder and by virtue of the authority vested In the undenigned as subsiitnted trustee
by.an.instriiment ol writing dated
the 4th day of April, 1953, and recorded lo Book —. page —, in the office of Register ol Deeds ,of Da^
vie Conntv. delanit having been
made lo the payment of the in-
debtrdneaa tbefeby secdred and the of ■ trnat being oy the terms thereof aubieet to foreclosure,
•nd the holder'of the Indebtedness
thereby secured having demanded
a'forcetaisnre thereof for the pur.
pose of aatlafylng ssld indebtedness, the nnderslgiied substituted trustee
wjll offer for salt al public auction
tothe highest bidde/'for ’cssh, at
the court boiise'door: In.'.Mooks- villciN. C , on the 7|h. day of
Hay, 195s, tbe land .convey^ - In
aaid 'de^ortriiat, the . same lying
and being In 'Iemsateoi Township,'
Davie County, Notth Carolina, and mare particularly described as fol-
Being lola.Noa 6a. 63. 64, 65,
66, 67, 6 *..^ , 70, 71, 7J, 73, 41, 4a, 43. ^ and 45 of the Sam Fos. ter Sulidivlalon. as per survey sfld
plat made bv A, L';.- Bowles. Snr
veyor. May,-1953. And said .plat recorded h> Map.Bi»k No. ‘3. page
IS. in the Reglstei of Deeds cBce
of Dade County, North Carolina,
to which feleredceis hereby made
(or amote piriicular description
IPor titledeed' from E. C,
Mofria t& Boone Foster and wife,
Sally Foster, dated May 36,' 1953
and dulv recorded In aaid office/
ThJ« iat day of April, 195.S.
v CLACDB HICKS,. - Suhatituted Trusiee.
BIG BEDBUGS
A proup of Chicagoans were
showing a visiting Texan the city.
“What do you think ot our stock
yards?” they asked.
Man, we got brandin’ rarrala
in Texas bigger’n this.” .
■“Well.” they asked further,
Iwh'atdo you think of, the impos.
ing skyscrapers of the Chicago <ky-
liner
-Why, man, we got tombstones
in Boot Hill bigger than those,’
That night they put a brace, of
snapping turtles in his bed. WIten
h'e turned down the covers ^ and
asked' whar they were, he was
told. "Illinois bedbugs ”
He peered at them a moment,
“So they are." he agreed, “young
'uns, ain’t they?”
IN BAD SHAPE ,
Man at payroll window to wor
ker: “Soi:ry, but with tne- deduc
tions for tlie Sunshine Fund, so
cial security, withholding tax. hos
pitalization, savings bonds, union
dues, life insurance and gift fund,
vou .owe us $6.80!“
Do.You Read The Record?
OurCm ri^And
Social Sepmty
By Loula H. Clement, Muiager.
Question: Mav an Individual
draw his monthly sodal security
payments and continue to work?
-Answer: When an individual
has reached the age of 72, and has
qualI6ed for sotial security .hene>
fits, he may receive his payments
regardless of the amount of his
earnings. Any beneficiary under
the age of 72 is entitled to his so
cial security checks for all moAths
in the*year provided his wages as
an employee or his net earnings
from self-employment, or a com
bination of the two, do not axceed
$1200 In the year. If his earnings
exceed $1200 In a year,- he loses
one month’s check for each
that is in excess of $1200. Under
this ptovliion, a beneficiary under
age 72 who has net' eaminss front
$1200.01 to *1280 would lose one
month'« check; from $1280.01 to
$1365» two months* checks; and so
oh until his eamings reach
0^.01» or more, wh^n he would
lose checks for all .12 inonths
the year. This permits a person
to accept parc;time' or seasonal
work that pays him up to , $100 a
month and still receive all of his
monthly benefit checks. For fur
ther information, contact the So
cial Security Office, 301 Postoffice
Building. Salisbury.
If you have any question con-
cerningvour social securitv* you
might write us ac 361 Post Office
BaildinR. Salisbury* N. C* or see
our repredentative who visits the
Court House, Mocksville N. C,
on the first and third Fridays of
nch month from lltSO'ltSO.
Jordan Graduates
Fort Knox, Ky.^—Pvt. George O.
Iordan, whose wife, Delores, Uvea
at 24 Center St., Cooleemee, N. C.
recently was graduatad from the
Army's Armored School at .Fort
Knox, Kv: ■
Private Iordan completed the
school’s armor track veliicle main
tenance course.
^ n of Mr. and Mrs. George D.
Jordan, 26 Main St., Cooleemee,
h!i entered the Armv in August
1954 and completed basic training
at Fort Jackson, S..C.
NOTICE TO CREDlTORa
Havine as executor ofthe estate of Charlie Hege, deeeas- ed« |ate of Davie* County, North
Carolina, this is to notify all per*
sons holding claims against said
es'ute, to present them to the un- dietsigned'within 12 months from date hereof, or this notice will be
plead in bar of their recovery. A I
persons owing said estate will
make immediate settlement. Tliis
March 21, 1955.
BOBBY CLAY HECE,
Exr. of Charlie H ^e, Decs’d.
B. C. Brock, Attorney. •
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
. Having qualified as-> administrators of tlie esthte of S. C. Ci^rter,
dtfc^sed, late of Oavic County,
^drth Ca^lina. this is -to .potify
ail persons holding claims against said estate to present them to the
undersigned ■ within 12. months
from date hereof, or this notice
>vi11 plead in bar of their i^ v * ery. 'AH'personsowiiig said es* tate w ill make immediate settle*
ment. 1 his March 16,1955.
C. R. CARTER.
P.M . CARTER,
Admrs. of S. C. Carter,'DecsM.
George W, Martin, AttVv ' '
Seen Along Main Sticet
Br The Street Rambler. r
. oooooo •
Sidewalks iiill of childmi cartV'
ing biddies of many colors home
from furniture store-M r. and Mta.
Gerald Bernard working thdrway
around the square paying billa—
Maxle Swlcegood getting a 75 cent
hair cut on Friday afternoon—Mrs.
S. S. Short talking about apoiding
th m weeks In Atlwta—^Rev. Rob-'
ere Oakley getting a Friday after
noon haircut—Ernest- Hunt talk
ing ' boiit running foot-race .with
Harvev Blackwelder-Lovely lu .
from Farmington wearing.old-fadt<
ioned hoop-skirt on busy morning '
—)oe Murphy modeling sport
coats on hot morning—Sue D»y-
walt doing, some morning dime
store shopping—FIoretta Collette
looking ac new spring dfease. —
Grant Daniel wearing coat of tey~.
eral colors aroiind the ' 'Miuaie—
Prospective bride walking around
the square window shppplhg on
her wedding day—Young lady on
her way down Main street carty;-
ing four coca-colas and a tray o(.
sandwiches—RIke Willson threat
ening to go home and make a ga».
den-Guilford Miller negotiating
for bottle of medicine - Mrs; Wade
Furches dotng some after dinner
shopping—Mrs. Henry Snyder in
Nora StAoley CreasonV!t
R. C. Creason
Notice of Service of Process
By Pubtication
T o R. C. Crea.»!on:
Tflke Nuiic« tbat
a pleiinini; wekliiit relief
(>ainsi you has Iwen filed in the a
nove «»tt(led action.'
The nature of Hie relief b«ni*
souKht Is u tijiu f«r divorce by said
plaintiff, N*ra Stanley Creason, a
KxinHt.said defendant, N. C Crea
son
Yoii are req dred to make de.
fense lo sticb pleadimt not latei
than May 13. I95S. 'OU'failure to do so the parties i*e.*kinc
service against you will apply to
the court for the relief demanded.
Tills Ike 8th dav of M«irch. 1955
S. H. C H A F F IN .
Cleik of Superior Court.
Shoaf Coal &
Sand Co. .
We Can Supply Vour Needs
IN GOOD COAL,
SAND and BRICK
Call or Phone U . At Any Time
PHONE 194
FPrmeriv Davie Btlclc&.CoalCo
HILLTOP
Service & Supply
HOPES t o SERVE YOU
. EVEN BETTER IN 1955
Gag, Oil SuppHe*
Also A Nice Une Of
rV egetablet,
And Staple CracoM*
, We Appreciate Yoor
' Bnnnew
J w T h iix
C%ifBer' .„
dime store buying flowers—Pedes*
trian wanting to know'when the
next bus would arrive—Mra. R. H. .
Weaver hurrvlog to beauty .hop— .
Mrs. Grace Call on; her i wav to
freezer locker to look after supply
of meat—C. C Bailey; John Bowles
and Hamp Jones talking thing,
over on Main street—Mrs. Arthur
Daniel doing some 'afternoon shop*
ping—Mrs. Willie Button trying
to cross Main street throiii^ heavy
traffic—A ex Tucker taking a half '
holiday—Mrs. Luke Grave, taking
time off to drink a cup of coiree—
Bill Radedge and F.ank Saflev ait*
ting on lawn chair in front of fur
niture store talking about «ilMn
the world was young—Knox |ohn>
stone taking time off ret get hate '
cut—Mrs. S. W. Bowden and Mra.
Broadus Clontz doing some sun
ny morning shoppltig—J. L. Foster'
carrying big b-x across Main St—
Misses Sallle Hanes and Mary
Heltman' chatting in postoffice lob-!
by— Gilmer Brewer parting with
silver dollar—Harley Sofley taking -,
time out to s w ^ barber shop—'
J. D. Collette doing aome trading -
around town on windy morning
—Ph9masene Havn^ carrying a
big l<nd of books down Main
Street-Lee Baker greeting friend,
around the town-Rev,E.W .Tur«
ner talking with friends on Main
street—Hubert Lashmit and b ^
policeman hoMing a ' caucus in
small park, on Sunday afternoon—
Mrs. W. M. Pennington on her
way to Gift Shop—G. K. Husser
browsing around in auto store—
Mrs. I. N. Smoot shopping around;
in dime store—Spurgeon Ander
son hurrying down Main Mreet on
windy dav—Mrs. Clyde Youngatid
small, daughter shopping aiaund
the square. ' _________
PAfiBTWO --------S-!—^-----—----------------------^-----;_______________________:_5_____^
Iflii PAVIE M8C0BD. MOCKBVlttE, B. C . APBlL 80. 196B
THE DAVIE RECORD.
C. FRANK STROUD. EDITOR.
TELCFttONC
Bnttted atthePostofflee in Mode** m e , N. Cm m Seeond-elftM Mtll nwttor«lUrchH, 1908.
;sDBScwpnow Rxm
OHB YEAR. IN N. CAROLINA « I.SO SIX MONTHS tN N. OAROLINA • 78c. ONE YEAR. OUTSmE STATK • <8,«0 SIX MONTHS. OUTSlOE STATE . $1.00
Talk in cheap here but land
keeps soing up.
1' takes some talk but a tot of
hard work to make a town grow.
It h sometimes easy to talk a
gcwd thing to death. What this
town needs is more workers and
fewer talkers.
Remember that newspaper
space is our stock in trade. When
vciu ask for free space please bear,
in'mind that there ate perhaps a
dozen more who have a campaign
on which they think is just as im
portant as vou think vours is.
The Record desires to aid alt
worthy causes just as far as posst^
ble. but our space is limited and it
is by selling space that we are en
abled to run a paper and support
our family.
From Florida
My Dear Stroudt^Please change
my mai'ine address of the Davie
Record to Gainsvilte. Fla. It
might be interesting for you to
know that you will have one sub
scriber read>ng vour paper out oh
Orange Lake between <ish bites, 1
will have one eve on the paper
and one on my fishing cork. 1
have be^n a subscriber to vour
paper for over thirty five years
and 1 guess I will be when I pass
beyond. Good luck.
Your Friend^ Kf L. COPE,
H'. tt, Foster
Funeral services f.<r W. H. Fos
ter, 68, of Wlnston.Salem, were
held at 1:15 p. m. Sunday at the
home, and at 2:30 p. m.. at Bethel
Methodist Chutch, with Rev. W.
C. Anderson and Rev. A.chie
Jones officiating and the body laid
to rest in the church cemeterjr.
Mr. Foster died Friday morning
at his home. He was a native of
Davie County, but left here about
30 years ago. Surviving are three
. sons, two sisters, one of them be
ing Mrs. Pearl Cartner, of MockS'
vl lei two brothers and six grand-
chlldten.
Lucky Boy
A Mocksville senior at Waice
Forest has won a $1,000 scholar
ship from Duke G.aduate School
of Arts and Sciences.
John E. Durham, Jr., son of
Mayor J. E. Durham, will go to
Duke next fall to begin work In
American literature for a m.,ster*a
ikgRK—He is 21 years old.
John will graduate from Wake
Forest this apring with a Bachelor
of Arts degree. He is majoring
in English, minoring in French.
John plans a career in writing.
He is former editor of the col
lege magazine. The Student. He
is a member of Phi Beta, the
French Club, Sigma Phi .Alpha
(modem language group). Gamma
Sigma Bpsilon (chemtstr, frat) and
the Fhilomathesian Literary So
ciety.
Last year Johu was a candidate
for the preaide cy of the student
bvdy on a third party ticket.—
Winston-Salem lournal.
There will be a Chicl(en Pie
Supper at Advance School Cafe
teria, Sat.rday afternoon April
30th, from 5:00 to &00 o’clock,
benefit Advance Fire Department.
The public is cordially invited.
NOTICE-SALE*OF LAND
U oder aod bv virtue of the pow*
e r of sale contained in a certain
deed of trust ezccoied bv R D.
Ttttterow and wife. Jane J. Tiitte*
row, dated tlie i8tb of Febtuary,
1954. and recorded Id Book 44,
page 7 1. in the office of Register of
Deeds of Davie County, N orth Car
oHoa. default having been made in
the paymeiit of the Indebtedness
thereby secured, and »aid deed ot
trust being by the terms thereof
subject to foreclosure, the onder-
signed trustee will offer tor sale at
public auction to the highest aid.
der fot cash, at the Courthouse
door in Davie County. Norib Caro,
lioa. at noon, on the 14th dsy of
H ay, t955. the property conveyed
io said deed of trust, tl» s a a e ly
ing and being in the County of
Davie, and Stute of North Caro'ina,
and more particularly described as
follows:
Adjoining the land** of J B T ut.
lerow. N . B Dvson, Ralph Cwig*
gins and others sod bounded <ts
follows, to.w lt: Beginning at an
Iron stake on W est Side of road and
runs N orth s degs We<t i 75 cb«.
w ith road 10 irpn ^tlke; titence N.
71 W . 8.3&chs to a stake; thence
5.28 dee**. W . 1.80 chs. to an iron
stake; thence 8 . 71 degs. W 9 38
' ehains to the beuliminc c»'i|itintni(
one and 50100 (1 50*100) acres,
m ore or less.
F or tIMe Pee deed f cm J. B Tiit
tcrow et ux to R. D. Tntier< w,
el u* .. recorHed in the offi'-e r>f the
Register of Deeds for DI- It* Conn.
tf. N . C., in Book 54. p4«»e *14.
See also Commitsiouer's deed frnia
R. L. Baker. | F Cl<ck et «1.,
Commlssionera, to J B T<it*«’rnw.
Book 38. osge 335- al'otiing Lor
N o 7 to J. E. Tutterow.
T his 14th day of Aorii. 1955.
M A b K . CLIC K . TrtMtca.
Polio Vaccirte
The Hralth Depaumcnt wUI be
gin giving the Salk Polio Vacclue
to lim and second grade children
whose patents have algned requests
as soon as the vaccine p ro v i^ b y
the National Polio Foundation ii
made available heie. The local de
partment will be notified by tele
gram when the vaccine arrives io
Greensboro tor distribution to sur-
rounding counties. Under the
new policy oaly two shots will be
given this Spring-one when the
vaccine arrives and another . about
two weeks bter. The prognm
will be under the supervision of
the local physiciana, and the vac
cine W.II be administered by Dr.
I. L. Harris,.of the Health Depart
ment, and the public health nurses.
fHew Bttildinq
Hendricks & Merrell Furniture
Co.. are erec Jng a new brick, store building on Wilkesboro Street,
opposite Irvin Pontiac Co.» one
story, 80x100 feet. The building
will be readv for OM upancy with, in 60 days'i The furniture siore occupied by Hendrivks-Merrelt on
Salisbury street Is o w n^ by Wade
W. Smith, The Company will
move into their new building as soon as comoleted.
Benson Vf^ins ;
Boorie, April 12 WilUun H a^
ing Benson of Mocksville was elec*
ted president of nen year's stud,
ent body at Ap{>alachlan State CqI-
l^ ^ n a campus-wide election.this
Seven candidates sought the of.
fice, the run-uff being .between
Benson a n d William Herbert
Good of Statesville.
Benson, rising senior at^Appa-
lachian. is majoring In elementary
education. He is treasurer bif the
student council, assistant m ana^r
of Justice Hall, and because of his
academic record, has been elMted
chief marshal forcommencemen-.
He is a member o( the Assocla-
tion.for Clilldhood Education In
ternational.
As a mrmberof the North Ca-
rolitia Naiional Guard, for six
years, he presently holds the rank
of seigeant in the medical com
pany of Mocksville, and holds two
citations which'were given him as
the outstanding soldier for two
Miss Margie Wagner, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs C. F. Wagner, of
Mocksville; R4, became;the bride
of Pvt. Terry p. Dedmon, son of
Mt. and Mrsi' Luke C. Dedmon.
of Mocksville^ at 5 p. m. April 9,
in Tunentine Baptist. Church.
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Badgett, ot
Coleemee, are the parents of a son
who arrived at Rowan Memorial
Hospital April 12th.
Dedmon-Waqher The Record ii only 3 ceiil
a week. Sulxcribe toaay.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as Adminlsira*
trix of the estate of Henrietta pix»
on, deceased, notice is hereby giv«
en to all persons holding claima
^ J * against said deceased to present ♦Rev. B. F. Eagle perforined the ^ game, properly veriii^, to^ the
double ting ceremony Miss Faith undersigned, on or before the 14th Oeadmon, pianist, and Miss ianell day of April, 1956. or ihiS : notice
Gaither, soloist, presented wed- be plead in bar of recovery,
ding music. | aII persons indebted to said MUte
The bride and groom entered will please call and make prompt
together. She carried a white Bi> settlement. , '
ble with a white orchid. | This the 14th day of April, 18^,
Bud Ridenhbur of Cooleemee, > ROSA S. MILLER Admix.^ ^
and Pvt. Phil Peacock of Ft. Bragg,
were ushers.
Following a wedding crip the
bride will make her home with
her parents, and the groom will
return to Fort Bragg, where he is
stationed.
of Henrie<;ta Dixon, Decs'd.
Mocksville. N. C., Route 4.
Administratrix Notice
Having qualified as Administta*
w - \4^ trlx of the estate of FredS.Orrell.Davie County,'utes o fCooleem.eHigh School. [ No^h Carolina, this is to noti^
Neatly Siiuches of rain fell in all persons having claims against
Mocksville frou» last Tuesday un- 'said estate to present them to the
til Friday morning. All streams in undersigned vrithin twdve months the county were high, covering from date hereof, or this' : notice thousands of acres of bottomland, will be pleaded in bar of thel'r
Dutchman and Bear Creeks were right to recover. All persons ow-
said to have been as high as seen ing said estate will pl.ase make
In many years. Travel was cut oir immediate settlement. . «
across Hunting Creek at the Rat- This the 4th day of Aoril. 1955.
ledge and Willson bridges. Some SARAH B. ORRBLL.
damage was done to bottom grain Admra. of Fred S. Orrell, Decs*d,
crops.- I Hall & Zachary, Attorneys.
DONT settle for
a 1949 engine in
yournew
The most important eni^'ne
advancement in years is revolutionidng
truck power! It*s shott-stroke design.
Make sure you get it in your new truck,, . ;
ONLY FORD gives you a modern
Short Stroke engine, V-8 or Six,
in ievery truck! , ,
Fold’* got /bur Short Stroke V-S’s ^ a Short
Stroks Six ; . with engineering lefinemetits resulting
Cram five billion mile, of aervksel Why settle for an
outdatfd hmg-stioke engine? A ahort-stiroke enginr
givM you nioie for your inpney now—and protects
your truck’! ultimate iRxtfrin uHue, too! \
C dllutM D il
•.!
TH£ MONmr M AK M ^ 'SS
SANFORD MOTOR COMPANY
Ford'Dealert Since 19J3
If You’re IntoTMtod in «n A-1 Truek~Be Su k "to Soe Your Ford Deilar
, 20. 19£S PASB THRBB
THE DAYIE RECORD.
OMatt Phper.ln The County
No l^uor. Wiii^ Bmt Adi
NEWS AROUND TOWN.
M, A. LuKmlt. ot Wlntton-Sal.
«m, .'W.8 «n Baiter viritot. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Sofiy .pent
latt week with relatives in Pmns^K
vania.
M ar^^^Feks
Mr. and Mra. Charlei Andrew
BurrbiOfShelbv, N.C., announce
tlw etiRageraent of their, dauahter,
Elbaheth Martin, to Dr. John Har
Tey..Felta, of C6nway, S. C., 'and
and Wiattoo.Salem, son of Ma,
Tohn H. Felts and the late Mr.
Feltz, of Conwav, S. C.
The brld»electii agmid-dmgh
Mrs. Cllffoid Reavla underwent
. a tonsil'bperatlon at the Dr. Long
Clinic Tuesday.
Mrs, Gwyn K ^ , ot Charlotte,
ippat he &ater holidays io town
with relatives.
Time Meroney. of Lenoir, spent
EfUtet Inlowh with his mother,
Kirs. H. C. Meroney.
r Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stroud, Jr.
returned Sunday from a short vis
it to Washington, D. C
Si F.Binktev spent the Easter
holidavs with his daughter. Mrs,
J. F. Hickman, at Danville, Va.
' Mrs. Irene Winntogs, of India*
napolis, Ind., apenfthe Easter holi
day with relatives at Smith Grove.
Uovd Faihlng and Jack Navlor,
students ar Mars Hill College,
spent the Ea>ter hoUdavs in town
with their paroits.
Mr. and'Mrs. WUey Angell,' of
Route 4, aimounce the arrival of a
dauiditer at Rowati Memorial Hos
pital oh April 11th.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Pmples. of
- East Chicago, bd..'spentlastiyeek
with Mr. People’s mother, Mrs.
A. W. Peoples, on Route 2.
. Sanuny PoweU, of Greensboro,
spent a dav or two last week in
toiHi with triends. Sammy likes
(o visit the okl home town.'
" Mr. and Mis: Aimand Daniel,
ot Charlotte, have donated $790
to (umish and equip a room
the new MockswUe Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Munav of
Route 3, are the parents of
daughter who arrived at Rowan
Memorial Hospital April lldi.
«M (i Carolyn Smth. of OdoIw
mee, spent several dwft last week
in town with her: grandmbihcr,
Mrs. Franm James, while having
some dentirf work done.
Mr. ^ Mrs. Freeman D. Slv^
two aona and one dauohtet, ot
Takoma Park. Md.. spent sem al
davs last week in town, guests of
Mr*. Slye’a modier, Mrs. Z. N.
Andeison.
Mrs. J. P. Davis, who was a pa
dent at Baptist Hospital, Wins-
lon-Salem for more than two
w eda. recovering fnmi inluries re
ceived in an automobile wredc on
March 30th was able to return
hlome Thursday. She U getting a-
long nicely, her friends wlH be
gladtoleanu
Ml*. P. J. Johi^aon, Mrs. Marga
ret LeGrand and Mias Ossie Alli
son will.leave today (or a' two
weeks sojourn in Geofgia and
Florida. While away they , will
visit Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ailia6n,at
Venice, Florida, and Lieut, and
Mrs. CUnard LeGrand, |r„ at Al
bany, Ga. ■ ■
T. P. Dwlgglns has begun the
cicctiooofa6 ioom brick dwdl-
iiig on Wilkesboro street. Which
wUl be occupied by Mr. and Mra.
Kenneth'Dwiggtau. a n d Bttle
daughter when completed. Sgt.
«idM rs.Dirigginaate now living
In Columbia, S. C.- but Sgt Dwlg-
glos wl I receive his honofabledis-
ckaiae on Mav iSdi, and wW mom
back to the old home town.
A. A. Fowler, of Spartanforg.
8. &, for many yeara Soutbem RaUway detective, spent a day m two last week In totro with his •on. Frank Ibwler and Mrs. Fow-
ic d iw l sm e ta l v e a is e c u
ter of the late Dr. and Mra. W. C.
Martin, of Mocksville. She grad-
usteJ cum laude fmm Salem Col
lege in 1952, and is. now teadiing
at Emtover Elementary School, in
iCharlotte. Dr.Felts,, a graduate
of Wofford College and the Medi
cal C o H ^ of South CaroUna,has
recently returned from an eighteen
months tour of duty with the
S. Army in Germany. J le will
shortly assume a position on the
fiiculty of the Bowmm Gray
School of Medicine of Wa ;e For
est College, Winston-Salem. The
wedding is planned for June ISt...
Minery^artman
Miss Frances Elizabeth Hart-
nuin, daughter of Mr. and Mra. R.
H. Hartmin; of Advani^, became
the bride o( lohn J. Minery, at
3:30 p. m. April 9th, in Advance
Mediodiat Chutch,
Rev. W. E. Fitzgerald and Rev.
R. J. Starling performed the dou'
ble ring ceremony. Mra. Starling,
organist, and Mrs. FitzgeraM', so
loist, presented wedding music.
The bride was given in marriage
by her lather. She wiAea gown
of white chincillv lace and satin
designed with a small collar and a
lace peplum ov« the full ntin sldrt.
Mits'Nancv Hartman was her
sister's maid of honor. She - car
ried an. arm liq u e t of cham
pagne ;amations.
Bridesmaids were Miss Rebecca
Starling anid Miss Starr Starling, of
Mt. Ulla, Miss Jeanette.OneU and
Miss Fniices Seafdrd, of Advance.
Tane Russell Griffith: of Greens
boro. and Delilah Hartman, M
Advance, cousins of Ae bride,
were Bower girls.
Sgt. Hugh fertleit U. S. M.,
Camp LeJeune, was bestman. Ush
ers were Henry ’ Hendrix, Brack
Bailey ani^ William Bailey, of Ad
vance, and Ralph Griffith, of Win
ston-Salem. '
Following a bridal trip die cou
ple will live at Otis. ,
H ie bride Isa graduate of. Ad
vance High School. The groom
served with tbie Marines for'tl
A. G. Smldi, who has been As
sistant-County Farm Agent in
t>avie for liearly thiee ^ars. has
resigned Ills positloii to become
efe»ive June Isfc
Mr. Smith and iamilr will move
to Fayetteville, where he will go
into the nieicantiie business. . |
The . Record' is sorry to lose'
these good citizens, biit wish them
much succins in their new home..
If they ever decide to comc back,
back to the best rounty in North |
Carolih thev will find the latch
atriiw o6 dte outaide. ,
Wo don't (ike to inake X
mark* afler your name.
\oqler-Brown
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Vogler o f
Advance announce the engage-
ment of their daughter, Barbara,
to Leonard’H. Brown, Ir» U. S.
Navy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo-
H Brown of Lexington! No date
has been set for the wedding..
Mr. and Mrs. Hal C. Boper, of Fori, have pnrchased a six-room
brick house on Avon Street, from
Hubert Eaton. Mr. Boger and
family will move into their new home shortly. '
Princess Theatre
WEDNESDAY
Barbara Stanwyck In “WIT
NESS TO MURDER” With
George Sanders
Cartoon & Comedy
THURSDAY & FRIDAY.
••ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET KEYSTONE KOPS”
Cartoon & News
SATURDAY
“CANADIAN PACIFIC” With Randolph Scott
Cartoon & Serial
MONDAY & TUESDAY
•‘6 BRIDGES TO CROSS”
Wld« Tony Curtis & Julia.
Adams? News
DAVIE COUHTrs BIGGEST SHOW
VALUE - ADM. lOe and 35r.
l^ANT ADS PAY.
w a n t e d — White settled
housekeeper, full time. For parti
culars call MRS. G. M. Hammer,
Phone 370 J Mocksville
Pianos turned, repaired, rebuilt,
refinished or restyled. Free estimates. New and used pianos.
Anv^ing musicaL Easy terms.
Write for priees.
• Starling-Thomas Music Co. -
629 N. Trade St. Winston-Salem
Boy*’ Dungarees
CSanforized
Men'* Dunnreet
( S a n f o ^ )
ShirUN;
Men’t
Nylon SMrta
Men*! Sport Shirt
eSkiplPent)!
$1.48
$1.98
97c
$ 1 .9 8
$1.39
MAN WANTED—To operate
Watkins Business in Davie Coun>
ty. Hundreds of families needing
service on f^ e d Watkins Pro
ducts, now Nationally Advertised.
Must be. over 21 and have car. $600 weekly earnings and up easily possible. Write K. A. Pensyl,
P. O. Box No. 5071, Richmond,
Virginia.
HOUSE FOR)SA LE-QUICK
5 rooms and baths. Hot water
heater in basement. Living room,
two large bed rooms, dining room, kitchen with built-in cabinets. Floor furnace. Price $6,800. See
Roy Collette for keys.
W. I. BAILEY,
Phone after 5 p. m.. 2-7045,
South Boston, Va.
See Our
LEE OVERALLS
Mocksville Cash Store
“Tiie Friendly Store”
Phone 205 North Main Street
Driving a new Chevrolet
can help you win one!
years. He Is engaged in the lum.
her busiiieaa at Otis. / ‘
Mocbville Higli
School Newt
DEANNA SILVERM S. R tpoftw .
!b<Ii work onThe luniora hw~ sthrir new pby, “Peck’s Bad B*^.? which will be preseated aom^me in May. M ostof the parts have
been given out, however the fol-
lowi-ic Itot is not complete.
Henry iPeck, Sr:-M ack Kim;
'"'htoct Peck, Ir.-Billy Sejl.
Mrs. Hannah Peck-ChrisUne
Ilmmy D u^f^Henrv ShuttMinnie—Kathrine Plotfc . •
LaeMa Thorne-Naney Rnvit.
Melville Beaumoiit — Charlea
Measick;Unie-rLvnda Crawford.DabUa-EmUy Sparky
Schulix-Gaither Sa^ord.
Lora—Harriet Tutterow.
Thuraday the Juniors met to de
cide upon and orfer their * ss-
rings. Part of the class ordered black awnes and part ordered r ^
Tlie Glee Glub Is practicing v m
hard <nd very frequ^tly m order
to getthemueic for riieir S ^ g
Concert In perfect order. Tlito
Concert will be held at iheMetho-
diat Chutch, Sunday night. Vtey 8.
at 7ap. The pubjic U invited, to
Enter Chevrolet's Big Miracle Mile Contest
- You can win, a new Chevrolet plus a
s $1,000 U.S. Savings Bond
Many of the members of the B m Oub lelt Friday afternoon to
Mtend the week-end Beta Convention iu Asheville. At the tjiett-
ings this Convention much will
learned about the- National Beta,
Club and ideas be exchanged which will be helpful to our grou^
The Baseball playing WIMcata;
are certainly making a wonderful;
ahowingonthediam oi^. .lliurB-j
day dtemoon they defeat^ Davia
Townaend 14-2. i
What you lean) on a demonstration
drive caii help you win
Here’s the happiest invitaliion a motorirt ever,
received. For not only are you being invited to
drive the smoothest, liveliest, loveliest car in
the low-price field. . 7but you are also getting
a chance to win a bi-and-new. Chevrolet, plus a
$1,000 U.S. Savings Bondf
That’s the story tehind our Miracle Mile
Contest. It gives you a chance to sec for your
self tlie wonderful advances built into the Moi-
toramic models. And while you are testing;
you’ll be picking up a whole hcadfiil of infor
mation ttiat can help you be a winner.
There's so much to appraises, it would fill
pages just to outline all the improvements and
advances. So why don’t you sample these pleas
ures yourself at the wheel of a 1955 Chevrolet
Enter our Big Miracle Mile Contest. . . vi'ithout
cost or obligation . . .
and you may win a
1955 Chevrolet of your
own, with a $1,000 bond ‘
to sweeten the pot!
DON’T BUY!ANY V8 UNTIL YOU’VE TRIED CHEVROLET’S RECORD-SMASHING ’TURBO-FIRE V8”!
- ■ Most Modem in Design-Lowest in Price
PEMNINGTON CHEVROLET CO., INC
PHGME 156 MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
y_-
l>XOEn>DR‘T O OAVUi Mb0iro.'ll0CK8VILUe M. C.. APRIL M. IIW
Goiily Nations
I.ess(m for April 24. 1955
MAY as well admit that tw
W such thing as a "godly na*
tion” has ever been seen—
not if you take the word **eod‘
.ly” at it£ fuU meanlog. A god*^ nation. 100 per cent, would be
one where every citizen kept
God's commands,
where every act of Congress (or of
Parliament, of de*
creu of k in g ) would .be such as
G od'w ould fully
approve. For the
matter of that, a
hundred • per cent
•godly individual is also unheard of. Dr. Foreman
And yet wc can speak of godly
men and ungodly ones. So we firiti
speak of more or less godly na.
tions. nations whose trend and
direction is toward God or away
from him.
It God on Our %\M
We nlways like to tWnk. espe
cially when we arc at war, cold
or hoi. with other nation."!, that
God is on our side. We like to
think that we are God’s people
and the otiier side, the enemy, is not The truth of the business is
that no nation is either complete* ly right or completely wrong,
no nation fully ca rrie s out
God's will and no nations whol
ly defy It. No nation In' the
world today is composed entire^
ly of Christians, no nation in the . world today is without Christians
in it. But having said all this,
we can still say truly that God is on the side of some people and
nations more than he is on oth
ers. tn the Old Testament wc
have a good example of a nation
that made this mistake of sup
posing God would be for them whatever they d/d. and they were
dreadfully dismayed when they
discovered that tlivy could lose wars and generally “eat bitter
ness." Many Jews Ihoiight God had let them, down when such
things happened; but the proph
ets knew better. Azariah. a proph
et in King Asa’s time, put the truth in a nulshelL “The Lord Is
with you while you are with him.”
he said.
Uatfership In thi Cliureii
King Asa’s times, and the
times of President Eisenhower
and Queen Elizabeth, are not so very far apart after nil. Wlwt
was needed for a godly nation in
the days of Asa? The need th^i ths prophet- mentioni' first is
"teaching priests." Tliere were
plenty of'priests who went through the liturgies and made sacrifices,
but what the nation needed was
{caching priests, religious Jeadcrp
who could teach the law of God
that is to soy, pricitts who could
show the people what religion
meant in dail^ living, in dealings
between man and man. So long as ^ religion stays inside the church,
no long as religion concerns it-
:jjlf only with the Other World,
so long as religion tries to confine itself to what Is exclusively
spiritual, it y^ill not be Biblical, and It will be powerless to build
a godly nation.'*An ofncer in a
young people's church group once told the writer: “Our bunch real
ly means business. This year we
raised the money to extend the
ch.’tneel two feet." —and that was
!ll they did! One suspects that
tliere was something missing in (he parson's sermons, if thps«-
young people got the idea thnt
the business of religion mainly
has to do with how long or short the cliancot is. God's lew is not s
low for Sunday mornings only. Rut until and unless there are
teaching priests who take th:*
le/|d in showing us bow we can apply God's law—and above all
the law of Love—to our life as a
nation, we shall be godly orOj* on Sunday mornings, • if ever.
The mo'lt church-going city in the
south was for years also the city
v.'itli the highest murder rate; Ui?
place lacked teaching priests.
Uidonllli li iht Nitliii
Preacherf and ehurchea will have an uphill time ef it, at the
best, even when they do see and
work for the doing ot God’s will
In everyday social and political
and business life. There Is too
much organized and unorganized selfishness abroad (6 gWe the
God Love much ^ance. So
in our time, as in King Asa's long ago, there is need fdr lead
ers ouUide the. j>ulpit. ^ .^ose
. days it was the^king himself who. took the lead. We have no kings
in America but we do have lead
ers. all the way from village mayors up to Congresimen. s ^
tors, supreme court justices and
•he President
Raleigh—'Colonel Thomas H.
Up(on» State Dfrector of Selec*
dve Set vice* said today that he
had ceceived notice from the Dir
ector of Selective Service • to prot
ceed with the disposal of the in
dividual files of registrants of the
Selective Training and Service Act
ofl940»as amended. He points
out that any World W ar'll regis
sbttaot.needioeJnformatinn from
his World War II selective service
file should ^ u e s t it now .^before
the loss of 'such information by
destruction of the records. The
information must be requested
either in person or by letter sign
ed by the ifegistrant.
Files obtained under the cur
rent draft act will continue to be
maintained by each registrant's lo
cal board.
S e im i
m i i
y UST •WCIK'S
A N tw n ;^
ACM08S
1. A fastener..
•.Earthy ^ deposits11. Book of
Old-
Testameat12. o r theaxis . •
l2 .S u tt^
dull
4t. Volcanic
MK DOWN
l.M4mdarin ' tea
of hair t.U ke
aijai3‘-a3Da HMuuia ’ aiaaiaa
m u a .tja oiua SBaEffiaa n aa-.aS aa
HU[I]
fiu G as ncaaa ^'juaaaii] a n a ra a n[ii3r3»
Mrs, Polly JHfest
Mrs. Polly Aim West, 67, of
Mocksville, Route 4, died April 11»'
at the home of a daughte^, Mrs.‘
Cordie Tcivette.
She Had been in declining health
for several months,
Survivors ^ include two sons,
Dewey and Robert West of Moc s-
ville, Route 4; three daughters,
Mrs. Mamie Barnes of Cooleemec;
and Mrs. Cordie Trivetteand Mrs*
Kathryn'Frye; both of-MocksvlUe,
Route 4; 27 grandchildren; four
great-grandchildren;(one sister, Mrs
Cora Heath of Pilot Mountain;
and one half brother, Lee Cliam*
berlain of Cooleemee.
Funeral service* were held at
3 p. m., Wednesday at St. Mat'
thews Lutheran Church. Burial
was in the church cetnetery.
Rev. G. W. Finlc and the pastor
of the chuich conduc.trd the ser^
vice. ______________
Eaton-Modlin
Mr. and Mrs. William Gordon Eaton of Cooleemee have announced the eogag.:;menr of their
daughter, Mildred Elizabeth to
Harold Lee Movllin, son of Mrs. R. L. Modiin of T omasville and the late Mr. Modiin.
The wedding is planned for June
18 at the First Baptist Church. Cooleemee.
Dog^acinajfio^
Prbtrol: Ybiir Doig Against
^ V RABIES _
: , Mondavi Apiil 25, 4s00 p. m. - 4:30 p. m.,Pavte'Aculmy
County Line,-
-7W«tte'n^ «tvl<je-Statiori" • Monday/ApritJ5.-5;(X)_p,jyu-L53 p,.m. _
Sheffield, Smith’s Store ■ Monday, April 25.6:00 p. m. -'eio p. m.-
CcnterrTuUetowySioie • Monday, April 25.7:00 p. m --7:30 p..m.
Clatkn>llle, Gentle’s Store-- Tuesday, April 26,4500 p, m. - 4-.30 p. m.'
Four Corner, - - Tuesday. April 26, 5KK) p. m. • S-SO p. m. .
W|n. R'.. Davie Schfiol • - Tuesday, April % 6:00 p. m. • 6:30 p. m.
, ;C»na,’V
Roben Furches* Home • , Tuesday, April 36,7KX) p. m. • 7:30 p. m. '
Farwiing'on &hobl • Wednesday, April 27,4:00 p. m. • 430 p. m.
Miller's Stored Junction ' •
Highways 801 and 601 - Wednesday, April 27, 5K» p. m, • 5dO p. m
Sinith Grove School Wednesday, April 27> 6:00 p. m .-6:30 p. in.
Smith Grove, I . ’
PauV Bowles Store ' - Wednesday, April 37, 7:00 p. m. - 7:30 p. ,m.
All p<w> Four (4.) >lonth» Old Or Oldw Should
Be Vaccinated.
The Charge^ Special At Clini(».'Onl]r, I, $l.M'.Per Dog.|'_
.All yacdne Win;Be;Adminirtei^ By A Veterinarian
Pavie Counfy Health Departnient
LET US DO
YOUR JOB PRINTING
We can save you money
on your
ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BIU
HEADS, PACKET HEADS. Etc.
Patronize your liome newspaper
and thereby help build up your
iioine town and county^_____ ^
THE DAVIE REGORD.
GRAOr COl^ p o f^ RKfio s«w ef WBT 'W
ahnift luiid Karo for €ooUng . .j. aiii on tfw tabfs'—tt<i
dark Koro for jnsr llw b^-tosting
M tiiig^ p^ > ni dll"
Tm . indMd.. .btaeutt* go I0» hot e d » whn .
mu pout on plenty of deUcioua dark.Kaio... there’s willing lilw it for g ^ eating. Sati,;. ijnn’ ihyw* So tiehit ataadalight upon top of UacuUa (Inepa’em litfit md Oul^). Keep/
Xaio on your taUe moriiiiig, noon and n i ^ '
...it^ u y tlu n g l -
Adt yeuf groMT for DARK K«nw, In pint and quart iMlriM
Count th e values here...
Yours only in »C»HRli^UEf|
W IN D SO R D ^ei|uX E * v - e
CtlMMMddtlW
Aimihi'tllMSMrtlit
DMNNlCirl
(Mte apart from ita long, low, dazzling lieBUty, this new-atylad Windnr Deluxe V-8 has • special ap p ^ tor budget-minded ear buyer*; .
. Il't not mUv tmdedly rrictdfor a ear l, — , tia,,comfort and performance .. .biUtl alto offert you raluet unmilaied hy any other make of car lodtty!
There’s a brand-new, high-powered SpitSre V-8 engine here, to begin with. Teamed with'PowerFlito
Automatic Drive, it puts this ear definitdy in the . 1 top-performance class.. And only Chrysler gives.you ' the one and only Full-time Power Steering pUa ■ extn large, extra safe Power Bralfes. j
We’d like to show you how thi* “HR®*performer is, too. Stop in m n and enjoy a thrilling .
^DoHar,
. O fifiS ' D RIVBIIS DRI.VI ^ ' . . '
DAVIE MOTORS, Inc.,' ■'
.FOR,THE t:ST IH TV, $ II" ir$ A OKAT Ufl," "ttlMAXi" AND "$HOW*« Of STAMS" « « W PAOi I W - T ^
North Main. Street:
■’i'.
"V •
- '-'Si
.-../ft,., ft . -
•lOWE SH A li THB n t < ^ THB n o i ^ V M C im .M j^ A IN l
v o u j i m t v ' :
N nM BBR,ts
NEm OF LONG ACO^
W bai W ^ H aM M obf b
B otora l> * h ih | M a lm ;
A nd Afclwtifiatad S k i ^
(Da«i< RecDtd:'Apr 35,1933)1;
W. R. O a k of lerusateU^and
^ New York, was In town iSalnrday':
The btlek work: was started' on
the new banli hnlldMi ’Thnn^ay.
Mlsa Iaii(^ Stewart who Is teachi
Ing at Hamlet apmt .the .week; md
here with her parents..
Attorney B. C. Bmefc, of Wins.
'ton-Salem; was iu town one ,day
laat'rweett on bnalneas.
B. B. Vogler and soil yof near
. Advaiice, were in towti last week
havlni soitie dMtal^tark done,
R. L, 'FWhaii ‘purcbaiied ;i lot
from .Cedi Morris on Selbbnrv
streM, and will erect a hoosethere*
- on., . , ' '
Mr. and'Mrs. C..IA,'Bnrrus, of
, Slielhy. sijMit the w eek.^ In town
with Dr. and Mrs. W. fc Martin.
Spring has arri»ad. >ifhe .derk
of'the couft was seen e n ^ n g the
. sqaare Friday afternoon with
■ straw hat on.
' Tbe memters of tbe 4 V. P. U.
enfond a pieole on the banks of
th^ Sooth Yadkin laat Tuesdav
. U te n ^ .
;; . G. B. Horn has traded the, old
Cell pmpiwty pn^Sallsbnry a’^iert *0
■ the Walker Motor Co.. for a Dnrl
. an»6«Tllnder eowh,
' Pleree Foeter has begun the erce.
tlon^. of a nice 6^niom biU)(Mtow
jaBt-;beTond. the town llmlta on
Nisrth Mato areet.
.Mim HsreerM Mer
baMa..a position in Oreeneille, N.
C., eame: np lest week to
' some time with iieJ p«rentfc;..f'■ i
d .G . Walker'is pattinc naterl.;
a1 on 'the nrontrf for the erertienol
another eolt«e«4i. dallabnrvjlteet,
west of the railroad brldee. ; ^
' Mr. end Mrs. W. M. i Marklei^d
children, who h a i^ lm living
.;; ln'’Farmln«t<Mi lowmhlp, 'leftItM
W«k for Ammon, y<i.. where they
will make their,fntnre
, 'The Da»le C"n«trn»<lo« haa
hwnn the ereMInn ol tw o \^ em
, tile honwi on ,Wt|ke»Iii>ro i«reet.
O niof>hm houses l«heln«'hnll»
for A.-A. Holleman end the other
(or n . ,N. iTetsnp:
Re*, and. Ml".,‘ C. R. Johnson
(pentonedavfaM week.ln.Mooreb
*l1le. Mr. l<>hn»on’* brother, re.
tnmed 'whh them and:^ has., aecept.
ed a position with the Stste. High,
wey fq ^ h e n .
Mrs .U. i . Wllllanis-end dangh-
' ter Misses Lonlse and Martha, of
Snmter, 8. C.. are spending a few
dam In the eonntT wlth . relatlm
and friend..
’ Miss Ossie-Allison who nnde'.
went m opm llm for amiendleltls
■ at toners Swatorlnin, Statewlller
lost Week. Is <vttlng'.Img. nicely
■ her man* frienila will glad
' learn/
«ash, thfr little 11 monthiUId
■ soh.'of Mr. and Mrs Orad* ^Tard.
dM Snnda* afternmn. following
. an lllnMa of M*eral months with
raneer. T>e little hod* w«a laid to
, ,rest at Jopbs Monde* afternoon.
The grief Hrleken parents ha*e tbe
i syinpathy of a host of frle ^ .
C. P. Winians, of Cam.
den, a C;. was In town one day
:. last .week shalclncnaads witb. hie
frlehda. Frank has been lbok|nc
after the new !«neeT «lant which
th»0. t wiillanil Veneer Co.,
; roerMlng In Hlgh ^olirt
: 1^ now ha*e' 6*e faetorlea ind ate
fnll time at all thdr:mllls;
. ___board of triisteia of Moek^
*nie let ib<! contraei Monda*. afierf
m > ^ for the high achool bnlldlng.
‘d i B. MooiieT^^.or Hnnteifitrtll*.
' ' waa awarded the cMtrect. at |4S.
‘ <iao Work Will beiln-at M M t^
5^^-'--'^-dalt'oBthe;brtIdlog, so>'t*;I«i»#
f j ■ . ItnadyfciraceiipaBevtlilafill.
w m f o n v M
i/Doriog the, iboBsaiid year* of
peaceful; rejgn the.earlh will' brine
forth Its stnngth;' great foresta will
grqw np In . the wilderness, (tsslah
4i)rRI*m and springs will ebiinge
dm ris and wastelands Into mead*
farmlatids ;(Isalah ^557)
N osi^ns'^^Si hriers and thbms
will glw wa* to grows, orchards
aad. ^ro6table tdant life, (Isslab
S3!tj]j' llie'pJiTsieal snd'cheinlcsi
hatnre of Ihe'earth ^ 1 1 also he
qulekei^. Tl^change will be 'so
great that theI^rd\iiKaks of It as
' 'a, new. earth” and savs there will;
be so. little to remind one of the de
(icient and fallen sphere which we
ndw Inhabit that "it shalj^ not be
remembered nor come to'imiiid.”
(Tsaiah <5:17 19). The refinement
of the earth at that time will he so
marked that the planet Is described
«s lieing "trsnsSgBred” .- Wlien
the ApoMlea were together on the
mouiit tiie* were Aowb the vision
ef It' snd not at any time since
then; has the fnll acconnt of Its
glory htm wvsaled.. Not onlv will
the nrth . he translcnivd. hut a.
mone the rlebteotis eveo hnmsn
llfe .wlll funcilon on . a more oer
feet and efflclent scale than at s«*.
time sInM the Fall; The lAid hss
said. "Aiid there shall be no »or.
row becanse there Is no death.
Thelmmicstlons of this promise
are tremendoua. Such a condition'
wouldfrequlre strict eelfjllsclplloe
among all human beings and a snf.
fidenti* stmnV control o*cr natnrai
phenomena an d secnlanelreum-
stances sothst there would' lie no
accidents, no disease, no Infant mor,
tallt*. no aenlle old age, no tw -
gmltal deformities. Soeh'a condl.
tlon wonM chsnigte maiiy tbinga In
W made ofiexiste^ no funerals,
i»o;i»meterle«; iio: morluarios. no
Slice cciinnahiM to' endow the
.'o
NatuKfGhfuU^
n^ilgar,
lodfl, made bl.
tbe, past year—td*
li)bwtodupUeat»li
I agreed on bow to
WASKINGTON^ugar, M e- «.f
Qiaii's foods, made bis mws
twice during ‘
and the world
trade U.Yet M
A natural bounty known and songht for ttMratands ot years, .it baa
ively recent.grown and form only 1
.times, noW ranking as (he most
abundant, pure chemical com«
pound man takes from nature.Sugar Is essential to life,'Every,
green leaf toudicd by sunlight
turris water from the ground and-
carbon dioicide from thp air ^-into
sugar and oxygen. Any animal
without sugar In its blood wiU soon
drop dead.Honey, fruits and succulent
grasses satlslfled the‘ ancients* sweet tooth*. The origin of sugar
cane is lost in the past. somewAiere in the Orient. Probably It was
first grown by man in India, where ancient legends .and then the army
‘of Alexander the Great in 327 B.C
;0pdke of the “honey-bearing repd."
Today the worid produce^ near*
ly. 40,000,000 tons of sugar In a^
yetirt M^per cent from cane and as per cent from sugar beets.r,>
Americans alone consume over 8,- 000,000 tons. For 30-odd years', per
capita consun^rtion in this country has remabied nearly,.constant,
averaging a hundred^mind bag p e r, person IpOT-year. ‘
Only in late 1068, however, af^
er centuries of trying, did science ^
succeed, in making sugar in Qm
laboratory ft^om simpler com
pounds. And this year 40 countries
„put Inio effect an intenwtlonal
agreement stabilizing sugar pfO*
dnctlon and world pricev.
NEVER IN THE HOUSE
The wife of the congression
representative sat >up In bed.
Slaved look on het&ce.
‘Jltn," she whispered,‘•there’s a
robbdr in the house."
“Impossibte!” w uthe reply:
the Senate, yes, but in the House,
never!”
berimed In plan of the deceesad. ^
tn'ssying that tbire be no death,
however, the Xord does, not niesn
that the nenple;. livioe d jHiig the
Mlllenplnm will Iw jmmortal.: He
smes on to explain Mhat this. pro.
mlK.idmnl* mMns that among tbe
rigWeons there' will he no separa-
iliinof tlie iibdv from the aplrit no
c^algnment of .the body to the
Men will live until they are
• hundied yiara old f rsaiah 65;) In
the fnli strength of the andenl pa
trlarehs then they win he changed
intbe twinkllne of «n eye from
noftat to'remrrerted beings^ Such
perams will be ••csbeht tip” and
their rest will be glorious Nor
does the lord Imply that this Mess,
ed promise of "no desfb” applies
lo'evcrvone. It onlv applies to the
righteoiie and ohedient.'- Dnringat
leaat the eirly part of the Milieu,
nltim there will he many 'who. will
aurvlye the great: destrnrtlon who
are not members of Christ’s Klng^
dom andtheiK will have' the op.
pMtraltyto bear, the gospel and
jiio the .Ohnrch If the* ao : dealre.
H thei»di» liot, howe*er tint choose
to rmslnlntheir sins, laalah clear.
IndleateaMbat the sorrows of' death
atc Mllthelra laalah 65:30.. The
acriittnre a^o indicates that among
tbe'righteoda there arlll b* no Jn.
venile crime; no dlaobedient or dia.
reapeetfttl. ^ntb. Forj aays the
Lord. “ Their cMldrra ahall; graar
up withqnt sin niiib aalvatlon. He
fVrtber adds the salnta will multi,
tdv ami wax atrong. It Isl -highly
poaalblethat wUh the ceasation of
war.-tbe eradiealinn of Infant mor
tfllt*, ,the.increase. of, the. .Wumaii
life span to one hundred-yeara aiAl
^ iaarfced lnereise ln the araMt
Iaiid)arn. .the'; nntriber of indivj:
dnala wlbo will total more, than all
thm wto llved mi tte dnir;
ibg .theVpic^^s sis '‘tbouaaid
years;.', '
• C ' .' D u ^ N . C
Lott Driver ;Abo Loses
Wife, Cor/Trailer
BICHMOHD, i. Blchai»m of BeatUa, Wash., lest U. a. t
on Us way tbrougli;B|chmi>nd «• norida and started'a diala <t evMita.-^''- ■ • V - ■He stepped oui «f big «tr to
look a road algn, waUnd aetv era! blockt and lost hlBWiiy. Whn be finally found a poUce statlMb
he reported he now bad iort OM car, one IB^oot yellow trailer Md a wife iriio couldn't drive..Police found tbe wife, can. and traileMbm Hra. BlchardMB f*> porIM she bad lost In tbe
time me waUet, a poctefboolb • «air «t glasses and % set tain ,
253,404 Tractors T '
Produced in 1954'
The farm tractor bMiustry tunad
out 16,517 units in Decemiier,
lOM, to bring the to U V s ^ s pro*'
ductlon ;ot farm use tractors vp
to 2S9,^ units. * ' ■<
In contrast with tbe 258.404
wheel and crawler type trdctor* for farm uw, ^cludbig garden
ifpw , produced during the 12 cal-
endar months of 1054. the indus
try turned outT414,282 during the
comparable period In 1953, Ihe
drc^ is eiq>iained thls way; First,
195t output was at a. rate blgher
than tbe farmers' purchases. Om-
sequently. theie was an'inventory build up at dealer level after Joly,
1053: This'.forced a drasUc reduc
tion in Ute *53 and early *54. Sec-
9nd, in the . second half M/54 Just
about every/tractor manuftcturer further r^uccd pivduction *|o be
gin tooling up for a; new model output during the last half of>1954.
Thus, dealers were «ble to .^ rk off 1953 prod^cUdn durtog 1954rand.
gel se tte r Oie new mddeU .coming off the assembly, lines at . ^
.rate 0^18.000 units: a month. |
INFORMATION WANTED
The fadier was taking hb litde
son through the cemetery, look-
fog at the oM headstones.
“Daddv/'asked the little boy.
'where are all die bad people
buriedr
(hr County And
Sodal Secarify
B* Louis H. Glement, Manager.
Question; Will a business man
who also opm tes a farm use the
mediod of determining and re
porting the social security tax on
his fam income as he uses in con
nection with his business?
Answer: The new social secur-
It* law provides an optional meth
od of soc’al security reportings for
farmers who have gross incomes
of $1800 or less from their form
ing operations if they report their
income on acash receipts and dis
bursement basis. These farmers
will notihave.to compute their ac
tual net earnings for social secur.
ity purposes. Iitstead, they era
limply assume that their net earn
ings arc SO per cent of the gross
and lepoct this amount. Farmers
WRONGEND
A Naval offi^on-watch aboard
ship rushed angrily to the'speaking
tube and veiled: "btnere a blith
ering idiot at thc ’cnd^bflbiaituber
*'Not at this end, sir,” came the
dilm reply; ■
, ;BY MARRIAGE
A motorist imd his wife hadn’t
spoken for miles. They’d, got in-
to a quarrel and neither would
budge. Suddenly, the man point'
ed at a mule in a pasture they
weiepjssing. .
“kulative of yours?” he asked.
“Yes," the wife replied, —‘V
.marriage."
who gross over $1800 will have lb
compute tbelr actual net earnings.
If, however, a Armer's net income
amounts to less than $900 he has
the option of reporting $900 as
bis net earnings, provided his in
come reports are on the cash basts
and not on an accrual basis. .This
will enable many farmers to main'
tain their social security protec*
tlon even during years in which
they suiter losses from their farm
ing operations.
For further information, con-
act the Social Security OiBce,
301 Post Office Building, Salis
bury, N. C.
If you have any queation con
ceming your social security, you
might write ua at 361 Post Office
Bjilding, Salisbury, N. C., or see
our represenradve who visits the
THATSTHAT
A wholesale dealer who had
lot of trouble in getting a certain
retailer to pay hia bills finally lost
patience and wrote the meit:hant
a threatening letter. He received
the following repl^
Pear Sin What do you mean
by writing me a letter like that?
Evenr month 1 place all my
bills in a hat and then ^ u re out
how much money I have to
on my^ accounts. Then I have my
bookkeeper draw as many bills
out of the hat as I have'inonev to
pay. ■-
“If you don't like my way of
doing business I won't even put
your bills in the hat.”
A T ^G E D Y
Funeral Director: ‘TIow old are
you, sir?"
AgeifMouraer; 'Tm98.'
Funeral Director: “Hardly worth
gotogTioijie.talt?’’
Court House, Mocksville N. C.,
on the first and third Fridays of
each month from 12:30-1:30.
Wattr TnBCh
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
qiiatified'as admlnlatra-
: estate of S. C. Garter, laM of Davie County,
lorth Carolina, this U ^ to notify
I all persons holding
|iaid estate to presei------,<undersl|pied within. 12 months j from date-hereof, or thia notice
? will be p le ^ in barofthetar recov-
' ery.: All persona owing : tate vilL mdce unmedlate aettl(
ment.
I them to the
This Match 16.1955. C .R . CARTER.
^a. Along Maia Sheet
Sy T he stre e t R am blet. i, ,
onoooo • ■
Lady exhibiting live legim bU«
dy around town - H i^ school liaa -
wanting to know what had hap-,
pened to Billy SelR ^lara Gffc
ham and Deanna Sllverdls puia- .
ingin Soda Shoppe for refteshr
ments—Gray SmIA walldngdown
Main street in the rain batdic«i>
—Mrs. John Bowden, jr^ dolllg
some rainy afternoon shopplnf-'
Kim Meroney ambling across the
street in the rain-Joe Murphy
standing in front of theatre talk
ing; to pretty Senior-^Mrs. John
Larew d6ing some aftranoon ahop;
ping-Advance teacher sm d liit
under awning waiting for n tn to
slow up—Mrs. Frank Fowler «.rfl
Miss'Gertrude Sherrill visltlhg in
front of movie theatre—Lady re.
marking that she had finatlT paid
her ’54 income tax—Mrs. GctHgc
Rowland, talking about B ea rC r^
being full of water—lohn and
Charlie Brown rambling atound
town on rainy day—Tohn Groce
leaving temple of justice—Billy El
lis on his way down South Mida
stieet—Mrs. Henry S. Andetaon
and little daughter on their way
movie show-^Mrs. A. G. Smith
sing for refreshments In Soila
Shoppe—Terry Shutt 'tm her war
home between showers-Alvin Dy -
son busy washing windows In au-
NOTICE OF SALE
P.M . CARTER,
Admrs. of S. C. Carter, D ea’d.
George W-Martin, Atty.
Under Slid by virtue .if the pow er of site containeil ia a cetlsin
deed Ilf iinst exi cnled l>y Boone
Foster and wile Sal'y Foster, to
Roliett S. McNeill, .Trustee, dated
tbe'ajrd day ol M -y losj. and re- cotdedin Botil: 43. oaee 23, In ibe office or the Register of Deeds of
ttav-e County; and under and . by
vfi-Mie of tiie authority vested in tlie undersigned a« suhstituied trnste- bynn instrnment of writinK djted
the 4th dflv of April 1955. and re.
corded in Book — page —. in tlie olfire of Recister of Deeds of- Da- vie County, default iisrlne been made in llie payment of tlie In-
dehtedneas thereby secured and tlie
said deed uf t'rnst being oy the
terms tfiereofsnhjeet to foreclosure,
and the holder of the Indebicdness thereby secuted hiring demanded
a foreclosure thereof for the pnr.
nose of sBtisfyinttsaid indebtedness,
the undersigned snhstituted (rnstee
will offer for sale at puhiic auetion
to the' blsbeKt bidder for cash,
the court house door in Mo<-li8-
vtile. N. C . on the 7th day
May, 1955, the land conveyed
said deed ol trti«t, the same Ivioe
and being in Jeninalem Township,
Davie Connty, North Caiolina. and more partlculariy described as fol.
Iowa;
Being lota Nos 6». 64. 65,
66, 67, 6*. 69. 70. 7'. 7». 73. 4<
4<, 43 44 end 45 of the Sam Fos.
ter SuhJiivision. as per snrvey and
nlat made by A. L. Bowles. Sur veyor, May,-1953. And aald plat ■ <1 In Map Book No. 3, nage
Din^rded . lull .water
-makea Me troogka t e . ,ealvai;«r-eih^ yenni UvMaek,-V haviiic aeeeas to a ereep. AaHth- . ateel.i^ are.w el^.at..lte.a» nera of tke.tnagli a ^ kraaaa' ’ ' ’ MaaeklagareweHeta*
Shoaf Coal &
t Sand Coa
WetCan - Supply ’ > otit Nceda
in g o o d 'o o a l,
SAND and b r ic k'
fcall iw PhoiJcOa At Any Tlme
: -PHONE; 194 ;
Formerly DavleBtldt&OinlOt*
15, In the Keglslei of Deeds rffice
of Davie Connty. North Carolina,
to which reference Is hereby made for a more partlcnlar description
For title see deed from E. C.
Xlorris lo Boone Foster and wife, Sally Poster, dateo May 20, t95j, and dniv recorded in aald office.
Tbla tat day ol April. 1955.
CLAUDE HICKS, Snbatitnted Trustee.
B ntter call a t'ih ii offk«
now u id gM yotnr U nd
|«r« M o r* Mm M indy n
bauMoii. Printed on bakV
card boM d^ SOc. d o n n .
sfores -Local t
around town in braitd new Font
presented to him by members
ofhisc ngregation—Mrs. Graham
Madison and Miss Florence Madt-
exchanging greetihgs In fnmt of
banking house on rainy moniinc
Mrs. Milton Call doing aomeeailT
morning shopping—Jitiimv Piiller
making some remarka about Yad
kin RIver-Mrs. lohn Bakct doing
some warm morning shopping in
Sanford’s Department Store—Mta.
D. G. Shore trying to iind pair of
children's shoes in BlackweMer*
Smoot sure—Early Williama buy
ing bunch of rope but not to hang
hlrosell^Miss Ossie Allison shop
ping around in Davie Fum itun
Store—Motorist parking auto a-
cross sidewalk in business acahm
forcing pedestrians to walk inntid-
dle of street—George Rowland (m
hisw avtogeta 75c.'hair cut—
Young widow pausing long e-
nough to teU the Street RanAlct
that she was so busy she -didn’t
have time to stop long enough to
get married—^Mr. and Mrs. R. D.
Poole drinking big miikshakea. ^
of
NOTICE TO CREbiftORS
Having qualified a* ^ceciitor the estate of Charlie Hcge, dccea^ ed, late of Davie County» N<mh
Carolina, this is to notify all per*
sons holding claims agaii^ nld estate, to present them to me un* deisigndd within 12 m o n ^ itom -
dace hereof, or this notice will be
plead in bar of cheir recovenr* AU
persons owing said eMate wffl
make immediate settlement. ThU
March 21.1955.
BOBBY CLAY HEGE.
Exr. of Charlie Hege,B. Cs Brock. Attorney.
HILLTOP
Service & Supply
HOPES TO SERVE YOU
EVEN BETiER IN IMS
- Ga., Oil Shh>Um
Alfo A Nice Uae Of
^eg elab lM ,
And Staple GraceriM
We Aiipreciato Ywir
x w . i m
Owner
II
il
'■I
' iJl
"I'il
■ :;i i’t
i 3
•
M ii
I-m k
PAQBTWO i f e DAVIE WaCOBP. M0PK8TUJ.E. K. C:. AlfRlL 87. IW5
THE DAVIE RECORD.
.a FRANK STROUD, EDITOR.
Bntered atihePoatoffiee InMocln-
fUIe, N. C„ u Seeoni)-«l*m Mill
matter. Harcb <t, IMS,
:SUBSCRiraON RATESt
. ONE YEAR. IN N. CAROUN^ % 1.S0 SIX MONTHS m N. CAROLINA • 7Sc. ONE-YEAR, OUTSmE ST 4T> • *2.00 SIX MONTHS. OtrrSIDE STATE > $1.00
From Texas
Our old friend Chas L. Woot
en who has been serioualv 111 at
bis home at Friendswood, Texas,
for. several moittha, writes ui that
he la Improving slowly and is
learning to walk again without as
sistance. He is now at Happy
Harbor Home, La Porte, Texas.
Mr.'Wooten is a native of Yad
kin County, a half-brother of T.
A. VanZant, of Route 1. Mr.
Wooten seived for manv years
a missionary to the Indians in
Oklahoma. He has been a min.
Ister. in Friends Church before
moving west some forty vears ago.
He is about 88 years old. His wife
pabed away last year and her
bodv was brought t o Yadkin
County and laid to rest in For-
bush Friends Cemetery. We ate
glad to learn that Mr. Wooten is
improving, ________
hospital liews
We will be pleased to accept
coucributiona from any donors who
are interested in hoiiorine relatives or friends bv having their names placed on a plague, which will be
placed in the reception room at
the Davie Countv Hospital* The
name of the donor will not b. ia- cludeJ on the plaque—*onIv the name of the person who is being
From Florida
We have received a letter from
our old iriend,,Geo. Smith, a
big vegetable' grower at Home*
stead. Fla. George wrote that he
had just finished harvesting 86.POO
bushels of potatoes. He a so
grows thousanos of bushels of - to*
matoes. Mr. Smtth writes us of
the tragic death of Patrick Coston-
guary, 36, who was a partner of
his firm for nine years. Mr. Cas^-
onguay left Homestead on April
6th pulling a house trailer to the
fsitm at Hendersonville, N. C.»
where he spent the summer. His
car and trailer was hit head*on bv
a Carolina freight truck on the
morning of April 7th, and hiA out
fit was completely demolished*
and he was killed. Mr. Smith says
the accident brought sadness to a
host of friends in Homestead, and
especially t o his company, t o
his company, the George W. Smih
& Sons firm.
Elect Officers
Vernon Dull, who holds a posi*
tion -with Davie Furniture Co.,
is the new President of the Mocks*
ville lunior Chamber o f Cjm*
merce, Toe Wilson is Executive
Vice-President, C. C. Hartmun
Vice Pre«tdent in chartje of inter
national affairs; Wayne Ferebee,
Vice-President in charge of pers. n<
ah Sheek Bowden, Jr., Vice-Presl-
dent in charge of projects} Rov
Brown. Vice-Prestdeot in charge .of
public relations; Eugene Smith,
Treasurer, Frank Harding. Secre-
tarv and Dr. F, R. Kemp ^ tate Di
rector,
H, Brown
Henry Wilspn Brown, 73, of
FihiU quor
Ben Bovle. andSheriff ----- .
Hellaid found 24. Ballons of liquor in a bam liear County Line,
0.1 April 16th. Faster Johnaon
and Wade O m ni wece arfeated and put under bonds (or their ap
pearance at the August term of
Davie Superior Court.
at a Mocksville nurstng home.
He had been in declining health
for four years.
He moved to Davie County 36
years ago and was the owner and
operator of Boxwood Nursery near
Mocksville and several other nur
series iu in the county.
Mr. Brown ■ was a member of
NOTICE OF SALE OF
R E A L ra O P ^ T Y
Ptirsuant to the autlieritr vested in me by vittueof an order of the
Glerk of Sttpertor Cottrt of Davie
County, deled April ao, 1955, io a
special P r c ^ lo g entitle U P.
Ward, et al vs Praok HoUoo et el,
tbe undentlgtied eoaimisslooer will
will offer for ale, at public aao.
tion, for ceab, on tbe. aist day of
f95S; is:oo nodo, et tlie
court house door In Davie Cotitit?,
N. C.. 10 tbe higbeat bidder, the
followhig described real property, to.wlt;
Beglttning at a atone comer of
Lot No 3 io the line of. the round hill tract add rnnofog North 27 cbs, to a stone, Leat Ward's line,
thence West'5.9s ehs.' to a stone
comer of Lot No. 5: tbencea7cbs. to Slone comer of Lot No. 5 in the line of ronnd bill tract; thenm
East 5 93 chs to tbe b^nnlnie,
cotitainiae 16 acres more or -less,
and being lot No. 4 in the divi.
sioD of P. B Ward
Beginninsat a stone comer of lot No. 4 in line of round hill tract and rannlog North 37 chs. to
stone in Lsvl Ward's line; tbeoee
West 5.54 chs to a slotte comer of lot No. 6; tbence South 27 cbs to a atone lA line of round bill tract;
thence Enst 51:54 chs. to tbe be
ginning, conialning 15 acres more
or less, and being lot No. .5, alloted to J. P. Ward.
Tbls the 30 day of April. 1955.
JOHN T. BROCK,
Commissioner.
NOnCE-SALEOF LAND
Under and by viitne of tiie pow*
*r of sale contained in a; oenain deed ot trust execnied by j R. D.
Tutterow and w ifi Jane j;> Tutte
row, dated the tStta of Pebrnary,
■9,f4, and recorded In Book 44,
page 71, in the office of Register ot
Deeds of Davie iCountv, NoRii Car
oling, default having been ittade in the payment ot the indebtednm
thereby secured, and (aid deed oi
trust being by tbe terms iliereot subject to foreclosure, tbe under, signed trustee will offer for sale at
public auction U> tbe bigbest Md.
der foi casta, at tbe Couttbonse door In Davie County, North Cato. lina, at nooD, 00 tbe-'utb day of
May, 1955. the propeny conveyed in aald deed of trust; the same ly, ing and being ra the County of Davie, and Stale of North CaroUna,
and more particularly described as
follows:
Adjoining the lands of J. B. Tut
terow, W. B Dyson, Ralph Cwig
gins iind others and bounded aa
follows, to-wit; Beginnrag at- Iron stake on West side of road and
run* Nortb 5 degs. West 1 75 chs.
with road to iron stake; thence N.
71 W. 8,38 chs to a stake; tbence 5.38 dega. W. 1.80 chs. to an iron
stake; thence S. 71 degs. W. g 38
chains 10 tbe beginning. Gontaining
one and .50-100 (i 50 too) acru more or IM.' ' I . -
For title see deed trom I. E. Tat
terow et ux. to. R. D. Tutterow,
et ux.,'remded in the office ot the Register ot Deeds tor Davie Coun
ty, N. C., in Book 54, page 314. See also Commissiouet’s deed trom
R L. Baker. I P Click. Trt at,
Commissioners, to J, E Tmterow,
Book 98, nage 335, allotting Lot
No 7 to J. E. Tutterow.This 14th day of April, 1915.
MAb K. CLICK, Trustee.
The Record it only 3 cento
a week. Subtciibe today.
Dog Vaccination Clinks
At The Fqllpwing Timei And Places
Protect Your Dog Against
RABIES
If it's PRICE you
want
Oak Grove C hut^
Mocksville.
Monday, May 2, 4:00 .p. ‘ 4:30 p, m
S r o r S . 'M S m " o n t r L S
for this is a hundred dollars, however, no me tion will be made of
anV amount received from any
particular donor.J. K. SHEEK, Chairman.
Purchase house
Mr. and Mrs. 'William Mason.
ofSmidi Grove, have purchased^ ^ __________
from Mocksville Builders Supply, the Mocksville BaptistChurchand'oarte^iiw TrainiorfSchool Monday, Mav 2. 5K» p. m. - 5:30 p,m
^ ” ‘ the Mocksville Masonic Lodge. I Moekaville H i^ School - -- -
In 1933 he was married to Miss Otha Graves Store
Minnie Crater, who smvives. | p j„, udge Road,
Suiviving by thar marriage are Cheeks Store
three daughters, Mrs. Rod Wood-j Greasy Comer,
ward of San Francisco, Calif.; Miss, Everhafdt-CMwood Garage - Tue.dav. May 3,6:00 p. m. - 630 p. m.'
Lynn Brown and Miss Nancy j James Service Station. 1
Brown of the home and'a son. Across fitomReNu Dry Cleaners Tueidav.M ay3,7K»p.m-7:30p. in.i
, Barsonage at Advance as soon as Henry Wilson Brown, Jr., of the! Mock's Church - - WednesdaW»*»y4,4.-00p.m. - 4:30p.m.|
thebuildingisreadyforoccupancy home;8urvivingbyapreviousmar-;AdvanceSchool - - Wedncriay, May 4. S^K) p. m. - 5:30 D. m -!
tidge ari a 8 >n, T. W. (Doc) Bixby, Robertson's Store. • Wednesday, May 4, 600 p. m.r 6:30 p m -.
Brown ot Mocksville, an.l two Fork, Livengopd’.(Store ■ Wednesday, May 4,7K» p m.-7:30 p.m .
'B i g J V e w I 9 S S
ELECTRIC RANQE
now
ONLY
ic Modern Pusiibutton Controls!•S' Big, Wide-Open Mosfer Oven! 'ir High Speed Colrod Surface Cooking UnittI ir "Focused Heot" Broiler ir Fully-Enclosed Bake & Broil Units—No Old-Fashioned Open Colls!
' . S f il todsy! Lim Htd Otferf
Hendricks & Men%ll Famiture Co.
Phone 342. SaKabury Street^
a modern house on Forest. Lane,
now occupied bv Rev. and Mrs.
C E. Crawford, Rev. and Mrs.
Crawford will move into the new
Baptist parsonage ac Advance as
soon as the building is ready for
oocupancv. Rev. Mr. Crawford Is
pdstot of the Advance Baptist
Rev. Mr. Crawford is pastor of the
Advance Baptist Chuch. Mr. and
Monday* May 2,6:00 p. m . • 7:00 p. m«
Tuesdavi May 3, 4^00 p. m. - 4:30 p. m.
Tuesday, May 3, 5i00 p. m. ■ 5:30 p. m.1
Mrs. Mason will move into their daui^hters Mrs. Allen Bo^cr and,
new home as soon as ir is vacated.! Mrs. Claude Foster, both o f
C A n I* C L A r* Mocksville. Route 5;’ and four’-
Jt^O liO iJ R O t i^*'^^'‘o*herr, and two half sisters,]
^ a . . ^ I Funeral services were conduc • •^Salwburv April 20,-The R o w a n 3. „ Thursday at Zion
Davie Medical Associa. on a";, Bap.is, Ciiurcl-in Iredell County
nounce today that it ha i agr«d by r „ . J. P. Davis, Rev. E. W.
upon a standaid fee of *3 for ad. burner ai d Rev. GraJv White,
mfaiistermg Salk v ^ n e in pri- Burial wa. In the Church cemc vate practice—$1 being the cost of ,
theiemm ahJ $2 for a reeiubr 'bf-
fficecall.
The doctors adopted a priority
scheduled designed to make vac
cination available to different age
\ AU Doga Four (4) Month* Old Or Older Should
~ Be Vaccinated.
The Charge, ^lecial At Clinic* Only, I* «1.00 Per Dog.
.AU Vaccine WiU Be Admini«tc^ By A Veterinarian
Dayie County Health
Annual Banquet
i The first Annual Banquet of the
cansidered susceptible to the po- P’In the main auditoriuin of Coolllo. They further decide they „ . _ , , o _ nnn •_ .would administer th e vaccine Sprtog, S^ool. Some 1200 m-
withont charge to children c«,i- T T * ^ T f6ed by official agencies as iodlger.t. duates and their husband or wives..
--------------------- I Well over 100 of these were sent
to members of the Miteheli Ac»
demy wfiich was cevertcd to the
To Mr. and Mrs. Ned Boger,'Public school at Cool Spring early
Route 2. on April 16, a .on, at in the c.ntury. ' I
Rowan Memorial Hospital, | Former teachers of the Mhool
. To Mr. and Mrs Gerald Barn- and their husbands or yirive. are
hardr, of Mocksville, on April 16; espedaliv invited and diie to the
ason,ac Rowan Memoriel Hi s Incompleteness of the mailing
^ew Arrivals
you can*jt get
your house In, too!
WINDSTORM INSURANCE
E. C Morris Insurance Agency
Phonel96 ModuviUe, N. C
pital,
.T o Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Seamon,
of R. 4, on Aoril 16, a son, at Ro
wan Meinprial Hospital.
To Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Mun*
"dav, of Route 4, on April 16. a son.
ac Rowan Memorial K^ipinl.
To Mr. and Mrs. Jcs^e jorJan,
ofCooleemite, on April I8ib,
daughter, a t Rowan Memorial
/H oaptoL
To Mr. and M r.. C. G. Cranfi I, near MockavUle, on ARfil 21. a
daughter at Rowan Memorial Hos
pital. .
lists, the association committee
would like to use this means to
invite any tcaeher ot graduate that
has not received a notice of this
event to contact the ■'president,
lohn H., Webb. Route I, States
Statcsv.lie or Mrs. Edgar Sowers-
8l7 E,ist Front St,. Statesville, se
cretary of the assoclaiion,' before
April JO.
Mrs. Walter Carter is quito ic. ar
Lynn Haven Nui.ing Hoi,.e, lol
lowing a bean attack, her frienJ.
will be'wtrv to team.
m dh tfor, of WTOt wrt, "MrJOHNNY M tiat, p .
htt, alm vt lUtd lUhl Kan fcr eeoUw... and on Ifc* tatfa—»V
dark Kavs far nie, Iha best-tasthig
ealiaii syrap efsm off"
Yea, indatd...biaouili Bk* biA ^ youpourm pl^dfiM ichwiadaAKTO ... W a nothing lik. it> » ( o a d M ^ Sat»
lyin’ tUviir. So rich tt atanda i M ^ on top
of Oaepi ’«m andflofly). 1 ^Kara on your taUemoiidn« noon and mgbt I-
. ...Itto p B an y t^ l
A dty«w t»M «lerD A «|C iC iii*,lnflrt«i.d< uailboltlw
Get Ready For The
Plantin£r Season Now
SEE u s FOR
Cole Planters and Distributors
Complete Line Of Repairs
j^ n k in - S a h to d
Y«ar Ibteiraational Hat VMter Dealer
P h o o e9 6
! DAVIE SEnORO. llOCK3Vm.E, B, C.. APRIL 27. 1MB PA6K1
O idiM K pisir In T l^
No U quor^ W ine. B ern Ad*
NEW S A R O U N D TO W N ..
Mr*. Wade Brown, of Boone.
•pMt last wedt in town ^ th her
'moduftfi M n. J. T. Baity.
Mrs. G. N. Got* arid Mtfc Don
ald Binghiun, of Cleinmon., were
.^MtwJtavflle vid tty P ^ -
Mr. and Mri. Qutoce P<iwell
and son Simmy,'of Greensboro,
ment one day tn the old home
town recently.'
. Lleut.-CoL J. A. Yate., of Luin-
,ber:Bridiie, apent a . few days to
town recently with hi. mother,
M w .C .N .C h^ ^ a n . .
" Mbs illllef Metpiiey' i^ in W
hotne last from Lexlnglon,-
• w bm .he spent the winter with
her sister. Mrs. JiAn Hotige..
Mrs. W. M. Peiiiilhgton left
Sunday for A«heyine. where -she
will spend time with ber
mother, Mrs. F. W. Poindexter.
There will beTchicken ptem d
ham suoper at Oak Grove Metho
dist Church hut next Sawrday,l» ginning at 5 io’clock. All Invited
Mr. and Mts..Noraiian Cement
of Raleigh, .|^nt Kveral days , last
week In town, giiints of, Mr. Cle
m ents sisters, M n. T. K. Sheek
and MI.S Unda Cleinent.
Mr, and Mrs. J. C. Jonea, Joe
FMner, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sea-
fbid aiid 1; G. Robert, spent Wed-
neKlay lit Waahlngton, D. C., at;
' tendtog an R. E. A meeting.
/ Mines Lmlae and leinie Libby
Stroud, Chdre Wall and June
Gteene attended the concert by
the' North Carolina Syiiiphony Or-
cheatia In Salisbury laat Monday,
- evmlng.. .
Mr. ^ Mr*. Da«4d P ^ ln g -
ton, wlio live In Soil* Mocka-
'vlBe, are biiildlng a 5-room brick
hotue one mllewear of town, oti
Statesville Highway, which -they
- will occupy when completed.
Mrs. a C Smoot, of Route'l
returned hotne last w e* from Ro
wan Memorial Hospital, where
' she w>ent several day. taking treat
ment. -H er friend.'ate hopli«
that die will ao«m be much better.
The young people of Liberty
Pilgrim Churah of Sheffield, will
ptewntadfam a. “Toudi of the
Master Hand," on May 1st, at 7:30
p. iti. There are several different
sceim in this drama. Ey^body
-we.come.
H.M.-2and M ^ Gerald Bern,
hard of this city are the proud
mteitla of a line soti. Edward Ear),
who anrived at Rowan Memdrial
Hospital; Saturday, April 16th.
Mrs. Ber.ihard is tbe former Mli.
■thelma Anderson.
, Mr. and Mrs. Radfoti Harris,
who' are living in one «>f the
Jiiocksville Builders Supply !
on Hardiwn street, have purchas
ed the.W .J. Bailey hoiijK bn Sal
isbury inreet which they wlU.occu-
copy. Mr. Bailey a n d ^ i l y
mov^. to Soiith. Boston, Vfc, Iw
year. .■ ■
Mr. «id »ii». Benttett J. WU-
lia ^ o f Diablo Height*, Cknal
; & ne. arrived here yesterday_to
. ;';* ^d ;tw o week* with Mrs. Wil-
Itito ' dster, Mr*. C N. Chrl*tian,
aiiid brothn, Ernest Hunt. They
have many friend* here who are
alwmaglad to .«
. '• Mr. and Mr*. A. E Alford and
aoUl Km, ot HWcory, moved Into
one oftheRavinondFoaierS^in
houMa on Avon Street laM wedt,
Mr. Alford will m ana^ d
B.' C- Moore department atote
which opens here on fclay S«»; to
Steady pnicrice I. being put on
the lunior play, “Peck*. Bad Boy,"
whkh will be 'preseiJted Friday
evening. April 29d», at 8 o’clock
die audiMtlum.
Junior ddegates to Girls’ 'State
h a ^ ’bMn select^. They are Lyn
da Crav ford and Betty Lou Ed-
iratds. ',
Friday Miss Coble’s botiie room
was Iri charge of chapel. They
rtted a program showing how
the 48 states came Into the union
and they also gave interesting foct*
about each statei -
The Monogram Club met Mon
day at Activity Period. The'pur-
poieofthl* m e ^ g was to dis-
CUM the next two gaine. which
will be played here under light.,
The Club has planned a party
which will be h ^ May 19. De-
t^ a of this oarnr were dlMUssed.
In chapel Wednesday we were
privlledi^ to hear the Rev. Jack
Page, who cottducted the Metho-
diat revival last week. Everyone
thoroughly etijoyed and appreciat
ed hi. inspirational talk.
Tuesday night 23 of the F.H A.
girls, accompanied brMiss Greene, oumeyed to Rockwell, where the
Qavie-Rowan Count? Rally was
held. Following the business ses
sion everyone adjourned to the Home Economica Lab where delicious retmhment. were served.
Out baseball boys are still on
their winning streak. Fridav they traveled to Cooleeinee where they defratd ttiejn d ian sj^.
George W. Rowhmd and U rry
Murray returned Filday night from
aliahlng trip In South Carolina.
Tney caught .Ome big ones.
. dw hnildUg fly occupied by- Ml* --.
HeftJer fit. BoUck, on the, ^uaw.
Mrv Alford' has been w to * e
MoQic atpteVfo HfckorT
V va4«.. The R e c ^ Is
I Mr. A lfo rf.sn dto *».e beit^own.lii Nocm
PEANNA SILVERDIsi Rqmt«r.
Mr. atid . M r..' Jim . Fuller and I Rev. H .C . Sprinkle, a patient at A < l|||i||is tr a tr ix N oticC
children are. moving this week.'Lynn Haven NuratajlHome, who / ■ . . j > .
to m Wlnston-Salem to a h6use< .uaFered a .troke abojit tenlday* Havfay jualliied a* Admlnlstta-
pn Hardlsoii street owned by the
K(<k '.sviUe Btiiijet* Supply" and
fbrmerlv^ obim|4^ by? Mr; - and
Mr*. Radford I^rriB, iyho are
movli>g t6 the. W- T^ W ley hotise
which th ^ p U ^ a se d . on Salis
bury Street .
Fije-McDaniel
' of^e'esttte of FredS.Orrell, -ago. Is reported to be dighUylm- of Davie County,
proved.
NOTICE XO CREDITORS
HaCing quallfietl a* e w c u ^ of the estate bfH . i.'Carter,
ed, late of Davie Coun», NordiCarolina, thto is to ootifv all " "
sons holding di,tate, to p i ^ t them to ete u ^ ^
Announcement is niade of the'»iW>ed within 12 m»rrlage of Mias Annie Lee Frye date heryf, or Ais notice wM te
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Pkad I" bar <>f diete i»ctvo t. ^ I
Frye, Route !, MiKksville to Gil- perrons ontog Mttte
bertLee McDaniel, son of Mr. 'and M n. Walter McDaniel of April I6,19M.____
MocksviUe. V IRG IN IA -A R Tre P O ^ L U
; The ceremony was performed E xrx. of R I. Carter, Dec* d.
April 8 in York, ■South Carolina. . B. C. Brock, Attorney.
North Carolina, this is; to notify all person, having claim, again^ said estate to present them to the
undersigned whhln twelve months
from date hereof, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover. All persons ow
ing aald estate will please n
immediate Kttlemant.
Princess Theatre
WEDNESDAY
‘TARZAN THE APE MAN”
With Johnny Weissmuller
Cartoon '
s a r a h ¥ . ORRELL. -
Admrx. of Fred S. Orrell, Decs'd.
Han & Zaijiary, Attorneys.
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
BANK OF DA VIE
Of Mocksvlile, In the State of North Carolina, at the close of business
on April 11.1955'
ASSETS ‘
Gash, balances with other banks, including reserve bal-ances»and cash items in process of collection . $ 747|7M.75 Ua S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed l»0w»4lZ.W
Obligations of States and polirical subdivisions • 7 ^ * 0 ^ ^
Other bonds,'notes and debentures • - • loans and discotmts ? • •Fumitute and fixtures > - - ; ‘ • _5,8»z3Other assets • - • - • 14*980.62
TOTAL ASSETS
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of.individuals, partnerships porations ' ». -Tlme-d^osits of indivWuals, partnerships and corporations ■ • . * . *
Deposits of United States Government (including postal
3334,202.04
and cor*
make
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified as Admbilstn'
trix of the estate ofHsniletla Dix
on, deceiM^,:notlce'ls hetebrilv-
en to all. periibni holding dateu;
against'said deceased to p tc m '
the same, properly v e^edr to ^ •
undersign^, on or before the I4«h day of April, 1956, or dila Aotice will be pluld in Iw of recovery.
All persons indebted to n ld ertM
will please call and make prompt
settlement. . __'This the 14th day of April, 186a.
ROSA S. MILLER. A < W
of Henrietta Dixon, Deea'd.
Mocksville, N. C., Route 4.
Do you read The Record?, Do You Read The RecdHT
and I
_ _ "AL I
Other liabilities
..itical subdivisions
and officer’s checks, etc.)
• - - $3,472,885.06
1,645,156.15
1,656.020.14
23,702.45
144,530,91
3,475.41
25360.18
TOTAL LIABILITIES (not including subordlna-3.498445,24
$ 50,000.00 250,000.00
35,756.80
335,756.80
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
“SMOKE SIGNAL” With Dana
Andrew*& Piper,Laurie In
Technicolor Cartoon & News
SATURDAY
Bttl Hickok In “OUTLAW'S
SON” Cartoon & Serial
MONDAY «!TUESDAY
“GOLDEN MISTRESS" In
Technknior Wldi lohn Agar & Rosmarie Bowe
All Picture* Above On Out New
WIDE SCREEN Coihe In And
See It Yo j’ll Si^ It*s Sensational
DAVIE l» U N T V S B i c c m s iio w
VALUE . ' A m I * , and
3.834J02XH
2,417.00
32836038
ted oUigations shown below)
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS .
•Capital -' . . ■ . ■ .
Surplus - - - - - - Undivided profits . . .
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
TOTAL UABILITIES AND CAPITAL
ACCOUNTS - ■ - . ■
*This bank’a capital consists of common stock
with total par value of $50,000.00
MEMORANDA
Total deposits to the credit of the State of -North Caro
lina ot anv official thereof . -
Asset* p led i^ or assigned to secure liabilities and for
(a) Ltiana as Siolm above are after deduction of re
serves of - - . ' -(b) Securities as shown above are after deduction of
reserve* of • - -
I, S. M. 'Call, Cashier of the abcive named bank, do aolemnly swear that the d»ve statement is true, and thill It fiillv and correctly Kpre* senrs the true slate o f the severiil matters herein contalited and aet
forth to the best of mv knowledge and belief., S. M. CALL Caahler
, ‘ Correct—Attest:
KNOX JOHNSTONE
R.B. SANFORD
TM . CAUDELL
■' , Directors
;,Sute of North Carolina, County of Davi^ ss: _I .■• Sworn to and s|ibscribed before me this 16th day of April, 1955, and 1 hereby certify that I am not an officei or director of this bank.
MAE K. CLICK. Notary Public
23,526.64
5,616.C6
Quidc Service!
We Have Just Finished
Installing A Large
Hammermill
Which Is The Largest One
Of Its Kind In North Carolina.
This Mill Has A Capaaty Of
300 Bags Per Hour
Which Enables Us To Give Our
Hundreds Of Customers .Quick
Service At All Times.
We Are Prepared To Crimp Your|
Oats, Put iviolasses On Your Feed.
And Supply Your Needs In ,
Feeds Of All Kinds.
When You Come To ToMni Call
And Look Over Our Equipment
We i4re Better Prepared Than
Ever To Give You Good Service
Hupp Feed Mills
Salisbury StreetPhone 95
THE GIFT SHOP
MM. ChriiliiieW. Daniel
W^ANT ADS PAY.
Pianos turn ^, repaired, rebuilt, refinished or restyled. Free esti
mate*. N m aitd used pianos.
Anvdiing musical. Ea*y tenm.
’^ ^ tS ^ g ^ Muric Co. :
^ 9 N. Trade 8 ^ Winaton-Saktn
MAN wX'NtEi>-T«>...........................-^p—To operate-
Waddo* Busbiew^ln D a ^ Coon.;
ty.» Hundred* of Csmlllra n ^ n g :
anvlee TO'faned W a ^ s Pr^; ducts; fliow NatibnallylAdvcttlsed.;
M ustbe vover: 21 and have car. |
p y^ p E ^ A C rt^ IMPLEMENT c a
jPhone 310-j
MpdnviUe, N. C;.
I^lisbutry Highway
I
\. - '
TBI^Ig^iPpilD.'IIOCE8VIUJt N.X., APltIL 27:: (M
—' " "" \ i ' ■' ' i \ * •, ^ , r < ''■t' ^'li
..........
'.PR. KENNETH J. ^^OREMAN
3- Chronicles
"ptyMUtwl ne*4la« NehemUh t:!-*.
Faith and Action
LeMon for Mftjr 1, J955
^ H E church l8 not the state aod
u r J J ,1®'® •** *^e church, wjen elUier one tries to be (he
Is trouble. Church aod state are
® <leep.rooted American prt.«pfe. But that flow
not mean that a waU should be run
up between the
»fafe and r«li*
gJon. That doesjjot m enn th at the
state can afford to
bo indittcrcnt (o
religion. You are
not I and I am not
you; but that does not mean there Dr. Foreman
ought to be a stone wall standing
hiGh between us. It docs not mean that either of us should be Jndlf.
XcT^nt to the other. The church
can help the state, and vice
versa.
Executive** fttHglea
Most American churches, ftj.
eluding those denominations fboth large »nd small) sponsor this col
umn. bcMcve that the state ought
m)t to help the church by direct "establishm<int’* of any chureh by
public low. No Presbyterian.
AJclhrdj.sl or Baptist, for instance, and sUJI loss a Quaker or a
Pentcco.stnl Christian,. wants his
own church given government svpoort. by money grants or any
other way. Nevertheless, Chris
tians of every label rejoice when a President or other leader pro*
iesscs w s faith openly, We all
feel. Quiio rightly, that we shall
be bPiivr off when our leaders
in si.i{c and society are genuinely
rcJii»nHis men and'women. There is on interesting anc* instructive
imtstration of this li. ihe Bible. In tJjc coursc ot the history of
Judah we como on the adminis*
t»-atlon of a king named Jehosha-
nhat. He was a good itjng and ho leU his country Jar better than
be foisjjd it. Now we hear very litUe about this king's beUefs. He
was no m.'jrc nor Jess orthodox
than kiiiR^ before or after him.
He was not a better king because be could pass a better examina
tion In theology. He was better because he put his beliefs iota
action. A creed that can't get
light and nir and exercise turns
hold'it
B w lM |« (M « k tS n » rfn M rNow many acts of a hi«h execu-
' live may not seem to be religious
or to have anylblnfi to do with « Won. and yet they may affect
rdiglon stronely. For examBle,
r " . •''■'oEhaphat, a king whose Brst recorded act was one
’i'l' defense. He SotUfled his border garrisons and he
developed a weU-organized and -quipped ,m r . Seilgioa can
not be upheld on the points of
, bayonets, that. Is aU true; but
Ihe fact remains that in the time
of lehoshaphat there iv«s real
danger from invasion, and a suc
cessful Invasion meant that the true relleion would have to go un-
dorsround. Korean Chri«ti/ins
know this today perhaps better
than anybody. What South Korean
Qirlslian^ wants the V. ti. forccs to to home? So. even so seemine-
ly non-relicious a business as re-
orfiaoliine an army for greater
"olablereligious elTccts loo.
im M n n p lo ft. PH fit
Before Billy Grahar- visited Dcnrnark. ^It was said, the preach
ers In that country, who were
men of high education, preachcd so far over the heads ot thi- p.„,
M tllsmolly , small congregations, it is tlie people’s buslnesa to rise to ou. level, said the prcachors. noi us to oink to iheir.!. Tli'n Sillj-
Graham eam^ along ind showed wliat would hai.pen If ,,. eBchvi» reallj-, Sol down where the people are. Since that time, it If report, ed, the ministers have t.-,ken th. hint and the churches are gsttinc
more people interested. You can
put religion In a beautiful Ivory tower, or gothic cathedral tor that matter, and iieople may ad mire it but that'i rtt Sdlgion has got to be put wMWn reach
"J"'”'- Jehoshaphat did this by putting hli •tcachlii* prlnli” on the road, taking the
W ’Pl'> <he)Law which had so much to say about everyday Uvin*. In oar
country,, on the contrary, though
the one place where you can reach all the people is in the public
schools and state coUeges, the
law generally permits any sub-
^ taughl-cxcepi the Bible, which cannoi m-cn bp
legally read aloud!
WOMAN'S W->.'?U>
Frequent Smile ^ H
Can DoWonden p
For PerMily
F SOMEONE bas, said to 7011.
'You*d be prettier it you smiled
more oftai** .this should be • cue
to ask yourself -or. some close
Irlend or- relative some questions. People close to you may hesitate
to speak ot how often you l^own, squint, arch your brows, s^w l or
other facial misb^avior; but an
open atittude «o yow part'm ay help elicit some fnformati<M). -
Fre<iuent:6mUlngi>e8peak« hap* piness and the lack ot smiles m ay.
point to conditions you should do something obout. Sometimes the
solution may be very simple. For example, short stockings and tight
shoes may put an unconscious
When lt*8 too warm for a coat
and too cool for Jost a shirt and
blouse. yon*ll Hfce this Inferest-
Ing knitted sweater wUcIi lea*
tures loose bat not faO sleeves,
a braided effeot from shoulders
lo the pecfceto aad bright clrcih .
lar buttons.
scowl on your lace and prevent a
ready smile.
Face Tour Oondltton
When your smile is not as natural as it should be. it may be
that you‘re trying to hide some defect of the teeth. This would be
a good time to have the cimdition given attention.
Squinting may indicate a need
for having the eyes checked or
glasses changed. U your face Is
listless and it’s an effort to smOe.
then your i^sical cooditioe may
require improvement.
Kegativc personality traits can
niin your disposition «s well as
your smile so you mJgtit ehedt up on little things that upset you and
see what can be done to resolve
your problems. A desire to do •
something about being irrttftted
over certain small things can often
4o wcmders in hdptaig ironing tben miL V
Y«vr imfle wilL be lovdier, toe.
It you wiU select a good Upstlek
tad then use It to advantage. A
Broperlsr made-up moufh ofTera the
frtm e tor a lovely smile,
color should gOi wltk the tone ot your sMa as well as
enamel on the teeth and be flatter-
iag to both. Buy several smaB
•ises of lipsUck and tb eA them
caretolly under durereat ligfatliic
(0 choose the one wfaleh looks best.
Appljrtbe color wWk m good
ImiA for a <aeui Una. A
smile is often marred if you hare
teeth smeared wltli Upsdck. Be
certain to blot the access. T9ien
face the world aod smile your
loveliest.
Colors W ill Add
Spice to Drab Rooms
Color la the least expensive ot
all home furnishing decorations.
Tet» tb b ^ how tnucb color can do to enliven your hom«l It inalmi
drab rooms cheerfid. tt fives tba pUUn 'a touch ot glamor.
One ot the best eotart to be
used lor a lively and twarming ac>
cent is red because tt Is* ey«>
catching and Uvely. However, if
you don't care for red, there ar*
other colorf whleh serve the pur
pose lust as well. Periiapt ycRl
might like to consider turquotM
or aquamarine or even brass or
“S 'peclaBy
latdycon
ot these suggestloas It m -
ly Important it you Itav* ' come to.teel that jm ir hom*
Is not warm enough as Ihr as tha eolor choice is cooMmed.'
{wedomliftfllUg-
iA »
AOROM1.8hut -6. Plant of .mint (amity tl. Long-legged wading bird . l3.Las«o13. First man14. Passige.
wiiy»19.0newho .readspalma
IT. Typo measures15. Appearing as if eaten20.Maleawan 33. Land.. measure 24. A style of
4. Rlver (Fr.)
5. Half an em
g. Touingh e n ^ * (poss.)7. Sloths . g.AucUon •.Article
l«.TounirgM M. Hebrew .
' instrument
16. Persia
19. Organ
> otslght SO. Lettuce
iV.8.)81. Coin (Swcd.)33.Morsel. .
bookbindingin limp
leather
2S.Conatel.lation30. WlM
91. Third son otAdam32. Argon (abbr,)
33. Famous
cathedral town (Eng.)34. Path
described by a planet37. Immense10. City (Pa.)
44.InfuHate
<6. Flourished
47. A moment48. Analyze
grammatico
ally49. Dwellings60. Deeds
DOK’N
1. Fellow2. Girl’s name3. Verbal
"to be”
26. Chum ;27. Travel ^ back
and
forth
3».6»da.mation
80. Fused
material (Ceram*
Ics)
SlD ex.
terout SS.Storma 36. Roman
- outer.garmenta
ST.Girri nickname
38. Set of boxes
tJap.)
113:1
iiu tin’j-ja u ii
uirjLJU II .vj n a i’j
M :rjau LirjflL3i!
30. Stem41.0dd(S eot|. . 43. Snug retreat :
43..Fillswlth
sotemn . wonder 45. High card >'
48. Pfennig
tabbr.)
> If' H la
Pmm
It j n f n airaJd ot a bvigbt flash el color, then atari bgr • cbigle
addttien or two. Fredi lanpdiBdes, new cushions, a new dado or some
pottery may be aU that you need.Once you have achieved suectM
with a lew simple addltioas you
can go ahead and make addltloiial
ones. Changes can' be gradoal
and still be effective.
W arning Colora
Do you have rooms which are
ntty cool in tone and
Culture of East
And West I49et
In Puerto Rico
CAYEY, PUERTO RlCO-Hlgh
in the hills of taterior Puerto Rico
a private and personal good-wm
campaign Is bringing together the
cultures ot east and west.• Ever since W tsue Shigeno
Klolzbach moved to the .Common* wealth with her fanOly a year
ago. the arep around this picturesque mountain agricultural 'cen- .
ter has been treated to a taste of
Old Nippon.Mitsue is the wife of Kentuckian
CarrOU L. Klotzbach who had to ilght Congress to get her tato the
United States. She is the first Japanese woiran to have been per
mitted to enter the country after
the war to marty an American-
citiaen->nid It toidc a special pri
vate law to get her to.Klotzbach met Mitsue In 1948 in
Chotu. Japan, where he was civilian chief cf the Army's larg
est hydroponic farming. unit, in'
Japan. When lie returned Ho the
states In 1949, his attempts to bring
Mitsue to this country were ham
pered- iv the A ct no machinery
had been set up lor Japanese na
tionals and the War Brides Act,
pertaining to servlcen^. had « •
pired hi 1947.living in Florida;, fdota-
bach took his plea to Governor
Spessard I*. Holland who introduced the Special Private Law in
ttie Senate. The House passed it
on February 7. 19S0. and MiUue
soon Jt^ned her husband In Wash
ington.Now. «4iUe- her husband man>
ages a hydrcqpcmle unit being ad- , vanced to teach the science to
Puerto Kico's farmers. Mitsue dresses herselt and two cbildren
in ieimonos and prepares pungant sukiyaU tor vistttog guesta.
Titanium Strong,
Shibbbrri Metal
WASniNGtON-TUantam. recently added to the United States
s tra t^ c stodti^e. Is a real mod- , em ^%onder metal" whose pbten-
, tial for war or peacetime industi7
Is equalled only by Its problems
and contradictions. ‘
Although distributed throughout
tiie wortd. titanium is lo u ^ In low
cMcentrations, taivartably nUxed
with other elements.
ft is one of the most abundant
structural metals in t ^ earth's
crust.. after alumhium. iron te d magnesium, it a light, strn g . and
resistMit to heat, shock and corrosion. Yet Ita disadvantages, par*
ticularly Us tendency lo absorb gaseous ImpurlUes at high tem
peratures. make it a stubborn, costly mhterial to process. .
Consequently. United States con
cerns have taken even,less than
the ten per cent of the limited sup
ply opened to civUians earlier this year.
The metal is particuUrly suit- ' aUe for hi^-speed, high-aylng
jets. It also seems ideal for lightweight tank armor, gun parts,
guided missfles and portable .
bridges. The Navy finds titanium's resistance to salt water hivaluable ‘
for submarine snorke uses and the Atomic Energy Commission puta
titanium to secret tisee '
Best of Six Husbondis
Turns Sour From Sweet
^DETROIT—Sweet can cha^e to
sour awful fast. b'-"eves a local
Judge. \When Roy M. l*^y. 26, won a
suspended sentence on a mteor traOlc violation last May, his wife.
Sally; 96. told the court:
. "Judge, he's sweet. He doesn't
drink or carouse an^ he's the best
husband 1 ever bad. I oughta know.' I've had she ot them.!'
Recently Roy and Sally were back in coturt. Sally as the plain
tiff. ’She i tenderly rubbed a bruised
mouth and told .fudge W. McKay
Skillman:
“Judge, he*s’ awtul. He's ornery and cheap and common. He's the
v'orat husband I ever had.'*
You'd be surprised how these can be warm^ without i.iiMiging the basic color schema '
-ot the room or without- draslto
¥ FOR RENT ♦
SPACtiN THtS PAPER
W AiTMst T* S«tt
GOOD NEKSHBORS-PtKES to
\ F ir v c H * BiisNess : ,
IP YOU HAVE-
. beenion a ^uip'
entenalned (uefM
celebrated a biithday
. caught • big 6ah i
..-moved ...... i, ' .
tioped
. Iw d'ab^ . ■ :
bm'lii'avii^t' . . ■■■
' told yoiit hop
Ind an oi»ntlon '
■ '.boui^t a c»:
palh^vbuthbuse '
been' inattted' ;
.'cata;n«w’’tooth, :
"■■ ■ been’shot
' ■ : v:':' ;»tolet>'an^teg ’
.b^'.fobbed _ /■
. , ioldottt
' . / . lofltvvour bair ..
’b e e d ;* ^ ^ ';'" . ■'n--''
Or ip>one Anything At AU
TeleplioBc^ Or Drop a PoatcBrd, Or Come In,
' QT: In Any Conv^ment Way Inform . ..
t h e PAViE RECORD
Heart Disease, Cancer
Second to Accidents
NEW VORK-Only heart diBeue
and cancer cause more deaths than,
accidenta among American men
at the principal, working ages ot
IS through 04. At ages IS through 39 moK men die through accident^
al hijuries than from any other
’cause. ' • 'More than 40.000 accideht fataU-
ties each yean occur among men
under OS. ■
A leading' life tosuranee; com
pany says nearly hatt.ot the ac
cidental deaths among policyhold
ers are the afterm ath-ot motor, v e h i^ misliaips. Falls, ra n k ^
second m a cause of fatal ac- '- cidenu among the insured men.
accounted for one<ninth of the ta-
, talities. and drownings for nearly
as great a loss of life as falls.Altofetlwr, the three leediiw
causes-^motor vehicles, falls and <frownfogii7*w«re responsfbte Ibr %bout seven tint of every ten ae-
cidental deaths In this r insured . vmp.
— d A V I B CO TTN TT’S O X.bXSST N B W S P A iP B R -T H B P A P jt lt » H B P B 6 p I .B M B A D
•MtMC a i u i t i m i i o i ^ u a ^ tiiw w iD «■ a m u B K t M p m m i m m r o a h*.*
VOI.HMN XV.ItOCKSyiLLB. NORTH CAROUNA, W B D im pA T MAV 4. IW -
NUM BBR S9
Dayife Record
Has Boen Pdblished Since 1899
NEWS OF liOHG AGO.
W M W M H a p p M ih itliiD a -
vi* B ator* P to k hif M alar*
A nd A U>ra«M te4SM rti^^
(bavie Reeded, Hay 8ih 'i^ i) V
Aren't Tltlett Parnell’s re d
cates pretty?
W . A . Ballejr, o f Advance, was
In io m i M ondar.
S hirt waists ate becoming popa
a t in M ockivllle.'
T . C. ShM is, ot BIxby paid n<< •
!>Ieaaant call Mondav.
Oannon Talbert, aaslstanl 'pnat.
niaster at AdTance, was In town
M onday. < '
G. H .'G rabanI, of Farm locton.
. waSa btislness Wsilor here Hon*
, W . F . Ftirches one oftheconhtv
eommlssloners. Is v<|nlte, sick, and
conld not he here Monday. ,
JudKe Bowden o( C hieaeo,. was
Olhea* h»*e come and cone.your'
county newspaper keep* ffoing.
S->melime« it bat Mamed hard to
make "buckle and longue" meet,
but *oon the tun shine* and we
ntarch on. CJw faithful tubtcrib ert
otdit of whom pay prom ptly, p v e u t
courage and abiding faith in our
fellow man. /
If your neighbor it nut tid in g The
Record tell ^m ' tn tubtcrihe. T he
price it onlyI.so per year , in 'th e
Slate, and iS.OO in other ttatet.
When You Gome To Town
Make Our Office Your
Headquarters.
W e Are Always Glad To
:iS4e You.
y~I
S ^ «Safi, aS.n..^wHh. ^ Tj»e J)ayie RccoH rteb Shade of cranberiF r«L «led bjT a iiativ^e o f D«(vie G>unt]r«
Booms la which blue or Uulsh
green la the predominant dMde
LET u s DO
yW jobprinung
We can sav«» you money
-.on'your ;v.;,
ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS
STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL
HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc.
Patronize your home niewspaper
and }diereby help build up your
' IwMi# town andvcoupty.^ ; : <:
y l H E B A V i ^ ^
m
w -■ ,'A '
{n thft cotiatir BToiNfav .abd Toe*.
day taklne denosltlona to b« used
In a trail la Texas.
' r» S. Leotiard, of Stateevllle. ba»
Vwfin yttittfnR fits dati?liter. Bfrs/S.
Swaim, loir the past week.
; J. Pink Beck, of trear SbeffieW,
‘was In town last week ob btndnew.
Tames Welker, who ‘ tiear
KaptM. lost hfe house, wheat aod
baenn« and part .of hU com aud out*
bulldlttca by fire ^ttirday mom
Vtof- ' • ■ ■■ ■: %Mr: Villen, of Blxhy, la MnhInK
ot.itnoytng Us 4onr mlllto Mocks,
^tte; \ ■
l;‘ w . ana 1. Ci ChailW loat ten
to 8f ) ^ t e 61 Innber last week
hr fi(%, aho a .^anw and a lot of
saw mill fistttfea. '
T. H. Ratledce haa opened np
' encory and dry (roods stole In the
OnMI bitndlBC at Advan^
^ e conmenceaient a't Smith
Ofove . Academy will take ^ place
'Wednesdav, May land. The liter,
m addrem -win he dellveied by
Rer. Ch»» H Dtl»v. '
The folln«»lnK list taken were
appolnted.hy the county comnili.
slmen Mondav: Advance, O. TaU
hert-.Caiahaln.' T. F. Mcorej Clark..
*llle, M; P. Rlchardmn; Jerjisalem,
W. D. FMier; M«cka»Hle. 6. W.
Shwk, Fnitoii ti. A. Ballev;
Pannlncton. C. A. Hall. Dr. Jas.
H ^Qlre was elected superlniend
m N F m v M
Another Oi the rather- a ta rtll^
ptedlettons of cbaoges te cam e dajiy
Ing the M lileanlnm lath e p ro |A e^
that animals will lose their en i* l^
oine towarif another. Isaiah t^ c e
describes this pbenomennm. and
makes K definitely clear that "th e
wolf stso ahsll dwell ^ t h th e lamb,
aod the leopard shall Ilf down with
the kid. and Ihe calt and theyoanc
Hon and the fatllnc.toEether ” las.
lah II. 6-g and (>s:>S! Bosea 9;tg.
H e even Koes farther and ptedlcits
that the animal species which have
formerly been clsmlfied as *'cam |.
varons" because of the!* depend,
ence oh Sesh from other snimals
will therefore become herblverotn
W that they can exist npon plant
Hie rather than meat. '•The Hon
shaH eat straw like the bnHock,
and dnsi shaH be the serpent’s
m a t. They shall not h nrt . nor d c
strov In mv holy monntaln. sslth
the Lord.’< Tsalab 65;>,i;. In an.
other place he again refers to tkl^
Molojrieal cbanee when he says:
"ilie Hon shall eat strew like the
lox.” Isaiah ii:a . Not only win
lenmltv bMween memhers o f . the
aolm ^ kinadnm disappear, bntfear
enmity between me • and ,anl.
ent of the Board of Health:
T he to m election la oragf
aa w e g o to p re n .The old tidiet
ISSlf
1^ - '
ft being voM for: Repb^lcans
are taking no pan In llte election.
Flah weighing; from la to ig
vonndi each were caught at Coo.
Iwmee Saturda*."
;W. W. Strand, of Hickory ap^t
one day last week M town with :his
btothef, .C. Frsnk Strond.
TheConfederate pimic will he
field In Hoekavllle on' iSatnrd'ay,
Mayasth. Among those selected
to solicit bsskets for Ihe occasion
^ were: Capt.' lohn H .' i%menti
HlasSallleHanea, Jas H. Culev,
Min Laiira Clement. Mra. Ida O
Nall, John B Poaid, Bph Bara
hanlt. Mias M. B. Uvragnod. Mis.
Lila Chatin, John PeeMea; Mrs.
U n Hanes, C. O. Baley, W. ‘ A.
Bailey, Mra.'Belle Peebles^ Mn.
Eugeiila Lebtiardj N. A. Peebles.
Mta. W. A, Bailey. S. A. Janris
M in Bmrns Jahnsoal Thos. Pera.
bee. Mas. W. A BHIa, Isaac Rob.
ens, Mrs. B. Frost, P. A. Baity,
M ir A H. McMahan, Ab' Avder.
SOB. Min Ulllan Smoot, Rey; W
R. fCetchle. MIsaNantle Rattedge.
John C>. Hodgea, Mra. Emily Black,
-■taetl. ' '. '
. -.lOnlytwoof the above people a n still alive- Min: SalMe Hanes,
nl Modsvllle. and Min Lillian
Sao.)t,.a6w Mra. lahn-Koontz, of
.Soiitb Ctlthain. Bdltor.] .
A lohr.bnrae teaai helongieg io
J a ^ h H endrh^ of. Teaoysop,!
rta away and ran into the SiMitb
Valklii river at Poid/ft Ulidaay’a
frrfr.-btn weicKaened. hy. Thoa. Spry a e d o tb ^ ; No' aadont.
. jtnlw ntidM ^
UHReporiS^s
folks Around World
Are Uving Beffer
^ WA8HINGT0N--An insight hito the compMitivc Uv^ .ttandards ot the Vnited SUtes 'and cert^ countries for which suiistics
mats wfit tikewim cease. Referrlafr
to It, Isalsh ^avfl; ^ 'A n d th t «ttck*
Inc ebltd shall play on the bole of
the asp» and tbe weancd^chlM ah4n
out bis hand on the cM katrlce'a
deo.^' Tiiey flball not biirt nor de.
rtroy In all mv holy monntftlu.**
ilsalab Bom lty between la*
dlvidnals will a1«o be elemlnatedi
For ,eentbrle«i. poHtleal aeleotlsta
h aw dfeam edof tbe.anpreeldeBted,
proirrea« w hich' maokind c o titd
make If their I n m to ^ ts o f money
and tnnt«ria1a conM be dlrectad ex-
eltia^vety toward, peaieeful pdrm lts.
Tn tfie Wfllenltim tbie will occur,
Soeakftteof' tbe ivlsttotMblp be<
tWMO IndM duaU aod nitlono. Im*
i«b Mve? **Tb^ nball beat
iword^ Into plnwabarefl, and their
«oeara Into oronln« hooka; natloo
4ball oot lift op swomS aealost on.
tion. neither sthiafl t h ^ learn
any tnw ,** tsalab *»t4; One of
tbe creat so ^ a l. stnmblltiflr <b1oeka
jin thia Ihe twentieth eenturyfa o«r
jinablli.tv to eommnnteate Ifeely
with tbe.peoote of cither nattonfi.
|;Laaciiaffe has degenerated Into
tboitMiid^ d r dialect*, end m
who can apeak or understand eWn
or seven Is cnnrfdered^ eeb<^
.*rly ex p ert/ Tbc relep pf cnnfna*
AVS .vwaWM
are available, and dianges ttuit
have occurred since the late lUr*
ties,' are given In a special study
made by the United Nations sta- .
tistical organisation.^ In addition to the United States,
the countries covered are ttie Unit* ed Kingdom. Canada, Sweden.
Norway, West Gennany, Irdand and Japan. Belgian fli^rA are '
given only tot the post^Wwld War II period. The study is based on
Uie personal consumption expendi*. turcs lor' each county in th'eir're*
spcctlve currencies, and gives a breakdown ot outlays lor -food,
shelter, dbthtog and a selected list ot othi»r foods and nrvices.
In most cases, the year 1036 is the
pre^WorM War n base, while tbe
Ictest flgUTM ai« tor 10S2.. ■
: The. study shows certain com*
mon tendencies in the personal ex> penditure pattern hi all cm ^les^
over the last decade' and a ludt. For exapiple; tiie pr««ortion ot
total consumption outlays going
for food in most countries has
riJKn In ttie pMod. Pai% ot this is due to higher prieee. but the
fiSiires also suggest tiiat people
are eating beiter than before hi
, countries as well as In the
^United States.Another common trend has been
,a decided decUne In tiie proportion
ot personal « ^hdltures on shel
ter, which includes the cost of fuel and light, furniture and household
<«eration as Well as rent.
I960; More Pay >
For Less Work
NOTRG DtAME, lnd.~>By IIWO,
" will be earning 40 per
cent more and buyhig 40 per cent
more but wtn'ldng about five hours,
less each wedc, according to a pre
diction made here by a fdrmer
presidential advlMr teaching at
Notre Dame.' Dr. Roheri C Turner, viatting profesw in the- U niversi^s C<d«
lege ot Cwtnmerce, . forecast that within IS years the United States
will have a toUl national output “in excess of 000 billion doliBr8'^
as compared with 985 billions iii
1058. .j A framer member of Resident Truman's Council c< Economic Ad
visers,' Dr. ftoner said that America's population will be nearing the
200 million m ark by 1070. Although
Ms head, stuck iD^tbe hub hole
‘ of a'd^arded.autom obile wheel
M «. Eteanor Rowe and ber tour
children couldn't get it out.
Sit. I . C .-E ai-.,l of Uw. sher- ttTs fore. (oUe(. he pup's ears
hack clou and pulled It out bj-the tan. The ears (Cocker s^oicl
had trapped, tt.t»pe>
Ion which h«ao with the cnntonn.
ding of tonnes, at ’ the Toyer
Bshel-silll prevails The onlv snc
eeasfnl stiemnt to ovemme It
been the agreeniFtit s'mong sden-
tists to nse the dead langnages the
GrMk and the Latin for terms ai|«
appellations In the various branch,
eaof scientific stiidv> There are
wme who think language haa e.
volved. that it.lalmnrovlng and he.
iexIM eand e s n r m
bioN ’T LiKB HIM -
, Joiinnvm HhwlcliigatliblAby
ibtothetfor the'fint time.
“Wbtt dovm diiiik of himr
asked hta mother.
Tohnny alglied: T h e J<mea>
liavt a new car.’thc'Brwwn’s hkve
a new radio,' and we've got tUt."
WBDCaNGCAKE
Speaking on die dm gm of mo*,
dem fbod,'the speaker pointed a
finger at a hanessed looking Hst-
ener and demanded, "What la It
that we all aat, at some' time -or
aiiolher, Kat b the' worn ‘tKli^
imaginable ior its? Do yoa know,
sir?"
, Softly came tfie ^aaw t
|the little man, “Wedding cake.'
TIT FOR TAT
A tath« coi^ted bachdorwas
in y l^ lo dinnerby a wbinm of
his acquaintance, but did not
accept.
Afinirdan Uter, oieiMng (iw
in the street, he saJd in his. biiA
Inanner, "I believe you ask«l linie
to dine' with you last wcci^^
Ih e woman toofced at
thout^tfuUy.' ;
“Why, Vcs., I believe 1 did,” ^
answered brightly, “Atiddid yDu
conM?**
BEYbNDTHE LAW
I These Ruys iltUiig around out*
j ridc the coindiouse 'mxe 'tiUdnii
labout thevecy tough old iud^
who w u holding'cbun Inside,
“He's toiii^” one ,dF the guvs
said, “but auce believa In justic.."
*-8uce ,doM,” agned anodier.
#iw> o ^ rei^tly bad 'b m ‘' sm-
teiiced by ihe judge, “lie’a tbie
moat iustice Jud^ I ever saw—
just aa Moii hang youas not!''
SUltABUi R ^ Y
, “H a« vau'.ever aprieaM IwlAeaa In a auit'ibefoie?"
l* ^ W ^ o f’coufid”
I tell the jury
liurt w hatm itit w a^'
__ However, prominent Mholars
sgree'wlth the scrlntcyres that the
very.oppoalle Is the case.- Lan.
gnage haa develoned. Adam a^ke
the perfect. Ian«maee hef«ire It be.
nerated at the Tower of
Babel.. We .rtlthave a feilltotteo
of all tjilngs like'Peter Informs us,
aiidthe Adainic language which
was the langnage given -to Adam
In the'gsrden of ^ e n by. the.I/ird
himself. With thst Isngnage man
ean expre*< himself so .perfectly
thei« conld not he any miannder.
a tan W beanse of the olainuen
and force every e*pre«s!oo ha*.
[Ze^anlah 3;g, Informaiw as (ol.
" '‘Fw. then .will I tnm to
the people a pnre langnage, that
th ^ .W a ll call ni»n the nam<
of the Lord, io serve, him with
n L. BENNGTt,
) N . C
ItAOTIFUl fsTEIUNC $llVEIt\
iV
B A R T O M
AND OTHER
FAMOUS
.SIIVHSMITHS,
THE GIFT SHOP
IB( WIIW •«» « . . . .“It was a blue aoir,’' she leiilicd quIcUy, "with whltt^collar-and cuA, and buttona all the t»ay down
d » e f r o n t.^ _ ^ _ _ i_ ^ _ j.-
^ail In Germany
Munich, Getmany-Aif Force
M-Sgt. William F. KaU, whose
wife, Laura, iind motherV Mi*. W.
B. NaO, live in MMksvUle, N. C ,
leoentW waa graduated (iom the
ISeventh Army Non-Commi
led'OIBGet Academy InMnnidt.
Getmany. . ^ ' i
A auperviaor with the 34th Rai
dio Squadion Mobile he auccaat-
fullycompleteda6ve.wcekt cowae
inkadetship, map-ready and odxr
miUtan- aubjecta.
Sergeant NaU, who arrived
aeaseaa to Jtdy 1953, U a'veteraft'
'ofmoietbanl6:veaiain the Ait
!P6ice.
Oar County And
Sodal Security
By Louis a Oement. Mimager.
Qiustion; Will a farmer who
imis iM iiUa social s e ^ ty
liiany yean ago but never worked
under tocbl aCcutity and haa sinw
lost his card, be requhcd to get a
new account number for his fium
iUMieilage? '
Anawerr:. This farmer, or any
other peison similariv situated,
will not need a new aodal security
aecoimt niimbet. OMe account
liiiinfcer is ail any one ever needs.
The numbet on the first card that
is issued to an ihdi^dual idenii-
ties the accdtmt that has K-en set
up for him and all earnings re
ported by and for him duting bis
lifetime wilt be credited to that
account. There hat been no oth
er card Inued to another person
showing (be same nnmber. If a
person’s social security card is lost
or destfoyed. he should apply for
a duplicate account number card
from his nearut social security
office. Without a person’s own
social Kcutity account number,
there is no-way to establish social
security protection for him or his
iamily.
For further infoimation, con
tact the Social Security Office,
301 Post Office Building, Satis-
burv.R C .
. If you have any question con
cerning your social aecuritv, you
might write us I t 3<1 Post Office
Bjilding, Salisbury, N. C , or' see
out reptesentative who visits the
Court House, MocfcsvUle N. C ,
6n the t o and thbrd Fridays of
e ^ month from 12;30.t;3(X
NOTICE OF SALE
IJoder and by virtne .if the pow-
,=.• of ante cootalned In a ceitsla deed of jrnst exrcnied by Boone Poster and wile Sal-y Foster, to Robert S. McNeill. I'tnstee, dated
the ^jrd day of M.y. I9SJ, and « . cordedinBookaa. OSKC23, m tbe
office or tbe Reeioter ol Deeds of
Day e County; and' under and by
virine ol the anthotliy vested in the d as snbstituied truster
byan Insirnment of writing d.ted
ibe 4th day of April 19SS. •«'* « .
coi'ded in Book — . page — . in the
ol8.i. o( Jleglste: o( Deeds of Da
vie Comity, delanit having been
made in Ihe payment ol the io. ■ theiehv secured and the
Mid deed i.l trosl being oy the
1 terms thereof snbjeei to lorrolosnre.
:t,ofthe IndabiednesBland the-bolder----------------------ibereby,secured having demanded
a foreclosure thereof for the pur.
pose of satisfying said Indebtedness,
the undersigned snhbtitnted trnstee
wHI offer for nie si public auction to the hlgW i iridder lor cash, at the conn house door in Mocks,
ville. N. C . oil' the 7»< <*»T May, I9SS, •••* conveyed In said deed of lrn<t, the same lying and being In Jerusalem Township. Davie County, North Caiolina, and
more particularly described as fol
I Being lots Nos 62. 63. 64, «s
«6, «7, 6». «9, 70. 7«. 7». 73. 41
Seen Aloaf Msia Shell .
B, The Street RamUar.
ooooso
Three high school gitls pimifti
On pancbiriime show in tbell'gtiNih
-M rs. Mary Crow and MlAliltfiy
Heilman enjoying cold ^rlnxa
hot attcmmn -M in Maitle.-^Ktt.^
lian talking about going to Similt
Carolina-LcRoy Poplin w aM ^
for movie show to open—Bddc
Oreene drinking large coca-coh«it
extra warm afternoon—Mra. Lm
Lverly lookiog at new sutnmM
dresses In Sanfotd’s display w ^
dow—rack FenninffoncpmingoM-
of banking house—Bryan Sell oik
street cumer watching t i ^ paat
-M rs. S. B. Hall doing som c.t^
ly morning shopping-Miaa S ii^
Hanes on her way. to apothecait
ahop-M rs. C F. Meioney htiim
ing down South AMn street on
I warm aftetnoo.i—Dick
on his way south as die dinntt
hour apptoaehes-7 0 . 1C. Popt’and
Alvin Dvson talking thingaovct—
J. K. Sheek greeting old friends a-
lound the square—Mrs. C. P.
lohnson talking about taking .>
half holiday—Mrs. Wayne Maiicll
trimming window at Moefcavilt* ■
I Cash Store—Roy Harris on hla
way to banking house—David Rni>
kin and Robert Bawitigerexcbanp
ing greetings on Mafai street—At*
tornev George Martin bcowaliig «.
round in aiito n o te - Bank cleili*
working overtime on aultty aikar-
noon - Miss losie Foster m Ik(
way to doctor's i^ce—Mra. Jam n
Foster shopping acound in d h «
store—Homer Latham buyinf a
eamp chair to alt on whilesQutml
hunting—J.D. Purvis loadini •
lawn mower into auto trunk bd
Main street-Leslie Daold geitl^
a 75 cent lialr cut—New btlda t«-
matkbig that the hadn’t had any
lights vet, and hoped slwwoalda*t
—Bobby Hall hurrying into dmg
store with two paint brushes In
one hand—Allen Parks getting a
Friday morning hair cut^M r. and
Mrs. John Swing shopping aiound
town—Rev. A. M. Kiser teltliit
tonsoral work-Eighteen -atudania
from Mars Hill College paualng
for refreshments while on fbab
wav to Lexington—Sammy PowCH rambline around the squaic on hot afternoon—James Yodc tod^
ing a book aa he makes hit « w
through heavy traffic across the
square—Man driivng mule Midi. ed to sled down Depot atieiet—
M ani^W aters, A ',^ W agner,
theN. B. D ^ n and Harvey Bl
welder talking about when
[world was young.
I, 43 44'and 45 of the Sam Fo».
T Snb.divlsion. as
n o t ic e T O C R E prrO R S I
Having q u ^ ^ M eaecutrta of
dieeatateofH. l.a ite r. d e « ^
cd. late of Davie County, North Ckiollna, tbia la to notify all per- Mma holdingclainn acatnatsaid ea- tate, to pnaent them to dw under,
algned withhi « m c ^
date heteof. or thU notice wUI Iw
plead In bar of their tecovety. All pctac^a owing said estate ^ 1
m a k e hnmediale settlcincnt. This
A pt«16>19S5. .
VIRGINIA POWEUUEnx. of H. I; CanM,.Dec^d.
a C Block, Attorney.
auaf Coal i
Smd Ct .
Iw eCan Supply Vour Nceda
IN GO O D CO XL.
SAND and BRICK
Can or PhoineUrAt Any Time
.. PHONE 194
PonneitoDwteBHdt&CtiilO*
ier'Snb.dlvlsion. as per survey and
nlatmadehvA. L. Bowles. Sur
veydr, May, 1953- And ssid pisi
Kcotded in Map Book No. 3, i»ge
IS. In the Regislei ol Deeds rIBce of Davie County, North. Carolina, to which reference is hereby made
for a more partieular description
For title see deed from E. C. Morris to Boone Foster aod wife,
Sally Foster, dated May no, 1953.
aiid duly recorded In ssid office.
T his 1st day of April, I95.V
CLAUDE HICKS.
' ; Substituted Trusiee.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Having qualified aa execii^ of the estate of Charlie Hege, d e e m ed. late of Davie Counn. Notth
Carolina, this is to notify all p »
sons holding claitns againM said
estate, to present them to the im- deisigned wirtiln 12 months hw n
dale hereof, or this notice win
plead in bar of their recovety. A't
persons owing said estate wM make immediate settlement. Thia
.htarch 21. »55.BOBBY CLAY H EpR
E n. of Charlie Hege, I W d .
-B. C. Block, Attorney.
HIU-TOP
Servi<^ & Supply
HOPES TO SERVE YOU
EVEN BETTER IN 19SS
Gaa, OU SuppliM
Also A Nice line Of
^ e g e t a U M .
And Staple C^oceriM
We AppreciiM Ymir
J. W . HILL
.'O w ner
m m m
1
j!'
’ ■*;
. I
- ’ir
m