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11-November-Mocksville Enterpriseш т т ir. * v** i; ......... ■\ “ ^ '‘V* ' f THE MOCKSVltiLE ENTERPniSE -— -........... = ^ -.-—..... . íiillílStBRSiíí^íí. ':• ■■•CLAKEÍ4CE OUSLBV' ADDRÉSS-ì: i;,^!‘Éatiy' ;,cóttorii: farmersV; doh't' !ÌGB0 ?iBlfeÈlMriOP;(:.^:./'fiè' BANKEBS>ftlEETING ' kiio ' ' ' ■• ' <•’ b.i«i. . /ii iinaiiiiiMia ----- . ...... oìlowing. isf the appoint* ! | o rthe, Wineton-Saíem I H. Barnhart, »lï^^iiflii'ÎPhompson; ■;■.' .•'У;.,, 'e 'J. Aí 'J. FarrlngtohjrA««A4>f ■'■-М.:;.-:!■Jiç; jÄvett.;ivtsirb.l ;Ук‘::у: _/^Gofpicthí KGóode.' Ч' •,• '¡í.v'C ÍC;m;:,McKinney. 'âur'gesB.íorie?E.¡B. ВаПагф Wì^tì. McFarland. '/С^ДСеепег. ‘;Sinki ¡Кррвг.''.''.' .с^ Ш Church, >у. '-/Îï iufti fi. Duncan, [i^M ain Street, G. ii ’'V' ' ^ ' " î' J\\\t rrj,'ï'ï|«'^y* e C lr t t t it ,G . R. Prof^ , -----—— , •'■ “il'ftere 18 iiut.,u M.v,.» ..—, "Raieighj Oct'.-^ Hon Clarence and reckleaa gambler than the ■ - Aopiofnnf. Sec«- man'who stakes hia ali on cotton.It ¡9 liot farming, it is not busi- ne.s3, it is plain, low down gambl­ ing, ^ ' ■'“The cotton gambler never I •• • . .-_w %raVbroke| pro- .1 r hate I has i problems for many yumt. ...... ..strong: advocate of sáfe farming ; “You „wouldn't Iena mouii.v lu .. methocia áhd effipieht marketing Íman to go into the bootlegging as thé chief remedies for the .business, why do, yòu lend it-to farmersV'troubles., ;H^ a man to put into cotton wjiéíí; keenljr the serious situation which you know it means disaster to has ^een brought about by the your community? production of tw'o unusually large ' "I insist, tliat the time has come crops ¡of cotton in succession—a ‘ for the banks to use their power* thing ,thàt; has not happened; be- That ia the only èiBcient nieth^.*' fore -in the history^ of, cotton, pro- ' , Mr. Ousiey pointed out' tKat the duction. : - bankers can lend money only on ■"O^' ,_n, ' • XI.. -,v“Many 'cotton.. iUi I11V1.M ”T-.- Ipitiw it.biit they'won’t be in busi­ ness next year.” ■; * , . ; "Я’Ьёге is not „а more desperate ..thnn the м Ш тея , т ь € г . : - ‘‘We have proouceu lliv« y -- than' the wprld needs. It is' hotthe flrat time. * We are .alwayi'in ' gestions oirereo . uy ----------------- troubler rthd yet^thère m ! others In th^ meeting, but pÿnè- j dane^man in thé South who did tically all were agreed that in or- npt loresee Just auch : an -¿mer- ; der to meet the pfeaent emergency rkency: ias thlB." , V it is necessary not o n ly to form . f wù claBBéii,- declared Mr: Ouà~ Bomeiey,iare responsible for the plightythe present surplus from thé niar- of 'the South.' One is "thé man ,, ket, but also' to, insure a material- ‘ ^ varrea»« , J. С. С; rcook. who own* a great vast. a « ^ 4 plaliter hot a farm et-w bo utlli*- вя thè èervices of negroes or shif^ Gemetti M em o rial,George В. S p t J® b ry >K,U,Íiivcrsity— Ш .^В; E. Sji'««' • ket, but aJBo lu IIIDUAV . ,'reduction ih ^ thè cotton acreage hext;"yéar.,.l: ^Members of thè cpmmlttee- re­ cently appointed by Góyernotì Me- a >Anference Vthe iTenj4iit ; AM&IICV« V- ---- racé;¿^o,JpÍants^it takes only;' ö'ne-half the work- in^days ' ciU tivatèi’^ V brpüghlsiçafPttty,,’^ '. •. A' arii í, af. .Vttóiáe’/fcv (i have pnu, ». Ф & Т о т 'p îih ■ ;Z otv^iesire repose. ili W ^O w^earlness in doing the ' * na^Äerln* Vraise ' to Ws-- vV Ч at ■ f Л. -Î 'p ■ (reyer feeLHhe freshness.'Of , v;,;’ever..',be'';far from,'its the ransomed throng is the pearly,-gat* that have kept the tru^h behold tho paradifje oif.,.Adam. in. hia inhocencyt, .thenf.that'..- ■. richer than any music that " ever fellmortaj'.^iiar, is heard ..saying, is. ended, ’ ye» blessed of niy father, ! . ^Kingdom jprepared for you from the fo'undation - OI..the. world,.. ■ the; Bible the inheritance of hiy.'- r ... thf vsaved ,.-:r •iwiiiSfc calle#,a;, country, there the V flock to foun- don’t you want to - ! be one if 30 ■■■■-My ;■ brother, or sister, put ypiir •.••i', , trust'in O'pd ■ ;^3Pec^iise when death kisses down ‘ " i' - yoMr eyelids, .It 'vvill. be too late, to cry out to 'your God 'V;-' -J Tfou will'fm.y hear, i-hs mournful words.!' .. . 'V. , iO, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, "Thou thnt killest the prophets, ' . and »tonest . . ‘irhem which are .sent untoythefj, ■ ; how often would ' , have gathered you under my ‘i . wing and you T^Tould not, * ' ■^We know that ffil people have a .? - horror of death, ,y ''^ to old age, and spite of afflictions es tne B e r v itio o ----less whjtes'and who cently appomievi duce ,anything but cpUbn;^^^ as delegates to.« conference cotton' cih stand more p in’ Memiihis id formulate plans ment than, any ,bthér crop."for relieving the situation were The other class, he saidj . wag at this meeting, arid participated “the iten^ritVfar^ in the dJseussion. No definite ‘niantg; qottbn because plan was adopted at ithis meeting, b<jpause of a desire to cooperate fully, in the carrying out of .the plan to be agreed, upon at tho Memphis conference, : but the Agricultu'ral Committee of the Stiite Bankers Association, under whoso auspices, the meeting was j called,'.went on record as pndors-1 ing il movement tP organize and to withhold the necessary amount of cotton from the market to stabilizeyprices and tp iake stéps to;3rihg about ;a ' reduction in .acreage for next y^^enr—forced re­ duction if nece8sàry;^an(lrecp^ mending that the State i Bankers ìAssòclationiénter .fully into the support of the movement. ;p, , :clA^es rpughtsçaj(«imty,.’!^^^^^^^^ ‘•'A'g'al'list.-iti^^^^^^^^ ..claaaea he coritiBsted 'th|îiÜ'teiïigent farmèr, the pboperatiye asaociation mem­ ber, anid^t cultural'schools. • V , ^ ÿReferring 'to thé surjilus crop, he'said: "We have got to make it tempting to Bomebqdy to carry it "iintil ; thé panic passes;” “^nd we.are'in^ panièHhat will c6ntin,ue until, wé/withdraw .three millipri; bales through the aid of thé' credit ot country banks., who in ‘turii will' be !ftnanceid by the : city banks. ' Loans on growing cotton must Jbe coiiverted to loans on surplus co^on conditional on acreage reduptlpn," L e a d s th e M a iíc e t Q v e r ^ M é ’■ •. :■ .'.-.•‘-к J .• . ...л-.;’, ' - ч... S ,De£|r Sir:- v.-, --y-.ir -'ry:./:,-, • Sincfe the tobacco market opened in Winston<Salem the price has ad- ~ vanced.considerably, and we think NOWJb. the time to sell your’g'ood tobacco;.^ as the mark*t is not so crowded. ,:^,r As usual PLANTER’S WARfiHpUSB'Is* leading in ayeiragei aa w^ :: las^t week with an average of on each thoniiand poun^ above the(~ market average. The farmers who are taking .«dvsn^ge of the High prices ;at our house have a i been well pieaised, so'whm yo^ us you can have th,e assiiranie of high price« and our. be«t effo^s In your. . 1. behalf. Our motto Is “efficient Service and cowteous attehtldn’’ and we ihlnk after you'bring us one losld 'you will be convinced thst.^ our fore« ia all . .:;we Glaim'.it;>o Iw. C r Xas^ Friday our. %vc|rage 'waa mare than ihirty dollars a hundred and ' it Is not unusual for iis toi sell piles aa high as fifty, sixty and seventy ccnts. Wiith thcse facts concerning ^HE BEST WAjiEHbUSE IN T O / MARK IN NQRTH CAROLINA, we; trust sincerelywW give us the opportunity of serving you. , . ’ ■ , , ^ Yours;very truly, ■ . "fifV WE CAN SAVE ÏOU MONEY W V^’ TR JOB PRLVTINO * f a < T h e nom inees on th e CITIZEN S T IC K E T w ill a^ddress th e vo ters on th e ^ b je c t'^ b etter gov D avie I C oun ty a t th e tim es and places n am ed W 2 7 ^ ^ i^ ra tin e ’s School H ouse . C ahfi School H ouse i |Fhrirsday, d 2 8 , M ocks School H ouse '■v' 'Dciuthit^s 'tiarage: : F rid ay, O ctober 2 9 •;A dyan^ S a ^ rd a y , O ctcA er 3Cf C o u rtiio u Mocfcsvillie, I M onday, Npyembw^ 1 C ooleem ee H all, C ooleem ee H o n o riib 'e J u liu s ^ . R o ^ ss^ a u , o f N o rth W ilk s b o ro , N . C ., w ill a p e a k a t A d v a n c e o n F r i­ d a y n ig h t; O c to b e r 2 9 , 19 2 6 . H o n o ra b le W iH ian i C . H a m m e r w ill sp e a k 'S a tu rd a y Warehouselnc. J. G. FLYNT, PRES. ■ iieiaiiiaiM in ip sai M m , ■а1Г11!а!Ш1Я111!Ш!У«шнриа1пмр1«мв11а1№^^ Ü s é d ¿ÍW S U s e d C a rs We Offer The Following Used Care At GREAT REDUCED PRICES C*1924 Model Ford Coupe n - _ J« ',1 .. Шт - 924 O ne F ra n k lin T o u rm K »» »» ’» Roadster touring Touring Touring R o a d ste r O v e rla n d T o u rin fe ......................."■.............H tt tt tt tt fr/-, 'St f t.' I 01 «„„ccw,.., , H o n o ra b le W in ia m V;. lAom ^ n d infirmities, wo cling to life, '¿ t th e C o u tt H o u se in M o c k sv ille p n ' S a tu r d a y ■JPeople shudtlur at the eiiti aricejnight O cto b er 3 0 , 19 2 6 , : of the dark valley, «And only a few go shouting into ' tho black rivei', ., ; ' ‘i '‘The nio.st of us love tiiis; life and 'j dread vory much , •'Thu': scythe of the. grim Reaper' jV-thoniiet's be,ready . ; ^ ^,^0 >yhen God calls,iis, irom prison of^.death,!we [ O cto b er 3 0 , liw o , ' T h e s p e a k in g a t e a c h p la c e w ill b e g in p ro m p tly a t s e v e n -th irty o 'clo ck , P . M , ' ’ A ll C itiz e n s, re g a rd le s s o f p o lit w ^ o a re ?in te rfe $ te d in b e tte r g o v e rn m ^ ife iiiii D a v ie ,C o u n ty , a r e c o rd ia lly in v ite d to a tte n d th e rn e e tin g s a b o v e sc h e d u le d . a re e s p e c ia lly 'u rg e ^ to b e p re s e n t. 16 .J? E iiree F o rd L ig h t D e liv e ry T ru c k « v’ :V.: T hese cars a n a tn ick a haVe been re-conditioned and a re in first class m echanical condition. B efore buying a ca r be su re to visit o u r used car departm ent.: W e also h ave tw o carlo ad s N E W CH EVROLET . т у «Ï M.W.V-. - r —. - A utom obiles on hand liow . __I' ■ li (I M O C K SV ILLE , N. C, ... Шк-}' '^Я/ K é iÇiW i : К COUNIÏ М i s l i sMiER мшШ ^ ■ ■■■■ •• NON-MEMBERS CÒTTOn ' CÓ-EN^MY'S SMOKE SCREENS oPS ALSO GET HELP EPi'ECTlVE AND ENTIRE . " . ’ tick et GOES IN ' ^ !.»• - -- ' ___- * . rtiUJ.'.'iyiN tick et GOES in ^qi^lfpY 4 ALSO EFFECTIVE ■ Dayje. county Citizens were un- . abjp ;|f>;,oy?>‘come the gas attacks tl 8^ol(e screens of old line; Re- s nnd.get another;licking. licans are happy. Indeed,: lir vj*,ctory—after using„.,,,-1 ........ .«IV«! using ^^^pfiSible means of securing »tfhey would have died,politi- , .)*/ lrih ey had niet 'def^^ ÍÍÍ|m ^'b, however, feel they have gréai fight arid haye gain- ,ed‘!|^up|}i a republi- ¡q^jfll^lJpirity, of-from 700 to 1000 and are satisfled , Vfi^Hl:4 j}e successful gains which , №(»/;h|ye accomplished from year .{rpftifeJis'ex ; yeaM :'.'^ out and ; ■ the, standpatters will have abso- lutely ^nothing to campaign on in j vt|Jfii'^ a settled fact: - ; ; ' th^-'f-hey-'^^^ not ■■tackle their’l ■ ^j'ecoirtl , for. a campaign issue—it Vouldíhover stand and they know■ it, too. : r'.At .this time we arc unable to 'vcgivêiiuil returns, but It ia genor- . ally/boileyed 'that republican ma- >|-? i^6riltie8 .run from 50 to 200. GVantsj ..,,'inajprity in Cooleemeo ovor Mr. • was 58. Mocksville De- mocrat.H fell ‘for tho music of the -Gómody Foui*, and failed to vote «8 they ahould havp,'but novei*tho, i polled ¿"■.tp**'the .'entire Citizen tickets ,,' the I'epublicans tire iñí vchqiçé. or rio choice, and'‘'lt' isíiip •:>to‘,';the, ’éntlre . ^citizénflhip.ii-ôfâlîé; î; ¡ppjí'jjty tpifall in behind them/ilfft help i^ajíé bid Davie a better placé, tá Uve lri. • V JUNIORS ACTIVE IN THIS ¡/New Gotten Financc Corporation I Will Put Them On Equal Basis With M;mh:rs; Myers Says Plenty of Money arid Pride • To Be Found' In Dixie , , By R. E. Powell ■,;... Washington, Nov. 8. — The South is wealthy and prosperous. There is plenty oif money in the Sputh. ■. There is not much difficulty iii providing a simple arid effective plan for saving the huge cottori crop, and tho South sees a wfey to get more money for the carry­over hereafter. These and similar obaervationi? are made by Eugerie Meyer, one of thè ihembers of the'" Coolidge administration's cotton committee, as a result of a^ten days^ tour òf the Southern States. • Asked if 'he thought the South would recover from the; glump AFTÈRï ALL- A W.OMAN JkiAY BE A QUEEN, B k lsU WOMAN.'i iiREALLYvtÀft^ WE CONSISTENT? TriiE i V . idea IS TO BEAT i MOTHER NATURE TO IT. 4' ."i , ,Qileen Marie said, thPibi;hu'r'{luy that, allé juat: longed to get.iiWay ;frpm the- crowds and, from: formality and!gô into,thé homes of iime^ ;riciVri .housewives, visit' their,- and have a heart tb heart\tatk‘ with .them. , >That she wo the American . housekeepei*, is ,:th;,nkirig,'how a ‘things, etc.; There ia witn,out doubt,-'moi:é truth in, thiait stateiiiérit that moat, people would thlipk.; One may be a queé'n.'but -first of 'all, a normal woman is after ^\ll, just à^iwoman, endowed with those feininine instincts and Intuitiolis. It is, therefore, riPthlng but natural for her- Womanly Impulses \tb get the bettei of her\rpyal; pomp and formiality once in a while. A woman may eriter bUBiriess, or pblitica and force: herself bit of the home,: but there is Her natural sphere and it wili take riianÿ yèars to weed put; of her nature, that love of the home and devptloji 'to its upkeep,; Yes,, a nbrriial woman i may be a business marii a politician, or even a queen. biit flirst of all sherls a womari; andilt' Svould be just'aa reasonable to expect a man to: abandon the lovci of strife and buslness and ambition and take on the roll of ii ps'ritl« housekeeper; and be happy, as to lexpéct a normal woman to leave her house and go Into the business world, or enter politics, and' be entixiely satisfied arid happy. ■TSÿl ■ —7——r-rí-r;- .t':',..'. RETURNS IN! í loth SLOW ;• M^' AiijÇÎ -----— —’ ' moerats Soldiers’ Loán^and Constitutional .maiiy^yçài-£| Amendment Apparently,' ' ' ^.... ‘. ,,,..í¡-.'.Ap)^ípved-.i . Last week the Wèstern North Gafoiina Methodist Conference passed reaplutlons' favoring more stringent d,ivPrce*'law8 for this state.v Furthermore, a .committee was named, ^th Mr. J. F. ShTriri, as ii membér, to take steps towards getting tlie desired iegislaCiÓn. , W hot be misunderstood. We see. nothing wrong with the riiovement. It is,possibly, .tl^è thing to do. But, to, keep historyBtraight, rig h t héVe w e w iartt'to c a ll attehtlo h tc, ■mntiv lno.!'— :OVBRMANMIS ^"?АВ%.АНВАЙ Votes Tabulated- Late Last NIghì Gave Him 51,47(1 to 21;228^F9r Наум>~0п1у Scattering ' ^ .■ 'turns RwWvedi.'v, Чli'.. .. . . -, , ,...................— Charlotte, No. 2"—With reports scattering at best'and with actual returns received from ,^nly."ap>. proximately' one-third of the state, North Carolina; today on vtH face of , available Ireturns .apparentlygave the Demnni'D*«»' 'A-'-- ____ ИСе |_л;^ i'. ■-:rv..... «long wjin of available Jreturna ftppar^rttly iPEMCIC............. '8 possibly, ,t^e thing to do. But, t0|. keep history gave the Democratic 'state .ticket ¡OF DBBDp Ii|.8^ L ^ ,.straight, right hsie we want'to call attehUbh to the fhct that so arid vUhitisd States Senator Lee S; many lead.'ng Methbdistsi Baptlals, Preeby^rjians ivnd other-church Ov.prmari a riiajority'in excess of * folksi as well as npn ehurchi folks, fluiig'air kinds of dubk flta some 1100,000 in the general , eleO^ time ago when, a similar atiind was .takeii'to aecuro legislatio n for-i nf bidding the teaching of certain tbnm-ioo i« ■ in Surry/;;A5„, .t h e ir e n t iü f è f t iv iiv K i |'тЙрги1*в;|Ш|Щи .whi hàe\alweyà bé¿ii iJopular^i«,Ы^КЬЙ*“ *.th.ei,ticketfci- . rtpbrtpl trouble occurred nal ■ votine precincts. ' ’ , = í ; ;The official voüí'',»-’^*'^ not be knovn befi>№- as some of. the, preemi .'^'.'■.flMng.irítttrnAíC:'’'-^'’^''^ ^ - -j-.T— ..#*u ишсг.’СПиГСМ___, ..cii «Я non cnurchifolka, fluiig'alf'kinds of duck flta soma л от tne slump time ago when a similar atiind was taken'to'aecuro legislation for- Whicii ЬичГпойч mpii Biiv pnnip on bidding the teaching of certain theories in oui* state supported schbols Meyer says the setting;up of . nine equiyalent to the church aa.sumiiig the state a lunct.on. In other f.nancc corporations with capital "''>‘1 ®- <-he.v cned out lor no uitormeddliiig w,ith the state’s affaira .«tocka of .$1G,000,000 ia assurance , , P/!' ‘ '•‘^I'Kious orBanhation.s. How many papers which that it will got oyer the-depres-'.°l'I>«««<’ V’f m«yemcnl ol the Committee,oi Ono llumlrcd Ьес.фао • .. . , it wa.4 mixing church and state, will now spcnk out ;n. thin matter uIho sfnfnri if thei same 1‘eason? How conHiijtent aro we anyhowf Wc;atuncl‘ * ' tbrt “ - - »iicaMurt*, prOVsion.- ------ '”>'v speak out in this matter bond issue i'oi’.ut he also stated it to be hiaU"'' the. same reason? How conslatent are we anyhow? We,.atand which world. imttrc.saion that tho farmer is nòti "«thing when the churches attempt to foator legislation borrow to'bu Kcing to .be leg.-alated or coerced ;eif««ling divorces, prohibitio.n and the enforcement of nulvality, but conatitutibhal; into reducing his acreage. Cur-* -'"“"y church ia meddling with the state’s ing for: the i tailmfnt must como aa a i-e'quit.of ‘“’If P«'oh|bi_tthe teaching of .the „theory ■•' w. educational methods.In-, otherevolution-In the stato supported .soho'ojs; -^.Wherein. la;tW dlflf«..wbrda^ by aoft, persuasion..;'_And =....-MeyélT?thiÌlk'à-^that'rth‘'e^lieat''npi'; r.'I... .J " publicans iârrfedîîSto Tuesday ,'.by an а^еШМ „ of 800, with: thi¡5> eptiori;:! Democratic cnneidatè Johi Ior, register of .deedM ivát^s elected by a majority The election pasaedlofrtqIJr __V..C, Mj. Buic, persuasion.^. Am ■Meye ntWUk'à-'’t'haf Ж çuadéi’à ,in the Soútli are the«iinners in thp South are ^ impression .that it i8;ensior to get a, growth bankers whb advance money to ' on toll, soil, that Is./spil which .haa for a tiine .been to exposed to the surface, or nearly s<i.. Few people realize‘that the 1« *.,11, ^¿;.jonntioi.nion beat dirt on which to grow a perfect coat of lawn graas ia nnvô ninvIn: a talk wH-h, newspapermen,: n,.t.fpi.iiblv thnt w h S t..-- ■thé president's representatlvfi 4 State Couricilor Snydc|c Has Dist- ;i if ct ; MflKtlngie Scheduled For 'Hollis and Mt.J’Icaeant ■ ‘ o.i " i ^ . f • — 4««ni.om,i lu me »î>itUUUtUUÜStat^ Councilor C. W. stock of; the bank which John W.V arrpjjsing renedew activity, in the Snmnd.s.i meriiberahip pf thè Junior Order ypitp^ Americiiiri ■ Mec in Nortlj' G^roiihal ' portânifc distriçt nieptirigs^^s ; eil : for this „week. The first one iy'lil on Friday for thé f^fth ^and:jvil} be héld at Hollis, iprd 'Cbqrity, : The 'princi- ii«! fpati»re of ------ ■ ........... .,y , »icTYBjJii|)ermen :he president’s representative re ferredparticulaiiy to North Caro , ilna He said that GPvernor Me- ............... i-u.cec wny ot securing a perfcct lawn. -Le-an,- \vho, Incideritally, served' Thridea that one mii^st-lct pure unfertilized clay iie.for a few months with Meyer on the War Flnarico 01 a year., with possibly a crop of peaa, to make it s« t«blo tor sowing f-nrnnrnHnh diii-inir tha last aeri: seed,'is, we think, an erronooua one. While ft ia fresh, -culturni crisis in the South „3.1 «'>«< before it haa had time to become Inoculated wHh all kinda of aurod him North Carolina couid *** produce a fine lawn;' Then poratlon inatead of'the $1,000.000/"" ■afnriVr /iV »__.wMjii-o i*n«i mew VII »r men CO grow a perfect coat of lawn grass is, pure clay, preferably that which is froni ,such a depth aa to be iis'qlear of various seeds aa possible. But by the proper use of a good grade of fertilizer that is the best-and surest way of securing a perfect lawn. Tho idea that one mu.st-let pure unfertilized clay lie,for a few monthaov !l vo!>>. .•■n-l'------ " ' n o f DGHB tn r.inl— Forsyth* Again, pemófcraiíc' ...Winstpu^Salem. t Novi ~imMriMn A. A.Í t ‘ '. . . ’V ■ij -'''-.’* *''*-. ...........- vw Ol/Ul C. . HTnr.ii nf the bank whieh John W Nature is a wonderful thing in many ways, but iii ho wiuy does Somnsoii' Greensboro as repre- »he work more wonders than in her methods: of scattering: varioua aentatlve of the Cone mill inter-' various planta mayipontinue nat “ill! to exiat. Mother Nature has provided many methods by which seedsWith $16,OOO'.OOO, practically aa- bejc'.ttercd. Some seed pods havn - sured,:these banking, coi'porations formed and now ...m - ... wic Igeneral^^^^ of today. > . '■.! 'J ' At least nine of the state's ten; Donioeratic congressmon were re­elected, ■'The early returns also indiciit- ed ai>proval of the' referendum'] .in«. oieutiou pasSédi-oi^i^^ meaaure, providiiig a .$2 ,000.000 [• niid .¡a.' coiriparativoly'.':iigH.| bond isauo for a loan fund Îrym;|'.wa^ paat.^^ , which world .war veterans'.’ liiiliy;........... l)uild homes, and ,‘thp, 'H): ainondmerit 'prbv^ld- j V..V à.tate 'election,,board'f . ------•) to declare electiôri, returns. : • ,‘ denmcratjcj^^^ ;!,,;WithypeturrisM>omvl37.;put’ bTp^yMasct^^ tile 1,7!H ipreclricts in : the^ ststehl^ ’ the soldier 'loan measure,!had';a ..thé,;, votirig.vHejîéi.ï..^^ majority of ;8/472, ;tho vote being ‘•Harrlson/the'iiridepari * fop;'8;7l3,rag:ain8t ;2,30L-y :■ '.t< ;dat0;fQi^:Bhe(riflti;;iiii|M ; Froiri • 138 : precincts thé ;‘coristi-'- vata*.i^ - tutiorial rimendirierit I'eccived 4’,ii‘ 833 fayijrable yotes i»nd 1,607 nè^; gfttive/.:’" V ' ■' ■, For .'United States^; senator :..tijo;..l vote in'307 precinbta was (^civj'RAS; AÎSID'l^ man Gl,'475j Hayes 21^228. ; T hesfii:,-, nr'-n »» returns came from- 84 counties, ( only a fow-jof which reported the j complete omciiil' vote- while iS others reported. Democratic ma- joritiea raiiglhg from '100 ’to .2,-, 300. ' ■ ' I ii^'800 for*! sheriff i'Jnqi < risonevHtrength'"a»*‘ aa» come fi-om the republlfeaii SP'** nvwhiqh the^funior^ Will present a Bible and , tfl the school. ' a , ; pwHfdayiw the State Coqn- ® ' meeting y for Jabprrijs County, !'irr;;snyder attended and was Pjje of the speakep »t a big dis-tríet'i arnfhAvimv .... . n rH.y ntip « a oig ioanquetj served f tlie .Cowe Memorial Y. M. ,6, A. ati White Oak -by 'the (MjitflMY, of A ;; (n 4ttendan^ itrt-’ln thf feast.^ M pHls:’were''repreaen^^^ NBRO^N^ WEDDING 17).''.'./ I ^ ^ •’j-’ '• ^;!j||f!£|(jid,,Mrs. Allen;f. F Tjdjii^Cfl*vthe''i;.'iiri (Ip^hteiV'Anji . Pwi^fl|;iliWoIter:'Brow on Wed-J not^fty;ji'.!’the,;'’'twen , Octojaor.’i'jjineteen hundred and twcnjty-slx;.! Raeford, North Caro- iiii(iJif:At 'home -.after. November tenth,vWeavorvillb, .North .'Cnro- W...UW1 UI m e I co-operati ves afforded nori-membera and ait no extra expense. It la not irifeiided that the finance tforpq- ratlons; should make money at the expense of the ' cotton trvnwav’^-_ _____ llivucy, UI tne I •~~V ' ............----------— expense of: the'cotton grower'a'f death of any farm relief legiala-diatreas jbut,.:iri the very nature 1 ti nilni-i'l''' ----• '*"Zji "''tt- .----... »...o ooeu »caT,cer-...b uuouiBBs, so tnat dirt taken from the deptha entirely void of aeed inoculation, will within a very short time be literally filled with all kinds of seeds of grasses and weeds and other plaritsi This is why pure red clay takon from deep down, produces the beat lawns, and for this reason- tho quicker it,-is sown down with lawn grass after It is dug from the depths, the'better for the law grass, . .— .-VH.U11 ifi-ower a .distress -but, .;iri the very nature of M tilings,it ‘ is,! expected these cbrjiorationa will declare a profit. , ’ Mbrieyj,. lit: preaent. New York rates,; will be -ioaned these corpo- :raf;.’ori8 at approximately 4,50. It will hardly, be 'iidvanced to the farrner fpi* le6s thari. six per cent but it will be fbi’ eighteen months. This will tide over the farmer this j^ear. and enable iilm to start :ii" crop next ye^r, provided—und- ei’ the bipse watch of the localKfi nb>A**--■« J* ^ ---- tion at the coming session of con greaa. If it doesn’t work well, after a reasonable trial, it will be impossible to defeat farm re I'lief in substantial form later. JURORS FOR DEC COURT -, ...» w.yoc .notvii ,ui me locai banker—-he -.reducea tlie acreage. Т|\э only force that will be appli­ ed ;wiU be thru the biinks. ; ■ Mr.''Meyer spoke earnestly of tfie pride arid public'apirit he en- coiintereq ;vw Kis! ,tbur of the South, He avoided: afteiv dinnerЯП«0/*Ьйа' oM/1 »----» - , The following Jurpps^have been drawn", for th eDecemlier term court which convenes here Mon­day, Dec. 6th': V Joe Allen, J. M, Bowden, W. G. Hendrix, Robert Smith, J, E. Crotta, G, S. Sunimera, Geo. , M. Hendrix, Hall Hendren, \V, T. ...voiuti« Rtteiv«>n«er Barneycastle, B, G, Williams, J., apeechea. and, forma,l'.';'lu,ncheons. h-, Robertson, J, I-I, Dwiggina, W. Hd ;'talked . straight from the rj. Parka, J, R. Powell, E. W.Harp, shoulder' and ; he, fpund,. as, clear W. R.' Carter, Ralph Ratledge. headed business mc.n to talk backi ■ aa hf! >wriiii/i 'avr><i/i<.—^.v.w.i .^uoiiicaâ jiiu.ii LU laiK pact as heiwbuld'expept^^^^,t^ aiiy wh'ere'.: in' the ,’coiiiitry,' Had he ■bèéii'';bai3t:pn;'(i ;pplitica his,report.would be! calciilaW. his , report wouldIf 7Í?,^t*HÍfy,-h?iS;,l?eeiv .e\plo ;make' frierid3;for'thç man or party - and.-taking piçturea,;,of vhe:^^ i; ■ ■''' ‘-was , If ,: the present prpgr<im wbrksJ »' Ì A’vell—arid;, Mr, ' Mèyer saya he 'i’nnkcr Goe.'? Ashore San Pedro, Calif., Nov; 3,—,Tlie associated/o:'l tanker went asli'ore at Point Ar.iiuello, moro than i^O miles iiorth of here shortly alter 6 o’elbok tonight, said un ■SOS .... 1-. t l - ' *- PISTOL-TOTING PARSON RESIGNS PASTORATE ■ Huntington, w!. Va,, l^ov. 8,— The Rev. 0. P. Bellanger, who was indicted recently charged with carrying a pistol to hia, pulpit to prevent disturbances, hiis resign­ ed aa pastor of the Sixth Avenue Ghu rch' of Christ: of "Huritlrigton, it beci»me known today,; Mr. Bel­ langer canae here from East St. liouis a yeiir ago'''urid^^^ a , three- year contract. A suit:'?by. the h'uateea of the church for a man-; clatory, injunction' againat, the paator waa dropped when he atat­ ed he, would resign ‘‘for tho good of the: church.'’ ' V ' ' ■ . :0f.- title -, mobile. - ■' IpartmentIn the 10th cohgreaaional dis- inorithtricfveturna were sb meager that! in' view of' the ':closeheafli fri^the' race ft was still.'clasfted,ft» some-- whnt doubtful.' ’Thp 48 preciricts; reported gave Weaver *{>;83a;,to 5,- llO.for Smathers, Twenty-t'iyo’^p the precincts were from Buncorii-i be county. ■, , '■ ;■" " ‘ Leas'^than 200 precincts had been reported for the state oflSces; In 168 precincts the- Demobratic candidates for SupeWor cpur judges had 2,<550 votes ^ 245 for the Republican barididates. Chief Justice Walter P. Stacy was lead.'ng James J. Britt in the 46 precincts froih which actual vote was reported, by 5,992 to 1,- 196. In quite another county, however; riiajpritiea lw^ ed, i rievéry 'iií8tance,,faw to the chief justice. The sanie situ..' ation prevailed da regards; the na- sociate justices, ■■■' ;. : . ,In;many cbunties it \vas report d that th o -:v 'A tti.'l'n -'’ ...............li« 5 ..bureau-ph'owp^'i'-, у - x .... October 'Collectiori¿'W*iti|;»im'ó;f Q|iú niJlllpn dollars,,t0tklln¿J07fe ^ ЙбогбЭ^ "‘î?'"«^^coЦ<,^ctlö}8 of' V ?8,69,259: in.Octpb0r, 192в/- The bulk of ^ the,., collMtion¿í^^«Í<á'*'í^ came frphi, gasoll^je ,ti»xeV*thlli^v source yielding »72в;807;‘|1свпвм^"^^ y.ejd|d^ 1220,713 and^ltlii ¿ 4 ^ .........- Э , « Г ■ • .vs ' '. ".vrT?.^;, . . Bolognan, Itnlyi; Oc.t; fury, swept throiigh tl»! 'to; Mussolini hasi;|irio ; caped the assaa8lrt*s youth shot lit hini to i' let ripping a ..piecisv^.,,iii,iii«jiy counties it was; reportr .jl^i’emier’p coati.r.;wTj№^§ ed that the;iybteLUyadVnbt^ 4 was lynched- by' counted .tonight;.arid in ‘'¡bthers crpw'di - •' electiori officials gave out majorl- .' ; The F^Bcist.r .ties 'but .no: figures. ;,fw■.^';.^l;lng;a ,nwetijigi« was at ,tliei~'^=Cabarrua County JUDGE WALTER BROCK MOVES TO RALEIGH Jiidg-e Walter E. Brock, wlio haa .been practicing'law; iri :Winaton^ vSultiin since his; retirement from the Superior Court bench, has moved to Raleigh ;'urid haa opened an pilico in the Lawyer’s build­ ing.' Judge. Brock formerly liv­ ed at; .Wadcaboro,. and before ho was named Superioi;'• . , . r , . , , , .... - Concord, Nov. 2.—-Fifteen :out of 22 precincts in Cabarrus coun­ ty give an average Deriibcratlc majority, of 563. .This does not include Kannapolis, which is ex- isected to add, at the loivest, six or.. aeven .hundred Dcmocriitic ■.votes, : i.^ . ... : ■Thirteen', out- of -.22 ' precincts; give .Doughton 2.540; Po9le'il,747v' Anson County • ,Wadesboro. , Nov.*2.T-r-Th9’!!yptk in V Anson ,\va.s, -very; jight'’:on:i,aW-J count pf ;rain,'.iiTen precinct^ of;'!» give Hariimeiv fòrrConKViijB|i!' 1.395: againat 48 ; ;f Òr:i.Wni|,iijip>'' .'Overman ,^*397 '.ag'RÌnàtV;-:.$i|'5>-*'^ Hayes,.’ The Republican yo>-“" ;hnVl/'00 .‘'--C..» w m s ' ad by tiie g îi youth steppea^ quick motion® The buUètóf^^ Grand'Cori} ' Maurice ,4Î ■adoi^tó"ripper •• •' :.the--çç the Щ; tipjie“. « I IpIIS,!! I « ‘A'.VW М .ц ф со Ь '- 'Æouisvit'tü, ДСул V 27, 1&к LiT ’)\vl-íelr>4 recetïUy iV№ yöür ,йре1‘4^у°'....................thrtl I ,j‘m drisevt-iKe ííFK^jíifwe ¿rticles, ^èii\i’jwùr .ЙГ“’’' fempteeslon;. AitaH6ñ over myr.jijTiiiitui-e, ‘¿й Sét'mè fight before is iU CaioUnn and m ken'éÿVly.: ‘ЛЧЦсЬ'“аз,;1 tue ¿lrine'‘of one’s family Шго,tVie^puWJç, under the feíélt0Unlbtnnces it., seems i i p e ■ lìrél iWir^^^per-Stated :^ta¿iihe suit ¿tt¿h£ alìftinst;'me^fì}r my pro- 0ïV ÿ niy wifè wási’on' the basis rti'dKe had not heard ijt^^^'Mày ' ist an recélífed . feeWpport from ihoi: :^aU: i The "iacts are!:-;! I sent la «jcprisiderable ‘amount of money to ÏAhÿvïamiÎy July 40th and haye^ i|jfettér acknowledging saine. . This: one-of v t only four, lèttera tpvhichït, have 'received ; from any ámomber^of ;m during the j |;«ntîiâl'stràlmè^-: '‘got ■' 'sîclt/ Jü Îÿ ■ àï^iïikàW'iw^^;ïw'à8 '^advised яЬу, }0pe(É]bÿf tciaWih^^ ;'I'< hàye' î|ànj opéyftiÉlônii ,Th is opera tióh ' HÍs ||'JueÉ;i6ôèn \ done* a»íd I ¡ am, up vfр»“ Лпв'/ o;ip’;4;tfme l}5bve.^l;Vheard: ;irôm--^ inuring:' the,; tlnicj in !:the • hospi^l, ^exéppt^ienvélôpé'addrë^ Ifcÿimÿùwife. (in her äUit 8^ ivi^l^dî’^ot, к I i was); i¿gon]|j«1lálng¿a"^^^^" *k^í «ítíel iig^nié.víí 'i'::) ■■ fcï*'i.-:' toíiíoetyherfi./Jet'fmé/.s íiífent'jíte ‘.■.thé‘:'',!ioepitai^ I-:'>was';'‘ar-i, iJtimKlng’LWltbiM.Mocksvilie to .f;^te;tö‘ig!et mÿ-fwife some moriéy; № of the .-fact she Ltfebadi Tiot written to me - in itwro -mraths,:/; Л- , í/‘i xvant to’ say to my friends' ^ ^ Ъ о ; have bee f^^jíf/Teacíing the^.^^n in ;the papèr, bann ; foolish '•‘äcts/of anolíher; ¡;I am'trying now ' ,to :keep a covériant witii ту' Lord' --■■--''-y ■ Bécaua^ Wriglev’»« besides tóng a delightful; confection, «ffónìs / beneficial cxerciie to' .. .the téeth ìuid clcan them of ^ Abo. ir aida dlft^tlpn. Gl» A f U I r B v « i ^ SEVEN '»IISTAKES , , "There are severi mistakes of liia tliàV many’ òf 'ii9 'malie,’’ said a famoiis/ Writer then he gave thè followingJIst: ' 1. ; The delusion that individ­ ual, advancement is made“ by crushing’/others,doWn, : • v : 2i ; Thè ■ tendency to ;; ;^rry about things ihat cannot be .changed pV corrected. , ' : 3.'' Insisting that' a thing/ is impossible because we ourselwed cannòè/accomplish it. \ 4. Refusing to set aside trival pi'eferonces in order that impor­ tant things niay.be accomplish- . „ 5; ■ Neglecting development and i'ofiriement. of the mind by not acquji'ing thè habit of reaiHnE Attempting to compel oth- ^vAi:SAD;':DEÀ'rH',' - - .. . . . One of Ilio aadclest deaths «pii»'; i buv'eil ili; pu’i* '.ii'eiffhb'orhpod; wed<i ne.sday ■ njght, .wlion tho , ; d6'ath‘I nntf'ei ciim'e and took oUf .irieild.* He \vaa taken awiiy^ by thó;,.óii^ \Yliol doeth' all-' things^ • Theh;,;hé’ Ijiis'sed ¡over- tlie ri.ver of ./prdari' in,'a,: sweet sleep..'. We. ■ dò' ;.noÌ kiiow what iiOUr lie was 'cajloij tP goi .but lie was willing and l’etìdyj and kiiowi));,' him, aa we dp,. as a living neighbor foi' many yearsi' we don’t believe a better,or niòreV obliging neighbor ever ; lived thair Mr. Jones. Never wii) we foiv get his kindness, and hand that did every possible thing to aoot'h away the bitter pain in deiith , We can never forget such friends 'Tis true we have to part , with them, but it is Gods'will, His wflh be done not oiurs. Wo know it is sad to give up a friend as he was; we know the burden seems harder than we can bear. But all AVill have to meet death in some W ay soon or later, and it will be just a Jittie wliile till all will be laid beneath the marble tomb. Wont We have a time'in that bright and blinsful land be­ yond, where trouble will cease forever and sickness and death is no more, ■ : ■ '? —By a friend. Ы V W; ; t ï ÿ ,', ù ' 4> к < r ' « TíQ -c l * .Æt I 1 s'day, Novembér 4, bN PRAMEtí ADDRESS- lOP NOTE DURING HIS WALKS ' 1 .^ construction of tiiew lines in sections of the coOntn^i p where rails had not been laid befbre. ;" A hdw age in railrrad builcling has come. This b, a time of<intensive dev^lojpmerit of railnMd capaci^ within the ;;^t^toriteis''aliieady*8ery^^^ ; ^ handling today ‘onevh^ tiihes № much freight'tr^c ^ it handled dwades ago. The increase in traffic in the .next, deqade aiwi will be fiteat. Beyond a certain point no rafiroad can< --------i*. unitirn'i# raürpad building meant the- > * ¡7. .Tho. failure, to establish' the habit;.0Ê, saving money. ■ • • V... ______Æ ç^ afli!)'years -a¡g4)íaria -;-h a v e U - " '“'"T'V'i. - . .. fefítót)^ied;^';Soihináry^nnd'^^ ,Я 'Регаопя to believe and live .as sfe^0#piprayersv ;;:1 ha^^■■'I ih.n w; if|i1^?itt«in‘iorutliejp t^còriie to L fe®Ìf»SÌi{;tòv:pubJfeh/tlUe .letter.P J' ....■; îv:,«AMETGNrRIÇII. ii:'^y/Bensòn ^;.WÌiiett i,V mw-'' -Л9У‘^'' iia tu res greatest línd ut- P|i;^<â5îfe':,inPat gi^t,-...... ' ' ‘-i: ' FORK NEWS Mrs. Dalton Hendrix i<nd childf rfiri'of High Point spent several days this ' week with Mrs. Emma Benson. - , Born to Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Hendrix, a fine son, A, E. Jr„'Oct, 21.^:;', .-V.,. ' Mrs. Bertie Pèeliles of Elbaville spent last week with hoi* daught- er,'Mrs/ G. V. .Gree>);ii::’«:iiv':,' ■> , Borri to Mr. and Mrs".- Sam BaiJy a fine son, Oct. 80th. Mri P. W.- Hairston arid fami ly ai’e spending thè. last : of this week and next at ' Sauratown Manor, near Walnut 'tìovè. Several from here attended the Hallowe’en party at Advance Sat­ urday night and réport.a iileasant 'time.-.' ^ ■ \ ' .' . '.... .¡Mr. I JUnius^ VP (better ‘kno.wri;aB CarteiO'/son of-Mr. arid 'Mrs; A;.M. .Poster, ^nd Miss Grace Berin'e|;t,;daiight,cr'ói' Mr. and Mi;s.;,' D.’ ■ r>. Bennett' of Cornatzer)' was-' ......... ' ' *• i.;- VI»» Л felfea 1 ч ‘Í4* г X 4ï. .. zríV^ : ' ’Ä f e u , . Ä \ k ;ia]^ will be great, xxywa* mèét the increase in the demands made upon it wittiotit increasing its facilities. 'i 4'?Л1f ' / '.biÿ'A » tf! .'»■vt tj. leans doublé tracking its lines—and in s ^ e pieces adding^^ third and f o i ^ tracks. It m ust b u M ;^ ^ ' •; ’ 'angines:* »Ifii 'F iorth ^ u adre Ш .. The fanners of tliis conimiiriity are. busy gatheririg.'corn, sowing Avlieat, and ;pic'kirig cotton,; i'^., ,.bur ''cojnmunity;,i/'Was visited, with a ImrcV rain,' to srnall hail, Sunday/afiefri<зoriv , ^■^:,^^,V ■ The vvciner; roast and; Hallowe’­ en party ■ at Jerusaieni .school house,passed oil iiicely, evei'ybpdy ,ffeemed' to enjoy, the occ’asiori'j 'collecting. arounrl ?‘10.00r which s ana. luui ui _ i;;and s ti^ l^ r WMges to su p ^ ^ tojgw ,a ^ tenniiialsr and provide more and larger T " ’‘- engines and cars. < f / ' T h ^^^utV ^ is developing intensively its fM-fMent facilities, . . more improvWents in the coming years. ' i il^tiniue^^ will maintaih its cre<Ut and make' li ^ssible to carp'out ) • would lift, r -:' J,Ai^Vrii.7ir8eä^ Vt h ll IHi, ■ , ■But^rpm her tender loving heart! would share,.- iiAnd fpr its little soul would care. Nowi.as the babe I's' at tho age of -fouiv .■■■. ¡i As'it; crawls about on the barren little facefloor, One smile from^ its V. ;.., would cheer; ... .Tho isnddost of hearts'of ' its kind- •■...;,.‘..'vred ’so'.'dearj ■ . . <v.'- '■ ;; . ■Now; as.’tho ch^’d toddles, off tp ■ school, ' ■ ■ ' happily married last Sunilayvin Walnutv Cove, ;by iRov., Mr. Reid, pastor’ pf the bride'S;; family., Im mediately after' the cei'criiony:the jhappy cpiiple, left for a tvyo^w stay/ with iWr. . Foster’s . brother, Mr. Abner iFoster of Suffolk; Va., and' sisteis Mrsl'-Gray She^^ iioanoke, Va...We wish them much happiness as they, go through life together. .' . V- ,.; • ■ .■: ■ ; Born to. Dr. and :Mrs.,;G‘. y. Green, a fine son, Gene. Han'is, oct..25th,., .iIr; h.nd^Mrs., Frank Burtpn arid Frank,- ^ h6re."^.V- ' ■' ■ i\Ir>; J. M. Liyerigood and .fami­ ly^ spent VSiinday pat ,'Mr.; b. 0.' , Shu lor . near here. SYSTEM ^Southern the Soiith ш ш I H i Sunday: áehopl, ;, Thejlnteririe'diat'e Sunday school cltísfí, .feaye-their cl.assmaie Gilmer, Hariiey a surpriiieXbiYthday xi.árty Saturday •iiight,- Oci, ;30. „ í ■ .-.ilrsi : Willie; .Aaron 'and family spent;, Sùnd'ay : with -.Mi's. Aarpn’s: jirother, Albert;Beck, riearvMocks- .yille.,..' 'V- 1 ’ ; ■" >;Mi;s, Joh^ Owens, . and^ .sp^^ Frank HofTriian, spent the' .week^ end, with Mr. John Hoffman' and^' .family-near Salisbury. :• -"i ■' The Jerusalem D. Y. P¡ U.i;\vaS', . ■ .-pleased to have,'withv them .the ¿ *-'v '-—~ - . , To léarn the teaching of tbe gold- ^ liberty Sextette who furnished' * i’®“ want.tp.borrwv money ;.M.;:en rule,. - , for the.¿' Y P. U., prog-' v ' ::ït .knows Jiot^'the. sorrows in :the • Sunday night, Oct. Sl.'Every.l -* Pl«'> '- future days, ;_ ., ' -1 bb^y enjoyed this fine music. We ' " P'-oviflmg- ^fcu-: me^ensive, : ■ •As 'it papers and plays in natures j ho^je to have thém with us .again. ' "- - ..„,r fnmilv UlUtUl ,ÍIMÍ4. . (Miv:^Jim. Ratts ..and 'family-^ the Twin-City,', spent Siinday. at Mr. -S. ,E.'. Garwood’s', . ' -,«r FARIVIERS OF DAVIE ways. which Iwe: rork he :"'m'(S li’fouí' f'ibu;! íO’''ai| m ^ayt^ 'toiit Ker'i- Urty-: iprs ' I 7C..36] Í 6f: Ш y.^ or now as the child has grown older in life, ‘ , .^It';..looking to 'the' .future .p:' : ■ seems so bright, , ; iy , jiBut^^^ rolls on day >'""by day, f 'tender heart should seek the ^■%':^fo;.';.?nost;rtghtbu8 way. I ;Now'while in youthful; and joy- ';::!i?"::'Mk:u'''0us,years, ' .: in her slumber child knows not her grief-and ■ , ■ . • ■>. ■MM‘ the vacant : ^ in ■ the. dead j f v®^№fes:n'3MiptiieiyBs^ariaering whether its I Opu ty пит V w..*.,- ..Mr. O. H. Hartlfey and family spent Sunday afternoon with Mfs. Hartley’s parents, Mr. arid Mrs.! » long term 'pans; write to, call on, or: » ROBERT S. McNEILL, Atty. * * at Law, Mocksville, N. C. SHOULD HAVE STYLE, FIT AND m m "-«4Ï.Î Ar lii ■ WILL HAVE ALL THÈSlE. COME SEE THE B E S T YOU CAN FIND, AT Í 4)ts§ihamp. №«'i;’'wl)lruin'''it^' 'w arn in g jtuij^ a^'well ' iB^yîiuï' fn < For цДчт ti>b7 oui,nopiHlght ri(1e\io and'iiq, >■ ......... ipthi^ R' Vûice EARLY WIN'PER .lOBS FOR FAMILY GARDEN ra Show. That Civil vyar Pre-' llent Scrlbbed -Notes From 'iiich Hie Famous AddresHcs here, Made While Walhinf;. Put Many ldeae oiV'Backs of Enve­ lopes. Chicago', Oct, :28,^Boxes upon lioxe»' :bf :his ра'регй, now safely (toi'cd; a>vay; bear, evidence that Abraham Lincoln sought:solitude (o r his thoughts, as he walked, i; To .visualize Lincoln scribbling thoughts, ;pn '|2rieVelbpes '.on his a»ily walks iri: Waehington was the privilege of one of the few men who .Viewed his. letters and .pnpers before the deiith of Robr- (tt T,' Lincoln removed theiri from further perusal for 20 years. They show'Lincoln’s method, the development of his ideas, the fact (hilt fils most famous addresses ‘were re-phrased and re-written sometiriies four and five times, Diitil they. became finished gems' I of rhetoric. A scene is reconstructed. It [¿hows Lincoln stopping in his t wiilk to reach in his coat pocket for note paper. He flnds, none, blit finds a riuhiber of letters. He 1 inkes the envelope from one, tears it open at each; ?nd arid turns it inside out. There'he v/rites his idea. :!' Hie walk continues. Per- I' haps ft second envelope would be used, a; eecond Jde4' noted. with such. pieces.; of envelope for headings, are in Lincoln’s pap- er.H. • lildicatlng his thoroughness, _ i'or exariiple, tiie last two drafts 1 Rulcigh, Nov. 3.—There nre a of the final paragraph; of his sec- ffew -timely jobs in. the family ond inaugural address are cited, garden that will Vielp to mako it They show forcefully the work-! a better vegetable producing spot ing of his mind;, the careful de- , if done in November. veJopment of an idea into a thing\ November is a good month to of beauty. 1 have-a general clean up of the ‘‘I am loathe to close,” tne last' garden. ' Burn all the- diseased draft read. "We are not enemies ; plants left and, make a compost but friends. We must ■ not be' heitii or a manure pile of the re- enemieiii Tho'ugh passion may fuse which is,free from disease, have strained, it must not break Save'the fallen leaves and add our bonds of affection.. The mys- these to the compost heap. Plow tic chords of memory, stretching the Unused portion of the garden from every battlefield and patriot and leaye the upturned soil ex- tfrnVfi fn IJvino* iiPnrf ntirl' nnanrl'.'fn '+110 -r-itfl£»»(«»♦ fini4. fhrnir-grave to êVery living heart and heartstone all over thè broad land, will yet swell the, chorus pf the Union wh'eii''aéiiin touched, as surely they wi I be,iby the better angels of, our nature.” , That evidently met with Lin­ coln’s idea.s. It was Ihe'.lâst re- Vi,s;ón, one that has à place in ^he viirioiis volumes of the worlds best prose. Before this revision he had writtén it as follows; , .“I close.. We are not, we miist not be, aliens or enemies, but .fel­ low counti'ymen. Although pas­ sion has strained'tfur bonds of af­ fection too hardly, they must not, I am sure they* will not, be brok­ en, The mystic chords whichi proceeding from so many battle- delds and so many patriot graves, pass through all the hearts and ail the hearts in this broad conti- Back at his desk, he would take ours >vlll yet again har-n piece of foolscap paper, trim " , , , I the envèlope down t^ the size of aiicient - music his riotntion on |t,'aiid paste that, when breathed upon by the guar- clipiiinK at the .top of the fools- dian angel of the nation;” cap. Beneath that clipping the idea ia developed. The sheet I.“} marked number one. Urider .it, n secorid sheet whereupon the original idea, is develooed and , „ , then a. third -sheet and perhaps ;?0x3 Casings |6:7o_«acn a fourth and a fifth, bearing re­ visions. Spme!, sheets have two revisions interlined. Hundreds of foolscap notca posed'to the freezing and thaw­ ing of-winter,weather. '. ‘'Tj|ies¿'! are ' all timely sugges- Able to go to work next day after simple home treatment.,. First Quality Guarantt^ Tires. 30x3 1-2 Casings $7.50 each / ! 30x3 1 2 cord (Jasingi $8.00 each ROBEHIS HARDWÀIIE CO. Winston-Salem, N. C. ‘ As WiUlm H. Avey of Rutland, Ver­ mont,' iteppad^rom bie car .about three o’clock fn the •ttemoon,:n!i left foot felt iore, m d by fiv« :o’eloek be could not step on it. “I tent (or a bottle Ы Sloan’e Lini­ ment,’?,he writee, “and bathed it once every bell hour. At ten-thirty. I could Мер on it and walk'i and the next mornlnc I went back to work.” Active people everywhere tell of numerous instancee ot the amadngly; ' complete relief that Sloan*ii.■ bruiiea: paiil. _ _ _______ nervei. By epèedint! up the circulation it', helps the body to throw off the cause of the pain. Get a-bottle today and have it on band.-AU druK(^te-96 centib ' Sloan’s Liniment к I I, I, s I* Л I N lions that Will help one 'in hav­ ing ft better garden next year," says Bi Morrow, : extension: horticulturist; i‘It is also , easy,: to add a few more vegetables. If the old iisparagus bed has serv­ ed its day, a few crowns shou.d be aet out for a new one. The vigorous one-year-old crowns are best to use and these should be planted in furrows, 8 to 12finches deep and covered to a depth of three or four, inches. : In most sections of the State -, cabbage plants might be set Дог an early spring crop. Lettuce seed may be planted in cold ^frames for early apring heading?’ ; Mr; Morrow states that, the cold frames and hot beds: heed to be гёраЬ’еУ ready for. early spi'ing use. These, two pieces of eyuip- nient are essential for good gard­ ening. They are easily made and ^vill more than paj’ for themseiv-' es by permitting the growing of vegetables out of season. —----------♦—^------------ CLEAN FARM BUILDINGS ARE HARD ON BUGS V Mr, Weaver is^alsfl o f’wliitevya.sh on,) .North'.:G.aro..'inn farm«' cannot aflfd he can at Ieast;'gii houses arid hog pei] ing of white wai dairy stables ..w.l| an. applicatipri, will keep thé qull insect pest®, and= liberal :appiicHt(onj thp walls. - ; According 'to. sprayirig the wash ’ Çiadvodâte, .^the , ¡J Щ тJ 1Ш m m iä m a H^\lh'éyft4e!y:racks\'Âl' .. ..''’icsonnoneSf;..»* Ш щ щ ' Raleigh, Nov. 3.—G*i'airt weevils Insect pests and poultry 'parasit­ es have a hard time making in­ roads intp the, farmer’s income .when all of the outhouses and storage bins .ai^ cleaned and dis^ infected. . ! 7 . . ,, : “it is always ; a good plan to clean out the granary or corn crib before ' storing .the ;8ew .crpp,” says David' S. Weaver, agricultural'engineer at State Cpllegé; “Farmers know that weevils and other, enemies of grain find a .welcome refuge In. the- dirty corners, and in the rer*. mnants of last year’s crop. When the corn crib is empty is the best time to niake needed repairs alço; Holes admit rats and rats do, con-;, siderable damage to stored grain during the, winter months. ' ,The peats are said to be the most de^ striictlve anímala in the world and it is a good'illan to .stop their holes with .pieccs of tin or some other hal'd material,'’ (f. ,^5 ("Ч 1 ^ North Liberty Street WIÑSTON-SALEM, N. Ç. This season we have the most complete line of fall merchants« in the his- t o r y , o f o u r ; m e r c h a n d i s i n g e x p e r i e n c e i n W i h 8 t o h - S a l e m - « - a n d w e c a n ^ ^ ^ d ^ ^ ................................................ fer jrcm th^se goods at prices that will ^ |11ЯШШ;111В«Ш|'!а1!11В11а1 Cóets are very hard to get, but we are very lucky to have made a very la r^ j>urchase ! pf Coats in all the late sty^s and inaten^^ We ask tKat you see our stotk before you ^ ■■buy,;«;Our prices . ; л ■ ; One lot of 500 Hilts in ariiar]t and large shapçs. - . Felts;-Vel- ; ' vets;and -yelpurs. This lot of Hats ia луе11 worth up to $5.95 ; ■ Our price while-they last— : ' - ’ ; ; ; ' .If you have not seen our s пиФШШ 0Ц $25*06; I If , it’s Hats we ha-Ve them,.; In satin and metailic combina- I ' tioris, felts, velvets; aiid we.can offer you.a real price. Come to see 'our stock before you biiy.. Our price—| * ., . AND UP We liaye a empiète line In all sizesi Ti^o t years to size 14; In all styles and m^a^^ ■•^ánid áiihe right'price. See t^^ | $2p9¿ to $16.95 'We cannot mention our asscjrtment of Siiks and the-prices for ]ack,-„of space. But w.&jh'ave'a'complete line and our prices are right. .■ -t-'. ! ! '. -S. i > SUITING IN ALL THE PLAIN'COLORS AND PLAIDS You;can’t:fijid a better assoiitment, and our prices are very \ I i . ' -DRESâilS!ïV"'î-;',H ' Big lot ol Dje4ses,'in Satîn-b>ck Crepetí àîid^^^ new m.iteiials and siies. ' ße'^utjfully riiade, and a wori^e^ buy while thej last Oui piite— ’ * ^ \$6Ш ' , ч у ш ш hÊ jù: '■ Women’s-large s.ise: D^’eaBps, ois, in Foulaid. iThifi In large sizes oniy. 59ç-'i|i|S|8c IVIiJ r « pniBiiiaiiiHiaiiiiaiiHiBiwvawP'»*'"' 500f^LANKETS IN FBAU-TIFUL " 7 ; - . ;v ,j| Largo s|ze, double—66x80. You ■ ,'can’t alTprd' tcr miss this speciai. ; ;p Whiié.tiiey last Friday, iiijcl Satur- .• : day. ■Oiiv ni'iée.—- , . , ■ ; ; § . ■ Woolen Goods. We. have a complete line of Woolen i.. Goods, for dresses and coat^. . We' ' can save you money. ■ OUTINGS in all colors‘,stripes and all widths Our price- $2.98 • A COMPLETE LINE OF CHILD- v^REN’^ HOSE ^3{ip '.AND, up.'. ' : : ' " 1 i I If you need outings.seff our prices, 12 1/ 2 to 29c 36-INCH SHEETING Av;good quality -toi.go, Friday .and iSaturday-^very. special. ' 11.У ARDS FOR ‘ ■ ^Ladies* $ilk iSlips ; ,-In' any. sh^i/3 'wanted—and; you ^ .can’t beatour prfces . . - - • ' LADIES’ BLOOMERS .-In a big assortment'of colors. ■ In ; ; Rpyon and : Silk, ' Look . at our : .' 'prices—. . J ' 1 .'' 98c, $1.9S to $2.98 .-^..■'.('■■.'GHILDREIiJ’S DRESSES : uWool ««d Cottoiir-;'« a -big iwsort-. lament ofi styles . all . colors and ; .vrsiaea,'- Mothers,! wo' caiv save you . . ; mon%v on thc'kiddies’ clothes, : ,Pri('e.s— ^ ; ■' ';.: 98c to Hosiery LADIES SILK HOSE lij every new color... In rich silk‘| boot. . Ouivprices Friday and Safe; urday 59c HOSE in pure siik. and íchi/foni ': , In ail the now fall shados and you’ . will be surprised to see thia quai-.:; itv at the price.-., Our ;prictì-^ ; -. ...$1;48....'-i ..;. s ^ Í» K. . , •*. ,yl HOSE,Ladies^Çptton-.-Sport ;:-Цой^“ in all coloia. Buy theiD.now-.^ * ‘ 1 : : ^:í::;íaÉ asíáa. . ' .' . ..,-,.K dL Ú áSá^Í чиш Óne big lot oif^Ládieв''AIl-àíWЙ from top to )toe HPS¿ , Thift j reaP'value and we ban ^РЛ1У them at 1Ъ(з piice Ру^ау 4n4^,8*ítyV - '•'urday.' ■•All--;çolori.?i|l^^'!eJ«^5P^y|»^ f« THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE UD 1мйы W ery7^ ,lH H ^ ac ■ Mocksvpé, North Üacûlln.; ,. % .л , d нт 1Й с1]Т ]Г ^~ - Л ■' íiEACH ■ - Subácri^iim Rhtëe ,.-,::Stirictlj‘ ered at ;1 ksviy^^íl , # toiattef^hder the iilihi;£0Í.;Máf(íK * "Í, 1 8 7 9 . ■ 'Г' Í.' ■ •-'икдаиныиин ■WtV9t , Щ1 a Yea'r ^iSix MpntHa 6Ö ‘ s t r i c t ly i r ^ d v ^ ^ e ; ' '£-i—---------- Entered at òffice at МоскауЩв(^0 С:гпв sebond-class you . have read - it ton days, njoiiii- w ell dlBeatetl. liimlüfc.by Shake' it tiiovouglily. havo I'eacl theae loolc of Job. Reni eothu. A|i ,\yuit fvj^vèelc líiuií'ígettiiijí i ïheïi-tíiJct- apoai'i’'ÁtU'ivfOÜ' ш ’■ '# й “« you 1-eatb inri Ä ile t —Rend it П8 а ■aust ral d ¡цд). дд you inaiiUJnasteriM^®^' Кызр, ' thoujj"t' t Well, yood folks, I don’t sup­ pose that the Diinniercrats stole thé , election from Cant. Boyles, and the "Bo^s” this' time, Oh, well, worse. It could have been . *', <1 ■', » .* * ВЛХТЬЛ UVERLY, M. * • COOLEEMEE, N. C. ThUradtiVi -Novg'mbèi' '^.’1926 D. * dence No. 26. * Office Over Drug Store. Of- * fice Phone No. 3J; Koal- ■, ■ I know how dem dar republi­ cans felt four years ago. . 'ffie, fine tljou ment and béa Then compare matic produc- >îockôville, N; Cii'jríoy..,4,.192G , ‘ The latest forecast is that ,the i. South will this ' year-produce oV- iar seventeen mill|òii bales of eot- 1 ton. If thnt eétimaité is anythinpr- ■ like correct, there lis only one of Ì two things fór, the; cotton,;g^^^^^^ ¡-ers to do,, one ,is: Beil at ten i,a pounil, or les8,i the other, hòld . their (gotten off the market until .1 tho demand shall raise thè price.' t “United StateW have '-been placed on}guard ofmail i i n the; larg^ centers with instruc- tiQiW ;to shoot >t<í :ltll),íinj: casé : yattem%e'd robbery. 1 ?hia- stand jha? Ibeen , taken ^in yiéW of the - ifact-ihat- üüriíig^^ i-.iweeks bbld T tíult- V ed States' iriái^^ place Tight oni|the inaiii( ,streets of sqm 6f the'lafgeri'oitleai 'j0. ■. v; lioctór P . . , mean liquor In responsible for the v> /, ever. Increasing number,of suf the fine senti- ity of expression, the three as dra- onsi We believe e that, from every out the fact that the Book of Job was written by an inspired author), Job, as a dramatic ■masterpiece, is the greatest of the three. GRAiPASULATALlG ferers from 'Nephritis. There 'j|f little-.doubt but th^t >he .is correci: \ in hii;. statement., Ce'rtfcinly^,,- if V ;,bldckaders.;u8e 8(i6h/’matefiatigl ds ‘lohie people claim ,tH‘ey there is no telling what, the r|i‘i(6Uual 'drinking of’ their product-nfiay bring on, , ' ; North; Cnrolina loads iii jnhiiy ,ivaya.:,i iiast. week it . ’\v«s . ri,n- nounced thnt'зЬе.' 1са<1' а1Г,;0Гё Southern states in the uuriibeitpf deaths '.«nd it^uries \ciuised by ^ nutomobile wrecks,^ during tho week .endinft Octobcr'^2!h'd. Uuv- iV, С '■ ■' week thoro killed 'v-i^lnlthis state, ih auto wi'ocks, .ten Ж ’*-'-, Чpjersone.'nnd 23 werft Injilred. An ■ordinary, -^аг; looks like a ■ piker j'l' /■ }'’'h vhen It comes to comparing with' lit 'fv »4to as a human'slayer. ’ That’ wna a. line tribute which ,/;n[^9veinpr 'Mclfftn‘pnid'to former ^ i ; <, "'WVerhbr * Morrison ät .'Lilllngt<>%t ' '■ wheijl.^Ve -„stated!; jtRatl ^ ^uiing' the- Morrison 'acfthlnlftrÄ^^^^^ •;.,\tion ‘‘more progres's vvps J ^ind . n igreater i>rogram: of vpUblic . " Improvement achieved, thiui iltji'- ■ \Ing any other, parlo^l in tht* ^is-' tcry of the ‘.state,’’ but -it ;,w«s Vevery word true. . Governor Mc- ' Lcnn mndo a.similar atatement'ln. • his-Albermarle nddress lust weiek^. , Iti'goes to show that. Morrison is' ..to, go down in history ns one of •the state’s greatest governors,, tho ■ groiit. Aycock not excopted. i; аДл People ought to use mo|re com- ' : man .sense. Some will ealj n doc­ tor every time they ‘get a slight , .'bolly-nch, Others will 'refuse nbsoiutely to consult a phy.Hician, depending instead upon their ."faith” to pull them through, , Mrs. Beulah Norris, a Holy Roll: . er,- of Owensburg, Ky., died the ’other'day because she l-efusef] to . have n phyaicinn attend )ier. That there is something in one's mental attitude which alTects the' physi­ cal,'there is no doubt, but one can't always depend upon that. ■ There is as much danger of going "too far in that direction aa there js in taking too much mpdicinel Common sense is a mighty'valu- ■^j^ble asset for, any one. Some of them like the Enter­ prise so well that^they keep them for two years and Vend ’em over ■nhd; oyer again. That’s the stufi boys, you know a real newspaper when you see it. ' , After winning over Mn Seaford in the eipction Tuesday, some of thom old liners' 'thought they would go in and ride him on a .rail bu.t 'they got fooled.' Now „what do you think of such ■«stuiT as this. Baby stuff, I calls it. It was n whole lot worse 10 yenrs ngo., I remember hearing dad tell nbout it. Yes, and you will know you feel ngnin SOON, how ■^Ve nre going to wntch nnd aee how much they lower the taxes during the coming two years. .■ DR. LESTER P. MARTIN « * Night Phonö 120; Day Phone * 71," V » ' Mocksville, к C, #* DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST ; Mbcksvi'lle, N. C. X-Ray Diagnosis Office 7?hone 110 * - i Residence Phone 80 NOTICE OP SALE UNDER m o r t g ag e Weil I hope they will pay back some of the money they have bor­ rowed. ■'(The Enterprise has, not sent out a,single sample copy duriiig this campnign, •It'is all we 'cnn do to get those thnt are PAID for deliv­ ered, much less a sample copy. ; .Advertise where ndjvertfsing pays. ■ Downie Brotliers circus ^fiich exhibited, here last Thurs­ day 'afternoon and. 'night was greeted by an , unusual ; large crowd for/ both porforniances., 'They advertised this - show thru ■tlie columns of the Mdcksville Enterprise—Dnvle County’s New,s paper, and hlao the jCooleemee Journal. If you, want to' sell nijy- thing'advertise it in a paper,that the; people road—the peopji) .who tian,afford:to;buy.. ; Another ten thousand dollar rohd to some other commissioner’s home will *just about- .“fix” up things sure enough. We hope the good people of Cooleemee ,will get busy and brighten up that- "dnrk‘ corner” down there. •No, Mnbel, there wns not n president to be vot^d oil ^ihis elec­ tion. But there was a “ Citizen” ticket. ' v ’'" V Mi\ Business Man, áre you go­ ing to continue to support and patronize men that talk about you as; you .were .talked .\|^out during this elcctibn.: • ' Treat'him ruf/¿¿hat's mo, big boy; '■:>,■ That’s ali. THOSE WIIO NEED'i OUR SYftlPATHY AND HELP. A REAL J^JESS .AfiEN’rj {And STH.L HIS HOOZE WORRIES HIM. 'laiEDICI'S MC^ WARM WINTER AND EARtY SPRING. All’ around us-.thor^Q are men and women daily carrying.*secret..I--ii -__J.' -.i" 1.‘ 11. ' ■ J _Xll • - _ _l' 1 '--.l.l l.. Under and by virtue of the. power of sale -c.outained in that certaiii mortgiige deed, . exocute(F and delivered to Southern Bank Trust compaiiy bjv Noah ,H. S\('icegoQd;and wife'on September 4, 1926 and recorded Jn Book of Mort^at<es No. .21, at Page -No 442 of the public . registry of Davie county, default hiftving been made in the payment of the note tljiereby secured, the undersigned iis mortgàgeé, wiir offer at public salo .at ;the court .-house, door, in Mócksyille, liorth Carolina, to.the highest blddex :for cash, on 'Sat­ urday; the thirteenth day of Noy einber, 1926,. at ,12:00, noon, the following described tract of iand to witi ' ;• Situatéd.in Davie county. North Carolina, and bounded as follows .viz:;;.v V Beginning at a stone and pine knot, B, P. Stpne.street’s corner, and runs North ‘6 West 33.94 chnins to - a stone in Columbus Bowles’ line;: thence 'South 0.85 chains te n persimmon, J. W. Green’s corner; thenco South GO West 15.25 chaina to ,n stone; tiionce South 23 East'27.32 chains to a stone, formerly ri pine or pine' knot ¡ .thence North 74 .East 8.35' clisiins to a black jnclP; thenco North 2.Gt> cHnjns to tho ,,begiri- ni.ngj cpirtiiiiilnifr-f<)rtyroiiilit'(48) acres, ihóré oi'; less. . This iStlr dii'y cif October,' 1926, A:, D.: y ' ,i SOUTHERN ÌBANK & TRUST CO ,- ;',:',Mortgagfle. Robert. S, McNeill, Attorney, Place; of Salò : Cpurt house door', Mocksville, N. C. ' Timé;'oi iSalp; 'Saturday, Novemb- ; : er :l^-1926^12:00, Noon, • T erm l^t^ NOTICE , Tnkt! notice thnt tho pni'tner- sKip of J. R. Edwards and IL R. and ené^ri№®entt’tp,r8üeh?^ we lift" from: hé|píá№MU discouraged-shpu kney^,.and weré :well. ■;'I^he.;_troübÍé':lá ;we .are.: tooj'^areles^.ito’o busy, too iiilispr^ allow, the^bqtteríílm^ íchánce. ",W¡8i;áon?|::know éiách othír ■a^;Syé should.', In our ma'd rush, *we misjudge our neighbors and friends.'-’ .We are after ^apjiinoss, nnd most of iia would promote happipesa in pthera, but Ave are going .after the thing from tho wrong angle. Would you make.'others hnppy? Lend the heípfui .hw'd.''.QÍ-^'-Iove and.syiji'pnthy.:,,:'HfouId you make your own life, hup-1 Mni'tln ríninív ...„im. vk„ pier? 'Thcreisno,better.way to do this than through dirking others! irappy; The: man who loves his fellows and-is always on the alert I ^ to help--others'is, ns á rule, the happiest'person: in tHé world. Bui; I [. ,u, * , _ lú ”«! 'fv fv, don’t wait, for your friend or neighbor'to cry out: for help., He S ’ t f f ' by the adts may. never dp it. Moat men and womeii are proud.'-They'will, die ti n- consent oi rnthei'^hiin mitke known ,thoir load of care apd .worry and need of. ‘ ' '' liutnan help and human love and sympathy. So don’t,Avait. for the /cry,-for';help,'to, rcuch ;your ears. Many times the face \vill show vi,.,,,,„n, , . , ,%• theflond being curried as':plainly, as the audible cuil'for help, So w ilJ ’ « i .presented to let'us;b'b on, the alert more for thosé';needing our sympathy .and rpu.,¿ ^ ^ ,our friendly hnml. ' , - - V. ' : ^ -rhe^a«,id:G., P. .Winecpff being. • '-v:■■ . mutually ngreed :upon ? by snid\ . : Roscoo Marvel, prcipriefbr of Koiiilworth Inn,'interested -Adolph. Ochs, publisher of -the Ne^v- York Times, and former; Turkish am-1 the partner- bnssador, Morgenthriu, in taking a 'trip over the fiilfe highway from *' n i I*'}?’®. “P“*J Asheville: to Atlanta. The Charlotte Observer says that: Mr. Ochs : " v expressed himself as exceedingly thrilled with the scenery and -• respurces of. Wgatern North Carolinn and that he promised to .do the,' courthou,se . door of Davie County,' in. thè.city, of IViocksvllle, N,.C., oifei: fpr,‘snlo'ht publ'id riuc- lion to the Ingliost blddei’ for. cash, the foflovving duiieribed tracts or. parcels of .land in said Ua vie County, Ì3o.ntni'iiing,:in thè aggregate 246 acres more or,lead, situate, iyin.g and being oh tile, Cana-Favmington 'Public Rond, about eight niiles northwest from the town o'f‘Mocksville,,in Farm­ ington Township, Davie County, the same being bounded on the north by the lands of W. R. Hud­ gins, E.G. Liikey, P. R. Lakey and S, >p. Tatum ,heirs, on the east by the lands of H. G. Rich, nnd on the south by the lands of Mis3 Nettie Baton, being the same lands whiirh were conveyed to M. J. Hendricks' or to Emma G. Hendricks his wife, under and by virtue'of the following deeds, to-witli , (a) Deed from I. B. Winfrey to M. J. Hendrick8, registered' in book 21, page 407, conveyihigf seven acres; (b)',Deed from T, H. and E. W, 'Tututh to M. j; Hen­ dricks, registered . in book . 21, liage 410, cot\veying .ninety-two acres; ’ (c) Deed from J. C. l^ar- tin and. wife to*M, J.: Hendricks, 'registered in book 16, pago ,¡¡2' wonveying . ,twen,ty, ,,aci^^^^ ,,h Deed ,fi’oih';NettÌ0 'tìnto M j Hendricks ahd 'wiie^ i^ ¡,j book 21,1 Jingo .408, convoying (li'tv acres;, (6)’need from E. Pi EaUii, t o M- J . ; , ftehtfrickà, registered ii, j ibook 24, pritfé'301, conveying foil 1- ^iiprea; (f)- Deed from S; B.tEatoi,. fo M. J. :;Hehdricks,\réj?istered ¡n i book 24, page': ,361,,,;; cohveyiiiK f thirtyrtwó acres; . (g) peed from. Pi R. Lakey to .M. J. Kehdricka, registered, in book 26, page 2(u| conveying one nhd five-sixth uci-! es; (h) Deed from Henry How- ell, to Mv J. Hendricks, registei-Q(| in'bpok 26, page 262, conveying} two acres; ‘0) Deed to Emma fi. Hendricks -in' the division of the lands of Phillip Eaton, registered In book 13, at page 74, conveying thirty-eight and - one-half aerea. In office of Register of iJeeds of Davie _^County, North Carolina. | Thè • descriptions set out; in said deeds being .liere adopted , and maidé ii. part'hereof as fully «h .if here recited in detail. : This the 4th day of Nov. 1920. , CLIPPORD PRAZIER, iTrusteu for the Amériéan ■ Agdcult'ural Chemical Company and' Armoiu- Pertiiizer .Works. Lohger Range with Stiper'^X T h e f a m o u s S u p e r - X s h e lls in c r e a s e t h e e fF e c tiv e r a n g e . o f y o u r s h o t g u n 1 5 t o 2 0 y a r d s . T r y t h e ^ ._ „ P r o v e i t y o u r s e lf.- S e e h o w t h e y c r u m p l e u p d u c K s a n d g e e s e w a y ,o u t o f r a n g e o f o r d i n a r y lo a d s , . ¿ » e a d ly p a t t e r n s ., a t r e m a r k a b le d is t a n c e s . . . . . A n o t h e r f a m o u s W est- * e r n s h e ll is t h e n e w X p e r t . I d e a l f o r q u a i l a n d a l l ' r o u n d s h o o t in g . H i g h v e lo c ijw , G e t S 't h e g a m e . B u y ' y o u r a m m u n i t i o n h e r e f o r s h o t g u n , r ifle a n d r e v o lv e f . , H e a d q u a r t e i s f o r s p o r t s m e n , : ; i ^ l w a y s g la d t p s e e y o u . A m m u n it ío n MOCKSVILI^E h a r d w a r e CO. Mocksville, N, C. ; Ail 'accounts duo said partner­ ship' and all claims agninsfc said I / . .'.,'L'|h a, J-ecpht issue of his paper, ■ The Monroe Enquirer, ' Eugene Ashcraft was talking'about the . Tgpod old daya long ago; He starts ed off by telling some oi the oiit- standing ciualities of the old,time .printer; but finiilly ended his dis- cour.><o on the good old days- with ■ ■ this: ■ • . “ In noting from time 'lo - time Jiow ,in; olden times men were, far „ ‘. superior to the present genera- , tion, 1. am reminded' of the old • llili.on' county citizen, who, : it/is related, had thè uiuisual'privi- , lege pi.' ‘(:alkiiig :back' to the, I . ))reacher.’ ; ; One Siindiiy morning S, -'lyhile the Seripturd lesson was J. being ,1-ead^' relatihg' to Splomdii I and his : til,fee hu nd red ,wi ves ii lie] ‘»i. seven )nuidred ;ÌM frien.ds,. oiir !, nl(i Priviidgod Cluiracter' replied, .‘Weil'; :\vell ¡^.tìieré .shorei.v iivere' ;t!niun in them days I’.” ' ' ,----------------------- I If you t'ru'.iPolciiig foir some ;..duriiig'. this /wiiitei'' ti>’" some broadcasting up on his return home. The Observer then makes ' ' • h this..very true statement: , ‘IThb more people like Ochs and Moi;- ..n ' „ « gahthau we bring into the state, the* faster will the fame of North ' ' Carolinn be sprend. Bringing siich folks in. Marvel made a tèn- ■8trike,'^; .. - ', ' /^ Yes,-Indeed, and no man in North Carolina knows this better than Rpscoe Marvel. It is all right to interest, any, outside vlsitof td' come to this state, but when' we get suc'ii publishers as Ochs here we make, for a quicker and wldér fame for our state, for with the great circulntion which the New York Tinies has, Ochs caii tell mor«, people; aiHHUt the fine stateVof , North, Carolina with a singUi stroke , of the. pen than five hundred p’latform' lectiirerM could in a’ whole' year, working at nothing ¿Ise. Let North-Car61ih?( try to attract more such men here, ' ' 'i; Piddmont and eastern ..North Carolina need , a few such pub­ licity workers as -Maryel- ia. Pew men are doing .more to put Western North Carolina on the map than Roscoe Marvel. He is the,‘‘press «¿ent” of whom Irvin Cobb; was tliinking wlien he said the,greatest .péed of North Carolina vvns n press agent. ■ ''' *. When the national prohibition law went into effect,:a Tenndssee man had ?75,000 worth of go^ booze'on hand. It \vns seized by thje' 8tnte, but af'ter-a diwyn out lawsuit, the booze-Was. i^urned to the original owner; Now the precious stuff is causing the own­ er moie'trouble. He fears it will be'a temptation for robbers. It is stored in the man’s, private' home and he thinks he may be mur­ dered by robbers who mny make.ir,,ra(Id/for tho whiskey; . Hia fear is well founded. It would, be .^afer'Tdr'ii .’ffiri^^^ to sledp with a mii- ,lion (iollnrs. jn. gold ;under his head these days,; than \vithy,$75,000• .'vvorth of, wlilstf.ey—gqod wliiijkcy-^-in his hom,'e. ■ . '' ' '.M ; . For wdelta, woi\th'oi^^ have been foretelling.the raiighost Wiiiter, the country' hiig; seen in ¡i hundred years, All signs, they said, poiiited, to thi.s. Ди1 now coinea along one Williftm Altman;- of Pennsylyaniai with'a message of ihope to the fellow^.who will brtve to, toot the; coal bill this :\Vinter.’. Altman says we are in foi- ‘ a; nièc^ÿyhim winter.”. ; The Pohnsylwrhia tnnn is, said to be the be^t луе!11Ьс1’ prophet ■ Uiid; Woodariian in; thé country. "i\nd 4pring d l .................. DAVIE CHEVROLET CO. 10 27 26, 'NÖ-TIGEbpsALEr t|i^e second hope^ of Altman. State of Noirth Carolina, County _of . , /...';.;'ь ’ Undei* and by virtue of thd .power of sale Vested in the und- .ei’signed .trustee’ for the Ameri­ can Agricultural Chemical Com­ pany/ and-. ; Armour Pertilizer '/Works, in;;thi»t certain deed, of ‘'frust recorijed in the office of-the Register of Deeds of Da vie; Coun­ ity, in Book No. 21, pages 402 and j^03,-executed by M. J. Hendricks and Emma G,, Ilendricks his wife, 1 'to secure the payment of certain jiotps aggregating the, sum of $7131.60 :and. interest thereoni ^payable to 'the American Agri-^ cultural Chemicai.Compuriy, and $1898.17/ aihd interest payable to Arpidur Fertilizer ;\forks;' and default having been made in the payment of I the principal and in­ terest of.siiid notes; and the said Amd'ric{iii - Agricultural Chemical Gohiiiiiny aiid Armour Fertilizer '^drk.4. hnyi'iig: declare the. total sum dud.OTi'said' notes immed^ ly.’payable .as . provided bjV the. .terms ■ of said, ;dced of trust, and l^oth having: re.tluosl'od the said trustee td'foi'dclose .чПк1 deed ;ot trust, tho- undersigned ;: truR^pg will, on the aixtn dny of. Dofciimb- 01, 1926, at 12 00 o’clock M,_at: SAFKOl'AKD THE HEALTH OF “FAM ILY BUNDI,E” TO A MODERN, U P -T a D A T E l a i ;n i )r v . e v e r y a r ­ t i c l e I S W A S H E D C L E A N A N D T H O R O U G H L Y S T E R IU Z E D . One of these sei^ices willUt your pocket^ book;;;:;/■/-' ■ ■ ■' ■■■■ ■" &; laundry Co. Cool^^mee, N. C. B E T T & R THAN BARG AIN S . / W e started our Used Car business With the ;idea th(^t a good car at a fair,, price is better than a fair car at a bar- - gain price. That idea has no«^ become . a definite policy. Our customers can tell you why. 'G, G. WALKER MOTOR CO. PHONE 109 MOCKSVILLE, N. C. >!.;í, 'A' Use-D CAR IS ONLY A3 DeP&NaASL& . ''AS THE DE-ALera. WHÜ SeiLLS IT-. I -I >(twi *» /»V { vO WV',' tí г /Thursday, November 4, 1926 I THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE' IX)CAL ITEMS Oh Boy, :“ It Must «e Love.” Colleen Mdore, Monday und Tüés- daÿ;.;, :Bt5St/'Wc8torn, picture of the i^ear 'lit the; Princess Friday and Saturday.” ^ ' ; Miss Rose Owen, who tcaehoa in Winston-Salem, spent; tho \veek- end at home. . , , ■: ——Or—^ , Khi)X, Johnstone; attended the Davidson U. M., I., football game in Lynchburg, Va. I - ^— Misa Inez Naylor, of Greena- "bpro; spent the week end with Tier parents near Cana. —0-—r . Mrs; 'T. B. Bailey returned Sat­ urday from a month’s visit to JfPs. Jamea Hall, in Covington, Tenn. ; ■ , -. •- Johnstone. W, II. LeGrand, E. H. Morn.<i, Cecil Morris, P. J. John­ son, E. C, Choate, Olhc Stockton, Maxey Brown, Lester Martin, Ar- uiur Ilolleniun, Jlisses Ruth Booe,, Martha Cull, Jane Hayden Gaith-' or, lyie Horn, Haze! Baitv-, und Mrs. Fred Afidt'ews who.came in uftor the games. MATTERS BEFORE N. C. LEGISLATURE MOVIE NEWS Today We play “Fine ¡Manners” with Gloria Swanson in a geor- geua array, of late style gowns, tho ita a comedy iov'e.drnma. Ad­ mission lO.and 40 cents. t;dn/ ilhd; f or e^am iiiatióh ; of ' the : driver’s. li,cense‘.c,i»rd. ■; Law :dni'ordenieiit officers, dspef ciiiily motorcycle .police, ure/un- rcniinous in tlieir eiidprseriient .61' the propoaul» in t;hat it \viÜ make the. d etection of sioien curs m id oi spéedsrs much .eiiaiqr, when lic- 01130 plates; are; curried on both, the front und reur of ulitpmpípiieH.! Altogeth'ei', iui intoro'it'iig- tiirio in the' General- Asseinbiy mi\y; be' expected when the question of the .double license plate comes up, us i't wiil j t o do^ . , ' • , adopt-the double license plateljyiR. FOSTER WANTS INPOR- One of First Questions Will He Action On One Or A wo Auto Licihse Plates Raleigh, : Nov. 3.—Ono of the flrst-quei?tiona which, veteran nnd newly eiect'ed membei-s of the next General Assembly will, have to •ivrdstte with will, be the question to whether the State will conti­ nue to uae only one; iiutomdbiie license plate, or whether System, now in uae in virtually Friday and Saturday a Firat all of the atntes in the country, Nntionnl Western fenluring Kerr -with the exception.of North Cnro- MATION Mias Margaret McKinnon, of Hartsyille, S. C., is the. attractive giiest of her .cousin, Mrsi J. B. Johiistone. , ‘Miss Flossie Martin,, of the Reyii6|d8 High- achooi faculty, of W.instorirSa.lèmi;. apdpt the. weeki •^hd at home. Mias'/Theoddcln. Bluckmon nnd Miss Jessie Wiiff.Jdf Qreen.sboro, .sperit.the week end with Rev. nnd Mrs. W. B. Wnff. , . ‘ ■ Mri; 'W. '^M, Howa'i'd, returned home, Pridiiy. from Long’s Sana- toriuiTi. / We' dl'e glad to state that he ;is-improving., 0—^ Little Miss Sarah G'rnnt de­ lightfully entertained n number of her l.lttle friends nt a Hallowe’­ en i)arty; oh Saturday. —-0—— , Miss Gilma Baity/; who is a student at Mars Hill College, at- , tdnded a B. Y. P. U. conference in Birmingham, Ala., this week, — —0— — Mrs. J. P. Hawkins, of Sunford, Fla.i who has beon, quite ill, is improving,'wo aro glud to aliite. 'Her mother, Mrs. L. G. Horn,''is still with hei'. Maynard and Dorothy Devore, and bus bewi voted by the Inrgest thentres. the; .very beat Weatern picture mnde thia year. Alao two reel Billy Dooly comedy "A Goofy Gob.” "It Must Be Love” with Colleen liiin. South Cnrolinu and Texas. Up until 1917, this State used the double license plates, but ow­ ing to the high cost of steel dur­ ing the war,, but one pinte was used, and this system has b'een Mo.™ ana A.-th»,. Stone .¡il b,, ‘irSij'S here Monday and Tuesday ond number of automobiles in tlie,’«Tom Thumb” as we always knew 4? ¡„,.»1,.« irt 'hMirM we’ve been told by many that its , State, and, tho , confusion, which ^iS-inehes irt height. Tulsa, Okla. , 1543 S, Detroit Oct. 31, 1926 Mocksville Enterprise / ' . . . Mpck'aville, N. C. . Deiir Mr. Huneycutt':; ' I am sending you a clipping Aiduny. 84$’; who .as‘i^PomlThQihb,*?;. a 42-inch midget, for 40 '^years amused- thousands of-icircUs-gPera] with hia humor and prdw'es« as a" glass blower In.si'de Shotv atii’nc* tions. Tomorrow -funeral lae'rvic*-. es will be held for. the diminutive; octogenarian, who/died liist-. Pri“: day nt his home here. -Interment| will be at Evergieen cemetery, here. - ‘ Born in Medina county, Ohioi August 14, 1842, Alden learned the glass-blowing trade in. his' youth nnd when in hia thirties j first traveled about : the world with circuses. During. trav­ els, as a showman, h^ continued at the work of blowing miniatur­ es nnd ornameht'al pieces,'amus­ ing his audience with his ihfeeti-; ous humor; .'/Ten years ago he re­ tired from circus life. - Hi8.death,- the result of ati Internal' hemor- rhage, followed three years’ ill­ ness. He is survived by his widow, 82 years of age, and also a real knockout.' Its now playing a two weeks run nt the Revoli Thentre, New York City to pucked houses. Better_ think about ask­ ing ydur friends to come with you td see this' comedy love drama. Regular admission.' ■ '; Wednesday and Thursdny Pura- mounts Jiiriior. Sixteen of them will be. presented in the veiy lat­ est style clothea in the new pic­ ture “Paacinatlhg Youth.” CALAHALN NEWS Mr. nnd Mrs. W. V. Gobble spent. Sunday ;ijWitH , relatives in, Dnvidsdn* county. / Mrs. J. C. Anderson 'nnd little daughter apent the week end with her parenta, Mr. and Mra. P. H. Lanier. - . Hallowe’en Party nnd Pie Supper at Smith Grove School— Music 'i’eaeher Arrives reaulta when motori-sts . from North Carolina go into other atatea where the two-j')late ayatem ia used, aerious consideration is being given .to the return to the dual plate plan. - ; \ • At present. North Cnrolinn is pnying IV iittie oyer ,4 1-2 •,cents for ita licen.se ,'pintes, or to be exact, $.0457 each. More than 400,000 license platea will be used, wiljiout too much Idas of money this year, and next year 515,000 on pr'ope’rty and leavintf part of plates are to be ordered. The „у own, who are, mnrried arid haa only increaae in coat wpuld be, à'fnniny and in buainess;fdr him« not mòre than five cents for th'è' extra plate, so that the two pldtes. could be provided at a total cpst*" him when I was living |n North Carolina. I.think^he married lit-1 if anyone has the "information tie Maria Nail, of Mocksyille. Am^ iiesired by Mr, Foster, we" would I right liodut it or not?' Tell us appreciate it; if you would-write; in your vallid paper <^nl! .yoii. can himi about Marin , and Tom. 1 have been away from. Davie for 48 yeiiii’a, 1 am still longing for .my old. home and people; 1 le^ft'béhind, I wo.uld come, but my bUainesá and ties are so, I cannot get looad 'Mi,'s. Herbert'Birdaull, of i\IooiV .esVil.le, and Mrs., Price Sherrill aiid'little son,; Price, Jr., of l\It, uila, visited their' mothdi;, Mrs. William Miller, this week. ' :' ——n— ' '/. ;: :Revi J; T. Sisk and Prank Sain /are attending the North Carolina ildthodiat Proteatnnt church which is being, held jn Grnce. M. P, church nt'Greonaboro; ' ' ' A regulrir meeting of the O. E. S. will be held Thursdny evening at 7:30. All members a.skod to be present.—Mra. Jinnie Ander- sop,,W. M.; Mrs. Ella Holthouser, Secy. ' '■ ;ÍleBuiár Communication Mduks- yilie ¿odge-No. 134'A. F.' uncí A. Mf Fridriy night, Nov. 5th,;work in third ddi?r'eo;. All memberfi iïÉiïdd,, ,to ■ be prosehtv Visitors ■\yblapme.-r-C. G. Leach, M. ; Z. N. Anderson, Secy. -; ■ ' -r—0 - ^ - . The follpiylng nnnoUncornent ia pt\ intereat here nhd throughput tiie Statò:. Mr. ;nnd Mrs. L. -G. ■.IJdrn áhndúnce ti»e dngngemont •.and'-> ¿Pírdaííhing ninrringe of tiiei'r daugliter^ Ivie, to Dr. Hçnry Rucker, bf Snnford, , Fin. The, ' m'afriajie will take plai-e in .De- 'Cémbev•.•i The bride-elect is the ’ «h'armins^ nhd accompliahed -daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. L. G.Horn, aiid has maily friends. The grooih-td-be is a prominent den­ tist; of. Sanford, ;Pla. ' ^ V . / ——lo—— ,■ Miss Alice Lee waa grncioua hostess oh ThurBdny nfternodn in honor of the ministers’ wives of thè city. A beautiful profeasion •of.'roaes was used in decorating the home, Thè guests engaged in ajÎH interesting cnke guessing con­ test, nnd also enjoyed a number -of-,-ldvely selectiòns .on the yict- rdift,'' Delicidua hot chocolate and ■cakes \vdí’e' ''8érv^ guests wèi’é ; - Mesdames R. S. Howie, W. B.-Waff, E. M. Avett, Julia C. Heitmah.'anil ;J. P. Green. The iidstesB wns;àBaisted ih : entertain­ ing by her mother, Mrs. Sarah B; Lee,- and. her/sister. Miss Beitha Lee. 'I’hvrsdny Afternoon Club Bnttlrtained, .. Mias Mary Hdim.in was hostess lo tho Thuiadiiy Allei noon Club and' severnl.' ' other Iriends,, , on Thursday. Dnhlu\s, Lnnamabe-' murna, n’lul mangolds were ni- i.irtged in the two rooms whoie rook,.was ])luyed‘ at loui ,,tables, After, tive .games tho hosle.'ja, i\s- Msied by Miaa June II.i.\ den S«# - U' nnd MiS Coeil Moina, steuod i isfiind courae, The guests weu; MiH&cl|i)fne"8 Rui\is JR, Si\nloid, J B^ t jl}ji self that he cannot get Ipdiie With dùi too much loaSi so we will i i. ■ have to stay oh in our new state, of .not .more than $25,750 for .the; good oiie but thei-e’s ho entire State, and perhnpa a slight; pi„ce nkg home, njid nil frienda, increaae jn postage, which would I have"taken a Davie paper.iiearly .be abaorbed by other savings, in ¿ver aince T left" there, .which ;I tlie opiniop of Sparague Silver, aiwaya am glad to get,, it ,Ì(eòp8 director of the automobile licenae 1 pretty well poatod about peo- diviaion, and who ia in fnvor of Gowns of <jeVernl Chicago yoqng women have bc(\n/ ruined' by ink thrown by a middle aged woman in the busy, shopping diatf riot; ' Ten cignrets, n pnir of .women’s sho^s, a box of matches, some rope, ^ailcloth, and other: objects were found in- the stomach of a shark caught '/ off; the ' English coast. , 'rhe Smith Grove High School gave a'Hallowe’en party, and pio supper at tho achooi building /Thursday night, Oct. 28th. •The auditorium was nttractive- iy decqi-ated with beautiful C0I5 ored leaves and shocks of';corn. Iloro and there were Jack 0 ’ Liintr orna which, gave the desired weird effect. Bootha .Vvorc erect­ ed where fortùnea were vend, and gamea such aa ahooting, apples and' twirling ,the pumpkin were enjoyed by old as-vyell aa young. . After 'passing '' a, socinU hour playing game's,: thd crowd assem­ bled in the auditorium where sev­ eral iiiano iind violin 'aelectidna were enjoye.d. Then came the pie sale and cake wnlk thfe proceeds of. ^vhich amounted to $43.80— this goes for-the benefit ot the school. Miaa Josephine Ellis of Clem­ mons hns boen added to the facul­ ty of Smith 'G-rovd achooi. Miaa Ellis arrived Mónday td take up /her'Work us music teacher. There are- proapeeta for n large elusa. • -Pdrhnpa the public,will be in­ terested to know ^hat Smith Grovo la-expecting to' be placed on the li.st of accredited, high schools of the State: this year; A laboratory equipment fov the.teaching of science and aevernl mnps, hnve been added to thd achooi equip- ment. ‘ ^ ; : , ' ' pie at home, home, aweet home.' So give Ua nil the newa: about all the people and, all the changes.', ' I am youra truly, FRANK FOSTER, 'rhe clipping followa: :' ’TOM THUMB’, 81, : ; 4 DIES SUDDENLY the double licenae plate system. It’is known that the Carolina Motor Club und other nllied motor trades asaocintion.s nro going to throw thoir entire influence be- 'hind the move to secure .the double licenad plates,-and it is not cxpected 'that much serious opposition will develop, becaUad of the obyioua dea'.rability of tho aystem and ita .advantages to all concerned. „ , ; , - „ ,/- ■ 'I'horo are aome who will ,oli-' ■ject to it, oiv .the/gi'dvuulsV'that ■will' dncouru'ge‘''!Thr*?Si№ ,;, ’ Lo,s,.^Angeles, Cul., Sept.- 26.‘ . license; plntqa.frcVM one eav to.Hii-. W^fttevn- circus folks ,ri>o,ur,*ied to;' other, dr the operating of twp day the paaaing of Dnrlus; Abner cars under one license, But those >-----..... - .......- ‘ ‘ fiimiliur \Vith the duul pblte ,sys- Mrs. Jane Shaw of; London kept the mummified bodies of her two children in her home'for.six ty years, until she .herself , died; Michnel Ohlstein fell dead of henrt disense in n New . York court, while on trinl for callingj)» neighbor hnrsh ntimes: ' Sweethearl,',«, rtaife 2 0 (jnches , f pounds is 8«ld’to'be,tiit> full-growti hoys«Vlir'the,’W'Ml*.''y^ 5 vítra‘y/ao¿nf^4||í^^iEdWilíi' . M Taylor?'oi .Lo'u^вvt)|«^warn(!d^,.^li» - ig family llie 'Bathii i\|9 ht' when Hr* 17 _j broke o^t and a|) ^scaped, >> _ ■ - A 'BBro'n 'Eagene\\’>''erBort,^/#iiw' • J clhlmed'helrBWii.to the kinr^-^ i'.‘ThlB'fIÍ6moci?áía''^haYe ‘цН; Öiil .election' machinery.t,If» county: can- get'ía ¡'ír«i¿baUot.f'“ ’ they count Fl'om every soction where'/ Li8VM..«ecora,4;,iv«iiri, KutfBB ,;c *{,y got thè'free ballot and feir' .( "Ìhey' are- irti’ / ^ ' ’’ 'v.i 42 Inclioa High, Amuaed Circus Goers f().- 40 Ycnr»; Ue- , ti red 10 Yenrs Ag<» 'óur''floür-.híÍ8{beeii'Íoldíí;ííiey^^^ ...................................., V. 1: .'■14 so delighted that the iarm ers are bringing.-rbeir;.whent;(apd‘üi;. getting .flour, .;'f и J'« ">V,! W f tdm point out that'this is impOs- aible, innamucli aa, the operutidn of un automobile without both platea in place, front and rear, is equivalent to ita operation with no llfcense whatevei'i and may con; sequontly bo stopped by pplieo or deputies to secure an explana- Ä ,fa> AM.; BOOKING ORDERS FOR 'Turkeys at'30c per Iby See me . at once.T-Prank Carter. It pd. TATTING LUNCHEOl^SET FOR sale.—Mrs. G. P. Call, Maple ;;, Ave, ;:;.;;/_;;Xi . V L 0 s T V BE'TWEEN- SECOND. bridge and Advance . on, the ' Winaton-Salem road—ra . Pprd automobile tire, rim and tiiBe, Oct. 29th. Finder please leave at L. H. Crouses’ store arid re­ ceive, yeward, LOST—belt” WHICH~PULLS ahi'eddeis (using, tractor to ope- *'■'rate'same), near Smith Grove, / Finder please retui'n, or notify Slieek Bowden,' Advance, .N; C, Route 1', and receive reward. GOUCH! .“Here’s:.a little poem I think you will want to,< carry in the paper,” said ■ a- friend; the other, day. Read it: “A уп1чГоГ- silk, a yard of laceji A w’iàp of-tulle to give it-gi’aco. A flower to place, whore flowers ' ÍÍ.O,A skirt knee-high, a back w,iist- lo'w; One shoulder strap, no sign of ■ sleeve. If she could cough, ‘Good Morn­ ing Eve!’ ” ’--------------•---------------One of the best .uses of waste jnnd is for-grpwlns;„a f{ij;m.woöd- lot ^ TO MUSIC LOVERS IN DAVIE COUNTY The Mockaville school board counta. itaelf exceedingly fortun­ ate in having aocured for the yeUr 1926-27 the aprvicga pf Mra. .Annie West Andrewa. ' Mra. Andrewa took her diploma from the London College of Music, She' alao won there several mediils for being the “best roupd- ed” musician of her class. She can play witlr ease and tench al- most any instrument; Not only has she rare talent atid wide pro-, fessional ex'perlence, but she ia a born teacher. She has time, at present, ; for a few out of;, town pujiJla. ; If you love; music apd wish to embrace the opportunity of a' life-time, “now ; is the ac- ceptable time.’,’ A few weeks from' now you may be too late. You may talk to Mra. Andrews in her studio in the Mocksville high school building'. * ' S Í > ‘ Í ' .. è î M i We Offer The Föllowing Ubed Gars At GREAT REDUCED PRICES DAVIE : N"ext to Sanford Motor Mocksvine, N. C. For Ladies and Gentlemen Meals and Lunches Ice Qream and Cold Drihksv P. K. MANOS, Piop. : «• , # When in Winston-Salem Stop' * ■ " at- ■' '■'■ " T A L 'L. Y., S'-/ Expert Mechanics: to Serve You Storago-r-Wnshinjf Gaa and Oil Chepy Street juat below- Robert E. ■ Lee■.-J? , # -M if 1924 Model Ford Coupe 1926 1926 1923 1924 1924 1924 One Franklin Touring' Three Ford Light Delivery Truck« >»» >»n »»»» . »»»'.. ■ w ■ t*. n ^ lii f'v ‘Ч : ''-ч к " ■ •'Ä i Гч-'- " ,к * « .- ' i * 1 ' 1.1*. I îi' T h e s e c a r s a n d t r u c k s h a v e b e e n r e - c b n d i^ io p e d , . - . v a n d a r e in f i r s t c la s s m e c h a n i c a l c o n d it io n ; ^ B e f o r e b u y i n g a c a r b e s u r e t o v i s i t o u r u s e d c a r d e p a r t m e n t . W e a ls o h a v e t w o c a r l o a d s N E W * C H E V R O L E T A u t o m o b i le s o n h a n d n o w . G. G, WALKER MOTOR CO.iHIARHNCHEV DODGE C5ARS and TRUCKS « щ - Москзу’Пе, N. C.i I xî'' MOCKSVILLÈÎN. t. 1 чГ *, «tI, ',U-i ñ ; 1 ^ ''' ' - p .......Ш ''.............."■' ........................;......f/lv . Ч ir 4§.> (e£^________________________________THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE r >fl iMiineiiniiiiBiiiiainflUBiiiaii , V THE МЖШ CO. “THE LIVE WIRE STORE” » < ESÍtó FOOD FOR-TlllOUGHT FojKs, please let jour Ibralns work lO.Niinutes-^on’t get It Into'your minu/that you'can get .,Bnch: values mentioned below an'ywhere Jn this “Man’s Town.*’ Nothli^ ‘«orklng—oh, no; ’ Asrlon» as 'they last. Say, don’t liet around like a bump on a log and let youjr Mighbots get tt atl---an^ then grunt like a ktd who used too liiaay chestnuts. ______ I AGENT’S ANNUAL MEETING OF GREAT IMPORTANCE Friday Morning— 8 O’cIo’cK " '....V " ' N,-".. ^;5®-inch All-Wool Coatings .................. :.i66-inch AlNWool Bloclged Coatings 10 yai'ds Cotton Diaper..................... ;R’;8b-fochi l 6 yards: Cotton Diapers, ‘ '27*ai Cotton Diapers ‘ . -r ...........' < ■ K 1 V , t ^ ( 80xM Cotton Diaper i . . . ,'i / <• '¡ 40-iflch Pepperel Tubing ....... One caee ChoieevPlllow Cases ..., ' ^0 ii ^ t J •“ ‘:Onè :'eei*';'Choice ..81x90 Sheets v H'-.'-y • ;4-v f....1<Л/ ^)r' Dñi titlneh:tiffht Colored'( DÍiiiá-’Lt.i¡'pom Otítlng^^..^..лi¡Ä..::^.¿Йïì^ÿvh;ÿ :S7-lriehv;ApronyX3inghan^ ■<Amoekwg)4>&wï.4i|?j”|!i V Öne case Baby Blankets, 30x86 .................J J ......... ^^iOne BlMkétíí^ 80x86'..Д .................0 ^îV.O Bé.«ïwГйаЬу-Blankets, 86x50< .. i...".'..,-.,. '.......'.$1 S P c*e« àingle^ b l á t i k c t s .......................'•!..........’•* I n Óáf<вй1А^)Цо<1ЬГе B lfc b k W V '..'.f-t.’.'-Át,.............. |i.29 ГШ "Гг,'One'd a* Double Blankets ................................................. ííí^v;v.í.;i.v,29c; .........98й; ......$1,98 ,$;i.39; ..$ 1.4 9 i ......$1.59 ....v$1.69 ........... ..’ ... 98c ..... • •••' 1Д-Я6.' ,85c:’. m Л «v: ife , S Ä lu^ On'é сан Stalidard,Outing, 8 6 inches 0ne,caee‘B«ty/»’'’or Cilrls* Union Siilts ,.sf К •< e*oanee Feather Bed TickingA , One case'Pyramid Untbn Suit < One case E. Z. Union Suits . . ■ 18-incli - Colored Linen,', special ..« ]90-inch Linen :Sheotnigv , ,i., rOne'case M Druid LL. Sheeting; I » 20c 49c 75c ' 85c i;:-.49cS $1.98 39c Lovely assortment Cieiie de, Chino,...............................98c [ One case assorted Wool Hose .‘i t;....;,-.'....‘v'... 49c ’ i,000 pairs Ladies',JPplt Slippers....... ••...v-59c I ^'!«'5%6í(íí;y;ard(iv*íníw¿od ' Prínt/í ast'.’vfi»?-»! JfM 1 K. * ^ « I I ' 'j,fllM> Yards Punjab P e i^ c a le s ^ fa s t", ' .1;m m m 'wf*t ■ ^ ’ t i ,■ - |te||||3tyles aitd Sires Pacock Pillows . |.''^j|^WàwdvWlndoiiy_ shaded grepn^ " lianda^^ Table Oil Cloth “ [ l',000 Pairs Special Value Feib Slippers Nice .assortment' Ladies ,Wool Hose. Chiidrph’s Hickory Hoso SÙpportei'$'..f„^, ' Beautiful, assortment tìloves, fancy cUfl --Beautiful assortment,G>loyes, fancy :cцff;, ' ' I ^ 4. I V ^ -Beautiful a8sorim§nt Gloves, fancy cuff! Special Cpyset Brocades .......... .. . .• LadiesV Chiffon Pointed Heel Hose^v;,..;., Ladies' Semi-chiffon Hose\ ^ ifc »* i Nice assortmeWt-.Wool Hose- ...,r........:..;.^i; 49tó íi-ascl 49<íií 2 вс n /26с 49с-98с ,49с Збс 59с 49с ' ' 19с ......49с" 75с 98с 98с . 08с $1.49 б9с Г Г*, i ' W UiiAy.Vjht r LADIES’ НАТО :2,000 of ThemT^atlns, Comblnallonsi F^lte, Velvets, .and ^ Daude Hate-' All the new things—Special prices / 9 8 c , $ 1 . 4 9 , $ 1 , 9 8 , $ 2 . 4 8 , $ 3 . 9 8 , $ 4 , i l 8 , . $ 5 . 9 8 ^ $ 6 .9 > ^ Juflt different from the other fellows ' ' rf’ • • . ■ ■ I ... I . ■ - Ч ■ ■ J ■ ’ • • . ... '. . I • .......... Ч» T . 1,000 to se|iect fromi Silk, Woc|l, Jersey, Satin and alt the new;shades.\ ,1<Ьи.;^||г1се^.''‘ ; Ш Э 8 , $ 6 ^ 8 , $ 9 % $ Ш 9 8 , 1 $ 1 2 . 9 8 , $ 1 4 ч а д , $ 2 2 , ^ , : $ 2 9 . 7 S : ; Save 10 t^’25'lie'r cent ai Every iteni mentioneil above is, 100 li’er cent .merchandise. None of the kind уоц have to wondei-.if i'jt 'Will stand the test after using. R(^,mer^iljor .\y^ Stand ’ ■ guaranteed behind Voiir;; evei’y .(l'aiisactiion—i-§«tieiiaction or ■ Raleigh, Nov. 3.—The ailnual short ^course and conference of the home aiid farm demonstration agents to be held at State College during.'the'week of December C will be of unusüal importance this J’éar, according to Dèan L 0. Schaub, pf the School of Agricul- ture. : The meeting will face some of the most important problems re­ cently arising in the agricultural progress of North Carolina and it is planned that a definite prog-: rani of work will be adopted which | all extension workers will follow; next year. The farm agents nowi employed ih 77 counties 'of the State.will gather '.on Monday/ morning, Deeembev 6. They wHl begin, immediately to organize their course of study and to .plan a program for such general dis-; eussions of their work as they miy wish to take up. The home agents, employed .in 50 counties, will ar!- .rive a few days earlier and will begin theii' class room .activities on December flrsti The confer­ ence will, c|pse on’.December lii ' Deal) Schaub states that a clear cut program Will be. followed dûrj. iñg the.entire time the agents are at 4heJ College. Many of the gen- ej*«}; meetings a^ which invited speakers; will appear ' áre to - be he]d ij at nl¿htV so 'as, to conserve, itimÍB. V liean^^^S^ barf ;)nvlted. Dr; H. C. Rahisower'o^ State University to give a lecture' on qualitic-3: of leadership' iii' Agri­ cultural Workers. Two ; or .three of *;the leading thlnkerS' ¿of, iihe; United' States ■ Department of AgrioultureVat Washingjjton also been' inVltedv^o appear ber ;ÏÔre;'-the 'groùp.’- - ■ The program as now arranged ciiHs for bne^ two- hour joint con­ ference each, day while the/ágents' ,nre at the Colleffe. .At tlfiiis; per-' lodi the agents will <liacuss’ those, matters of interest to both the men and women. Some of ,the lec-'. tures of the" spécialiste will also* be delivered .at this period. One of, the greafost .problema, before tho. meeting will be t.he addpitio.n oP a pvbgrnm' of work .for next V' ' ■■ '■ LIME IN SOIL ESSENTIAL TO ■ , ■^'^LEGÚMES';'.^^:'■ '■ Raielцil,''Now-V{5.^“We.^;. ;we. knovv a lot, bu,t Sÿe gtiU do no^^ 'know so very,,vihuch aboutji,we ’ mysteriesi of' ¡pliiht life, and' ^tne soil’' paid an agricultural research worlcér, of ; State.,:Çollége recently Inr discussing :thé' l^ llihë4toriè;;^lth' certain, crops. ■ ; *‘Fbr instance; w know that to- baÉcô .’l^ e s . about:tha same an^rit bf-'lime from the soil.that t'jton of alfalfa does, yet we hayo niy i-ecently begun to' use mag­ nésium limestone under our to­ báceo. ' No'wonder we, began to have .sanddrown so'badly iri our fields. We know that alfalfa, will not gréiw-well on land in need of' limé, ' .Each ton of the crop con­ tains about 80 pounds of lime and thus makes a heavy draH; on the supply in the soil.',’ ■ ; ; • '• .Agriciiltural »extensip'ri, workers have reallied the impprtancje .of growing winter legume crops this year, There'jsya great need for more food ^nd’feed crops and the workers rèalize^ that if * enough winter grain and legumes fpr hay, and feed are {»lanted thi’s 'fall, the, feed bill -for next spring'and sumr mer \yill be materially, cut. These, same i.workers re’alizè, however,, •that it is useless to plant great 'acreages of legumes on land that wilH not, pow them successfully (ind theÿ have conduct in­ tensive; campaign', for soil, jm- proyement through the• ,use of, lime and legumes in combination., Se'yoVal cpünty agents report an' increased use pif, limestone over most of the State this fall, ijlany of thei.car shipments, have been ordered ,cooper,ntively so that the small grower could secure cut pugh for his needs at a cost with-: in his reach. . It is pointed out that one rea­ son why lime is needed under legiimes is because the nitrogen ■fixing bacteria wijl not grow in à sour soil. If the legumes do not add; nitrogen to the soil, they do not improve it. Lime is. nece's- sary. therefore to, the conl^i.nued improvement of the land by the growing of legumes. . EPiiaiiiiai Thursday,' LEADS IN VALUES 415 Trade, Street Popular Pricecl*(plothing for Men aiid <^ Actual Money-Savers s your cash back 'with, ia ämile, i f . M o m s m c o . Ounchffla Cloth a t $ 3 ^ 9 8 Colors Blue, Éròwii aiid Grey Olir Serge Suit $i>ecial Ч*j4- Ы i» f \>ru- It*8 jBfii^anteed sun it’s ‘ tfce b ^t. twenly-fbur dollaryaliie to behadv Att Mzet, aU models j : In all colors bishd8^ £v«ry hat we s e l i ^ i i s a v ^ y ^ , , ^ f i e ^ . 4 8 j C Boys wool Suits. Four piece suits, consisting of long and vsHort pants,^yestiuid'.coai;;.:; ; H .y A s u it v a lu e th a t is w o rth $ 10 .0 0 S e e w h a t y o u g e tfo s : y o u r m o n ey is p u r ih o ttp 415 LEADS IN VALUES , Wiii«tón^^ С. I'v il,'' f?,.-- - .f at 10:00 o’ck^iu m^ the Highest- bidder, i t i i i y r e s id e n c ^ ^ No. 80 tii^^ h aib eëh a^t^cfeided T h is jih d i« ÿrp st fô rm àhd h a i three p ^ atu res^ gdat-ti^lit; T his land ranks in j D avie còurityi A lso w ill sell òne sedan fòrd car, about 7 5 tu i furniturte, livestock, Sw iss m ilk ^¿Qàts; beis* fe m any! oth er things. Ò thèr business m e to' sell this farm ; Terms Given -liAf ' “r ' li This is a chaiîçe of a lifetiiiie. A score of prizes willbe^ ■ given awáy. ¡Sále .on above... date, rain or shinei <J. Lu ■!> * : ». » ft. » * * « .* ,* * _ NURSERY STOCK ' * '* Peach, Apple, Grape Vines, * * Shrubs * " iipecinl pncQfs. for vhe: ne^t' T, F^fiomsY Miller Auctioneer. Come clr Mocksville.,Hdw.. Go. ■* » » M -f! Ч ‘*.[1 < I*■ I Ш ш Ш ш Ж I ! € a d ¿ a a í S Í f e % ¡,>¿ '¡K ?vJ Ä S' J. Raleigh Frost ' ■- *■ Л 1аМ»Ша1|Я11вВ1яр||Я11Ш //..V'idVn <ni SV'.I/ I tSA , ’ " î ' V í W ® | r A I I T t e U ic a iX e w S ;” O u t M o tto -lH e L a rg e s tP A I D -JN -A p V A N C ß C lK C U L A T iO N o f A N Y P A P E R lii l ì a v ì l l i l l ^Ш'Л 1 *11 'шгч _ '■■9 ' ''-r- J-/4M M o c k s v O l e '• .JlItigiM liiïfililll^ 'fil'' _yHUTH, HONESTY QF PURPOSE AND UNTIRING FIDELITY TO OUR COUNTY AND OUR FLAG IS OUR AIM AND PURPOSB^, Г..Г t’ '* l^ h E v e n ïl^ îted States Senate MOCKSVILLE, N. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER И, 1926 ' , V'-;. )Rep«blleiub,4¥f| ü. Q: lefeatédr'ln :M«|ryl I Kentuck^^Arl; New York, Nov. '4i Irns ;'ötolday.|.;emph'i lons'^'thàïyf'Mm.^^ lebend' of"lts" tirni|i liiitt^^Ill' furiilslii^:«! ’esid^nt Coolld^l and list one-'helf .ofi;the'i|(|i1^ii|;ä^e w t Re'publlcáriá/.|:iEÍ|fifó/¿í. th Elf ■ will r b.è.; InsûrwnlIM-.,; . ' ' pros. i4|edi:re- |ndica- h till the =V,»■iiaper ‘■>111 ,,. „tihat 111 vvjn.' UB.; in'sUrgÌBjliiér'Vv The:;^RÈpiìl>lican8!'iwÌÌI/;')fave a (liicedilniajprlty ,lh’ thèsHouse, it thèii'ihsu^geht« witl>Ì>i(ra con- derable; .factor .theteV.'-.^'^i Ìn'i^didiiilon there. Ig ict ■oÌ4'thé)iÌewi;-,S«rièMf|ìrtl.. sc'kt':<twov.:Repubìicj|^^^ ictrpVàf<?5.,nf ;.>eniji'(|jfl»*ìiia, and itiinwjf *i|^i0 b«Ay]f|J^DkeB in tairiihgi;;' ,>ifominatìo^Ìi This ..itimpny 'Wiàài deveij^^^ibx^a sen­ te committee: befórfe^^V^^ Complete ’rétùrns'iHjóiWithat the ixt senate ,will ,hayìÉÌ5|48';Republi- ms, 47.Democrats ììbmÌ^^ farm- •labor-^hipstead W the.;preaeht,;'sf‘;'natÌBj7t^^^^ a »publiònn,'majbrltyj;*d^ The. 48 Jlepublièan?|il|i^^^ new nnteSvìll,;;ihclìid^ of »'n,'.Nyé\óf;i Noi;èh'vlÌli)aÌtò'tn andj,|^_ .tini ho 17,918,00 0. BALE CROP CALLS FOR SPEEDY ACTION go to polls; LaFo|Iette,;'of Wis- nsin: F>*azier, of îio'rïh'Dakota Norris innd lîowe|l|_’,pf Neb- Soven seats in the'Sen^te were St by the Republioansi'^uesday III iska. e\v Its flon. Lee S. Overman;' veteran United States Senatoi* from North Carolina, who was re-electad lust Tuesady. Final Estlnate Indicates Recolrd- Breaking Cotton Yield Agriculture Oepa,rtmcnt at Sea as to Effect iHolding Move­ ment May Have ~ —' ' b,', Washington, Nov. 8.—Placing this year's indicated cotton crop at 17,918,000 bales, or approxi­ mately 8,564,800,000 pounds of lint, the department of agricul- MOCKSVILLE TRIUMPHS OVER WINSTON RESERVES Playing their second game in one week Mocksville gave the few smattering of Davie county foot ball fans a treat last Friday w'lien eleven husky representatives of the local high school ripped the lines 'pf 'Winston-Salem''Reserves, skirted their ends, passed over their heads in such an'exhibition of foot ball that would give credit to any high school in this section of North Carolina. Playing the r last game for ture today declared that measures ( Coach Caudell. by whose valiant en to the queen today at Glacier,for relief mfi’nn ’ rii<nr1ii/iai*ci 1 « 4 « . 'Mnflnnal PavV 'Tha Tm_ PROMINENT SMITH GROVE WOMAN IS DEAD Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, 81, Died at Her Home, Advance Route 1 for relief of cotton • producers mu.st be put into effect rapidly and energetically if they are to effect very materially the re.4ult to producers this уеагГ There is still uncertainty as to how much of the huge record- breaking crop will be picked the crop reporting boards indicating that thel’e is some disposition to leave the lower grades of cotton in the field. There had been picked and ginned to November 1 n .total--of 11^259,038 running bales, the census bureau announc­ ed. Regarding the proposed with^ drawal of part of the eptton crop, which the cotton-growing states conference set at 4,000,000 bales to be financed-by state finance corporations through credit ex­ tended through the federal inter­ mediate credit banks .as approved by 'President Coolidg'e’s cotton board, tho department of agricul­ ture, in a review bf the situation seemed doub'lful what the efYect would be. “It is impossible to tell e.xactly Marié Accepte IiÌLyi|av tion ToVVisit North i. ; Queen Marie has accepted the I » invitation,. of.,.-the ; governor ?»of North Carolina to visit tlint state after she has liad 'a few..dnyq rest In Washington, it was announced. Plans for a Florida trip still, áre under consideration; • i; Another Indian name Was"giv- • « efforts, financial backing and ex­ cellent training has made foot bail possible for' Mocksville, the team bf Mocksville doped to loose by several touchdowns, №ve a demonstration of loyalty to their coach that is not likely to be for­ gotten. Coming from behind a National Park, The Blàckfeèt In­ dians named her Morning Star, while Prince, Nicholas was given the name of ithe ofllciating tribal head; Mountain ,Chief, llearia iwas dressed in an In­ dian, maid’s buckskin suit,, with fringe and beads and called Pret HOW DO WE KilOW?\ .' '# ^ .r,;'! ,‘iy^r I \ ..If * If your subscription expired, and yotrhav*'n<<tf;tti\t?• inewe’d,• whether or not you* to J cont inue ■ Bendi ng'j jfouir' touchdown made in. the ' Href ' quarter by Winston recovering a fumble, the locals snarled, bit and fought t6 a 12 X 7 victory. Elmer Latham, tall, rangy aind scrappy youngster on left end for Mocksville snatched pass after pass hurled by Caleb Dwiggins, who, incidentally, was playing dfi ‘with a dlìslocated shoulder; to car- so well that .she wore it all: day. Before 'leaving the park Nich­ olas and lleana tried Indian danc­ ing before motion picture came rasV , ''i; The spécial train is scheduled to arrive in . Denver early Wed^ nesday. Queen Marie took reluctant ac- ry the ball time after time down I **®" today to bring to an end con the field for long gains. One of his long runs being for sixty yards, phowing his heels to men that on Saturday ran up a hug# score on Troutman in the, high .«chool championship contest. Too milch credit canno't be g'iv- troversy and discord which mark­ ed her tour of the Pacific north­ west during the last few days.. A member of her , royal party announced that she had consented to an arrangement whereby Miss Loie Fuller, former, dancer and Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, 81, w;'dow of W. P. Williams, passedr, ., , ,, 1 .r- .1 it IS impossiDie to ten exactly away Friday night al 11:15 o’-l,,,h„t eflfect withdrawing a given ’ ' ■ her home, Advance Rt. quantity of cotton from the mar- an illness of several, kqt will have upon the prices dur- months. Her condition had been ing a season,” said, the depart- critical for the past several days. I men't’s statement. “It i^ quite ap- Sho was born in this.county . . • . . December the late en to the 'above'pair but the entire of the qiieeri, and Miss Fuli.__ ___ Л Í 1Л. « • VW'nQQ nrrnWf 1\.Tiou A,fov\team was right there showing ’their coach that hia faith wa.'j not wasted ill them. Mooney, Ward, Sanford, Wagoner and others of the team broke through Winston’s defeiisp. to throw their imnners for big, losses. Mocksvillo is ler’s press agent, , Miss' Mary Birkhead,. will leave, the train within a few days, ' The spokesman's understand­ ing was that iRIiss Fuller would, quit the party';.when, Chicagp is reached and that' Miss! Birkhead , . . , . . . proud to icnow that it .is holding womM leave'iis soon a-i she is,able, ni9 born in this.county parent that there i,s much more, its head up with the sciiools in; *” Denver, on Wednesday or be­ er 4, 1844, tho daughter of cotton available than is needfcd this section and that at last foot; Miss Birk'head sufTorcd a Mr, and Mrs, Anderson ' for spinning during thn current ball, a long needed game, is here ' collapse today followingSmith. She had spent her entire life in Davie county and was a /\i«i„ > ''''• hud iTiftiiy riicndA« MnfaVi I Surviving are one brother, JohnMlJiArd .-£« xydiD^S. 'DeinOCrAt, •«» • Unl.^ Vk44,mil«A««n ■ho hks 'WHtihRecl llnlfiiH States Smith; two half brothers, nave f a t S S i «« would th^. purchase of of ¿Dnroximatplv 46 OflO is in '■ sister, Mrs. Mai-y Jane Jones an equal amount by a single or- liM tionKe^i MarvlS^^^^^ ofjndiana; two half sisters, Mrs. ganization with a formal guaran- it would not be sold until IqiWi^a iipssessor:^?^^^^^^^ W. W. Allen, of Salisbury, iislied! ilervfce ^med'fljt'A^^^^ ms from; d^neral iPw^ Up- n ai)d Mo^pn; an law- r and a bacheld to disp«tch;ifrom B aitli^ He ^3ft;iyeiiril;v;old.^^:;|Ilii!^ icted', to';«'C(>ngre*8l'lj4i'3 ■ and eledted'Jia'4#24 iMary- Kd :'tecond dlrtrlct.\' j . Waton «nd Roblnion.ln India- we^' among "the Iasi regulars losefeleetlon t ^an; madiQ' certain. Qriegoh, 'fStelwer,' Republican, t a /bel'ated‘vlctory^^vd^featlng mey; 'pemftc and , Senator infield,' Republican rlncunibent, inning as an independent.;: ; Itepijbiicas;i,are certaln'^to elect- r a serib'tQi’ ih a special «lection; Alaihe ‘pnriNovember^89 to. fill, vacancy.''V'' '"v'.,■ Demdcrnts' -wiil: actufllly, ,.begin I'les a!ah';,,''( , , ___ ii'ves' ,'';pifiMis30ur),:;atpke ;TÌieir.-’were;electe(}'i'or the, il.4iice ípf-'iíutí^ ,tffms. With six-■oohgressipnal'distvicts issiiig in the returns'the^Repul?- Miis , had- fprty-one impre;. seats r the next house thaji'cthe'DemoV' !>tä, ithe figures beirig|234 ï^e- 'blicans,'. .193 ■ Demooriits, onö irnier-Labor and опэ 'SjOòialist, ie Republican classification inr lides some dozen ihsûwçnts,, Of e missing districtéjiátTiree ,are '>v held by RepubUoane,'two by eniocrats and one by'à.Farmeri »borite. In the resent, house ere are 65 more Bep,ùb]içans an Democrats, the'MjP4)bIioehB' 'viiig 246 seats," DeirtWÄts lßli wmcr-^jabbrites threi, flpclallhts '<>, with three 'vacancies.• I ' i ífíi Л .....Tori Tarheel say« tKe^mllk thát fan'iily"-doeeñ’t need/'le'fed to jn d R.. E. Williams, a neph<3W, who ma.die his hp'me with her, and many nephews and nieces. The funeral was held Sunday morning at Î0 p'q|pck at the Smith Grdv,e M, E, Church, i Rev, C, M. McKinney, conducted the service, and burial took place in the church gravé yard. Good yields of molasses are ré­ pond from; some counties. A farmer of Mdnitgomery County produced 393 1-2 gallons of fine syrup bn onè and one-half acres. , Uo stay. Several side line re “The‘ question may , be .asked marks were very interesting, ono whether, if cotton were with- of particular note was, “about, alj drawn from the market and held -I have learned of foot ball is that in the hands of individuals with- every time a Wit’**ton player 'has out nny guarantee as to -when or to come out, Jack Mooney has how it would ‘ be »sold, the with- tackled him.” drawal of that amount would Mocksville made no substitution hnve as great an effect upon , nor was there any time out called for the players, this shows, to a small degree, .the well condition of the players and the fact that they learRed how to care for them­ selves physically" as well ns the intricate details of the game, Mocksville is, sorry to Iboae Mr, Caudell as a whole but we are betting t^hat the eleven warriors bn the gridion Friday will miss him more poigantly than anyone else, ' ' at least after the next crop has. been harvested.” More than half of the cotton crop leaves the producers' hands before the end of Npvember, the report pointed out “so that to ef­ fect very materially the result io producers this year, measures will need to be put into effect rapidly .and energetically,’', . , V „The ' m®,«sures beingo takeni^tor, ward retiring' 4,000,000 bales, of, this year’s crop seem to be ma­ turing satisfactorily, according to reports reaching Washington from the cottongrowing states. examiriat.’on by CPloiioI John'H, Cari'oll, in charge of the tour,' concorning her activities on the train. She was .under'the, care of the queen’s nurse, as was Miss Fuller, whose health has been falling, ' Miss Puller, whose war services to Rumania were warmly praised by Queen Marie in her .Maryhill museum address, is associated with Samuel Hill, millionaire ' builder of the museum: She came abroad the train at Spokane iiiAt week as is member of Mr. Hill's part,v, which included Miss Birk­ head and Mias Gabrielle Bloch, the former dancer's secretary. SELF-ADMINISTERED DRUG FATAL TO WILMONT GIRL By selling milk to an ice-cream plant in /Greensboro, one farmer in Guilford county; cleared $96;00; last June' from five cows, f 104'i00 in July from six cows and $108,00 in August. He says such net prpfit is better than growing cot­ ton and.itobacco. * paper7 If your ,8Ub8erti^ib^\J has expired and 3M)itt7,r4v«V neither paid in «dv»fiee,i;lnAN " asked for credit, whaVitii.ire i “■'to do? ■ ^ ^ ’.t' '*«>11^*' '*4'« STYLBIN pRBSS'BACK'W'lVWsit^ COTTON’ llfl Con Women Really Help,lii ing Pric^ of Staple? '<3ould the. wimeh v; bf CaVollita', OF of; thov«ntl^\'; ;relleve - the cotton ♦ ing cotton, dresees, eoitW i Inks, cottoii underWear,\ 'ieoi glove j, and using cottop 3 kerchiefs?- -Perhaps, more to the' point,/-'•' < wpuld they do it? That is S*’ qtiestion; and frbm all present In-'',» dication.s, it:,;is . somisthlng'’'' fo|*/-?''.5||, somebody; .other; than the womih' to got gi ay over, . , t'L/r« ■During the; past few weeks Vo-''' ' inBh's clubs iin ; various 'iJartst’otj theSouth, haVb", takon.vth'a ^niattor^ liiidijv consuleriittoni' ,.^ott6ni' Stocking day hns ‘been’ injjpme places, ' Ginffhaiii'i^ifP'’' ,, , , - - drtyj - „ . And \yhat ;;wpuld be the j|ietter| with a Pèttiçbn| Day ?, A .petticoat; I of any kind, sigh the old/tlmqrs.'',,, But nioi^ particularly, the' good' ) old cottph ; underskirt that went yards around, were stiflly starch* ' ' (Л J ed, and were ■ the' death of more '> ä lau'ndrpsses than the old washing V machine On blue Mondaye^ ' That's what the; old timers are, . * .worried;- about, ;;:,It--.’:hurts i'the(ri<'A' u Southern feelings'to see the gjrii ‘ /V' so unpatriptlcally, wiearing «jrepfi*' .-/, i ' ‘S ' de chine dresses, that came from hW ' China ; flimsy night 'gowns thiit, ' " V«' gotjthelr-start in'Japan; shadoniry*-) / unirorwear Lithat probably cam» 'V from France, While here In th «' ‘V * _ South their husbands and broth.^.,< i /, ers are raising cotton, ginning It,'/'mnifinn If {t(li v'Mmaking, it into cloth*' and 'ith|«i'i having It accumulate in > Miss warehouses until the bottom ' out of the market, ' And .ithe, circle icbmeii Winston-Salem, Nov, 4. Nell Holcombe, who took poison last Fridayi^diedstoday at a local hospital,vafter lying at point of, back- around'to a Sceiji;^jlhii'..„ death for several days. She was home when the wife wants morie^ i '23 years old,-and is the daughter hm, o aiii, j Of Mr. and Mrs, Jode Holcombe, of Wilmont, N. C. to buy a silk dress, and the hue^', ^ ^ band can’t give it to her becauili;. i, IrM he can't sell his cotton. / /? Q ffíc ia l D a v ie G o u n ty V o t0 b y JE ach P r e c in c t о üw Рн •s я- ’ s iÍJW . B,oí- ,►-5 я'■■ ei: ,Ü. \[H и ■ ■ gü ■ •0-i3 ä - rt w I ' в g I i, . •й-' • V лзм и , ■ ' СУ. , «5 •СО 0Í. И 2: UÌ .. S i ' ;«3 rt, г о ' . 6Ы^~- . ; tH - ' Í B : &■ , о I- н W ,J -, ¡U ■О'.О м.-: tiО)а 8ао ■ W ,' d W >■ 1 3 § 3rj'üi‘r J“ §ü <3" t rt-О g .2'я M' Й'О Clarksville.......................... Cooleemee .................... East Shady Grove ........... Farmington' ........................ ■Fulton ......................!......... Jerusalem ................ Mocksville........................."i; North Calahaln .................... Smith Grove ...................... ■South Calahaln West Shady Gl’ove............... 140 204 142 276 148 ;276 ,■ 276 278 149 , 275 143 278 150 148 149jí^^?27l’'265 303 '421 335 458 345 445 46^ 465 : '; 319 '473 '3.32 '4631 335 331 334 » ’^60 « г 117 ‘ -108 463 ' • il ' Í/Í4V >«'■<',0'i,,'ív 291 ‘'bVV-¿ ' 119 152 100 , 174 ■ 114 ■159 1Ö9 1S8 117 ■ ^ 154 líO 160 118 114 159 104', 224 173 253 184 245 245 244 ■182 247:,182 244 178 137 182 t ; 243 244 ' 216 195 205 204 21P - '204 203 204 ;; 201 210 197 217 229 213 216 j 191 190 Í94' 117 167 113 . 172 138 149 172V/172 ■ 102 187, 118 172 118 114 119 175 1719 668 348 641 .462 '639 369 362 362 661 .зг»з 639 376 . 644 604 658 366 363 137 116 134 114 124 130 116 143 nò ;i32./;;'' 137 132 137/- Ш 117 i, . v ;í 99 116 86 Ш 93 122 122 122‘f ; -'"'94'-',■ Л2зП Л”94',^'123 91 93 95 ^ '• 123 ■ 130 72 93 71 95 72 95 95 -'■'вб- '■68 96 70 97 71 71 72<,»^,tÇ6 ^ 27 172 23 176 27 174 174 \:|Í73;'25 26 173 18 • 26 .26 ,^>j,|íÍ73'„.,r 2161 2268 2023 2415 2368 2094 2387 2389 :2061 2403f 2043/,2422 ____ 2089 510fi'%'íp8W';:;l e d i Ä iVi, > lamiiy -aoeen Ï neea ’is iea ïo rr„+„i : -....¿Ibi »¡sou auso finvo . üoe» ; v^uoi íu'ja, , ; t II T* hi 'ïjM 'О jí: I .f'"í/., ■ 'Page 2 ГНВ MOCKSVILLt! ENTERPRISE •' Thurt'day, NoVa^¿eit^ilí’l926 | ' / ‘' i MOCK’S CHURCH NEWS 4 i i i f . ил ,v Л ; m!' :ß\ ' i n' ^ '/, л ^ ' ■ kh{/ V Rev. W. B. Thompson, our new pastor preached here Sunday .- afternoon at 3* o’clock. There ■ was ii lnrge crowd l out‘toTiear ' ’him. Mr. nnd Mrs. G. F. Beauchamp and MisH Gertie Mock spent last Thursday in Wins'lon-Salem, shop­ ping. / V ' Born to Mr. and Mrs. U. H, ■ Phelps, Nov. 1st, a fine daughter. Master Charlie and Frank Mock spent''the ^week end with their . grandnfirems,' Mr. and Mrs. H. P|. Cornatzisi near Bi:^by.‘ ' Mil. and Mr^. L. B. Mock, Mr. '^.nnd • Mrs. 0. B. Jones,' Mr. > and :, Mrs. L. V. ' Myers', Mr. and Mrs; , A, M.T Folds, iill of Forsyth coun-,: ty attendofl sfcr.v;ce here Sundjiy'. Mrs. I. H. Mock is worse nt this writing, .«orry to note. i Mr. nnt^ Mrs. E., M. Jones of i, iMock.'ivlilOi' spent Sunday :with | ,thoir mother, Mrs. W. J. Jones, who continues sick. i f IÎ Able to, go to work next day after simple home treatment FORK NEWS The seven year old son of Mr. and Mra. Giles Foster died last Saturday morning and IMPROVED secondary ROADS IMPORTANT SMITH GROVE: NEWS Aa William H. Avejr of Rutland, Ver­mont, stepped from' his car about three o’clock in tho afternoon, his left foot felt Boro, and by live o'clock he could not step on it. ' ‘‘I sent for a boitle of Sloan!s Lini­ ment,” he wjriicd, “and bathed it once every half hc'ir. At ton-thirty. I could step 6n!;it 'Iliad walk, and tho naxt morning I went back to work.V ;■ Active people ovcrj^vhero tell of ; ntimcroiia iilstancfla of the amazhigiy quick arid complote rbliof that Sloan’s has given to sprniua, wrcnchea. bruises —in fact every kind of mustular ppin. It doesn’t'just dendon the nerves. ' By speeding up tlio circulation' it helps the body to throw dlf the CaUse of the pain. ; : .; ¿, ■ Got'a bottle today'and havo it on hand.: All druggists-^35 cents. ■ ê , M rsi'E lizabeth W illiam s’, widow of tlit:ln to :lfraiik:;W illinm s, w as! buried Jiove feundny morni.mr. • Mïa. Williams hnd^becn soriouslv , ilHfor sevoral weeks nnd death, was riot'unexpected. ,She was a im em ber:of .thoi M; fE., churchi also Й charter mpmber ,of the Ladicii дц. Aid Socleix, nnd tho fii'st one of Avc'lt were'pleased to have him " 4hill organization tp раз.ч on to,4o 'ПИ his iirst apiioinlmeiit here the great beyond. She is surviv- Sunday in thu, now, . confei-ence ^ > od by ono Ш1ог, Mrs. Jones, of your. ' We are :'Vûi'y :’^rlad^ • Indiana ; * one* brother, Mr. J. W., that tlie conforeiico saw :lït to:ru- ' Smith, two half sisters, Mrs. J. turn him. During last year Hevi C. Smith, of Smith OrovoV and' Avstt won niniiy frionds,who were f• t'}Y‘ ' SaMsburyii 44lwa^»--glnd to.soe..bim сото and; Paving of secondary, roads to funeral relieve trunk, lino highway/? and burial was held Sunday at congested districts 3 p. m., after a few days illness chief subjects of pneumonia but having fell and «t n joint meeting broke his leg a year ago had been can Society for Mlinicipal Im- un invalid since; he leaves to provementa, the Aspalt ,'Associa- moUrn his loss; father, mother . tion of Asphalt Technologists, and and several sisters. We extend! other organizations to be held in sympathy to the bereaved family.-' Wnahington, Npvember 8 to, J2, Mrs. Ellen Redwine is sííend-|_next. The,meeting will bring to- ing several weeks with her daugh- ,'gethc.r between two . and three te'r, Mrs. I. D.‘. Henctrlx of High i.hoiisand road and street experts Point. ! for the discussion of many'prob NOTICE OF LAND SALE! : ; tho beginningrz /containjiiriri^sodo square feeè,: be or •' By virtue of thé.pqwer cohtâin- leas. ed in tho last wili and teatament I«t No. 2.. fieginning at 8 rtone SoUtitv29^ East 8|\'çMïrie Ç9 links to jtti stone pÿ’Ndrth:!^^^ of »aid in'ondî' théncé',' Wéàt'4ДсНп1п^’ Rev. A. И;-Marshall Airy conducted service Epi.?copnl church last morning. of Mt. jlèm s colifrònting the'm un’icipali- u t the ties of the cpuiitìv. Sunday' tiv i/iwn. v»iv. , ,“A iïlance at the h'ghway ac­ tivities,” says. J. E. Pennyhiickor,' the Superior Court^of 'Davle couri- ty, N. C., we will sell at public auction to the hl,ghest bidder .for ■«ash at the Court, House door in, Mock.svilie, N. C,.v on Monday,the .^'th day of Dec,ember, 1926, the following tracts,. lots, or parcels of land in Davie county, N. C.i,.ad­ joining the lands of E. A., Cain, John M. Bailey and others, and bounded as follows, viz: ■ , ;' Lot No, I.. Bci!iinning at a ■stone on West pTde’-oX -public ro'ad | thcjn)ring the'Wost;^rno^^ in fil. A; Cain's line .and running ' This Novembflr 80th; West 192 feet to li stonq, J., M. ;Ba ........................ feet and 24 links' te a jstake* bf Wóddwárd’s, lot; theriee North 2» West 3 chai ns and 30 llnlffl :t,P the begihpiog,: .,pont.8ÍningC'i.ón’é TrlOO. .acres,/ mpje - pr ,*lcss.'^^ feaid lota, are' in; Cana arid,.ad­ join eUc'h other nn,d:'wil|^bé., piler- ed first separately'and then ■ as ;i * whole arid.rwill be apld, the .Way Tl V.JW 0^1/- Xbiv.!, I,«./ f* w., Bailoy’à line; tli^ice,,.North, 203 feet 'to a st'pi)e;: thenCe 'ilast 84 feet, to a’ ;äl;Öhe .;.iri’ Щу И., Foote ап(1,.Е. À. Ciiiif line;■ thence SoUtlb ' i.och. decci; This November 8Óth', 192ßi' S.,P. .SNIDER . , and’.'" -:'âv'M. .BRiiWi!:R,:' :-vc:,- - ■ Executors of ;Mártiía,:LV M'cChlm- CBNTER NEWS The many friends of Rev. E, Ml -C-’. nnd;^-i'wo,‘:half brotherài'; 'Mèss^^^^^ ■Baty'i’and ,Uufua;i Smlth'.Miòiir ÌÌièròf nndr,8evornlvneJc'es and npjiKeWa) itóA , one,of the oklo'tt women 1’'.,-'} in our communit.v, bcing 81 yeara A) mònlhs old. ' She will be grent- :ly;m'iS8ed., ;;;Wo.extend,>i)ur deepest! aymoajthy ;to th'oso beronvèil;'’;,;.'^ ]\Ir. Gì B, Taylor 'and.;fariiìly.; or iWinstoii-Salem'irwere ::the;: g pf /M i‘g.. MK J.-i Tayl or: S U ndnyi:'f,' ■ Mr. John Clouse is'.seriqùsly illjli't.-thé homo of His ncpho’w/ ;. ; vMr. /Charlie Ward. :V . s ■: i.'i: :Mr. and Mrs. Ray IIownf‘d/of it::;. Winstoii'- Salem, spent Sunday :: .'With 'Mrs. Ilowards parent.“); ;Mr.' and J. II. Fostor, Mr. R, F.‘ Willii-ms of Lòxirig-- ', tojj and Mr. and Mrs. E. r' Wrisori of Winston-Saleni, attendi ■ ed thè funeral of their auiit, 'Mrs;' Williams, Sunday. Mr;vinnd.;Mr8; G(jnr<ro Heni^rix . Í il (SД’“ .i L :■ ' f Sì! if Í* '^oaryiiiri: ììrea^ ff’Mifl's ;.GràcV'^^^^^ ‘R'oy: Pcelèiv Sunday iaftèriippri:,wi'tiv Mi’f <) j' :H;: ;Ìw;ggina,':inVdil?nniiÌy;'.'^^ i'^Ì.Bèv.;, Wi'i, J;: S;^ Lhwrenc^^^^ ^t^ysiiri ,piir cpmriiiin Mr,- nKd'^fM 'ifnil -Mr. fJó of Hick- W'y- speiit Sunday with. Mr;; J. 0. ;VSi)>aòraòn:aiid.'f^ ■ 'V. MrV'ruirier.Tuttérow of Greensr, bpro spent ‘tile ;wéòk ,end .with. W brotlior> Mr; :Eliner Tutterow. ■ ’ ;,’:irr.' arid. Mra; Odiis Tutterow-of ;M,ócy,vll,le,;:vÌ8i'ted ,Mr.^^ 'teVO^V;iS'i(tUrdily:v'ri 'Va^ce;''iw)rtm spVnt' a;'wjillevSundny riig^^^^ Mr.;;:B;,P;:GlOTÒttl'::;v.''‘' .............................. : Jilvarid Jfrs, Frank Hendrix of ,of Winston apunt the week end Dùiini,;;sj,ént Saturday with Mr. • With their i)arents, Mr. and Mrs. „„ipjii.g. 'a . Vanzant. ^ i G. C. Hendrix. | jjjiy Dwiggins of Wi'iston- Mrs. A. M. Foster; is on the Genoraj Manager oC! the Asphalt sick list, sorry ,to note.; “ I Aasociatipn, ■ ‘‘indicate.s' a' strong Mi-.' and' iVIrs^'VV; C. Tbpmpson ,.leaning,-ipxyard : concentration of and aon pf,;Siili9bury,.8peiit :Sun-: expenditures:'óri::,trùnk‘ lines; 'I'his ,tiay iit Mr.::G. S. Kiriiriier., ' ; ' j lfiave^sl' tiie / secoiidary ■ : roacls;; tò Mr^ aild Mrs.'WàlterrSpenrl:bf,shift;'fpr tiipmselyesviihd- ,, ; - , ....... , thp':.T\\*in-City .8p0nt;tho. wceic end . traflic io seek the triinlf iiiies tfj' ward with said line 231 fe'et to ' j;;. jj. Gaither- ’Àtty; '. . 'li -^il .11, at Mr. W.. A; LiYorigood. |he congcstipn of^ the labter. .This ----- congestion is actually . driving ploaaUi'e'.traflic: oif'.the'ihighSvays Motori,s,ts,; wlib; plbcnv^ ,,q , be elijoying di'ivos’ipn back coun- ,y ■ state, Pcnaiori Fund Will Soon All tiy roads are kept' at home be- N . Co ,'to VVomèn, IVesont ciuiuo of the congestion ‘at im-.M ; Figures Indicate po.vtant points ,on^ the ,trunk lines. | p ' i .,,^ WIDOWS LIVING AFTEU ; VETERANS , ;«м)1!^ямп11!а1111П11га1111Ш1111Ш1111аш1£а11Ш11№1|.!Ш^ш«|1Ш1111Ш11||С9111Ш»11;а{ша''Ш11Ш|Ка.я7'11111Ш11|1га1'<'Î ■ Raleigh, Nov. ,8.—With death thinning tho ranks''of'confcderate.............,,, , veterans at an ,advancing xrute farm^tp-markol, each will „ , Order Now .. : Tho rpads which,serye best thoisg’ , ^ - . ,' _ niral needs are those which lead . Q iye US/yOUr Ol’d s rs N O W " fo r lU ad^'tO 'trt the railroad , stutidii.^.“, These T * . ■ v*; ' ■ ' ‘ o i-d e rE I^ G R A V E D C H R IS T M A S C A R D S . .......................... 'Secondary 'year, the! state' pension fund high>vays;, should-be receiving iii-, H - ;800n 'become: the exclusive creased :a',itentióii .on tho iiart of •; property ol';\vidowa’of. veterans.' nil ¡Coíicornod," According'to 'jl^res 'ïrom the Modern; road machinery HUch office of the state , auditor; the tractors and, Horn i'iicliineo- such aa ^ 'Fresli sh.ipjnent'oi’’i^ orris i'ap'or's¡';ian,,d-,,../the','p,■'' i| ''" ' ''■■" (ioatii rii'te'irmc^ivetenins on the P#tjce; of 'sHrfaciDg' plil|grriyel;'j; ílleS JUSiamyeüi.;'..:;-:,;^ / : , • ‘.periáiorí' rpl|.. is 'far greater than andímácadatn^rpads/^ ’mnonk willow^. 'Tiie. reiison, is I’Wof wearing ,-smi-&^^^ Ihat'tlie avornge aee',of;tht.'cori:^<'i.?;iconcietp;tnp^ federate widow :is. considerably ;'^rep::,inp.ies,'has .made^^p^ lower' than ;thp' veteraii; ;,tho ,ma-. tbe .Puving- of seconds jcrily«' pC Mtlvpsb,;ón íthÍBt- pension ¡ 'roll ii!>ve been, 'tak'en ns' wives in I P«yersi', ^1 hroufeh catate highway.^ the years following the. war. ( wlthoüt;‘‘líeder-róads represent ■ This year the number ___ who wili; ve^ceiye pen^^ ■ . > 'THANKS - lytwicp.aa-’great aa.’the number of vetei'nns;" 5,186 \yidowa being on I wish to tharifemy'friends,'for I § 0оЛ'tho :r0ll^:as;;00mpared ;wlth:2,792 they.gaypmo. oklsoldlera.,; _ , j tiio ipuat ule'ctipu;'Even tlioutrh'^ Out ,of a total of ^,3,025,veterans \vere' defeated does' not ¡make „ who deceived pensipns last year; \nio ibss loyal .to,.my 'county; Lets' '& 5^ .have .died,^ ^r,more,Uian , 16 I'air gtiind by our cotinty officiala, g por ' oonfc .It;hu3 bocu e»timntocl Davio c<)iinty\oir(i of tho V ,than>for tho ¡loxt twò;yoars period ^ beat coiintlea'ih North Carolinn. P. this ■morlality-probably will bo , /■ —S/Ui BESSliiNT. EJllili f.A'2fi hfil*. f'Anf nl’ mnri> ! ^ V ■Slí'é'^éíáásoíl’s 'On kadingV ';;;;, . ,. 2 Í ílé S :i.? 'W :V : ■ ' " Phone 51 Mocksvüle, N. С. i!iiM:iKiiiitiiii!i«iiinitt!!a!iiiBiiiHiii¡Hií!iÉi!i!Kiii!niiiíniiiia!iiiniiiiai::!f3í:i:Ql:iin'iÍ!n:iÍ!Diixmimiiiis ..■1111П111В1111н«111В1!1!Ш1111В1!11В11|!Ш1№П1:11б::!11В)! Jncreaaed to 26 д)ег :ceiit 'or more : a'luV that by peçetribév>1929,:threo .voars ■ hence, ’tiio'iJiumbor of con-, , feaerate veteri^s .pensioners will‘a have shrunk to u thpusand or. y . : leas. 1,, . . ¡U' , . Tho wldowii, howevor,-who as a j •; class rocejvei half ol, the total W . peiiHioiv. apiÄpiiriation; are 'shb\y-yf|^^ ing no sucli,;¡n50vtaUty,:'although ä ■ ', their', number,;has , likowiso begun i « tp show rna'i-ked ilo«*'««««- ' Last; | h c a d q u a r t e r s , c o u r t é o iis .- s a le s - LEÂDS IN VALUES 415 ' Trade Sireèt i'l uA j I h Í Í V wm ATv" at™ Spencer, spent a while were 5,257 widow’s on. ^ ' w r ' V Saturday.; n(ght'-\i-lth,Mr.J.,G.,;'^fig-;i.ioji^..{M8 ;.yoar-th6ve'aro '0,-*? i * i ' i , i i * «.' 1 1 1’ Mi8. Ray McClamroch and baby • , |' peoplc,' dependable values, one price to all; and guar­ anteed satisfaction at money saving prices. 'of near Onk Grove spent a:few :days lasl?.,week ¡with her. parents, Mr. &.pd Mrs. J. R. Beeding. .iIsrusalem'newst ^ « Oui' pastor,^ Rev. 0. R.,Foster' li^Xgg;(ia'''spe'W^^^^ 'Piea'ch'iid ‘ an'/oxcollont sermon : with'' Rev;;'Wi'i J'^ SV: Walker and JIrs, Tom Tutterow :YÌs,ited''ht the home. 'i df, .lier < sister,l'. • Mri). Florence'Williams of near Mocks- Vllle,''Sunduy.. ' '■ 3^Iossrs' T'.; A.'.'Vririzan't and .'Loai irmon ’wl Sunday morniiig at 11 o'clock. We f, mil/; offJoh^^viiJp. ■■; • are grateful to have such a' Go.l f f •• ■ chosen yoilng inHn' toi''.our pastor;! ílOCKSVILUlí: CHAKOIS ; He will: pr'each-ifevery'¡first and ■ ., • third Sundfty.'^iil'n,a,,m. í¡ver\ ^ , J. T. 'Sisk, , iiastor body invited to ^fjie’se’’services. I JiGreotings: , For : -thp fourth '%Aunt ' •been we ar :Mr. ..................................V..................................- r- delphia. Pa., is visiting hid father, 6i\:.thi's; yemWalter .VVhiзl^^nt,•nearJerusalen^i''^yí'iti):«tbo,''UIl¡,ted'..c^-o^ of We were :dolighted :- to have- goodly number-of visitcjrs^in our, a' sji'ch a'popple '(is':'tbóvgdpcl p'bople r' (Й1 ¿;ЩШу.1П;0,;'СЬаг«('о Wb fell sure B. Y. P. U/ Sunday night. It en-. lhtfW'Jljr6.u«l.i;.-- irim .we -can do courageff.U8!i';ili our work. ■ Hop^' inucli', t'p prpmote.^ljo:, they will cioma ol'.tqrf. ' I Ini.IJavI'e. cpuiHy. • ■ . ' T\r.. .,.,,1 AT..u_ QvlfiH'Grubb spent W-will'fill our regular appplnt- ' wi'ihv reiiitives - iiii,i’'m.onte'-n’px-t';.' -Sunday; at;‘ Uriiom I'ty^W"' , '■''i'Gitnii(oi;;iin’d ,'i' JMr. and Mrs the I week \jSlnd ,,Davidson county, THE FIDBLIS 1-JNTBRTAIN ' The Fidelis class of the Mocks- ville Bajitist church gave a de­ lightful paity Saturday, Nov. 1st ur’d’^y.' rilghtl'at''7:Sor'It,-.is our W,ôCwan't.'èvûr.v-.’l3,érs6i Biivie. cdùnty.'.'wiio iis ' intifref^ted ' in; ÿ' CO,UNTy, ORDEIl рГ singers, for Davié to meet at Bethel next Sat- 'I :.at,the home of Miss Mary Allen ' Hendrix. , I ' The house was artistically de- ' corated with.chrysanthemuins «“d ■ potted plants.' The color scheme of..'red, white and green ,was of- -iectively carried-out. , - Various games were played tlir- oughoUt the evening. Music- be­ ing also an'enjoyable past-time. ,Miss . Hendrix as.sisted by,Mis­ ses Frances. Rich and F'annip A; Bradley served'the guests with delicious aunch and cake. The invited guests were: Mis­ ses Frances Rich, Margorio and Helen Stewart, Annie Mae Crotts, Ella,; Mae Campbell, Liiura Allen, : Gertriido Hendrix, Sara Chaffin, .Polly, Dvyiggins, Dorotha Norring­ ton; Messrs. Earl Penry, Finch Avetti .Felix Harding, Samuel Rich, Andrew Yates, Gaithpr Sanford, Charlie Campbell,, Adnip Neely, LeoiVai’d ‘ ' purpose to have a great big choir of from 100 to 200 voices from any and all churches. Whpever you are or to what Qhui'ch you be­ long makes no difference. : If you are interested meet us next Sat-' urdiiy. night. ? RECKLESSNESS AlVD REGULA- TION Harry Stroi ' iOnly a relatively small per,cent of automobile drivers ai’p care­ less,■ But they are sufiieient in numb^ er to ' Piiike, driving ;on the- high­ ways : hazardous. On a Sunday or holiday 'many people refrain from (Irlying because of the haz­ ard. It Is neither fair nor is it necessaiy that. careless drivers should drive others off the high.- way, to which and on which ev- leryone has an equal right, i’il, Frank an3 Automobiles are safe, highways ( -are safe ar\d driving, , : practices less idilfererice'iri.'the' averuge ; age of tbeï old . tóldièrs , and-¡widows'},^ И . 'yet,enih3,';tl)(\';Í!Í8t widow may b'ò ia living 26j'or 50:'^'eiu's from now. ,|ÿ Unde,r theipreappt:ponsion law, jyj 'ii;jiriilUöii^dollai'B,::n ;yenr . hn'fl." ‘.hiillf , (iointr.'to •• .-V -, I X m v . v c L U l «ilio . (11 u .Ul.¿ii «ifÿ - V 7 ” fund:: be doubledand 'bp fao'■ ap-f 1 :portionod‘;aa; to. Vvlibw. pv^^^^^ soldier a (ipllar'it day; ' Tlie 'larg- | eat реп.ч1ойог'-, receives from. :thié ■pro'sent fund -$260 the*year,,.; . Dairy cow :oWnèri3 of G'ranvill'p'; County, are;’ cooperating' iiow’.'to-g buy ,'theU’' «rauv feed.v:-,ThP' first -.| shij^ment was"; recently placed by I .cbunty agent,., .1., H'. Blackwell,-;,:';'| nnisf,lie made safe. , •: ;.; '(■^n (ill 'company,'operating seye-; 'ral hundred trucks, has nptv iia'd. ■a 'cPlIisiónv'or accident.- -■on .the ’■highways- ;or at railroad'; grade, ;croB3ÍngS'\f;c(r; a' number, of years, although :during,:thiit. time : :ltf}; trucks crossed railroad traclca, more tíiáív ;31,0Ü0,000 times. 'í V’lt, selects jts drivers with pro­ per; care,'instructs them in safe practices and ц1уе8, them h) lin- der.'^tahd thnt failurerto stoi), Ippk find listen before' crossing;a rai4-, ■rOnd;track, or failure j)roperly tp obae,rvQ traffic rules and safe practices, on the highways, will result in dismissal! from the ser­ vice.'-:. ' ' , ‘ It; iogiciiliy follows;'thttt public rpguiatibn of the same character woiild. ^iccomplish a like result, and with automobiles increasing in number, with proportional in­ crease in congestion and hazard pf accident, the point hfis been' reached imd the 'time-has arrived, fpr afiirmative legislative action in this regard. But compusory automobile in­ surance is not the solution; it,will. not reduce accidents; it wiH-^tend ito increase them by removing the last vestige- of perspnal respon­ sibility from persons already care-. B¡!iiB!S:niiiiBiiiiBiiMi»B:r;H.:i!B:№B¡ia::iWiiiB:iiin:i!¡itBii;iB]ii«iiiiBi n H n K! N га Bl' n a ■ . Rt. Я. 'Я и n Young and Conservative ^en’s Suits ^ That o^eir savings oi: not less than $5.50 on every suit. Suits of all " wool, with iwo pair of pants and a large selection to choose: ft«in. ai “SWEET ORR” TOÏÙC eL0THE3^^^S I The toughest clothes made. Corduroys, Kentucky Jeans and Tug go 0 ’Wars suits and Odd Pants, Guaranteed against Ripping and i ^ Price $2.98 for odd pante^^ . S :::./:Price'$7.95-'for .suits.., i';:'#:;:::.'::;.';. ^ Splitting. BÖY^S O V E R G O E S Sizes 2У2 tp 8 at $3.98 Chinchilla and Kerseys Men’s Plaid Back O’Cpats at $14,95 wboLCLOTHES, PRETTY PATTERNS ; EVERY THING THAT MAN OR BOY WEARS » LEADS IN VALUES 'г; 4l5 Trade Street, ; ,,. ^ Winston-Salem, ,N. С H H a i i ■ ■nHI M ■i я ■H s ■ .Я '.N Щ Л Ц щ: d Ш Щ Я ThuVBday November 11, 192G Fjbfr''' Söriß. ThrO ät*^’ 'lelightfullv entcrtain- ¿5k: wuh Vlolit^covér wllli i аяпй»Ь It«,;deubl,4tt«ct »««ten 'ijInhaUd ana «Ьи! b<4)У bHnfft iNréltoiM fftliec id at thre^ tables of bridge in honor oJ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Budley, of Richmond, Va. Tempt- ign refreshments were sewed. TO. MUSIC LOVERS IN DAVIE COUNTY U )C A L ITEM S , Miss Julia Hunt, is visiting in Milton, N. C. Miss Katherine Brown, of Mor- gantpii, spent the week end at home. MIbb ; Sallie :i^unter spent the week èhd'with friends in Winston- The Mocksvilie school . board counts itself exceedingly fortun­ ate in having secured ■ for the yenr 1926-27 the services of Mrs. Annie West Andrews. The orthopaedic clinic for the >ree examination and treatment cripples being held-1 Mrs. Andrews took her diploma S * ^ li K*'^«ni8 'f"om the London College of Music, iriniti n ® also won there several DimL Owen’s j medals for bcing the "best round- Duig Store at Winston-Salem will I ed" musician of her class. She Saturday, Nov- can play „with ease nnd teach al­ most any instrument. Not only has she rare talent and wide pro­ fessional experience, but she is a born teacher. She has time, at ember 13th. Miss Martha Call was gracious hostess to the Methodist yoling after-1 present, for a few out of town noon. №-s. J, Frank Clement, the pupils. If you love music andpresident, presided, and an inters esting program waa given. Four-wish to embrace the opportunity of a life-time, ,“now ia the ac- ; . Mr. Erviii Bowles, of Duke University, spent the week end at home. / ; ' ccptable time.” A few weeks ‘ - -- you'may be too late. You may talk to Mrs. Andrews in her studio in the Mocksville h.'gh achool building. Miss Sarah Gaither, of the Gas­ tonia school faculty, spent the week end; at home. : M^8.4GayneU;Seaber spent the V ,, week end in Salisbury with ^ «"<> one visitor, Miss Ruth Booe. Mrs. Burr Brock was welcomed as a new member. Delicious refresh­ ments were served. —— 0----- Mrs. J. B. Johnston gracipusly entertained on Thursday evening in honor of her charming guest, MI'SS Margaret, McKinnon; of Hartsv|lie, S. C. The guests were LAND SALE NOV. 18tfi, 10 a. m., ' three miles North of Mocksville on highway No. 80. Also milch ‘ "flats and many other things.— Raleigh Frost. Salisbury with friends and relatives. b; MiBS Mamie Hendricks nnd Mrs. William Murph spent Thursday ^in Salisbury, shopping. . , Mrs. J,.Frank Clement returned .'Wednesday from a trip to New York and Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Allen, of Denton, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Hentjrix. Missi Hattie Fowler, of Stntes- ville, spent the week end with her sistpr, Mrs. Grant Daniel. ;'i -----0------ Dr, and Mrs. R. P. Anderaon spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. E. L. Reed, at Tobaccoville. -0- Miss Mary Heitman. After seve. ral games of rook, the hostess served a delicious salad course with coffee and cheesestraws. The many friends of Hon. T. Bailey Lee, of Biirley, Idaho, will be glad to know that he:has been elected a judge of the supreme court of that state. He had pre­ viously been appointed by the Governor to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court bench, and in the recent election was the successful candidate. Judge Lee is a bril­ liant alumnus of the University of North Carolina. STRAYED OR STOLEN—A COL- lie dog, abou^.years old, gold reddish looking, name Rascfial • on collar. $10.00 reward if re- * turned to Berry Frost pd. DR. ANDEBs6 n~HAS~ MOVED o^lce to the Anderson Building, up stairs at Jewelry shop, room 2. Specializes in late work, gold work end painless extract­ ing of teeth; _ li 2t. WE WJBL PAY* IGHEST .CASH prices for cedar loica delivered at Mockaville, near Daniel- Cartner Co. storq(—Andrews «E: Sturdivant 11 4t pd. FARM PROGRAM AVAILABLE IN PRINTED FORM Raleigh, Nov. .10.—The program -The following ladies motored to Winston-Salem on Friday, and at­ tended the Woman’s meeting at of diversified farming adopted the Fnst Presbyttrian church, the this fall by the agricultural ex- luldress by Sirs. Winsborough be-' tension service as itsRev. and Mra. H. C. Sprinkle of 'vinsborough be-' tension service as its ideal of ■ I Salisbury were recent iruoats’ of “ feature, mesdames work for the coming moniihs and ■ .the tuer’rmotl\:rM.'!^t^^ M. I '"■"'‘f.'Cj.ii ., ". onnloid, G. G. Woodruff, John form. The prpgram was suppli-Call. -.-r— -0----- Mrs. Price Shorrell-and iittio aoji,Price,'Ji\,’.:bf'Mt;::Ulla;;'are ■visiting her riiother, Blrs, Willinin '.Miller, - ‘' .'-■.■i' - ............- _ppli- Larew, Cecil Morris, G. G. Daniel, ed to the press of the state in a Roy Holthouser, Misses Daisy condensed form during Octpbrfi'. Jlplthouflor, .Willie M.'llei',:and Sal- The program was given further lie lluhter.^ „ publicity through tho columns of -— ^0—7^' , Extension Farm.Nows, the offlcial Mi-3. P. J. Johnson Avas graci- publieatioii ‘ of (Ha cxtcrision ser- 'Mr. Southern the week Raleigh./ r j ' 'D Mm.i.nv ' nnBHif.r i nt a .bridge. luncheon vice, and now it has been printed hern Banif /Trust Cd-“ « n S fW ^u^dny in hon.or iof her at- In i.n ed.'tipn of 10,pOO copies for veek end^vhh■h^s-■p'ar6nt8--8[,.lW t'?„ГмM !-^-??Уll!-*'^^^mpns and Mrs. Edgar Blanton, of are interested in profitable farm- A.4hevillo, who are pleasantly re- ing: in North Carolina. Ml- ЛТ..0 Tnn 4i,n,.«n ,..„1 m««ibered here. Bridge was play- j ed at two tables, and following.little son, of Winaton'Salom, visit­ ed Mr. г ' iSunday. ADVANCE NEWS iw.. 1 ЛГ., UT T T.T nú i ^hi® ‘ii delicious luncheon was ed Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Holthouser rp,,,Mr. J. -W. Bailey of Charlottp, dambs Simmons, Blanton, John ““d ’'cre with his Mr. «nd Mrs. W. A. Byerly of Me\i'cn’ej-%Î^ c."cieîen^^^^^^^ who hold« a Route 1, attended-the Methodist XlHson Protestant conference at Greens- boro Sunday,; ' Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hendricks, 'o t Lexington, spent the week end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hendricks. ' Remember one of Fred Thom­ son and Silver King’s best, "The Tough Guy” at the Princess Fri­ day arid. Saturday. If you want to count your laughs when you see Johnny. Hin­ es in. Rainbow Riley, better bring j your adding machine, 1—0- ^ ' Mesdames David Simmons and I Edgar'Blanton of Asheville, have j| returned home after a visit to ! Mrs. P. J, Johnson, j . > .,i_o ------ : . ' . i Miss Virginia. Pt)é of the faciil- i the faculty of Advance school !'"iveek end with friends at Greens- i boro College for Women. ' , :. —0-— , Mr. and Mrs. E. C. LeGrand arid little son, of Matthews, spent the week end with . Mrs., LeGrand’s father, Mr. (?. A. Allisbn. position with Morris &’\Co., spent the week end at home. , I The Woman’s Missionary socie- Talbert of tyofthe Metj2^di8t church met'7» ii m i? were guests of Mrs. the church on Tufedday afternoon, I 1,1.1 ^Miss Bertha Lee, the president, Mrb. .D. D. Phelps of presided and conducted the Bible the week lesson in Acts. It -was decided ®"'' parents; to take up the book of Luke next., The president stressed the fact Mr. and Mrs. John Bailey and that this is the week ofvpra.ver, the three special objects being the loqal church, Breviird' Institute, and Isabella Hendrix College in afternoon. Mrs. F. T. Poindexter attended tbe funeral of Mrs. Frank Wil­ liams at Smith Grove last Sunday Mr. and. Mrs. Joe Jackson, Mr. rind Mr.s. W. H. March and family, all of Winstpn-Salem, were-gue.sts of Mrs. O. M. March Sunday evening. The regular riionthly business meeting of the Senior Epworth League met'on last Thursday rt'i- Mrs. Martha LeGrand'and son, Gordon Hampton, ,of Wlnstori- ' Salem, spent the week end with /Mr. and^Mrs. W, H. LeGrand. ----- ■ 1 Miss Mary Horne, member of they faculty of Advance'schooll speiit the week end: with friends ;-at N.’ C. C. W. Greensboro,-N. C. Miss Margaret .McKinnçn, of iHartsville, S. C., who has' been jvisitirig. her .' cousin, . Mrs. J. B. I Johnston, left Monday for Char- iIptte,' where she will visit before returning home. : Mrs. C. G; Leach and children and Mn arid :Mrs. D. H, Brown apd children; M4as Ruth Allen (and Jake Allen attended a birth- I day dinner given in honor of Mrs. ■ 'T. i; Aliens In High Point Sun­ day,' , ' . .— O'....... Oh" Thursday evening Mrs.'W- Brazil. The election . of offlcers took place, all the old officers be­ ing re-elected. 0— It Is surprising how readers of The Asheville Times believes in that paper—it seems to hold them by superior merit, as they claim , “ „ >-and ipsist the pqper is a l m o s t "iK**t.w(th Mr. Lindsay Cornaiz- "magic” in gathering and giving tlfem all news first and you will ■pay only $4.00 (saving $8.00) during "Bargain'Days,” Dec. 1-15, for The Times,.(evening or morn­ ing edition), daily and Sunday, by mail 'for. a fuy year—those subscribing this year will be in class "A” (preferred list) and may 'renew every year at this flx­ ed rate 3>4.00 (saying ?3.00)—re­ gular rate is ?7.00 a year.^-----n----- • MOVIE NEWS 3handyf packs! .( Today Paramounts 20 Junior stars of 192C in "Facinating .Youth,” a. real classy picture. Come see these new faces which will likely be the leading stiiVs for the next lot of pictures: Friday and Saturday we play one of Fred Thomson’s and Silver King's best, "The' Tough Guy.” It has drawn enormous crowds in the largest cities in the coun­ try. Also: two reel comedy with Lloyd Hamilton in “Framed.” Monday and Tuesday, jnore laughs than the rainbow has fcol- ors and then a few,, Its Johnny Hines in a First National picture “Rainbow Riley” from Thompson Buchaqan's stage play “The ¿ub" and yes a, new star, Misi Brenda Bond makes ber iilm debut in Ithis picture as Hines, leading Lady, There’s a treat for you and ' yoiu: cjhildren in the.Pepper» mint sugar jacket and another in the Peppermint • flavored gum inside—that ift W R IG L E Y 'S P. K . utmoit value in long delight. I’M HERE TELL YOU THEY’RE GOOD Wrigley*« M t dig*!' tlon and . mtkei tb^ n«Kt cigar taitc better. Try!» АА«г11м1ж1||«1 iGl» : :..'T'.. The importance of the m a n y recent im­ provements in Dodgi Brothers Motor Cars justifies us in urging everyone, prospective ^yers or not, tofsee and drive the car ite • ' ' ' s " ' ! « ! ? tl c J i t O n c e Щ Ш щ ь ш W á lk e r M o to r C o i ‘ Mocksville, N. C. Touring Coupe Sedany» . Spécial Sedan■ ' ' ■ ■ s . D d d e b .] \:ß Wèss DELIVERED •' I a i i e г а а т и ^ | ^ , 5 . . ' , й ШMOTO.R CAR.S::'..:*.',bibll|' iiicaiiiiBiiiiBiiiii Ш1а 111;в;11 WHEN YOU SELECT AN ' ' I*. HERE YOU KNOW IT’S R IG H T IN S T Y L E FURTHERMORE, YOU ARE ASSURED THAT IT IS RIGHT IN QUALITY, RIGHT IN TAIL­ ORING AND RIGHT IN PRICE. PLENTY OF THE REAL SNAPPY STYLES FOR YOUNC FELLOWS, AND AN AMPLE ASSORTMENT OF MORE CONSERVATIVE MODELS FOR THOSE WHO PREFER THEM. C . c Sow ■, , ‘ , ., ‘ •• '-M-'"j .4*,ií,' .. .■ .<A„./.Jf-.... .. ............................................. ......... . ,. ............. , ,. .. . _______ ,•..„. ...... . -. .......■,!......... ..,.^^'.i>,.L<iiv'VÎÆn.7V/,.HÎ^..ï.«SÆA*^^ .... : ' V ln'j¡re''4 __, '________^______________________________________ MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE- ~ . ^ K ^^.f ^'|, ^^»^''’f^tty.- Noyond r';.''. 4 Î » *Ki o. .Ï.'i < íí ' J./', «iiVf ;í .>' ■ í/'í, '‘." I f' r:¡ii ...j,:Ai'' ;^' ';' -á iiV '* ' ' t e í ' i '^<; lí* frr'Tdfi m/i r ' ' o'i « ‘i j P # i i »VA ^>àí.'<.Si®. íí'sV ■iíá>fíí*''>'í Ï |wiil'.''.si;^(■'W"1HÍÍ"1'’''’" l f ■' '' fSïîJÏÏîi'^fe’ » / 'Î î’l ||:ÿ...ra ik'i' ,11 L I S S ! » » » » M ,•íá%il " S F ' I •c !.4r ■í : ¡ # ’ ? ; f e í S ' " ' \7!É.,'^"[ a'c ^'.'v'--ív<i'>'r'‘;.''íVf t •" # ■ l j. V-..^* I >*•*■iv' '■'! ''C~’i'¡¡mW\• ¡C ’>( . I N > , 1 ‘ ’ A'i*'* ' ' > ■*V ■‘'“'ííff'i^tAf^íí^l 'sw 1 ’ ■'“ "k ,T(!.*íi'#«íafe'''i I - : r~ ■ ~ : ' pfïSflIfiPpfiii^BiÎfiiîîgstSîÿ'SisiÆ^^ ;: .aSìS^ife;*3IHÌiSè:rii:Kn3 ilis8iii*esafc»ïi*«':^^ ^' ' •'' * -..........—................. ® v f I s» É l " % f M S ■í:-# l(V:-.v^v'| í¿iÁ fí’i; í | lk i i\' '* ■-. i , ’.;■,,'V.;îîj<v;'h: , ', ':4-J:W'^k\M^v'v.'W -‘ï . . . ■ , ............................................. ,._____________..................................^-,..... 7 Vïi" IH A V È BEEN IN BU SIN ESS ÏN SA LISB U R Y , N. C., FO R THE L A ST 10 Y E A R S, AN D I A M G LAD TH AT M Y REPUTATION iI gH '^ ^ ÎD H IN DOING BUSIN ESS W ITH THE PUBLIC H AS N EVER BEEN QUESTIONEI); I A M -G O ÏK aT O gI v E^ TO CORRESPOND W IT H THE PRESENT PRICES ÔF YOUR COTTC)N. H Y INDUCEMENT TO YOU ^ If ' ^ 7 .NOT ONLY SA V E Y O U 'P E ^ N ICKELS A N D A FE W E^EE PACKAGES^ BUT W IL L SA V E YO U BIG DOLl^ARS AN GET FRESH AN D GOOD CLEAN MERCHANDISE I H AVE A.BIG STOCK Q F GOODS AND I M UST REDUCE IT DOWN TO CASH. -Vi ^, ' •>', .> THE BILLS A R E COMING DÛE AN D W E M UST P A Y THEM REGARD LESS. I H AD RATH ER GIVE Y O U THE PROFIT TH RROW. THE MONEY AN D P A Y 6 PER CENT. INTEREST. SO YOU SEE T HAT THIS IS A SALE FOR YOU A^ W ELL A S FOR . ’ ' p / .i M E. COME AN D SEE^''YOU’LL N EVER REGRET;i T. .^''v. ,J.''■ ' i;. N o rth : C o o le e m e e ,'' N . C . Sit'r'u ÏV ’ tí■tól' M en’s H eavy O vercoats, value $18.50 'Sale Price— > ; ^'$9.95 ' .Yoúhg M en’s • T op' )'Coats, va lu e $25.00, Sale P rice— '; $13.95 ', M en’s good w eight U nionsuit Underweai^^ ' O nly—- .......... '..-..... ; 98c B oys’ an d G irls’ good w eight U nionsuit U nderw ear, Only— , 68c '' C hildren’s good w eight U nionsuit U nder- j w ear, O n ly-r,....... ' ........., . 48c M en’s D ress Shirts, all sizes, special. Sale Price, Only— , ' , ' ,, ■' ■ .89c ..... / •, '■'■■- ‘ • I ..: . , •; -. 'I • ...... •/.',■ ‘ V': • . ' • i,'¡ ■.■■:*?' . iK •.>;■ Men^s w h ite E nglish B roadcloth; r ^aluéi: $1.75, Sale Price— ' ' . 98c B lankets, large, enough fo r , double bed, V Sale P rice— / : 75c. .,' D ouble B lankets, wool mixedy Sale P rice-^ $1.95 Double B lankets, all wool 100 p er cent, ' Sale P rice— • . $5.69 'ÌÉ È m-ÆâJài ,W¥i1^^,.,,.. , nS mm,, rmiAì i.'aii{B:iiiBpiiiiaiiHiiííB!»ia:iiniiiiai!in!iiiig;ii¡a;i¡H:!iii 'X" 'Weiivín fo r e v e ix Ten D ollars you buy. LOOK AT THESE éARCAINS BELOW SHINE. BE SURE AND BE ON H AND. Hiiin:iiiB:ia:iiiri.i:niiia:i!iH!iaii!iH;iiiai№a'iiiniiia;i»'ii!aiiiHaiiain'iw:i{!ra:a.riBS’i9’ii!»iiiai;i»sn::i!;siiiiSiSi:!3iiiiam;^':i»a:i:a«i^ M en’s W ork P^nts, another lot, all sizes, . T-\ • - j / ' ' Í 'j > 'y ' Um ' /' "'p', ’ u « ) s ' ^1 W/ .tti Sale Price- . $1.25 ,E)'ouble, B lankets; 50 p er cen t wool, ::'P rice~ . ''vi.’v:,.',.'!: . .=. .$3.98 |;:. Ju st received'^ a large^ shipm ent of L H ats Qf all colors, shapes and mater' go in this Sale a t— $i.69 C olored border and w h ite M en’s Han chiefs, fiale P rice— 3 c \ One dozen sa fety pins, all sizes. Sale O nly— One p aper straig h t pinsy .Sale Price 0 Ic lo y s ^ its w ith 2 p a ir pants and V est, ■ a le P rie e ----'^ - I.Reïnember The Date, .■, I" M en’s Suits .with 2 pairs pants, w orth $25.00 Sale Price— Lum ber JM cs, .good weight, all colors, Sale Price— , Lum ber Jacks,' $6.00 value, heavy weight. len’s la le P rice s, dark colorë, a ll sizes, $1.00 Cotton Spools, w hite and’ black,- , ' air sizes, only— ■.'. I c F ive spools to a custom er. Ladies’ Coats, the very latest stylés, all colors; Sale Price— $4 . 9 8 UP TO $3 5 , 0 0 Shoes fo r all the fam ily reduced accord­ ingly. : " Ladies’ Silk D resses— $ 2 . 9 8 a n d U P ............' ■ ' ............... It is impossible to m ention all the Bar-, gains we have on this circular as the space will not perm it. ' " ?i>«■,r a Y J O S E P H NEXT DOOR TO O. C. W A LL. ., . . ' , , j ] ................................................................... "... ÏHE SPRÈÀi) ÎN SCHOOL ^ ' INFLUENCE',v, ■ . _____ / In/ estimating the elflciency of lOUf: schools should the emphasis 'be placcd on scholarship or ciciz- «nahip—ciipacity or character—or (both? In the life uf the individual, «ven as in the life of the nation, the activities of today are con- xiocled in the light of their in- ^netice on the affairs of tomorrow. So it is with education—its prime tiiuincss is the development of the individual to build the nation’s iutUK. “One’s way of looking at things dbes not depend upon the gizt of the town he lives in but on tïe size of his mind.” With «dotation, there need be no “Main " Our'educational system works in maViy directions. It enlarges ihe earnjng value of the child to Its parent àtid' to the nation. It ,t>riOK9^iin Americanizing influence io bear ' on the lives of oui* fore- Jfaers.' It steps forth to' rehabi- tttait« thé'delinquent child, tò re­ ttore the.<ifa|rering phjrsicalìy. It {SovelopS'^esVarch students, trains^ JiMichers.^and makes possible the , . ' '•M'i^i'hese are all essential in bur i things. However, ediir - ’Kri®" especially concerned , i • „the many. They hold fhe iM crjBf^power at the ballot. It that they: int^est in i'and, an; Under; ***««9* It Jb to * ioi' establishing a .......'‘^'""^^^tegWiiiMmosphere ',of ' ■ '-it: is .important ¿ M l»' ^ to relish i ' M.V *h«yimay ^njoy toil arid ¡r tho increMirig leisure al-it i M, , '' ! borid ;ibp:;aiiiili^^ iMscbricmioh •' to: :con-‘ S i ..... ^ «¡sMctty to work should' be none IT'- ' the lisH Because he'has been iv,;: r fcHiwied.'• , l|!ind' helps muscle. A young ',>c®llegeman.who dug ditches dur- S ;vJ«i :.bis vabfltiohs, to gain heal^■.•«V •! •J.’ .................... during', the operation thnt was preformed in an effort to save hia lifé, but he died early this morn­ ing. In, a, dying statepient mnde to Dr. Rfddle he declared, ]tHat the siiei'iff was not to bla^e.. The girl .who was with him is in jail and it Is said that her story cor­ roborates the other evidence. HORSES BROKEN TO LEAD WHEN YOUNG EASIER TO HANDLE LATER The need of the Mexican Army for horses has stimulated a de­ mand for mediiim-weight anirals of from 96Ó to 1*20.0 pounds that are straight of color and perfer- nbly broken to halter and saddle. According to John H. Huff, repre- sehtati.ye Of the Packers and Stock yardii Administration^ of the Unit­ ed ■:SЫ«в,t)èpartmentj.^>Ai^^ turé; many green Hbtses are being bought up by dealers and specula­ tors at Fort Worth, Tex,, and are being “halterbroke,” since the re­ quirement to lead is a big factor in selling the animals. Animals that are only "haliter- broke” will command a. premium bver, the' absolutely green kinds, iind the ^dealers are getting paid forjrhiit the producer might have doirt'^ijth much less risk and with greater ease. Most of these hors­ es are sirong and fat and are bound to put up a pretty gopd -flght before being broken to lead. l;The operation requires consider­ able time; apd energy on the part :',6t. thé:;deálerB isnd rarely fails to ,i{{(in Up the ahimal. ■ - “The çoint'is," says Mr. llufl, Ij^het if the young coit in flrst mncTs whs ‘halterbroke’, at wéan- ing time or/«R soon-t|Veré«fter..áfe :Meg]b)e,’^t]6e «niniel.l even i though 'never handled a.gain before reach- _THfi MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE mighty close to real horse values through a little preparation of the tiolt.” ' ' LIGHTNING FIRES SEEN .48 HOURS AFTER STORM ^ ________________^ I - — -............ l ll t j U M if and at lower elevations. .Reports Kfii'fi'om lightning, since the timb- from the Forest Service lookouts I er or fuel has less chance to. lib- iu'e therefore extremely useful to sorb moisture. An interesting ondficiont.iata nf fh/i ------I -scientists of ihe Weather Bureau in connection with the observa­ tion of lightining stbtms and the practical phase of the study that has been made of lightning flres is the determination of the nuilnt).^-....c I.JIC 4» iMc umcriiiuiu'iion Ol ine nunH)-^ sending of warnings of various ' er of hours between first sighting kinds. I each lightiiing storm arid the time' Lightning cau.ses a great many forest fires in the northern Rocky Mountain region in Montana, Ida­ ho, and a small portion of Wash­ ington. Thé Forest Service main­ tains abouit 170 fire lookouts in this district which- incidentally ”***1 on lightning snow to wnat extent the îy gets a good start; .This iriter- and other w ither phenomenai danger of forest iflres started by 'vai is often as much as 48 hours. The Weather Bureau of the Unit-1 lightning is modifled by' the a- Which gives the attacking foriÿs. kinds. , Charts prepared by H. T. Gis­ borne, of the: Northern, Rocky ¡of discoverihg each, flre çaueëd by it Frequently a considérable, ^ ,— .v..v».i, ivuun; lu rrequeniiy a considerable Mountain Forest Experiment ,Sta- ’time elapses before a fire actual- 'tion, show tb what extent the iy gets a good start; This inter- ^ -----,»«<y .Av/iccyb‘lueie'.DC^' ing too damp : to ■ blazë, for' some time after the Btorn?i,yh,B8^^^'^^^^^ '» /■ -PARMÍÉíRS ' • if yolï want to boiTOWimoiiey * * on improved fam; lande ; In Uavie County undeif vft pí«u> * providing for inéisÌMìneive, * long term «оапя, call bn, or * # » # ,f: write; to,^' * ROBERT S. McNEILL^ Atty. * ....... Ш Ш : Law, ; Mocksvjlle; Nv u^rish.man. whb: _____ •'««ysv rvavn* ing maturity^ wpiìld: iiieVer forget ite lèseone. ; A.! déairàble feature of . halterbreakìng (the colt or yearling ifl^thjat thiy "áre lighter, iní weight than .they ever will be 'again and therefore,more easily handled. They агё .less likely to injure themselves when' young. Another good,feature is that when thfe; icolt reaches the age to be broken for saddle or work a good half'of the job is done, due to. the early halter training. . ‘/'уЛ .“Thè iday of hajjhazard horse IJroduction is past, ;nhd there is lio reason луЬу the horse raiser of today;:: cah -¿ptvreceive^My ЩУ0у даЩ Т Й Е Ш К1(^ WILL PAY YOU TO CALL IN AND LOOK OVER OUR STOCK. WE SEI.X ON EASY PLAN AND STÀ14D BACK OF EVERY CAR WE SELL Car Load New Chevrofets Just In ÿ Mocksville N f ¡мршишивдВмидайившияаимир ,1 «)ab¿r .euni " Mi 'ji; ihli couqtíy о ' ^ IlindfnJ '(iiifllçlcni iB^:eiÍuÍppi^;|i£^im :: th«i húmb^rtaf^lu'. it|: „jwTioüjKÉSro^^ CO^RT A^ER SIPAYINC ■'::::':'..'-’vMorg#nl)íi|i^.<lSíov;v'4.~-A5preIi :AHary'hearlng',wa'« held tonight for Sheriff; ;jiilián Walton, át > thl sheriff's request, ’ and he was bóund over to court in 'order tp i! obt'^in^pmplete le¿ral; exon^|#tio^ injicorin^ct|o,ti with;'.the^;^d^^ of , 'Biil^iifiRIajoniey, ' of ^ ., .Solicitor: ■ ^vhq: retiirnedj' frórii’Shelíjy; :'to iconduct the.henv^' ing, • V¿qliired^« §5.00C^ibond. m 1 ; :'0n'- Wed nesday ■ nig^; 8^yo)’al^{ y' citi.iehs' of Glon 'Alpine' reported!; . , tq; SliiBriff Walton that n' Coñdi'tióii' ', «t >tlie Malonejv li'o^e needed',i^7. ' vestigation, thlat ;Maloney' a ijia.n ^::of 65 years, or more, whose wifii ■ x.hiid'.^left him: was living with ^a'. .; l.Cryear-old girl. -: •:;’ó . The sheriff,'accompanied by Er­ nest H&rbison,i knocked on- the' dboi' of ilaloiiey'sihouse, tojd who, lie:*:was and asked to be admitted.)' R«iused admission, he pushecl open; the door, Which had been liairriciided by a bed, and as he did.isb 4 Iqad' of shot gréetéd him,. }ii8;‘fl¿s|iilijg}it showed. t.hafiiM,^- Jon^^ liad loaded his guni ji^d Wa'S: taking Í; second aim when’his o^H; ; pistol I v>»s,brought into plfiy, Má'4 • lonéy was, sjhot .in the sbdomeril but' did iript^die .insUntly, V : ,, Harbison^ W Dr. Long ^t; GleH Alpine and the injured man; i vvaB' brpught tp Grace :hpíipltár¿ fihérliff Dalton .Btayeil Oiir books shoMf tjliat thiwe who 8 9 lli|rith US once, come back to PEOPLES AVARtHC^ AGAIN ¿nd AGAIN. W They'r^iatisfied with Our Service land Our Prices; We guaran­tee you the same Service and Thi? is the Bes| jLi^ht^^ Tobacco Warehouse in Winston-Salem. Bring Tobacco tb US, as Winstori-S^iiern ha^ one of the largest and most representative corps of buyers to be found cm any maH^I jn North Carolina or Virginia. i / ........... MX:X'J’y 1 ' Í •' ( I V H>"ï*Winston-Salem^ Ni G á& á¿l t I :';í,cS Lùil >■>«'*.7., i’ i i l ï . Jn.V \> TRU’TH. HONEtirTf and UNTIRING FIDELITY TO 0UR COUNTY; AND OUR FLAG IS ÔUR AIM AND mocksville; Ñ. C., th URSDAY, NOVEÍMBER 18; 1926 viHe Postóffíce Argument Reaches Settlement Aa Posthiaiter Grants Rebate :; ^ Ë ^ ; : R e t u r n ! k ,.'P p s to g p ' ^ ! Í M t é d Fì|iM Òf Mbc^^ ;'ÌÒÒMÌBN^' ìiòii«véi‘; 6Wk«k ^Md Leach Rc- ;L. ;j. Hampton; In Winstoni,' . . jouTO^ ■' M<iiili|№l!i;Koy; Ui7T4Postmait|;i er She^M f|t^is‘,towifi;* ^-'.'У««twday;'.'i^urried^l||lof^t : T total which ,he '' 'Maiiagi'kfiiEditoi*:^^ ^.LeacH„.;p| the 'MbcltsvilloiEnterjpriae, 'a local .weekly .pul^licatipn, as a part re­ bat« on the; postage of t\^P centf ' : wflldh ; he. charged the I .WITHHELD V. paper of any size in the'State, as ' well, as in the Atlanta Journal and one of the Metropolitan New 1i;prk dailies Coming as it did atV'a ‘ tiiiie when the Enterprise, ;riilttdly;'{3itizenB’ Party in com- '^liiixion :an was mak- 1i^ya'iight fbir!lthe ticket of that narty; Ijhe Jactibn of Posiinaster Sheek; who' was a staunch sup- pprtfr-of the;;'‘old ring” Republi- caihVtiiket, took on a color that in hprntal tiines with no election in the offing might not have given ','it. ■/' '■ ^ ■ Postmaster Sheek is said to:ùa; copy. , , , _ , %WBpai)bt mairi for. 800 new told Editor Leach : ^‘I hope i'ttitlilliieifipitionB nialiid bui tw 6 ^ frijnds how,” but the' fsilïf.i, ,. *' .. . .. „¿¡tor is aaid'to have ireplied; “ 1 don’t know about that. You ac­ complished the purpose you had in mind—that of keeping my pap­ er out of the hands of thé voters EPrtofflc~e DeipartmenFhas^ Dûvle fPr a time—and I don’t âÉainst me, and I want'to payilfnow whether ! can forgive you• / ’!_li.:-.- T ' -f/MH T'Vii* T\/\of*»»»» iifbre ;the electiorii , ,^;';|liilèd^'A||a!nBt HI«. ' PfMtiiiaBter Sheek went, over to the office of the newspaper to ré- tiirn the money, stating; “The back the postage which I charged you." He paid only $12 of the ex­ cess postage, Editor Leach says, but stated that he was ready to pay the other $6 when the editor found.the receipt, which had been misplaced. It. will be remembered that Ed­ itor Leach accused .Postmaster Shoek of holding.up,the 800 copies, of, his paper going to new paid-in- for that or not.” The postmaster then, it is said, replied; "Well, if th'at is the way you feel about it—goodbyi" and left the news­ paper sanctum. Thi|rd P. M. Writes In a letter to Editor Loach, R. S. Regnr, Third Assistant Post­ master General, say.-i: ■ ' Nov. 4, 1926. • .Mr, .T. F, Leach, , ndvance :8ub8criberii 'two weeks ; before' thè : election. The icam- . pnign;wps,\va:{ing hotter and hot- :.ter 'at that time and *it, was re­ po,rtpd: ' that ;,. .Postma'ster Sheek I ' thought the. riewspaper, a sup- :i)prter pf t|jo Citizens’ Ticket, was ' yfnal.ling out the extra' Pcpies' to, ^Irtfljien^ public bpinic.i; It was i ;, nlBb’ 'rumored ,' that Postmaster Sheek was riled up over the odi- tpriala in, that issue which ridi- Mnnaging. Editor, ,, The Mockavilie Enterprise, Mocksville, N. C. ; My Dear 'Sir : ' I'have your letter of tho 21st ultimo, Avith re.spect to the mail­ ing of cppie.s of your publication paid for by j. B. Campbell and J. Q; ■ Dwigj^ins and have carefully noted your statements.. It is regretted that any incon­ venience was caused you and the culed Johnson J. Haye.‘),.'Republi- natter will be taken up with your can candidate i'or/'the United Stat-'.PO.'itmastcr. It appears that the es Senate; Jo^n R. Jones, G. O. i copies in question P. candidate for Solicitor, and A. in question were entitled to be mailed at the' usual second- class rates of postage or free in the county,' as the case might be, and if your postmaster required more postage than should have been required, he will be authoriz­ ed to make a proper; refund. Sinrarely yours, R. S. REGAR, Third Assistant Postmaster Gene- ral. WORLD WAR TeTERANS DY­ ING AT RATE OF 20,000 A YEAR, SAYS RED CROSS World war veterans are dying at the rate of 20,000 a year, many { of ; them from disabilities con­ tracted in service, the annual re­ port of the American Red Cross, disclosed. . The report pointed out that aid for living veterans must be con­ tinued in large volume. During the past year, an average of ;39,- 730 service men or ex-service men were aided by the Red Cross each T. .Grant, Jr., Republican candi­ date for the Legislature. Editor Got Hot Whether that true or not, '^hèn Editor Iveach {Tpiijg to the fi^tpfflce. the d»y after fje had ippsiitod his pÀlB^rf t^?rcj-foMnd here «tuck bff fiii'fippynè^ b ..uiiding like waste matwi'; as he ; Mwribed it, r»(iBp)i hiifjrish and ;||ijl,;iind Postmjiirteir'W "had f n.e words," as tp}ifi: 8À;|ring gdes. in the editor; c«llj^ ^n at- wrijey; Robert S. i^cwiil, to ad- .ylK® him as itp Tiie' rliirhts. The mstmaster waa told' that the , p,WBpàpérs iifiil tp; ir©i;put---and sp':put they dif pri ^ • aiiy'fl maii, Mr. Leach says,- some .$6 hours after they wer* deposlt- :fd in the.office. Postmaster Sheek had the .pub­ lished endorseme.nt of a formerai ^postmaster, but in a letter to him ^this iWeek from the Postofilce De­ partment, it was ruled that he ,':had'!;made;a mistake, leaving out‘ month Over $8,628,000 was ex- whether or, not it was done from pended in helping disabled vete- pplitical bias on his'part, ànd that j.-ms. ' vthe.publishers had a right to.mail ' -----— —-----------— ; put the' 300 papers free of charge • if going to fesidenta of ¡the coun­ ity ; jn which published, meaning Davie. •' ;:'i.Édit‘or Lcach says that not more I '','thftn « :hi)lf;;a dozen’ of them were \ . going: outside of the, county, f ;.^‘,il{i.?hf now no' oiìé aay.^ anything .'^'.^iien the : “W'll ■ ;;, ihe.’’m be pushed , against : But tho in- '^'ppeotor'; asked for in - Editor,' Leach's complaint to Uncle Sam's j here..tonight by. Dr, H. ,W. .Chase, . PbStdfncexpepartment h.ia not j ^sidont ot^ tlic ifeivereity. The yet been',sent, as far as can be ,; ,)eiirned. So .it is probable ithat ' ‘ v: '^hef ijivesiigatibn the charges aijT^ii^st the Moclcsvilie postmast- 1 er wljl not stop where they novy Btapd. ' >< Staiinch Republican ; The action of Postmaster Sheek in 'the alléged holding up or de- ■ Jaying òf the papers was termed as , a “higfirhanded , actipn" by ^ goo;d cellar where there is nb ijome; and^was; the cause of much' fumape i's a fine placò to store :, apples. i>p(| :root crops, say horti. .....-, . ,„u. GIFT IN MEMORY OF HIS PARENTS Ciiapel Hill, Nov, 13.—An­ nouncement of a gift of $275,000 I bw William- Rand Kenan Jr., na­ tive North'Carolinian and promin­ ent chemrcal and electrical engi­ neer of New York City, for the construction of a stadium at the University of North Carolina thnt will seat 24,000 persons, was made gift is in memory of the late Mary Hargrave and William Rand Ken­ an, mother and father of the don­ or, and it is to be known as the Kenan: Memprial Stadium., Con­ struction of the stadium will be.f; gin: immediia.tfily and the plans' call for its completion in time for the opening. of the football sea­ son next fall. , Д . I,,'* >11,! PANAMA CANAL TOLLS $22,931,055 During Past Fiscal Year 5,197 Vessels Passed Thru the Big Ditch; Sets New Reccjrd Washington, Nov. 15.-t-T,o11s amounting to $22,931,055 were collected from 5,197 ships pass­ ing thru the Panama Canal dur­ ing the last fiscal year. These figures, the annual report of Gov­ ernor Walker said today, repre­ sented an increase of more than a milliort and half dollars over the previous year in tolls'and a gain of 524 toll-paying ye.ssels. A commercial traffic through the canal was greater during the year as compared with the pre­ vious one but less than 1924 which established a record. This accounted for by the decline in oll shipments. However, the net tonnage of passeqger ships, gen­ eral cargo carriers and others, Excluding tankers, showed a con- N. C. METHODISTS TO BAISE I B Д H e e J 9 7 9 T w$50,000 FOR MISSIQN FUND, U cB U f m pX TC U I Г Durham, Nov, 12,—The North Carolina Methodist Conference adopted a report of its committee on missiotis to raise $50,000 of a special' million dollar fund that Southern Methodists propose to spend for missions. .the months of January and February were sèt apart fór edu­ cational work preparatory to put­ ting'on an every member canvass fpr this special fund. The committee on the Methodist Orphanage at Raleigh recom­ mended that Rev. A. S. Barnes, a member of the conference, be re-appointed , :to thé position as superintendent of the institution. His work' there was highly com­ mended. ' The report was adopt­ ed. Sou^ FW Wedc; N¿ Had slstent increase from 13, 231,402 tons in 1923 to 18,450,351 tons in 1920. The combined net revenue for the year was $17,340,865 as com­ pared with $15,757,751 in *1925. Vessels of United States re­ gistry led in the total tonnage using the waterway with ap­ proximately 53 per centi WORLD RECORDS ARE SHAT­ TERED Four Are Smashed ph Cha|rlbtte . SpMdway in Great A rmis tice Day Races O. MAX GARDENR HONORED BY CHARLOTTE. YES, LET THE PUNISHMENT BE SEVERE AND LET IT STICK. DON’T TREAT THE COMMON WOODPECKER AS A NUISANCE, HE IS A FRIEND That was a groat occasion in honor of a great North Carolinian w'hich the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce pulled off; Tuesday evening, Nov. 9. And the honor was appreciated as only a great man like Max Gardner is capable of appreciating. Indeed few men over live to experience such a demonstration, in their honor, espe­ cially when they are nothing but private cltiztns. The Gardner dinner was attended by hundreds of men and women from practical­ ly every section of this state. And included in the crowd were ox- supreme .court judges, Superior court jiidges,: congressmen, heads of great industrial enterprises, bankers, educiitors and publishers, Indeed, it woyld be hard to assemble In North Carolina a mòre diatin-. guished aggregation. And what must have thrilled the honor guest was the unanimous slogan “0. Max Gardner, North Carolina’s next governor," which was on the .lips of practically every ono present. Mr. Gardner was the speaker of the pccaaion, and ho was pever better., His .address was indeed one of the prettiest and most tpuch- ing which ‘that distinguished son,of North Carolina every delivered. Standing in the midst of such a di'stinguished assemblage, in the full vigor of his manhood, clean cut, handsome, stalwart, brilliant, he looked the part of a governor, and expressed the innermost feelings of the soul of a governor. 0. Max Glir'dner will doubtless be this state’s next governor, but even so, he will hardly live to see the occasion Tuesday night eclipsed for bi'illiance and in expression of love for one whose ser­ vices have marked Him for hpnor and approbation. The Salisbury Evening Post believes the only way to make the highways safe from drunken and reckless automobile drivers is to administer the firoper punishment and then see that that pitniahment sticks. Discussing this question, the Evening Post about expressea the feelings and sentiments of the average citizen when it malced this very sensible statement:, “Only five persons were killed ■when a reckless driver of an au­ tomobile pn one of the state’s highways ran amuck some days ago. Reports had it that the man had been deprived, of his license to drive a car, but the privilege was again extended him and the tragedy spon followed. “This sort of danger to the traveler on the highways bf the state will not be abated to the slightest degree lintll we punish people and let the penalty remain. Present methods iseem to be to impose a sentence arid thpn to reniit it, leaving the man to go his way. Our threat at punishment is becoming a joke and it is a rare case where one overtaken in such' fault seriously entertains the notion of get­ ting a penalty that will stick. “With a record, of five dead this driver ought to be threatened again, told that if he does .not behave we may have to force him to stay in sòme'.Sunday afternoon as a punishment. ^We nòte that in Raleigh, the other day a man under the influence .of whiskey drove his car through the guard railings and into a moving train which the Southern was handling on its track. The riian was fined and his license taken away from him for 12 months. We would be willing to wager a hat, that drunk or sober, this.man will be driving a car within thirty days, “And, by the way, we see that North .Carolin.n again led the list of Southern states in automobile fatalities the past week. The li.st of Southern states showed a décline,'but North Carolina led,by a large margin in doath distribution, . She usually does.” , Don’t treat thé ordinary woodpecker as a nuisance. His song is not as sweet and soothing as the mockingbird, the robin and tho wren,, and his noisy pocking and boi'injr sometimes displeases one but remember he has his job which aii'liil-wise Creator planned for him, and but for his services man.v of our fine fruit and fore.st trees would .be ruined by deadly, insects. Mr. Woodpecker bores in and pecks after and hammers on those insects, thereby saying the or­ chards and ,fore.sts. Treat him as a friend of man for he is. :In fact, people are,learning,that practically.,all birds are useful to mankind. The Charlotte Observer makes observation that the report of an eighteen million bale cotton crop issued a few days tfgo had little efi’éct on the, price, and suggests that the South is “shock proof.” It would really seem so,' When thè report of a seventeen million five hundred thou.sdnd bale crop was issued a little over ten days ago, the market/staggered just a bit, but within :twò 'days recovered .itself. The last ; report, that which came'near establitbing an eighteen million bale crop, effected the market very, little. It goes to show that some of the efforts being made, are'having a beneficial effect on holding up the price against these reports'which would naturally tend to force the; price down. ' We m^y be in error, but somehow: we feel that the price of cotton'has ¿Irefidy reached the low iwater mark, and that, from now pn it will :pither hold;; its own or g);^di)ally liae. , J ' Four World records fell iri. the sprint races which were a part of the Charlotte speedway’s program at the bowl near Plrieville yest­ erday. , V,;, -"'v-, 'The list of records as reléàsed: by C. W. Roberts last night show­ ed Bennett Hill breaking two in the great contest which he lost to Frank Lockhart in the first 26 mile sprint. Earl Cooper's five mile mark, made here in August fell when Hill traveled that distance in two minutes and 18.7 Seconds for an average speed PÌ 130.869 milés per hour. '' The three other marks shattered! yesterday Were madè at thé ro- cent Salem race. Hill’B tima /or the ten mile dis­ tance was four minutes and 34.14 aecond«. The speed was 131,32 miles per hour. Hill also held the old' record for this distance at 129.496 miles per hour. , Farnk Lockhart • broke the rè­ cord for thè 25 mile distancé held by Leon Durby at 130,393 milea per hour, Lockhart’s speed for the distancé was 132,405 miles per hour. ■ . ’ , Harry Hartz, 1926 champion, lowered the record of 128i249 mil-^ es per hour'for thé 50 mile disr tance held by^ Pete DePalo. Hart'/’, time for' the distance was 2!! minutes aiul 11.56 seconds for .an ayérage speed of 129.351 hilles per hour,■ , , , . ; jBsnriett; Hill polited a Miller' front wheel df'ive. car. l.ockhart and Hartz piloted Miller apeciala, BODY OF “UN^E JOE” CAN- NON IS LAID TO REST Fifty-si* defld and liw S was the toll,.taken mpP rail accidents ,(n'‘‘a I r. 1 ' » ■ • • . » . 'A - f M ?21 Statesi ‘ .Saturday, Su'nday''tìy'''>theVAÌil^éÌK|lfcf|,^_ shows. Of these, 12 were;;<!àtf|(ij| 'accidents at rÌEiilroad<‘i|VÌ'c^^^ itìgà/’ ' ' I ’ : ' ; The greatest Wa8,,ropprtód.''iin|;5 18 persons were |t){ Carolina <10; pe|| live« thru :iinju^ tributable to ' AlKbama,;aiid^'! ed the 'least' niiiii with one each, reported in both'' ! and Kentucky.. Florida' led’ infj injured. with:..!,.^7«|; Lbцiвiaria;■.;ànSfsr■ sbiiB receiviif;!;4i or ri-Jl «ccJlMl Fòllowing:dÉ<:_^^_,,. States of deathj;,(;ii caused' by ;tiraflCv>r .' .-'■‘iState I ., ,,..... Virginia. North Carolinà Tennessee .•.iU,'.'; Georgia ..........,; Louisiana .... Miasisaippl ... Kentucky „....i;.. South Carolina Arkansas ........ Alabamii ... Totals • In.. t ’ EARL С Simple Funeral Services Attended By People From All Walks of , Lift; Dawes Represents Gov- i\'i:ninent; 8,000 Children Present Wreath. Eorl F. Guri^^ son of Mr. atífí'v'r Mttüdo Curlee;|q five milos 'sputnifL Wedna»daÿ,(-ii]gh|j' à f té r, ,;;n;i.Ul,l певв^рЩ ^ei‘.:;ypu'rig:'Çnii^ii||‘w cd.ne^ been and , The ' young ; tria from :PhiIadetóh riiorning wherpw«?h hospital for -spme^ini claimed him JÌV^n'èsM , The funeral spryic/B wori at the home-'Saturdiÿ; at о clock, and. inteimeit was W aèill century ago had led to the the beginning eer in the halls of state, Verniii- fju u lion Street led today to M nhiir Cemetery and the end.pf the for the veteran statesman. ' rii„* At the Firat Methodist Church across the street from the Cannon young home there were drapyed honip-^^• • ■ it lay in the dark, 4 Mr.;'^! on the casket as ened house, th ere were oniÿ fiorai tributes to a great citizen. It was the wish of the fariiily‘ Î.4. that the services , .for thé, man ! home there were draped flags, but ' Hoiise be of the utmost simplici-l^:^^^ A^^^^ ty and even the men of ; state who I : .. gathered camé as friends and net as envoys of the government ; "Uncle Joe” so long served. ; .;',l bf.f^iwi Vice President Charles G. Daw-. Ki ' " es alone forpially represented:the; government of tho United States,-;‘0tljL._. aa the .representative bi- Presi-4'f^MÎfli dent Coolidge, ■ ;' ,, ' From the-brief church seryicepMffig ,'so set for 3 iv m., the way led.direct-pi^№ ly to' thb cemetery .iiiul a-^bdpsfW Fo/m.ei^ stone beside the grave of the hTiAMtiU'ièk, foi- whom .the s.;iaciou_g: old hpviàjf, .slavis, ;w was’ buiM.’ ; ; :• • j Kiojk wit Business and,public life in D/i-i interior ville halted for tho.funeral aiyl ¡11. the .ihi’ong; of ' rfiquvttevs j^aeo 'many school chiidreii.; ; ' _ .j/ eta, Mr* iiilft.city;j rberi Beatrice,! pme. in ,Bthèr*, ;| and Geneji 1^'; ' •■ A v a s a c c o n ic la i n u rei M'of jNew JJ 1 ^ 8 8 m a n y ■ Ù relgret tP PALACE IS |Г GAMBLIN(ffHALL l^inople, Nov. it^î maker and [breakei^ e;e, reigris it : Y||íl)l¿ IhÎè: favorite ’pa асв'п):р| yriiid,' arch tyrni t bf''jthje “Impire, has bei \ tV»ná^ 0 a ga^bllnè'vce ■ " Me whb wew'^'nce trbm obeisance to.;th< 'hance.'V,M‘,,..Y»:'' palace ofilcfala, se.cr ushs,. ccriçiubinmé's, pub-sed y eit fa :;)ip‘; : th' out ,'seeirig' riióírei'pí th ri thpir 0\уп:,Й;Р^р}п^^|1 Oo^ners, iife,/,npw^,ti'oppiu®%^^ In.'o, i'00nvit;,;whBr'e':tIi^i;,f'iin|f5/0 -----------. , iwroni wais'guaixlqd £.!ght thpusanirbf ;ith m from' except thd^o-.of tWe S 'u l'ta i^ ,. kindei'garton to high sc li^ i, gave lrutchcr,;'''the; baker, ,'tHei a penny each tow ard a flbrai trib- j itick maker iu''e cllrikirt&;^®^ uto. • ' , / NEGÍÍO HOY HANqÉÏ) , ^AT .li’A p ’T'rEVH.LF.' ■' Payotteville, Nov. 13.— Th/. body 'o|v Judge p'ichardson, 1)1- year-pld negrò,.AVas found ; this aftérnpon hanging to a',tr^'c in ihp' yard, of; the hpuse where he liyeclj hbro, It is (iot known wbatheri f V S V , 4.У 40 ...... death was fiècidental or inten'ti.à}. It ia thb'ught' he might have ;tí;eeri' pJayJn'g; ijj thé tree with the rPpe • 11-- - . «1. u : « ,the statel;/! hall where; his onetime guest, th Оогпщру, ■ secretly' Æ Ai'i claases 01 • sój^ score of national it ing about ithe ta and baccarat in while in ай adj kish' :wbmejji of, day- dance th latest of jqz Г/к И, ‘•'í,-:í4Í«.í"í, ; Evidenc iiite sho a n d ‘il^idenially i?ot his head, in-' who^^r the nopse, Another negro boy, crops ‘ 10 year's olji, cut the body down, ,b j,'^ rii 'щГ \ ''"M 'U k -' 14 ) ^ |T '-1 ■ Ч 5'' v№ mi ймеад ij«B»SjfeE3S5w ,..Ш С Т :К ' Г ’’ IV V v'í-' Г»Д*‘ ' rf-» Й, ‘i к 1Cy, ' .-■ „■■-'■ .. '. ■»' :' ■ : •-‘'■■••'V.-li. ■-■•-'.’i;.:* VBRyrSnow King'’m WiJ hiiw hoen nukini^ ijowl I^BNU<88acUxwlkt2tsay3 baking^^^ for '^.vith^-i ¿fryyeara.ati.f ■/ Ifbii i'caii 'cbilhtf|mV,M finei bi c- ^ B ^ in gP ow ^ ^ ’■ e quality (roia c . 1 to the last. tlie amount Cook Bwk. : A ir'ce copy !3 yo'irs ;or t' ! i#:IUM''reci^ exac% asking. Send (O.confi io.i.ij» '' t I'.wiU always get pcrfcct re- cover the co.'t packi:: j a.. I ; nuiling^ ^ ■ • '- CinvinnLiei, OMa te a s E C o n Я:1.. 'ingrcpipea.'!’ ■ irat ■ fThefe ars 44 ра^он or *hf ! in the' fanvou3 Snot^ JLii ji f o r ■"V Dean Schaub Outlinui Definite Plan for Betier Fanning V Methods Under; Présent , ■ ■' Conditions. • f e i ’''I KTd Sn.S t'' >’>'p5' I 't i,V' '!'i' Uv, â>4 « ;h ',., \k ' If .:1 Ï J'U.'?. •< ••••••••"••••';••*■ ” . , t№ AT A TIME (•Buying a new car is ono thing. Sell- ^ii)4;a‘iiBed Don’t get- rafi^tsihe two;^ you are dmost :^v;<‘;'aure to end up'with a new car you '‘’i'-''«¿ver really wanted. , G. G. w a l k e r ЙЮТОК CO. PHONK 11)9 MOCKSVILLE. N. C. ; A practical and successful plan for ¿iyihg relief to the cotton famera of North Carolina must suggest a substitution of other' profitable enterprises in Conntc- tion with cotton production. With ;Witl»' successful farmera and by experience o/ groups of faimers ■in those counties, where siich pro.^ grams, have been follaWed: ll ^ Each farmer should grow sufUcient grain and roughage to supply the needs of his work stock. 2. Growi nn ail-year-'round garden ,forJthe purpose of sup­ plying the needs of hia family with the necessary vegetables.such a plan we must have in mind, not only as much immediate ' and in most instances have a sUr- relief as possible, but also a sys- plus to market, tem of farming for 1927 and the j 3. Keep at least BO laying hens succeodihg years that there niay to supply the,^beds. of his own iamily and have a surplus of both ¥ оШ ЬдШИ, duettôilç- пШра^. onetbroo^' two liitòfé"^ Thlíwoiíia 125; bU8here/,Í ditibn 50 50 pouhtíe" each plg.'^' this amount'! not be a recurrence of such condi­ tions as now exist among many farmers in'^cotton countiea. To plan such'if substitution, the following facts must be taken.in- 'to consideration: The securing of an increase in the' price of the present cotton ’crop is almost entirely out of the hands of the grower, lie cnn aid blit the major relief must of necessity' come through' the niur-i keting n’nd flnnncial agencies now available or to. be created, , The present distress is.not duo, to any appreciable extent, to in­ creased production of cotton in North Carolina. While there has been an ihereasii In.aereage coupl­ ed AVjth' nn increased procl’uctioh per; acrc, yet the main' factor in "the. lar^e crops. Of Ijoth 1925 and 19S6 'ls the fact that during the Jn.s't ■;ifive 'years' Tesaa . and Okla­ homa ;:havp put'; into cotton more tha'ti’ ten millioh ficrea' of land that was .fortheriy' dev.oted to. :and; other purposes. '.This is af)- proximiitely; five;;;times the'total acreage \ devoted to!' dottoh .' in North' Garoiina. Another, facttir; which 'should' be ‘ takeniniio’ con- sideratiqii is that /it is cohsprvfi 'A poultry; and eggs for sale. . 4. Keep at least one family cow to supply the family with milk and butter, and whei'ever sufficient feeds are available ad­ ditional cows to produce milk and buttar to be sold on the market, 5. Produce sufficient pork for the family’s needs. If surplus corn is) available, increase'' thé suppl.v of hog.s^so as to be able to Sell on the local market or to take part in co.operative carlot .siiipments to tho larg'er .markets thus increasing tho family in- co'nie, ; ' '■ ■ • ' C. Plant cotton only on thb best cottoh iands, and restrict the acreage to , tliosc-,lands: tliat will prodiice at lonst ii, half bale clur- ing' a nOr'iiial seasOii. ; ' ’ ' ^ ' 7.; Have,'at, least;,two'so-called money;cròps.. :^■ V■:■''■';■ ' ' ,8’.. Begin à dolinite' rotation òf ci'Opsi wiiich'. should include a- 'le, jrunje,er,op grown oh at least one-' foiii'th .ofthe 'Cii itivated viicreafiie eflch year ,sp as^tp improve the •fertility.;.(if: thb, a'oil and iiltimate- ;ir be able to reduce tlVe cost of ■pi’OdUCtioni;.'. If-'- these ;rec,ommendations 'are tively estimated that an 'additional Put into operiitîon on ,most cotton *'*' ' ”'alici in.ТехЛа . ^^*|'Oñ^ntifìnlíy. i'e- r . f«^dV 'piodiicts ilWfR^ahould keep^ 'n'rf|fri6wi;at''!|eaiit' ¡igii^:,ÿètt‘ch':'.year;' ;re|Îpjpr;oxlma^ foi^V\';i4irid''in;;Vd- .^j^flèhrinëâl fiid shorts','-for- jMjt>iroperly, ■'■fed', . f|ied..will producè more thhnVônii^ënv of ipork; Wher- ever.the. farmi,ébi«8 surplus corn, it can, be markbt«d'throuflrh hogs to grerfter advAfttage than by sell­ ing it as grain»;"This'ha* been proven by; aevéjfilihtindMd farmr er«, wjio,haver»d.?aiicl sold thbu.‘ sands of,' head of^tiogs during this' year and }>ave iMcelvod a return for their corn of talmoât' ?2.00 per bushel. This offers an excèllent opportunity for the production .of, thé necessary meat'supply;fpr the farm, and also as a subBtitutioh of a money crop in tthe place s of cotton. , , Cotton Production. It ' is sel-. dom profitable 'to; :prodnc6; cotton; under .iNorthi Caroiiha: ■cofvditioh's when the yielda*are ,!éss than: onè-î half df:a bhie.’per aOre.-With the present, conditions',''it^ is irhpera-': tive 'therofpr.ei' that tliose .lands planted to iCottoii‘,l)p 'ï;i>8tri(‘téd to. .iAn .'actual:' »tüd.v;;%i<ïe'ij) 1924 of 1,471 fnrm's:MÒw'éd'.thnt..tnnaòri?3 ncres yieI^hK";24a,ip;ptì^tì3,:5o'IÌ^ per ,, aci'e. jyAll '?rbiintj,ÿt|iat.'„wi11 not produce one-half.'Ájíor. threéV .JSO'.iCÌOpi'.’.'tIfi! ,better còn^ioii'..,. hbsibtily cotton.,[ ''ditioYi' pravailB, are now growing otl!|élr|# a\oiig iswith ; cottpn.?^j|'a^ large increaae^ inVtobailcdl in .1927-may ‘'rtsultfj about : thè same' sittìBl bacoo : as ' is <n W -1fie/Q'élì ton. A nùmbér, of lie already expressed' tHS., intending to plant a ip 1927-.in ;the place'of^coi a plan, if; carried^ into 'effect will be fatal.,, 'liotations. ; .’North Carolina |{irjme^s now use more commercial fertnl*or> than nnУ^;'óth'ér state; Thiai,;isya‘n expense that; hiùst be paid frbhi Olir money cropk. If a-deflnlte rotation which ihcliides legunies :là;foÌtowed it .will result in improved . ferti|it.V -:'Of the' land with greater yields per acre, and a corresponding decrease in .the '.productiont^c.ost's of pr crops. At len's(:^^ne-fpurth of the cultivated ' land ^should. <be planted ,,to a Ic-i gume ctpp each year.' ; /- f- ^The iCollege of Agriculture be- JieV; ¡a;, in!*this program.lieoauseVit has^ljroV'en successfu ;fìirihèrs in evtry,còttjìjn cptinÌy; in th'é||^t'eyanai*au‘-county, and 'oth­ er . ;extensi'on'i*W^ , deydte ;thòlr-efforts to .i{s^jfuli;f& By J.;0,'Schaub,'';pGan;nird,. Direc­ tor School. of Agriculture. ■: .¡Ä i'-il/ s ■>< ".'К . V‘ ади 4É4 Nártll Liki^:i£¿ winston .salbm > !'c. It;-..'If *. • ■ ппЗ--<с.:^сиоате'- -ч' * •'■■■DENTIST'..::.>:л *;.г,: .Mocksviiléi :'N. ! с. • # Х-Еау ; .', ; i : ,Dinghosis * •.. Office' Phone,; 110 • * Résidence Phone 30, ; • .■ * я!|,1ю1;!я:ка1|11я sa ш ш ii i‘■ ,i a'ig,ni!iia:í;ira;ii№p'!i'w ',A USè-D CAI5 IS ONLY AS DEPeNDABLe \ AS* THE .DE-ALE-R WHG SELLS IT ilwv:A e FOOD FOR THOUGHT , id of buying $125.00 ad for this date ive reduced 125 Hats $1.00 each. Come^nd get your hat aiid dollar. Our :fii^flit\uought is bur customers, “the goose ih it li's the golden eggs.” ' 1.000 Ò ' V :lB«eutlful (Hats—- Velvets, j I ГеИ), Satins ■.p,pecialIled)ctions—Values , itoV^9,98..: Aiy hat in the houàe ;. ■ Sm ,,;. i'i.OiO .'Special .Stocking Values Siik—Wool—Lisle l5c, 25c, 49c, 69c, 98c,.?1.49, /'■ ; .^ ?1.98^ ■ '• - '■■ ■' Don’t Forget Our Silk Und- ■ erwear Offer, This Week :,'$1.49/:', uJoycIy Gai men^—Coals and . ^ -i - . v vE|ri.4fes :'^^''.'?-^:Niqe, Asao?raîoiiï:ToWels ials. Valuea+All; .Color.s 8c, lOc, 15c, ;25c, 35c, 49c l.y^,' $0,5f8i ; .$898, •-^12.98, . ' ' |>$14.98,!^$18,7a. $22.48 fOnè Odd Lot о: Jhckèts ;,$l;Ìf8^' I te-Inch inch' All' Llh I ; Й.4? ïG-În. Flaiirieis • Î , Color iWw ■.i I Our^ 49c; County hurdoned ■ ßü'lneh Lovuly C0'ating)( , ’, $1.39 Forget jViotoi .■' ■-■ I. .29c: Our Spec takiin'g pietoil lòrièy > but' did Harbit' G)eK AIr Avaa broi Nice Se'amltísá Sheets s :;;.v.;ï;::’;;''98c;-',; .. ' Fatho'^i- ■ Géorge Sheeting 27-Inch Light Outing ,• .Iron .King s :8-^0uiice , Ticking 29c .Best al ^Pointed , 98c ■' D^éar Folles—We have so■ . v’.- Í ' . ' '■ . ..■values/ we’want, you to look ' 1 i Special Dress Goods Oiler ■ • v29c . '. '■■ v-'y.:-, .■.■■■ J -, LumberjaCks^Ñice ; Assort- \ ■.V'.me'iit ' ■ '. . : $1.49. .?1.98,, $2.98, $3,9f "j Spindalo Ginghams N ' 39c , ’ Under.\venr for all the Fanii- . . iiy~Ali Kinds 25c, 49c, 09c, 75c, ^ 98c, $1,49 any"nice , things, such nice '----- on now. iAh , ,• Sherifft И yW94^ L - em over.—cpme The 'WINSTON-SALBM, N. 0. I ton million acres iof land - and Qkíahbniá .can; be cultivated in cptton-'nt a.decidedly'lesii' pro­ duction . cost. ji,er'; acre ; ;tli i n is ih.e ta.s'o : i n ! thi.s Statqi^ : ■ .■ , ;, ; In pjanning any substitut on for cotton;; weshould ' . have' ii , mm ;1 .that,the North Carpiina^farmer i,s^ both a ;consumer-and a iproducer.' ■Many ;ithous,and, cotton jirowei'.s^ jtiow ipurchase in the',open market,! much of, ihoir supplie,^ that 'can be^ profltably 'growhion'^ their ,qwn farms. It must also b'e taken into consideration that there is grave danger in any large number of otir farmers substituting the other so- called money crops in tho 'place of cottOh, Tho balance of crop production may be easily disturb­ ad, This will ,re.sult in an over­ production of any other cash crop that they might undertake to pro­ duce 'with just as di.sastrous re-: suits to the individual as is the cáse ufider our present system. Any change of plan on the part of the. management of the farm must involve as little additional expense; as possible, on the part of the farmer other than'his avai­ lable labor.- With thesé facts; in; mind, tho following suggestions are, made in the firm belief ithat if follo\yed, they will stabilize farrning, bn, a more profitable basis during thè, course, of the coming, year, ;and succeedii'ig years. duco the acreage, now planted to' 'ppttpn, it w,ill;d,islf'ributp,.the'ava.il- ablp .labor- throughput 'year, and'Avill,mnko the,f(irif(: nior'e'oco.-: noniic'nily,!profitable,' rogardlPsa of,;'wliat- :farmers- in: other states nia.v dp. The; following Itifpr.matlon is- .gJ'Vbh ';by,'\Vi|y of. exjilnnntioii io' th|it , eii'clf^farmoi’ niny tako ihtb cbnsjdei’ntlpn; his own local con-^ ditions and /so'^plan:- ills t’hrmirig enterih'ises that he will meet his p\vn needs ‘ for . food , '«'nd' food crops, and alsO produce a sur­ plus. . Growing Feed for Livestock,'A good ration for one work animal for one year is approximately GO bushels of grain nnd two tons bf hay. A ir of these products can be grown on the average cotton farm. One mdrchant in a typical eastern cotton county sells on an average to farmers more than 2,- 500 ,tons of hn'y per, year, . Other merchants in the same county are also selling hay. An average of one ton of hay can be, aiid is be­ ing produced pe?,t,iicre in this same cpunty. If this''niiy were grown instead of being shipped in from other states, it would require al)oul;/one-;fourth of the 25,000 acres now devoted tp cottpn. in that cpunty,, Similai conditions pxl.st in other cotton^’cQuntias.' • Gardens. . A garden plot of-one- 'half acrci is ample to'furnish aiThese .suggestions aiie substan- .,“‘'*’3 J® 'to' furnish a tiated. by 'actual ^demonstrations ™’hil.v of five with a complete and Wrigley*» Chewing Sweet helps teeth, mouthy throat and digestion in ,a delightful and refreshing way. Removea odora of smoking a ^ eating. People of refinenient tiM it. baiaiiCQd supply of vegetables, to­ gether; with a surplus for storing and'çânning. The allyear garden can.be; macie to supply fresh vego- tablesjit d’fferent seasons in the year, iuid a small amount for,sale. Poultry,' Eacli .family should have at least 60 laying hená. In order. ,to .maintain this inumbor, it i.s neeessiU'y to ra¡.so at least ioo young ,; chickens, T.lie' !cockc(rels and most of the ■ bid 'birds may then be sold for cash and the re­ maining ’'hens and pullet's carried over for the /future, :]lecords of many poultry growers . in' the Stato during the last t’ew, yeai’s show that with proper nianage- ment and feed, each hpn will re­ turn a net profit of'at least .$2.00 per bird i)(ir year. This offers an unusUal opportunity for farmers to have a constant iiicoino thr­ oughout tho yenr, iind, in addition to supply the family -with poultry products. Dairy Products. It is now a- grced by physicians, health ofllci- als and nutrition investigators thnt milk is an absolute necessity for thé proper, growth of ehild- ren. In a large number of the cotton counties there is now'ah aver.ige of only one cow to each four to five familjesi Thé annual feod;,réquireimeñtB for an'SOO- pound cowÌ are approxiroately IB buthels of corn, 10 bushels > of LITTLE & SINK ' . Winston-Salemi. N. ,C. .‘ DEPENDABLE FÒÒTWEÀl? \ 434Mi Trade Street Fine shoes for men; ladies and children M E N ’S H pSIE H Y--LA D IE S’ LION BRAND SHOES Formen andi boys^**Work and school wear made of H AR DY HIDE LEATHER. Rubbers and R^ A school tablet free with each pair of ijtchool shoes 'й» M я ш и, 1-N 'И м . kì м 3 I ■'-•44, , 1 „< 1 ir. I Everything For Spdrisihan You want to know what you are getting wheiiyou buy a gun; Apoor oneis rto use p to a:nyoné. A g-ood orie is a source oi great pleasure. Inspect our stock of L. C. Smith and Winchester Guns as well as ouramu- . nition. Thé hunting season is here; Are you ready? . ’ Big Stock Hùntijng Çlothes Leathw ánd Canvass {.«ggins t№ Col 433 W e street f W ÀÎ I и Ж' ' i f.,‘> rt I/ /Ч WE HAVE BEEN BUyiNQ AND PREPARING FOR THlS SALE FOR MONTHS, AND AT THIS TIME „ ARE ABU: to OFFER YOU SOMETHING VERY UNUSUAL IN PRIGES bìURING THIS SALE. CmL STO^ IS OVERFlX)WlNG IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AND WE ONLY ASK tHAT Y ^ R E ^O y» 1>RICES^B^^ EARLY. WE EXPECT tO OFlFER VALÜÉS IN THIS SALÌ AÌPPRECIÀ'TÉ and we know THAT we w M money. DÒN’t ТО»EA1U.Y. CHILDREN.'^» DEPA Teddy Bear Suits ffliF chiidren in,air colors and sizes, tfiir price ..:,;l,.,.:;„;j3.98.$f 98' ; Chlldi'en’s Sadques ,,......„$1.48 . Caijs; io' Maich;',;:.„v^.'.l..<..;;„,i..59c , Childreh’fl SWèati^B and Lumb:', erjacks In ail ,colbr .plaids. Slip- ■over and'Coat. . < ^nr price ...98c to 12.98, Chlldren’R Sateen Bioomers in Black. Our price« ... 29c to 48c - Bbbtees in all Colors 29c; to -590 ■- ' HOSE Chlld|ren’s Stackings' We have a big assortment of Children's Hose In, siziçs' from SVi to 9. . If you see our stock­ ings at the price we have on them you will buy and save money .......................29c-39c-48c CHILDREN’S COA’rg. .. We have a big assclrtm'eht' of ^’' Children’s' Coats in sizes 2 to ‘ '•’.■|'í6,,;,,6 ;tb|,l6, ■'yenrs,,';.wifH,',' fin' col- ■;:''-'*ÍBr8'.i'áiií'clvi.'¿uÍrH If . the kiddie» nee'cf a cbiit now is ; i'he, time to save money. Our i sale price— ' ,V’ $2.98, $5.i»5; tp $12.95 : ■■;;■;;,V,:: WOOLEN GOOD^.'‘,r Fiannel.iln Sfi-inch width. In 'all colors. We have a big pa- sortment 4o choose fnim. Our '. price .'................................$2.89 54-iiich 'Flannel in ' big assort­ ment\ofcolqr8« This is a $2.5(1 quality. ThiK best value In oi^ ' Store. Our : s^e price ,....:fl,98 ' We' arte showiiiK a big assort- mint b|f PIaid\ Suiting in the { 'colors У(Ой want and our price Vd ln\ plain мцЙ plaids, In Jahfl« jOiieeii, Clárete Blue^. Black. TMh is a 1^ 8 quality. СЬ||г;и1е »YES nalÀ ' About llV dozen in Ml col ara ; and a i ^ Chamoi^le Sued¿ This le\a big valile! will go faat FrMay and Batk- day mo^r^ng. Ч OufPlrlcè.';....... We have la wonderful assort- , ment of Gloves, wi^h the sport : and fancy (Buffs, & t u^^B^bjv yoii KiJaW ;muchj we cafr .;■ ';ón : ybur .'gloves Ladies' Fancy Ki« every new style. ing them at a very this' sale . , $2.fiV $^^ ChIldF.eh's CHamoisette Gloves in all colors, sizes ; ! 5. . Our prices'; , ... . '■ SILK GOODS Satin Back„Crepe, 40 inchcs wide. In colors Crackle, Blue, CUivet, Wine, Green, Navy Blue nnd Black and other seasonable colc|rs. Our sale price .,.,,$2.8J /Crepe de thine. In all colors. We sell oddles of this crepe at • $1.79. Our sale price is _ only........................... We have just purchased' for this salé a very large quantity of coats, everything in the new styles and! iï you read our prices you will be convinced that this purchaseof cot t} will mean a wonderful saving to you Come.to see our coats before you buy. 100 This lot of coats ifi composed of all the better fur col­ lars and styles, in all sizes. Every coat a new arid dif­ ferent color. Let us show you this assortment before they are picked over. Our sale prices. In a wonderful assortment of all the new styles,in Suede,Velour,Bolivia and Needle Ponit. With fur collars and cuffs in jun- ioir fiiizes,r Also sizes 16 to 48. This lot of cdats is wpHK up to You can’t ap- p i^ ia ^ :^ you see the coats. Our sale price MlL^ÈRY-HUNÒRÉDe NEW SXYLBS Satin and Metallc Hata, tha thing.' ' Also the new; cA«li »len. Л We Shave ^uat jiitf big shipment of thcea' o«er spécial Friday, aiid‘> day. : If :yoi^wieh ta aaVa • ,v» éÿ oh mllllnety.i 8aa;iHlr I " Оцг■prices ■•.:;4:v...|4.M aal^^ A big lot qf Felt H ita -^ ^ you haVe hccii piiytai llM iWe will oljrer yan a let ttfiif.i please you for, aháliit halfj In this sale. Our. prlca,.., Large Velvet and Satin Hai,i We have about SO of these larg«, Hats and our prices, have-been' $10.95 to $12.95. We wlll sell fhem Friday nnd Saturday while j: they Inst i..'..,........... 1 $6.95 ChiFdrcrt's Hats ^ 'i. We have a ,Wondurful nss<î(i4-' ^eñt of Children’s Hats In,ally new colors and sizes. If the kid- ,(licH need a hatrçee our, stopk,,.''' ■ bsforq.ïyoii ,buyu'bt'<i/,f) '^^Ь%ЬМ 'i^l^pricëSLiv^fêfl.Oe'and'^IAMu« In sizes from 16 to 48,- with^fur collars. In a-big range of new Colors and styles You will be surpris^ to see the low price we have on the^ coats when you see the; quality. Worth $18.50, ouir sale price Our Dress Departiirierit is com­ plete with everything in Ladies* Dresses, look at our pncé and be ^ere early. You^ill t»iy a dress Olir price if yoiii don’t need iti ead pur iprices belowi jhis lot of Dresses for street and ^;^^se wear is compq^éd òi Suit- ^Mìs and Siik Foulards. In big ¡¡¿‘is for women and all good thtj,\last. Our price only LádiésvDiresses 200 Ladies’ Dresses in Jerseys,- Satiiu, Crepe and ^ergee. In all colerje and sIms, vejry pret- w o R E ty styles; iWor^h up to $10.00. In this sale they will gei fiiet, Í Our,' pric¿ wllf be only ..a.«.»..-.— ■■ Ш | ^ 3 4S4 North Liberty Street 300 Ladies’ D res^ In Satin Back Crepe, ail the better woolen ma-\ terials, and a wonderful assortment of styles. This lot of dresses was bought for thjs sale and will be sold at a real sale price. Sizes 16 to 50. See this lot Friday before they are picked over. Wortli up to $29.50, our sale price 'v Party and Dinner Dresses V Also a big assortment of Street Dresses in all the now materials. Beautifully trimmed and aré all the latest make.. See our assortment. Our .prices 'HATí'^ALBa*'. ,.<{*<’1 We. will sell nboiit'250’Hals in'j belts and Velvcffi, in all new, | styles and colors. Not, old stock '^but good new hats and;; fhey aré worth up toi $5^00, <|ur Firice while they last.....„$1^00*? COATS SPOOL COTTQUi in all colors and. white and biick. Buy It here—6 faii< 2Sc SPEGIAU—HAT BOXES We arò selllng In thls/Mia' $ f i large élzé ladies hat boi. $4,09. J value. Our prica ..............$2.*8 j' HEAVY COLLEGE, ,'..SWEATERS . V In all colors and ulxH. Catlan and ail-'ivool We ca<i offcjr you a wonderful low price on:!th«a: Our sale prices $1.98 to $8JS' .,,;'ч;-:-Р1БСЕ «OQPS: > Outing iiñse-lñéhwall colora andvplalde, If you., want oùùhg . we can aa\e'yaa^, money. Our sale price 1ве t 27>fnch Ouiing 1ц checks and plaids, ./Buy:it here special 10c >' 9-4 yhblèjBched: Sheeting, a 60c quaJHy,; - Our sale prices , Í 3 yards fmr , ;/ , > . $1.00 '. RIVER SroE PI.AIDS Our price is; right. Dutr Sale- price i..,;.,.::.,;.,’..,;,. 18c SILK GOODS ■ Sat.'n in colors: ' Blue, Black, ^;Rose, Rц.st, (Claret. Also Rrc- . cade. Satin, 'Jungle Green ;and Chárrel Red. 40-inch wiufh’ iind a very heavy quality $L48; >4 hU í t Í S r a йд'ЭД¡íV/¿ ' ь î.î.fs'ÿi'M й. Ail SuK Satín Gnarmause, in cpiprs: Black, : Blue, :Glii|ret; :Iiose, '.fuhgic Green,- 'VVine and all colors. 40-inch width. A beautiful quality; Our sale price $1.98i An exceptional purchase enahl es us to sell it ai^this pr,lce. TH E ''ÿr*T'" $19.95 to $39.50 i ,.'4 .1 '1< n ’ S' “ l< ^ *^4 4?4Nortb^UbiertyStrMt^ ^ ;^iNS-roN.SALEW,\N. л ■V .Ijí EJvery Thurar^ay at •yille, North Caroline-. Ж А * ^ С . H U N EYCirrr ^ ____-----/7'^-J.c:F.,.LEACH Publmher. while this w.aa ;bein’ done; Mr. Call, the 'Publican candidate for the Senate, beat Mr. Cranor, his Dimmcrcrat opponent, 'zactiy 304 Votes. Neither Mr/ Call or Mr. Cranor made any campaign in this county. ^^Klfànasing Editor./itoTâAr.-ir-./t'.. ■ lâuliéertptioii Rates: ■ iiipi Six Months 50 Cents, fitly Jn Advance. ,{ 1' V ...vit the poet office at N. €.• as second-class blinder the aét of March iocksylll«^ N, C., Nov. 18, 1926 ----■■ ■■ ~ ----------- ---- li^Euy Red Cross Christmas Seals, ti'don’t; get that mixed up th liDecember Red Croes Roll Call fcinent.VThe se^ls are sold by iiitional Tuberculosis Aeso- The Red Cross Roll Cáll on> by the American , Red , . IS8. Join the roll call and buy k.‘¿eal§;':t|»oi'ii , . Ш ■ ■■ ■ .... — •íVÍi-.TnefAnnual, coal strike in Ame- l ^'rica wae, "averted” this < year. li/'Thére'e.a reason. The strike ofthe ItV British^mlhers made an American l«-:'!V:itr!kW^^^^ , It;! afforded rise in' the ; price of icoal without bothering L'^the iillne ;owhere .arid coal miners ll, |ttfi Am¡i)r^ca,jábQÍit colluding to- ]jl7¡ÉeOi^¿|iri!|he.;:ü^ ' in order I' to Hatch tlipi an ucuse for robbing Í ' ?The i^et trpubiespme detour on А^ЦсЬкп Scenic Highway betweeii :?Aiíhévi]1é ' Atlanta was tut'out ^"fe^tclttya ag^ when the last stretch fox hardsurfacing be- Г ;tween; thoe^.;twq citie <' ;p1ete4. TWBré' ái^e^w 264 miles «t -hardeurfácing between 'Aáhe-' ;p ¡PiIle^nd) Atlántá; by way of Bry- ! j топ ' City' '^l^jifpr^rvLaytfren Л. and Decatüi’/^áciíording to a re- ’> ceirtt'' newsin ,tho Asheyili? Citizen. spring 'hasf iU countryside' f . I t5hami,M?ut for real beauty ho (ÍJ яеавоп can beát this. The fletás «Í ;«hd ( Woods are.; decorated;. ;áiid, 'd' <3aubed :with all the .ciilórs' ^ ; Í .rainVow. No artist сбЩ paint • So it ’pear rke Parson Jones’ si.x-days canipi;;”-\ here, togeth­ er with the work oi tocal,man­ ager, got him, just TWENTY- THREE more votes than his fun- nin’ miite, Mr. Cali, received with-, out any e’nmr.nign at all* ' Davie County is not alone in its plight as a constant victim of political demagoguery; other counties Imve to contend with .the iame evil. The recent campaign waa filled with false charges of oiflcial misconduct on the part of our Citizen officials four years 'ago, which were about as well- founded as so many balloons floating through spaice., However, they were uttered by astute poli­ ticians trained in the art of de­ ception and the effett of them. Parson Jones must be a preach-1 were felt by the citizens of the er like he says he is for his vote ' County .at the polls on November shows he shore ain’t much of a 2nd. political campaigner. “Davie, Wilkes remained true to the Republican column, “ Macon county is reporcea «e- , i‘* publican while Cherokee, usually Davie coiiht^ in,reieent a Republican county is reported "run as higlilîàS'ON.Ë.'TMOU^ fchored in the Republican column/'come a jpiialiW;©;:P.' Alexander, which nas a one-sided .times ,and' cust0mes ,.cht>nge,\ and election law all in favor of the „the Hearts ofte change Democrats, is reported ' to hnve with them,' There must be now gone that way, t.v has gone Up in Wiitaujia where the Re­ publicans wei'e desperately clam- Well, it might be a good idea oring for return to power' this for some of the ex-postmasters yenr, similar attacks were made who tried to uphold postmaster on the Democratic administration. Sheek in his ;act to ,prohibit this G. 0. P. candidates, during^the paper from the proper use of the early part of the campaign, broad- local mails; to take notice to the cast their charges that excessive decision' made by the postoffice j jjgbursements by the county department at Wàshington recent-^ school funds of the county. In I ly. We have gotton our money [ „n effort to . mislead the voters, back and have been advised that these, charges were exploited as .there will be no more two cent, proof of Deitpocratic inefficiency. hu8ine.S3 in th« mailing of our‘ An audit was made by A. T. Allen, 'papers. Certified Public Accountant, ac­ cording to Associated Press dis­ patch under date of November 10,: 1926, and the report thereof show- 200.;■^-1“Randolph county is Democri»-, tic ' ns is Caldwell and Iredell. Nothing more waa expected from following facts ii; i In the bienniai>cohtest for gross in 1920 Cb^,;the G., p. P. can Iredell, the home county of those ' didate,'recei'veal2,G52 vo te stlie ? three choice Democrntic political , hands, of Davie's electorate; while. , ringseters, Hoss Watts, Jim Hart- Hnmrner, ness and Zeb Long. “Stokes is reported to ent,'received It was only another of the many dirty, undermined ways of receiv- ___________________ ing votes that caused all this two I ijd that the school board’s cur- cent business, But we “showed” up in this one. have They’ll all come out this wny if you ■(vill just stay with them arid do a little investigating your­ self. ' ' ■ > fhe Iind>capa,aS'^|ti nont/’Fpprots, I . , J, «l»on,-were horahle to collec\ithe 1/' ’ 'colors which would be neceisary, ' i/pol^'/jiindr silver and red ; and Hl<;riiMlbn: and purple;: If you have ï» r I f ^ind'/ silver and . red n\and purple^ . *,1iot taken, ajirlve into the cojiniry, sure to do so before the, colors! j| 9^ landscape,/. ‘ i' À /JàoiicBoiiville news, dispàtoii V i'.wlh'iof 'f. man in Florida who has •lr««dy^ celebrated his 100th blrtljday; jinniversary and who three boxes pf .cigars n ^ weeV and gets away with it. That’s about ^he biggest story coining . out. of that state sinc^ VV the'tornado^;';.But how long woüld J that man : have lived by being u bit, more ‘temperate with his . smoking hahit? But, who knows? Maybe smoking has not shortened JriM days after all.' ■ .»/!i'A ‘storyi conges: from Ohio that 8,^'iarmer of the stidte recently . notice» that the wool on his sheep wiifl of a dark green ! qblor. He ' ; în^estigated the cause. He found n rthat there had been so much rain !'->duiflng the late summer and iall ■ :thnt the wool was kept continu- .ioU8}.v wet. The sheep rubbed ',„ ;:against 'the haystacks . and tho V'"timothy seed fell into the' wool. ; The'wnrmth and moisture caused ■',;:the i»eed to sprout and as a mat- • ■’ tfer ot; tnct the sheep wei’e cover- ',v) ed with a n 1 co growth ‘of timotliy. 11 tlo'n’t Hopm tlia^ Parson, Johni R Jone,“} 19 m^uch of Uicunipaign- üi whoii jc'tomes lo ijqliUcai; lie, ;3íot juBllinbovit half.as ,í)\ány, votes In.tlic^ pisltUíL on Novfimber 2iid ;is Jl u‘jju) tner, Joiiiusoii. J. Haycs, tos IjOL^i a’git^jn'’ ,ind,; liis vote litis ni&Díívio C'ounty'->xhere ho fepi'nt wliüle ■lí'cpk' ,preácliin’ »Ijout oclMealion and Éhe.-’téctiyp tanlT loóle hko; hi3 ,argu- irienÍB 1(®k well. ' '! > ; 4 ■Jountv gave the parson y of only 327 votes over loupseau, oi: Wilkesboro, e lact that the parson !' 'Davio 'ii majoi'i, ¿алууог ■ despite t had .1 Itlfi^l campaign,,manager, and an orMUizatlon^ Wpi’Hi.n'^^^or him, whilfÍLaVfyíJÍ |louBse^u; was juat runninlW:|W* Own ШЦП;’ And : In the Offlcial Bikllpt which was printed in this paper'.last we said: “Mocksville Tpwn.ship E. D. Ijam- e's 639, S; R. Bessent 369.”, 'I'his, of ^course was an error by the operator, Which was overlooked by thé prooi reader. The ballot wis: Ijames THREE.HUNDRED AND SIXTY-NINE, while Bessent polled SIX HUNDRED AND 'raWRTY-NINB. We make (this statement in order that no one may bo mislead by the majorities, and, regret that same' was made. We want it understood that no Republican can get a majority in Mocksville township;: ;; WHAT.S THR USE? i ,. ' When progressive, counties like iGuilford, Gftston, Mecklenburg, Wake,; Forsyth, Buncombé, etc., consistently return overwhelm- inflt 'democratic; majorities! each election year, and poorer counties like Davie, Yadkin (not a railroad !ln 'it) 'Wilkes,', Yancey etc., keep on' adhering to the unprogressiVe policies of ; the Republican . party, isn’t it time for tlioughtful men and woman who ha.ve been voting the Republican ticket in th^se poorer, counties to pause and ask themselves the question: /.“Why continue to closc bvir eyes to facté?” „ ; How miuch good can a Repub rent assets were ?14,046,90 in ex­ cess of all liabilities. The audit put an end to the false charges and the Democrntic party swept its entire ticket into office again. Whenever the .nyerago voter gains the benefit of .truth he turns his back on the propagan­ dist who seeks to deceive him with false rumors, but it is not always possible to present facts until after the propagandist’s purpose has been achieved. Up in Wata­ uga the truth caught up wiith, and overcome the false rumors that were circulating agóihst the county board of education and complete vindic.ition was accord­ ed the bonrd in time to counter­ act the ill effects of propaganda. Had the people of Davio County been given the same opportunity toj.know and understand the real character of the attacks which wpri made on the Citizens’ nomi- neó!| during the recent campaign, there'would have been no G. 0. P. majorities in Davie this year. Lei’s learn then to follow the ex­ ample set by our friends in Wata- ug'à and await with patience the fujl development of facts before wii agree to subscribe to the poli­ ticai chicanery of trained experts. IT’S DIFFERENT IN DAVIE In last week’s issue, of the Davie Record, thé following article from thé Union Republican; appeared under a 24-polnt hoad: “DEMOCRATS AND BOOZE “The election last Tuesday was disastrous to the Republican par- _______ . ,ty generally throughout the'pa- iican representative accomplish tion and in North C^iroliria, ^t for his constituency when tho ' was a great day for the Democrats odds are against him in the pro- and the liquor adherents, for in portion of six to one? FACTS AND FIGURES In the 1925 session of thé North Carolina House of Representativ­ es the Republicans controlled twenty seats out of a total of one hundred and twenty, or just 16 2-3 per cent of .the entire member­ ship. In the, 1927 session convening next January the Republicans vyill , control bu* FOUHTEBN seats, or' ■just 11 2-3 per cent of the total. In the last two yoars the Re­ publicans of Nor.th Carolina have lost SIX seats in the Lower House, or ju.st 80 per cent of their total 1925 représentation. ■ 0. 0. P. in North Carolina may not be wholly dead,, as ao many statoijmeii claim, but according! to tho above fact.s. and figures; it surely seems to be “in extremis.’’ , SOME MORE FACTS • Tn the 1927 session of tho North Carolina Senate, there will' be forty six Dehiocrata and FOUR (4) Republicans entitled to seats, F(!),CJIi seats out of^the possible fifty: means the Republicans will control just EIGHT PER ' QENT: ;bf the;full strength of-the,.Soil-, atoi' " ■,"-7. Davio :will be rppresentpd (?) b.y one of these “oight-por-cent- ors" who will go «.lown to Ralpigli totally out of harmony wi^h the forty'six gentlepien who mako'iip the other 92 per cent. How can we hope to retain the respect pf tho jieoplo , of North ' Carolina when we constantly clin^' to a puny minority which resists every measure' designed to advance the common interests of the State? How long, dp you suppose, vypuid it take fpr squad .to dor , feat-an! army? 1, ^ many of the States the Democra­ tic candidates were out and out opposed to prohibition and in favor of the dry laws being re­ pealed. “In New York State Governor AI Smith, leader of the wet ele­ ment in tho nation was re-elect- ed governor by a big majority and Judge Robert P. Wagner, anoth­ er Tammany wet Democrat was elected to the ssnate. , "Massachusetts, the home State of President Coolidge, elected'Da­ vid,^,I. Walsh, a wot Catholic to tho United States senate defeat­ ing W. M, Butler, dry, and chair­ man of, the Nationai Republican executive comrriittce., ' “It) Missouri, Harry 'B. Havves, another dripping, wet Democrat dofoated George II. ,Williams; “In Ohio, Atloe Pomerehe, wet! Doinocriit, was defeated' after, a bitter figiit, by Senator Willis,, dry'RoDublican;;, ' , / V'!; ' . . “IlIinoi.ii had a Democratic t^an- didato 'as wet aa Lake Michigan,; Geo. Bronuan, but Smith, Repub-' lican, Avas elocte'd. ; : “In Maryland, L. F. Tydingii, another, -wet Democrat, . won out over Senator' Weller, dry ’Repub­ lican. ' ' ■ ■ : ': i‘,!Th<! ^^publicans will ha,ve 48 . members,in the United States.sen'-! ate after next Marchj' and the; Democrats will! have 47.. The ilpuaq of Rtpresontiitivea is Re­ publican by about 40;majo'rity. ; :j ‘‘Pennsylvania elected .William S,;VVaro; Republican, ' and , Con- necticut! returned Hiram • Bing­ ham; Republican. . . ■ “Aii the Democi’atic ' reprofeen- tativea ii.', the,-01' congresiiional districts of North Carolina were olected last week. “Senator Overman . defeated. Jphnsph J. Hayea by around 7?»* ООО majority and the legislature is overwhelmingly Democratic; v bootleg element? By taking the ents. three named counties we wonld The case of , Mr^ Grant is , e v ' 4 n _________ вау ^yBS.V Davie ha* beeii Re- more vddi|tiV6 of G; p. P. decajr. Д! publlc^:'M' "‘wet” «уф .slnci.tlwi,Duirlhg!tlW'p*t tei3t’4re?ini;;hls^ stock-law, and booze flght' occnr*: lorltv hi»« tonnled from 610 to lOTr.,,',. . NURSERY STOCK ed, and Ihmie is ho way ht' oiccer-' jority hait toppled froni eiÒtó 107, , * y getting or'!.slightly imòre than 13ÌGHT,Y- * Peach, Apple, Grape; Vines, * » ■> *<»> rpwn, VRR Г1ЛМТ ' nn. * Shrubs .' ' ’ *out of .it either as long as the TWOr PER ,CENT^ .while !Ы people are going to try to belieyc ponènte haye made! ! consistent such rot as the aforeaaid^iNHMini gains in the‘;Pumberlof votes try to beat Into the head» of th* voters. ■; Davie, we are proud to say, is fast learning or the mistake she made by leaving the Democratic party forty years ago, and ié fast coming.back. ZERO A *A LIMIT ceived each year.' \T,he loss of 508 majority. vote% during a period^^^^o^ six years means'a reduction; at ,th« rate bf 125 majprity, vote^i for each! ei'ectioh ' year. 'Tt- is ■ clearly' obvious, then, that unless this gradual, yet fatal drain is check­ ed, Mr; Grant can not hope to be' re-elected in 1928; A! majprity dwindling from :610 ;to 107,.in six years’ tinie cari hot.; be regarded lightly as « mere ;syn|ptoin of dis- Shrubsu * Spécial prices for the next * ;•! '!-.vao'';days.v Л* !;:.;\'',!T;!;P.;'íMER0NEY^' f clr;Mocksville Hdw. Còl ч * ,* ,, у : f!,' BAXTlüR BYEItLY. № D. • '„'’d.eiiçe',iio.! 2В/ : Storei Of-•. Office Över prug Si '•!‘ ! £i^,.,;P)hien»;*!^ ! *With the passing of the 1926 general election politics in Davie county has been forced into the back-ground of subjects as one presently worthy of little more than cas'jisJ, interest; and human, , ' Tbe'FirW’Th!8nkkgivihg:pTpclai.;. tion^^^^ open hostility, nave relaxed into ^ .. r»A«a*L 7 1 ie T h á n k ^ normalcy once again. Personal frienda converted teihporarily into political fpos during the bitter days ofthe campaign, have now thrust,aside their prejudices and animbsitiea and have returned, to their former estates of am|ty; And all of this ns it!’should be. ' We popple in ' Davie county are en­ deavoring to improve and builci up a section of tlie' state that has ’been blessed richly by the benign­ ant touch of the Divine Hand and if we arc to accomplish oiir com­ mon aim we must, work together; and refrain from ‘‘back-bitihg’’; each other.; , , _ ,•!. ; ■The ;ISntcri)H’|.‘!o entei'tiiina' !hp- .purpose to atir tho. silont droga of the' political pot' in .Davio county and force tiieni.'t'o thé aiirfivcc for review mproly tO;appoaaq the mpr-; bid api:ietiteii ol! ' thpae ifow souls ^yho ’instinctiyely! !!',.crave' “po.st m ortem s” nor doeft 'it mean: tp!:a- rouso a sp irit of rebellion :in! the hearts of those whose aenaibilities m ay bo wounded by thb ’diselo^iir-: '6s that : follow herein. , it;m ereiy , w ishes to'.state a few! .sim ple;facts connected Svith;,the 'recont .ii^oliti- ciil iiistory of b ayie cpuiity! for whal evo)’ value .they may, hayci !as news, and ^theri pass on to jt s i’er puisite considération of bthér!suj^ jecta of lessor im portance perhaps' but, certainly, of ; deeper dign ity and' of broader puljlic ' in terest., ,, For, several de,ca(lcf party 'llpps h.'tve diyided; the voters 'of-pavië county just' as they have held ,'a- part the political forces i'n;"other sections of the state. The Republi­ can party having affirm hold on tho confidence! of a 'mojority 'of the 1 peoplé loc^lly,has. enjoyed a long span of ’ cbWroi over) countr affairs and the . , , matlbhi pf Presíúent'Washington,^ issued in 1789: . • v';‘ '!,\.^ ; . “Whereas, it is tlie duty of^ a|l nations tp acknowledge the_prò- vidence' of Aliiiighty God, to obey his ' wiii; 'to i be grateful for! Дis benefits; ; and; h\»mbly. t«! implPre His protection and fayor; 'and, whéfeaa both: Houses pf Congress have; ; by ! tlielr joint Committee/ requested :me .to recommeiid to thi people of!tÍié Ú!ñlted Statéa a^diy òf. Public ‘Thankaglvirig aiid Pi:¿y- . er, ,to;;,be pbsoryed ,Ьул .1hg \vit!h ’grate!fuìi ^arts thé njiinÿj. 'and aigpai .faypra’:of i.Alniip^ God,;e.siiocially byi A^ording wem ah!'!!'opportunity' poaçéably; tf ; tabiish'a’. f drill ;pf ,,.'й:руагптёЙ'^^^^^^ 'tliéilV:Mflfôty/nr|dj,'hiippi;n ^'Npw;^:;!tlierof tire m'öij'd; ■ а,йс1- nsaign,-.’; ThuracV'^-j,^» twe''nty ; !;si!xth'! uVny rpf,';;N'^ next,,to:'bo devoted by’'!tìì;i of these States to t!he .aegum/f' that great 'and gJorioXiT 'Who la, the beneficioné^úíiíor/ of ! • been enabled to; ejstablish ,Consti­ tutions^ of Gpyeriiment for. bur 'safetyfrand hap|iihes8, and par­ ticularly itlie hatiorial ! pJie now iate^. instituted I: for th^'Ciy^ »reirgipus liberjly with; which ;we irt'e blessed,; aind ! the! m^ns, wo ^ftnye pr acquiring! and di<fu.siti^ knowledge; i\iid in geriernl, for all the great.!'and ' ,:yarious ■ favprs.i whlch^/!Hb ;!lin8' been plpaaed to confer upq-il us.' , ■ '‘‘And;' niisb,'; tlint .we^'may :then unite;1n ;raost ,humbly offering our 'prayejs!;^iid! SU^ ■ to; thn great -Lpilxl ,and :Ruleis ofv Nations, besee.ch ;,j^:lim ;pardbn 'our, iifi- tioivU i'arixr,othoiv tra^ '!tó'-,wi!tb'8£flhd.^ :tést¿ ;:V!:'In the!llfé'.^pf;a',büSy:';b,o,uhtr^ |itia'yi,e.':twb;Vyearfc 's'pán,:óí,,t,imé;>!¿ó,,:tb(lh^ purselyesk, labored ‘Hard. iáitd! tp haüi; dówh'tiie."^^ OVíP.’i baitifter it on ihé aéépndípf r !^Tóyemib|ér,;í9M^^^^ and failed; ay. McDowell coun- something deeper,’than consolation i when a;futúré'Répúbilcah ^ Republican by about for ;thé|Citlzen 'Voter of'-'DnVie ' ty in Dayle is!!cbhsídéredí;ÍHéy ! county, when he};!c6ritemplatesi the call that old .ialgpbiiicí'bfígéomé- il ; . V ^ic7phraséíarid^^é!!!;á88uí^ Con- approaclies zéró'as | pomp's DEFENCE fShelby other. day,. 9 reel I 10 and 40 , fftbri, of States- iek end with Mrs; ir, 'hiai-iDemocratic oppòn- í stole denr britchè^.;. I ’kriow- I clvéd;í,)á27—.a clear major- ledge de corn¡;, /^: -, ; > IЧПР» «’ li.: ____ Tini- ЧгиопЧ vin • -anñ.a Ihave ity of 925 fpr:Cpx. In thè same But^wan’t rio c r i ^ your elected the entire. Republican 1 election. AviT; Grant, Jr.,<candi- ^. !,PP^"> ‘ . ticket eJicept the register of.deeds, I date on the RepUblican titket for de motif am right, den whara I but Surry la again found in the the Lower House, received 2,379 !de,'Sin7; I Democratic column thnnks to the votes while !Furchees, his Demo- I. stole dem britches ,to be baptize | iniquitous election law and ab- cratic, opponent, polled but 1,7GÌ9 , -i , , aentee ballot caat in that coiinty. —a , clear majority , of 610 for “Davidaon county elected n Re-■ Grant. . ' : >> 'V 11 Fur my onliestipàr-was clean,Wore publican aheriff and Lincoln I In 1Ì926, with a largely iijc^aiS-'iA . ' , V, ' elected'ChaSi A. Jonas, Republi- 'ed; rògristratÌori :, distributed a- Dey gave up de ghost when I gun cnn, to the Legislature, nil other bout evenly ìtiétwéóniHheVtwp par-, offices going Democratic, '. , I ties,Williams,,the G^ O. P. ,candi*;;'”¥t''Iwon, am,hiighty and mua “Cntnwba elected Kluttz, Re- date for Congress,: received 2,426 _4',P.” . , , , ! ,. publican to the legislature and votes while Hamméri: the Demo- T||? J»n*an ? darkey in de c Brady Republican as bne of the, cratic; nomlriee, polled, 1,968— l i'-'.J, commissioners. All others De- clear majority of 463 for the G. O.v ^ .^ . ¡W'» , .. : ' , mocratic. ' i P. candidate. At thè same time ®',‘Johnaon and Snmpaon went A. T. Grant, Jr., Republican can-^ ! cpfil mine, Democrntic.—Union Republican." dldate for the Lower Housè, re- !®“^ what could .a fehsel,ess cul- ■ Now we want you to get this, celved-.:2,268 yptes; nndj, iStr6wd,^';; ^. ¡nan dp f , , ; “Dnvie, Wilkea nnd Yndkin all his Dempcrtttic ppprinerit/polled ; When de jedge and de jury lowed remained true to the faith, in the 2,161—a;slight majprity pf 107for ',V,^ ';Ì - Republican column.” !We arò not. the G. 0. P.'dandldatei^ ' V ; ;;;j;;Tpi8teii^ much surprlaed at some outsider| An analysis of the figures cori-, nt anying such n thing aa this, j tained in the ¡foregoing demon-' . ' v ' especially the Union Republican,] strntes t!he existence of one pf two and gopd- but when it cpmea to a man who, facts: either the people of the . , . has spent 13 years or more here, | county are losing confidence in ^ em in heaben when my and who knows the situation, re-, the Republican party, as evidenc-1 , work is troo,, ,, producing such a thing, we are èd by its greatly reduced majori.;: f°*'is white, do my skin I lend to)ask 'the question, ^‘What tieS; or the anti-Republlcan forces . . .. . , I is true to the faith in the Repub- nre augmenting their strength / lif llcnn column.” ■ considerably vin the recriilting track. - If you wlll show us a Davie route. In six 'years’ time Mr. , i . . , ^ u i i. » county “Bootleger” we will show ; Hammer, Democratic member of, de jedgement, old Gabriel hes you a D*vlé county Republican, Còngress, hps reduced the O. O. P. ' gwine to say and we are', surprised to see ou(r majority against him in Davie | ® straight as,a shingle and friend coppy such an article iind- from 925 to 463, or slightly more „ ,ii ■ i. -i. er such bold head. Does It mean than FIFTY PER CENT,/and has Hejl shout .tp de world dat it that to be true to the Republican steadily increased his , own vote ; _ . . . .. faith, you must be true to the while reducing that of his oppon- be bap-- ■ - . tlae in., i , ;■ -Author Unknown. rDouthit, of-Clemr B' gtiest of her sister, P Morris. iopre, Jr.,_^of the Wins- |chool faculty, was a 'Sunday. re gracious hostesses to tlie'’ ethodist Young Peophi’s Society! on Tuesday afternoon. Several nterestlng cohtests were engaged in, and then thé. guest? enjoyed a ^onderf Ü1 violin, dohcert jby ! Mrs. ! Fred Andrews, accbirip^ on the piano .by Miss Bertha Lee. ^ighteen of the twenty-one iriem- ' bers were present, and ;!Mrs. T,.■' B.; Bailey was an additional guest. ■' ,',;'! V;'- '! %'f-, J- K. Me,roridy'^:graciously I entertained the Brid'ge club, on; Friday : evening. i Threg tables, cnjup, «ore throat were nrranged for bridge and a : jîjjny colti tn>uble, apply Vicki tempting ; course of refrèshments to iwaUow- waa served..; Miaa Ivie Horn, an . attractive bride-elect, Was given " loVely; chind; ten-pot. The. 1 Moders Treat CoMi Ibe New“Pirect’’Way ■гмк Ce|d».y;,',.v;,,;.-,','•'!, .ChUdreii'tdifeih' boi» are easily up* Sfj by tdo much ■doelnr” .Vicki"dosiar' Vai^Rub ternally does notüpeetUttle »beine ex- .appTled, stomachs. At the firat sign of croup, sore throat, THE OLD‘north STATE Listen! my friends,‘while I relate Hpw the Good Lord made-Jihe old North State; ’Twas, Saturday eve and the world was done. Arid the stars were made,^riridth'e • moon, nnd the sun. And tiie Lord had finished Para-dise ■ And had left over a greit big slice,'.' So he took this slice of choicest earth Ari^ North Carolina had her birth. Then over this sister of Paradise He scattered !birda and bijtterflies And myriada of flowera of henveri- " : 'ly'hues, And wet thekn“with unevenly cel-! ., estinl dews: Arid then he snid :, “This land is blest,” I'iW WE WriiL tAY'HIQriEà’r CASI , prices for cedar logs dbUv^M. , at Mocksville,' near DáíttféW’í’ « Cartner Co. store.-rAndrtfé Í* fid ,Sturdivant ' -¡1 ji'd.'; t MOCKSVILtirroARGti ip! ;ей&ад us all, whothçr .-iri pub ;Ti(j;!'or! m'íyaté! stations to' perforn '■'&'afiVenil! hn'< form !i^ÿ’a<jVénil! iind vekitive. ■ dütiçs ' jin y to rend- ..^,ЛГ ‘ Natio!niil; ' it e.'îsirig to áll'iiéopl'é; by cónbitiíñt- !,v;;':being’.a;!kòv!firnmènt of 'wiac, .iuat,’ and cbiistitutio n al. lav/s' dia- crotitlv -and faith fu lly '' excçüled all' tlie good tha;t was;.^íhiitis,'!'pr' arid obeyed to protect;iipd gilidB thfit wiM bu; that y é ;;imrty';the all unito in ron<bJ'ing;';'i!intb';!FIiri;i^^ -our sincere, and J)[iimble,thàiiks!!l’òr; Ilia kind • carp/:i;)ji(i: protejutioivvpf! the ))eoplc o'i'; thia -country; ; pre:: y 10 u s 10 t Ij i'i I r b 0 c ora i rig' n,! n at i pK ; for. the'.signal' a ciba, íviHl;,!th'é ;’faytiy.a,bjp;r tion oi the late war; for the groat degree of lrnnqi|ilitypunlon,,and., plenty; which we have since en- .proa!^ M ;'’'iiii joyed; for tho peaceable and rn-'.bo j vsovûroigna and riations ;(ésp£- /éially auch ая'hnve'shown-kind- :;n'ess to ua) and to ;blp^s ; tíiém ''.wiih g()od governments;-peaco ari,!! 'cbiic'prd ;tp ;prjòtìipto;:;the ! !:k>îow- Jödge^aridpra.ctice of (true religio ¡incl , virtue,: ..hii^^ increas'O ; ol' :sciôriçé, ««ióng;!thém ;arid;,úsi arid, ,geriérall^i'|feii{rá k'injî'siich ‘-áw'tlMtiM .л. i-.'Let ua furnish the needed utenaüií|!for the фгерц'гаЧ1оп^о^ ’’’ DUmer.j r'iWV' *' ''‘Thanksgiving” “THE STORE Q t TQDAY’S ,PEST” / clement ia at- home ^ ek. attending the Field ;ls ;at Farriilngton. Miss Clara Knox, bf Salisbury, , vai 'the'.recent guest of Misises .!B6rth(i arid Alice Lee.' Miss Sarah Gaither spent the Tveek ;erid'with her-parents, Mr. ;and Mrs. E. L. Gaither. ' ; V , ^---— Dr. Edward B. Clement, of Sal- • isb,ury, spent Sunday with .'hia aunt, Mra. Julia C., Heitman. ' Mrs. Paul Green nnd little sort, of Thomasville, are visiting her ; parents; Rev; rind Mr,R, S- Howie. , 1 High Point Top Biggy and 1 , ^ Harneaa, 1 lot of roughfeed, j • ^®y waa his dny to fnrming toojs, and spmo house- « , ' /hold und kitchen furniture, also ‘his la how God made the great some other thirigs to tedioua to ^'’^sressiye, gloripus old North mention.—W. R. McDaniel, pd. ' 'gueata wère:. Meadames cê^ü P i© f f u i i aon, !Roy Holthouaer,; John Le- Gr^pd. B. C. Clement; Jr., T. F. Meroney, W. A. Aliiaon, Miases ,Ivie Horn nnd Frnnces Welch. , The 'Lndies'Aid Society of the Methodist church met in the an­ nex on Fridily afternoon, the new president, Mrs. T.-Ji. Chaffin, con. ducting: the devotions. Rev. R. During'“Bargain Days” Dec.' S., Howie was present and offered can get The Asheyille a prayer, nnd -Mrs. Ollie Stockton i (evening or morning edi-, s.ecretary,; read the minutes of the i Sunday by mail, I Misa Emily .Powell of Winston-, last meeting. A bualness meeting, “ year, for ,$4.00, and every- Salem spent the-week end, with •followed, and plans were discuss- ! body aujwcribing this year will be her plirents, Mr.' arid Mrs; R S ed for the annual bnznnr to be'”' «'««a “A”' (preferred list)— Powell. • held Friday.,afternoon, December mm'Ked td^expire Dec. 10,1927 and Mr. Ollie Anderson and Miss may renew auch aubscription ev- Myrtle Anderson sporit Saturday :ery yeni^ at the fixed rate $4.00, --ilght and Sunday, with Mr. and ! —тВу Riley Scott. CEN'TERNEWS The many friends of, Mrs. Kate Holriian will be glad' to know that she , is .improving, after bei^ng <lMite sick. , Misses, Sophie Richards and Nina WHlto, of the ^school facul­ ty, spent the week end nt their home nt Dnvidson. — 0— - Mr. C. B. Mooney, Rev. J. F, Kirk, Rev. W. B. Wnff nnd Mr. T. M, Hendrix are. attending the State Baptist convention in Wilm­ ington this week. ! iWrs. ' Edward Crow; Edward CrpM^; Jr.,/Miss Jane Crow, arid Mr. :and Mjw. iHenry Crow, of Monroe,!.apent the week end with Mrs.’Phillip Hanes, ' , Prof. and Mrs. R. D./W. Connor o f Chapel Hill, and Spencer B. Hanes .an^ son; Spencer, Jr„ of IVinstomSalem, spent Sunday rwith Mrs. Phillip Hanes. , ’ ' " '■ ■ V'O ' ■ ' Mrs. .PhiUlp, Hancf), Mr.s. Ed-, ward Crow,' Mrs. -Hpriry ,Crow, Miss Ruth Booe, Jane Crow arid ..Edward Crow, ^r., spent Saturday - in Walkertown' with rela'tiVes. , '>! ,V.„ ".! M ' ! Circle Two of the First 'l*resby- 'teripn church will hold a bazaar !and serve sppper on NoV; 19, open- j'inif a,t,^;80>p. m., in the Direction .''Room, Southern Bahk aii'd 'Trust , ^pmpap^. . , , — 0- — ' ,,Mr. and Mrs. Maxey Pass eri- I tertained delightfully at.dinner on • Saturday evening, their guests being Miss Sallie B. Hunter,.Miss Irma Hoimes, of Stntesvi|le, Prof. E;,C.';Statpn, nnd Prof. Young. ' , ..'Mr.vand Mrs. T. L. Summers, * iMjss Ella Leo Summers and Mr. , ;and Mrs. Curtis Summ'e^'.s, attend­ ed the funeral of the latter’s bro­ ther, Earr;Curlee, near Saliabury, on Satiirday. , ' , '■"v 0^-----: ' . ‘. ' Row and !Mrs. E, P. Bradley; Misses Fannie Gregor.v and Jano BradlOy, Mr. R. B„ Si\nfordi Gaith- ui' :Siinford.,. Bliaa; 'Siir.ah Gaither;: Krio.x Johnfitono.. Wil.iiam' Stock.- ton, Mi'S. Ollie Stockton, Mr', and Mra.;,R.!S. McN'oill, and Miss Os­ sie 'Aliiaon attended the p,'ividson- Cai'ciina game on Saturda.v. , Mrs; 'L;, E. Feezor;!delightfuIly ontertajifcd' a,'^^few frient|s infor­ mally on '-Tuesda.V,,evening, !N,ov. i)th‘;, bridge i beiiig plnyod at, two tables,; .The 'l\bste3a, sensed a Jde- licibu.s; siilad qplirae, The !g'ue.s1;s were: ;,Mes(larries Meroney, T. F. Merpridy, Maxey Brown. Roy liolthouae'r, Cecil Morris,■ Miases ■Tvio Horn and'Ossie Allisan. iJrd, Mrs. J.,L.'Ward being chnir- .ninn of the bnznnr committee, Mrs. J. L. Sheek is chairman of thé .parsonage: ; committee, nnd Mrs.- L. S. Kurfees of tho waya and meana committee. , Two new members; Mesdames Hattie Mc­ Guire ;'ahd ; Percy,. Brown, ' were welcomed into the society. '------------ MOVIE NEWS Today the Thomas Meighan Special “Tin Gods” 9 reels, the Inrgeat iri aize nnd qunlity Moigh an haa ever made; coat ua twice the price 'we’ve ever paid for one of his pictures, ndmiaaion will be only 10 and 40 ¿ents. Thia pic ture hns juat finiahed eleven weeka run Rialto New York. Total receipta. $331,218. Friday and Saturday a six reel western picture featuring Hortt Gibson in “Thp Phantom Bullet” arid two reel comedy “Slipping Feet.” Monday arid ; Tuesday, well its a brand |new First National. Its a scream. Its a lowdown on the i;eal New .York as New Yorkers live it not just Broadway but East Side, West Side all around tha dizzy , old town, hotels, : night cl ubs„ Central Park, department store, Ritzy Shops and that Sub­ way. Girls and gowns; next sea­ son’s, style show. ! lts . Dorothy ''Mackall, Jack Mulhall, aiid Charl­ es Murray in “ Subway Sadie." Wednesday and Thursday Dorothy Gish in “Nell Gwyn." (aaving $3.00)—while others pay Mrs. Walter Anderkon Of Wlnatori- $7.00 a year. , ' | Salem.' ' ', \ ,», » tt * tt *. A. F. CAMPBELL UNDERTAKER WADE REAVIS DEAD : , Wade.ReaviS died at his home here last Wednesday morning aboiit 5:30 o’clock- from pneu­ monia. He had never fully re­ covered frpin ari automobile acci­ dent about three weeks ago, in which hé was, secretóly irijured; He leaves a host of friends Here wh.o heard of his death with much regret. DIRTM ANNOUNCEMENT tt tt ---------------- ; tt A complete line of factory * and hand-made Caaketa. * Motor Hoarse nnd nn E.x- pert Embnlmqr at your * Service * MOCKSVILLE, , N. C.^ » Also J. J. Starrett’s ^ Mock.sville, Rt. 1. * Day Phoi\e .......................164 * Night Phone — — on 45 * TAX INCREASES UP TO VOTERS .Mr. and Mrs; Robert Safiey, of Route 1,. announce the birth of a' taxes; daughter, Mary Elyen; This child has three great - grand father.s'; t^yp grand -'fathers, two; great- grand mothers' and two : graiid- ;mothers now living. ,■, Ш Й ! ! Réyy! R., S,. ‘Howie was genial host'to tho stewards bf the Méthó- ; dist/ ’chiìrch, op Tuesday evening ' iri:'" th.é'.j.ychu.rch annex. Covers were lai'difb lit the ibrig tablé!''whiçh' ^Уas, prettily decorat- :;withi;chryaarithemurii8. A de- ^ic.ipuæ^^^^ by the 8pciçii,ôerviç!e cbnimittee of whicji йМгэ'.'¡ollie Stpcktb^i is^^^ ÌEàch, ;pìàcp .was by a ' Th'^nltegiviriiifprttce card ANOTHER CAR CEMENT NOW. in stock.-i-JIocksyil|e HaVdwarie company. ., : ! , ! LOST—Between .M ocksvillo. and Farm ington—Stato Liceiise Wo. 90730 E,:n;\C.^A. Hollem aii; 11023 DODGE'COUPe'to I^ A L E . This car iS ' in e.xcellont’ condi­ tion, .tiros prhc^icailly. ;new;.bne . goo^l spare tire, etc. \Vill sell for, ¡¡¡SSR.od;; cashV-^Sep A .'B ; ' Furr, 'at M ocksville Entorprise office. • Who is to .blame for inçr.eased taxes? , The war ciiuaed an increase in federal'taxes which no one could prevent, but thé government has been reducing those taxes àt s' rapid rate. The war was used ns an excuse for many rapid increas­ es in city, county and sitate taxes. But as a matter of fact, war ac­ tivities are responsible for only a small part of any increase in local taxation. The people themselves are largely to blame for tax increases about whicli they complain. They vote for tax-raislrtg propositions which add to the cost of goverri- ment. .Then, when’ the tax pay-; ments, including principal and in­ terest, come due, they kick about 'the increased tax rate. If it .is 'the désiré of the public ,to cphs* tantly enlarge the activity bf gbv- .ernment into the industrial, re­ gulatory, research and administ­ rative fields bf private enterprise, which are entirely outside t!he function of funiishlrig sound gov­ ernment for a|l the people, the taxpayers cap only expect'a stea­ dily increasing tax burden. . ' ■rhe ; ballots in every state nt every election nre Ibnded with measures which add unnecessary The voter mu.st show keen I Mr. nnd Mrs. Elriier- Tutterow, Misses Ora, Floella, rind : Ruth Tutterow rind Mealsrs Cleo and. Glen Tutterow :;visited Mr. J. Hendrix of SniPm, Snturdny night. Mrs. Brice Gnrrett spent Tuesr dny with Mr. and Mrs; Hasten Carter of Fork Church. ; ,. ' Messrs Rny Tutterow nnd Pnul Mitchel of Greensboro ; spent J the | week end nt the home of Mr. Tom | Tutterow. Mrs. T. W., Dwiggins ' spent Tuesdny with her' slater, Mrs. J. C. Dwiggina of Mockavillo. Mr. Spencer Dwiggins \vent to the pnrty g;.ven by Mr. Wnlter An­ derson of Wihaton-Snlem spent Friday night with Mr. J. Gi And­ erson and fnmily. Messrs B. F. rind Albert Tut- :terow!went to Winaton-Snlem bn^ a business; trip, Tuesday. ■ /. M lases iAijpie and M nry Walker of Jonesville is spending the week' with Mr. and Mrs. T. P. DwlggUiSi Mr. and Mrs. ,T. W., Dwiggins; spent Sunday with Mr. , Gi 'Dwiggins rind family of Salem. ; Mr. L. R. Dwlggln^pf Winston- Salem sperit Suriday! night with Mr. W. M. Seaford. J'! Mias Katherine Ijrimes' of Cala; haln snent Sundny with Misses Anna Mne and Eurt Anderson. Meaaera Htnry Tutterow apd Millard Anderson visited Mr. Lep Anderson of Calahaln, Sunday afternoon. • Mr. and Mrs; F. s; Ijames of Calahaln aoent Sunday vyith Mr. and Mrs. W, B, Barneycastle. " 'J.'T. Sisk,^aBioi "ip We had a pretty good stkrt for the ntw year at Unlpn Chapel ihd Bethel Sunday, which 'was.'Verl encouraging indeed; Thi'.people: greeted us"ivith a..wartn'-w;<)lcom^ and, saldv;;many- nice '‘encouragin'it' words to lis, which msketi us-fee! 1 ike our ■ efforts hsve been 'fipprP !ciated. t , ( '■ / ', ', ■, i0 ,i We wlll b6 at Dulins land 'Elti; baville next'fSuhday,^ and flll' ou^ regular appointments, and hop«’ ;to see you thei^e, ! The county choiri^of 'singers! met at Bethel>'iast)lS«tUrday;:hight and decided to vmeeti’on Saturday' night before the secondv^Sundnyi; in each! ‘month.’ Ltb^rtjr M,.;Ei church ,was selected as the |»)acft for the December meeting. >' you.are. interested in good.Biiif^ .ing come- along and join uit ' MOCK’S CHURCH'NEW ^Vf Rev; W. B. Thompson ,will preach Here Sunday afternoon .2:30',,o’cloclc,.;„''! ' ; > ! Tlie‘;ilneniber3 ,■ of ; the EpWorthJ X>erigue had; their regular wpekly! meeting: Siiridny night. The Se6-! ond department gave an interest^ ing !program: with Miss Nanniei ,Carter: as Supt. ' • ; ' ; ! Some of the boys and girls here motored over to Midway last Fri- diiy'night to pliy' b^ . Miss Effle Orreli; spent Sunday afternoori; wiiH ;her Mi^s Mattie'BeaUohamp/near'Redlaftd. ег'1rf. г work ÍÍh||# ngsBometihil Willie’ 01гШ|1 'end,with МкЩ| %át'LeWfsv|ÍíjÍf* ¡йй'В Ш оскт, l^yltichmond'V’iéitHÍ _ ifday. ' ' ', " VisItediïJ ceiVòd^huifé! ^ tee Sèbilii' , ‘a^eï^lulil tolri-iSiil SSìiif* t t iS Mrs; J, ! C. Beauchamp : returned. ‘li« saiidiL ohildriç# ■'Satui"’-*'““ ^ cieix!’.'mlN Î'erel I ' в V Ч а д JÉlái EUcin an¿R«|d received. €от»шао4 US and save money. « FULTON ITEMS ANOTHER CAR GALVANIZED ' ■ rbpfing.' now ,.iiv stock.—Mocks- ., ville liar,ciwriro Conipiiny. . •DR. ANDERS0!N hiia mov^d pf- : fico ! tp the Anderabn Building, up staira I,at Jewelry siiop, room 2. Specinlizea;, iri'' plate work, ' gold wpi'k and;painle83 extrnct-' ing of teeth. NOTICE-J;; wilt.offer nt public^ nuctiph, ,;at,. the! ! bid Anderapi\( Lucky F«r'm on Saturday, Npy. 27, 1926/!iat 10 p’clpck, the fal­ lowing articles :> 1 mule, 1 C0W, discrimination in pnasihg on men- siiroa and candidatea, if he wishes tp hold down hia tax bill and of­ ficial v extravagance. This , is ah individual- responsibility and a diity. of- every citizen, ;!An. incomo of $8,800 from hogs and a liability on 100 bales of cftttpii is the.'situatibri .in - whi'ch o.né: Wayne County faririer . finds, hin'lself. ! !, ,': O!!^».'-GROVE ,.:NEWS^ , 'f|iÍM7Bivt^'..«B4' д Oeo,,Jî*#ion Wagon and be^, with 1 • Rév. E. ,‘' M. ; Avett ! filled hia ;ap- pointnient hèrè:Sunday !night, -bo p'reachéd.n -'goüd'scrnion to a largo !crowd;.'' ; Mr's.;N.' S-:'Welbri«>i _apent,Sun­ day !af,lorrioori in 'Winston-Salem ,with..!Rey. vMaryin ; Wellmiiii ;'who ;ia a paticn-t in. a ¡hospital.;,there. ; Mr,., J;.’ G.,. Cravens'pent! ^a. f'ow days 'witii relatives in 'High Point If^st'we.ek; ■ '■ ! '.\''!v.';_/''-! !R;ir. and Mrs. Ç.: W. Ilopler spent Saturday''aftprnobiv!; with thoir dnughtor;! Mra.^J. M. Hairelirio'in Mocksville. '' M,r, and Mra.! Lee :.Clonient ; of Salisbury are visiting his .parents, Mr. and Mrs, D, A. Clement, Mr. nnd Mrs. Albert Bbvvles of ■Route 3 spent Sunday with hia sister, Mrs. C. M. Turrpnlin^ï|j;''< ‘ ' Mr. Dari Smith,..of Smith'^^ was a Suridayjdiiil^r'nere.': MlsiiFlori ^ Mr#. ; Rev. W. B. 'Thompsbn preached a wonderfiil aermori Sunday at eleven o’clock, the aerm'on was' enjoyed by all. , Measra D. L; Lanier and Bill Frye left here Saturday niljht with Dr. G^ V. Greene for the eastern part bf; the state wher^ they'will spend n few daya hUnt- Mr. Edward Jarvis who has! been in tlie as.vlum for some time has returned home, his,health'has been restored to him, Mpssr.s Oiaroriee Livengood and Leafcer..Youilt,,_and Mi.ssos Panthy; Lanier., and , T^.,n V Stewart . spent Sunday' evening in- High . Point with Mr.! and 'Mijs..Baxtey.'HenU-, ri£'’ '!, T''!:. ,A. !!', Mr. 'and! Ml'S-! !Llpyd and Weniiip iiiui'Jena 'i.loyd'of Tho- 'maSvillo spent iSunciay with, Mrs/ D. (L'anicr, their bistor. - !!\iiV and Mrs; N. -F.; Young and children spent Sunday at ■ Fork visiting Mr. and Mi'S. Lowia Hend- ; rix.;,;V;' ' / Misses Iva S>6wart and Panthy Liinier’spent'fjHturday evening, in Lexington, sl/opping, FQRK NEWS Mrs.; Tom iFostqr and chikirpri of .Winston/sperit last week with’' heiv pai;ent/j ;^Ir'i and Sirs. S. E; Garwood. M' Mr, P ;^ , Hairston and family sperit 1 ^ Saturday in . Charlotte. Ml', Mrs. ! Troutmari ! of StatpT^lje spent Sunday with Mi^ Jfroutman's sister, Mra, J. C. F(/Wr, near :here. Martte Carter and Mary |p^';’'.M||4ted,, Oa^ftT of! with S.J. С, O u r entire stock o f tires andvy now the new Ipw price^jl tory, being reduced* T a k e advantage o f trade in. your old tires sets in. d i t e l i „ Ipok ' I t ■oîtOrt,',, - e p ''''1 4 w & Щ Р М Е 1 í".‘ J í í n 'i í V . I i ü t '. '- k l i '..-• •‘‘•'.v m . ...<tTain№%órk ijty:":_ _ JU 8loiíí’_ lihmMiuiahd: Ш «oniMiM ? jClHi ‘Atoo an «i||^fer,iitUaMk ~ (¡tt'jwmlouii hew aélM páitidi ,___ Ш ёШ ь 7\Юча „y/‘, I f '<1 i}"«' V ' в Éíl'íl __,^ТЦИ(1Н ' ì '^îî •'', Ä is E r > 4 !/ ,' , kf|.|¿jbhÍ9mici; 1lnfátbí|']wVri№' M igliài,í^tHe; duátry, hûwéver,,.,_hn0 one great menate and'thia -ifl »the stomachj worm'.; Most ¿rowers ,recoKMlze thp symptona characteriatic' of; thia trouble. The shetíp are in ai general'/'Ustlesa.'condition,:; ¿they; are white around the membrancep of thè eyes, the skin lacks its or;' dinary pink color'and, there ,is a 'sWeiling ,under the, thr'oAt.' Prei; ventative measures should'berused to ¡control th è worms' iitf'doctoring: áfter they have gained á foothold do«« Httlei,^good.” i' ' ^ * ‘ Mr. Curtis; advises "the > blUe-^ stone trektmentio provent worms both in ihe'twes ,and the lambs. Bliieíiton^ iBlcheáp and one>fourth of'a,>pound-iS',enough to drench a flo¿k'of !SO, Ío '40 sheëp one time. Thlg;aniolint'of bluéstone is miX: «'dWlthieBOUgh-water to. dissolve 4lt^èHop6ughly ahd then ; enough 'coldi.watei; added to'the. solution' 1 0 i;brinb'-it*up .to ' three .gallohs. nonmeiallie container such . a»;a 'wooden; tub.; For. . lambs; vtinder one year of;age give ,1 3-4 j ounces and for mature sheep give ‘ 8 »unces. This treatment needS'ito be given after the sheep' hávé /beení without feed *or water iovèr night. ' ïn.drénching, Prof. Curtas ad- Visës’^io allow the sheep to stand flhl all four legs and do not hold thé'head too high or ;^he solution Will gét jnto the lungs and pro­ duce Instant dtíath. Use a Tubber tube about three feet long. Drench all sheep before putting them in winter'quarters, and then , keep them on a clean pasture. Fre- qiieht change of ^pasture is adr 'vfsable. I r GERMAN FATHER 84. LIVING ÜHILDRÉN '.s^Borlln, :Nov. 9.»—The-story of a man who twice married, at 76 is the . father ' of 87; children, 84 of whom are living/ is reported by a' Vienna medical association journal. ; Bernard Scheinberg/living hear the German border, had 69 child-, ren by his first wife, who died at the age of 6 6, the journal says; Not on was a single birth. There were four quádruples, seven trip- lets and 16 twins. Sixty-seven oif the children aré living, but he ad-, mits having iost count of the grandchildren. Scheinberg’s s'e- cbnd marriage at the age of 57 waa blessed with 18 childrattv in­ cluding two sets of triplets. His second wife ;ia atill living. ' * ''.V * 4/#‘# # ^ « When in Winston-Salem Stop'« ■*.i - a t . J •: * TALLYS * * Expert Mechanics to Serve * -^'''.YOU * SlorageH^Washing , * * Gas and Oil • * Cherry Street * * just below Ro)bert E. Lee * LiL kitself {tèmpi« \tion < luté.'dl •ílri'. ■otsï'efl :tb'.WÍtí m m ■“y j - v "...•fí-irv-pí'f* V We are getting' /.»’''''Л?''' V 'i ' ä I and they come back for tioiK., that buy call, for Ovtt iW Toi^^^^ " teat, iln thöi layie № '№^elyès,,^i'ifkui dówi isecohd ie tw l ¿.■dfitlr Í».tíí»4*ww. «'• >’ ■'î• ‘S' Ж й зШ ’весопщши^^й 1 f.. 1« 'tAttWativiMii! án i and А § ^ Jiv' i 4l>l ..... ' ■ 4^' hornW o h n sïo ^b a NOTICE OF LAND SALEt J M i я í p ; ' - » жШ By: yiriue of the power contaih* -ed In. thevlast-.wlll 'and testamén^ ÌÌin. ''jPÓ]k ,1« ! of Mrs. Martha L. McClamroch, intl^iiiniwhl'ch <r decd.j whioh w i,ed and •recorded .Ìn,'thè;OÌBci year and the thè Superior Court of Davie coun- of the re- ty, N. C., we will sèll at'public iwd'by the members. I auction to the highest bidder' fòr fair Is one;Schedul- ¿aah at the Court House door ih'.m Ittdell County on^October Mocksvillei N. C., on Monday èhe fiilihe'directTon p t A. R. gth day òf -^ i l l ? . ' ? ' P * ’’*’‘>tt. followiri^f tracts, lots, or parcels ‘»'••^mber.vfairtì .for club of land in Davie county, N. C., ad- illbb^,»№ ld'irà,(Bladen jo in iiig ^ la ^ d a io f e ;Ж Са1п, il«*’»«” »'' l i » : ? ' and E. A. (Jain line: thence Soiithi ward with said line 231 feet;to№çk-] judging', a'l'hletifs, ' de- étr'ation' contests and ' music tiie(.begi,rinirig,;",'contairiing iu-. i, i lu I square feet, bo the same,'Wioi;o or||3|oc8j, bands iWjll, feature the 1 jggg^ "" LotNo. 2. Beginning at a stone Sbuiiheastivcbrn^^ J;: M, Bailey’s j ; j|iibu8ei:.’lot’:'and^^^ E a s t 2 ^ !C.hainiii and ?8 I кЖ||Щ‘^»у,'} There will be a number pf SMííÍjíiliííi'Wte by club members and, 1МчШигЬ‘'опе .‘who‘'’goes to Ashèville Illlf^ Ilb a y e .th e opportunHy of-win-;! « r ‘ A » » « • South sideiof Cana road; thenbe premiums are of-'a„..4b oo» ' ¥ fte^ÿlufe ^contorte. INDÜSTRŸ;-M 'Jaf'Jtid^/èar^l marketing. *^ur rule, then,' should :?be .to 'ìiteitfi 'the ewes not 'later than: AlifUat to have them/'lamb not V liil^than': Janu^ryandito ^ market. " ' /j Ittm^not later than May, if we are ' '’ toiatake the most money , from South 29* East'8} chains' ahdl'K9 links to a stone bh Nqfthisiiii;cf said road; thence.West^.'Chai andi24 Hnkavtol a ^ 'WobSwaMy?:lot;ith.ence;<^^ il^sti-'S^hatns - and' 80 linlA'Ito the- beginning,bior;:> and- 7rl00 Vabres/'more ','bri -leiii.' z '¡ Saidi.lpt# ,'Ar«' In Cana aad <ad- Mni.'f ib]h!:0tteV M id i firfet; sbparately 'land then as a whole 'ai>C be sold the way they bring, the most money. . .• This November 30th,-1926. li':i;i;:::$.;::P.::;SN|DER ' s. M. BREWER, »c i’ «^leep,” says R, S. Curtis, of the Executors i of Martha L. M V ' ‘ «aUnal husbandry department at roch, deed. ’ ' * College, ' “The sheep in- E. L. Gaither, Atty. 11 11 ^4t. L A U N D R Y ^ ;^ iP E < J U A B D .;iT H E ' H E A L 'T H C R F A M I L Y B Y ,S E N D I N G T H E i'i« iL Y B U N D L E D TO A M O D E R N , 11' ' » ¿ ‘I’ii-D A T E L A U N D R Y . E V E R Y A R -: W A S H E D :C L E A N A N D i ' S f i l l l ^ H L Y S T E R IL IZ E D , : ■ ihilS ' beiM p; '.■■■; ■! jici e will fit your pocket- ‘4■^U^ola’ i , V, :’bout: odiucation .;a; t.inJT ■‘(ШЧ look raenls'tgek A\ell, .1 1 r J ' t e v i i ' - Davie County ца' ’« 'maipri'lfri of (inly Зц .biiwyer Íjpusaeau, of despite t ‘ . had,.‘'i^ Iqi «n(j,ano him,; whil JU8tTUl>nH iíí¿títi«u:.jjíí5 ía iín d r y 'C o .' ^yflr,^0U88 ‘ Шш . other\áií by the.1 pany^îf' oitWetíaVÍ atill,; .Sállebiirj^.^,1 people'.jh^ dàjîÿ flclal Íi Í>»víi í w lít 'i; Щ V. PINO ÍÍEW^ - Rev. C. M. McKinney wil UH his regular appointment at Pino' Sundoy night, Nov. .2 1 , Every ■body come., >/ S iS S l 'ii ife »irth C a La m e g u a r d IF Y O U A R E IN T H E M A R K E T 1Ч Ж A U S E R C A R i IT W IL L P A Y Y O U T O C A L L IN A N D LO O K O V E R O U R ST O C K . W E SE L L ON E A S Y P L A N A N D ST A N D B A C K O F E V E R Y C A R W È S E L L of ; , Prison. .. Had isñlá'Solitary ILetHIm , [ard^'".-'' .■ ^ '^ rtïb iié p ip fe i .■■. 4and')in;Eutópè,vA^tto Wood, : 3íéwíi.l5e||^ít■■¿rid . I,successful l^ . of :the w * e County isen^ again,, young meri i i ys from \yar a.«} members of l^or the ■ finbnts- of/thq., Uni.ted«»»" of "p'oditionnry ^forob.s wfe ' .. . the leadership' of Gen^P*® ' t'( i :ing arid othei'.|, helped t*.}“’ *’®' n ■fidb of'victory and ft man mar,ch toivard ¡"gay^, a Gave^iTrhfdr- Live^ries. c ■': Fathers. ‘ail;d>\^iioj;iier.V ii'Mo, County wlib.%' sons a Plaiuiers.fields,bi''(he'’3uriii^^ h aides of France/Of.who d№* v th'e ■ camps,, today fji'oodeci ' li ■over their loss, biit jjairied co|' i} tioh . fn' the :knowludt,'e that ?, j, •supreme sacrifice was'.maqlo atWrfe call 6f patriotism and-ifor ilovo\of (Country. -Earneat' McCqliohj' if Turrentine,'was ]<illcd,in actio S T * * at thér,,;- church 4asti Jhursday and snept the day, cutí i ll» ' «'e hope in. the hébr church ^ . The' ladies were alao there with' .basket well .filled with: /¿bfeid ;|^*"*f^-0. **t;:and as'the weather /^“/ •■“^tioi b.ool.the hot cbfféeíWásenjoyed Iminenaely, Supper w^s )^0; served {«t:;flye:^ everybody.went,home feeling that ,had 'beep well apent. : in the^ hospital at Winaton-Salem was, able to he; i^rdught home the past week, her mah’ir friends wlH be glad to note, i; - 'Mr. -Johiv and :Míss Margaret Miller of -Rurál jHall spent: the Week end at'home^ ' , . Mrs. Louise Ward apent a few daya the past; week >ith her broi thmv Mr.:W. T. Millér of Winston- Salem,; Mr; Fred-Swirig bf: Salisbury pent. the. week;,end..'With 'lio^né foiksi.v^.' '■ /' Miss Laüra Ward who hiia been sufferinfe' with i a ,sore' legi is'sdmo '.better, at;,thii wa-ltihg, • \vd ^are .gtnd.vtíp.'rióte/.^ ,\4 ■ '• . Mr., Elriia Lrttharii of Mocksville sperit the'iVéok end. \vith his'par­ ents,'Mr.-riiid.,Mr.s;.Tohri.Latham. Ml'. 'Charlie, Pptta; of VVinston- Saloni was. a' viaitor ini our ,l;|ur¿ Suiidiiy. '' ’,'''1 THIS, .FREE AClUyiTY BÜNÍÍ . lllÎEi-MOCKàViLitk^ÆNTEBPliik^ %Í A'DHV D B ^PC U T , П Г -: ■ " ' Durham, Nov. Ifi.—'"I am Democrat, always have been » Democrat with a Democratic tra- dition behind me. But I Want to say rightjnojif'that. I.will. vote for -M Rep^l^iicah (irather . than-vote, 'for an .vou anti-prohibi- tion »uppitfrter ior. a man * who-»ha8- kissed thb Pope's H W®t of a foreign monarch. We have some fun in the South iii,New York tries to do what it .thinks It.will do;” Bishop Edwin P, MptJzpn, .presiding ovjer the North Carolina „Conference Pfthe Mi E. Church; South, in Durham ^astj'Week, -told , the' 460 members: in,' aiteridance. His- ^ statement^ foiJowed an addreaa . by. Rev. C. A., Upchurch, .superlntehaerit of the :North iCarolina Ahti^Saloon and a,Baptist mlriiater who urged' the Methpdiata■ to help keep the United States dry. A death-like silence’fpllpwed Bishop Mouzon’a statement; then prolonifed ap-< plau8e,'the first of the conference, broke out. ' 1 ' im p n o m ñ in t A ^ —4ms retulted eptntion that рНмаамопа« h w n m m Á m iB , - -haa given the ear a quieti^M 0Г ' •tion moat uaumial in cars o(! tiUsbiv'.i:.! -........... .......... .........(P«ce.,| ■ Л прпвапм т С Concord Tribune* ■ ' ' lUght in the beginning wo want to cpmin'erid local, sch'pol>oniclaIs who after hoarinj? .in ;'address' .here,recently ,by Mi.ss LucJ- Gaifo, of Nashville, Tenn;,'told‘the Con­ cord teachers to, get ^ :.ttìo best l>9?flis._fi;p.])).thé:addres'd; and leave :.;;;.V;'iiiJERUSALEM NEWS . Tho^'health-. .of the /Community IS very,.good at> this writing, we are. giad. to note." У The .Jerusalem Farm Woman’s club .svili meet al the. home■’of Mrs. John -0\vcn,3, 'Eriday,.':Nov. 2<>, at 2 p. ni., both men and women are eordially invited, .Stibi' ject,. Demon.strat;on pruningviby, ■Gòiinty Agent. - Mr, Dave Bock'and family .spent Sunday, atternoon with Mr. W;' H;‘ •inilaid and family near Churchi land. ' , J There wiijvbe.a box suppor at Jqrusalem church, Thankbgiving .night, Nov. 25. Eveiybody in- yited Please remember the' date; 1»! FrancerMaxey M v , o n iib o k -tn if^ Jrie; Л Centei-sect on, died in.one olì t h d a t e I 'bthl.<country;.Reid Pp^le '^^ I «Iso ol,. this,, cpunty, succumbed noticing mpre itliani 'the^ Car Load New Ch^yroléts Just In M o c k sy ille , N ; G. \ Ф.I'i’’ to disease in' ori'e>j' íhe cnmps in' ■this .üoúritryj /Chrirlie Jordán, pf j Coolóemep'i was.killed in actÍ9ri in iPranco; ,G;e‘orgb: ^tewart,' : of :near-Fórje; .Ch'urcli j. Bill '.Lo.wry,, of: Ca'm;.:Jphri' Bilis,' pf /‘The’ Bericl,” ;iiHcl.IClaude ; Howard,: of Bixby;iand toe Powoll, pf.'Cantér,'; ■died 'in the campa iri thia eóuntry. HOGS KEPT НЩ 4 FROM GOING BROKE Miss Kate Lantfston and.vMiss k^v/ii-1 were the guests best oi .Miss Edna Hartley Sunday. .■• II seema iiKo aoijio of tha moiri' bers of Joiusalein church have lorgotten^our.. preaching aervicea; Pleaching evciy fiist nnd thii'd Sunday al H a. m, Be sure come. . ^ li>' .Y. P. U., every Sunday riikht at 6:80 o’clock. - Mr. nnd JIis Odell Grubb h'tiyél ^gono, to Yadkin, Howan courity;- whei‘0 they have accepted a pbsiiv ■tlpn--in . the. 'hlGnching 'inili.':;s:iiv;i MR. V O n 7 3 3 , 6 5 6 pounds w e sold la st w ee k w e LE A D the^ o th er fiv e w areh o u ses b y $6 . 7 0 on ev e ry 1 0 0 0 pounds, w h ich M E A N S T H A T F A R M E R S V/H O SO LD AT /P L A N T E R ’S la st w eek M A D E $4 ,9 1 5 .6 9 . . B rin g T h e B a la n c e QjF Y O U R C ro p T o — I ' lies-„for.: the- year, to date, have ''ntch:thL da t on itlie child s face, Obviously it”' ^ri'^out, ?3,800-r ariv; just „ {roved that « ¿ m, \ Raleigh', Nov. 17,—A. ÏI. Oliver of Mount Olive i.s a young middle- aged farmer with a 'keen mind I , and when n fact about better ,fa,rming is presented to him in tte right' way, he searches thr­ ough', it cnrefully ,nnd if it is ■worth; his attention, he gives it, '»'.¡|rial.':; : ' . He ; did i this with* hógsi ' For I pvbr :‘fp.ur ; years, Mr. Oliver i\nd T1 ly;.;W. .^hay, swine extension, spe­ cialist-tìt State College have been Hrrltiri^gito each other and. paying ohefiinqther occasional visits. Mr. I 01iver.,.:))ecame .¡ntd're^ted \ in th^: brèb(ii,ng and feecling: of swine ac­ cording to i: tht .deriionstrated I , Tnétiiòda and decided to give it a trial.. On November ,6, he wrote tci. Miy Shny saying, ‘‘Ì have mark­ eted --two ' carloads of .hoga thia |; year, and now have 106' pigs just ■weiiriirig. I shall begin breeding ™Y'i i ijulbs heen turning my pigs on the sPybean ' fields with access to shelled corn, mèîilj-, middlings, fish meal and ii)iij'ei;aia; If .'this course is un- :wise,:;'pleaso write me. ht once." : :Mi’. .diiver, sta'ted , further that. [ he. plans',to have rye on. nesy land' ■ w itli;, which to :fatte n . hl'a, i)igs in thè p’pring. -T he. rye w ill thpii be,pl.b'ivbd u(ul er a n d ' th e .1 a nd pliirited ,tp ,corn for hogging-clown, in .the fall, ' ■' '. “I, have made over, 1,400 barrels ' of pbtnt of . cbttpn thisiiyonr,’’ 'he .says,. “but hogs, hnve kept riio from going broke,”i;. ' ; Miv',''§hny disngrees with' his corrosi)pji^lont; \yhòn, he snys thnt I hogs kept ;him from goirig broke.; I'. It ]wHs• :the. c'oriihiriatipnl of hogs and'the knowledge of how to make them profitable that, kçiit Mr. Olivr fir on 'a: cash basis, this; year.: The, J.06,;ypung mortgage lifters are, being, handled so as to be ready for;.finishing, npxt ' yearj. rtt the least-iposaible cost and \vith the EDISON AND LITY IMMORTA-. are to bo^ allow,fid ,tp do as'it.hey please,■:, : ■.Misi^, Gage,' arid .we'-iiav^' tlie word of irinny teni.chers fbr,it, tPld her heareiis here i^ncljn Salisbury' ithat: to, correct ir'child' iri: the, pri­ mary depnrtme'nt ia unthinkable. Free.'activlty, ihb clalmsi,(lo.velops tho'child and iho wil| acquire 'oth­ er, wdrthwhile,; things as he 'ferbwa older.; ‘ v.'''’.' ' ■' " -. That may be nil right as‘a the- \vin«frin c-vii.-m, ory but-we wouldn’t give a snap ¡< f ^ of our fingers for any school-that . ^employed all of. the .m e t h o d .^ .a h e ' f^tablishe.d ks it.n to;belieye in the Jndeatructibility of itho sou I'/” 'asks, Thomas'A.! Edison,.thus giving in form of interrogratory his belief in im­ mortality. Back in 1910 the elec;- trical wizard said, he did.not be­ lieve in immortality. Ediapn’s bpiriion on-, the ques- / i-i —bas added to éhe ear’a durability ¿íÍl' pendablllti^qualitiaa which have ■et Dodge tìrothilera M ew -^ ^ 'art.';i;''i ' m car must aetuàUy be driven to appradate trie#«,4^ r > ' /Ш :)? rtachlng importance of these impravemeniai, • ¿'¡i V > I V " ^ We urge you to make Ша p e ^ ' opportunity. , . /''Й’.'.',’ "Touring' \ f i' а ) (ív H'/ ‘ * ч' ШШШ D q n ' o e - B i R p l i - i i i i s employed all pf the riiethods she outlined. For instnn.ce, iri Salis­ bury she told tho tehchora that in one city she visited .she actual­ ly heard a tpacher tell a child 'to quit running back and forth thr­ ough the hall making a noise. It is little' iess than a Crime, she in- timated, for the'-child thus to he n r i T , , ! ‘J ff'"curbed” non of lite.after death ia widely -Again, she niaiirtairt«id, W ents f often are 'róspdhsiWé'.fbV ing” their children ao.their’initia- tive is killed, , snid that ninny "parents'actually had the nerve tP make their chil- dreii .get up frpm:'the tiible ari'ci wash'their face and .hnrids; -This), ia ni.l wrong. Let the child nlone, ahe anys, and gradually he will learn to wash his face'and hands. Of course, she offered no solution for the.other.meriibors of the fani- beliefs of religion'haVe been aifb--. O’« jected to rigid scrutiny. Men dei .paientS'actually tenets! as immortality.So when Edi.son or any other- eriiiri'ent aci- any school system thnt allow.s •children to be taught anything in 'i-v,n ’«wi it. m o i'ta u ty is a n oo,reci o i la it n .io i ;Snli ‘ belief-arid- not;- of .deihonslralion.think much,^shouIcl be' taught in .m,- Bdiaori. emrilov.s :.the word entist has anything to' say h'e is siire pf, a large and 'i interested audience. There is a 'differerice between ‘‘life after,death’’ and!‘‘immortal­ ity.” A rnn^i might live after denth to' die ngain and .again-.', Immor fpjever, for all ’cnn' neybr :be man hnS' lived i)t|is; never' entling ^lifo. So im­ mortality is an object of faith,-,of • Щ'Y'K J K * ^......... Ÿi MARTIN «I i « H op«’1*0!,Day Phone ^ i‘ v m *v ' ' • ' 4 ' . WfO. the second grade,,',. Just let them alone seems to bo. her plan, nnd they will grndunlly ncquire know­ ledge,',' 1 ' : ,‘v • 'Free nctiyîty .shoulcl- take, the pl.nco. of te.xt books, she has been' quoted as snyirig, niKl to illiistrntb sh 0 toi d ■ of' how : she \ hnd ,-^I 1 owed children to biiild houses,pi’ any- :thirig else ■ they wanted ,-to build during s'chool ' hours. Students: should have,' anwsi.hamniers 'a^n^^^^ ..nails'arid shbuId, bo allowod'to ,usp. them 'any. itimè;:' Ijesaon.i should riot ibu: as.s|ghecl,'',li).y; ."th^ .eftheri' ' Tho'subject' to bo studied' should: be left to the children, ' Miss Gage told thia'story: .She had n “pest” in her room and'al­ ways he was bothering the othçr children, One day as a boy was sawing away (arid ^he was haying a reading lessbri .i'br girjs in the' same room) the pbàt slipped,up behirid^e hoy and pinched him. "'he boy aawed 'away. -Again the pest” pinched ^ifn, ' The hoy iawed iawiy. '^ caièe; time the •'pest** pulled Then hte boy goK up,’”tuj7jei)|ahe ,'‘pè8t'^ over his knee and stiiiitxed him. That’s fwJapM viiy,9ÜM W the whole' Mr. Bdispri.,empIpys;:.t.ho word ‘‘practical!' in stating his opini­ ons,: The only practical napect •Ipf the immortality- question la: to’ :ii,vo;in the ;bulief that one!a 'life is tp; ho liovor 'ending, immortal,' ¡evqrlastiiig, eternal. iritprvons for fear .she : .would “cu.rb”.' th e b oy’s i n 111 a ti ve, . H ow in the rinme of. henven. does she ’’think -those girls could' have been tiii-nldng about their reading while all,the sawing and fighting was going.', on? And ,how would any­ thing ever be done if the- tencljer dared not correct a student?, ,'Or ho\y could the parent ever, control the.^housBhold? 'This, fret: activity is hunk. Thirik..of: 'every child in a achool roon^ gbttirig' upland doing what hn or ahe wanted to do,' regard­ less of .what the: teacher waa sup-.' poaed to be doling, One ;'miglit want to read, ariptnor'might want tp. aaw, anotiibri m want to run abput the'-robrii andiatill an-t o^her; might .want to shout, and sing. Under the theory of free' activity the. teacher must not cor- ■rebli:(|ihbn!uii?fPreBi-bedlamiiifiwh^ / ih •'.-H ave ''-yoiii*'; :v â iy ( é Î |  i , ' - „ - i r - _ ' _ j j i Z : ‘Й 1r e f a c e ^ 'Kwik-W ay ' 'syii'Îiçm''''i ti (I P ;>v-. 'Jl' an earnest effort'and with an honeat deaire to rerl'Üor', ,) í tliçj best possible sei vice to our'customers, we. are ,,ever v. т VM’■■ v-‘ д*| on)the aleit ior now toola and new equipment that'will<l' * ‘ ■''' enaVile us to do youi work better, ' " . JustKvecently! we inatallod a ,complete, 'new ivalvc.' servicing ..syaten^ It. IS: acknowledged to thov best and most'- (ic- .'V Я'/ 'V' Hf !l'l' it Just to bh\i\Y what an iippjlant pan the vaUeS’—tho hpni’t ol tho mobr—play in youi ,^otoi’s opeiation,'let us téfl^;;you that ii-......... ' '...................... ■ ........ ......... -..nll'motoriïst) _A\arpçd,'leaW valves. ,The cilea oi leak} valVoa la'"felf;^ -î'cleaivthrougf ,cari:','';:; ui— lii yim* ,yiuLoi s oiiLiaiion, lei us j;ejU(.( 18 gtatod on gobd authoiitv that 85 pçi cent of i roiib'lea'call be tiatèd duoctly back to faulty, "'‘i 'V ìKy valves. .The cilou oi leak} valVoa la’’fe if;''•’1' JíWíh ■ Itña ímpor^ and' in ; oi'jfl wo instalU'd^thb KWiK-WAY'SYSTEM, Qome in it over. Lpif 1|1з'зЬЬту_,уоц Jiow 1); >v,brks^vi|tett';U{^(^^*s||i^y¿.y your car. ìjlt will make’old cars run,like ,(fc\v ¿p¿nb%0n' mt} bettcif, ’Drive in lîet’s talk it pyer,,’ V ‘ ''ir'tÌIl. i . " ''Л >,v,m h m MO,CKSVILLB ENTERPRISFÍ íCBÍIÍESS ÿ'iAN'Ô;'. • INhÜMÁN jRipIJte inflicted on THOUSANIifS OF POOR ; С AND '.¿HELPLESS/: *- .......CREATURES OÌMAN CRUCIFIED BEFORE HER SON JlSteiiMibile Motare Started ■' B||«wn Out;CriMÍof fTorturedV been bu vied ; near i ^tHë ; ,D fprmed an immense,;cehieteryi ; \ This criminal. ;!wlio ' niao a thief; ' stealing -the from the cprpses/' haVlnot; only been acciuitted but he Has been cohgratulate4 and Géné^ Epure came to, thie ¡bar and proclaimed I bitn a national herb/ ( Morarescu, to j to whom the, ppwerfuL writer; Phnait Istrati, ascribed publicly, some terrible truths, has APPLES AS A FOOD M An «PÍ>|ilHhg chapterVof Henri recently been, it is said, appoint-, Barbuaee's expose of modern ed propaganda ágent of the gov- J mitoi» in the iBalkans is present- ernment. . (#d .herewith by UnlVerBal'Service. i ; After such savage operations ;SI; BarbQ8lieV: the French author there etil i^emain^ nevei^hleless, irf'.the fiimouli war, book, “Under, some eurviyors, as it is impossible gathered thè facte which to harvest a people like a. field, but Jhi reveals M'a a com- theiie áre innume^ablë criminal .^aittee of .threè which went to the prdeecutions started against them. iSâlkans to inye’stigate conditions In jBulgaria statistics give the ■йЬсге.) Hie flndings; uncover hor-, follbwing figures for; the periods ^íróe rivalling thoBe^ W May to Augiist,' 1Й2Б; thé ;*fee. ,Today-^J\e , contribute hia number of accused, 3,557;, capital y^wcrlption. o^;'wholesale- blood- punishment ord^red for 600; con- land to^ re not ^0 in Bui- demned, 611 ¡ condemned to death, ijtwi«, but in-;Rumania: ' i ‘30d, In Bulgaria there are 800 Parii,i*0«Hiébçr, 1926 --çSpme persons waiting to he hanged, 4,- «•tudy^muit. be niad eof the coliec- ООО waitingr to be judged. -<4ive .,.«x«cutions.' \ExfórMiniltion To this is’ to be added: Two »'{iÍDiok place;:-in Bulgaria thoiisend; accused, implicated in Mhfe fall'of- the Stambo- thirty new great suits (for ex- Járapent/’ T^^ ample, the, monster suit of Sch- ^^eSW/; átí the; timé of the umla, :500:. accused к of Lom, 120 й* ‘ in .the ,!còuntr^^ 10,000 vacçusièd; of Russe; 131 accused, •fteí' íwe^c of the ,bf ' Haskovo, 500 accused) the 'ài,.';6;000j.victims; in, Ru- means mosi used to manufacture ■t the time of the occupa- evidence is torture, exercised ^,^Q''òf 'tb6 n«w provinces In Bes- during the'hearings in Rumania, ^•laíábfá âione 18,000 peasants as vv^ell as in Bulgaria, ivéti'killed. ' ..The brochure of M. Costa Furu which began Ц awaken the inr elidible inertia of-.European орГ- hion relates seventy tíases where the' accused yfere: compeUed to confess by tortures.' The Sigur- nnanza used the samé treatment for women 'and young girls.. The women aré tortured before their husbands and the men ih the pre­ sence of their wives. There are no procedures savagé enough and. diabolically devised which tHë'i . police commissioner, and also the í!;i7»rd;;. Tyro men w of instructions have not «f ,my cbmradei succeeded in es-' ^„pioyej to draw the maximum jawing.: : One^vlyan^ ^ ^ physical pain' without: killing ' them blit of the unfortunate nien arid woinen who are dragged be- Tha^,is what, hüs been said to aùiU>i' N<»rdvt6 thé reprisals fol- »h refugee whom ntinoplé.i Hie is Bh ;oif thé ; wild 'Boar-: comiltutéd ■: à •;çommlttèe; 1 rapréssiori, but this tinvlng been : advised would b() massacred, dis- .'^ressed/'and fled into the vine- ^íi ' ('^^,byftlBulcari»h:rèl , ' 'lä’<^Mii!tintino'] ^l^een. wou^ded ih. the leg and fled üto lileïhome in Botargas, irioweyer, ' -father, who was afijaid of the n'|i’ i‘'t'^'e®4ern|nent; delivered him to the I'jMÌ)'.' \ ' I'euthorities and he уай shot in the Æ ù i m M . Í ^ , 1 ' 1 • ‘ . 1¥A^wi'i“'i'-'‘Tbeft*‘®r'Conirade,..P.iscal Ne- W i ? -^ e / w ’lqok fpr fo0(á;-|' Wry‘r'\.''*«ïed,' He tried'to ,Цeuve/i hv. il nbvk other-cpmraiiei^Pf^ ying,^-;gpni^;i^9;fii;i;iii5a^ ...... . ,jbk 0;:'-;ppiHph' '/51,(1 ^/^''''*biii waH s^ved by u p^^ The -.'Jpolic^i.^J^npwirtg that he love^ his ' > • tie arrested and to be tortured be-, fore the eyes of .her son during , > ithe entire night. In this . way ,,they. M.hiiv' siicc'eedea iii jnakinsr hini say ; (ÍI •they' sücc'ëëded iii inàking hini say ■' anything they wanted. , "However, thés poiiçe judging 'that the secrets he delivered Avere Mot sufficiently ' interesting, killed this' mipther; who Was crucified on , :* the ;flpor by, niians of nails driven thro.iigh, her feet and hands,. Ne- yiiBov,;WboVw«B,:b^ and haiids in : a corner, Ipst his ' .¡^r^ason at withéssing this terrible ' «pectacl«. ïhd jvaa^^^s^^^ next " day pn ,the 'pre^ise8:6ii the surety ,'.^»epéraler’-:‘'ïi'ife The Btilgariaii; Colonel Kouma- zov,' after having caused a group of young pebpl« to bé shot before, ihe.eyes of their parents, ordered .that the, latter ki8s;his hands. In, ihe;village! through which he had patpe'd--fàr days the dogs carried ^ limbs. Elsewsere wen were bound with ropes to ' .Autoniobile trucks before starting Ihe .motor. ; In the city ,of Fernin- snt^ (r tal№ spme haphazard epi- ' Bodes) lall the wounded were as- • :> ;BaB8inatcd; also two nurses, fif- .ÿteen years of age, and two phy- ieicians.who had looked after them, jtheil twenty-two children or.bro- '^ 'li'thers of the victims. Even those •whowiere promi.sed grace for sur- v'jentiering themselves were assis- : :Binated. j Nb.w let us take the cafee of , Lieutèiiant Moranescu—this oive a Kiimaniaii., The career of this : oflicer is nothinK but a series of jnii'rders/, ile'ravaged ruthlessly ■ duriiigVtwo years of the military occupation of' Bessarabia. ■ The : i'estimony made hiin appear in -a :/ xea)ly'iantastic light, ' When he was asked how his JiCaltli Vvas he answered: ‘.‘I’am 'well. ':I kill.”; He caused to be shot a; whole crowd of fugitives ' Tv.ho. liiul crossed the frontier of the Dniester and whoni -he had enticoii to come back to Rumania .Avith :p,rbmi8qs/^a he 'enriched -}i)nÎ|e)'ii>v’lt;h tbeir belongings. He ,^^^iuBeäVtq be slaußhtercd on his i^à's.sage^^^ many men andrWomen [M'h'e.^çpüld. * ^yer irritated ag 'clésnite they dithhad a peasant woma9>'^destined . birthdays.—On "alauKhtered carrj'ed.-a child,. Ï-, .'y :V ; fore th'em. Often a physician is present at this opération, and int/erferes wheriV the tortljrts ; threa .?■,) overcoriie. thé; unfortiinates. They strike . ijiitll,?^^^^^ ' faint. . Then they ,reyiyo the yictimsVwithi cold Water in; order tp ; bd ' able to strike ag^iri impré yigorously, The vic- timsltaré ■strict bars cpVered ; ,with rubber' until 1 blbp3 :comés out of itheir ears; Bolling water is poured into 'their earsj thçir, nails and teeth are torn ibut.., In Belgrade , in the: central ."police station tfiore is a chimney, where the bodies of the,prisoners from whom the police, waiit to obtain information are presented to the flan^ies. The name bf a 'woman has been cit'ed in whose bbdy ¿n iron blade heated white had beén thrust Needles are put un.der the tongu'^s of the prisoners and pins heated white under, their nails. There is a special machine which screws the head until thé bonw pf the cranium crack. ; '';'ln 'Ciiumeti' there is .«« hypnotic, and electric tréatiiiêrit' whicfi "specialists" give to those whom^ the police want to make speaki Several ^ men died undei" thel'r hands. We have seen in a hos­ pital for prisoners a man whose legs were torn and atrophied by this instrument. There is y no prisohér who does not_mei)tion similar cases. I In 'Varna, in the interrp'^ation room of the jiolice the motors pf I three automoibileB were sVirted in , order to drown the cries of the ' tortured victims. ALLEN REUNION HELD AT FORK CHURCH ',Thc Alien reunion was held at the home of'Mr. A. W. Allen near Fork Ciiurch on Sunday, Nov. 14, aiicl was attended by a large ei'bwd. Many of' the rclative.s were not present bri account of sickness and other eaiisòs, A long table was nifide in-thc yard and was loaded xli)wn with good things to eat; in the center of the table set a large beautiful birth­ day: cake;^iwhich measured nearly 5 feet aroiind, andHield 80 candles, in beautiful pink'/tfrtifical rose buds, in honor of the 80th birth­ day for both Mr, and Mrs! A. W, Allen.; ; ■ ,1 ' Mn ¿nd Mrs, Allen are/-bó'th much younger in'.looks .apd mays Hendersonville News. The apple, becaiise of its abun­ dance, its roa'soiiable price and the ■wide variety of uses to which it lends itself as a great food, de­ serves, a, more prominent place in the dieiary and should be the fruit of the masses of these Unit­ ed Statesi Hénde.rson county has thous­ ands of bushels going to waste. It has a scientifically cultivated crop of at least one hundred and fifty thousand bushels. This food should be more freely consumed. The following from Dr. Royal S. Copeland, the noted physician, hy­ giene and health expert, is en­ lightening on this subject: City folks deny themselves a delicious and valuable food by eating top few apples. There are fifty varieties of this friiit of com­ mercial ilnportance. How many do you know about and how many do you eat in a year? Apples constitute a world-wide item of diet. They are fine for youth, and old age when properly prepared. Eaten in the form of old fashioned apple sauce or bak­ ed in a sugar pan, apples are fit for the gods. Feeding experiments conducted recently proved that the protein conttíht is low, although of an es­ pecially fine quality. The juice of the apple is of great dietic value. Tnken freely, the apple ib a laxative and acts freely on the intestinal tract. Unfortunately, as is true of oth­ er, fruits, some perBons are sen- sitive to the portein in the apple. Fortunately, these are ffew and far between., ! Not only is the apple valuable oh account .of its protein ^rid roiighage or fibre content, but It also contains the agreeable malic acid. This is claimed by eminent dieticians, to be an excellent anti­ fermentative, preventing trouble in the intestines. The free use bf apples appeijrs to combat tho tendency to acidoSis. '.The apple contains vitamines which are necessary to promote grbwth aind to maintain good health.' ''This';fruit is worthy of a more proininent place in the; dietary. Usually it is regarded as a luxury to be indulged- ih when conveni-^ erit brwheh it cdn be afforded. As' a matter of fact, the apples should bo considered an essential part of the menu. ' ' ; Naturij has so distributed the various foinns of fpòd which make a complete ration that it is neces­ sary to include in our. diet all parts of the plant—leaves, buds, roots, seeds and fruits. 'When this is done we can bo certain that notliing has been overlooked. You can see then that the apple is one of the plant foods which should be regularly eaten. thè . appiè suppliés in a more palatable, though less poncentrfit- ed form, much the same food es­ sentials that are found in roots. There are particularly the alka­ line salts.^ We need a cbnaider- able amount of these to neutralize the^ácld wastes of our ,bPdies, ,Iln the commercial field, the ap; p)es is ; put to. many uses. The dried apple is used;in the 'mánu- ^facture of jams, jellies, apple butter aiid sweet meats in the form of candy and pastries. Eat fruit every day, especially the appi«. * HOW DO WE KNOW? fo0ds which iisuaily play an im- '¡ibrtant part in the southern djiet. Beef, "potatoes, dried fruits, boana, and peas 'wbre used in larger quantities ori the farms of Kansas and Ohio. Milk,‘cream, eggs, and poultry were consumed in larger quantities in Missouri and Kans­ as. Ohio and Misspuri led in ,the consumption . of purchased bread, but when bread* is expressed as equivalent ’flour, the wheat con­ sumption in.the four States was similar, Fresh vegetables and Kimbrough, Laura ' Wasson;: Wii^; l:am. .Wa8sqii/,MlnnI'e’;DbUthit''^)pi'd' Leah Douth'it. ' .......... ■; Douthit Kimbrough,';,:; Kimbrough, -i Düke ;'!:;KimbröU!^ Lucy Kimbrough, Miiihie ;poiit, and < Leah Doiithit, MeferidwVW above-named; ‘ will : ',takel' that ah action entitled a«'. has been comniieiiced in ridr Court of DaVie:Cbuhty^;^” ^"’'"® Carolina, ;tb. divide and'paj that certain tract bf oiie ’ acres of land lyiiig andm - ■ 'o_____________ fruits were co;isumed in larger Farmingtph ' ToWhiihl'p; quantiities in Missiouri and Ohio Countyj,-North CarollhtlJ than in Kansas and Kentucky. On joiiitly by Minnie Dbui7 the whole, the diet of the farm families studjeid was nourishing and abundant. The chief lack was the proportion of fruits and j to other Important heirs ‘bf G. ; 6; :<Alken) déc«ásed arid the hpirii Bettle Kimbrough, dec the said defendants ДЬм**"* vegetables foods. . . . Foods furnished by the farm ! ersigriis(d clerk ^ were valued at a fair price, some-1 in the court hous what between what, would have N. C., on the 27th been received had they been sold or, 1926 and aris^ and what would have been paid the c'omplalAt of take notice that they/M^^ .:no céle to appear at thé olllfr^bUt '^ , 0 . '1 . . - ^athplM àÿj s6mc Sliitiiaieift,; löther^ri „i -¿i L '■ ü'i'- í 1 — had they been purchase^ locally, On this basis it was found that 40 pencenit of the ,perage value of all the farm famiiyVliying was represented by food, one^thlrii bf which was purchased, the total cost of food per man per ; year varied in'the different States. It averaged $147 per adult-male unit in the States studied. This means the cost of the food consumed by the average moderately active man. The proportions spent for the various food groups are: 28 per cent for meat, eggs, arid cheese; 19 per cent for milk and cream; 12 per cent for faijty foods; 19 per cent for fruits arid vegetables; 10.per cent for cer­ eals; and 12 per cent for other foods. The largest proportion of purchased food was in, Ohio, 89 percerit, In. Kansas it was ’ 86 per cent, in Kentucky 29, and in Missouri 27 per cent. Food fur­ nished by,ihe farm thus amount­ ed to 60 or 65 per cent of all food consumed. , ONE PLAN ATOPTED TO CUT COTTON ACREAGE | Y 7 ^ ^ Ï É R P R 1 S E ^ I I Tj|e Local Mews. ‘ Our M otto~ T he L argest PAID -IN -ADV ANCÈ CIKCU LaVÌÒN S VOL. 49 TRUTH, WOXESTy OF PURPOSE ANP UNTIMNG FIDELFTY TO 0UR COUNTY AND ;■ MOCKSVILLE, N.^ C., TH URSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1926 :M 3rd Escape ToM Npjrtii Carolina’s Prison Raleighf Nov. 17.-^North Caro­ lini»'will move forward aggros- sivbly to cut tho ncreago to cot­ ton next season under a plan, adopted, as a state-wide’ measure at a meeting of all interested or­ ganizations and individÍJiils, held in the Statò Capitol at Rttleigh on Monday, November 8. The meet- ii]g called by Governor A. W,; Mc-^ Lean heard a nuinber bf import-' #.nt suggestloris and then adopted a prograin of action to be put into effect, by a special committee headed by Dr. E. C, Brooks, Pre­ sident of North Carolina State Collegoi -, This committee consists bf a representativé of the College, of the State Department of Agricul­ ture, of the cooperative cotton as­ sociation, of the Agricultural Committee of the State Bankers .riottéiyrltcee]*àrid Statesvijl'^;’У and ШШуТ'Ма This ' 15th daMüiP^ tb,é, Л1гг1п^ 1926, A. D. - - - ..Ш warawlwse .ofJ W. М. SEAFiymarked todw iij Superior Cpürt vithe; naltiori Robert S. McNeill, A'rlca, Austi-alia * tloners.; . ,'pthei: far-flurijl'i i, .... -■ ♦ -V ld. ■ V NOTICE OFSj^i'ltg quota p: - ' .rttb. thé' Iàtt State of North Caroltn«Wi;]ou^ cbn County of DavI** ; \i'States Ex Under and by virtue;]ü ndé power of sale vested: in 'u-ai Eersfcf^ ersigned trustee for the'o tùm-lthili ' can Agricultural Chemicaç tiiq 'QeV pany and , Arriiour ; F«i Pni bo.' Works, In that certain de, ; trust recorded In the office к Davi( Réglstér of Deeds of Davie C-jb'i |rj t.v, in Book No, 21, pages 402Vÿi),'il| if03, executed by M. <J. Hendr,|cc] it and Emma G. Hendricke his i^çjndl} to secure thé piàymentwf certksola ,r — notes aggregating'thé sum iii,( /nJ i b *AN^ER<{^N 17131.60 and interest thereoU.V* V ®"î "’ S i« «!! ® ' payable to the American Agrb ' uemisi , the remedy)'for 4he evils' of .free­ dom' is more free.dom, Mr. Wood reached out and grabbed all that he could get. Had he not escaped twice be­ fore the unhearlded and cheap exit would have amount to little. Mr. Wood wearied first of his . , chains May 10, 1924. On thatRaleigh, Nov. 22. Otto Wood, jjiund memorial day. he and aripth- jf Greensboroj. most \ successful. gj. pi.jgoner armed with knives ov- 'Nprth .Carolina author; fescaped' IoFFICIALS blam e guard uperintendent-.- of i*rljon., Had Slayer Of Kaplan Iri;S.olltRry But Prisoii Bor|rd Let Him , , In Back Yard HOW THE DEAR WOMEN CAN BETFER MANAGE THEIR HUS-1 bands: one who died in THE HARNESS. MAY MEAN HIGHER PRICED COTTON. HOW ABOUT THIS? from state prison today again,, fter two prévibiis.getaways from ercame a guard, forced Him into an automobile and made the man drive them from prison. : They B. C. UROCK * lÀttórriéy at Law * I ÓGX8VILLE, N. C. * títicé.in State and Federal * Phonem * 1 i OA ' - i i.1. I niuni irom prison. : rney sentence of years ior the! ,,,„fted anPther! automobile and mrder of A. W. Kuplaiv, of forced a driver to carry them to- reensboro.^ . ' ward Greensboro. He was taken Somewhat after the example of' to,Roanoke two days later. Fifteen :he anciont philosopher, who re- mter, November 24, 1925, ¡red to desert place and by medl- m„ i,t-i 1-......1.....^, . - . • - - Mr. Wood hid himself-in a culvert ir»'» and rode from prison in a box f“' uf car as just ordinary freight. He Kr,;.Wood W^nt,o few^(^^^ to popular im- ifimewhat against hia^own -bnsf — fortnight ' Mocks-1• ,* « |»nv ;YY,ooa w.ent,a lew w .rtppealed..mightily to popu ilimewhat against, .his^ own ,:bcst „grnirtiib'ri' .but, after -a ■ fo (ndgment, to solitary .confinement j,e was capturedT^tWeen (There he undoubtedly was work- viii« nn,i ..«.i 1. Why do wbmen'so often make failures in managing .their hus­ bands? Well, we don’t know, and we do not propose to say someh, thing which would bring down upon our head the wrath of the dear women, for we love all of them, God bless ’em. But, 11 ice Stanford Martini Edltbr of the Wiiiston-Salem Journal, we are going to offer the good sisters some suggestions'made by a member of their own sex. In her book, “The Woinen of the Family,” Margaret Culkin Ban­ ning discusses this veiry question, and among other things, as quoted in the Winston-Salem .lournal, she writes: ! "Marriage is still the only job mostwomen ever have. Then why shouldn’t they try to make’the best of it, instead of‘the worst? Why should women gb around with almost an air of. pride, because they have failed In marriage—-that is, divorced? A woman is not proud of being fired from any other job. And, whilei the divorced wife' may arguevthat what she has done is to resign her /position, the fact remains that often she'has been fired frbm it.”' . Again shel says, “If/,I were asked what the average wife should do in order to make more sticcessful her relationship with her hus­ band, 1 think I should answer: ‘ . . ' . ' “LET HIM ALONE!" Now that strikes us ns ra'ghty goSd advice. On« trodble with many married Women is that tliey want to db as they please and at the saine time see that hubby does as she pleases, also.; ■ Ladies, take it from a wise member of your own sex, LET YOUR HUSBAND ALONE, for this is the law and the prophets. 130 New________ For ТЪё Generiä ' •Jm J» CHRISTMAS SEAL FUND, ÖAV1B COUNTY ,■' .......................................... ' Friends : The happy-:Chrils{rit^8 time is again vdrawing<méarj.?Ì'n^^ our Christmas seals ; àré;:^i'Wfji ready for ’sài é. ' Thr6ùg;a^ labor of love : last year, year before we were abtóÌttìÌ'^^^ many through their' sufferl^ìlB.^ six patients : were treaiédiift!' h w .'pitals; five, of which ::wet'é|taken; to our State Sanatorium.;:$THi^i: others were given ’medlcàlììr««!-; irtent and helped- in thelr.fhpiinl*^^^ Fl ye have "recovered, wlti^'three'; we Avere-. too late- Let's) àll|;^ ready to do oUr, best: agaiii : this, year. The sale'will begin aft%; Thanksgiving day. Statemeiit:Ì|é-; low showf amounts received and If wnii ! expendfed this past year., . Ton ali - . ..... 'Щ R E,S BVtrMt,'' . o p j be V ?агй to> елЫЩ must insist on doing as you please, that'is on exercising your so cailed ] -iri •thls. gopd-work; a Í NB\y, FREEDOM^ allow the husband ’the same privilege, otherwise 'yciiir 'miiti'fmonial ship is most*'sure to run on the rocks, Wilkesboro and brought I, And above 4.11 _things, do^ not cite other men to htm as', examples n,(?-out something that would a- confinement in ! "’h'ch he should g,pvern his conduct, for that is the unpardonable 'orn the state and enrich his age. jjjg ggj) sin.if your husband is a self-rsspccting being. . , 'r. Wood had just completed the,’ jir. \Vood got literature in his cultural Chemical Cbmpiiny,^ anj^. $1898,17 and Interest Armour Fertilizer iVi-::;:, defaul'; having beep made payment of the principal and, iri-”']' terest of said notes; and the said Amcricnn Agriculturdl' Chemical Company and Armour ' Fertili:;er Works liavlrig declared the total sbm due on said notes immediate­ ly payable as provided , by the terms of. said deed of trust; and both' having requested the said trustee to foreclpse said deed of trust, the undersigned • trustee wilj, on the sixth day of Decemb­ er, 1926, at 12;0g o’clock' M„ at .the c'ourthou'se do®*" o^'County, in the city of Mocksville, N; C., offer fbr sale atfpiibiic auc­ tion to the highest bidder for cash, the following described tracts or parcels of land, in said Davie County, cpntalnlng in tho aggregate 246 acres more or less, situate, lying and being ori the Cana-Farmington Public Road, about eight miles northwest from the town of Mocksville, in Farm­ ington Township, Davie County * Ófllce in Anderson Building *' Í!;, Phones: Office 50; Res. 37 * Mocksville, N. C. -4- ,Association, representativeB of > ,- . , Chanibers of Commerce and twoor more leading farmers. . north by №e lands of W.R. Hud- The plan under Which the re- duction in acreage Will be brought '*"‘1 ^ 9/ T“*“™ about 'Calls first for a better balr I ®«st 'hy the lands of H. G. Rich, ariced system of agriculture, which iri itself according tb the and on thé south by the lands of Miss Nettie Eatori, : being the *, If your subscription has * expired, and you'have not re- ^ newed, How Do We Know * whether or not you want us * to continue sending you the * paper?. If your subscription * has expired and youVrave * neither paid in advance, nor * asked for credit, what are we * to do?* * ^ * •» * ■»: tt •» » » A grower in Beaufort County, recently sold, 12 tons bf finq soy-, bean hay. This hay is eoual'in f eeding value to the finest legume; hay of-the W-est and can be grown more cheaply, WHAT FARMERS EAT tliari they are Jn.'age lirid we hope they will аееГграпу, *■— .— Óntí urei ап(|;,ап',о' hirri,: whil JUSii гцши; îlaugl^tored carríe( fflarm ' he ; preWred to. kill l^imsélf.í гЩ brdéred'the, i i B É i i i ore .happy presfent. ; ,ro so he ll ''^Г.йИ the 'Various interesting conclusions have been drawn frbm a recent s'tudy of food consumption by farm families, made by the;Bu- refttj of Home Economics of the United States Department of; Ag­ riculture. This study was part 'of u standard of living study for \yhich figures were collegted frPm 1,331 farm families in four;States ~^Kaii|!8s, Ohio, Missouri,; arid Ken'tucii; ■■ i,Keri:ti the copi! lard;’^'-" li; should reduce,the 4preage by 83 arid 1-3 percent. T^e second point is that a canipaigfi will be begun Vimmediately to curtail acreage by diversifying crops and by signing a pledge to cut the i acreage tp cotton by 25 percent. A pledge wiill: be presented to 'each iridVvidual ‘ cotton farmer ■asking him to cut his acreage by 25 percept and tb put iri a better balanced system of farming. I Fourth, the aid of bankers and supply merchants will be enlisted and they will be asked to sign a pledge not to Supply credit ex­ cept . where acreage is, reduced | and the elementary principles of good farming are followed. Fifth, public, recognition of farmers adopting the new plan will be given, Sixth', better miirketing facilities will be worked out and the farmers will be'aided'in mark­ eting their surplus food,and feed crops, ' To carry out, these plans, one central state committee as given has been; appointed and a county committee will be in charge of each county, ' T ' NOTICE |,and; Missouri ,;led in PTÏ, SEKVICE .BY PUBLICATION : In the. Superior C.«urt Before the Clerk NORTH CAROLINA, DAVIE COtFNTy. . ,. Dillard ;; Cuthrell Adams, .T. A, Adams, ... Hugh ;• Cuthrell, Faith Cuthrell, Lucy Cuthrell Bell and ■R:';,R.'BeU,.^:;'■; G.'L; Kiriibrough,;Zol.a Doutljit'Klinbrough,jEVelyn Kjnqi-J',iOl ..... G. Heridricks h(s wife, under ieirid by virtue of the following deeds^ to-wit: (a): Deed from L B. Winfrey to M. J. Hendricks, registered in book 21, page 407,' Conveying seven acres; (b) Deed frorin T. H, arid E. w; Tatum to M. J. Henr dricks, registered .in book ' 21; page 410, conveying; ninety-two acres; (0) Deed from J. C. Mar­ tin and wife to M. .1, Hendricks, registered in book 16, page 382, conveying twenty acres; (d) Deed from Nettie Eaton to'M. J. Hendricks and wife, registered in book 21, page 408, conveying fifty acres; (e) Deed from E..F, Eaton to M. J, Hendrick.s, registered in book 24, page 361, convoying four acres; - (f) Deed from S. B, Eaton to M, ,T, Hcndricks, registered in book 24, page 3(31, conveying, thirty-two acres; (g)-Deed from F. li. Lakey to M, ,1. Hendricks, registered in book 26, page 261, convoying one andvfivo-sixth acr- 0«; ; (h) Deed from Henry How­ ell, to M,,,T, Hendricks, registered in book 26, pajje: 262,, conveying two acres; (i) Deed to Emma G. Hendricks in the division of the lands of Phillip Eaton, registered in book 13, at page 74, con'veying thirty-eight and one-half acres. In office of Register of Deeds pf Davie : County,,' North ' Carolini The 'descriptions set out; in sij deeds being here .adopted, arid made a if here recit This this 4th day of Nov. 1926. CLif |ORD: FRAZIER Trustee for. the American' Agncultural '^femlci»l Company arid 'Arm Wor^tifc nost conspicuously pi-ofitable in.' he;'dV thenVorked on his book. Icursion into literature yet under-j th„t and sold tho first Jtnkcn by any North. Carolinian.! |lc had wrtttcn, had printed and, pHson oiTicials said this after- J^n.d lor 1,000 copies of his own „oon that Mr, Wodd's escape was romantic life. Ho had .sold near- possible by tho gross cnre- I.V all of.them wi^thin 60 days. Bj; ]es.4ness' of Joe IIux, guard. It tomparison wit,h the Wood book, ¡g tinted that there will be short- Take notice thati-'tiie partner- llbe letters of Walter Hittea Л ly another leave-taking-from the ship of J, R. Edwaid's and H, R. К'“' 'Pi'oved a mercantile piker. p,.|aon. Wood gi.l away before Martin doing business Under the: iTbcro are not 500 copies ot tliat breakfast, A sui)porting pin in Alaitin cioing nusine 8 B„,,eat work on ¿urtpn Hqndrick, tl,e roar gate had been removed 1 blessing is due;. , , , , . , , , . . ^ Stiitemerit' of receipts and ex­ penditures Nov. 5, 1936,'to Nov, 20, 1926. ' . ■ ' Received , .From 1925 Seal sole: . ^ ' Clarksville township schools ............. Cooleemee town and; schools....'........'..... name of Davio, Chevrolet Co., with principal office at. Mocksville, N, C,, has been dissolved by the acts 6f. Ji R. Edwards and consent of H. .R. Martin.-.^ : ' ■ у All accounts due aaid partner­ ship and all claims against said partnership' will be presented to 'said Winecofl^ foiy adjustment. . The said G, ;F; Winecoff being mutually agreed ,,цроп ^ by said partners for the purpose of re­ ceiving ail claims due the partner- shiii and to receive and pass upon all bills and claims duo by said partnership. . . ■' ,, This the 20th day of October, 1926. ..-V: - bAVIE CHEVROLEt CO. By H. R. Martin. : 10 .27 26. Most men are amb.'tious to “die in the harness,” Tiiat is, retain their physical and mental strength late in.life. And it is a laud.able ambition. Many of the world’s greatest men have,beeii able to keep working, up to within a short time before death, John Wesley, was , _ , . , • , a fine example. He was a hard worker all his life. When a student! at Oxford he started his activities, and thru a long life, no man work-' "" ed harder. He died at liis home near London in March, 1791, at tho ago of 88. Ho preached hia last sermon on Pebruury before he died in March following. And even after he was confined to his bed he , 1,1 ■ lU ■ 1 soomed zealous to keep up. the fight, -This is evidenced by th^ fact | that on tho day before his death he saiig, “I'll PraiBc My Maker While town and I’ve Breath.” The’ day on which ho passed away, many friends gatli- ' ,F.4rmin*gton town, and', school Smith GVpvo tow'ii and , , school (dnm, radical biograijher), owned ' äml Mr. .Woocl'^'sUd' ^irouidrth^ i “ ^o-ut'his bed.s'klo. lie bade them all farew ill, As otliera came R '»î«tipns to„fund\\v Nni'fli Пя1*л1тм»пи iVnrl onvoiMiI » 1 1 . 'v . . ^ly Noi'th Carolinians and several ; below. 'ïn the language of ¡•ears , of intensive advertising thé tombstone, Mr.'Wood is “gone, iiacle that possible, Mr, Wood Jidth pnly (I brief review of his book by the Groonsboro Daily Mews .,lis prolimlni(ry -advertise- nent,, had sold his first edition. Mr, Leali! chairman of the board of directors of the state' prison, made the following state­ ment today from his home In NOTICE OF RKllll^LE OF LAND . Under and by v irtu e .a n or­ der made by the: Clerk of Supe­ rior Court of iDavle . Counity, 1 November, 1926, directing :;,the undersigned, mmgaeeé to ге-яе11 thi^ la^ds hereinafter фв(;|г1Ьес|. at 'public auction,' ian ' Increitficdi bid five peir' cent, ha'vlrig been plac'ed u)i(in thé same, Iind. de­ posit th'ëi*efor having been duly ¡ made, tlié undersigned : niortgageé; will offer .for re-sale at, i>úb)ic , auction, ,for ; cash) at the cburt house' door in Mocksville, North Carofina, 12:00, noon, Saturday, Novembér 20, 1926, the follpwinf described tract of land,-to. wit: BEGINNING at'a white bak in Clement’s, line, running' South 1ЗУ2 East 5,20 chains to stone in the road, Alexander Wyatt’s coi'- ner; thence Eastwardly with Mocksville and jState^yilie road 250 feet to a stone on side.bf said road; thence Westwai’dly about 350 feet to the line on Noi'th sifl® Wt is a marvelous tribute to/tho .Wndesboro dealing with the es- Jar Heel- taste ior'high litera- cape this morning bf Otto .Wood, ... . ^ ! •'* prisoner serving ^2 1-2 to .”.0^But one North Carolinian ever years for murder: hh approached tho 'achievements »otto Wood, serving a 30 yoar of Mr. Wood. And that, strange- sentence in the state’s prison for y enough, was a volume ot verse, murder, escaped this morning, Rey. Hersey Everett Spence, ot »r,, „joking this announcement Duke university, did dispose of j wish to publicly absolve Super- about 800 copies in one deal back ¡ntendent George Ross Pou and in 1914. This successful delivery Chief Clerk Love of any respon- of books was remarked at the gibiiity in connection with the es- iime—Mr. Spence got rid of them cape. After Wbod’s escape and in, Wesloy found that'ho could not make, them understand what ho was saying. Then the'»rreatprpacher in one last offort. summoned J all his strength, and, iif-ting his'dyiiig arms; in token u'victory, and IJ, ; I'iiising hi.s feeble voice then alfnost hushed in death, ho triumpliant- ' i„ ' ly cried ovar and over a.s long:a\i breath lasted: "The 'üost of aU is, ^'God is with us,” ' , ' : ; is it any wondor that one so zealous tb servo his Maker foUrided ('a groat church and turned the world upsido down wit:i his eloQU-énce during the coursé of his long,'consecrated and-vigoroùs life? . .the;iiijioi^fm^| fwencfe?jib||itlii|f ,,::'.Th'e:-fi!<ui«tiii'ii'| tha^Blx^MilieM from '>WOulclK:m'iincijtlv’iitI crats i W k r ' ': theWv weire,#h'w?i« 'Not orii»:'of;ifefif’’’’ l8torV’Win;-;iomel^„_ 'YadkiriV.WtfriS*^^ .,th6;'flrst;ti^^|)tt|&^ ' brought'-^bptti)itfpR,e^^^ feats-:-:-in:-:'JbhiiBtbnpSiiinL ........... Brunswick’ cbu'Stjea‘.‘~" '.'iifffS I There will be tWo/Ev^(;etfi|ii|| the (House'..'¿They but they hail from dlflfeiin:tlSe(!|}^^ tions of the^ state., t!K. ..... is froin Durham ¿nd'hi>8 bein'lniiii I2'<) jI the assembly befpre; J. 'AV/K«*e| “ ' ett; is’from;-, Martin coiiJjtyjvsftWi 1». a: newcomer.V .'//v :-.,.\Thb-.'Se!i[\:at6s':ol(joi'iiw|5i eVp. '■ Theyt'awM'#®ii^H"^ -Pitt8boro,'!-j\!}fB|\;i*^"' ............." iw ■' 9.07 27.31 1,92 13.60 9.00 91.76 12.00 3.00 .44.00 Ex, ;Cha:rman M..J,;’Ilendrleks, Ex. , I'Chrm, Farmington TOTAL re'ed, , 165,75 ( } 10,00 I will tend to bring down the price of, coal in this country,, although, it may be some weeks before we feel the effects here. Doubtless In the great-million dollar fire in ¡ubsequrnTrecaiture l7sTNover-1f make some lidvijnces in the meantime. The Durham-in 1914. If that purely ber, Superintendent Pou directed “"‘’ f I’' After having cost a biUion and a half dollars, and, after having crippled cotton nnd other American, cbmmod.'ty exportation becatise of-lack of shipping, facilities while all ships available were engaged In shipping American coal to England, meanwhile the price of coal in thi.s country haying advanced in some cases nearly a hundred per cent, aftor all this, the British coal strike has ended and relief will come to the cotton farmers, the coal consumers of America and , . . . . - i Europe. The resumption of operations in the English coal mines , P*''' Nurses care to patients Transportation to; Ho’sp.i- tals and treatment :nprtpn;rOfi',p4ÂÇBjaL ______ -■,44im'’lari-ty:'0f.--rihm4B To St^te TuoeLioá.s As-: ^ ¿n.intlon, 25 pei- fcent: ' : 1925 .sale ....41.40 A«tl '^"".sndo ifiunpiios ..... Spitum cups and Holders Téléphoné calls to Hospi- •tals ...;...................... southern cotton fnrmers and,coal consumers of this country Can living people communicate with the dead? Suchva question naturally provokes laughter in most of us. 'vSpiritualism to us is ccidentai disposal of literature tj,aj; ),e be placed in solitary con- lad'not taken place,-there would flnement and'that every care be jbe nbthirig to mar the all-time exercised to prevent,his escape. ■ecord'of'Mr. Wood for salesman- This was done and Wood remain-j . . , a 1 i it, nt n 1.1, a i. u hihlp.of riative as well as foreign ed In solitary cojifinement until " there are literally thousands who believe as elles letters. . S e p t e m b e r 1 4 , ^ 9 2 6 , a t w h i c h t i n i e ' «/'"'y ^hat they have been In touch with their dead as they^bd^^^^ Any.;nian .half the philosopher he was released by direction of the sun shines on a .fair day. On Armistice Day several thousand that Mi-; Wood has several times the board of directors of the People were assembled In London at a spiritu^ist convention. The »hown himself-to be, would have state’s-prison over the vigorous services were beingJead by Sir Arthur Connon Doyle, famous E •nown that his days at the state’s protest of Superintendent Pou J^'n^er and scholar. Suddenly he shouted to his h^^ irison were nMnibered, It just „nd Chief Clerk Love. | /. “»el«: to tuck out in his book that he was “The matter of his release had ®® testify. Material aid-clothes, food 'and bedding .20 1,90 ."-,,75 12,00 15.00 244. éO з9;зб in the last scH8loii,,,wlTPIifBiBiiiiKi>;!iiiii«:fl/ffi as .will Z. V. Turlington,‘father. of the state’s dry act. i v . Wa.lter Murph, politicHligenW^*--' of ;Rowan ceunty and • aytiWed '^ti^ pbnerit of the Salary and Coriimisslon and '‘the. i{Exec^tjlviKf budget, will bk on hnndiaga'fr,t*#jfii sWiir,'Harrison'^Y«jverton,,';^»^' county statesman.,' /'■! Other, familiar ¡ifa^esis'iiiyjiik' TOTAL :expd, , ?365.10 ' éf«?"í Balance on hand, Nov. 20, ' . ' TO /he ambaesador^rf 1926' i„ 25 . McDowtill, primary oppottiB ' 'iL ^ flzan d the original ЛЫЛаЩ on;#| . ' ' *398 35 wae^bfá^nj'tr ; -'.;.'„-'':;year8:of,8ervlce!by,-,iaí%píi¿Mp ! Signed-OUÉEN BESS KENNEN,hnhrm maß я«„1 -«Io , ’ of oppo8.ng the Í 00I anti-M headed, for 8pmet,hlng. higher-^ come before the board of direc- |perhaps the- tall timbers. The tors at its August meeting but lan’s nature as presented by that on account of thp-'very ea.vnest prince of non-partisans, Mr, Wood protest of the superintendent ac- himself, was entirely, too celestial' tion was deferred and Wood re­ fora state prjson and its sblitai-y mairied in solitary. The question cells itinn More than three thousand are said to have stood, “Thank God,” exclaimed Sir Arthur, “and I prophesy that within flve years, to such nn appeal every man ai^d woman will rise.” Now that sounds nèxt to silly. But who shall say that that entirjs three-thousand were .under hypnotic ¡nflue.nce, or were fakers, or crazy? Indeed such demonstrations really make one wonder, es- ;. Uncie Jimmy Leak, chair- again .came before the board ■ at Pecialiy if one is inclined to think For, ni-ter all, we^know very lit- of the state prison board, ¡tt September meeting, at which - tie, and while we do know very jitile, one of he-few things ^ye know generally has been against any time, as stated above, the board *' ‘ widling of prisoners. In all his directed' that Wood -woujd be- re-, «e® ««»• neau years out there he has;.made but leased from solftary; confinement | one complaint against G'eorge „nd given .'the freedom of the cHKISTMAS MAIL SHOULD BROKEN WINDSHIELD Pou, the siipérjntendent, and that back yard of the prison. This ac-1 BE MAILED'EARLY V CUTS DRIVER’S-THROAT when Goverpoi»-Morrison called tfon of the board was opposed by ' ' ■ Chrm. 1925 Seal 'sale, : fArming-ton bàzXàiî The public should do thoirof th^e.lot. to R, A. N > ■lii,. p^, great penalogist. Uncle Superintendent ' Pou, Wood was by Floyd Fry, to point 286 le ■jinimv never had any purpoise to given the freedom of the back-' from the said.white oak (the ')f;|harbnv'one of them damned things yard and assigned to thé boiler! early in order out there, Mr, Pou showed nil- room where, i t was f e l t he could to insure éarly deliver.v, snys \V, niiatiikable signs of being one, but be better watched by the guards. 1 E, Rutledge, Mr. Rutledge says Hucce,ssfully hid it from Uncle , The.reason the board favored hia ' Uncle Sam will make every eiïbrt ginning corner)' ihence North 86 West 286 feet to said white onk, the begihhlng_ corner, cohtiilninf| TWO (2.60) acres, 'moi’e ;or loss. The ajbove laiVds were sold iit ............................., ........................................ to handle. the .Christmas m.ails tompermanental as all groat au-j was purely, from a human stand-, \yithout congestion and delay, and |Jimmy, Last summer Mr. Wood, | release from solitary confinement, : Washington, N. C., Nov. 20,— His throat cut by a piece of brok­ en windshield, Lige Wollard,'bf 'Bunyan, was aimosfc inotantly kill­ ed shortly after 6 o’clock; tonight when he drove his automobile into a car , parked on the side of the road .a few mileSjifrom here. He public niic'tibiv: after due adve>;'itl)ors ai-e liable to be, finished his ' point, as .we felt his health and | because, of the., enormous • volume jjie,',' without hiivihg regainecl con" tisem^nt accordijiff' to layvi’. on .■monumental work in his cell. '| mind’ would^ become impaired by | this can only be done with the cp- —:— ...t-.m-XT ion/». 1. V,«. .................. -........... mind’would^ become'impaired by Novembej1 9 2 6 : , J After, being recaptured on his continuous confinemorit; No blame chasod by. E, C. Morns a. i Jsecond escape, Mr, Wood was glv-j whatapever can be attached to the v.uperinterident, ' The: resppnsibi-prtce^^:;$5?5.00,.^n^ncrea^kn « cell on Vleath row and vir- M . Of-flw P9|,cent.h^^^^^^ P.»“'Jlually 'advised' to stay there until (,3 do part. From the.-de- .herefore, the biddjng:;9t;i-this i^fsert pl^jce he wrote his lifé;Super- intenderit; Pou favored .keeping him there, for pnce4urning to the Philosophy of Mr. Leak, who had I little love for “pôrialogists,’’ .Un- for hiriiself, Mr. Leak toward “poniilogistsi’’ eptember 14, Mr. Leak . ordered the b^gin 'with the sum 01 A. D. ' A'. T. LBIWH Mprtgage?; .................... Robert.,S; McNeill^ Attqfj|m i iforturtately for Place of Sale; Court House W «w as headed tow Mbck^yille, C. ; J■Anyway,^^^^^ Time of Sale'^:^fturday,'NovenilBjiW>rvi^!i^&.f;.,..^ er 20i^l9?6 f 12:00,(Noon. ^ sciousness while b(>ing carried to a hospital.,' lity.rests entirely upon the board of directors, as Wood was releas­ ed by the boiai’d oyer the continu-^ ous protest; of Superintendent- Pou.- .“Every effprt is being:put forth' to effect \Vpod’s recapture,” S^vine feeding.hijs begun iii the mountains aridW, R. Anderson of Clay county states that one carload of dempjistration fed hoge operation of the jniblic, Millions of Christnlas cards, I says the postmaster, are mailed each Christmas, sçparate and in on a tag, because th'ij tages are envelopes: and when they are easily pulled off whenUi bulk‘of ma/led within a day or two before' packages are, packed tôgetherÿ Christmas, great congestion and He says all ariiclés ea8%;,bi’0^- delay occurs in postoffiCes, For en or damaged miist bé plaiiily this- reason, he . says, the peopje, marked'Tragile.’’ These articles should do their riiallirig early if iriust be;crated; or securely wr^p- they-want their mail to reach} ped. ' : ^ 0 \ thoir friends and rq)a(;iv^.on or y ‘ .— \ before Christmas day. . I' A pen : of Leghorn poultry enA • The postmaster thinks it .jsv.^fi’ed iby Eugeiie Brown of Richj the best ideai when' rtailing large ^ fauare led: tlié South'eâstern egg.A- _'.,x J,U^> >...1 .Wnti>{n«y /lAii^aaf "'of: • •.....Terme M ;? 0  S Ô ,',-U ad- loe V i g i li a tlon bill..;apd^:h'i8:;Fiin^ .cpristltuericyrvnever/:!^^^ ' ■ Ampiig. -'ihe';’ji(?ii'l,ija^^^^ _____„ for the .assembly !i and VVe feel that you will riiiss some cbronipler of\i bargains if you fail to be bn hiipd , * a t: four : o’clock Saturday after- in, ;^w_ain..,c.punjy,^^^ noon, Nov, 27th,- Dinner;will ;be,.‘ TJ*®!!®ompilation"il»l»^ served cafeteria style froin 5 to . ^^ppbilcsri ^W,pji|d:,,«, 9 o’clock, ,in .school RliditpVium, -Houae;iup8et;Wrty.;i|^J^^ nnd will consist of turkey, 'pump- predictions of Democv^Uqj kin pie, and everything that goes,; which indicated-^''thal to make a good Thanksgiving din- only. 12,' Lustijii ner. : - ; : ' . I there wcro,. nu;cteennn’<t^^^^^^ •The-fancy worl< department is thiec in the’ ^eija| making a specialty this.year o n ; theie wil|))e opl>vl|^ luncheon,or brexikt'aHt set.s, table- p^‘l"te, the upset'eomft runner’s crib ¿pr,ends, pillow cas- es,; elainty a'piiphs for the .house l "ve jnojiffi wife, on all. occasions.. pur'hand - '"'hich appaven' painting this yenr. is sbmetiiing new and attractive, ptinel'plctur- , ‘"'e C‘ ea, old fashioned boqucts -oh li amel, ({loth forpprch pillows, tray ' SPECIAL WEL^,^„ decorations, pottery, 'arid 'qtjite a .:jfjf,. Kafc .Bu-nL number,of other hand; made:articU , Coinmissionei pf* t. es, suitable for gifts; dr the home. COMEDY FOUR A t COURT- . HOUSE TONIGHT . Mpcksyille people are fortunate in having thè ppportij^ityiof hav­ ing theMMbeksvilleComed’.ii, Four tp; pment them a return. engage-; meritvpf tlie best, play in the land. This sbpWixWfts ¿iyen; to a packed hoiise iaat April, aiid'ivii who wit- nejssed it,were linoW^than:ple<»aed With. eyei-y act.'''TSlS ^ vMa p* Ing,given, 'undeìr'‘,fjìi|SM»|tì ““ the:lpc^,',Ca'mp^-*-^^“ ”-'-'' and Mis»,- Mary;5% Director ofiÆounbff both of county pn ^yejl and address tf AIockHville hlg;<> 'f|?ATeÄ : ;:t ^ - ;wiir » v T ' f . , ;^ â ^ ‘0' ''" < L f ' ' t * \‘ jÎ, ’•J’aen 2 { ‘ ' ' , I ‘ , i f Ix ппив' Mrla''vavtrTW с’М'гспво^ос'rfi', ■ ..: " 'â^K^-'iüii ..........THE MOCKSVILLS ENTERPRISE ' ' '^ ',,' ' ' _T4iur«da^^ 4' . & î/ « 4" Vi^ti s tPEPPERMINT FLAVOR A lasting treat •nd ¿ö(fd FROST BEST HARROW FCm^jdLAY SOILS Raleigh, Nov. 25i-r-To take ad- Vflntfige of a cheap and effective harroW -suiiplied by nature for conditioning 'clay ;soils,' gbpd farnieisi in;: North Carolina are ■ ploWlhg. the: •' I arida,'. thia fall. ‘‘Frost is one of *’’8 best and chcapoat harrows that Ve have for, clay soils,” aays E. C. Blair,' extension agi'onomist nt State College. “To take advantage of this harr'''-'';'. ’'owever, it is neces- : t) uci at once, and all clay soils in. the Piedmojit region that pre not now in fall crops, ahould be i plowed hetween liow and WARNING TO THE MAN OVER ‘'^;SIXTY,-^. Frank Crane Lays Down Rules To Be Followed By Man Past eòtii Milestone ;.The man or woman who haa ar­ rived at the age of,,8ixty is gene­ rally ihtereated in methods where­ by they may .preserve their stay on this earth. At least such should be vitally interested. In a I’ec’ent issue of the Physical Culture Magazine, Dr. , Frank Crane, who by the way, is one of the niost gifted writers in the country, lays down eighteen rules LETTER FROM tOUSIVILLE 'shall Chapter p. Ai R.; were there r' ' land the regent oif tliat .chapter Louisville* Ky. Mrs. John Chenault . brought ’á ' Nov. 18, 1926, message. ,The chairman of ihe Yesterday while Royalty and Cpmmittee on; Historic sites for her retinue were speeding toward the D. A, R., was present, the city of Louisville, out on the Mr. F. J. Waldrop, Pres|dent of Lexington Road in front of the the Studént-Body of the'Baptist Southern Baptist Theological Seminary delivered the principal Seminary, children members of address. Mr. E. L. Spivey also of the D. A. R., chapters in Louis- the student body followed with a ville, students and staflf of the sketch of Boone. A. A. Kreiger Baptist Seminary wero paying tri- City Engineer of the city ^of bute to an old pioneer who helped Louisville was present and recelv- lay the mudslM of a great re- ----------i- i«-— ~~ to be followed by “The man over Christmas. Tha land should be [ sixty.” Believing these i-ules plowed deeply, not turning up the are filled with abundance of com- new soil but turnlhg the furrovvs ' mon sense and helpful sugges- pn edge, leaving the surface as tiorts, and thnt they may be fol- rough as possible. The sod will lowed by many of our readers not dr,V out into clhdoas Cr- a | with great profit, we give space not dry out into clods at this for their reproduction as follows: time of ;the '.vear but .will absorb more moisiure from rainfall than If the land were harrowed. The rough suriFace leaves more soil exposed to the atmosphere- which means harder freezing and more 1. Cut down the amount of food. Three meals are better than four; but two are better» than three. ' 2. Increase the amount of wat­ er. Neither, a city nor a citizen coirnplote puiverization during the can run a drainage system with- Winter/’( : put a waterworks. i;Mr;*'B^^^^^ 3. Two movements-a day are ^iahloftbreaking is followed, the better than one every two days; public. The occasion was the unveiling of a tablet—a bas relief of Daniel Boone and one of the 300 markers of the Boone-Fremont Ti-anscon- tinental Highway. dd the memorial in the name of the streets aiid Highways Dept., pf the City. Mr. Kreigers words were especially fitting and he not­ ed'that this was the first of the great highways into the city, Roiite <)0 which follows the course The Emmett Fields public from Virginia the way Boone went school turned out in body for the when he was a member of the le- occaslon and added much inter- gislature from counties in Ken- est to the occasion by flag cere- tucky and also the highway com- monals and patriotic songs. All ing from North Carolina over the the children of married students Old Wilderness Boorie Road thr- in the seminary 24 in number car- ough Cumberland Gap. ried flags and stood as background The fact was noted in the cere- to the unveiling. monial tliat the brother of Boone, The mombers of the .lohri Mar- Rev. Squire Boone was a Baptist , preacher-: aiiíd'‘aÉ,.;^n*'|l(t^^|/;,$fl .torvtírthe.'KpritüijHy"Ва1)'мШ ;ciation.г:: ;;.: ; , J. Hampton RicliviManaglí'''' rector of :the rBoone Trail way and Meinpriai Associak, presided ;and ‘]}resented the tabU 'The ;tablet:^^ '1,- Boone;:I)escenaeñt8,i Misses HelJ en and Máry ÁndérsóhiB Tho’l trahscphiilhéntál flag},; w^ has ^ been used in . unveiling . three hündt^ed of the niArkers ac the U. S., was draped ;by two other Boone descendente, . Mis?, 'Eliza­ beth,Bryan ahd Mrs; Sawyer. The closing prayrir’ of. dedica­ tion was made by Mr. Gibson oi tl\e Semitnary. DAVIE CAFE Next to Sanford Motor Co. Мбскятач N. C. ■ Fer: Ladies añd Gentlemen ' ' Müále; and .'Luiic5«i'' ’ Ice, Qréani; andi Coid brinks id'.'hand-made Caskets. r,VHeane and an E:(- - -------------------* it,Ш м ш 164 * ' ori 45 * p l l - * ’'^A*'rb«'-B VE R LY,-М. D. 1Í. C. top," six òr eight inches of sPil VHI liaye llteraliy melted down into à better seed-bed than^ can •be preparéd in any other manner. Much valuable time 'will there­ fore té ‘saved at the planting sea- sbp next 'spring and the seed-bed (Wili al^o contain more mpisture than ;^onò, ' prepared during the ;^Wrig.',:,s'"v''/ 'As a bnsis for, this recòmmeh- datipri,, Mr. Bla^ Òfi'ohè red, clay field that was planted to cotton in' lÌ926i That part of thè: field which \yas brok- en| in the fall had a fifty percent better stfind of cotton than the part not broken until the' fpllow- ing spring. „ ' It is not safe to 'put this work off until after Christmas becnuse the ' weather in January, may. be suchjthat', little bri no plowing can be done. . TJncorih‘piledi rninwator 'sweeping 'Over thè'flelds of Npi'th Carolina ' tcarries.;away 20 times as much 'plant food material' eaichjear as is.permanently removBd. by, ò'rops. ' V liX Q U iSITE —Ì3 the, only _ word which deacribes the wondei'l'ul perfiim eà in our special Chri.stmas stock-—tso de­ licate: and>so .fascinating nre tlie o(lor.s—-ho 'dain|;y, and gracblul 'th e’ cry.stul , bottle—so lovely th p 'silk lined; .boxes In which' they ai’e packed. , | : • : • ■ / • ' Pei’fum bs-loiui the parade—alvvay.s—in the thing that ' Will ;])leiaae ,her nioHt— but, our 'sclsctioiv of . gifts that w ill ' •alBp' .please is ;inuch wider, There, are daint.v C hristm as 'conipacts and caaos—.'¡ewel-liko; and a 'per-sonal gift. Oiy wrhpit'te''sots,'Pp'wduir, vouge, lipstick— ¡ill of the sam e de-' iiliglit'fui: sc e n t." '' : ' - ' Tho personal gilt—jroni 10 cents up. . ii',' mu occupatiotfvu.. ^ testimony m ad ^ , really ifantastl,-' ‘ ' wiien he w.| health was he ic 'welKi'I kill." }. ' shot' ii: whole cri. ' ^,•^vho. had crossed,—ti ¡cift itiwni!,<j .Hppreciated—not a luxury-r- the Dniester and .gii't—iq: be eJijoyed dn.'.all s>easons,'. We enticod;.tp each with Us own'‘di.stinctive .appeal;with promises, ana . / , , , , ■' Wnii»№liVi№'.’tlielr- be,"*“«' •»'Jcle. Let ua dhow you,the famous ;P6'; sla'ukhfive at i>2 30 up. tl^cbulcr""^ " Beautiful f,;/?l‘4'^ c’ame irritated ‘ ' when they did ■ИI1Я U'. Ги: i I ffi 'II p : i ■ Я и ''''I..':ii'.i■Я is ■ a "I CÜ when they didn,^ ^ J a. peasant .womai/d^ “-^^laüí^tQred'¿arr>fed-a'ап^' ап; o| .hiin,)whil| jusVír^ntii' ihtoredi carr) arm 'he proi(jrred t pГlJseif^í::!.^J^'fe ordere ' ® M “;|jjÇ^K|VILLE. N’ Ц I S?''’ the colon bacilli in the large in- teatihe are the principal cause of old age. 4. If you want to keep young, keep in with young people. 5. Keep busy. Work hard six days and rest hard on the seven­ th.' 6. When you see an easy chair on a sunny, morning, keep away from it,;and go for n wnlkinktend. The heart grows-stronger'by use and weaker by idleness. . 7. Dfcn’t change your lifelong habits nt si.\ty. If you h'nye been n smoker ¡ill your life keep on iimbking in moderation and if you hnve been a moderate drinkfer ail your life, kedp bn drinking in moderntion (if you can get it.) 8. Never exceed ono-'ounce of tobnecp a week. 'Never drink al­ cohol except nt meals and never before'C p. ni., and always wel| diluted with water. ’ 9, When you are - over sixty don’t try to warrii a cold bed with your own heat. It: is cheaper and ciuicker to put a big hot water bottle in the bed., , ' 10.' ,Whon you, reach sixty,'.if you haye been careless of your a’ppearnnce before, bpgln to dress well.' It makes you look better and feel better and you are as well as. you feel. A warm bath a week will keep your skin young. 11; If when yolf reach sixty, y<iu have a beard three feet long begin cutting it off one inch a day, In thirty-six weeks you will be down to the skin. Then shave and look young. 12; Don’t' wony. 13. Do not turn your home into a'.musuem of fine arts and anti­ ques. Happiness, as a rule, is in inverse proportion to tho number of' usele.ss articles you own. 15. If you have not, a b^iai- ness, when.you are sixty,' either get one or get a hobby. IG. Cancer, pneumonia and in- ilu'en'/.a are the principal causes of death between sixty nnd nine­ ty, If you have them don’t give them to' your friends; and if you haven’t got them, ;don’t 'let your friends give them'to you. , , • 17. Don't go to funerals. The fuiicrnls of .your friends is some times followed hy your oWn; , 18. Microbes, ,ai'e; everywhere and they are looking:'for people with ii poor circulation. A fatty heart is a 'Nveak'heart; keep thin. They are also looking, for pale people; keep rosy,' ■ ' ' ' ' 1 •' *....... . J • ^ ---- ' ■ JERUSALEM NEWS Our pastor, ReV. R. C. Foster, filied his regulnr,. appointment Sunday. • vO ur P. Y, P. IJ. group No- three gave n very intorestihg program Sunday night; )nusie'> 'furnished: by the Liberty'(luarteW e.- : / ; Mr, and ¡\Irs, J', H.: Hamilton, Mr, Hugh Kearns, and-Miss Ethel Eller of Granite Qu'ari'y; spent Sunday afternoon. ;,with'vMr, .John Hamilton and .family';heav Jpru- ;salem, 'v.'-' ■ 'jKS'y.. : : ■ ' Miss Mae GiiUi wlip isVteaehing in . the Pilot graded sc*liool near Tliqniasvjile, .^pen’t the M'eek end ' M4ä”'s Het|:io : Langston spent 'the w eulretul :f<h: .Winstp.n-Salem. ' .. ; T if 6- j. e'f;ii s ii 1 eiii v.:iïâ r in. -\v pm a ii s' club|>‘'^!l ::me¿t'::áíifihe'-;h Mrÿ'Jbhiii.Owens;;Friÿaj;;/^ al; ,2:'рг ni;, jni'eii "aiidii'vyohroii':^^ iio/diiilly iiivited ,;tQ>iittericl ; this inéetihg..;.v.''/.‘4/n'-'^':.;j' : I Dpii’t forjipt thoi box supper Jfarusnlem, Thurs(lay night," ííoy. ÍEr?D US In Fact, W e H&ve The Ideal Gifts For Every Member of The Famiily W h y g o t o o t h e r t o w n s f o r y o u r J e w e l r y ? W e c a i r r y a c o m p l e t e li n e O F D E P E N D A B L E J E W E L R Y a n d S A V E y o u 1 5 t o 5 0 p e r c e n t o n a n y p u r c h a s e . A s a keepsake— Jew elry is an etern al delig h t. A s a rem em ber- ancft— it is delicate and fin e. A s a'token o f esteem it is u n su r­ passable. So in yo u r grift g ivin g — G IV E JE W E L R Ÿ . It is the m ost ap p rop riate g ift fo r all. WRIST WATCHES-.tHE MOST ■ Inviting' Group Yoii Can Immn-. ■ : gihe; Gold; Silver,. Tiny;' Accur- • : 'ate' arid Bejeweled. Also Pliiti- V; riiup, and White or Green Gold . Cases, and oiir .Guarantee is back : . ¿i’ every'o'ne of them. ■ $0150 to $50 TOILET SETS—EITHER IN Ivory or the Beautiful Amb­ ers. ' In three. Five or Eight Piece Sets.' 'The three piece 'Set shown from the cut in white Ivory is eomnrised of Hand Mirror, Hair Brush and Comb. Beautiful Desi.'ins {it $2.50 to $8 THE RINGS—"I'HE NEW Long Oval or Square dflsigns. Either Amethyst or Onyx ; with Chip^oed Dianiond sdts.. ' ill Center, . Some Mounted in ' Filigree Settings. Priced, : from— . :■, up CIGARETTE CASES FO'INTAIN PENS PENCILS CLOCKS AND HUNDREDfi OF OTHER USEFUL AimCLEg Y ou need not search fu rth e r fo r som ething suitab le to g ive h er or^ him . W e h ave done th e searching and i t isi here aw aitin g yo u r Inspection— each piiece w ill save you m oneys v ANGELL & LANDRETH ‘‘G ifts t h a t L ást” M ocksville, N. C. ■ЯУ.тКоуетЬег 2&th.. 192G 7 П'! JMi THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE ' - m 'Jilound help at last in simp] borne tr^tment Bow u olMtiMto caw of »heumaMam waa^gitip wM by a «impie home ta in thia^ktter from ^ ain'iit crippled from Mri.,E. M. RcM a n Combea Owe, London, “After oneap^ation of^loan’s Liniment, I find eoiMbrt and can move with ease. ’ flU u’l glvM KIM becinM It deetn’t'Jiut deaden the nerve«. It M ^your body to throw off the cauie Juit'Pfi a iiiite Sloan'« on lightly, A heaUnjt Mde of fmh, healing, genS- deifroMm tlood i«^a«nt tlrigling thfojwh the aching place, and p«in, awelling and itiflnecs are quickly re­ lieved. ' So' dean^ pleasant and easy to uae, too. Get a bottle today. All dmigiata— 86 cent«. Sloan’s Linim ent MOCKSVILLE CHARGE J. T, Sisk, pastor. . Sunday was, à good day for us nt Dulin’s nnd Elbaville although it was cold the folks were there,: and seemed to enjoy the message. ' The folks nt Elbaville decided to fix up a bit for 'the “new, preacher,” and put down new carpet at a cost of about |104.00 which adds much to the Inside appearance .of the church. DulSns has the shingles on the ground and Wednesday and Thursday of this week was set aa daya to put them on. They are also planning to paint the church in the near future. •The Men’a Bible Clasa of Bethel are to motor to thè college and Children’s Home at High Point Thanksgiving. .Thanks 1 We are indebted to brother and sister -D. C. Clement for apples, pears, sweet potatoes, and pump­ kins. Brother and sister W. W. Summers, sweet potatoes. Broth­ er and sister Frank Dwiggins, milk twice a week, both sweet and Irish potatoes, and apples. Broth­ er '.md sister J. E. B. Shutt, tur­ nips, and pears. Brother and PRESCRIPTIONS COMPOUNDED FROM P U R E D R U G S During tirne of sickness when health and very often life itself is in danger—lio chances can be taken. Bring the doctor’s prescriptions here at once—let our .experts fill them accurately—using the. very purest quality ingredients. Administer them as he orders and quick re­ covery to, full health is the reward. Sick jRooni Supiilies.Firsl Aid Supplies for Hospitals and Home Harris-LeGrasiid Pharmacy / REGISTERED PHARMACISTS ! MOCKSVILLB, N. C. | ■ ■ «■ ■ ■ ■ ■iHiiiHT iiH iiHiiiiHiiiH ||1м и и |||иш »ш я ж и :ича1гж : sister: W. G.^ Sain, ;two :'gallohs; of molasses, iind there may be others th^ have slipped oiir memory. We pray the heavenly Fathers bless­ ings upon you all. PRESIDENT KOONTZ TO VISIT MOCKSVILLE H. H. Koontz, State President of the P. O. S. of A.,'will be in mocksville Monday and Tuesday, December 6th and 7th, in the in­ terest of the order. On Monday night, December 6th there will be degree work put on in tht Masonic Hall, featured by a musical program by the Mocks­ ville Comedy Four. Other speakers will also be on hand to talk on the principles of the.,, organization. After the degree work refresh­ ments will be served. Every member of the order is* urged to be present. Visiting brothers welcome. MOCK’S CHURCH SEWS. unts. iHilihg right; if it snorts and You May Drive In With a Grouch—We’ll Send You Out With a Smile— It’s not the w ay a m an feels, w hen he drives into a garage^ it’s the w ay h e feels w hen he d rives out th at If yo u r car isn’l spits ' an d sp u tte rs and fires back th rou gh the m uffler; if it shakes and rattles an^ yibrateii until yo u r teeth chatter, you h ave a right to feel grouchy. B ut th e trouble is not serious— it is caused b y faulty, w arped , leaky Valves. T h ey give you an une,Ven com pression. T h at throw s the m otor out of balance and causes m ost of th e auto’s aijm ents. E ver think of th at? Fact! P rop erly centered, faced and prop erly seated valves w ill do m ore to put pep and p erfo r­ m ance in a car than, a n y oth er one thing you can do for it. H ave your valves p rop erly ser- viced — w e .c a n do it-a n d she’ll p u rr like a tab b y cat b efore a grate fire. W e h ave in­ stalled the m òst scientific, the m ost com plete and moist m od ern m ethod of servicing m otor va lves that has elrer been devised, / It is the K W lk - W A Y SyI^TEM it sure does the busi­ ness. Stee^ this w ay arid g ive us a tn a l. W e ’ll serid you aw ay w ith a sm ile. Öoithat TODAY. Mrs. Adeline Mock, widow of I. H. Mock who preceded her to the grave abriut one year ago, ^ied last,Thursday morning, Nov. 13th at fiyie o’clock and was . buried here Friday afternoon. The fune­ ral service was held by her pas­ tor, W. B. Thompson. She had been suffering for sometime from heart trouble and death was not unexpected. She was a faithful member of Mock’s M. E. church. She had beon a loving wife, and mother, and loved by all who knew her. Mrs. Mock was one of the oldest women in our com­ munity, being 75 years, 6 months old. She is survived by cine bro­ ther, eight children, forty one grandchil’dren, and four great grandchildren. We extend our sympathy to those bereaved. Miss Ethel Jonea spent the week end in Mocksville having some dental work done. Mrs. J. C. Beauchamp does'not improve nny, sorry to note. Jlr. iind Mrs. Calvin Baity spent la.st Thursday night, with Mrs. M, R, Jones. Mr. and Jlrs. Enrl Myers :of Fork, visited Mr, nnd Mrs. G, Z. Myors Saturday. ' Jlr. nU'd Jlrs.’E, M. Jones spoilt Sunday with homefolks,.. Tho memliers of tho league met Sunday night at 0:30;and rend­ ered a short 'program, it >vas given by 3rd department, folipw- ing at 7 o’clock Rev,; W. B. Thonipso'n preach a helpful ser­ mon.•’---------------—♦ ---------^ . THE PECAN TREE IS WEALTHY PRODUCER V m g up witn ШНЕ growth of the South in recent ye¿ref^is;ionéíoá(flí^^^^ t >'’' A outstanding developments of the nation, ft eeeñilíy,ih<i* , ‘d V i' " following facts: ^ In Ih* IS-rnar period, 1910-1923; t&ecMlminmlifn th^tuiMoflte ' v:. i.Scuih icrvtd.by th*:Southerly Rahway Sytttfn'hat'lnereáMil'iCtf! Pf r c*ni; th* pig Irort produciion inenaejd 14 per emu acU«* iotioh №.■pindl*« incr**B*d S3 per c«n<i and ih* totaí- vale* of minara) :pio^b>.' ' • ^ _dnction.tncr*«i«d'2o: с(пь ^ In lb* two d*cad*i,'Í900rí920, th* vain« of faiffl property In that*. I •latMilneréáMd.from apptoiiaiauly 12,900,0Ú0,a00 10' more than ,‘|io,^,oóó,ooo. And in til* 20-y*ar pariod, 1904-1923, tb*,valna.of all manutacluraa ‘ ' producad. In thM* itat*e incraaecd from about 1 1,200,000,000 to almoilfSiOOO,000,000. Such, has been the ^ w t h of the South. The growth the Souths Railway System in the same period also; impressive. ....... • Ia tha:iaat twantjr-flva'jraar* th* total tnv*at<n*nt In ih* 8auih«ia Railway Sytttm haa incrainM al>oal |I75,000;0(W—'ftoM .llWîiNW,-: 000 In 1900 to |77S,oob,ooo in lt2S. . : - Th* total fralght : trafic haiidiad by tha SoallMtn haa about 350 par i'ani. The ability of thé Southern Railway Sÿstem quate transportation to the growing SoüthrhM factor in the healthy ecofKMhic developmenti served by the Southern. :/ á Xver« dai) m tht Soulhtrn about s,mcarloadê vffirettkt art hand- , td avtr to U/or motvNWnt. mm Í i H *t «-■' о UT RAILWAY\ ¡M№i:Hjiia»iiiiM:i„ SYSTEM,¡ ______________ Rníeigh, Nov. 25.-Pecan treés planted now will in a few years begin lo p^iy tho taxes for the whole farm, 'rhere áre several orchards in North Carolina now that will produce large and profit­ able crops this season. | On many farms in I^orth Caro­ lina, say horticultural ¡workers at State College, there arc from two | to three trees which will make fine yields of nuts this fall and on other farms there are from twol to three dozens of trees which will will ,this fall. 'Trees that are from nine to ten years of tige are yield-¡ ing from 50 to 100 .pounds of nuts' and these nuts are selling now at; froni 35 to 60 cents per pound wholesale. Some of the larger trees will yield about 500 pounds of nuts and it is not difilcult to see the cash value of such a .tree on the place. ' According to W. N. Roper, Secretary of the North Carolina, Pecan Growers’ Society, there are some pecan growers in the State this .year who will not have to | sacrifice their cotton nor borrow/] money for taxes and other urgent needs because p'f the income from their trees. "Therefore,” says Jlr. /,Roper, “growers are advised, against j \yaiting until they can niake large plantings. Even, with: pecans as ; | the main crop, _|such growers would still bo in tho one-crop j| class-and so every farme,r in eastern Carolina should set out nt least a few or a cjpzen trees this fall; .Land is available on every farm for a fe\v ti;ees. There is waste fertility on ¿very farm that pecan trees would delight in using aiid wpuld pay handsome re­ turns for the privilege," .The Pecan G'lwers’ Society which has its headqiiarters at Raleigh will assist any grower in obtaining the best trees and will be glad "to give information and suggestions that will save time and expense in bringing the tree? into profitable bearing. Tim .man yho i Sa;d that he wouldn’t milk a cow for апуЪЦу is now glad to have his milk'check from thé creamery each montfa. •Af\ \^ П > г ' L E A D S IN V A L U E S 4 1 5 NEW SHIPMENT OF LUMBERJACKS Bright Plaids For Men and Boys $2.98, $3.98 and $4.98 Zip O Jack” Wool Luinbeijacks give about all the profit that I For Men and Boys,patent fasteners, no buttons be received from the farm^i . , ^to bother Qbout, all wool clothes. A real practi­ cal garment at , . . . $4.98 and $5.98 « • i l m P i i / '7' ’ " M fìb' .' ' ’-\,к<Ф'‘' ' ' . •■" ■ . '■№ ( т 1 Ц»йвв 4> .1 ‘ r^i ‘-|||:^ . ■> V *. . V * - THE MOCKSVILLfe ENTBg f г iíiliilt''>• '.TriÉ,:Ü.:.S.,A..'AS AN ADVERTISING ACHIEVEÍMRNT THE MOCKSVILLfe ENTERPBISE КЧ' it'ubiisiti«ÿ;-ii[vei‘y fbuñ'^ay «i ^MoekeViHe, Ndrth darohn^i. A. C. HÜNEYCUTT Fubii«H«r. J. F. LEACÍI MMiUgln# Editor. ItatM» |1 a Year;átx>^Months 50 Cents . S tr iti in Advance. EittcM ,at tTie póit о1ТЫ at Moekiiville, N. C., a» eecond-cla»f« mattpr under th« ' itidt, |£|f IMar ' “....................................... eyllle, N.43j>Nov. '25th, 1926 iTi ‘MI i / jt#;tliii(itruih i TKe,i;fd'ikt <gM«t coinfimhr & pr6|rre«a i>»yi. '.what a 'gwat bem«paying~oh .Ji^ a y irlM fn e d that, p|||iit№ofd|ng. t,‘Which. i| » W s W ilW i« g to ri; .a^inf^JfcfuateqB had do,,' fDr.-I^dteat at Wake, |e,'^'j^t preaideriti, J w en teaching in the' ma teaching pi that M the mannei* irivwhicH' pht itfVi^Used, n storm tho Bttp-‘ jipw,,that he ia-to ¿6 №!lppt^e|' than this i;hi9 'entire-,time . i'iiuit ihoW' man' iSiw ft’g ' hairy'itali WSiiWtS: From The Literary Digest. ' ; ; ( Atneiripan’S j jxrpud poaition of ndustrial ; pi-e-eniinence is vèry hu'gely düè ,¡8 the opini pli, ,'oi/ ' n o riéa 8 a p era ontìgc tiian th!e Presidérit of the United StateSQi ^ iid PreSideiit Coolidge'a argument iI^;it r.dWt^ rather thrth., competitioi. I i really. “the life, of , trà^e,” : because A upon it rests thë success of our indMstrial aystlni; là indorsed by the press, which Hri’ e commented on it all ', •.... -oùntry, ' Adverse criti- .cism,;ty!e9,-mostly . to deny the proaperily or to dispute thè credit for, it, and some Democratic èdi- toirs'seem to think that the: Pre- sijierit was simply malting a cam­ paign speech at the Washington convention of the American Asso- tóiation of Advertising ' Agencies on Vpctober 27th. The^ ! Norfolk Virginian-Pilot' lightly character­ izes the addfes's'M hand.'^ome tribute tó an essential service of intelligence, the prac­ titioners of which are^ not noted for their demiireness,” but most of its contemporaries are niore deeply imprest, Thè point, as the Syracuse PostrStandard sees it, is thatvthe' President’s voice Itirely thru the developm((nt of ' reached only through a display as »tanding among the peoples of the advertising; ■ attractive as the announcement earth." To take up these state "It is not enough that goods, of a gale of bridge lamps or crepe are made; a dèniand for them must also be made. It is on this foundation of- enlarging produc­ tion thru the demands created by advertising that very much of the success of the American indust- iial system rests, "Advertising is not an economic waste.- It ministers to the true development of trade. It is ho doubt poasible to waste money thru wrong methods of advertis­ ing. But, rightfully àiîplicd, it is the method by which the desire is created for better things. “The uncivilized make little •progress becauae they hnve' few desires, Thé._inhabitants of our country lire stimulated to new wuntfl in ailfl^irection^. In order to satisfy their constantly in­ creasing desires, they necessarily expand their productive power, They créate more wealth, because ments from represèntative adver- ti.'ters in ' the approved imparti- -allty of the alphabetical prdeV: Armstrong Cork Cómpàny, IS. E. Cqnybeare, Advertising Mahag- er—President Coolidgfe has most r.efré^hingly souhdèd , the fuh()à- mèntai job of advertising,,which is that of educatinjr the iiubUc to use and enjoy particular pro­ ducts. Since 1917 WÒ have been -" « .y r s iç '; \ • ' . ' r ^’/1 ,'V' ■ ' ' \ 'y " m‘ ‘ • n^asthake ‘ . '■ ‘'V f'‘ quality nnd':úe'fl ^ ____ ' bÿ; thè ;;{rénie^o|B^; íorce* yertiei'ÿg,;. áre-’^ the i 1 over. This Нав-^еп no ortli, '* growth Bordèn'j kdvortl#i ng v,■ wielded a moi|ti^<»tehtiinflueii 1 in adapting:>ania;; changing thl habits art'd modes of. iifé’’ nftçj ing what ; millions eat—^ancl рц J ticularly milk irt its'viribus f tìèchine what you'callema. And; advertising today mlnlstei's to man’s spiritual welfflrej the .churches havè recognized its pot­ ency in awakening men to tfieir religious opportunities." .“The b'est-khown products in .America are thè-products most widely and continuously, adver­ tised;’’ remarks the Charleston News iind Courier. For instance, _ _ _ notes the Kansas City Star, “the j mental habit of the American pepv motor-car came with a rush be- piè, in relation to llnoleUmi We cause it wag advertised; 80 with want them to thifik* qf rind',use the radio, the mechanical player- our product's as a; lijsting floor piano, the talking-machine, and material instead of tísiá tempor- the safety-razor,’’ ary floor covering. . ' , The New 'York Commercial By advertising this new conèép- finds an interesting illustration ; tion and these new uses of our of thc demand creating-power of ^ product we have steadily enlarg-1 ing newspapers, It gives you fujj advertising in a test lately made: , ed the market for the industry as !.market reports» complete spoitlnj all activities' every! such news .Ì8''“itnn|{J ih other newspup Loth'y'GisH in "Nell Gwyn," using advertising tb change 'the I As: the PreMdent . furtKer 3tat«, ... .1.. A— ..,..------- a'dveiiising has made ,it. “econo' mocially possible’’ for Borden ti .spread its 4)eheilts*'and cany ¡tj, milk into .the homes of; the land, The Asheviile Times gather^, and prints tho newa ais it ia hapJ pening far ahead of regular m'tfrnltnr* A««»aikn ___ rt .1 Uf ,Iuiie,; Meroney, of Lenoir, ¿t SuHday with his parents, Jr. L. Q. Bakeiv spent Monday [Vinst'on-Salem 0n business, mon’t forget the P,'6, S. of A.; Xting Monday ^night, December pon’t «misa “The Gréât Deéep- u» (it The'Prihcess Monday and ksdáy. ' - aavercising in a test lately made: i ea me тагкес lor tne inaustry as ; market reports / "In a recent issue of a well-'a whole with the. result that the i new^ with al ', known national weekly there were total business done in the lino-■ where^ while s s I aixt.v-nine pages of advertising, leum industry is vastly greater ing on a рей" 1 1 and of this number ' flftv-seven than it was ten .years айо.‘Furth- er. offlces—AL which made it easy to èheck up . by the lower prices due to marktd. and^^urlng “Bargain Paye," Dec! it is only by that method that ! and of this number fifty-seven than it was ten years ago. Furth- er. offices—ALL news ,£ they can satisfy their wants. It were full-page advertjsements, ' ermore, the public is beneflttlng FIRST in Thé Aaheville is this constantly enlarging èircle that represent.«; the increasing progreaa of civiliiation. • "’There can 'be no permanent basis for advertising except a rep­ resentation of the.exact truth. imesl the various kinds' of products economies in production costs on which were advertised. Of this, a volume basis. , ' , • sixty - nine pages of advertising, I Our experience over these ten fifty-one pages, were devoted to years illustrates exactly the point articles unknown to our grand- that the President makes. His Turning to “our present pros- parents, or to Some new'modern statement clears away a lot of the "is aa thè voice of the public to perity,’’ President Coolidge finds form, of .distribution, and only fog aiid mifsconceptions regard- which;; advertisers direct their , its most creditable aspect to be ni«ssage, a c^ of the ' “that wages are high, while pro- Utterance of a nation’s buyers,’’ | fltsjvave been moderate—’’ eighteen pages pertained'tp pro- ing advert.sing,.and emphaaizaa' ducts known as long ago as 1850," aiid indicates its true educational This country, says the Wichita function in the development of ,N0 one‘before, declares the St, > “That means that the results of Beacon, is the pioneer exponent business in this country, Louis Globe-Democrat,‘‘has given, prosperity áre going more and of a new philosophy of industry: The Borden Company, Stuart atioh large credit, and In'; such more into the homes'of tho land | ' “In England the use of the tele- Peabody, Advertising . Manager-- pouitiyo ,terms, to advertising as and less into the «Jnríchmcnt of | phone, radio, automobile, and oth- As America’s oldest manufactur- ‘ At*' ^____ ___ ____t ___- a 'H . . ___ ___-____•____________________ __..I..« A ___1 __a factor in tliat industrial pro-the few ; more and more to the gref^s' which has ainaz.ed^^ nien and women as less and less and has astonishijia fpurselyes not, b the capital which is engaged a.little, ‘ And this ciSmea in 6ur economic life. If this were head of thé Government,a , not so, this countiy could hot sup- ‘mart Avho is; careful of hia, facts port 20,000,000 automobiles, pur- and his.wordsj and ,who never in-, chasc 30 many radios-'aiid install dulges in /exaggeration.” "Calvin! so many tel'ephone.4. ';From a re-( trial life, has neglected a . wide ,Prfrtt Мп»л .'o ir»»*nna.TnaanVi ЙЛ1 ' /'Oiif .•foni* nf boi nn* .-DVnl nif л/1 Kv ТП«П*«*П1 Л1* l»nvv T\*inim*{nl nniiirni»-' ' er conveniences, is very restrict- er of canned hiilk, the Borden ed. At the same time there is a Company subscribes whole-heart- vast ,lot of unemployment. Ob- ediy to President Coolidge’s com-, V.'ousiy there is an economic dis- —----.i.. .i.........................y— ; ea.se. Even England, with its in-1 'tensively developed countryside nnd its highly organized indua- 1-16, yoii pay only 14.00 (savinl ?8i00) for 7Hs,Timei9 (eveniiii; otl morning edition), daily and SunJ day . by. mail for av FULL year- before and after it Is $7;00 a year] WILL BE CLOSED ALL DA\_ Thursday. Get your HuntinJ Coats and Shells Wednesday,- Mocksville Hardware Co. -----------------------OUR NEXT SALE OF LIVE stock ia Tuesday, Nov. JIO. Hale & King of Tenneaaee aro Hhip.l ping ■ to ' this sale.—Auclioil • Commission Barn, Mocksvilic,] N. C. Harry Fox (auc.) Ilr. A. T. GraW, Sr., is improv- g we are glad to. state, after Ing quite sick. , , bqn’ti forget ‘ Monday night, >embeir'''! 6th, Miaaonic hall, ¡iksville. .N,: C, -•■■■ (Ir. <3, E, Horn, who has been is 86me\vhat improved, we i’glad to state. — r<*—^— ^ias;Lula Betts, of Lexington, nt Sunday with her sister, , T. N. Chafflii. ~-^o-— Jl93 Sarah' Clenient, of Oxford; |j| spend Thanksgiving with ' Cecil Morris. Miss %rah Gaither,' who' la vvill spend M. i with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E; L. Gaither. ■ <-----0----- ' i •^'’•‘"son and, little daughters,'Guasie and Marie, are vyill Durall, in Cheraw, S. C., Mra, Wiiiintn Woodruff and Mr, Robert .Woodruff will spfend ThanksgiVini«‘With Mr, and Mrs, Henry .Kelly, lh Taylorsville, Mr, and Mrs. W. P. HinSon and little daughter, Barbara Lee; of Lexington, spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Walker.■ -------o—---- Misaes Fronie French and Mai- garet Bell, will leave Wednes(lay tor Louiaburg, where they <ivill Visit the latter’s slater, Mra. M. L. John, Mr. H. P, Foater and Miases Allene ljairfiaon and Jeasie Waff, of Gi'eehsboro, spent Sunday with the latters parents. Rev. '"and Mis, W. B, Wair, ■ W.V V Icar Rev. li,;;M . A vett in the liool auditorium 'Sunday even- at aeven o’clock. Ctfolidge agreeS'with Joseph, Sòl ; cent fear of being exploited by ómon, .Cneaar. 'St. Paul, Washing-1 large aggregations of wealth, the tiin, Bàrnum, Wanamaker, and the ! people of Ainerica are learninf^ ,,,ereJiartfl mèrî: f^ftreÍB;íi,thatihi"¡it;: iisííáimjdl^iketípt^ ®Â'e}Ilôw.’s>;.âd,verÿ -, -.Vïeave the^flëld. > f e " “' user, of the classified columns that it ,pays to advertise,’’ remarks the Albany Knickerbocker Press. " The speech, on advertising con­ vinces the Montgomery Advertis­ er: that President Coolidge "is •'an economi.st- pot; only in the sense thafhe ipractipes economy,, with respect both'.itò his personal ¡ and Prosidentiai. affairs;, ho i,s also an iBconomlst inithe sei^se that hé has a.'broad undefstaiiclirig of the sci- eljùti )0f economlcsij y Similar; tri- rjbùtea'^òme from more Vnèw^papr grs'^ th^u we have room to; quote, ’of I^evcn mention. The' • impoi::^- ance of 'the President’s address ^ 80 clja'tiy shoyvn by thè wide-, rojrijni;! .neWpapèr'interest in it tWîye;!;1iàve asked a^ ^eá4iirig'^adverti8W^ tp tell as ex- ipèrtsì' Ho^ tliey have made' pràè- to'make such great concerns their most faithful servants.’’. REPORT OF 'IHE CONDITION of THE SOUTHERN DANK & TRUST CO. at Siessrs. Howard and Herman nes, of the .Tw in-C ity, were lek end visitors here. ,r‘ : : z “ " L T z : m « » , n. g.,ь »o s u « ■ • • • * « busine.ss, November. '!, 1920 ,Sion: As if is now; pi'acticnlly the whole of Europe la lindfr the economic bondage of. the theory that the manufacture of bare ■ RESOURCES DOLLAM Tho President cohchulod his-iicl-' necessities produces basic pros-' , r r»- l' dress with reference to the Gov-. perity. ; . : ; : ami D.scourvts ............................... 'Ernment’s co'htribution to proa- ''The thing that causes Amor- 1 i ........................................... perity; .a p'reciiction/that prosperi-, icans to enlarge their d e s i r e s ; a n c i '...........................+ v». will r»nnftnnn* nn ■ ouani’fim« 'huv mA»»n'n+' +Virt crunnlloAl l»ivn»*l_ UinilUlG tUlC* l lJCtUlCS,.........................i........ AIJ othor lUul Estate ovvhedr Mlscelaneous Cash iri vault’ and riot amounts duQi,irohi ,Bank.s>VBahker8, ; ' and Trust Companies',[;;;Y.;ia;vi.;(w;:(v'.;'i;^ Cash Items held over 24 hours .....'........................... Checks', for 'clearing Expense accpUnt a, Bliss H attie ChafUn w ill spend Tanksgiving in Lexington with ' aunt. M iss Lul'a iJetts, '-----0—7-^ . ^cp, You’ll laUgh too, if you to the play in the court- lisD tonight (T h u rsd ay);, ty w’ill continue; an ■ assertion | buy more of the so-callèd luxuri- that,.after, all, our, future as Д>:^о.ч-is advertising. The ■ expari- nation will be determined not by material resources, but by the spiritual life pi' the people; and a declaration that a "lidvertising xniniaters; to the spiritual side of, ,trado.”; ^ Complete ,agreement' with the ^iice of iho United • State,V has J>roven'that prosperity can not be built lipon^ the basis of the pro­ duction of'bare necessities.” , ' “Advertising and masa prodiic- tion are the t'vin cylinders that keep tho motor of moderii !ius;- Prbsident’s , conclusion that, "ad-; nena in 'motion,” is thu Kansas vértialng' createa the demand,’’ j City Journal-Post’s graphie way coinea from tlie Cinclrihati Times-!,of expressing the saino irtfta. 'Phe $trir, 'Qmaha Bee, Minneapolis, Minneapolis Journal, Nashville. .Tribune, , Charleston Newa and Tenneasean, Philadelphia Inquir- Cp'urier, and Washingtdri Po?,t. er, Des Moines Capital,,Philadel- Jn;the .old, days'it,may have been.i phia 'Récord,'Buffalo Curier Ex- aro t4c№^^ theory he enunci- true that "if a man write a bet-j press, arid New. York Herald Tri- •iv-i. V;.L.a i.,..,.. ------.... te). book or preach a l)etter ser-1 bune likewi.se rqpoat the Coolidge mon, or make a better mouse-j argument is their own way. The trap than his neighbor, tho’ he Brooklyn Times calls adverti?in.g atojf),; itrnd their statements '^upted'i.iv little farther on. '/ 'it seijms to President Coolidge, ;to..notqjthe chief points made in Jlis'Wi'.shirigtGh speech, that we arp'-inclirieti to place too low an ,q;;.ph the val^ of adver- tis,ing?,i(iT bas'ic function of'ad-. .. 1-, :---- .iv í¡9,( ;M0.91 kí,;í;«.gs 4, .111,5^ 301,02 Mra, J, C. Sherrlir'and childreri, Carl Jr,j Margaret Hili, and Sarah l)f Mt, Ulla, are apendlng Thanks­ giving with Mrs, Sherrill’s moth­ er, Mrs. William M iller, / ' ..... ■ Miss Clayton Brown, and Miss Katherine Brown, who is teach­ ing in Morganton, will spend Thanksgiving with their sister, 'Mrs. Perry Ashe, in Greensboro. ; —o—- , Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Furr ,ai;d children, and Misses Nell Holt- houser, Ella Summers, and Mr. J. H. Milton spent a short while in Albemarle Sunday afternoon. iiilgEjlOCKSVlLLE ENTERI^RISÉ Thé,24th‘Ch»ì»ter. of^Acta/Waa’the« SULTRY, ADljeriÎNCÔME aw ■'Сгл'Й study for the afternoon.,' The membora present were : Meadam-; es-T. B. Bailey, J. B. Johnatoiiéj TO JOHNSTON FARX Sriiithfleld, Nov. 17.—A flock of John Larew, Grant Daniel; Roy poultry on' the farm of T, W. Holthouser, B, P, Bradley, Miases ^IveS'of Johnston County, has more ®“,|*ie, Hunter, Willie Miller, and than made up for the low. price JaAe Hayden Gaither, '.Th^&adiea of.; the Methodist chureh'^^ jYlir hold their annual bazaar ,01] Friday afternoon, Dec. 3rd, iri: the,.directors room of the SotitherriV Bank arid TrUiiit Co; Mrs. Ji L. Wa'rd is chairman of the .bazaar com Coffee, sandwiches, hot, chocolate' and cakes will be Sei^ved. Oh Mondny and Tuesday of'coürt week, Dec. 6th, and;7th, the Methodist ladi- es wili serve dinner at the March House. Mrs. L:; S. Kurfees is chairman of thia committee. ; Mra. Thomaa Meroney delight­ fully entertained the Bridge Club on Tueaday afternoon at three tables of bridge. Miss Ivie Horn, a charming bride elect, was pre­ sented with a lovely plece'bf ling­ erie, Tempting refreshments con­ sisting of chicken salad, rolls, and coffee,,followed by a sweet course were' served. The guests were: Mesdames W. A, Allison, Cecil Morris, J, K, Meroney, R, S. Mc­ Neill, B; C. Clement, Jr,---------, Roy Holthouser, Maxey Brown, John LeGrand, Misses Ruth "Rodwell, _ , ;Dorothy Meroney, Ivie Horn, Jane These 108 hens Hayden Gait,her,- Willie and Frances Welch. of cotton and has returned a; net cash' income ôf ^272.01 in addi­ tion to |800 worthy of poultry left on 'the , place, ;. 'Mr, iVes began the year on Januàry first with S3 hens which he carried untii Maÿ 7,when the flock was redticed to 43 hens mak­ ing an average of 48 hens for thé year. From this flock he hatched out 384 chicks and-raiaed 330. Hia financial account shows thal he sold 223 chickens for .$210.04; he sold 429 1-2 dozen eggs for $182.35; he used 172.6 dozen aggs at home valued at •$101.90; he used ¡57 chickens at home valued at $30.27 and has reserved 11 more chickens for home use at a valué of 110.20, This is a total income of |534,76 from tfife flock. Hia total expens­ es for feed and aitded equipment was $262.75 leaving a net profit for this year , of $272.01. • But this ia not all. In hia re­ port to Misa Minnie Lee Garri- iton, home dem6natration agent, Mr. Ivea atates that he now haa 108 hens with which to begin the new aeason and these are layihg high priced leggs at this time. are valued at I ) Miller, Mra. Arthur Holleman' waa gra­ cious ^ hostess to the Thursday Afternoon Club; on Tuesday. Three tables were arranged for rook, and after ,the' games the hos­ tess, assisted by Mrs. Lester Mar- '^270 and six roosters selected for breeding aro valued at $30.00 which is a total of $300 worth of well, selected stock. The income from the flock paid for feeding and. rising thia stock in addition 1« iriving tho net income. Miss Garr.'son .states that Mr. Ives, is one of tho be.st small farm- oi's ,of Johnston Courity. He istin and MrSi John Larew, served. . - delicious chicken a la king, sand-1 of Clovordalo Farm which wiches, coffee, arid miniature makes'^a speciality of pure brod van d* Wall. with li« ,'át Mocksville vice iaio&ñ io' ihe',pli ,Л V " ( ^¿OÒLEÌÈÌMjBÉ'’'Ì^l^S License-pl^er.1.79-947 E,<-‘,‘hàà .-¿ñ !en’found.an^;iriay bé'receive'd . ,f. 1 ,]i, ofri Mr.’M: Ji,’;Webb by the pay-* ' ent of .this notice. \■ ' -■ ■ i ' tóv iHi) 1 «« Révérend N.'-C, ,Duncan will Jv ¡Г*,, ’ >,i each át- the'.,Goodv;‘.'Shepherd »/J There will be a Thanksgiving .service at the Methodist church Thursday, morning at 10 o’clock. l[r,i. A, B.,Bowles, of AVinston- Come and bring a free will thank lem, spent the week end with'roffering for the Children’s Home I and Mrs. H, C. Meroney. .................• ~ - -o— 4,7üG,öJ Я;'0,911 :îi)9.(i( ÜÜ3.,'; Ilr,s. м. J. .Holthouser and.Miss- lAnnie and Daiay Holthouser nt Sunday at Brookstown. TOTAL ..............................$102,lt)S.7'j at Winston-Salem. -----0-----; ■ Mrs; L. J. Horn liaa returned from a visit, to her daughter, Mrs.; J. P. Hawkins, in Sanford, Fla. Mr.s; Hawkina, who has been quite.Jil, but is convalescing, ac­ companied her home. ,; LIABILITIES DOI.LAIÎ! pv. and Mrs. H. P. Powell,‘ of |tay, will spend Thanksgiving Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Moore. -o------- - . (lrs. M; D. P ass and daughter, I Cordelia, spent several days ton, accomilanied build his house in tiie wildcr-"the best show-window” ; the New ness, thc;w prld w ill make a beat- York Jo u rn al of Commerce c')iisid- pf;gpve^iir, ,i'díi."iTn , 'promises' S'j^e: eat, what, we wear, aji.d -th^.'v%)rk .'^nd play'Of the whole :hat,i6ri, Forrii'eriy it vvaa an axiom №.*111 competition was the life of trade. Under tli'ifmethods of the l*hMPfO?'lÎ?ëa,, thiit trafflf \vill; be ■^■iia'ged;biri’)a'mathematical -way 5l'ftlleiad„,qf ,'by traffic * ni« n agers as ®'p,^f."^jSoi.:ât'ter all the great in- 'entoi/ofl^e'rs‘.enough good to rath- i'''c!fclintèi;balfince the future deaf,- ^ ,________ ;Щ8ЛЛПВ THE LIFE OF S^fe%'AN0THERh'.'^' ;,wip^ to, 1’^ duripB'>u4.-' occupation t’estim ony mf really ’fantas^ W hen he health w as hei луеП. I kill” en path to his door.” But. not in tliia day, continues the Seattle Times;. ‘Svithoutiadequate publi­ city tho wol'ld wpuld pay little at- tontip'n to the genius in’the wild­ erness.” The mousetrap idea i« similarly relegated to the’scrap- by the ;.{^iclimond Times- Disatch; ,it "w4l| not pay rent, clerks, discount' bills, sell , arid yield a profit—to man- I'acturer; jobber, or retail mer^ era it “an .'essen tial part of tho distribution of goods in an indus­ trial society organized like ours"; and the W ashington S tar says it "is a constructive contribution to the culture of the peopie.'” ;A nd we read in the D allas N ews: “ ‘The public be darnnod,’ said a bluff o ld 'railro ad er of a genera­ tion ago; ‘The K aty is your railr road,' 'says an advertisem ent, in Tho News pf a few weekS; ago. Capital Stock paid 'in'.................................',.......... Bills Payable ........................ Deposits subject; to check,; Individual ^ , Cashier’s Checks outstanding . a..';;. ' Time Certificates of Deposit, Due on or.After 30 Days Sa’vlngs Deposits ,'.....................I. Trus.t Deposits (pet), (not invested) .........?, 'V ' TOTAL ........................... 25,ooo.oq 17,500.0(J ГЛ,657.81 52‘1,8:| 18,;М0,81 8,Б72.0| . 70;!.7(Г i week .w itli.relati ves in States- ., largó or small,” The New.!'The difference is enough to illup York Sun pays an interesting; trate'the, words of President Copi- editorial .tribute to modern ad- idge.’^ ’ ,', ;, vertising: ,. ’ ’ Np fault is found by the news- ‘‘The academic essayist may tell j papers >vith the President’s argu- yori that the material things of j nieñt, about the importance of ad- present day it would seem to be,;life tire negligible; ‘money isn’t vertising, but. tho " Democratic more appropriate'to say,that 'ad- everying,’ etc. , Ilis, e.ssays, how; ^New York World , rpsents the ;State: of N brth';O arolina—;C ounty.of D avie, November 17, 192GI I,: J'. D. M urray, Ca.‘ihier']‘bf;the iiboye pamed Bank;’ dp sojemnljf sw ear ithat the. above statem 'ent‘'i,s.;truB;tovthe bost''of ,myj;kriowledB^ and'beli.ef, ‘ V,;;-.A Mu r r a y , Cashier| • Subscri'be.ci and sworn to, before m e,.thifi 18th 'day of Npvemiier 192G.' S. M,:.'c a l l ,'N otary, Publ.ic. .' My eommissiori' expires AususJ 2,.i928.;;.:..;:.,v','iVr;:,?-;,■' . ■ . ' Correct—A ttest: .;j. A; DANIEL . A..,:A.,;HOLLEMAN , D irectors; Hisses .'Th'elm'a H illiard and Naylbr,' of Greensboro, spent hday with, Mr. and Mrs. J. ,P. fen. . . ; . ' .—----- ■ (Ir, and M rs. W. B. Eidson and iih-eri le ft W ednesdny to spend^ nksgiying with relatives iri Iginia.., . ; V 7-^ b — Iie,=i3r.s. Duke W alker and W ill Mrs. Margaret Oakes Willia, and daughter Ariianda, of Lexing- by Chief-of- Police and Mra. White are spend­ ing', the week end with their cousin, Mr. \V. M. Howard and family.. ■ . vnod, o,f W inston-Salem spent lidny w ith. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. |lker,- - . f" - I-...';— 0— I Pr, s. ,A.', H ard in g,!^ in Lc- liid, and;. Clarence H endricks, k Tuesday in Richmond coun^ fcimting.-' vertising is ,the life of trade.” V Advertising’s contribution to our prosperity and to pur indus­ triel succe.ss is illustrated by the Pr'osiderit: in a /stbry ot; an in­ dustry which went to. pieces be­ cause/its leaders decided that , it was not riecossary, to Iceep on ad- ,vci‘tiairig.;, It i.s further shown by.the „case of an industrial con­ cern ,whoso workmen', had no in- ever,' are, w ritten w ith advertised pens on'advertised paper, the au -i about prosperity and business ÜTÎ I I Я. Щ .“com placent” tone of hi.s,rem arks u about prosperity and business'|| thpr restirig his feet on an ad- progress, w ith "only, a sligh t and j|' vevtised rug and looking forwa'rd vague reference to the fact that ^ ‘‘Sqmething for t W ill Please Her Èest to an evening of surcease .with ^ the VVeste'rn farm er, the So u th -. ^ hi,s boolis; m otor-car, rad io 'o u t-j ern cotton-growor, the N ew 'lîn g -' ;f1.t,''phonograph or pliiyei^piano land textile hand, have^no sh are '(I —all advertised, all m aterial. He In this ' exuberant 'prosperity.” (| \yill tell you, perhaps, that- his | And it thinks he should announce; j| years of poverty w ere happiest.; i new. doctrine labeled “The New- || W hat he means is that the,siicces- M aterialism .!’ centiye t() work full time and thus , ful struggle again st poverty was; iju t let us turn, from thc nows- increase;pro^duction, until a lo c a l. enjoyable; S traigh t poverty^ is | papor;(jditoi4als to vtlie statem ents' |j m iilincr;displayed and advertised | pleasant, only to.persons lik e .S t., made, at ^pur reqiiest by a-sco re,;Ij I new bonnet. - The , men worked ^ F rancis of A ssisi; and the census |^bf the leading nation-wide adver- ij ,pnger hours:to buy new bonnetrf taker could not'find .m an y.' r^ --< t"' these today. Poverty, itselfjtheir ' wives, thé industrial f ГП'ilpufished, "more wealth least in America, hit' the .toboga o f , tisers of'; the cbuntry, The Presi- . .'tt,' dent ’“has hit the . nail ' pn ; the head',” we are ;ipld by one great ^ m anufacturing concern, Another |'■odu,ced,'' .and finally, the ¡ gan slide w hen,advertising, show- arid cuit'ural standard^; ed men w hat they could ,get .if ,i thinks that "his statornent clbars the community, wqrel^:thoy worked hard eiiough/fpr, it. | aw ay a lot of the fog and mi.scon- "NorVis advertisirig nierely a ceptioris rogar^iing, advertising.” -.i'oad to]^ good, living and. luxury. St'jil' aTioth'ei’iexpreasess- apprecia- .T h e'advertisin g ,qf. tlie ’3.nvirig.s- tion-./of his “vivid • thoughts.” A ■'feiriks hjis' .broughi: th eir d,eposits great drug hiariufaetU rer 'pays'tri- «Viñt íí' whole c'v’ ' -r. 1 ■ ' ■ i. 1 M of this came from' Ä ' Ö Ä ä F » ; . * ? ' . ofiti,.: the 'Dnioafer- anáj^'^ g ill— to; b e 'einoy(d in all se^iye,.tisin g.’’,-IWiich enticpH to comc Ь'УЧ*''^' ‘-‘‘'•‘'-'i' .''yit,h its- own’ distinc^g hits occurred'j.p^ w ith proniises, : anl.ntucd article. ï^ t u s'show youf scale through . thé, .hjiyiael^th'their V ¿ ut S2,6Ö 'üw, ' Wment.-of■ ¡j^yertifj-. .';¿ ^ E ;w h c n they^dibv :; ' h l K iwomapvi' him,. ;■,)Щ orde,,just runn(j|¿yi,,,„-i,v.;i>'¿í^^^ ..«p manÄbillions. i: Thç life-i'naur- 'iincè';;Compaiïie8;^aye' advertiscd /Until-thèir policies^ 'fanjiiîo^ of the United St,ate,3.' Tho, trvst-òàmp*ny ; ;. ¡1Йуе1^1ветеп1,з, haunt n^Jfip Svho ;‘huvon’t'. ,riiade ‘ ' WiYÇi'ÿ Ift ■ Realjes^ I riÜ T^ ' / ''’î’6bplèi-ïp tho; best .of; |ГШ l;ri|y ,lVb,3ai,l>>' .''/t — .hOm'ifsT,,, i’chases Çhursdn^.. ,'bute';tO‘thè President’s "keen arid uiifaili'ng*: judgriiont.” One of olir forem ost ins'urance com panies agrees w ith th e. Prèsiderit that •■‘advertising' is a great educatio- ,rial 'foyce,’' and a lending motbr- •ci)j':,niàriüf.acturer declares he is 'cbrificrea'i.t.:'tha|t;‘‘advertising ■ w ill ■ come to I be one of tlio greatest V » ■ Wi^ïd/’' , : .‘‘'^^ns/:;,»^^ ol pel- Ч ; ^ ■> M ^ /'• ' Vfttoü ,, ■ 7 . ; y ' ■ .^ybtera'/ean \ ¡ mànent vaj^i'àaaïlife ■ unde«* .;';liele*i*ieH ÉÉÉllW G et read y fo r the hoilidlay season. N ot so m any m ore shopping d ays before C hrist­ m as. D rop in “ T he S to re of, T oday’s B est” and let us show^ you re a l G ifts o f U tility. C hina in open stock and com plete sets. C ut g lass-tu m b lers, goblets and sherberts P yrex, P lain and S ilve r M ounted I Luncheon T rays “ M an tle C lick s, $1.25 to $8.50 S ilverw are in open stock, and fu ll sets E lectric appliaDces, T oasters, G rills , Table Stoves, W a ffle Iroi^s, Sm othing Irons H eiiting” F ad s and P erco lato rs; B eau tifu l W in d so r C h a irs ^ v;.'-‘‘G ifts;oi;U tiility^^, “T^e Stoi e o f T oday’s B est’’ lardjvare Gq.5 " - n- I E i i i E i e a W w i l B ^ i f li'.s, Kiitharine Formwait;.(, of, Vilie, ;\yi(l. spend TiiarikSgly- | with;.1i6r'sister, Mrs. J; B; Stone;.;; V’;. Ir. arid ,Mra.'' Fraiik ,Millei' arid |(!ren,',.bf: Sniisbiuw, spenf the ' orici .Svith, Mr; ' and; Mrs, R, lijames. ' ' ‘ '-s' ■;./ V.,^ |lioi'o:'’.w;ili;be a'p ie, supper at, lie A'caderiiy Satu;rd,ay.': night',' p. 27t|i . iit ’7,;!30 o’clock. Every-' " invite'ti.^ ’ ' ' ' ' ^ ’".■ ..-ÌT rb ^ ; Ir. und MrsV. C; A. Bu'rrus, of- jlb.v, Sppiit'the vveek.erid ' with llatter , . ' |C. Miirtin'.;‘ 5 r’s • p il'r è n ts, I) r¡ ; a n d M rs ; liirtin;;l^:: . ] Mocksville I Ion, W.vC./'.HairimQrfo'f !A'she- \ and- IWiv;H,;;;F-:^^ pViiistori'-Saiem, Vwere ^.ivfre; bri fUess/. Friday^V''^';"^ ' |iSR Flossie.' 'ikiarti)!,'.,;. of ,;the; isti)ii.:S.aiein high,'school.'facuU; |s silencing;.thb'Tharik^giyirig pH'oii;,ut,’honio.; p . I. .1. .Uaticdgeirotur'ned;to Von-Sal6ni;'/‘:;;$undayf • .after ljing;:,'twOiW.eeks' with her son;' |l)., P j'R utledge,, I |i'8, J;,K ;'Sjieek and little son, l|)i'oiig|i',. :'JI’i./v'will spend , the r'ciuliiri O xford with, hor sist- Yancey. , . I HqWpe HaywqKth and lit- I'li). -Horne/j,' spendi ng Jweek' with hep paients,, Mr. IMrsi'jB, Ji.'M orriK i'r . H, Mr. and IMrs, lAbram Nail and two children,'Abe, Jr., and Mary Anne, who have been spending tho summer with Mr. Nail’s mother, Mrs. Ida G. Nail, 'wiU leave Dec. 1st, for Grand Island, Nebraska, where Mr; Nail will ongago in the bottling busineaa. • ' ' , —— 0----- . Misses Sophie Richards and Nina \y;hite will' spend Thanks-: giving, at"their iibriie 'at Davidson , Cbiiegc; Miss, Loui.se Little will be at'.heiv.home at Denver, N. C.; Mi.ss iMiiy' Pendergraft at ChiipcI Hill; .'IVli^s ,Winnio Davis Mbore jn BuTlirigtpn. ;..-Circle No, '2 pf the Presbyterian Álixiiia.ry held á bazaar and serv­ ed suj)per” bn ,Friday, afternoon, Nov;; 19th, Mrs. Rpy 'Hólthouser being chairman of the bommittee. A beautiful array of haridmadc ;'articles vyas sold, ’ the proceeds' :‘a'niounting to ?llp.00, which will be úsed',in building a hut on the chu,rch grounds, ; The following is a list af the ’.,stf)res that, will close' Thanksgiv­ ing' cl a,v, Thursday, Nov. 25th:,' Mocksville''; Hardware Company, J, Ó; .Dwiggins, AllisonrJphnson, Brown Brotiiers, Martin Brothers,' ,R; M. V Ijames,, Ladies & Gent’s Slion,: Harris-LeGrand, Alli;)on- C!QmeHt’;C. C, Sani’ord Sons Com- ’pan.y,- R. Ij. Boooj Bank of Davie. fSbuthern' Bank &. Trust Company; pumpkin pies. The guests wore: Mesdames Lester Martin, W. H. LeGrand, J. B, Johnatone, Rufus B. Sanford, ,J. Frank Clement, John Larew, Grant Drthiel, Burr Brock, L. E. Feeifor, S. A. Hard­ ing,'Miasea Ruth Booe, and Mary Heltniiffl. ' MOVIE NEWS Today we play a true life story with^; Dorothy' Giah iri "Noll Gwyn” a moat facinating tale' of''' laughter'teara and burning ' in­ trigue, actually produced in Lon- . don.;' ': Friday and Saturday Tom Tylor comes again in his greatest wild west romance, athrob with pulsat­ ing drama, aglow with youthful love, abristle, with speed and then more speed ’in “The Wild Cntf” also two reel comedy, ' "Fair Warning.” Monday and Tuesday another big First National picture, a Rob­ ert Kane production. Ifs "Tho Great . Deception,” featuring Aileen Pringle and Ben Lyon. It gives air thrills; fight thrilJis and love : thrills and one Saturday in August it;broko th^ attendance record at.,tho RiyoM Theatre, New York, over a four year period. WE CAN SAVE YOU MO.Nh'V ' ii'.i Y'^'fiR JOB p ;h n 'I';' ( a . _ _ . _________ Hampsliiro hogs, gobd seed corn | und Mexican Big Boll Cotton. Mrs. Ives /is hia 'partner in the poultry venture and the income from the flock thia year has aid­ ed the family in kuelng on a cash bn.'?iii for incidental expenses and has^ provided high quality, food^ producta 'fpr the family during tlte yenr. MUSÏC PRACTICE AID TO SURGEON C'onsUinf prnotloo oh a iiiii4laU In- '.struiuoiu u.< II meann of uciiwli'UiK tliiit (Ii'Ki'oo (IÎ Hklll wlili'li till) Rm'Kt'OM iniist hiivu for tlie Hiii'C'PHsi'ul piif.siilt oi Ills profossloll, Is'lulvocntl'll by II writer III aa Kiiglish na'Lllciil ,|riurnul, cnplu.s of Wyoming I \ylil(!li, Imvo liooa rodnlvoil by tlio Coati AIm ,Found , ^ , eípliñé |n CorMctl|<i^; liUtitutiorii. . M— r-----^ ^ <'iiKflptd progress, til the nseiAf; mttslp. na ii iiiPHiis of discipline In ortiyectlV«! InstUntlonS, 1« ' pnrteil Uy 'the Conn Mnsir Oçn- ; tor of Elkhnrt: . iiid. Music IS no' only belnit I'ao; miccessfiilly HB I. tonic for (lit ensed nilndx, hu ,1« , ni»o ; bolni .found effective li safeg u ard In ; .youth paIIMIn'; throii'gh ; adolef : cenee.: ; Williélí'i ’ ynn de Wall, dl rector of the Coninitttèe.for the Sloil; of Musió In inatlfutlpn* «Bd.a crlnil noloitlst and . micioioilit who ' hat , spent u Kuod portion' of hi« life In BX|)i>rliii«ntH Hlonft thiA line, flndf* thn uiumIchI work with t^e tnsiin(>' snf nienfnily weak tend''to make .thé In of wiffh InHtltuMons forjtét their „lillosyncraRlvR for a time ‘at lea^J,,, Musical exercises sHinnlate ,thnlr ro& tnl iiotlvltleS, as wóll iih their nidÜt reflection. It, inaki‘8 tbohi happier •Van do Wall tells of ami-./,In«; trans- fonimllons In patients brought about by timsle. , ; , "Aliislc do(>s for the aliaorinal nilnd Ideal Ical I,V wliat It doe« for the nor­ mal," hii.vs van do W all.,. ,1 "It tllêpela the gloom, of morbid IhoIhIIoii iinil rc.HUltant delusions, and liiilli;<iliiiit!iiiis. It;'creiiti's a dirent, , ,, .. . . liio.'o'iiralili.,. conm'oliil ntid buinitlful thanking everyone who helped ' (>iivli'<iniii;'nt la tones,' It stliniiliitoa make thé; bazaar the success ;it soiiii of tlic drowsy patlfnta lo'vlRor- ;’was. ; , . ■ . , 1.II.-I (M'llnii iinil iiina'- rtf .Dio antl-aodal , .Several'Cooleemee -people will ' 1.0 •fio«.‘i(riicUvo actlvlllen. probiibly attend: the Duke-Davld-' I'hoi.' IJioiis «iiioi'Hinutos wlio-aro too i„ ■'iiuullciippoa iiientiilly linfl pliysieally i ;•i> iU' lull! ilio uorinnl .Hi.'liouin 01' !io- _ A nuijiboi' liavitig signifled •i'.f.v, iindof tht‘.,InlUipa'cu of musU"', their intentions ot doing so, ,,i ; - l'îiilcüî.'' (li'.ipMioli' piitluiP/tflcal ni'joi).«« ' ; Mi'i Ed. Beiiver nnd fam ily,..of tiiil ¡■•’I'i’i'Uon.'i. tlii'iv.v oiï tlieir ocpcii. ‘Landis', viaited Mra, Beávor’s . , í'.*¡;.ivloi'and .slhf;. (liiy.u., act and father, J. C. Sell, an d'h er slater,' .v!i!i í',i!i;cüiu'(>níi-.'.';!n2 0Ï miaii," Mra. A. T, Trexler Sunday * Í-!: I* / Ь' 'i ' p J ^ ' ' li г * Х ш • '-Iñl •Vi'v: '1 ^ ‘' t s preach Church, Friday xriight, November 26, nt 7:30. Tho public i‘la cor­ dially Invited to attend this aer- vlce. \ , School will stand idle today and tomprroW, a reapite Jieing. given i^|k«;,fall term fbr Thai\k8Kiving^ ; bf „the teachers who ;U ve out of iowji ; have left to .'apend th*^ week end,;Hblidnys withvrelaUve» and frienda. . .. 'The 'basaar'given in 'the Hall Satuirday bjT; the Mt; Agnea Guild of the Church of the Good Shep> <i ' herd waa .a grand succeaa. The *' ' net prbceeda exceeded the hopea ' , of those,in charge, and many peo* / pie are claiming that Saturday’s * j bazaar was the most successful t 1 J the Gtiil^ has; ever held. ‘ * . Those Iri 'chnrge of the bazaar i wish tb take thia opportunity of. » " ^ to,'' ■ ''Ai I "vr® Musicinm'gaK 1 ComUm'. Tilt* oditor of tlie no carrylng tlie anuiz}HK,iu'tlclo la II' fiiiiious nioucoHtòr sìii'kooìi wIiokp advaiiwl opinlons uro wlduly Quotcìl. , Tlió wrltur of tliu articki mallllllla.^ tliat coiiatant l'ind latcn;^lvo. pnictlct’ Oli a auK^lcai lir-itrumoiit glvos tlio siir- , Kfion a siiiior-dcKreo (i( do-xlcrliy, 'l'h«' illlllciilt oxercUus renulrcd ,la bringlap tuaul'iil blasls .fi'oai a bora «re ovoii niipoi'ior tl) Ilici sklll renulred by Ibi' medicai 'ama la tìiti inldst of lì- inujor oiK'i'iiHon, Al).soliiki inUKeular t'onlrol of Uui.diitiovs àad thnir limm>dliU« ro- spoiiso to montai suKKostloii lire llstod by Ibo, wrltoraspariiiìioiint aiiionj; ilio buaólits dcrlved Truai lliu'musical side-, lUie. ' ' w o n th é l i É i C a l l a t K u r f e e s & W a r d a n d s e e o n e o f t h e F i r e s t o n e T i r e s t h a t w o n t h e r a c e . A l s o s e e o u r n e w ■ # ; ,Tlve';rii',inStrcl show'given' at the ;iligh;Schbpl auditorium on Fri- 'cliiy .'eve.n’.’iiji was- quite a success, llip.vriiè'rnibci'S' of the ".¿a.st talcing , tÌie)i''pavtà;Avoll; ¡tHfeVclirectipri' pf ,Miss May Pender- :grfvft;; ■ a||(i;i1ihe,'p^ ; which ';)yéreVoVéi,-$70.00,' w,ill be used for itiie.Athletic, iiisaocia A very bnjeyab'i'e .'feature 'bf'tiie program was tho sdiections; given by the. 'Urcho.stra' directed by Mitì, Annie W. Andrews. -----0----- '.The> P.roabyterlan Auxiiinry held 'riri interestirig meeting at 'thè home? of Mi'S'.' John Larew on] Monday; , afternoon. In ' the ; ab­ sence ,‘pf the president, Mrs, Wil- llum' Woodruif, the devotional were’ conducted by Mrs. Lare’ ' , ,'í^ -■ ■'ÍÑ' ¡''¡liSPáge ¿ , t^^Éf^AIR FARM BUILDINGS . Î < . HEFORB COLD WEATHER it'Ç r*v'^î'‘'^’\*i* íf''v¿K' í ì/'J '•i,l..I ‘ ' Thu reday, >^óY.émbM26th'; 10^6' - " "\.i(. .,’.....v-x“..; B*f6jgh; Nov. 25.—Construction ■Df iihe . necessary outhouses and ithedd and repairing the barns and oilier; buildings is a good job tq occiipy one’s attention befxJre cold weii(№iBi‘ comes. - ' The buildings usually con-' ^ructed during the late fall con* sist ofi irtip'lemehtïÎBhedçj poultry houses' and hog liouseâ^ , ât'atts Prof. David S., Wea^^erp-agriçWl* tui'al, épgineet*^, at St'atè" Ctillege. Where concreté ’foàndations or floors are to be used, It is best to put thèse in before hard freez- ingi weather comes. ‘‘This" work is' not’ expensive when thé labor on the farm is üseîd,” says Prof; Weaver. “The P'- t e m e n t 11 , > CO. INC. I ' / ' MEATS--GROCERIES WE'DELIVER THE GOODS f i ы E lk i n a n d R e d G o o s e $ h o e s j u s t r e c e i v e d . C o m e i n p p d t r a d e w i t h t i s a n d s a v e m o n e y . ; Overhead Bridge South of Mocksville WE^GIVE VALUE- ^ Your dolla'r will carri^’away a Big Dollajr’s worth when you buy groceries from us. And the QUALITY will be the HIGHEST. Phone us your order and we will'have it ready un the dot. Our prices are the same LOW PRICES whethefr you ’phone in, send in or come In. ALLISON-JOHNSON CO. L A U N D R Y SAFEGUARD THE HEALTH OF YOUR FAMILY BY SENDING THE «FAMILY BUNDLE” TO A MODERN, UP-TO-DATE LAUNDRY. EVERY AR­ TICLE IS WASHED CLEAN AND THOROUGHLY STERILIZED. One of these services will fit your pocket- 'book. , WET-WASH-THRIF.^-PRIM:PR[ST. GooleeiBfiS 'Icii & LausiiSFy Co. Cooleemee, N. C. ' We are getting customers from evcjry section of the county and they come back for more. They are delighted. Those Ihftf buy call for Ovet" the Top or Mocksville’8 Best. HORNE-JOHNàTONE 00. prospective builder shouidr talk the matter over with his lumber dealer and see how, little cash it takes to put up a she'd in which to houfte tlie machinery. ' We flnd that there ia a depreciation of about fifteen percent each winter 1п: that machinery allowed to stand ^.uncovered and exposed to the weather.^ Sometimes, this amount of depreciation on high priced machinery will pay' for constructing the building in which it should be housed.” v , Repairs are necessary, also, esr pecially in the dairy barns. Prof. Weaver states that the less food required ,to maintain the body heat of the milk cow, the more she will have to use in the pro­ duction of milk. Half of a day Spent in repairing the .stable will keep out the cold winds'of winter and will bring a big ■ return in milk and satisfaction. All holes in the roof and.walls should be closed, drainage provided and the' windows made sñug and tight. This does not mean, however, that all ventilation should be closed off. Plenty of fresh aii* without ' drafts blowing directly on the cow is the proper thing for producing animals. . ХЙМ MMËY FORjrOU Search Your Attic for Fortunes inOIdConfcderateEnvelopet Among the old leuen of many South* ern families ate hundreda of very rare ‘ ataropa and envelopei. Many have been found and told for amall fortunes. Single envelopes have been sold for as high as t 2,000, and many bav« brought upwards of 1100 each. If sounds "fishy,” but it’a true. They are valuable because they are rare. And they are rare, not because there are only a few, but simply because most of them have remained stored away and forgotten, in old trunks and cloactg. Malte a thorough search through your •ttic or store room for' these old war letters.' .Fortunes in rare stam ps or franked envelopes have been found in old trunks which no one ever dreamed contained anything of value. Keep tho letters if vyou wieii, but send the en­ velopes to M r. Harold C. Brooks, Box 223, M arshall, M ichigan, and ho w ill, Im m edialely write you, elaling ilicir value. In sending them to him you aro not obliged to sell unless Ills otfer meets with your approval. A nyllilng not pur­ chased lie w ill return in e«»d order. M r. Brooke, who is mayor, of his city, is 11 private collector und hos paid thousands of dollars for old envelopes. Allliough tho rare issues ,aro especially ' desired ho also buys ninrjy of the com­ moner kinds. M an y people in this way aro gelling Cliristm as money with very little trouble and no expense. T h e First'N ational Dunk of M arshall, M leli., w rites: "Air. Brooks hos been in buolness here, for twenty years. You^ w ill make no 'm istake when you recom­ mend him to your readers ns worthy of the fullest confidence, both financially and personally.” M r. Brooks slates that there are so many diflerent stam ps which are sim ilar in appearance he cannot quote values from written descriptions, but must see the envelopes. There are, for example, ten different Confederate government stamps bearing the portrait of Jefferson Davis, and m any local stamps or stamped envelopes are very much the aame in appearance. The same is true of II. S. issues, the heads of Washing­ ton or Franklin being used on different atampt. Mr. Brooks doea not buy loose atampc, atamp colleotiona, coins or Con- fedeiate money. Stamps should not be cut from the envelopes and ' no datea written on. He is fully acquainted with all issues even though tne postmark ' mar show, no year. date. Those espe­cially wanted ar« ;.Confederaui.w issues, ЙЦ. h*./also'buys U. S., Canadian, awaiian, and certain foreign stamps provided they áre on the original en- trelopea aud mailed not later than 1865. If envelopes are sent in a bunch' they. should be carefully packed in a cardboard box to protect them from damage while in the mails. If you have ' reason to believe your envelopes are of special value send them by registered or insured maib If you have no old lettera written during or before the ' Civil War, show this notice to your friends—especially those whose fami­ lies have lived in the aame home for several generations. M any old families, old banks and law firms still have stored aw ay hundreds of letters, w ail­ ing to be burned^or sold for large sums. Before destroying such envelopes or folded letters inveslÍ0lle their value. M r. Brooks’ address is as follows: HAROLD C. BROOKS, Box 223 Alareliall, M ich. NURSERY STOCK Peach, Apple, Grape Vines, ' . ■ Shrubs, Siieciul prices for, the next 30 days. T. F. MERONEY fi|r Mock,sville Hdw. Co.* •» * * ■» •» '* * G. G. WALKER MOTOR CO.♦ DODGE CARS and TRUCKS * Mocksville, N. C. * First Quality Guaranteed Tires. 39x3 Casings |6.75 each 30x8 1-2 Guings $7.50 each 80x3 1>2 cord Casings $8.00 each RSBEKIS gARDWilRE CO. WinBton-Saleni, N. Ci H ereJlxk y . :,'Л I il j this im preasive list of im provem ents --/a notable twelve-m onths’ , record of progre»> .sive engineering: . A new five-bearing crankaheft (replacing the three« bearing type). A new twó'Unit starting and lightíng system (replac* : ing the single*unit type). ; : , Air cleaner of. improved design. M Spark and throttle .levers placed above the irtikl for greater convenience. ' ' 'i Rumble seat for Sport Roadster. ; Stylish:newbody.lines. >;;’R^.and:attraGtlvenew colors.: V Improved ali-ateei body construction. Á Increaaed^driving vision. Indirect dial lighting for Dft Luxe and Si^r^pes. - . Far greater tiding comfort. : to new smoothness and silence of engine .. ' operation. . .Greater beauty, greater convenience and rem arkr able new silence and smoothness of engine operation have followed these vital betterments. Yet JDodge Brothers low prices rem ain iR unchanged — values certainly that m ni caa now afford to overlook! WALKER MOTOR CO. Moclteville, N. C. , f I Touring . Roadster Coupé ..... Sedan .$ 903.00> „ 900.00 .. 954.0è .. 1010.00 Delivered : '.■•We Л1вО: S ell D ependable U sed Car^' , i ÏSO D E B ÊRO THE-RS MOTOR CARS I NOTICE OF LAND SALE! DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST Mocksville, N. C. * X-Ray Diagnosis Office Phone 110 Residence Phone 80 » FARMERS OF DAVIE “ ♦«if you want to borrow money *. : * on improved farm' lands in * * Davie County under a plan * * providing for inexpensive, * * long term tdans, call on, or * * write to, ■ * » ROBERT S. McNEILL, Atty. * * at Law, Mocksville, N. C. * DR. LESTER P. MARTIN •■ ,« Night Phone 120; Day Phone 71. Mocksville, N. C. NOTICE NOTICE OF RE-SALE OF LAND SERVICE BY PUftpCATiON In the Superior'Court Before the Clerk NORTH CAROUNA, , DAVIE COUNTY. Dillard. Cuthrell Adams, J. A, Adams, Hugh Cuthrell, Faith | Cuthrell, Lucy Cuthrell Bell and R. R. Bell, , —vs—, C. L. Kimbrough, Zola Kimbrough, Douthit Kimbrough, Evelyn Kim­ brough, Duke Kimbrough, Lucy Kimbrough, Laura Wasson, Wil­ liam Wasson, Minnie Douthit and Leah Douthit. Douthit, Kimbrough, Evelyn Kimbrough; Duke Kimbrough, Lucy Kimbrough; Minnie Douthit and Leah Douthit, defendants above-named, will take notice that an action entitled as above ,has been commenced in the Supe­ rior Court ol’ Davie County, North Carolina, to divide and partition that certain tract of one hundred' acres, of- land lying and being in P’armington Township, Davie County, North Carolina, owned jointly by Minnie Douthit, the heirs of G. B. (Aiken) Douthit,' deceased and the heirs at law of Bettie Kimbrough, deceased; and the said defendants will further take noti(?e that they are required By virtue of the power .contain­ ed in the last will and testament! of Mrs. Martha L. McClamrocli,] deed., which appears duly probat­ ed and recorded in the office of I the Superior Court of Davie coun-j ty,'N. C., we will sell at public! auction to tho highest bidder fori cash at the Court House door ini Mocksville, N. C., on Monday thel 6th day of December, 1926, thel following iracts, lots; or parcels| , . T T ~ T v“ , o'f land in Davie county, N. C., ad-fUnder and by virtue of an or- joining the lands of E. A; Cain, der made by the Clerk of Supe- John Mr Bijlley and others, andj rior Court of Davie Cpuiijty, 1 bounded as follows, viz: November, 1926, dii^ecting the Lot No, 1. Beginning at undersigned mortgagee to re-sell stone on West side of public road the lands •hereinafter , described, in E, A. Cain’s,line and vunnin? at public auction; an 'IWreasid /eet a J. Mj bid of five per cent, having been Bailey’s line; thence Nprth 203 placed upon the same, and de- feet to a stone; thence iast 84 posit therefor having been duly made, the undersigned mbrtgagee and E. A. Cain line; thence South win' ofTer for re-sale at public ward with said line 231 feet t auction, for cash, at' the court house .door in Mocksville, North Carolina, 12:00, nooii, Satiirday, November 20, 1926, the following described tract of land, to wit:. BEGINNING at a white oak in Clement's line, running South 131/2 East 5.20 chains to stone in the road, Alexander Wyatt’s cor­ ner; thence Eastwardly with Mocksviile: and Statesville road, 250. feet to a stone on aide of said road; theiice Westwardly about 350 feet to the line, oh North side of the iot ,conveyed to R. A^ Neely' the beginning, containing 2S06D square feet, be the same, more or| less. Lot No. 2. Beginning at a stonel Southeast: corner of J. M. Bailey'J house lot and runniiig East chains and 88 links to<a stake onl South side of Cana road; thencel South 29* Eiist 8 chains and B9J links to a stone on North side ofj said road; thence West 4 chninij and 24 links to a stake, corner Woodward’s lot; thence North 2' West 3 chains and 30 link's to thd beginning, contaiJiing one anii| IV '»il ' í 'h Й: , At!*’ fil t цi и i ' to appear at the office , of the und­ ersigned clerk of Superior Court in the court house at Mocksville,_ N.' C., on the 27th day of Decemb-’ er, 1926 and answer or demur to the complaint of the plaintiffs, This 15th day of November, 1926, A. D. W. M, SEAFORD, Clerk of Superior Court, Robert S. McNeill, Atty. for peti­ tioners. , 11 18 4t. by Fioyd Fry, to point 286 feet 7-100 acres, more; or less.; from the said Whito oak (the be- Said 'lot^ are in Cana and gin n in g co rn er) .therice North 80 join each: other ond will be ollerl .West 286 feet to said-white oHk, ed first ■separately and theiyas | the beginning corner, contoining whole and will be sold the wa5|^ iTWO (2.00) .acres, more 'or .less.- they-bring the mpst money^ .The.: above lands “ were sold at public auction .after due . adver­ tisement ,according to law, on 1 -November, 1926 . and were pur^ chased, ;by E; C. Morris at the , price of $525.00. Aii increased roch, deed. ,1 I bid of five per cent has been plac-, E. L. Gaithei’, Atty.‘ This'November 30th, 1926. :S. P . SNIDER i : ' . and " ■ S; M. BREWER, Executors of- Martha' L. McClan 11 11 4t| . Л ed upon, said, purchase price; therefore, th^ bidding at this re- ^ sale will begin with the. sum of $561.25.'- ^ * This 3rd day of Nflvember; 1926, .* A. D.- A. T. LEFLER Moi’tgagee. * Robert S. McNeill, Attorney. * Place of Sale: Court House door, * .Mocksville, N. C. * Timei of Sale: Saturday, Novemb« , er 20, 1926, 12:00, Noon. * TerijiB of Sale; CASH. 11 11 2t. * m When iri .Winston-^Saiem Stop [ .at ' TALLYS Expert Mechanics to Serve You Storage—Washing , Qas and Oil Cherry Street jvist belovyJfRohert E. Lee » * * ■Thtiriidayt!jjoycmber 2 6th 1926 CAROLINA IN 1925 FIGURES SHOW . Chailotte; Nov, 19.—-Divorces :5n .North Carbliria ',- during 1925 made :iivhehlthy; gi^o in the p centage ln' gain of in^arriages per- I formed , was; very .slight accord­ ing to statistics frojm tlie;:Depart- mont of Commerci^ireceived hereyesterdtiy; by the jplerk: (of the court. ‘-'-y' Dur^g the year 1925 there BABERUT FOR KN' .Babe Ruth not only, won^ver- lastiniibSse ball .renown withfhia run , swats ill : the' fourth gatne of the World Series played :'in St.' Louis, but he'also- .won a Chevrolet. • ‘ ; One of the circuit clouts crash- , ed through the plate glass .window- automobile salesroom hear ‘ÿ , Cardinal park and bounded off the side, of a Chevrolet coupe Macksvlllev N¿ C. , л . NOTICE . w^№ 576 .diyoi-ces granted^^^,^ In ^know- t-468 1924““ 1.- *'ledgement of his feat the Bambino;l 468 in, 1 ^ an in- was presented with the coupe...--------- -.c 1_____ ,crease of 108, or 7.4 per cent, '’There' were 23,3^7 marriages per- I formed in North Carolina during ‘Times have changed, “said Ruth with a broad ,grin. “Some years ago it would have been itV 1925 as^ompared with 23,190 in' serious offense/for any of us to 1924, representing an increase o£ break a window with, a base ball. “ oufltod fe d fc .against 85 in 1924, and 1,095 mar­ riages performed as against 1,- 046 in 1924. Press Poll to Plumb Faith - Church’^Teats Belief In God , - N^^ Nov. 21.—American '’churches are,to use dally news­ papers to find out how many per­ sons in this country believe in God;;';.;:, The question “Do you believe in URGE lOOLÈEGE WORKERS Raleigh, > Nov; 25.—Milk is a food, a healthy food and a com­ plete food'rather than; a mere beverage, vit is essential to the proper development of the young t)f all animal life; it hardens the bones; makes sounds,teeth :ahd la a better beautlfler than the jire-^ pared liosti'ums of the ^.heinist. Such, in ' b r ie f ,th'e'irteasàge given'jtp bverll2,000 perions Jn Dayidsph County duriitg the, week. Take notice that the partner­ ship of J. R. Edwards and H, R. Martiti-idoihg business under the name ofrfpavie Chevrolet Co., with principal office at Mocksville, N. C., has been dissolved by the acts of J. R. Edwards and consent'of H, R, : Martin. All iaccbunts due said partner­ ship and all claims against said partnership will be preserited to said. Winecoff for adjustment, ■ - G. F. WineCoff being mutually agreed lipon by said partners for the purpose of ’re- cdvlilig all claims due the partner- and to.receive and pass upon all bills and claims due by said partnership.' This the 20th day of October, 1926. DAVIE CHEVROLET CO. By H. R. Martin. 10 27 26, NOTICE OF SALE Southern MocktvUle, N. C.v Offers to lend on Cotton as foUowK (1) To farmers, supply merchiints, batilts, 'an^Ahy others whose loans serve ,;an agricultural purpose. - . ■- (2) Loans, will be inade for a^ miniinuin term': (ig) months, with the privilege of renewals;to an aggregate-period of three (8) years. ' Loans muat be secured by receipts for cotton of merchantable grades issued by a bonded warehouiiei a mbinber of the State or Federal house System, showing grade, weight, condition and description i 6^ .the-cotton. ■ ' ''vr,;-"'';,'-:--" (3) (4) Stale of North Carolina, County of Davle. Under and by virtiie of the ___ . .. .________ ______^ __ power of sale vested in the'und- mitt to. newspaper readers all home agent, put on a’ eraigned trustee for the Ameri- -----1»:-. u.. ...... I special “lM;¡lk^F'or-Health’?'\yefek can Agricultural Chemical Com- (5) God?” and .eleven others will . make tip a questionnaire to sub- November when Miss Elizabeth^21.1. i.J: __ __j'i__ 1« ' Pnmaltiia linmn nnnvii over the. country by the church advertising department of the In- terhational Advertising associa ,tion early in December, it was an­ nounced today. Questionnaire The questionnaire will aak: "Do you believe in' GodV “Do you believe in,immortality V “Do you believe in prayer aa a means of personal relationship -with God? , "Do .you believe' that Jesus was dlvJno as^no'pther man was di- 'vine? "Do you regard the,Bible as in,-. apired;.in a sense that no otiier literature could bo said to bo in­ spired? ' . ' , “Arp you an active member of iiny; church? “Do you regularly attend'any religious services? “Would you be willing to havo your family giw up in,a commu­ nity in-which there is no church? “Do you regularly have ‘family worship’ in your home? . “Were you brought up in a re­ ligious home? “ Do you send your children to nny school of religious instruc­ tion? “Do you think religion in some foriii is' a necessary element of life for the. individual 'and the community?” ' Publish Total, Newspapers are to be asked to in the county. Miss Cornelius was assisted by n group of ex­ tension workers from. State Col­ lege and tho United States, Dle- pnrtment of 'Agriculture. She also had the cordial supporj; of the school authoritiea both in the towns and in the. county. The young ladies taking special train-' ing at the Churchland School aided in spi-eading the mesaogb lind Ijefore the week was over, 'each school child, white or color­ ed, hnd heard how milk improves the general hoalth and relieves undernbiirishmeiit, , A'total of 1.1,974 pupils wore reached in 234 talks. The; re­ action wos excellent and practic­ ally every ;iachool child stated th.nt he would ask his parents for milk to drink in the future. But the message waa also given to adults and five talks were made before 440.members of civic clubs and 'parent-teacher associations. The workers in tho campaign found , much apparent under­ nourishment, One of 'the inter­ esting things found was thnt the Baptist Orphanage at Thomas- vilie with 445 childroii oxnmined had only 46 children who were 10 percent or more underweight,. Of the total number of children, 432 were drinking milk’each'day. The extension specialists state that this was a good demonstra- priiit theae questions daily and publish daily total,a of the religi­ ous poll. Names of^those answer­ ing will'hot bé published. Charles Stelzle, publicity coun­ selor for-the church advertising department, ’ tbday said ' thè facts tion of the valuo of milk in thb diet, becnusc.. 97 percent' of - the children received milk, and oiily ten percent: w?re undernourished. : Cheap cottdnaeod meal ls cau.s- ing dairy cattle owners over the ikveYop7d-,V”the poii' ‘'’‘will'," no ' United: States to ; increase their doubt, be startling to large numb- grain_ feed arid to buy thia fine ers^of church leader's whose opin-1 feed Ht the expense of ions concerning the state of mind North Carolina ^rbwera, oh religion 'have been baaed upon ADMINISTRATOR’S . NOTICE n comparatively limited personal ucquairitahce, mainly, with thoae sharing their-opinions, “Nobody,” Stelzle snid, “is in a position to secure this data quite as well as the new.spapers. They will' make g unique cbntribution to tho religious life of the nation by giving the country the infor- mdtiph thills obtained. - Thé non-, -sectarian nature of’the questions will permit everybody to partici­ pate, As the answers will deal with beliefs; without regard to M’hat others may'.think, and as there will be no particular desire on the part of those who answer the questions, to, change the opin- ion.f of othersj thé answers given will undoubtedly bo sincere,” Prominent ,ministers, all , over America are connected with the pnmpalgn,’| H * \ '.:.. NORTH CAROLINA, DAVIE COUNTY,' The undersigned, having this day qualified as admini.strator.bf Lewis VVilliams, deceased, late, of; said County and State;'r hereby: notifies all persoiis haying claims against the estate of the said' de- cendent, tb exhibit them \to ; tho utidersigned, duly verefled, :bn or before the 19th clay qf 'November^ 1927, or this 'notic'e vviH ,be plead­ ed. inoliar - of ‘their; гесЬургу;л: ■ All persons indebted to silici bs- taté; will please make immediate settlement,,, ■ ■ /'■. ‘; ; This ,19th day of- November, 1926, A. D. ' ' V ROBERT S, McNEILL, Admr. of Lèwis Williams, dbc’d. ii'25;'4t, D d d g e - B r d t h e r s D e a l e r s SE LL EDDD U SE D C A R S The title of this advertisement was originated byDodgeBvothers aiid given ' to,their dealers as, at!;inyiol£|ble doc-, ^ ^ , tririei 'We believe, we are justihed in / , " \ ' saying ;tliat vve' are living up to the , doctruie'jn every particular. , , -. 1 G. WALKER MOTOR CO. • V. PHONIC 10!» MOCKSVILLE, N. C. , U ' Ì 1I’AS ,ТНЩ It t» 'i A в V '"/t! ‘ ^ \a)\S ONUY AS DEPeNlI WHO, Se-LLS •T "fifis pany; and Armour Fertilizer Works, ih that certain deed of trust recorded in the office ofthe Regiater of Dtìeds of Davie Coun­ ty, in Book No, 21, pages 402 and 403, executed by M. J, Hendricks and Emma G,'Hendricks h;s wife, to secure the payment of certain notes aggregating the ' sum of l?7131,G0 and intereat thereon,]* payable to tho American Agri- cuituràl Chemical Company, and $1898,17 hnd interest pa.vab;e to Armbur'Fertilizer Works; and default haying been macie in the payment of tho. p'riticipai ancj in- tere;3t;of said notes; nnd the said Amori'can Agricultural Chemical Co.'npnn.v and Armour Fertilizer Works;liaving decl'arèd the,total sum duo on said notes immediate­ ly payable'as provided by the terms of snid deed of trust, and both having requested the anid triistee to'foreclose said deed of trust, the undersigned trustee will, on the sixth day of Decemb­ er, 1926, at 12:00 o’clock M,, nt the courthouse door of Davio County, in the city of Mocksville, N, C,, offer for salo at public auc­ tion to the highest bidder for cash, the following described trncts or pnrcels of land in said Davie County, containing in the aggregate 246 .acres more or leas, situate, lying Hnd being on the Cana-Farmington Public Road, about eight pilles northwest from thé;town of Mocksyille, in Farm­ ington Township, Davie Coiinty, the .lahio being bounded on the noi;th by the, lands of W, R, Hud­ gins, E,G,; Lakey, F, R, Lakey and -S, 0, Tatum heirs-, on the enat by'tho lands ,of H, G, Ricli, iind on th'e south by the lands of Jliss, Nettie Eaton, being the same lands which were convoyed to M, J, Hendricks or to Emma G, Hendricks his-wife, under and by virtue of tho following deeds, to-wit ;, : ' (a) Deed from I, B. Winfrey to M, J, .Hendricks, registered in lîook 21/':page 407, convoying seven acres; ; (b) Deed from T, H, and E. W, Tatum to M, J, Hon- drjcks, registered , in book 21, page '410,- conveying ninety-two acres; (c) Deed from J, C, Mar­ tin and wife to M, J, Hendricks, rogistored in book 10, page 832, conveying twenty acres; (d) Deed from Nettie Eaton to M, J, Hendricks and wiie,;rogistered'in book 21, iiiige 408, conveying fifty acres; -(e) Deed from B, F. Eaton ito M, J. Hendricks,, registered in book'24, pngè'361, conveying four acres;, '(f) Dee'd from S. B, Eaton :to,']\^', .1, Hendricks, registered in book 24, page 361, convoying ihirty-tivo acres; (g) Deéd from F; R. Lakey to JI. !J, Hendricks, .registered in book 26, page 261, conveying one and five-sixth acr­ es; (h) Deed frpm Hehrÿ Hpw- oll-lo M, J/ Hehdricks, registered in ' book' 26, pago . 262, conveying two acres; ; (i) Deed i:p Emma 'G. Hendricks, in :,the division of thb liinds of- Phillip ;Eaton/registered ;i n book 13, at . page 74,, con veying thirt.v--eight',-and onèrhalf acre's. In olTico of,¡Register ;of Deeijls of Davio’^County, ' North Garolina. The-.descriptibhs • set out in .'sftid deeds being here adopted ; and made a part hereof /as fully as if ', hero recited ; in detail. This the 4th day of Nov, 1926, , CLIFFORD FRAZIER, : Trustee for the Aniorican;;:iiìÀ^ .ChWical ' Company' arid ÎArhiour, Advances will be made on the basis of nine (9c) ccnts per pound'ilor' . middling cotton, a higher or lower advance being made on higher or lower grades. ■ ; All notes are to be drawn with interest from date.at the rate of 6 per cent per year. The borrower will get the full amount of the note when the loan ia accepted. The interest and the carrying charges,’ un ess the borrower arranges with the. warehotiaemeh for the charges, will accrue until the note .is due, at which tiifte, the amount borrowed, together \yith the accrued interest and the chirrying charges, must he■■ paid. ■ - (6) No additional sectirity will be called for during the life of the loan, (7) Tlie borrower may repay lonns, at any time, thus stopping the ac'cruol , , . oi interest, but the warehouse receipts may be retainiid by the Finance \ Corporat;on until the maturity of the'note, / ^ <8).,' .-The .Finnnco Corporation reserves the right to ask payment of notes ,at any time ,during their Ijfe, 8l)oukl cotton reach a sale price of fifteen ' ceiits, and should the aale of coUoh at tho then'current price, in the'■ . ; opinion ot the Corporation, contribute to the profitable and orderly ' ■ , marketirig of cqtton. In the cvtnt of such a demand, the borrower may . ’ ; either soil the cotton, or re-finnnee .it olaewhere, (9) No loans based on less than five (5) bales of cotton should'be'offered clirect to the-Finance Corporation, but loans .-for such small amounts ., '‘Sh.oulcl bo handled, through local bunks Whore they can bo grbuped, , (10) VBttnka-und aupply merchants may forward.nbtea in accordance herd , with, without-rocourae,”.‘but nccompaniod by their guarantee of sigha^>" ture, and with the understanding thnt thoy will collect the notes'with- / out charge to, the Finnnco.Corporation. ,1’ : , : . : ^ppKcations for lonns nnd notea'to the Corporation.Bhould;be:mitdeM;';; forms, which tho Coijjoratlon will gladly providt^ - * ' Iiiformulion to warehouse faoilitios and storage charges can-be hiiii^ ,^ from J.'D, JIURRAY, ' - ' ; У' 'vii (11) (12) i à l f tlíír>ít, NÎÿ i S o u th e rn B a n k & T ru s t G o . Get Out Of The Way Of The Man Who V Knows Where He’s Going . Tho gentleman at the right ia not combatlvoi • BUT— he’s just been over to neighbor Brown’s whore;he heard,' and he; has decided-rdefiniteiy and finally—that his home shall no.longer be'withou't a radio-—a'good radio sot; ■ So he is on, his way to C, C, ,SANFORD .SONS CO;; wh^re ho knovys tho famous AIIBORPHONE' radio is to bo had, He is going to give us. a Christmas'.order lor a radio set, to bo all installed .and, tuned-in on Christmns morning. Which, . by,the why, suits ua-^becatiso that“ is our promise—and our specialty, ' ■ FIVE YEARS AGO—A TOY, TODAY—A HOME NECESSITY!R A D IO ' '' When you select, a :radio set' look for ali-routld porfor- manco,—tone—voiume-rrdistance-and tlio ability to - tune : OUT ,interfering: stations. Look/for: reliability,'- Look,)for’^‘: simplicity and ease of operation—and-^it- is>,important— look for the set that is more than a radio—a nice piece of furniture, as wefl. If you look for these qualities—thoH you -'.- too. will come here bocause we have-,the solo solling agoncy.?: ior ihei famous AIIBORPHONE radio.s it'i MOCKSVILLE, A Five Tube Set $H§ to $13 & ■ :Л М/ '¡À уф Let^us install one in your home for. trial. ; C . S k n fo rd S o n s C o m p l y к v i I »f MOCKSVILLE, N. С, Ч !, S' мГ IA t¡m £ m ! í>,íiV ., 'i^íI'f £ fl'íüJ-i-« ñii THE MOCKSVILLE :(Wa№ÉiiiiBmÍ9aMi ii\ tj sV'"> 4\’/ Ä | F i' /' r ’ í'l , >»ç / I 4 j h» T , " e tu r n íiit i>A•íM>i ' Л Bigger and Better Irt^ i,f », .1 ' <■ 4 a ,r ..i New Songs, New Jokes, New Music. Six months of success in Nortli Carolina. Fox^ former B. F. Keith Comedian. Laugh until you hurt, at— Hariy t Ä’»■иЛ'. h if'>f 1 >{ livï',.',J,' .N o v e m b e r 2 5 t h , 8 . P . M . * \ ^ rf ^ Admission 25 C ents U n d ^ r t h e a u s p i c e s o f t h e P . O . S . o f A . turn aiii ■• w w ■ Il m m ■ innanMaNMnaMiaJI 5i'' iñ í-' f . ri Muflic for “Sissies” ? с ' Listen to Thèse Boys ' Elkhart, Ind.—Tlie ago-nl^ .ccititeu- $km thiit trnyiii conilder music ae вот«- • jftMng for <*«1м1ея” In exploded in a ‘«grvejr brouKht to light by the Çono . Iftalc Center here. ■ rj .Ifore boyg^nnt to itudy music tban Ф girls, questions put to 6,000 chll- tfrM) betW;eenvthe fourth and ninth .reir(ialéd.\ Forty per, cent of ttie- Wys Announced a wllllngnese to ■tndy music If given an opportunity, mrty-seven per cén to t the girls шао- Uested Interest Parental Influence was seen In the toct that while only 18 per cent of the ■^«tlly, intererted expressed a pref- CKOce for the piano, no per cent were •ttid.vlng that Instrument. Only 12 fMT cent were Interested In thé violin, ret 20 per cent were taking lesgons on’ tbe bow and fiddle. Tlie saxophone, the banjo and the comet took honors for preference Aro<mg the boys. None studying tliese Instrurocnt.K wus dlHentlRfled. Among . ihe «xtremely уоипк boys the lowly barmonlt'u rnnkcd high. To Spend H alf Billion - on ^1Ц,92в Music Lessons KIklmrt, Triil.—IlMlf (I blllloii dollnrs , -will lie spent liy Americans for music 1еяяопя buiv'ooM now nnd next Juno, it ifi cstlmntoii by tlio Cnnn Mu- л1с Center. Tlie estimate is Ь акеа on a «tnllsMciiI Htudy by ,T. I’. Bialce of • J.iraia. A (4'or(llng to, Air. B inke, th ere nre 250.(i00 toiicIierK oC m iisie 4vlló rogn- Jiiriy prfictlro llip ir profoBslon in tbc : XTnitcd ..sta tes. T liese teach ers avoi'- ' a g e л;0 p iyijlii iMicli. A ilow int; an, livr , ега к е of tw o lessons ii w eek i’tJr еасЬ etndont for llie 2Г) w eolis biitweon now V 'iin d .Time, m ean s a lo tiil'o f 2П0,000,000 '• jnnHlc;|(|sson liours, w lilcli Ut tbó av- «гн к е fee of ij!2 p er lipiir, brInKS tbo' in ­ f im e of the ‘m usic teu ciiers uj) to 1800,000,ООО. ■ ■■ . ,Л1А¥ВЕ HE KNOWS '. Teacher—"Johny, what is the .^Jteination oi generation" V > ;jÌDjbny-~j."^^ alternation of g«i),er«ti.o,n;js tho ■as.similation and donation towards ♦he‘c^9,trBtl^nyof relation and ,*)Ìjla«lÌlìjio;ÌiS^^ of 1 ....................- . > endence, ' [ S a x o p h o n e s U s e d i l l F ig h t o n D e v il The saxophone—"instrument of the devlj”—Is being enlisted by the churches In their fight on the devil, It Is Indicated In advices reaching the Oonn Music Oeiiter, Elkhart, Ind. All- saxoiihnne quartettes and sextettes In Church,and Sunday school'are'among the “devil’s own weapons" being used to win folks over to religion. "Not so long RKo It vas quite com. mon for church people to shun the mention of saxophone, let alone go to hear one played," says James F. Koy- er, supervisor of tiie Conn Music Cen­ ter. “The sentiment seemed to be, even among muslclHns, that the saxo­ phone wasn’t much good for but JasK, and for a while It did appear that the Jazx artlsU were the only ones to recognise and make use of this com­ paratively new addition to the brnss InRtrunient family. Reports now tom-, ing in Imre, however, indicate a changed attitude on the pnrt of. the public. Artists icnow that, the saxo- pbone tones come nonrest of all other« in resninblnnce to tiie human voice, nnd recoiinizc tbnt tiiere is notiilng so beau­ tiful musically as a saxophone solo. II. Ilcnne Ileiiton, one of tiie Ki-pntost livlnf; iiiaslci's of this instnimeni.clnliiis tliut no clcaner, tnoni oieyallnB or In- splnilloniil inuRlc can conu* from' any inslniinont, and will not play anytiilnB tlmt Ifiis llio sllf,'bto,st taint of Jazz In it. Saxiiphiine qunrtottes and saxo- piione sexlettoH are winninK n place for. tlionisolves In cburciiu.s, ospeclnlly tho.se tliat cannot afford'ii iiipe organ, and otiior clnirclios linvo fonnd tlial the' appoaraiico of an orcbcstra nt cliurcb functions Invariably driiws In- creii.s'ed nttendnnce. 'Jlils is Indeed llglitlng tbo devil with his own wea­ pons.” . I ■ : . " FIND YOUTH IS •*HORNING’* WAY AROUND WORLD FARMERS OF DAVIE * if you \yant to borrow money * * on improved farm lands in * “ Davie Countjf under a plan • providing .for inexpensive, * long term loans, call on, or * * write ,to, '* ROBERT S. McNEILL, Atty, * at )BERT S. Law; ■ ]Mocksville, N. C.» "Horning one's way around the world," Is rapidly becoming a popular means by which Young America Is gratifying Its “going abroad" hunger, according tc informaiinn reachllig liie Cdnn Music Center, Kiklmrt, Ind. Mu­ sic Is not only the wherewithal which makes It possible for him to satisfy his desire'for travel, but It Is also keeping his pockets rather well lined. The American band is found aboard the ships of every flag, and In the cap­ itals of the nations of the Orient and Occidenti Meinbers of orchestras pro­ vide niusic aboard hoat at comfortable salaries and further increase their earnings through concerts in foreign ports. The story, of .America's sym­ phonic Jazj! has penetrated ever^ na­ tion, nnd thc natives are waiting to ■know .more of It. They are anxious to try their luck with America’s dance steps, too. Kven tiie American girls are “horn­ ing In" on tills free but de luxe travel Rcbenie. When Jack Sutherland re­ turned 1Ò tbo United .States recently his saxnpbone sextette Included four American kIi'Is. They bnd stopped In Honolulu for tlieir first appearance, then Jumped to iliipan. From tliore tbey kept on goliiR, and plnylng, "We worn trented like ambassa­ dors," reported .Tesse AVrlglit mid bis fellow inombers of tbe S.-S, l‘'rnnconla orcbestrn, wben they docked at Snn Ii’ranclsco after circling the globe on ime of tlieir tours. '/(¡•И у irti M Ü S I C i p í fc O tJ Ù È G É S lOÓPERCENTINi Builds Character, Pre Studente Pay Wa Morale Ъ School, Music Centjir. Survey Shows/ you.ai iy* *'■’0Seaso jl,-^ ?' .dnage a:■^-J. F. tOYIR .. , MuKlc hns beconie an IndlsMBsable varlably <those havlng honort to iii«- part pf college Hfe. It Is of tnentlma- denilc subJectB,’’ and at Lo|Bliard «W- hlé. Vaiue 'to thè college pro^r,' and legé, Galésliiirf,/'tlh, 'vth«,st*dèntS'«lli of gleat niàterlal and splrltt^al tM>neflt our nmslu McbwJ aré all abavt’SMnifc to the student who takes active In their acadeiiilc woHr." > , This ll the composite sentlment of Porty-slx per cent of the «H m m close to 200 presidents of Aifterlcan deported band end orehMtrai.«M<k ar I colleger and unlyersltlca and «'J pijrt of Iheir ictíóol eorrlcnlotó ÍWtf 5 nmsic departinents In Ins tutloiia of p*, cent of the.total enrollment of the ( higher lenrnlng who eontflbuted^ colleges anif jrienibera of college band« ¡ by the ^ún,'»íusl6 C e n ^ ,.K ^ a rt ,„1, ( Ind. The survey shows that nmical playln« alm’óíit \ésc1üstvely lii brches- straining In colleges has, doubled In tras. Leaders tór thésé.college bandi popularity In t^n years. aré drawn for .the mést part fi;om the A uslc not only adds coloi to jollege faculty ranks, though some college« alhl.|tlc events, stippleiiient^ i students as leaders' and anothei rounds out the varied acHvlties of the, small group goes outside for leader campus and. assemlily hall,'but .la'of talent.^ distinct advantage to the iiiember. of . .piayj^ the cóIIeBe orcliestnt It the glee club, the sextette, the college go^ewlmt more popular than the band ordhostra, band or whatever other or- .«lili »h« ho«« . . ii.i. the college. In the oyln on^ of th e» v ents'w ho play an Instrument In the college executives., Music helps pre- t-nrt n» An<h«>»F> .n.tserve a high morale In tlie Institution, *(. rnnks nf nrnfi It aids In littlldln*,tlie>ara¿lér>f.ltei:‘f f l f f i ' ”.voung men and women, provides iin ...o UL. ‘ ' opportunity (for. a good number of ' " V W (hem tó pay their own way íhi^ngh ,^lth the boys a s 'well as girls. Ap- »P«"* When you cóme to ¿ee üs^ as we hope you win Boon, be sure to wipe your feet bn the mat. You ought to see Brqnson Hall. It has been flhished only a few weeks., The kindergarten roöm 10окв like fairy land or the Gard-^ en of Eden in doors except the heir Way ThroHah." college, and In many . instan(;es, pre- ^ animals ttre lust nnner ¡Atirf fii«pares them for H life of' usefulness ''ods of self support throOigh. th». ы j along lines the> are naturally best Ut- У®"Г*. according to the collegi blg^gymnnBlum--well, we ,ve nevei- ted for. i ■ . : executives contributing to the'survey. M.in. ■ ^Despite the comparatively limited opHelps Cl ara^er iuWliiB. p„,tunltles offered in the average col Great stresj Is tajd by^ college,heads ,.jege town, fully one,fourth of all th*. on the benefits of musical training In students playing In the collegé bandf character building, ^ihe .survey re- «nd orchestras are paying for theii vealed. Fully one-flfth of the college education’ with ihelr Instruments executive who contributed^ the re- Students' earnings range all the wa; suits of their experience to 4»ie enrtey from, board artd, room, two-dollar-an hour tuition fee, and up to two thou: siind dollars a year. Twelve per cent of the college executives In the sur vey are of thè opinion that plnylhjc one’s wny throuRli school pnys hcttPt tlian other , means; aiii.thcr' 12 per cent IlKJUght It offered an easier way to ninko onc’f? wny tl'i'oncb. wbllr n had one before. Oh Tairiy \yinter days nowive can play nil we want to ^vithout'being cooped up like chickens In our'domitoriee.' Wfr wrote you' last THinkBgiving,. didn’t we, about the Central Heat- ing'plant? .Weil, it’s still work- ing. So is the new laundry, and the inflrmary, and' the cemept road where we skate, and the new shed where the cows sleep:— these are all working iine. 5ррлк- ing of cows, wje drink Jott< of milk yoti know, about'10,000 jjal- ions,, so we joined^ a cow club, . R\*A1*V mnnfh n T«nn nt«rti«»4r(goodly tiiiii.bcr ol’ I'ltlhM'H snld itlii'l 11! month a man conifa around IntíM’ff!. J ^,•lt;l t;io ,;t';-.ÍLnli to tect the ,mi!k and ,if a cow i.s not robust and vigorous,.Ayp.,juat J. F. BOYER Supervisor Conn Music Center. sclioorwork. -Saxophone rinics KIbIi. Amnng tlioso p:r.,vlr.;i tl.olf w.".} throiiKb coll(>Ko, .tb'v violin comes tli's( In tbp, prKforoncc (if Ihsirumcntf TbO: Biixnpliohe Is second .'cbolco 'o! , C0ll0(,'t-, p)a,viM‘s,; bi;;; iX'^fndi ■wl(li (jifl , inuNiclJiiiH.' i’lniin' is ilm,; second fa _ yprltc Inslr.nminit with tlie ' girls, an(’' ; ; third with tli«,, lyiys; ' Corhot come: fourtb ln,,tbo prcfci'i'nec |oi both Iln , yourig liicn '«nd women. Oi'ffan Is,'Hi'( ’ ’next fnvo.l'1l(^ wllh tbo bqy.s, a.n'd ihitt ' wltb tho girls, Oilier Instrniiion'lii li ■ the ordor of fnvi.r wltli'’'tbo younr • mon are the trnmppt, tlifi .trombone tbo born, rtnim, bnn.to and nmndollii With tbo girls, it Ih tlie drum, piarlnci tronibono, liiirp, bnnjo, trumpet, ort'ai. and mandolin. ' A 8t,rlklng fact, bcongbt put In 'tli' surWw was tbe clo.«e relation <i< considered this the best argument for I music In tbeir college or university. ...................... ¡Others mentioned tbe social and cui-' tween'music nnd student Ibndersblp I lural advantages acvruln« to the mu- Fully 40 per cent of all the oiitstand ,slc student, tbo effect of music In re- Ing college students,'class presidents .fining tlie student’s taste for art; mu- student leaders, etc.,,are repo.-ted t< Hlc as an aid toward developing clear be playing some kind'of an Instru thinking. Improving the discipline and ment, enhancing the student’s power of con- Music Plflhts Crime, ^ ! centratlon,. as welj as making for het- That music Is tUo greatest deterron' : ter team work and co-operetlon jin col- to crime, .Is the opinion voiced by thi. , lege matters. Music on the canipua , of thè college of music of New jas an outlet for surplus energy and y„rk university, who iprote: "If w. as a help_ln getting many , youths were to orgnnlTio a hand .'or orchestri ..through , school, was broug.it In by in eyery public school, high school : still others, ' • college, unlverslt.v, bpys* or girls’ club, j Aii hut three of the colleges repre- or place an Instrument Into the-handf j Rented in the survey find their mu-, of every,boy or girl at an age wliei I slcally trained students more efllclent. understanding and appreciation ' be' I In their studies than those not so come evident so that the.child's mini! trained. "They usually make grade« is aroused sufficiently to make hlir I above the average,” Is the experience ? want to excel In ithe . instrument ■at liethel college, in Tennessee,.ond . which.he likes best, I believe that wt 'n el’aul university at Chicago: - find«, wónlit’hàver In: from ten to flfteér "miiHlcally-lriilned pupils ati tlie' top i yearlp, frojfi,ttO tol.715 per,cent less dopi In their studies.’’ At Wellesley; coK. flends.vcrlmlfiala. and .gatabliers,.in th( lette our best musical students are In- United States.’’ ' ' » » * » HOW DO WE KNOW? * If your subscription has * ,expired, and you have not re- * * newed, How Do We Know whether or not you want us * * to continue sending you the * paper? If your subscription-''^ * has, expired and you rave '■[ * neither paid in,advance, nor * ^ itsked for credit, what are we « to dtl?: 'iw. ' One in Three of Denver Pu­ pils Trained by Private Instructors Klkbart, Ind.—Aloro'boys and girl,' of IiIkIi Kcbfioi aKO are sorlonslv sliidv InK nnislc loday than ever bofun'. Iii I'oi'iiiatlon roiiclilng Iho Conn Center hero indicates rin iinlisimiri lilKli dc'grofi of. Interest In music .secmidary trvliool pupils. : , An exiim plo Ilf coniM tlnns'said to h. reiircsen tiU lve iif.'tlie co u n try Ui vti Ir. fouiKl Iu D enver, accortiìn g (/> ilvc IU\ sic O oiiter, w h ere.tb e riii.io’iif hU ’ini BtmlyinK iniiHlc Is one; In iliree, ' A ro- port on 1,74(1 blgb KClinoi pup!)-! In (0. Kenrtol, 'd ire c to r .of .'mu.sUv In th' D enver schools, Khowed tliiU tC a wcv H tiidylng niUBl.c u n d er p riv ate tors. ■ ■ 'There nre .'!,202 inn.slcàl''lnstniinent. In the fiimllle.s from 'vvblcli the,su bov nnd girls come, and In-01, of tlie lionu lliero Is a ' definito musical (irgiiiilz;' tion such u(f ail instrnmenlai ti'lo, i quartette or a small band. On»? timni even reporied an 11-plece orchestra a; their solutloa to the problem of hold Ing a large family together. Orchestra music Is preferred by 27 per cent of the Denver-children, diincr music by 20 per cent, Inijtrumenlal h,v 10 per cent, hand music by 17 per ceni and vocal by 14 per cent. 264.4 MÜes Per Hour don't stand I'oi’ it, tliafs-.-áll. . Pf courac, yoii hayéi;:;henr(l about old Mr. Osborne.'iVlIe was like^Enoch in tile Bible : “tie walk­ ed \v'th God, and was not, for Gpd.took him.” He loved us and wé:íoved him toó.' .He started thé Orphanage way back in 1887, We miss him, but we shall keep him ;l.ti otu' hearts, and try to'be kind itind good like he was. •- 'And now, we say good-bye for anothér year. . Think of us on Thanksgiving Day, won't you please, when you make your big iffóring for us? We' think of you all, especially whon wo pray by our beds 'at night, and when wc kneel in Chajiel. : They are only children’s prayers. But we be­ lieve' our Heavenly Father hears us. We toll Him that we are thankful for your goodness, arid ask Him to bless you and all the dear ones in your home. With, much love from, -'The Boys and Gírls- óf the Thonipsoh Orphanag.e. v A ГГ FAM ILY BAND Iwet ue do :Уоцг job worlc ‘ ' - 4,M ' . Major Mario De BerriatH, Italian; , aviation ace who'estabii^ed a new-,’ worli speed record of 264.4 niiloB . pe.v hour to win the: Schneider Cup ,,»tNbrfolk;,Va.''.: In another .state, ihie 'farmer are finding:that theyI'eceive from 70 to 198' perciBht'nwrie for their crops by feeding.the« to liveniopk. than they would if ihay , Bol^ tm harvested cropi; Those, who arò' laboring'under-the delusion thnt the present generation iilonp 1^ responslblo for, tbo .7a?.z A,!;e ’.vnuid do 'weir to study tbia pU'turo,. sn'ya the Cónti Music Center,' Klkliart,. Ind. Here-ilvo' gijnol'ptlona aro píct.urc.iK' in hnrmohy. It ; slipws S4r.s. ,Snri::» .Tane nowltfpf Iios ; Angeles, elKlit; - six years of ; nge, drawing lifirninn.'' froni one SHXoplione, while two' inoi'J' and a, clnrliiet are held hiireserve. ,'IIòr ."littio: boy" ;J''raiik, a, mere hut of; siicty-seyeni- Is playing tlie cornf- Her gtanddaugliter, Mrs.' A. Q. ; W t ifer, fòrty-òiié, holds still, another sn>:i‘- phone, while her greats jfMrs. J, Eflitiger;, Jr..;’ twenty, ¡Is |)layl«^'^ .'i'sécónií',' cornèt. '.tìré^t-gréat-gràiidsiiii Jalck Eflílngér¡rJr.i i¿;'dpláB lila ;,best I with the druiiis, '. '*'' Needless tb' sayi'there'Jare no'dyll, inementar.ln the bornes of . tbo ^ . Kfflnger c.\oa . 1 > Vi, лГ ''Tt' E THE M O CKSVILLE EN TE Ë iPM SE^G üARAN TE ED l a r q EST CIRCULATION OF A N Y N E W SPAPE R PU BLISH ED IN D AVIE CO U Ñ ^t ^ « à ■ JÉ»; i, 'Л. ; ^ /t . r . • ' ' i r y ^ i. I ‘ I ^ ^I , • " i l I ,'I ' H '' t 1 ' I, I ' ,*• 'thiirtltfütíe'sti' “nh pdroIíiílí'AiiálOT becaüBeHtóre of U|l here li - riòW.."'.'-Wé to|i:;ihátaóí¡maiiy;^^ f àVe : /piind Íhi8 hápply ;.' We are living nó)y InVbéauiiftiI' \ i new cottages with flowérVSiííd'íiíc- / tures .and shiny flóots á n ^ ^ ing folintains, il); théfií iWith lífiiih air to sleep in ari^ wariri robn)» i to dresB in. Alt /itrie 'cid bilild^ .ll ings oh the place have beén iorii ) | down. The néw' buildings that you and other good, friends htìVe put up are made of brick ffbm. Mr. Wheeler’s house clear arqühd - to the Infirmary and back agàih. We are tnighty proiid of our neiv homes and keep them spick arilT TRUTH, HONESTY OF PURPOSE AND UNTIMNG FIDELITY TO OUR COUNTY AND OUR FLAG KS OUR AIM'a ND PURPOSE - ‘f M : VOL. 49'MOCKSVILLE, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 192G, [Eighty Killed I k Tornadoes In Six State.«; Towns Wrecked I Arkansas Suffered Most Forty-Six Dead With [Mnny Injured nnd Property Dam­ aged VVill Run Into Hundreds of Tlwusands Hens ea ()o'not i[e ifeésí&'úíéíísíív'iiw. ' ' ,tMí 4 'wl|en they 6r»tch''ofeÿd;<'. I A. C. HUNEYCUTT Albemarle, N. C. Memphis, Tenn,, . Nov. 26.— Eighty persons were known" to be (load, tonight from the violence of lornrtdpes which struck in six southern, and 'southwest states .Iftte yesterday and today. Arkansas paid the gravest pen­ alty with 46- killed by the winds In twelve or more widely separat­ ed communities. Heber Springs lost 21 citizeiiiJ •vyhen the twisting otorm struck,that Ozark foothills town ast night. Moscow, neaivsPjiiife^^^ 10 slain and ¿tAeie>fatiUti1jS'in seven coun­ ties.; , Louisiana c«uhted 16 dead, 11 at Merrouge‘a|idiflye in or aljout Maynesviile, Caliborne parish. Ten ifegroes diied ..as a.ffituU ____________ of the gale’s fury in ^isBi'siip^i,' press association, has made a Jline of 'the victims were killed mark in the newspaper field of outright 'on plantations around ^ his state. In 1920, he bought the Marks, north of Clarksdale, while | News and made the Stanly News- -another- djed later today. Tho i Herald, which reii\ains his hobby. Btorm. swooped down upon the The same year he bought the negro quarters shortly after mid-1 Troy Montgomerian, later the night. _ j Mocksville Enterprise, the Badin In Missiouri, tonight’s fataliti-. Tribune and the Spencer Rail- es stood at four, three having per-1 voader, since selling the two lat­ ter. He has been active in civic and fraternal endeavors, and at 43 is rated a wealthy man. 1‘Busi- A lawyer until, in 1919, he founded the Herald, President Huneycutt of the North Caroliiia ished at Brandsville, Howell county, and one at Competition, Laclede county. Reports of the death of a school, teacher at Big j „ess needs nothing more than Piney proved erroneous. I genuine revival of old-time relj- The winds slew three today gion," he says. “ If we in Amer- wh'en they fell in twisting fury ¡cn lose our-health and religion. THINKING A POWERFUL FORCE, BUT TAKE HEED HOW YOU THINK. SAYS MODERN BOY IS AHEAD OF HIS GRANDPA. SWYPING SENATOR SIMMONS THUNDER. WHY SHOULD THIS BE THE CASE? I Thinking is the great force on earth. But it depends upon what one may think, as to the value of thinking. Thomas A. Edison .spends his-houi'iT'thinking in his laboratory, and we have some'new and useful inventions to ble.«s mankind. A Pasteur experimen's and THINKS in his seclusion, and we havo discoveries in medical science which free mankind from the scourge of disease, and pain, and death. A J. B. Duke spends his time THINKING, an.d wealth springs up and men are given employment, schbols and colleges are endowed, streams are harnessed, factories are built und great elecr trie railways penetrate the remotest sections. A Henry Ford thinks and men are paid wages for six days, but only have to Work five days, A Marconi spends years thinking arid experimenting, and the news of the world is Hashed over wireless space'in the twinkling of an eye, ships in distress are saved and the human voice is carried around the world. A John Wesley thought, and a great church sprang into existence. A Thomas Jefferson thought and we have the decla­ ration of American Independence. A John Calvin thought, and a great Chureh was purified. A Martin Luther thoug:i’i;, and forever was establiaheid the^theory that "Thc Just Shall Liye by Faith.” A Charles Dai'wiW. thought, and men’s hopes of immortality were blast­ ed. A Tom Pain thouglvt, and his fellows lost theJr hope 6f immor­ tality. A modern “searcher after liruth” thinks, and J«su8 Christ is preached ouit of the Bible, the 'Vitgin Biirth is made a myth, the story of creation is ridiculed, and men’s hope of salvation is gone. Thinking is the great force on earth. Ws should oncourage original thinking in all, especially the young; but for GodV'sake, let ua be careful that we properly direct the thinking of th» yoiinir» Let us make sui№ that our THINKING» IS ALONG THE-LINE WHICH WILL TEND TO BLESS MANKIND, .RATHER THAN ALO.NQ LINES- WHICH./V1LL BLIGHT MEN’S HOPES AND LIVES AND DESTROY CIVILIZATION. Rock Hill Buildings Demo-; lished By Tornado Friday м.. . Mrs. Mina C. Van Winkle, director of the womans protective bureau of the Washington police department, snid thé other day that in her opinion the lad of today is on iv higher plane, from a standpoint of sex morality, than was his grandfather. She was not willing, how?,ver, to say that the young woman of today is more virtuous than-was her grandmother, but she did say that if the girl of today is on a lower level than her grandmother of two gene­ rations ago, it in due to conditions over which she is not responsible. Mrs. Van Winkle believes that “the growing sex laxness on the part of the young girls of today,” is due to the taking away of the “re­ straining barriers” behind which the .young women of a^genereatioh ago were shielded. Another suggestion is made by Mrs. Van .Winkle, and that is that delinqueiicies begin earlier now than a generatiosi ago, that iS; Prank li Smith, altho elected to the senate *om lllino •, may not be ieatwl. It is claimed jje literally bouiht his election. Shotìd ^the Mnate refuse to admit Small (alwve), "J'«'^;É<»veroor,, looma as the.bian. to 5, S'S ,»i chair in Washlngten. GoV, Smap* will resign, Pred Sterling, r. lieu­ tenant f overnor, then bewm*» governor and will name,Mr, SinuU -----------1- ' ii I I BUSINESS .SECTION STRUCK , High Winds Stl ike Charlotte, BuV'y ^ No Damage Reported From ' ' ' iitorm leaving in its wake “to»\,/j\(^Át*. ún«\AAatt KfMinon пм^')'ДЪк'т1к1]М1п<м.^:^':-^^és\ roofless houses ■autos,, the::worst torns,d6',èver tOi visit this Bec'tion lilunged; the tiré t'wn into darkness,and, tei*- ‘,i. v,; ^ 'ror laté't'bdaÿ; , YV/ Coming unexpectedly after 'day of drizr^ing,, rain,¿J sti4ick .the BoutHeastfl ■квюгтж ¿rt of way ,i town about í'!Í:80i’.:8raÍi|hl^ up throligh; the" C<írtfMéráie park Bectloh,.léavihg th e jt^ ' ,.'л; houses ih varying stag« ' * age, Turning whÎBn;5 W ^Ï^ aa senator. YOUNG WHITES FILLllWï JAILS ;;;;u p of h^m;^ në;;^ «t the ag« 0 ^ 2 a,whereas, a few years ago the u'ouuie usually field, Ala. Another was bcliev- hnd a largo la\y practice, he has ed fatally hurt by the tornado, nevei; regretted entering the which demolished more than a “broader fleld" of journalism.— score’of homes and killed a hund- Natiónal Printer-Journàlisi, Mil- red cattlo. waukee. . One died, in West Texas when ^ Main street, t^tfeet at a : рас? estimated ati: ^or OO/milee'^" • - pac7: estimated;;»!, ’^^)i>er:- hpui-i':. it'>.ei|rri«\ Mf| with it all mov^ti|e material; ing’cafs on side^alkB'and amaa№' ¡ip ing windows as it went,’ ^ Turning diagbnally aa it [aft JIain street the cyclone awipt ov-, J, ei: Hampton and Marlon, atr«et8, A{ leaving' a path .. of' demoliah^d^ treea • and roofless- hbu?eSi;!:tT;iiif^ steeple arid towei^ 'and PIrW# Presbyterian church waa levelWij to the ground, while the, root the Lyle hospital was lif^ed ^Ojij Sink DcclarcB Law lo Put Boys lo Work Needed In SlaK?; North Wilkesboro, Nov. 27.'-t-^H. Hoyle Sink, North Carolina par-| piotely off, ctirryjng vyith'It ft” don commissioner, in an address tion of the second', stpr^',^^^ •before the North Wilkesboro ktw- Railway 'caM'Aptt'àfctó^^ anis club, made the statement. trHcVaMitJ the O’aklnnd^ that the negro of the state was ' terscctiori vyoi'.e''tìplid/;iÌM^11..... XI. ^ ^ U r« - ' _11 . Ll''*'ll DEPOSITSa sandstorm caused great proper­ ty losses in Lubbock county. _________ Jb rs s 'is s w t vts;:' ■»timatod:,at;;150''arid property loss- Miners, Guologlat Repoits cs might total' a million dollars.' „ i • i, м . oa' PnvnRed Cros.s and state authoriti- Nov. 28.-North С.ад- es wore busy tonight in.strenuous in.efforts to аТа storm sufferers at 000,000 tojns o.f_coal deposited _m S ; s i r S s ; wh^e whiW: the old ‘Triassic” basin, exte^ ing winds wrecked the northern ‘•'“r r if ' a f n 1 niLrd section of thc town with property pc'ti'nl to ^ r d tlo.sses which may reach a half "’K to « ''oport made to the de- the S t L»ul. Red Cro.5 »t»«, wn. velopmenl by H. 0. Biy.on, «»te i" ^“ îu r’e. о . o„.p „t.f„ the P ..t •from Governor Terral, started ut 17 to 20. While w<; hardly agree with this good lady, yot it must be ad­ mitted'that her statomen't.s, mado from experience, atiould not bo regarded lightly.' , ■ , ' ■ , \ ■' I I ■■■■ " ' " ■» It looks very much like President Coolidge is going co get away ......... with Senator Simmons’ thunder. Since the democrats are about to' of the. state than any other two the interior of .the bdiflce. get control of the Senate, seeing what he evidonl'ly believes to bo causes. He .spoke for a half hour i On tho Ibft'si.db of:Mnin street' , .‘''‘r'lljij the enovitable, Coolidge quickly seiiioct upon Senator Simmons’ idoa '| or more on the work of tfie salary from Hampton sti'eet to the Caroi i of making but Coolidge get credit nre going all they please to hand it to Mr. Coolidge. Why should the cotton market at Monroe run so much abov.e ithat at Cor'3ord? Why is it that there in a town known dyer the state as one of the great cotton manufacturing centers ofvthe world, with Kannapolis only » fqwmiles away, Kann.apolis the home of the world’s largest towel factory, why should that town allow Monroe to pay moi-e for raw cotton than is paid on its market * ______ ^ One would naturally suspect that in those towns where more A..if,m!L two vears show that this enormous ‘ cotton is manufactured than is produced for the local market, the/ilKUllHUU , * ____U , T____ ____T_______ *1.^ ......«m.A» » UUn Mnnt*n& wKovA natiôiïal guard.smen were — . also tò'àid in restoring order in fhorr. naturalstorehouse of wea)lh has price would have the advantage over a town like Monroe where rtpv in hardly been tapped. They’ show -very little-cotton is manufactured. But such is not the case. volopment, who addressed the into every crevice by the\flying; club for a short time. Major wind.', „ ' Phillips is a former state com- Before the fitorm had pasaçd the mander of tho North Carolina de- (Ire trucks weio colled out t® eJt--,, partment of the American Legion, t.'nguish a fire stttrted by liiili^tn-’ He paid a warm tribirte to Judge ing in thé dweliirig of'Mri Wright Thomas B. Finley, who recently on Hutchisbn:; street ; ' for gave Rendevous mountain to the mddlcal.aid were being“ state and the Daughters of the pn all sides, but tho miajoriiy of American revolution. Mr. Sink stated that he had pn all sides, blit the ,majority of S the irijuries were miiior c^ { brui.ses,' arid not more ; than a aiso io »».a in that in 1924 only 57,094 tons were Commenting on this, the Concord Observer of last week had ; ; ь r д а г ä ' « t ™ S r Ä „ , „ b e „ i - S . e ^ Ä r . ' t ,h. to“,5jltlon to Д äead i'h"d'S in windswept areas in Louisiana, 35 suffered injuries j”'V925 was given as 240 in windswept areas ot Merrouge P goo. •and Haynesville. Eleven The North Carolinii product is teen children escaped death neai , as a good grade bitu- Merrouge but the raging elem^^^^^ especially adaptable killed their parents,,Robert Lott, ordinary.commercial uses, but. a farmer,-and his wife, and their sisters, Wilmerth, 4, and'Dons 6. Oilfields suffered in the Louisi- ' ana storm, fifty derricks, a numb- .ei* of houses, and an oil work- • men's camp being destroyed. Oth- er oil; property was damaged nt . Bracum’s Spur hnd in the Roxana camp and 'Ware Chapel communi­ ties, , Washington, Nov. 2%—States ■are., prohibited, by prescribing 'equipment for railroad'locomotiv- es operating within their borders, the Supreme Court declared to- • day> in cases from Wisconsin and iJeorgia. ■: Holding that the field was ex-- ciusively occupied by the federal go'vernment under the boiler in­ spection act, tho ^ourt overturn­ ed a Georgia law requiring ioco- motives to have automatic fire box excellent for use in manufactur­ ing artificial gas and coke and for crushing into coal powder and for the by-product of this product, ammonium sulphatd, used in mak­ ing fertilizer. _ ,______ ME TOO You will miss a treat if you do not hear Mrs. Ka_te Burr Johnson, Commissioner, of Public Welfare a n d 'M I.S S Mary Francis'.Camp, Director of County Organization onDecember, 1,1926, at 7:30 p. m., in the Mocksville High School Audilolrium. , Mrs. Johnson jWill make an ad­ dress on general welfare work arid Miss Camp will talk on or­ ganised play. / u 1 Informal reception in school auditorium impediately after pro­ gram,’ y ■ ' ' , Und,er : ,«|e l) «usp^ of the this to say:"While cotton is cheap at best it is strange that Monroe pays ................. a cent'more for cotton than Concord. To prove this the editor sent two offenses for which pardons before the fui’y of the storni whi passed on 2,500 applications for dozen were reported,to have been pardons and paroles since -the treated at the hospitala. creation of his ofllce, and point- The tower and ste'-ple of tJjeA- ed out ihat there were at least church at the Indiistrial m'il fa ll'' a truck load there i-ecently. The best he could get on this market was 11 3-4c but our man came back with the cash at 12.60, nearly a cent more per pound. This was cotton raised in Concord and sold in Monroe where .there are few mills. This matter should be correct­ ed in order to make Concoril as good market as any other. No doubt this same cotton will be sold back here to our mjlls but why haul it t-wo trips? Concord can and does sell goods cheaper than Monroe and of course our cotton money will be spent here but some-, how they do pay more for the same co.tton than w'e pay for we tested it out and were ahead sorfle $4 a bale. “This is written solely to try and get a better market here so as ■to keep all bur cotton here. It can be done. Our buyers are as smart as Monroe buyers and they can pay as much as_others if they will. FLAMES FATAL TO SEVEN­ TEEN Deaths in State Prom Violent Cases Follow Seasonal Trend iiiui,ivua V ,,—y - ,. ■ тТпЛйг ■ the auBDlcea oi ine ¡seven hcxbuho . w^ibd o o « i ¡ , f tn d r e g ^ l e t j o n Raleigh, Nov. 27.—Official figur- es is.sued by the bureau of vital statistics of the state board of health reveal, that during Octob­ er violent deaths in North Caro­ lina followed strict , seasonal trends. Death from burning increased over the total for summer months and deaths from drowning slump­ ed. ’ Accidental, and- doubtful deaths from gunshot wounds also «oared. . . Seventeen persons l<?8t their lives from- fire in October. In August, the lowest month, there were only six siich . fatalities. Seven personB ! were drowned. In '■ from gunshot wounds other than homi­ cides. The 18 homicides during the month was even with the preced­ ing month but failed to touch the high record of 24 made laât May. Automobiles faltal'ities' totalled 35,, a decrease from the year’s high month—50 in August. Railroad accidents 'claimed 11 lives. Last February 15 died in this manner. One person was killed by lightning, and four in crossing crashes. Suicides slumped off from the hot summer month of July when there were 16. Thirteen cars of hogs were sold by farmers of Chowan County this year bringing in over $20,000, re-: ports County Ag^nt N. K. Rpwelh . Thé ma'n who cared for his poultiy .flo'ck thi* summer is, no>y сааЬ1п(г;М Щ Л high prices for. and' paroles for consistly denied; all the windows on the storm 8}ds.‘ 3 these being burglary and perjury, of the mill were smashed in by ’ Continuing, he stated that men the ferocity of tho wind. - serving terms for murder made ^ Dr. G. C. Manse, of the iWinthii^iS on the whole the best prisoners, rop college weather bureau, sai^ > i and were often made trusties, that the storm was cleorly a tor-^ ' ,'^fter months of observation Mr,> nado and estimated the speed ot~f Sink said that he had found it .the wind at over 80 milea per i,‘ \ ч'н!! better for tho older prisoners to hour. School girls caught down' / >' J'l'.p be, with the younger men aa in town during the storan were tear- f most cases they gave them giiod fully terror- ' ’ .........’-------л ч t..........i.< advice, telling them not'to get into . them were trouble when free again. ^ i refused "Idleness and the desire to have \on foe^.' modern conveniences and pleasure --------------♦ — ггт~г»'ц ^'Г' 'of life, cause many young men to STATE'S BEST OIIi ROAD ^ И','* commit crimes,” Mr. Sink said. FROM YADKINVILLE TO^ “And th^re should be .some law . BROOKS CROSS ROAP^^^^i-^ ^ with proper restriction to make 'Я t ^ i®: boys go to , work at the age cf twelve yenrs,” the speaker said forcefully, referring to the idle brains the devil’s work shop. Mr. Sink told of a group,of prisoners coming to the penitentjary from Guilford courity, there being seyen young white men and two negro­ es in this group. The speaker gave this as an illustration for his statement that the negroes of the state are vacating their cells for the young white man, aijd bb gave the lack of proper,training in the home as the reason for this condition. Dairymen o\er the United Stat­ es nre intereated in the, cotton­ seed meal of the South becauae it is. cheap.. This might be a good time for North OaiSflljna farmers to feed tbiB>hiillb pvotein uring the atoran were tear- { ‘ y'® >rior-8tricken and many of,Vi« eio io frightened that they S.’í|| I to stait out to the collegei, ] ¡ '■ ® ^ ^ ^ iT OIL ROa 'd '’, * DKINVILLE TO,.' KS CROSS ROAP^ ----------of tho road from Brooks Cross 'Road8,ygi|^g|||^P® ______.„mpleted Monday, it.VA'-vjí'ííí slated at the d'strict high-fiV^' ofiice This strip is about >n miles in length, and is a,' i \i ;,ot Route 60. < vl'’'’* The' oiling. Yadkinville to Bi'ooks Cross Roads ,was about completed Monday, it, ,‘.i i 4'.^ \yas slated at the d'strict high-f/' ' way seven part Oiling began on this strotch, i'i' during the early pait of tho year»' >t ' and three different oil trealment», have been given. i ^ It is said to be'the best oil road in'ffle di.sjtrict; and has won.praiai^ from all who have trayeled it./'Qi ^ C. Northscott, ^vho had.''chargei«rf<i| the oiling, stated in" the diatrleVAi ofiice Monday the\peopie ]^ho^hs^l]i| traveled it declared it to’ ti best in the state. \ ' t -r '“'-------------------------».■'v«2,400 poi^nda ,of^'rarkeySii.i sold by farmeraiAf,)liUi»on < m i