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10-October-Mocksville Enterprise/ 1
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- DAVIE COUNTY FAIR -
Clem ent Grove Mocksville, N. С.
September 30, October 1, 2,1936
The Following Business Firms Are Boosters Of The Davie County Fair
W e W elcom e Y ou To The
D avie County Fair
Visit our store and Let Us Show You Our
Line Of
John Deere farm Machinerx
Job Lot- of Men’s and Boys’ Shoes, values fi'om ?2.00 to
?3.B0, special at ................................................. ?1.48 to $1.98
Men's and Boys’ Overalls .................................69c and 97c
We carry a complete line of Groceries, Flour, Feeds, Stoves,
Shirts, Blankets, Boots, Overshoes, Wool Sweaters, 25c and
50c, Men’s Hats, Harness and Fertilizer.
See our display of Farm Machinery at the fair.
We Appreciate your Patronage
M artin Bros.
Near the Depot,.Mocksville, N. (j.
W e lc o m e T o
Davie County Fair
Pure’» Motor Analyzer
W iHBe M
Kurfees & Ward’s
Service Station
Wednesday - Thursday - Friday
Take your car around for a
FREE INSPECTION
PURE OIL COMPANY
Of The Carolinas
G. N. WARD, Agent
Sanford Motor Co.
Ford Dealers 23 Years
s t a n d a r d O il, G a s a n d L u b r ic a n ts 2 3 Y e a r s
G o o d y e a r T ire s a n d T u b e s 2 3 Y e a r s
We Sell Quality Products
Watch The Fords Go By
ist»ss№ii!isi;ixi2i;K]3;i)!isKia:ixisi»si!a!:i»!:N23i)!i!si!0SDii£№i»i3i№ixi3;i»!Si»i;gi»sciy
25 Million Buyers Can’t Be Wrong
ЛЛ-L?^ ПТw
T h ree Big u a y s
Attend The Fair Next Week
You’re sure to win first prize if you
bake your cake or rolls with
Mocksville’s Best
I
and your biscuits with
Over-The-Top Flour
We appreciate your patronage given us and invite you to
visit our booth at the fair and see our products on display.
H o r n - J o h n s to n e C o .
We are expecting you in to see us
During The Fair
Lcttve your packages, Overshoesi, Etc. with us. Look
over our stock, ask for prices, information cheerfully
given. We are displaying Heaters of all sizes and des
criptions this week. No doubt you will need a Heater or a
Cook Stove, or both. If so we both lose if you don’t see
us first.
See Our New Furniture.
Coppercarb for Smut in Wheat
“The Store Of Today’s Best”
MOCKSVILLE, N. €.I iraîrsîïîZi rwïnrîiatuware store
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
B e
Visit Our Booth At The
Davie County
Fair
Campbell-W alker
Funeral Home
Ambulance Service
Phone 48 Mocksville, N. C.
Attend The Seventh Annual
D av ie C o u n ty
F A IR
A Booster
TO THE FAIR
Bo sure to pay us a visit and soo our lino of New Fall
Jlerchandiso. We are daily Rotting in the newest things
for Fall wear and invite you to see them.
New Fall Shoes, Hats, Pants, Shirts, Sweaters and Jackets
for the men. , .
In women’s Keady-to-wear we are showing pretty new
Full Dresses, Sweaters, Hats, Shoes and Hose,.4 I
Special showing of School Shoes for the Children
Best selection of school prints, fast colors, in town.
j J f y o u w a n t a g o o d t im e
ATTEND THE
Davie County Fair
u .
Mocksville’s Newest Store
If you want the News
Subscribe To
The Mocksville
Enterprise
T h ree Big Nights
Davie County’s
Best Advertising
Medium
TBB NEWSIEST NBWSPAPBl! !N DAVIE—THE BEST FOR THE SUnSCUIBEK AND ADVERTISEIT
Mocksville Enterprise Read By The People
Who Are Able To
Buy
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
VOLUME 58 AlOCKSVILLE. N. C.. THURSDAY. ОС^ГОВЕК 1, 1H.3G No. 45
S t a t e L o w e r s I n d e b t e d n e s s
F ig u re s R e v e a l C a s h
B a la n c e O f $ 2 2 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0
O n 31st D a y O f A u g u s t
liiiloigh, Sept. 29.— State of-
ficialH released figures today
showing North Carolina had in-
iT('I'T'd its cash balance and de-
it.'i indebtedness during
llii' last year.
'I'ho combined monthly atate-
iiK'iit of the auditov and treaaur-
i;r listed a cash-on-hand baiiuice
nl' .'j;2ii,701,81(i.G0 as of August
:!l, t'omparcii to $19,615,001.01 on
Aiiijust 31, 1935.
The state debt was .$103,894,-
OOO at the end of August, com-
]).ired to $170,604,000 on the same
(l.’itc ono year ago.
iioceipts coming into the gen-
ci'al fund during August were
$1,580,517.06, as against disburse
ments from the fund of only
il,530,602.24. With the balance
of $5,509,503.17 brought over
fi'om July, the general fund to
taled .?8,559,418.59 on August 31.
On the same date one year ago,
w a 'O u i“ $6,‘/09,573.85 in
the general fund.
Highway fund receipts during
August totaled $3,028,587.66, as'
atrainst disbursements of .?3,133,-
7‘l(i.24, leaving a balance of .$10,-
70.'!,.'’.00,28.
This figure wns considerably
lower that tho balance of $13,-
llil,895.04 in the highway fund
at the same date one year ago. '
Hoceipts from all other funds
totaled $667,231,70 during Au-
L'Mst. iigainal; diHtiiii'smnpnts nf
«810,745.14.
Tho state’s del5t was listed as
xnllows:
tiuneral Fund Bonds, $56,763,-
000; World War Veterans’ Loan
lioiuls, .$2,500,000; Highway
Jiond.s, .$91,271,000;' Chowan Riv
er Bridge i^und Bonds, $350,000;
Cape Fear River Bridge F'und
Bonds, $1,175,000; special school
buikling bonds, $11,835,000.
William F. Moore
In France
Registrauion Bboks Орел
The registration books will be
open in the various precincts in
Davie county, on Saturdays, Oct.
10, 17 and 25th. If you have not
registered and .wish to vote in
the fall election, you must regis
ter on one of the above dates.
Notice To Farmers
The Corner
Cupboard Column
Kdited by M. J. H.
HILL IMAGIC
"Wu cannot always know how
much we care
I'or old familiar things until we
find
That they are gone. I did not
know how fair
Were my loved hills nnt.il they
lay behind.
How could I know their silent
glory still
Would follow me when they were
out of sight?
Or that their magic coloring
would spill
Across the fabric of my dreams
at night?
But, sitting here, I listen to the
The directors of the Davie
County Soil Conservation Asso
ciation have set Saturday, Octo
ber 17, 1936 as the final date for
accepting work sheets with res
pect to the Soil Conservation Pro
gram for 1936. The committee-
I All persons who havo moved into I men who filled out these work
sheets for interested persojis in
the spring will conliuvic to do so
until tho final date. Work sheets
"•'tl also be accepted in the coun
ty office until the closing date.
Supervisors have almast com-
-- - , pletfid chocking compliance and
AT YADKIN VALLEY CHUKUH from the records in the county
office over 95% of the producers
T o b a c c o C a r a v a n V is its
M o c k s v ille O n S a tu r d a y
And think of quiet uplands, far
away,
Once more I feel their peace en
velop me, •
And I forget the sting of salty
spray.
Instead of high blue waves, 1
'■ visualize
The blue of tranquil hills against
the skiea."
. (Pearl Council Hiatt.)
Tlin nlinvR pneni won for Mrs.
Charles E. Hiatt, of Pilot Moun
tain, the "1936 Halstead Cup,”
given at a recent meeting of the
North Carolina Poetry Society.
Mrs. Hiatt is a native of Red
Springs, N. C., and has received
several honfrs for other poems
of unusual merit.
the county, who have moved from
one precinct to another, or who
have become of voting age since
the Inst election, must register, if
thoy intend to vote in November.
LAYMAN RALLY TO BE HELD
News Briefs Of
State And Nation
The Gospel Prayer Band of
Davie County will hold their an
nual laymans rally nt Yadkin
Valley Baptist Church, Sunday,
October 11th.
Ail day service. Dinner on the
ground. Everybody bring a bas
ket of good things to eat. There
will be good speakers to interest
you and good quartetts and soul stiring songs.
A banner will be given for the
largest church attendance of
Davie County at this rally.
William Moore, зол of Mr. and
Mrs. W. L. Moore, ,who joined the
U. S. Navy this summer, is now
OH the U. S. S. Raleigh, which
was to reach a French port on
Sept. 29. His numbers of fri
ends will be interested to hear
■:f his cruise.
CONCORD CHURCH HAS
SUPPER SATURDAY NIGHT
A chicken stew will be given
at the home of Mr. Joe Everhardt,
near Gi-easy Corner, on Saturday
tvoning, beginning nt 5 o’clock,
fill' the ben,efit of Concord
Methodist Church. The public is
cordially invited to patronize this
worthy cause.
JIM-YoJ№ <7«b5rtEii.goXr
,( //6’Lt 1-ОЛН J - . МЁ T £ !^
"Comfiimcms an: louus which lenders expect bacl{ with heavy interest"
O CT O B ER
— 1—Alexander Иска 1,000,000
Persians nt Arbcia, B. C.
-— ^ — 331
2—First Pan-Amcrican Con.
ference opens at Washing.
ton, 1889
3—Jacques Cartier arrives at present site ot Montreal. i:3s.
4—Frederick R e m in g to n ,
lamed painter, born, 1861.M
Miss Harriet Monroe, who was
known as the “patron saint of
American poetry," died of a heart
.ntack on Sept. £6, at Arequipa,
Peru, She was born in Chicago,
nnd her first poems appeared in
thi.i' city’s newspapers. Her
"Columbian Ode” was sung by a
chorus of 5,000 voices at the
opening of the World’s Fair hi
Chicago, in 1893, which was in
celebration of the 400th anniver-
.sary of tho Discovery of Amer
ica. She founded the magazine,
"Poetry," In 1912, and did much
to encourage young poets in their
work.
1* 5—G reat H avana cyclone.
J i r ' i 1,000 die, 1768.
6—Attempt to cross Atlantic
in b.illuuii iella, goc. only
. 100 miles. 1873.
f
0-Ì7. t >11 -British fleet fires on Brit-
toi, Conn., 177J. titiKV
Admiral William S. Sims, who
commanded the An',-'rican _ fleet
during the World Wai', died in
Boston on Sept. 28, aged 77. He
will bo buried in Arlington Na
tional Cemetery on Thursday,
with ful naval honors. Admiral
Sims wns noted for his sharp,
constructive criticisms of tho
American Navy. Although he
was unpopular in some circles
for his plain spcech, he found a
.strong supporter in the late Theo
dore Roosevelt, when he was Pre
sident.
The other, day somebody asked
us to name the battles of the War
Between the States, in which
North Carolina troops took part.
Of course this 'is a Jargo order,
and we cannot mention all the
conflicts, ibut here' are some of
the outstanding engagements:
Bethel (Va.) Manassas (land 2),
Seven Pines, Sharpsburg or An-
tictam, Chancellersville, Fred-
erickburg (Va.) Gettysburg (Pa.)
Chiclcamauga, Spottsylvania Court
House, Petersburg, various points
in North Carolina including Fort
Fisher, and Appomatox, Va. The
last battle fought on Ntorth Caro»-
lina soil лvas at Waynesville, on
Мяу 8, 1865. Theso facts have
been obtained from D. H. Ilill’a
"Young People’s History of North
Carolina.” Daniel Harvey
are in line for payment. Th’cf
payment will probably average
bettor than $50.00 per „farm.
The work sheet covtrs the farm
f'.ir 1936 only and no obligations
are placed on the person submit
ting the work sheet.
Persons intending to file work
sheets should do so on or before
October 17, 1936.
R. R .. Smithwick
I County Agent.
----' ------
Retail Advances *
. A. t* I* A
Atlanta, Sept. 30. — A more
than seasonal increase in retail
trade paced general improvement
of commerce and industry in the
southeast during August, . the
¡Federal Reserve bank of Atlanta
ji'cported today.
!■ Tho six states of the sixth di.s-
trict showed heavier volume than
n.'ii,. A 1 , ‘1 “Iso for wholesale trade,0.1 s Motor Analyzers and can roHidonti'al contract awards, coal
you the condition of .your niining, pig iron production, and
BKIiAKS LEG
Winston-Salem, Sopt. 30.— S.
S. May, 101, was brought to a
hospital hero with a broken'log
suffered in a fall at his homo
near Yadkinviile. v
Mr. Lynn Puckett, a skilled
mechanic, having years of ex
perience on all makes of autos
and trucks, and who served as
a mechanic in the Government
Air Service during the World
War, will be at Kurfees & Ward’s
Service Station during the three
Davie County Fair day^, , Ha,
will be operating ono of Pure
CARE IN SCHOOL ZOiNE
URGED I
Raleigh.—lArthur Fulk, direc
tor of the division of highway
safety, urged, nlotorists to take
special care • when driving
through “school zones” ihis year
as he noted today that 159 North
Carolina children were killed and
787 injured last year who were
under 14 years of , ago.
tell
motor and iijake any minor ad
justments necessary to give you
b«itter performance. The.se ser
vices are free. You are invited
lo come in any day.
KAPPA NEWS
Rev. and Mrs. B. C. Reavis, of
Greensboro, were dinner guests
of Mrs. Reavis’ parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Cartner Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Davia, of
operations at lumber and cotton
seed oil mills.
Decreases were noted in life
insurance sales, total contracts
awarded, building permits and
cotton milll activities., Figures
for these classifications how
ever, were larger than for Aug'-
ust, 1935, "
Retail sales, ibased on reportei
of 57 firms, were 18.9 per cent
ahead of July, and 14.7 per cent
LOST ÜLÜODHOUND FOUND
‘McAIester, Okla.— Old Boston,
famed bloodhound of the, McAles
ter penitentiary, waa found to
day in thé hills south of String-
tuwn and Warden Roy Kenny
said he apparently was ‘all
right.” Lloyd Carr, switchboard
operator at the prison* said War
den Kenny called from a farm
house.
HUiNTS WASHBOARD
IN KEY OF G
I A motorcade composed of to-
j bacco warehousemen and merch
ants of Winston-Salem, visited
Mocksville last Saturday on their
lour of the tobacco sections, ad-
'■f'rtisin:; Winaton-ghlem as ti
toibacco. market. The caravan'
!’»v ns ila purposo to create
goodwill and interest tobacco,
¡¡rowers in the market, was com
prised of -sovóral cars and a banil
truck, decorated, with vcloth ban^
ners and bumjier stiMpa. They
spont/a short while in our town
making talkf), distributing adver
tising matter and inviting tho
growers to tho tobacco market
opening on Monday, Out. 5th,
Garner Reunion To Be
Held Sunday, Oct. 4th
The Seventh Annual reunion of
the lineal descendents of the
pioneer Philip Garner, will toe
held Sunday,' October 4th, near
thu site of the first settlement,
San Jose, Calif.— A shortage
of washboards in the key of G 'w ill be present for a part the day
prior to lYOO on the estate of H.
>1. Gai'ner and! located threo
miles North of Denton, on Sta'ta,
Highway 109.
The lineal descendents include
members of tho families of Gar
ner, Snider, Lanier, Becker, Boat.
Black, Tyaingors, Nances, and
many others.
An interesting program ’ has
l^eeii arriiriged,'' Dr;’’J; B', Hiirlby,
D.D., Hon.^ J. R, McCrary, of
Lexington, and Prof. A. M. Snid
er, of Coffman, will deliver ad- ,
dresses. A|s a special treat tho
Baptist. Orphanage Quartette
from Mills Home Thomasville,
. T.; ahead of August last year. The
il*® Sundaj I adjusted index of daily averageguests of Mr. and Mrs. E. C.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jones and
sons were shoppers in Salisbury
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs, Robert Williams
and aon, of Cleveland, spent
Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Leo
West.
Mr. and Mrs, W ill .Peacock and
family spent Sunday with rela
tives, near Society.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smoot, of
Salisbury, spent the week-end
with Mr. T. L'.- Koontz,
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cartner
spent Sunday afternoon with Mr,
and Mrs. S. A. Jones.
Mr. and Mrs, E, E, Koonta
and family spent awhile Sunday
afternoon with Mr. and Mra, W.
A. Byerly.
Mias Edyth Koontz spent sev
eral days last week with Miss
Margarette Ijames, of Coolee
mee.
Mr. R. L. McDaniel, of State
sville, spent Thursday in this
community with relatives.
Miss Ruby Warren, of New
Salem, spent Monday night, with
Virginia Jones.
Mrs. Jesse and .Ervin Wilson
spent o',ne afternoon last week
with Mrs. W. F. H, Ketchie.
Hill, of the Confederate Army;
and for a number of years Pro
fessor Hill taughc"English at the
A. & M. College, now State Col
lege, Raleigh. His daughter is
now in charge of the Lrbraiy of
the. North Cai'olina Historical
Commission, in Raleigh..
When this paper appeiirs in
print the seventh Davie County
Fair will be in full swing, ao you
may not take 1!ime to i’fifld thi."?
column. Next week we hope to
give somo of the impressions
Hill 1 gained at the Fair. Hope you all
was tho son of Gteneral D. H. v/ill win prizes.
cent, the highest level recorded
since the 1923-1925 average.
For the eight months of th^
year, retail sales led 1935 figures
by 12.9 per cent.
The monthly incr(«ise in whole
sale trade was 7.3 per cent, while
August this year stood 16 per
cent over August, 1935, and the
eight months of this year led the
same period of last year by tho
same amount. \
United States buieau of labor
STntistics reports quoted by tho
bank placed employment in .Tuly
1.4 per cent better than in June,
and 12.5 per cent over July, 1935.
CCC Taking On 109,276
During Month Of Oct.
Washington, Sopt. 30. — The
Civilian Conservation corps plans
to enroll 109<276 men during the
first tAvo weeks of October a's
replacements for those who have
dropped out to. enter private
employment or who leave' the
corps today at the conclusion of
its seventh period.
The replacement program, an
nounced today by. Robert Fech-
ner, director of emergency con-
serviation work, is intencljed to
bring the corps up to its author
ized strength of 350,000. It calls
for the enrollment of 97,526,
young men, 7,120 war veterans
and 4,991 experienced local men.
An increase ot 16,200 men
from the states in the drought
area on the south and west was
authorized ao as to provide for
young men from families placed
on re.'ief rolls because oi' the
drought.
Proposed enrollment by states
included;
North Carolina 1,684; South
Carolina 1,352.
К
•was reported tot^ay by Hulbert
Hood, San Jose accountant-mu-
.■ilcian. "ood has been approach
ing hardware clerks with the
querry: “Have you a washboard
in the key of G?” Then he in-
apects the stock by rippling his
fingers over the corrugations.
He has found none.
SEES FUNDS FOR CANAL
New York.— Mayor John T.
Alsop, Jr., of Jacksonville, Fla.,
expressed’ the belief today the
coming session of Congress
would appropriate ,the funds to
continue construction of the
Florida ship canal.
and will sing some of their spe
cial selections.
All members, of the family and
friends are invited to come and
bring baskets and boxes with
lunch.
Miss Mary Holthouser
Dead
FREE TOLL BRIDGES
Montgomery, Ala — Alabama’s
State toll bridges were freed
today by proclamation of •' Gov
ernor Bibb Graves. Governor
Graves said tho "happy moment”
had, arrived for the lifting of
tolls from the 15 bridges built in
1929 and 1930,
W ORLD ALTITUDE MARK
London.— An official announce
ment today credited Squadron
Leader F. D. R. Swain of the
Royal Air Force, with having set
a world record altitude flight of
49,967 feet, bettering the old re
cord of 48,698 feet by 1,269 feet.
au-
re-
LICENSE REVOCATIONS
IN STATE OVER 5,700
Raleigh.— 'fhe number of
tomobile operators’ license
vocations passed the 5,700 mark
today v/hen the motor vehicle
division announced the suspen
sion of 47 more licenses, mostly
for drunken driving to make
5,736 revocations since the law
went into effect November 1.
RALEIGH PRISONER
lA K K s OWN l if e
IN CELL AT JA IL
Raleigh.— The death of James
H. J.'ic.lrRor), 40-yoar'Old fnthei'-
of six children, waa recorded as
suicide today. Jackson was found
dead in his city jail cell, hang
ing from tho bars by a blanket.
Relatives here received word of
the death of Miss Mary Hanes
Holthouser, of Winston-Salem,
which occurred at her home on
S. Church street on Monday
morning, as the resuh of a heart
attack. The deceased was a niece
of Mr. M. J. Holthouser of this
place, and' had frequently visit
ed here. She was the daughter
of Mrs. Fannie Holthouser and
the late Elmer Holthouser, of
Winston-Salem. She was a mem.
ber of Troutman Lutheran
Church and was'a talented musi
cian. She is survived hy her
mother and two brothers, Lind
say and Hugh Holthouser, all of
Winston-Salem, Tl/S funeral was.
conducted at Vo«ler's Chapel on.
Tuesday afteynoon .at 4:30, by.
Rev, Gordon Spaugh, Bishop J.
K. Pfohl and Rev. D. L. Rights.
Interment was in Woodland
Cemetery. Misses Daisy, Nqll
and Annie Holthouser, Mildred
Blackwood and Mr.s, H. A. Lagle,.
attended the funeral. ,,,,
New Home To Be Built
. Material has been placed ou
the A. F. Campbell lot on North
A'lain Street and work on the re
sidence has begun. H. H. Lanier
has the contract for building the
Camplbell home, i
Í
IN THIS ISSUE
News, page ........................
Dragons Drive You, page
Floyd Gibbons, page .......
Comic Sec0bn, page ..........
* Editorials, page ...............
Irvin S. C(rl»l>, juige ............
News Pictures,! page .......
Sunday School/Lesson, p
Society, page ./.....................» *• ♦ » * *
1
2
8
3
4
Ü
6 *
6 7
'i rii i
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THE МОСКВУфУГЕ ENTERPRISE. MnckBviile. Ñ- С.. Thursday, October i;‘ 1936
2 ii_ _ a b o u t :
The Passing of Tlialbcrff.
H O L L Y W O O D ,C A L IF .— Big
an industry as the moving
picture industry is, tlic death of
one slender, shy, frail man has
stunned it. The old guard of this
business has lost its little corporal
and the second generation of pro
ducing talent is left with a yawn
ing gap where yesterday there
loomed a leader who was both a
pioneer and a progressive.
Irving Thalberg whs an authentic
genius of the films — a master
showman, a deft in
terpreter of that
tricky a r t which
flnds it s medium
through story and
camera and screen.
It will be long be
fore they breed an
other Thalberg out
here. For men of
his brain, his ener
gy, his pathfinding
instincts, don’t come
in sets, don’t often irvin S. Cobb come singly.
The name' Napoleon has been
overworked to describe ability with
in some small body, but here, to
the limits of his own craft, was not
only a Napoleon but a Daniel Boone
and a Balzac all rolled in one.• • *
Payroll Patriots.
S OME low Industrial royalist has
been checking up on tho sisters
and the cousins and the aunts of
New Dealers who are on the federal
payroll. We call that nepotism
when the opposition does it, or fam
ily love when one of our own crowd
is guilty.
'Twould seem Dixieland leads in
this display of domestic ailection.
The champion is Senator Smith of
South Carolina. There were all
sorts of delegates at the Demo
cratic national convention, but he
was the only walking delegate —
walked out twice, ' and each timo
walked right back again. He has
five relatives drawing salaries from
Uncle Sam. Even Uncle Jack Gar
ner, the sphinx of Texas, has
-4taoe,
Thia looks like an improvement
on the old southern system, when
kinfolks dropped in for a week-end
and stayed the rest of their lives.
) * * *Summer Annoyances,
C'VEN in sun-kicked California,
■*-' suininer is on its last legs. This
one will go down in history as tho
summer which produced handles,
knock-knocks; tho dust st6irn nnd
the campaign speech, theae two be
ing interchangeable terms in most
cases; likewise the seventeen-year
locust and the gentleman who was
in active charge oi our Olympic
team’s trip to Berlin. People wore
seriou-sly annoyed In other ways,
too.• • •
Polillcal Geysers,
C AN it be wo made a mistake
by plowing under cotton instead
of orators?
That famous phenomenon of na
ture in Yellowstone park, which
spouts at such frequent intervals
ought to be getting uneasy. Any
moment it may lose its name of
old faithful and become known as
the Junior John Hamilton goyser.
And Secretary Ickes certainly is
qualifying as the minute-man of the
new revolution ~ or of tenor than
that, if there’s an audience. Colonel
Knox isn’t doing so badly, either.
In the modern version of ‘‘the spirit
of ’76,” he’s the one who’s beating
so hard on the eardrum. Still, it’s
a grand thing — out surprising ~
to find a newspaper editor who talks
forcibly on his feet instead of writ
ing feebly on iiis seat. ,
On the other hand, Uncle Jack
Garner continues to be the ideal
back-seat driver — the one who
hasn’t said a single word during the entire trip.« • •
Dictators and Shirt Tails.
T E'r’S see. Among others, we
^ now have the blue shirts in
Ireland, the brown shirts in Germany, the red shirts in Russia, and,
of tv^urse, the black shirts in-Italy, which seems the most practical oC
all because you don’t need lo wash
a black shirt for months and months.
So maybe we re too quick. The
alarmists amon^ us are predicting
an early dictatorship here. Al the
rate all the standard shaies are
being snapped up, we’ll I'.ave lo
think up a new color in shirts, and,
unless w i hurry, there may not be
any new colors lo think up, and
you can’t have a dictatorship with
out a shirt lo match — Ihal’s the
rule. Lavender hasn’t been taken
yet by anybody, but lavender seems
kind of sissy, and, while, a gravy-
colored shirt might suit the careless
eater, it lac)ts zing, don’t you think?
In any event, our shirt ought lo
have a good long tail lo il, be
cause, by that lime, the American
taxpayer probably will have lost
his pants.
IRVIN S. C0S5S0 Wcstirn Ncu’spnticr Union.
■r
/I t
“l,en(ilh” Ll Horse Kacins
, In horse racing the measure ol.jj 1.1) ^ J, “lengih” is the distance from
\;.li 1 ■';i Ui‘e lip of the nose lo Ihe base ol
!.A Of Uiil. 'Hie average horse Is ovei
eight feet wUle running with ne<-l omslrotcheci.
S c e n e s a n d P e r s o n s i n t h e C u r r e n t N e w s
.............................‘•••'■•-•“■"''■•■•î'’--»"'—
1—Lewis O. Barrows, Republican, who was elected governor of iWaine. 2—German flying boat_ Eolus in
New York harbor aftel' its flight across the Atlantic. 3—Spanish loyalists from Irun and Sun Sebastian taking
refuge on French soil.
K n o x ’ s B l u n d e r
A i d s R o o s e v e l t
Insurance Policy
Slip a Boomerang;
Find Old Tax Law
Is VMated
w;
Spain Appoints New
Minister of War
Mêlions Receive Chemical Award
In chr reorganization of the Span
ish cabinet the post of premier was
given to Francisco Largo Caballero,
Chester G. Fisher, chairman of the Pittsburgh section of tho Ameri
can Chemical society, presenting to Andrew W. Mellon, center, and his
neph'ew Richard K. Mellon, rigiit, the society’s bronze plaque “ for out
standing service to chcmislry.” Young Mr. Mellon acccpted in tho
:r, me laio n . a. ivieiiun.IIUIJIU U l ills
N o w B r i t i s h e r s J o i n t h e A r m y o n T r i a l
An army recruiting ofTlcer in London explains to some young recruits “The New Idea” of his majesty’s
army. .The now idqa is the army’s supplementary reserve trial scheme. A recruit may join the supple
mentary reserves for six months. If he likes military life, he may join the regular army. If he does not, he
may return to civilian life, but is required to come up for 14 days of training for the next five years. He is
given a bounty of six pounds a year and pay while in training.
II Duce Greets
Mothers and
Their Chiklren
Fecundity being the must desir
able feminine virtue, in the eyes ot
Premier Mussr.'iini, these Italian
mothers al Polf^nza brought thoir
offspring with ,nem when they gath
ered to meat II Duce. Premier
MiisHuUni is heie shown chatting
wilh a group ot mothers, during
his visit to Potonza.
For several years, Mussolini aiiu •
his Fascist governmenl have urged
the rearing of large families. Vari
ous government funds have been
appropriated to give fina.icial aid
to families wilh several childre ,
and the resi't has been a gradual
increase in Italy’s birlhrali.
Germany unUer the Hitler govern
ment has also used similar ichemes
lo check the declining biith rale
and lo increase the population. The
war and the recent financial dis
tress in European countries has
caused a falling oil in the popula
tion llgures, and looking to the fu
ture, the militaristic governments
have used every means to increaae
the population.
Is Chosen for
Palestine Post
Lieul.-Gen. J. C. Dill, directoi
genera', of rnilitaiy operations and
intelligence at the British war of
fice, who was appointed as the new
By EARL GODWIN
ASHINGTON. — It is Col.
Frank Knox himself,
Hoosevelt’s loudest polit
ical foe and the G. O. P .’s
vice presidential aspirant, wiio has’
delivered the best stroke for Roosevelt’s re-election. Roosevelt scored
easily on Knox’s error when Knox
reminded everybody of the Hoover
days by bringing up the subject of
the security of life insurance policies. Colonel Knox says he meant
to say that nothing was any good
at all under present government
policies— but what he said, at Allen
town, Pa., was that ‘‘no life In
surance policy is safe.” Of course,
folks who had life insurance poli
cies and bank accounts in the latter
days of the previous administration
recalled immediately how every
thing had gone lo pot; how we were
on the verge of a revolution, with
banks closing, financiers committing
suicide; thousands of people losing
their lifetime savings — and how
Roosevelt calmed the storm and
established confidence in place of
the fear which had gripped the coun
try.
Those were disgraceful days—
those last months of the old order,
'rhe senate was disclosing rotten
ness among high financiers. We saw
the money we had given to trusted
banks fade out before our eyes. We
were close to the brink. We needed
a dictatorial policy, said big busi
ness, whose captains of industry und
finance came down here begging for
strong federal measures lo cope with
the situation.
Roosevelt, in his inaugural ad
dress spoke of “nameless, un
reasoning, unjustified terror.” Four
days later he had the bull by the
tail. Without a dissenting vote the
house passed the first emergency
measure for the restoration of order.
Not one member voted against It—-
tirat-ir.sluJcu 14-
supreme commander of military op
erations in Palestine, to break the
Arab general strike by force. At
the same time a division of 10,000
lioops was ordered lo Palesiine.
Starting Arguments
“Arguments kin often start,”
a lot o’ folks jes’ natchelly like to
said Uncle Eben, ‘not so much be
cause sumpin’ is wrong as because ui-gue."
ttr
gave’ strong weapons to a strong
rrfan — and the country rejoiced.
Along with these banking powers
the congress gave Roosevelt tre
mendous axe - swinging powers
lo cut down the cost of ad
ministering the government; and he lopped off $600,000,000 a year
in salaries and veterans’ benefits— the latter took nerve. It was the
biggest salary lopping ever undertaken.
People remember all that. I think
the Republicans regret Colonel
Knox’s error, because the general
public 'ijeliuves tlial Ihui'e Is a
stronger financial underpinning than
during any-previous time. The folks
know that their bank deposits are
now safely insured by the govern
ment (which is one thing the G. O. P.
is growling'about.)' People believe
trutlifully lhat Roosevelt took tho
gamble out oi banking. As for tho
insurance deposits being unsafe, tho
life insurance companies themselves
testify that there is nothing safer in the country llian a life insurance
policy in an American life insurance company.• • •
TIIE MAINE ELECTION.
There will be more than usual in
terest this year in learning whether
Maine’s Republican victories in ihe
September slate elections precede
n national sweep for the Landon-
Knox ticket. For eighty years we
havo been saying “As Maine Goes
so Goes thn Nation” ; and some
times it has happened that way. This year the principal fight in
IWaine, the Republican candidate for
tlie Senate, Wallace While, beat
I Democrat L. J. Brann by 5,000 votes,
j which is not an impressive figure in
I that state. In fact White received
iust a hair’s breadth moro than 50
per cent of the total vote. That might
be a barometric sign indicating an
increasing Republican vote through
the country—but certainly it does
not indicate any landslide for Lan
don. President,Roosevelt, one of the
keenest political prophets in the
country, predicted for Maine just
about what happened; and I can’t
imagine that he believes the'Maine
result foretells his own defeat.
A real barometer would be an
election today in Maryland. That
state, has in the last half century,
wilii one exception, voted tor the
fnan the nation elected president. So
it is a sample state; and right now
(he Baltimore Sun is taking a poll
■jf every registered voter in the
state. Most polls cover only a por
tion of the population, but this one
covers the entire electorate—and it
stands at this writing 61 per cent
Roosevelt, 39 per cent Landon (ap
proximately, of course—there are
scattering votes for minor parties).♦ *
SPENT MONEY IN MAINE.
Roosevelt’s moneyed enemies cer
tainly did what tiiey could to take
the state of Maine; all the Duponts,
J. P. ’Moi-gan, and others of that
high moneyed stratum contributed
largely to help turn Maine Repub
lican and thus arouse Republican
morale elsewhere. These contribu
tions came to light just after Gov
ernor Landon had rushed to Maine
and delivered his odd speech about
“good government." AU the time
his campaign there was being ,sup-
ported by these tremenaoi,.i
wealthy men who have enjoy(.r
sort of one-sided privilege to income taxes.
The Duponts are splendid
individually, but politically 2 1
They manage to bunch thonisoT.
in the political limelight at nil i¡„'
and wherever their support Í
thrown, that cause is lost. Dunn
money has supported tho Libwf
League, now one of the best ink!
in Washington. It supported frow,,
rabble-rousing southern organi
tions devoted to race prejudice an
the defamation of characlcr in „! effort to hurt Roosevelt in the Soulk
Now, just after the Duponts hoZ
Landon yell about “good gov^
ment” a senate committee pxtm«,
the fact that the Duponts own
good slice of one of tho groat Goi
man munitions firms; it expo.scs-th fact that the Duponts once employ«!
a German .spy to sell arms to 0«
many via .Holland; and it appear
that a company in which the Du
ponts own an interest is now re-arm ing Hitler, who is possibly the gri>ai
est international mad dog of tho iol
Consider this flirtation of Landon'
with the munitions trust—and ti Roosevelt good neighbor poi¡,
stands out like a beacon of light,
THE MORGANS.
The name of J. P. Morgan
rarely involved in politics althouel
the Morgan firm for years has rep resented that private grip on thi
flow of money and credit wliich ha
been detrimental to the popula
rights ever since before Andrei
Jackson fought “The Bank,” Th,
elder Morgan, honestly believed tha
the public welfare was best guarde-
with him in control of moiiey-a money.
Tho younger Morgan, (the one
whose lap tho circus midget t-
when he came to Washington i
testify about how he made sever;
millions without paying an iiicom
tax), is particularly interestoa inth
attacks the G. O. P.’ is making o
Roosevelt for breaking up the Loi
don economic conferonce in 1933
You may wonder why a plain "typ
ical prairie state governor” Ilk
Landon is worried about such
high-brow thing as a London eco
nomio conference. I’ll bet he doesn' know much -about it, but he cai
learn from Morgan (and maybe h
did).
Roosevelt busted up the con ference by cablegram becnuso h
didn’t want a return to the OllI
gan controlled arrangement of
' С 'r VS'
.................. ■ MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. Mocksville, N. C.. Thursday, October 1, 1936
rxi^ ¡¿Hi' -it’/ ,4<u Í i
ternationai matters.* * «
CHEAP POWER.
I ’m wondering whether the powe
trust took seriously the exhibitio which was given it here at tlie worl
power conference. At that vas gathering of repreaentativus fioi every country in the world it wa.s a
outstanding fact that Business
quit its ill-natured fight with gov
ernment; especially the power bus
ness. Here in this country a corta!
class of business men lool; »n Ih
government’s attempt to fiirnlsi
pov.’cr v.’idoly .nnd cheaply
of crime; in many foreign counlrle
business arid government got t
gether long ago for the best use power resources, administrativ
ability and investment. Ono imm
diate result is that some Europca
countries can boast a much large
proportion of farms supplied wil
electricity than we can—even in thi
country of such onormouK undei
talcings as TVA and BouHer Dam
VIOLATE OLD LAW.The gasoline station man wlio pul
up a sign sayiiig that gas costs
cents, taxes five cents total eighlec
cents is violating an old fcdeial la
which came to light here ns th
result of a row between tho Den» crals and the Republican nation!
committee. Not that any gasolin
merchants are going to iso sent tiie penitentiary; nevertheless som
keen friend of the New Deal with
knack for digging out little 'unow
facts has discovered an obscuro an
never enforced law which makes
illegal even to hint how nuich tn
a fellow, is paying when ho l)nys
specific article.
This freak law dates bad; to 15
and it presumably was init thci
as a war-time measure to prever criticism of the government for ley)
ing war-time taxes. The provisio
has been automatically re-enactr
three times and is still in force.
The freak came to light when ti
Republicans began to scatter
ards around the country cnllini! a
tention to the vast number of
called hidden taxes in ordinary con
modities liko a loaf of broad, shoe
clothes, etc. Of course, business nv
have been excusing some of 11'^
prices because of taxes nnd this especially true in the gasoline bus
ness. But now comes a politic
committee and puts placarais in U
grocery stores which tell of tm
eight taxes in a loaf of brer.il; ‘T'“
large number ot taxes in a pound meat. When such placarais 0
signed by the Republican Mi’-ii»'’
committee thej presume to the thought that the.clection of W
don will remove most of tiie-'^c
den taxes.The placards do not di.sclose
fact that many hidden tiixos i
state and local taxes and li«i
foes; nnd that, in the case of line, the heaviest tax is the s'“
lax which, wiiile heavy, *■ tainly spropd good roads throiitil'®
this country.The Republican placard? J’“
made the New Dealers mnci-
of them insist that federal tions be instituted. The RcpiioH^'
laugh and dare the New Dealers
bring cn their prosociii';'«-© Western Newspaper
By E L M O SCOTT W ATSON
F o r 50 years an hcroic-sizcd figure of a woman has been stand
ing high up on a pedestal on a tiny island'at the entrance of one
of llic world’s greatest seiiports. In her upraised hand she holds a
torch and with that torch for half a century she has been "enlight
ening tho world.” For she is “Miss Liberty,” otherwise the Statue
of Liberty on Bedloe’s Island at the entrance to New York harbor.
It was on Octobor 28, 1886, that ^
sho took her stand there. On that
(Into nccurred the formal dedicn-
.-ntx-t-s ;tiw
quickly made a sketch of the
proposed statue and during his slay in this country talked en-
where it had been, visited by
more than 300,000 people. When tiie framework and base were
put in place at tho French capi
tal, Levi P. Morton, American
ambassador to Franco, drove tho
first rivet in it.
Late in 1883 the work in Franco was praetically completed but
the pedestal on Bedloe’s island
was only partly finished. So the
figure v.'as placed on exhibition
in Paris whore it towered over
republic. The principal address
nt tho dedieation was delivered
by President Grover Cleveland
and thousands of people crowded
on to the little island or lined
the New York shore nearby to
witness the ceremonies.
On October 28 of this year that
historic ceremony will be du
plicated by another and similar
ono. Among tho notables' who aro
c.'cpocted to tako part in tho 1036
f.
AUCiUSTE BARTHOi.Dl
re-dedication will be President
Roosevelt • and the ambassador from Franco, M. Andre de
. Labouiaye.
It is an interesting colucldcnco
that the dedication address wns
made by a-New York governor
wlio had becomc President and
that the re-dedicatlon address
will.be made by another. New
Vork governor who now oc
cupies the White House. Equal
ly signiOnant is the fact that
Edouard de Labouiaye, grand
father o( tho present French
umbassador, made the original
siisgestion tor the presentation
of such a statue to tho Amerl-
people by tho people of
Prance.'The idea for tiio monument
Was fust brbached at a dinner
eivon by M. Edouard de La-
boulnye at his home near Ver
sailles. Among the guests at lhat
'linner wero a descendant of La-
tayotlo and Frederic Auguste
Bartholdi, an Alsatian sculptor
“f Italian descent wiio had fought under Garibaldi in Italy and was
“n ardent believer in human lib-
'rtios in all countries. His im-
aeinalion was fired by M. de
Lalmulaye’s idea of a gift from tl'e people of one republic, who
^ad achieved their liberties by
li!;luinf' for them; to the people
of iinolher republic who had done
same.
l5artholdl’s Inspiration.
But no further action was taken on the plan until after the
¡'’raiico-Prussiun v.'ar in which
“arllioldi served valiantly for “ighl months. Then he decided visit the United States. As the
stcam.ship Compagnie Transat-
antlque entered New York har-
wr on June 21, 1871, nnd his gaze,
^''Coping tho inspiring panorama boff.re him, aUghtcd on Bedloe’s
«land he ut once visualized upon
** a great statue of Liberty. He
■ /
tnusiaslicaliy of his plan. He met President Grant, Generals
Meade and Sheridan and tho
poet, Longfellow, during his stay in this country and found them
sympathetic toward the projoct.
Upon his return ,to France he
showed his friends the sketch he
had made on board ship—a giant
figure of a woman which he'
called “Liberty Enlightening the
World,” Soon the French wero
organizing committees to raise
money to pay for such a magnif
icent gift lo America and Bar
tholdi wns poinmissioned lo mnko
the statue. The beginning of the
campaign to raise the money was
ceiebratod on November 0, 1875,
by a huge banquet at the Hotel
Louvre in Paris, Prominent fig
ures in the world of arts, loiters
nnd politics were present, both
from the United States and
France, Among the celebrities
there, also, was Gounod, com
poser of the famous opera,
“Faust,” wiio had written a spe
cial hymn in honor of tiie
goddess, which, he announced,
was lo be sung at the opera’s
premiere.
In the course ot the banquet,
Labouiaye, a typical Frenciiman,
climbed to the stage and cricd:
“See how muoh I lov- the Ameri
cans, Even at my great age I
mount tho platform for them.”
As the project developed, an
American committee . was formed, with William M. Evarts, secretary of stale, as chairman,
to -raise $300,000 for the foundations and pedestal. This added to the $700,000 being raised by pop
ular subscription in France
brouglit the cost to $1,000,000. In 1872 Congress had voted to ac
cept the'gift and in 1877 Bedloe’s
Island, previously used as tho site of a fort, was set aside for
the memorial.
Work on the memorial pro
ceeded steadily, though far from
as speedily as the ardent Bar
tholdi wished. Hig first small
model stood nearly six foot high.
Its dimensions were multiplied
by twenty for the final colossal
figure.
Shown at Expositions.
By opening of the Centennial
exposition in 1876 at Philadelphia the project had gained great
headway. At that world’s fair
was shown the right forearm of
the image, with the torch, just
as it was finally installed. Many
who saw it there wondered if
anything so huge could bo ever
lifted to the height proposed. Af
ter the exposition was over the
arm was exhibited in Madison
Square.The head of the statue was ex
hibited at the Paris exposition of
1878, The following year the sub
scription lists v.'cre filled and on
July 7, 18B0, an official letter was addressed to the American com
mittee in charge of the project
on this side of the Atlantic, re
porting on the progress of the
work and the probable dale of its
completion.
Steadily the work went on nnd
by October 19, 1881, the anniver
sary of the Battle of Yorktown,
all pieces ot the figure’s frnme-
work and the base were in place
In the work rooms in France,
tne Housetops tor months."
On June 11, 1884, Ambassador
Morton gave a great dinner to the committee of the French- American Union, under whoso
direction the work had been done,
and suggested that formal presentation be made on July 4. This
was done and the presentation
look place ip Paris, with Am
bassador Morion representing
tho United Sta^s, and Ferdinand do Lesseps, builder of the Suez Canal, tho French.
A month later the corner stone
of Ihe pedestal was luid on Bed-
loe's Island nnd in June ot tho
next year it was completed. The
copper goddess sailed from Tou
lon aboard the French vessel Isere, her parts lacked in 210
According to tho program
drawn up by Major General
Scliofiold, commander of the
eastern department of the United Slates army, tho formalities in
cluded “miUtary, naval and civil
parades,” speeches and invoca
tions, patriotic songs and hymns,
artillery salutes, and illumi
nations. One can Imagine Bar
tholdi’s pride when he drew the cords of the jiucn tricolor nnd
unveik-d tile slulue in the pres-
his cabinet, tlie French delega
tion, members of both houses of
congress, the nation’s political
and inilitary leaders, massed
troops and a vast throng of on
lookers.
Eighth Wonder of World
When Count Ferdinand do
Lesseps made the speech in
Paris i n '1884 presenting this
statue to tho American people he
called it '“thii eighth wonder of tho world” and it is indeed that.
For “Miss Liberty” is two or
three feet higher than the famous
Colossus of Rhodes. Her height
from the hqel to the top of the
torch in the raised arm is 151
feet. From tho base of tho foundation of the pedestal lo tho
IM PRO V ED
U N IF O R M IN T E R N A T IO N A L
S UNDAY I
CHOOL L
ny HWV. IIAIIOMJ Ij. liUNDQUIS'i', Dcnn of ttio Mnmty UlUio InRtltuts of Chlcngo, «© VVontorn Nowspaiior Union.
Lesson for October ,4
THE MACEDONIAN CALL
esson
LES,SON TEXT — Aot» ttoimins IGilS-ül.16-.IÎ - 15j
GOLDEN T E X T -^ o yo Uiorctore, nnd tonch nil nntlons.— Mnttliow 28:11),
PRIM AIIY TOPIC — Paul’s Wondortul Droain, ■
J U N IO n T O P IC — a o il'a O n ll to a N ow C o n tin e n t, , '
IN T B K M E D IA T B A N D 'S iS N IO n T O P IC — A C ry fo r IIo li),YOUNG PKOPL.E AND ADULT TOPIC —Tho World’s Noed ot Christ.
Filet Crochet Set for
the 'Forgotten' Chair
The roots ot American life, cul
tural and religious, reach'back Into the European soil on which our
forefathers dwelt. Thè lesson before us is therefore of peculiar interest, for it relates the first step
in the carrying of the gospel into
Europe, and ultimately to.
America.
Paul, the missionary with a pastor’s heart, felt constrained to go and visit the centers wliere he had
ministered on his first journey. As he proceeded he was providentially
hindered nnd led by the Holy Spirit
to Troas. Here his next “step” seemed for a time to be a "stop,”
blit soon God in a vision callcd
him into Macedonia—and tho gospel had come to Europe.
It is of interest to note that Paul, as he thus began his second missionary journey, was .
I. Obedient to the Spirit (Acts
16:6-12).
He had certain plans in mind.
He set out wilii a purpose, but
lie was willing to bave his own
itinerary changed as the Holy
Spirit led, It is slgnlflcant that the
guidance was negative as well as
positive. The stops as v/ell as “ tho. steps ' of a good man are - ordered
by the Lord” (Ps. 37:23). Chris
tians will do-'well to remember that
providential hindering circum
stances may be as muoh the lending of God as the ho(ivt«nly vlaicin.
Wa are to be obedient to nny guld-
we_are not tcT
but actively
DEDICATION OF THE STATUE OF ЫВЕ11ТХ IN 1886.
(From Frank Leslie’s Weekly)
boxes. The Isere was convoyed
across the Atlantic by a squad
ron of American warships, and in
June, 1885, “Miss Liberty”
landed on the shores of the New
World.
The assembly of the statue be
gan here in the spring of 1886
and when the statue was dedi
cated on October 28 of that year the principal address was delivered by President G r o ver
Cleveland. According to con
temporary accounts more than a
million people witnessed the cer
emonies. The hllle island could
not accommodati? many of them
but the New Yori; shore line was
a solid "hiass of humanity for
miles.
Needless lo say, Bartholdi, ac
companied by Mme. Bartholdi,
and u French delegailon headed
by Ferdinand de Lesseps, were
on hand for llie ceremony.
torch, the memorial stands 305.5
feet above sea level.
This female figure, shown in
classic draperies, is 35 feet in
diameter at the waist. The right
arm which holds the beacon is
42 feet long and 12 feet across
at its greatest thickness.
Inside its hollow metal shell ia
a ladder with fifty-two rungs by
which visitors may climb into
the circular gallery which makes the upper rim of the torch.
Witiiin the head forty persons
can stand at once, as the head
is 17 feet high from chin to the
tip of the cranium and propor
tionately wide. The hands are
16 feet long and the index fingers
8 feet. The tablet held by the left arm of the goddess is 23 feet long and 13 feet 7 inches wide
aiid 2 feet thick. It has inscribed
on it “July 4, 1776.”O Wuvrora NuwupftOer Ual«n,
unco no gives bUf
be merely passive,
submissive to His will. Paul was
about tiie Father’s business,/» not
Idly waiting for tho speaking of a
voice from heaven. It is to such
a man or woman that the Mace
donian cnll como.<5 oven in our day,
only now it comes from' China,
India, South America, pr Africa.
II. Faithful In Testimony (vv. 13,
r,14).... .......
Paul, with his companion Silas,
Timothy who had joined them at
Lystra, and Luke (note that tho
“thoy” of V. fi bcCuiiieii "we” in
v. 10) camo to Philippi in Mace
donia, but they found no Mace
donian man waiting for them. Had
they been mistaken in tlieir vision and call?
Truo missldnarios aro not thus
easily discouraged. They hnd como
to bo flshors of men. Tho fisher
man does not expect tho fish to
come to him. He goes after them.
Paul soon discovered that tliere
was a place of prayer at the river,
evidently a gathering place of de
vout Jews for worship. There he
met the man of Macedonia who
turned out to bo a woman. For
some reason the men were absent
from the place of prayer on that
all - Important Sabbath morning.
Lydia was a woman of distinc
tion, business ability, and of higli
moral character. But Paul knew
that oven good people need to bo
saved. Ho spoke the truth of God.
She accepted the message as God
opened her heart, and at oncov she
entered into
■ III. Fellowship In Servico (v.l5).
Lydia proved herself to be ono
of that noble succession ot women
who have served Christ and the
church. She and her household
shared in the ministry of Paul by
their Christian hospitality, thus
helping forward the missionaries.
Observe carefully that she was not saved by her works, but that her
works followed naturally after her salvation.
Turning how to ono of the epis
tles of Paul we .look at his exposition of certain
IV. Fundamental Missionary Principles (Rom. 15:18-21).
Those things which Christ h a d
wrought (Paul took no glory to
himself) through him Paul had
consistently directed into fields
where no one else had preached the gospel. . ,
The spirit of the missionary ot
the cross is tliat of the pioneer,
pressing ever onward, taking new'
land, not duplicating the work of
others, not jealous of their suc
cess, not seeking comfort or glory.
Men need the gospel; thoy are lost
without it. Let' us press on into
the yet unoccupied territory.
Sorrow and Enjoyment
We are sent here, in one sense, to
bear and to suflier; but, in another,
to do and to enjoy. Tho active day
has its, evening of repose; even pa
tient sufferance has its alleviations,
when there is a consolatory sensn
of duty discharged.—Scott.
Undermine the Character
Fear and gain are great pervort-.
ars of mankind, and where either
prevail the judgment is violated,—
William Peiui, in “Some Fruits oi
SoUtude.” - - -.....
Pattern 1224
Filet crochet in a fresh, new
design, is an easy way to bring
new life and loveliness to the “for
gotten” chair, Scarf ends can also
be made this easy way. Us*
string. Pattern 1224 contahia
directions and charts for making
the set shown; Illustrations of
stitches; materials needed.
Send 15 cents in stamps or coini
(coins preferred) for this pattern
to The Sewing Circle Necdlecraft
Department, 82 Eighth Avenu«, New York, N. Y.
Write plainly pattern number,
your name and address.
W e e k’s S upp ly o f P o stu m F re *
lload the offer uinde by tlio I'ostuia
Сошрану 111 another part ol! this pa
per. 'Tliey will send n full week’s sup
ply oC lionltli giving I’ostiim frco t*
unyoiie who writes tor It.—Adv.
Simplicity
The further men wander from
simplicity, tho furtlier they ara
from truth.—Dr. Bowrlng.
'lïMuftî#PEPFBCT ном е DRY CLËANËR 3 0 t.4 0 t.6 5 < B o t t l e sA L L o n u a c l S T S
MUFTI S H O E W H IT E w H/nofrub o/A| Coefafns fngrtdlcnis of Muff/ Нот» Ont Ct»<inte I Al С Ш Ы a a lt bVhtt9ni\ larÿé ûoWes ЛЗФ |
Уоц Lose You may defeat an enemy, b u t,
then you nave a bitter foe for life.
Miss
REELEEFsays:
C A P U D IN E
relieves
HEADACHE
quicker-because
it’s liquid...
аёшк^у i(¿iic& ed
'in g
ЕВЖ1Я
Th« Safe Laxativo'
For GONSTIPA^TION:
A N D INDIGESTION
Silent Uypoorltc
One can be a hypocrite by mere
ly being silent.
Less Monthly Discomfort
Many women, who formerly suf
fered fro.Ti a wealc, risn-dov.’n con
dition as a result of poor asslm'lla- tion of food, say tliey benefltod by
taking OAIlDni, u special mediolne
for women. They found It helped to Increase tlie appetite and Improve
digestion, thereby bringing tliem
moro strength from their food.Natiirally there ,1s less discomfort
ftt monthly periods when tho system hns been strengthened nnd tho. varl-
otis functions restored and regulated.
C ardul, praised by thougsnds ot w om on, Im w oll w orth trylne. O f courso, It n o i boncntcd, consult a physician.
Dullest Moment
It is always dullest just befor#
the yawn.
"BIACKIEAF40"
Keeps Dogs Away from |&ergreens,Shrubsete.
'°Um ШТеироопГн! tMrCallon'orStiriiy.
W E A L T H A N D H EALT H
Good heiiith.ind.succc33go togethcr.Don't handicap yourself—g«t rid of a sluggish, .icid i:cji|il;lii,ii,-iiiili (.¡.-ii-j' Miluc.iiii, tiw original milk <ff iniigncsin in wafer form. Each wafer ccjuals 4 tcaspoonfuls milk of mngnesin. Nejitraiizcs nclds nnd gives you pleasant cliintnatloii, 20c, 35c & 60c sizes.
I m t . 1
M i
. I-.-.-?.-,
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РАГгЕ r o im
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE, MOCKSVILLE^ N. С.Tlua-Mclny, Octobcr 1, 1930
The fv2ücksville Enterprise
l'ubliBlilifi Every Tharsdny at Mockaville
North Carolina
A. C. Huneycutt ............ Editor nnd Publisher
SuhscripMon Rates:
$1.50 a Year;, G Months 75 ccnta
Strictly in Advance
Entered at the post office at Mocksville, N. C.,
ks second-class mutter under the act of March
8, .1879.
*********
NOTICE TO GENERAL PUBLIC
This newspaper charges regular ad
vertising rates for cards of thanks,
resolution notices, Obituaries, etc., and
will not accept any thing lees than 35
cents cflsh with copy unless you have
regular monthly accounts with ua.
We do not mean to be hard on any
one, but small items of this nature force
us to demand the cash with copy. All
such received by us in the future with
out ';he cash or staw.ps will not be pub
lished• ****•• •
Mocksviilc, N. C., Thursday, October 1, 193G
,* # * * •* * » *
* Our soul is exccedinirly filled with ■*
" the scorning of those that-are at ease, *
and with the contempt of th? proud.— ^
* Psalms 123:4. * **■*•»*#****» '*
FAREWELL TO YOUTH
The Now York Times suggests that, stop
Iby step and country by-country, the youth of.
Europe is ibeing swallowed uj) by the insatiable
State. Mussolini of Italy is starting tho boys
off, even before they .reach their ’teens /in
serious militai-y training with the daily grind
of the thought of mass action and regimenta-
l.inn. In A.ustria, two suparato youth orgaii-
inations have boon thrown into one. _This_
orgaiiization is putting all Ijoys from tho age
of eleven to eighteen into uniforms for pur
poses of sport, military drill and political
education. In Russia tho youth has long since
been taken over by the State and each is made
a part of a vast machine. The Nazis in Ger-
riiany arc putting all bojva in work campa lit
order to insure that no boy escapes trajning
for war. Th’s has forced ever democratic
France to follow up the same,'or similar ac
tion, in self duf.inse.
This all means that fcy the time the boys
in practically all the major European States
maturo from eiKhteen to twenty-one, they are
completely taken over by the government for
full timo military training. They belonij not
to their family, their creed o r ,, themaeives.
They belong only to the State. They arc pay
ing off with their youth because they aro
being levied upon for the best years of their
life. These drilling chililren no longer ex
perience the ‘carefree, irresponsible days of
the playtime of life. Those happy days of.
adolescence at which it is the l.aherent right
of every youth to develop his imagination
nnd his initiative free from thn shackles o£
even educational institutions are hot for these
young bo,vs. In these European States there
ia no more free time for idle dreams' and
nights ot fancy on the part of youth, even
(he chiUiren. 'I'here are no more opinions, so
Jar as they are concerned. They must Ihinit
and act in ,i;r<:oves made by unscrupulous and
.siill'ish dictatorvj. It is a bad siati' oi' affair.s,
and one th nking iiloiig this line is naturally
moved to ask the ciiiestion, "Can il happen in
¿'.merica.'” The answer to this on^ the part
ot every ihiniiing person is, “11 can.”
Bel'oiu each vuler goes to tile ballot box iu
November he should think carefully and enn-
.Kidly. \Vc-can- vole t.'.iroiigh prejudice now,
but later on some of us. may vote through
force like the population of Germany and
. most other major European countries do al
ready. It is up to the American people to hold
. higher than ever those American ideals which
have in time past so distinguished us fram alt
other, nations. And the ofticals ejected to
carry out the will of the people should
made to know even now that these sacred
rights are not to be infringed or trampled
.upon.
---------------0 ----------^----
' . SOMEWHAT UNUSUAL
Something happened in North Carolina
during the, month of August that is so'out of
the ordinary, that it becomes reat news. The
tiirth rate drojoped and the death rate in
creased, according to the monthly report of
the iiureau of Vital Statistics. There were
six ihuusand, seven hundred, seventy-one
births in this st.ite during the month of
\AUigust, which was i'oiir-tenths of one per
ceni less than during the month of August
one year ago. There were two tliousand,
i'.ve hundred, ninety ono deaths during Aug-
n.^t in Ihis .stale, ni'.ooi'diii}; to the report.
Suicides increased from nineteen in August,
1935, to twenty-five in August,'1030, Accord
ing lo tliii ru))oi't tuberculosis ’¡ed the list of
fatal di.seases wilh one hundred, forty-eight
' <’dc!ttl)’i|l while eiirlileen died of influenza as
with .siivcn Aiiijiisl a year ago.
U , J,, ■ -t.Vvj-'-ijicU-iur.TA-iriK ■i'c:dui’e'-of--thu'M'eporl'\v
I'/.'"» , ,'i'ii :.,th'i,t''''&ii>'t'm:iterial death rate sliowed a de-
I'lease. Aei':iients look a Loll oi ono hundred
Iwenly-tliVee lives.
i f '
Ì M :' ... ...
I '
“WHO’S DRUNK..’
A« all student.s of law who took lectures
under the laie Ur. Samuel F. i\[ordecai while
he was associate professor cf law at Wakc_
Forest College and later Dean of Trinity Law'
School will agree, no more unique character
ever lived in North Carolina. He spiced his
lectures witii liriUiaut bits of wit and humor
and always iield the closest interest of. his
class, many of his lectures being real classics.
The writer lias just finished the re-reading
of Dr. Mordecai’a lectures on the first and
second books of Blackstone. ^ome of these
lectures, like his oral lectures, are enlivened
and made spicy with rare quotations and
bursts and w.t. For instance in chapter twen.
ty-three, Dr. Mordecai is discussing the ef
fect of drunkenness on deeds, wills, contracts,
etc. Then he takes up the question as to
the definition of drunkenness w,ithin the per-
view of the law of contracts, etc. He quotes
the late Just.ce Douglas of the North Caro
lina Supreme Court snowing that typical me
thod 01 expression with which Judge Douglas
often enlivened and enriched barren subjects.
“The determination of that .shadowy line
between mental twil.ght and night, where the
last faint rays of reason, resting for a mom
ent on the horizon of the mintl, fade away
into utter darkness, is practically beyond the
(power of finite understanding.” (Judge
Douglas is def.ning, or attempting to define
urunKenness.j
Dr. Mordecai then in his unique way asks
the question, “Who’s drunlcT’ and proceeds
with the loliowing comment antt iiiiotations:
"HoAvever, to drop from the sublime to the
ridiculous, 1 will give you a definition of
drunkenness which. 1 tane from the grave of
the iSorth Carolina Law Journal:
^ot ;,runk is he wno irom the floor
Lau rise again or arniic once more:
liut {trunk IS he wno prtiatrate lies
/inu cannot eiUier orinK or rise.
Tlie Koman term lor "dead drunk” was
ineisus vino— dru^vnud in wine. ii,very symp
tom of iiuoxicaiioii .s not to lead us to the
conclusion tnat intoxicaiion exists, as tho
following colloquy between Boswell and Dr.
Johnson will show: Boswell (.speaking of the
fcicotcn- ueiore me annexation;: “We had
w.ne-before the Union." Johnson: “No, sir;
you had some weak stuff, the refuse of
i''r«nce, wiiicii v.'ouid not make you drunk.”
Boswell: “1 assure you, sir, thero was a irreat
‘ deju'l of drunkenness.’' Johnson: “No, sir;
there were people who died of dropsies which
they contracted in trying to get drunk.” ,
----------------(J----------------
PROSPERITY COMING WITH A pANG
: Business is coming back strong. Recovery
from the depression would seem to be at
hand. This is the case in practically all na
tions. The depression waa not only an
Aimerican depress.on, It was a world depres
sion and ■was doubtless dircctly or indirectly
the aftermath of the World War, The United
States has possibly been a bit slower in get
ting back to ‘‘normallcy” than many other
countries of the world, but nevertheless, we
seem to be arriving.
Tlie Charlotte Obsei'ver editorially points
out that, "August is usually the Dismal-
Swamp month of tho year in industrial cir
cles.” That paper makes the following san
guine statement:
“August is usually the Dismal-Swamp
month of tho year in industrial circles.
Trade goes dov/n. Commerce of all kinds
dries up. Unemployment increase'^ Fac
tories taiie vacations. Stores are hard press
ed for customers. People are languid and
lifeless and off to the mountains or seaside
to cool , off and get ready fov another lap
with the coming of the autumnal months.
Such is the traditional history of Augusts
in years of good times aa well as bad.'
There simply is nothing doing.
But not so August of 1930.
Secretary Perk.ns has, the records, she an
nounces. to shov.’ that industrial jiay rolls in
creased by more than ^17,000,000 that month
over the previous month of July and that
ICC.OOO more workers had found fur Iheui-
selves profitable employment, '
The country is bounding back upon its feet.
If it can make a record of such surpassing
proportions during the worst period of the
whole year, what can it not do when the frost
is on the pumpkin, etc.”
---------------0 -----------—
A W OR'raW H ILE IDJ'JA i
A recent news dispatch states that a work
man in Privins, France, found ninety rare
gold coins embedded in a block of cement.
The discovery was made during the recon
struction of an old house. The coins dated
'back to the Thirteenth Century. .H ow 'they
became embedded in the concrete and why,
no one knows. Possibly some old miser
thought of the idei^ as the best and safest
method of keeping rogues and plunderers
from steal.ng his cash. Maybe during some
of the numerous wars the then owner of the
coins preferred this hiding placo as the only
safe one for his money. Coming to think
about it,, it is not a bad idea. That is, pro
vided a follow might have tho money, for
■ certainly no rogue would think of going about
crackiiVLf concrete block.s to locate valuablns.-?-----0 ---------------
Old Lady'iit Telegraph Office: “What will
it cost to have my umbrella sent to me by
telegraph'.’”
Telegrapher: “Why, Madam, it can’t be
done,”
.....(Hil' T,Vuiy 'fi'f'ftW of..'yft'Ur' smart-"'
ness on me, young man. If you can send
I'liiwers and money by wire why can’t you
telegraph my umbrella'/”
LEXINGTON ROUTE 5 NEWS
'riie Sunday afternoon guests of
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Darr and
family were Mr. Raymond Darr
and daughter, Joan, of High
Point, Miss Marganna Carter,
Theo Carter and Mr. Parker, all
of Muffersboro‘and Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Allred and family, of
Churchland.
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Grubb and
bnby, Peggy, and Mi'- a»d Mrs.
Harvey Byerly, all of Cooleemee,
wero visitors of Mr. and Mrs. J.
E. Grubb Saturday afternoon.
Mr. T. W. Hartley and Miss
Lena Grubb wore Sunday guests
of M r.. and 'Mrs. D, E. Beck, of
Jerusalem.
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo .Beck and
daughter, of Thomasville, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. 11. F.
Lambe. Mr. and Mrs. Lambe and
children returned home with
them to spend the night.
Misses Sadie Barnhardt and
Virginia Grubb were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gwyn
Long and Mra. A. A. Grubb, of
'tyro.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess E ister and
family visited relatives in the
community Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Darr and
family and Mrs. Flora Darr spent
awhile Satiirday night with Mr.
and Mrs. Cliff Fitzgerald, Jr., of
Churchland.
Mr. Wilburn Snider spent the
■week-end with his sister, Mrs.
Tommy G'reen and Mr. Green of
Churchland.
■ Mr. and Mrs. Gray McBride
and family visited Mr. and Mrs.
Jim McBride, of Churchland Sat
urday night.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Sowers,
Peggy BrowMi, Mr. and Mrs. Sam
liowe and children, all of Yad
kin, were pleasant visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. J. F. Barnhardt and
family Sunday night,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Grubb spent
Sunday in 'i'yro, the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Wiiliard and
Ei!!i5!Mai!aai!!iaMKMKiasi!Mai!(i5jii!aEi!iifficii3S!!iHi)i)Jt!Masi!iiEiMKMBi«iKMaMai!iiS!!MSiC'i)is:,f):(i5i^
i DR, P. H . M A vSO N , Dentist »
HM Sanfofd Building |
i M O C K S V IL L E , N . C . |
iljtHBtajtMSi!SJ!H!!i5BMKM?tM«w5!iiiia;MKMsi!ifajsMSMffiMEMaMssMaMEMsi!r>j2sii5a6a3H
n m m a a m a m n n a m ^ n u a im m m m m n m m m n y in n u n Y ra m a m rfi
CaMPBELL-WALKER FUNERAL HOME “
AMBULANCE SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS
PHONE 48 MOCKSVILLE, N. U.
E v e r y th in g f o r F A L L
Newest Fabrics In
FALL SUITS
{12,95 to (19,50
Smart Fall Suits, made of good mater
ial and good tailoring. Single or dou
ble breasted in the newest stripes,
plaids and check. Let us f t you.
.Browns, Greys, Tans, Blues and con
servative dark colors.
BOYS^ SUITS
You parents who are keeping an eye
on expenses right now will be hapjiy
ivhen you see our line of bo.vs’ suits.
Gbod materials at reasonable prices,
$3 . 9 5 to $1 4 . 5 0
Mr." iiirnest Carter, of Coolee
mee, spent tho week-end with
Mrs. v..arter and IVI. D. Vv.
Barnes.
IVir, and Mrs. Johnny Crowell,
Mr. ana ivlrs. Jtlenry Koontz, au
of Trad.ng Ji'crd, spent buiiuay
with Mr. and iVirs. K.,B. i.amDe,
iVir. and iVirs, iviarshail o:>arnes
and cnildren, of Churchland
visited iVii's. i:)arnes’ parents, Mr.
and Mrs, VV. A. Grubb Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mra. John «iiOple, of
Trading X’oru, were ¿unday
guests of tlieir daughter, IMrs.
I Joe roage tuid ivirs. roage.
iVH. iJiUTlur, ul liig u
l-’oiht," anu Jiuri jiairier,
unu;.i;niain.i, v..siied relatives
tiere aui.ui...ai uiternoon.
here Sunday.
iviessrs. ^^caboii Cope, of Spen
cer, Keniietn liarnes, of Yauiun,
and Willie Cope, of Winston--
Salem, were business visitors
here Saturday afternoon.
Men’s Shoes
Our Shoe department is now
showing new Fall Shoes for
men and boys in work or
dress.
$1.98 to $6.00
NEW PATTERNS
Fall Neckwear
Al guy aEjsortniont of nevv fiill
colors and patterns.
25c to $1.00
Dress Shirts
New Fall shirts in the now
patterns and styles. All fast
colors.
63c lo $1.25
NEWEST LINE
Fall Hats
$|.50 ^ $2-95
A wide range of models
and shapes to please
every man. Dark fall
colors and mixtures.
C. C. Sanford Sons Co.
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
SSS WAIT FOR THE BIGGEST AND BEST
WINSTON-SALEM
FORSYTH COUNTY 37TH
I lN N U A L f a i r
#! OCTOBER STH TO lOTH-4 A.M. TO 11 P.M. «
^ B I G D A Y S a i i d N I G H T S ^ S
ETMry D a y a F eature D ajr— E very N ig h t a S pectacle
.NEVER SUCH EXHIBITS—SUCH ENTERTAINMENT
' AtRKULTURAi
EXttWIT
The flneit fonn produots pr«- duced In North СпгоПпп competing; for premium« imesoelled In Importanco,
HORSE RAeiNfi
Tuesday, Wednesday, Tkursday, Friday. Aftetnoona.
LIVE STiMK EXWMT
Showlnr the quality that has mado thli «efltlon famoua—■
handaomo awards for the best apeclmons.
WINTER QARDEN REVUE EVERY EVEKING M FROMT
OF THE GRAND STAND
Special Mutic—Beautiful Girin—Dancing—Singing
WORLD OF MIRTH SHOWS ON
THE MIDWAY
35 Big Features—Shows, Rides
and Spectacles
«LUCKY* TETERS HELL DRIVERS
In Smashing, Crashing; Automobiles
and Motorcycles
SATURDAY 0NLY-~I:30 P. И.
Tuesday for
JVinston-Salem ■:? Wednesday;; íoí* Conjrty" ■'All School Olilldron ITioo Thnso Dnja
Onrvor’B Fnmoua
'№gh>D!ving
Horss
QVOry afternoon nnd n.iiiht.. - Mvííí}: - n ‘Í0- fom Jcrti) into u IrtuU ot Wtttor with u Kirl riclcr. Л (liirliiB, mmctnculàt act.
FfRiWORKS lYERY НШНТ
m REVUE
FREE AQTS
DAILY AT TE«E
Ш Ш
Eiiiicatiöiiiil and Entertaining
Featiil'cs
Thursday, October 1, 193G
тш тШ :
о b=SNAPSHOT CUIL
The Shape of a Picture-
Horizontal or Vertical?
When tho pplnolpal lines of Bubjact are horlzontsl, don't forget to hold the camera tiorl- lontally. Composition may be
further Improved by enlarglna and trimming.
F rom the standpoint of nrtlallc
oompoaltton tho shnpo ol a pic
ture makes a lot of tllfferonce. This
slalemont may aoem nxlomatto but
liow o/ten do wo snapahooters give thought to it iu uslnff our cameras?
We all know that inoat cameras
are so constructed as to give us a
oholce between horizontal and ver
tical pictures, doponding upon the
position in which we hold the camera, but la the business of taking
pictures there aeems to bo a sort oC
psychology of laziness that makes
us, choose tho way most coiivunlent
to our hands. With some camoras
tho vertical position aeems easier,
with othera tho horizontal, and to
cliange to tho other position soems
to requlro aa effort. Too many of us
don’t mako the effort, whon we should.
' So, wo go rlglit on taking pictures
the easier way without bothoiing
about the shape of them, when a little thought and llt.tlo morn tiuui a
twist of the wrist would make all
the dllforonce between good and
bad composition. Remember that
tho lines encloalng a pioturo are al
most as much a part of Its compost
tloa aa the lines Inside;
Snapshot albums show all too
many pictures of vertical subjects. Including persona In full length
poaea, with a vaat waate of margin,
right and left, because thoy wore
taken with the camera In horizontal
posltloi). This Is bad, because, for
one cnTng. tne excess of margin di
minishes tho Importanco of tho sub
ject and for another, distracting ob
jects oro usually present on ono aide
or tho other. That anapahot of
Mother picking flowers In tho gar
den Is an excellent likeness, but
t.hy tha corner of the garage on the
left margin and clothes reel on the right? These ugly objects would
have been eliminated If the up-and- down view had been used.
In the ease of scenic picturos, a
«preadlnj Inndaoapo and such aub-
JoctB aa a flock of sheep or a herd
oi cattle almost always call for tho
horizontal position, but no less
often does a plcturo of a tree, a
waterfall or a skyscraper demand
tho vortical. It la simply making
maglne the waste of margin,If this plcturn hnd been taken
with tho camera horizontal.
sure that the lines which givo
length to your aublocl parallol tho
long edges of tho dim, thus avoiding
an overbalance ot ninrghi nbovo and
below or to tho right and loft, aa tho case may be.
So much for planning the shnpo ot a pioturo before you tako'lt, but
composition can be Improved, In
deed often much Improved, by shap
ing tho plcturo atter you take it.
There aro two wnys of doing It. You
may reduce the margins and, In Boino cafloa. n1sr> nnf nn»
objects by trimming tho print; or, still more effectively, you may mask
the negative so aa to leave a ao-
looted portion aad, from this por
tion, havo an enlargement mado. |
Thus, a vertical subject In a vertl-
cal panel that haa cut out detail on
the sides becomes much more Im
pressive; Its height and importanco
have been enhanced. Similarly, with
a horizontal subject a horizontal panel will emphaaizo Us "repose"
lines and accontunte Its sweep. j!
Most good pictorial work, such aa
finds a place In salons bocauno of Ita
artistic exoellonce. Is usually tho
combined reault of choosing the
right camera position, masking the
negative and trimming the print.
JOHN VAN GUILDER
(iOOD SCHOOL LUNCIIE
b a s e d o n DIET NJiJEDS
The good school lunch is pian-
i:ed in relation to the moals nt
homo, said Miss Mary E, Thom
as, extension nutritionist at State i
College. I
If children aro to grow, be
ia-l've in mind and strong in
body, and havo resistance to di-
•‘^ca.se, their noonday meal should
(-■iimbino w ith thoir homo meals
to givo a weil-balaiicu diet, slin
added.
child should hI'o daily:
qiiart of milk; two servings of j
vegetables in addition to pota
toes; two servings of fruit one
raw, if raw vegetables or canned j
tomatoes arc not served; at least ;
one serving of egg. moat, fish, or '
clieese; cereal foods such as
whole gigain bread? and break-
I'H.'jt cereals; butter, and sweets
in moderate amounts.
The food should be so prepar
ed that it is easy to digest. 'Var
iety in texture and color makes
the lunch more appetizing. Have
one of the foods in the lunch soft
and moist, another crisp or
crunchy to'Chew.
Sandwiches, are the mainstay of
any lunch as they are easy to
carry and. are generally lilted.
Numerous vai’ieties of. sandwich
es can be made with fillings of
fruits, vegetables, meats, and
cheese.
VegetaJbles, especially, raw
ones, aro appetizing aijd can bo
tarried easily either wrapped in
wax paper or made into salads.
Tlie fruit in the lunch box may
lie fresh, dried, canned, or in
the form of juice.
If milk cannot be taken in the
lunch box and kept cold, it may
i)e prepared in tho form of cus-
-I'nifc, pudcFings, and cottage
cheese.Misa Thomas ahso pointed out
liiat it ia better to put the staple
i'lHids on tup, whore they will be
caton first, and have the sweets 'j
*■'■ desertfl in the bottom of the
'iinch. This will tend to keep tho
child fruni eating the desert first
iiiul thon leaving the rest.
Trade with the Merchants
DKlVl'JR IS KILl.ED
C031PANIUN HURT,
IN AUTO ACCIDENT
Reidsville, Sept. 24.— Marti.n
Proctor, about 28 years of ai^i,
I of the Bethany community, this
county, was killed and his com
panion, Miss Frances Nugent, ot
Oak Ridge, was seriously injured
in nn automobile accident about
1!! miles west of Reidsville early
tcini;-:ht. Miss Nugent was in
.Memorial Tfospital late tonight
witli injuries of an undetermined
nature.
Details of the accident wore
mea.ger horn, pending an inquest
being held nt the scene of the
wreck. However, it ivns reported
that Proctor’s machine overturn
ed when he swerved to avoid hit
ting another car on a curve and
lost control.
»utter Toast
When you think that biz is rot
ten,
And you’.ve lost out in the race;
Then you’re gettin’ boft and doty,
And you can’t keep up the pace.
If you think you’re so skillful.
And that people ought to know,
Get your pencil out and shave it,
Tell the story of your show.
Don’t sit around ju>;t mopin’,
Workin’ up some old sob stuff;
Get your plans up and a-comm’
’Stead of hangin’ up a ibluff _
Business won’t come a-huntin’
For the man who’s down and
out;
But to them who are makin’
Tho bi«geat bloomin’ slwut.
So stand up now and back it
With tho skill of which you boast
That’s the way to get the bacon,
.\nd some butter on yoUr toast
Raleigh, Sept. 24.—Tilio state
■board of educntlon formally ap
proved today the 4.1(3 per cent.
.■;a!ary raise ordered .by the Gen
eral Assembly of 1!)!!5 for all
iHibiic school teachers.
LET US DO YOUR JOB WORK-
-WE WILL DO IT RIGHT.
ТИГЕ MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.HAGK FIVE
OCTOBER 1 FINAL DATE
FOR CONSERVING CROPS
All soil-conserving crops to be
counted in th& 193G soil-improve-
ment program in North Carolina
must be planted bv October 1.
Conseving crops planted after
that date' cannot- be used to in
crease the amount of payments
a farmer is allowed to earn, said
II. A. Patten, state compliance
supervisor at State College..
A number of farmers have
reduced their acreage , of soli
depleting cro])s and carried out
aoil-'building practices, but have
no1i planted enough conserving
crops to qualify them fo the full
amount of the payments they
have earned, Patten added.
Each acre of conserving crops
qualifies the farm on which they
are grown to ?1 in ssil-building
or diversion payments.
If a farmer has diverted
enough depleting crops to earn
$25 and has conducted enough
soil-building practices to earn
$25,. he must have 60 acres in
conserving crops to qualify for
tho $50 ho has earned.
Patten urged every grower to
check his acreage of conserving
crops nnd make sure he has
enough. If not, ho should plant
the required amount before it ia
too late.
Among the soil-conserving
crops are crimson clover, vetch,
Austrian winter neas. red clover,
and other legumes, if planted on
land where no depleting crops
were grown this year.
Patten pointed out that there
is an exception to the regulation
limiting payments to $1 for each
acre of soil-conserving crops.
The minimum payment a grow
er will be allowed to earn is at
least $10, no matter how small
the farm and regardless of the
acreage of soil-conserving crops
grown, if the plantings of soil-
depleting cops have not been
greater than the base acreage.
The payment will be made for
carrying qut soil-building prac
tices and for the diversion of
land from soil-depleting to soil-
conserving crops.
URGES GROWERS TO LOÜK
OUT FOR NEW VARlETlJiS
Thero is a certain amount of
chance as well ns skill in thc-
I discovery nnd develoning of su
perior varieties of fruit trees,
said M .E. Gardner, extension
horticulturist at State College.
I Every now nnd then a chanct
seedling is found that is superior
, to many of the standard varie
ties. Such discoveries are valu-
'able in the development of the
I fruit industry, Gardner added,
j Not long ago, he continued, a
'MoDowell county faimcr discov
ered a red seedling apple which
matures in the foothills around
July 1. farmer has heen
offered an'' attractive sum by a
large nursery company for- the
sole right to propagate this .seed-
ling. The other day, Gardhei’-'re-
coived a seedling from Lumber
ton that gives promise of pro
ducing high" quality fruit antt
yielding large crops every year.
Some years, other vadetiea' in
that section fail entirely.
Gardner uriics al! growers to
inveatignte their tree.'; and seed
lings. If they find what nnpeura
to be a different variety that has
good pnss'bilities, thty may be
able to sell it for a good price.
When superior varieties are
discovered and propagated, G'ard
ner went on the fruit growing
industi'y is benefitted by the op
portunity afforded to obtain bet
ter trees.
The horticultural department
at State College and the county
farm agents over the State are
glad to assist,any grower in de
termining the possible commer-r
cial value of chance seedlings
■found over the State. ■
in "adit on to chance discover
ies, Gardner pointed out, there
may be cases where, growers
lave developed varieties that are
well adapted to the conditions
where they are grown, but which
have, not been available to other
growers in that area. These, too,
are worth invest.gating.
--------О---------
LET US DO YOUR JOB W ORK
— W b W ibL DO IT RIGHT.
A Month Of H arvest Celebration
O C T O B E R
Efírd’s M onth In The Carolinas
trpenmg PrMay Morning
Continues Entire M onth Of October
it was ih the Fall month of October that
the first of the Efird’s went to work in a
store, and it was in the th of October
that most of the Efird stores were opened.
WeVe planned for months to make Octo
ber a month of celebration. O.ver 100 buy"
ers and shoppers have been in the markets
selecting style and quality.
R E A D :
EVERY WORD
In Our Big
4 iPAGE CIRCULAR
Just Delivered To Your Door
STORE HOURS
8:30 A. M, to 6 P. M.
SATURDAYS
8:30 A. M. to 10 P. M.
The Best M oney Could Buy
For This October Celebration
You can choose an Entire
Fall Outfit for every mem
ber of the Family from a
Variety Like Ours.
~u-
O C T O B E R
A H a r v e s t o f V a lu e s
E F I R D ’S B E T T E R
M E R C H A N D IS E
Everyone is looking to Efird’s for
Better Merchandise at Economical
Prices. October now finds your Efird’s
Store filled with higher type, better
and the most Stylish Merchandise, and
by Planning Ahead we are able to hold
Prices in a reasonable range for all.
Crisp, N e w M erchandise Fills E v e ry
Departm ent 6t Our Store
E f i r d ’s D e p t . S t o r e
Salisbury, N. C,
■1
I
-li
WÎTprK«W.jÇi^ .-лр^
T H E M O C K S V IL L E E N T E R P R IS E . MocksviHc. N. C.. Thursday, Octobcr 1, 1936
DRAGON S D RIV E Y O U
* By EDWIN BALMER *
Black Satin Frock
for Autumn Wear
11
J
11
ir' I
Й,'Л
!жм|д:
'f
CH APTER V III—Continued
I — 14—WImt iniulo Justllleatlon for the tnlc-
Ing nt tho life of nnotiicr~oX a lunn
yon Imd iiinrrlcd?JInrtIn O’Mnca Imd sitid to her, when
Inst he wns here—on SnturOny:
"When n wife kills n husbnnd, no
ono else over finds out why. To save
her life, she'll never tell even her at
torney more than n part. Sho shot him J nnd the fact speaks for Itself tlifc
fiillness of lier renson. You were the
flrst to see her.nfterwnrd."
"i'es," snid Agnes.
“Then you can best Jiidiic for you^
nolf—no one, who wns not there, cnil
tell you ns well—whnt you should do."
Agnes arose nnd dressed long before
bronlifnst-thne, though she know she
would not be suniinoned to court today.
Both Jlr. Nordell nnd JIartIn O'Mnra
fiad told her tlmt they would move for
tho exclusion of witnesses, except when
testifying; nnd In a trial for murder,
the judge would so order.
Thu luornlng paper came; nnd there
ngain was Agnes Glenelth on tho pnge
beside Myrtle Lorrle nnd Blnrtin
O’Murn. , ISho gazed once more at tho placid,
confident countennnce of Chnrlcs Lor-
rlc', who hnd east oft tho wife who hnd .ninrrlod him when they both were.
, yoimg, and who had borne him his
■ dntiglitor.Hero was that wife—Stella Lorrle—
ns now sho was; and hero was tlielr
daughter Janet Sho wns saventeen,
nnd she hnd been graduated from n
high school In Wisconsin Inst week,
nnd had accompanied her mother yes
terday to Chlcngo to bo beside her
, mother today when Stella, tho flrst
wife, sflt nt tlio trlnl of Myrtle, tbo
second wife.
Wife I Did any other word In all the
language describe—or fall to describe
—as mnny dllTerent relations? Both ot
these hnd been wives, nnd of the same
man; nnd ono had borne him n baby,
■nd the other had Wiled him.
Hero wns Bert—Myrtle’s Bert ("Oh,
God, Bert I") What part hnd ho played
iln tha killing? Some said—nnd Jeb
■was ono of them—that tho cxIstencc
»,f Tjort iind the Insuriince on thn llfo
of Charles Lorrle completely explained
Copyright by Edwin Balnior
W NUSorvlco
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, her husband to go oif with Bert—and
ibo Insurance.
.f Agnes shut her eyes; and sho saw
liersclf again In that room; and she
know, ns she was returned to tho fnel-
. Ing of the moment when Myrtle Lorrle
' first clung to her, that she had not
come !n upo.n -a wife who hud Just
' .'ktlled her husband because of another
man, nnd to collect his insurance.
It wns very warm at the jail, and
•ultry nnd sticky. Myrtio perspired
. Avnn ___
dressed (or the courtroom.
She wore her platinum wedding ring
and hor engagement ring—sapphires
nnd dlninpnd set In platinum; and she
turned them nervously on hor dnmp
finger. Sho had figured, when slio held
up her flnger for lilm to slip them on
It, thnt sho could get nwny with mar
riage with him.Why not? Wasn't mnrrlngo Just liv
ing with a man? Wnsn’t thnt renlly
all there wns to it?
He’d glvo hor n lot of money—more
than she'd ever seriously drenmed of
having; nnd she'd glvo him loving. Hut
hers didn't do. . . .
They were coming for her to tako
her to court—to be tried for tho mur
der of Charley. Damn It, sho nuver
meant to kill him—Just to mnke him
leave her alone, sometimes,
Stella would be In the courtroom;
Stella, whom he'd given the gate, but
who yot hnd showed up Myrtio as a
wife and lover. Well, Stella'd had nn
advantaKo; slic'd loved tho fathend;
«he'd not had to try to love him, think
ing of soiuebody else.
’ “Can't you keep her out?” she had
asked Cathal.
"Not If she wants to como."
“Stella ain't so frightful for forty.
Somu men might llko her yet.' Aren't
you going to have tho Jury, mon?"
: “Yes," said Cutlml.
i “Then tho ones I cnn’t get from
Stella, Agnes can. I’ll toll you—there's
one typo of man that novor liked mo;
^that’s tho type likes Agnes, I’ll het
you. So hnve Agnes there for mo."
“Agnesi" Cathal objected,
“That's how I think of her; wouldn’t
you? Say."—sudden terror took Its
turn,—"Agnos ain’t going to throw me,
<8 she? She ain’t—"
V. "No," snid Cnthal, "But she won't
bo there when you first como In."
Nordell outlined to tho 12 men nt Inst
selected-nnd the newspaper repeated
to all who rend—tho cnse against Myr
tle Lorrle. It wns bad for her; very
bnd, ns witness after witness built It
up. It wns much worse than Agnes
had expected.Agnos reiid It at home. For tho
stato had decided not to call hor; and
Mnrtin O’Mara told her tlmt ho could
glvo her nt lenst two hours’ warning
before he would put her on the wltne.ss-
stnnd.Sho felt shaky and halt sick again.
These were matters about Myrtio Lor
rle which Martin O'Mnra might not
have known nbout his client Yet now
he hnd heard them; and ho continued
to. defend her. Jiideedv It w«s plain
ho was fighting for hor only moro
hotly.
The newspaper writers spoke espe
cially of how ho fought When Mr.
Nordell put a question thnt might havo
n damaging answer, tho defense attor
ney lonjied to bis foot.
"I object Vour Honor I I object 1"
“Overruled,” said tho Judge, and told
Mr. Nordell to proceed with tho wlt-
noss.-
"Exoeptlon I . . . I take nn excopllon I
. , . Exception!" O’Mnrn struck back
nt tho judge ngaln nnd ngnln.
Agnes could not completely under
stand It; but sho could foci tho fight
In It
iToh hrought with him, that night, tho
Into editions which carried tho report
of tho nftornooa session of tho trlnl.
It wns worso for Myrtle—and for Ag
nes—than the morning's disclosures.
Some ot It, Job read to her; somo ho
left to her to read lo herself.
"Now, Glen, what aro you going to
do?" I .
“I'm going on, Jeb. I hnve to—
haven’t I?"
“Not ns a defense witness.”
“I hnve to—If ho calls me."
‘‘Ho I" repeated Jeb. "He’ll call yon ;
but you can give him a surprise on the
stand.”
“How?"
^«iU «3UU
side Job, nnd with her mother opposite
nnd Bee beside her, and looked down at jellied consomme In the cup beforo
her. She Ilttod her spoon Into tho cup,
but not to her lips.
Jeb could ent; l.'oe could eat; her
mother could, a little. Agnes sipped
iced-tea.
What Myrtle Lorrlo had done—and
what Agnes Glenelth wns to support
her In having dono—divided any group
of people. 'They did not debate whether
she had shot hor husband; that waa undisputed. It wns whother she
“should" have shot him or not; or nt
least whether, having done so, the
should now be punished further.
Jeb wns ngainst her—Job, who. If
Agnes would murry him, would "tip
up the cup" of seusatlon with her,
drain it to the last drop while thoy
both were young; nnd then? Why—ho
said—think now ot that?
Пег mother bud no pity for Slyrtlo;
her mother who had given herself
completely to hor love when young,
and who now wns being neglected for
nnother. Bee, somewhat less surely,
wanted Myrtio convicted. Not electro
cuted, but Imprisoned at least until
she was old—until, for her, the llfo
ot sensation ceascd.Martin O’Mnra would Justify, nnd
free hor; nnd not bccauso ho would
mnke money by It. Ho could havo made nion>>y "fixing" taxes, but ho
would not Emotionally thI.s sort ot
case nppealed to him; ho wanted to
defend cases like this. Uo would get
Myrtle olT.'.I'lio talk at tho tablo changcd noth
ing. Simmons drove them at Inst to tho Crlmlnnl Courts building. A crowd
lined tho curb. People were every
where In front everywhere Inside.
Windows ot all tho courtrooms wero
open. Photogrnphors formed tho edge
of tho Inne that wns oponcd. ^
Agnes never knew, until she saw the
pictures in tho ififpors the following
day, how sho got from'tho car to the
doors, of the courtAn elevator lifted them to the hall
way outside the courtroohi where
Myrtle Lorrle was being tried; and
there thoy met O’Mara.
He led Beatrice Glenelth and Beat
rice A.vreforth Into tho courtroom, and
then returned to Agnes and Jeb In
the h a l l ._________________
îju v u tiu lïô J uu*
nov.’—you must see now—how thlngs
wore. She wns double-crosslng lier hus-
band for ber Bert Wasn’t siio?"
Cathal telephpned to Agnes at nino
thnt night
"It looks," lie sald, "as It the stato
wlll rcst tomorrow niornlng. If It’s not
Js available In sizes 12, 14, 10, 10
and 20. Correspondlne bust tnea-
suronionts 30, 32, 34, 30 and 38.
SizG 34 (32) requires four and
three-eighths yards of 39-inoh material, four and one-fourth yards
with short sleeves, ' Price of Pat
tern, 15 cents.
Send your order to Tlio Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., 307 W.
Adams St., Chicago, 111.® Bell Symllcate.—WNU Scrvic«.
WHEN
EYES BURN I
■ Oof Quick, Safe
Relief wiihJrnilRI^
Í Z EVES
\m m m iioom oofr*
3 DAYS J
•‘I’ve one witness to finish with Be
fore you," he said to Agnes. "Ио’Н
be on when we stnrt again, in a few
minutes. Ilo won’t tako long." And
he showed Agnos nnd Jeb together to
tho dofonse wltness-room.
It wns n plain, storn Ilttlo cliambor
with two window«, n tallio and six
chnirs; It was vacant; but tho feel ot
conflict filled It Not strango, with ,Tob
and Martin O’Mnra with her In the
little room I
Cnthni, at lonst outwardly, was thowfAfo m
,Introducing Autumn's smartest frock. Snug at the waistline and flared below, a youthful interpre
tation with snap and dash.
The blouse has a clover feminine touch in its soft gathers that peep cunningly from beneath the'
yoke, which is topped by a nar
row standing collar that ties in a
dainty knot. To please your whim,
omit the nscktie and substitute a
neckerchief, or ascot tie; then
again forget about tha buttons,
open the yoke, press down the sides forming a V and trim it with a bright bouttonairo. You may have your way bout the sleeves,
fpr flm-aattem-ofl:eEa_hDth^
aa Е4ят£к
BEFORE YOU N EED A QUART
■ '.......
« w
Mako tho »First Quart" losti
Drain and refillwltli Quaker State.
Note the mileage. Prove for your
self that you do go fattlier before
you have to add the first quart.
The retail pticc is 33|! per quart.
Quaker State Oil Refining Com-
pany, Oil City, Pennsylvania.
QUAKER
STATE
M O T O R O IL
He Seated Himself, Restlessly,
Upon Another Chair.
I I i' 1 ‘ t .4!
‘ i
С} <Ü
Myrtio Lorrlo would hnve gWen much
this morning If she could hnvo counted on Agnos Glcnelth's prcscnco in tho
courtroom where sho was to be tried
for her life.Sho was not In thn old jail, but In
tho new ono on tho west sldo of tho
city; for, together with nil other prisoners nwnltlng trial, sho had been
moved Into tho fine, modorn structure
of Btone and stool directly In the ruar
of tho new, Imposing Criminal Coui-tn
building ot Cook county,
Myrtio wns now In tlio courtroom.
Stella wns stnrlng at horl And she
was staring at Stella, Sho couldn't
tako her eyes olT Stnll«, And beside
Stella wns Charley's kid.
Where wns somebody for herV Sonio-
liody that counted and could do good?
Where was Agnes Glenelth? Oh, why
In hell wnsn’t she hero?
The diiiiin' room was full of people,
iitaring! but you couldn't see thom, ex
cept Slillrt and Charley'a kid.
/(/»Jrflle did her best to tako It
Í. I.r fought over the
’.' í'ííkrjw, Weducaduy; bufor« Mr.
too near noon. I'll put on my first wit
nesses at once; I figure I'll ask you to
go on In tho afternoon. Say, two
o’clock."
“Yes," EuliJ Agnes. "I’ll be thero.’t.
"Will you?"
"Ot course I, wlll,"
What had happened to her distress
and disturbance? He wns fighting; he hnd been lighting all day, nnd waa
spent, but with tho fight still In him. Sho could feel it in his voice; nnd sho
nllgned hei'Belt ngnln with him."How’n tho trial going—really?"
"Really?"' repeated Cnthal.
“I mean with you. You know how many ot those things are true; tho pa^
pers don’t—do they?"“No," said Cathal; "but’some of the
things aro truo enough. But thoy’vo
got nothing to do with whether she did
murder. That's all." . . .
Agnes hung up, but sat by the tele
phono without stirring. She was warm
and excited and satisfied, as shu had
not been all day.It was eleven, next morning, when
she loft tho house with her mother and
Bee., They avoided tho train. Simmons
drove them, In tho big car, to tho city,
where they plckcd up Job. Then they
stopped at a (pilet Ilttlo restaurant
whore thoy could bo alone, ond whero
Jeb had had luncheon ordered In ad
vance.The-noonday was very hot Tho heat
Indoedi supplied the third topic to tho people of the city; the others were the
further advance In stocks, and tho trial Today It seoniod almost more tho
trlnl ot Agnes Glenelth thnn of Myrtio
Lorrlo. Todny Agnea'a pictures and
hei’ name exceeded Myrtle's In size and
display. Agnes had ceased to care what they said even about hersolf.
№u ant at the re.stauraut Uiblo be-
sult ot dnrk gray, and ho had Just
changed his linen; aud tho excltomont
which he controlled gave him better
hearing.
I'm sorry the day's so hot Miss
Olenolth," he .said.
"I dim't mind. Don't bother about
me, please; and don't worry. I'll try
not to loso my head."
Cnthal caught breath, looking at her
In her light simple dress.
"You'll not I'll nsk you only whnt
you Itnow I’ll ask. What the Stato wlll
ask you, no one can toll; but I’ll be
hoforo you to help you nil I can."
’"I'hank you."
The door opened for the warning to
Cathal that tho judge was returning
to the courtroom. Cathal hurried
away.
Agnos stood atock still for a Ions
minute; and .Teh merely stared nt her.
When (kt last she dropped down upon
one of tho straight hard chairs, he
seated himself, restlessly, upon an
other. These two hud nothing left to
say. Only at last, when Agnes wns
summoned to tho courtroom, he got up
with her; but ho parted with her at tho
door of tho wltness-room.
"Oood girl 1" ho said, and gavo hor
his hand. “And good luck, Glen!" And
then, to save himself, ho could not hold
back the gibe as sho went to bo Martin
O’Mnra’s witness. “Go get your little
pal—and her lawyer, Glen—their hun
dred and fifty thousand dollars for tho
shooting."
long and short. A graduated gore
reduces the sweep at the hipline
and gives the much desired flare
to tho hem.Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1040-B
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.CHAPTKR IX
Befctre she sat down In the'wltness-
chalr, Aai'Kis stood, for a moment fac
ing the courtroom. She had been sworn,
facing thu judge, who wns beside hor
now, at her right and a little behind
her.The Jury, twelve men In two row»,
were nt her loft A court reporter,
with pencil and his book open, wa§
almost at her feet to hor right
Directly In front ot hor stood Martín
O’Mara; and ovor his left shoulder sh«
aaw Myrtio Lorrle seated at a table.
Agnos would hardly hnvo known
Myrtle, hnd not the newspaper pic
tures of recent days prepared her for
her present appearance. Myrtio wa*
In hlnck, with not oven a touch of
color, excoiit a piping ot white In tho
neck of her dress and on tho sleevea.
Black becanio her and made her look
oven younger nnd slighter, than she
was; and It made her skin whiter. She
hnd on no rouge nt all, nnd Ilttlo or no
lipstick, Sho looked not In tho least
like a killer.Mr. Nordell wns n few foot from her,
seated nt another tablo with tw«
younger men with books nnd pnpey».
Thnt wns the table of "the State." Bo-
yond wcro benches row after rowj
whore people sat nnd leaned forward Ymi could fool—Agnea felt—the claej
of the conflict which swayod thai«.
n o UE CONTlNUEOi
Í WELL ...IF Vou W^NT 1 b
5ББ MB ANY > MORE, VOU I BETTER PO Л$, ■THE CO/\CH
5AIDÍ I PONr LIHB A; , ra u ir r e R !
XF Vou FEEi. THAT
WAV...X SUPPOSE
X MIGHT AS WEU.
C U ß ^B ^r
Ш UClCEDi TUM A im ss
"■ Л<>î
i g o P A Y S tA T Ê R
WELL-HOIV
, P0E5 IT FEEÍ.{to 3B H(6H‘SC0RIN0 CHAMPION üF-íHB
9ГАТВ?
f in e ! FirrTHEN, I'VE Ш Т Ш Е fl MlUION VOILAUÇ EVER. <$INCB X ÇWTCHEP ■ TO PpÇTUM I
O k COUKSE, children ihouId never drink cotflM.
And many grown-ups, too, find that tha cuffoln in
cofleo dlsngroos with tliom. If you havo headache*
or Indigostlon or can’t sleep soundly...try Postum.
It contains no Cüffoln. It 1» simply whole wheat ond
bran, roasted and slightly awootonod.
You may miss coffea nt first, but öfter 30 doys
you’ll love Postum for its own rlcli, satisfying flavor.
Postum comes In two fomia-Postum Cereal, the
kind you boil, nnd Instant Postum, mado Iristantly
in tlio cup. Eitlier way it ia easy to make, dollci»ua,
economical, and raay prove a real help. A product of
Cenoral Foods.
FREE-l ct ua ucud you yuur flrst week'« supply ol
Postum /rco/ S im ply m a ll coupon. O les«, «. p, eonr>.
QBNi:iui.Foopa, Battle Creek, M ich. W-A
8und mo, wltUo\it obUßoÜon, n wook’a eupply of Q lm tiw it
Fustum П Postum Coroal (chock kind you prefer).
Наше..................... ■ . I.................. I
Street.------- ------ , —
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1
р а с е :.0ё у Ш
Club Meetings
Ghurch Nows
Social Punctiona
Cer<i Partiee S O C I E T Y
Local UappeninflTO
Coming and
Going of thooe
We know
MISS MARY J. HEITMAN. Social Editor Phone 112
Miss Freida FarUiing spent the
week-end in Greensboro.
Harry Osborne and Bill Blan
ton, of Shelby, spent Sunday
liere.
Hanes Yates returned home
last week from a visit to Wash
ington, D. C.
Mrs. H. C. Lane, of Middie-
burg, Va., is visiting her father,
Mr. John lamos.
Mrs. Birdie Mays, of Roanoke,
Va., is ,the guest of her niece,
Mrs. W. L. Moore. .
Mrs. Ajnna Barneycastle, of
Center, is visiting her daughter,
Mrs. J. C. Dwiggins,
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Kurfees,
of Richmond, Va., visited rela
tives hero last week.
Mrs. Grady Ward and Mrs.
Harry Osborne wera visitors in
Winston-Salem Tuesday.
Mr. D. M. Haneline, who has
been ill for sevorai weeks, is im
proving, we are glad to state.'
Mrs. Eva Miller Jncksun, of
Winston-Salem, spent Sunday
afternoon with Miss Alice Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kurfees,
of Winston-Salem, visited Mr.
and Mrs. J. L, Kurfees on Sunday.
Misa Elaine Call left Tnnsrlny
for Greenville, N, C„ where she
entered Eastern Cnrnlinn
chera’ College,
Class Jüntertaincd
Miss Mary Heilman was hos
tess to her Sunday School class
of junior girls on Saturday af
ternoon. Games and contests
were en.ioyed. anti rofroshments
’.vere served. The pupils who
were promoted to-the interme
diate departmoit were given sou
venirs. Twelve gli'ls were present.
Ur. W. B. Lee Here
Sunday
Dr. W. B. Lee, widely-known
Methodist missionary of Sao
Paulo, Brazil, who has been
spending the summer witl\ rela
tives in the State, will sail from
New York on October 5 for Bra
zil. Dr. Lee and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley D. Lee, of Burlington, will
spend Sunday here with Dr. Lee’s
sisters. Miss Mary Lee and Miss
Alice Lee. Dr.'T-ee nas many fiT-
ends here who have enjoyed sew
ing him and hearing his interest
ing talks.
Mrs. Ida G. Nail accompanied
her daughter, Miss Ivey Nail, to
Hickory last week, \yhere she wilj
spend a month.
Mrs. A. A. Ajiderson, of.Cala-
htiln, and Mrs, P. B. . Cain, of
Brooklyn, N. Y., visited rela
tives here on Sunday.
---Tyi^Wr-WT"TiryióT'àml"son, W il
liam Taylor, of Warrenton, spent
the week-end with Dr. Taylor’s
sister, Mrs. W. H, Dodd.
Attend Group Conlerencc
Several members of the Pres
byterian Auxiliary attended the
group conferences cf the Wins-
lon-Salem Presiiyterial last week.
On Tuesdiiy Mrs. ,Tohn Larew,
president of the Auxiliary, Mrs.
Alice Woodruff and Mrs. C. G.
Woodruff v'sre at the conference
in Le.xington I Mrs. Larew attend
ed the group meeting at Collina-
town, Stokes County, on Wed
nesday, and at Winston-Salem on
Thursday. On Friclay Mrs. La-
^ev/, Mrs. J. B. Johnstone, Miss
Saliio Hunter and Miss Sarah
Giiither motored to Glade Valley■g.nVngl,
the confeience.
Koontz—.loneg Wedding
A marriage or wide interost
was solemnized at the Davie Cir
cuit parsonage on Saturday even
ing, Sept. 20, at 6:30, when Miss
Helen Jones became the bride of
Mr. Ernest Koontz, with the pas
tor, Rev. M. G. Ervin, using the
impressive ring ccreiiiony of the
Methodist Episcopal Church. The
bride wore a becomirig Aist dress
trimmed with fur, with brown ac
cessories. After a short bridal
trip Mr. and Mrs. Koontz will
make their iiome in the Kappa
community. Mrs.^Jones is the
daughter of M r. and Mrs. Hamp
ton Jones, of Davio, and is a
graduate of Mocksville HfiHi
School. She is an attractive and
popular young lady. The groom
is the son of Mr. Thomas Koontz,
and is an enterprising and well-
known young farmer. Mr. and
Mrs. John Smoot were present at
the marriage. W'e join the many
friends of Mr. and Mrs. Koontz in
best wishes_ for their happiness...
Ladiofi W'esley Class'
The Ladies’ Wesley Class of
the Methodist Church mot with
Miss Ruth Booe on Monday af
ternoon, with Mrs. C. H. Hend
ricks and Mrs. George Hendricks
.loint hostesses. The devotionals
were led by Mrs. E, J. Harbison,
/er topic being Self-Confidence.
A musical contest was held,^ and
tiie prize was awarded to Mrs. T.
N. Chaflin. The election of of
ficers took place as follows;
Mrs. T. N. Chaffin, president,
Mrs. Ollie Stockton, vice-presld-
ent ; Mrs. D. R. Stroud, secretary-
Treasurer; Miss Ruth Booe, tea
cher. Tempting cream and cake
were served. Members present_JL£1
SASSAI RAC HIDGB ITUMS
Mister Editur & Co.
Hit’s bin' « right smart spell
sence I writ you any itunis from
this here burg, hit hns, yes-siree,
how-some-ever like’.vise an’ ac-
corilin'iy, I whant to say as how
Sassafrac Ridge air riht here
onto tlie map same as ever, with
ineetin over to the meetin house
ever Sunday an’ ol’ Bruther Mc-
Corkum into the pulpit a shovel-
in’ fire likewise brimstone (by the
scoop full, he is, an’ Deacon Josh
Wilson a sleepin’ thru the ser
vices, he is, an’ Square Bixter a
iayin’ out his Sunday ,chaw of
store backer into that trhar high
hat of his’n, yes-slree, an’ that
thar meanest boy of Cy Watson’s
a watchin’ out fer a chance at
startin’ a. dog fight on the sly,
an’ them thar sow an’ six pigs of
Cy’s ft walkin' right in same as if
hit was a free show, thout ever
winkin’ a eye ner shakin’ a tail,
much lest shedin’ a tear fer
that thar feller Franklin’ what
got to' whantin’ to dicktate,'yes-
siree, way off) some whar, an’
had lots of ther relashuns mur
dered he did yes-siree Mister edi-
tuT, an’ 1 whant to /say right
iiere an’ now ashow weuns here-
bouts is a bout decided into our
minds as how that thar thing-a-
fore-sed wasn’t nuthin’ but it
compreshun with mr.ybe a gin-
erus slab of obseshun flung in
for }jood measure, shore ns kraut;
an’ that thar reminds me about
tiio travilin’ man what was over
to the storo an’ postoffice fur
ther day, an’ handed out a heap
of samples of storo backer, he
did, yes-siree, free gratis fer nir-
thin’ to them whnt looked like as
if they mout be of some commun
ity importance an’ then he got
to talkin’ some, he did, an’ hon-
ist-to-gosh, he seemed to know
most efer thing, ho did, an’ he
come from away off some whar
maby most a hundred miles, he
did, an’ he went on a talkin’
some more about how thesehore
compreshuns. likewise obseahuua
a maskcyradin' under the names
Mrs. Meroney Haa Club
Mrs. T. F. Moroney graciously
entertained hor bridge club and
sfivcral other guests on Friday
afternoon, her home being at
tractive with snapdragons and
potted plants. Bridge was played
at two tables, and Miss Ossie
Allison won the high score prize,
Rev. W. H. Dodd, v;ho has been
vi.siting his daugibtor, Mrs. A.
J. Haynes, in Stateuvile, is spend-
uig a while at Ridgecre.s’t.
Mrs. Wriston Lee, of Monroe,
loft Saturday, pfter a visit to
Mrs, E, W. Crow. She visited in
Statesville before returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Cooper Edwards,
of Columbia, S. C., spent tho
week-end with tho latter’s par-
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Meroney, Sr.
TfwTute flower-pofr~TFo delicious
refreshments wore chicken salad,
asparagus on toast, watermelon
pickle, cheese sandiviches, craclt-
ers, chocolate bars and coffee
'.vitii whipped cream. Those pre
sent were: Mesdames Jack Alli
son, John LeGrand, E. C. Le-
Gr(ind. R. S. McNeill, C. R. Horn,
T. I*'. Meroney, Misses Willie Mil
ler and Ossie Allison.
i:>uuUf ivms**
dames C. H. Hendricks, George
Hendricks, E. J. Harbison, T. N.
Chaffin, Ollie Stocicton, D. R
Stroud, M. G. Ervin, B. I. Smith
E. P. Foster, V. E. Swaim, Dallas
Kirby, Prentice Campbell, Robert
Sofley, E. H. Morris, Clarence
Grant, and a visitor, Mrs. E. W.
Cow.
W H O 'S W H O
IN CHILDREK '3 CLASSICS H
W h o caas It uiho told.^
O f B rer R abbit, B re r B'cuj
B rer W olf a n d B re r Fox
iin d th e B a b y o f T a r ?
FORK NEWS
I’arties For l\lrs. Lee ■
Mi'a Wi'ialon T.no nf H o;:
Sirs. M. G. Ervin returned
home last w’eek, after a visit to
lier sister, Mrs. R. W. Sammeth,
of Abbeville, S. C., v.’ho has been
()uite ill but is improving.
Miss Kathryn Brown, of Green
sboro, and Mr .and Mrs. Perry
Ashe and daughter, Bonnia
Brown, of.. Mayodiin, spent the
week-end with, Mr. and Mrs. M.
D. .Brown,
Miss Jane Crow, of Salem Col
lege, and Edward Crow, of Win-
•ston-Salem, attended the Davjd-
son-State, game in Raleigh, and
spent Sunday here with their mo-
Iher, Mrs. E. W. Crow.
Mrs. E. P. Bradley and Miss
Jane Bradley left last Friday for
W.-ishington, D. C. Mrs. Bradley
bas entered Washington Sanator.
iiim and Hospital, Takoma Park,
Wa.shington, D. C., where she will
take treatment for ;'everal w'eeks.
Hor many friends hope that she
■'vill soon improve. Miss Jane
Bi'adley will spend a while with
lier mother, nnd later \yil! visit
'iilativos in Virginia and North
l.’arolina.
'I'eachers Honored
Tho members of the faculty of
the grammar ,and high schools
were guests of iionor at two do-
li’ihtful affairs given recently.
'I'iio first was given by Mrs. Z.
N. Anderson and Miss Clayton
Brown ono evening rocentiy, when
tjiey entej'tainert at an outdoor
supper at the Ajulerson home.
The guests wero seated in the at
tractive backyard, and the tempt
ing supper consisted cf hot dogs,
hamburgers, biscuit, fruit juice,
pickles and two kinds of cake.
The faculty was again hpnored
on last Thursday evening, when
Mrs, Speer Harding and Mrs. S.
B. Hall were hostesses at a pic
nic áBpper at Clement Crove.
The tempting menu consisted of
fried chicken, potato salad, sand
wiches, rolls, pickle and iced tea.
who was the guest of Mrs. E. W.
I Crow last weeki"\yas guest of
' honor at an informal party given
by Miss Mary Heitman on Wed
nesday afternoon. Punch and
copkies wero served, and a var
iety of flowers wero used' in de
corating. Those present were
Mesdames Wriston Lee, ' E. W.
Grow, Julia C. Heitman, J. B.
Johnston, R. B. S.'tnford, P. J.
Johnson, J. Frank Clement, MisS'
Ruth Booe, Miss Sarah r.aTther
and tho hostess. Miss Heitman.
On Thursday afternoon Mra.
Wi'iston Lee was again honoree,
when Mrs, P, J, Johnson, Mrs.
Jack Allison and Miss Ossie Alli
son entertained for her. The
guests on this delightful occasion
wero Mesdames Wriston Lee, E.
W. Crow, J. Franlc Clement, lî.
J, Hanbison, John Larew, E, H.
Morris, Misses Ruth Booe, Mary
Heitman and Sarah Gaither.
Dainty fancy sandwiches, cookies
and Russian tea were served.
ui. ucprB!)uuiis,'''iney aiers was
shore to kiver up a multitude of
sins, same as, a woman’s over
halls, he did, an’ after he got
done talkin’ an went along weuns
helt a.sort of corkus, wo did,
with Square Bixter as a sort of,
chief spokesman, yes-siree, an’
decided he mout be purty durned
nigh right, shoe as kraut, how-
som-efor. Mister Editur, thom
thar same decisuna of our'n ain’t
helpin’ none to let down the
price of storo backer, thoy ain’t
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Allen, of
Smith Gi'ove, were Sunday guests
of Ml’, and Mrs. J. C. Barnhardt'.
Mrs. Cecil Sofley and Mrs. U.
D. Wyatt and children, of Wins
ton-Salem, wero guests of Mr.
nnd Mrs. Frank Burton Sunday.
Mr. R. D. Poole and Frank
Ratledge,. of Mocksville, wore
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
H. S. Davis.
Mr. and Mrs, Loyd Spillman,
of Cooleemee, were Sunday after
noon guests of' Mrs, Spillman’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Liv
engood.
Ml. and Mrs. Tom Foster and
'fhomas and Dnnhn"
l>rs. Martin and Byerly
•ielurn I
Dr. W. .0. Martin, Dr. A. 'B.
Byerly, and Dr. and Mrs. Lester
Martin, who spent the past week
Philadelphia, returned home
oil Monday; Tliey paid a short
vi.^it to Nev,' York while- away.
Party For Lettie ;
Lindsay Sheek
Mi'S. J. L. Sheek delightfully
entertained on Saturday after
noon, the happy event ibeing the
seventh birthday of her little
gi-anddaughter, Lettie Lindsay
Sheek. Nineteen little folks en
joyed the pleasure of the occa
sion, the games played being bob
bin for apples, a peanut race, a
fish-pond, and pinning an arrow
on a heart. Several prizes were
given, after which the refresh
ments were served in the'dining
room, The table was prettily ap-
liointed with a pinl: and white
color scheme, nnd lighted with
wliite candles, Delicious cream
and cake were served, the pretty
pink cake being decorated and
having seven tiny candles on it.
Each child was given a dainty
basket of candy with a little doll
on top. The litj;Ie honoree re
ceived a number of interesting
feifts.
DULINS NEWS
. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Barney
and children spent the week-end
with her parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Chole in the mountains.
Mrs. Avery Jane Hendrix, of
near Smith .Grove, spent Sunday
with her brother, Mr. J. P. Fos
ter.
Mrs. A. S. McDaniel spent one
afternobn last week with Mra.
A. J. Hendrix and daughter,
Leona.
Mr. and Mra. E, Clifton and
children spent Sunday afternoon
with Mr. and Mrs. R. E. W il
liams, of Smith Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Potts, of
Cornatzer spent awhile Saturday
night with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. D. J. Potts.
Mr. and Jlrs. Herinan Boger
and children, of Clemmons, spent
tho week-end with her parents,
Mr, and Mrs, W. T. Haneline.
lM.rs. 'Wtliiam Jones, of near
Cornatzer, has been on the sick
list for sometime, is' improving,
we are glad to note,
Peter F, Newton of Laurin-
burg has been elected president
of the newly oganized Scotland
County Negro Farmers' Cluili, -
ner raise the prices on sassafrac
roots, no-siree, ner fish hooks
nuther fer that matter, they ain't
but goin’ back, to that har fel
ler aa afore sed, he seemed like
a purty good sort, he did, cause
he warnt a bit upety, he 'tvarn’t,
ЧЙГ puffed on his own wind like
as a mad frog, same as a heap of
fo’ks gits when they happen to
blunder into a placo of somo im
portance like goin’ to legislach-
iir, or ma.vbe writin of the itums
I’i'om this horn burg, an’ honist-
!o-gosh he had one of those hero
now fangled radyus things onto
his kai', ho did, ar’ started the
thing up, he did, an’ let us listen
lo what hit had to say, free «ra-
lia for uthin’ same as if weuna
had all a bin his оГ friends an’
I'kewise neighburs fer all of his
lifu, he did, an’ after he went a-
lung ;wuns decided we druther
hear оГ man baiiy, down to the
ol’ creek mill, a sipin beef-hash-
?oup thru his whiskers on a fros.
ty mornin’, we had, 1Ь»л to hear
that thar thing a tryin’ to sing
one of these hijre modern popliir
songs er make a polytical speech,
yes-siree, shore as kraut, an’ Bill
Surkeys ho left out at onst he
did, cause he lowd as how a fel
ler mout put up .with lots, but
when hit come to fetchin along
a kar what could talk, likewise
.sing, to say nuthin’ of screechin’
to beat a dozen frightened ol’
maids yes-siree, an’ a sqüad of
scrapin’ tom-cats at midnight,
why he jest nachurly hauled in,
an’ mofer along, he did. an’.that
thar meanest boy of Cy Watson’s
he says- jest wit on thil you meets
one of the things a ruin to large
nit amongst the sassafrac bush
es an’ hit a dark foggy night, he
did, how-som-ever. Bill he warfi’t
a stayin’ fer nomore.
Guess them's about all fer this
time only while we air aibout hit
maybe we mout as well ast what
times of tho moon as well as un
der what signs of the zodyack
does you’ns over to town gether
yer craps of radyu.s things, so as
they won’t screech too bad indur-
in change's of the л^зather?
Yourn fer news,
Jimmie,
j Winsitou-Salem, spent Sunday
with Mrs. li'oster's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. S. E. Gar’vood. -
Mrs. Lucile Greene and child
ren and Elizabeth Ratledge wei'e
■gueata of Mr. and Mrs. Homel’
' Greene, of Yndkin Culluge Sunday night.
Mr. and Mrs. Toni Spry ahd
two daughters, of High i Point,
ot -iunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Pijik Spry.
— Sis&wsr—Beiv-ey---mr(r—Foy—Ifrrii-'
nier, of Oalahaln, spent Satur
day evening with Tim Kimmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Williard Foster
and baby, of W'inston-Snlem,
spent Saturday night with Mr.
nnd Mra. J. M. Livengood.
Mr. and Mra. Roy Garwood, of
Cooleemee, were Sunday visitors
at the home of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Hugh Mason.
Tho many friends of Mr. S. E.
Garwood will regret to learn thnt
he doesn’t improve any.
M. and Mrs. H. L. Gobble and
s-on, Jerry Lo.e, spent Sunday af
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Shoaf
of near Yadkin College.
Mrs. B. 1'' ffirniage mul B, F„
Jr., arc spending several days
with her daughter, Mra Henry
Iilichael and Mr, Michael, of
Crew, Va.
Funeral and burial services
wore held here Sunday after-
i noon for Mr. Godfrey Cope, who
passed awayi at his hrjne/in Le.'c-
ington early Saturday morning.
The mission will begin Sunday
night, October 4th at Ascenaion
Chapel. Services will ibegin each
night at 8 o’cclok by the Rev.
Mark H. Milne oi' SL Luke’s
Church, Sallsbm’y.
Miasea Pauline and Earline
Livengood entertained a number
of young people at a party Sat
urday night.
Quite a large crowd attended
the semi annual Foot washing at
No Creek Church last Sunday.
tiUOOHlCH WOKKKHS
AT AKItON VOTE 'fO
END THEIR STRIKE
Akron, Ohio, Sept. 24.—;Mem-
J bers of the Goodrich local, .Unit
ed Ruibbor WorkorE of America,
voted unanimoualy tonight to re
turn to work at the B. F. Good-
I rich Company plant which sus
pended operations making 10,000
eTployeea idle after a aeries of "iilt-downs.”
L. L. Callahan, president o f
Goodrich local, announced the
■vote. Receiving a report from a
unTon committee which had boeu
in conference all dz>y viith com.-
pany officiala.
(i. A. R. IS INVITED t o 'H O L D
ITS 1937 MEE'riNG IN SOUTH
Washington, Sept. 24.— From
tho deep outh, an invitation camo
today to the.Grand-
Republic fo Its 1938 encamp
ment.
The city of St. Cloud, Fla,, no
tified the blue-clad veterans, they
would be asked next year to se
lect that city for their gathering*
tv.'o ••^ûûVà hunce.
Al six-member delegation head
ed by C. H. Parker of Zophyr-
hills, represented the Florida de
partment of G. A. R. at the WasK
ington encampment.
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Quick Delivery Service
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CEIVTER NEWS
Farmers are about through
hay making and houaing tobac
co.
Mra. Emma Barneycaatle spent
several aaya last week, with fri-
ends in Calalialn.
Mr. Glenn Cartner and family, ;
of Salem, wero visitors at Mr, '
i!i. R, Barneycastle's Sunday even- |
ing.
Mr. Clyde Walk-r and -wife,
Mr. Frc'-l Edison and wife, of |
I'JKin, were visitors at Rev. W. J.
S. Walker’s Sunday evening,
Bernice .I'oweli is spend
ing sometime with- her sister,
Mrs. Walter Anderson, o£ Wins-
ton-Siilem.
Mrs. Ora Hodso^, of Greens
boro, spent tho wee.k-end with
her father and mother. Mr. ancj
Mrs. Thomas Tutterow.
Phone 141 g
MOCKSVILLE. N. C. S
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THEATRE
Friday & Saturday
BOB STEEL
In
“BRAND OUTLAW"
COMING
Monday & Tuesday
Another Special
"i^lEET NERO WOLFE"
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FAIWIINGTON NEWS
ìiirs. IV. 11. Dawson spoit the
v,-nuk-(jnd with Jlrs, F. II. Bahn-
M)'s, Dnw.son will be ro-
nicrnbured as tiio wil'e of Mr. W.
L. Dawson, beloved pastor of thu
?.I. E. Church here .several years
.■ijio, and has many friends in the
community wlio welcome her re
turn. She makes liev home iu
Grocn:<boro.
, Lester and George Martin
linve returned homo after spend
ing the week iu Farmington, mo
toring to Mocksville to .schooi
every morning.
'I'hc parsonage shower hold on
Saturday afternoou the 2Gth,
spon8..ied by the local Ladies
Aid bociety, M. E. Church, was
{juite a success. A iiumjber of
members from the other churches
came and a large assortment of
beaul jul, and useful igifts were
presented to the parsonage.
Bliss iSlizabeth James and Miss
Margarpt Brock spent; the weekr
end V. ,th home folks.
The, Womans Missionary So
ciety of the M. E. Church held
its Se]:t. meeting with Mrs. 0.
K. Allen.
Ine iievotions we.re given by
Mrs. Freeman, the President and
Mrs. Kennen presented an inter
esting program on the medical
department of our mission work.
Oiie new membp.r, Miss Dorothy
Perry, was welcomed into the
Society.
,a....dral guests, with a good at-
lenuunce of the members, enjoy
ed tills delightful meeting.
Duiing the social hour delight,
fui leireshments were served.
CANA NEWSJ________
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Patterson,
of M.itthows, N. C., spent a few
days last week with Mr. and Mrs.
T. F. Latham.
Miss Mae Green, of Winston-
Salem, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Green, of Mocksville, "spent Sun
day aflornoon with Mr. C .. S.
L'nton.
Mr. and Mrs. W ill Furches
spent a while Sunday morning
wun ivir. ana iviio. oub ■Г'иТО/юо.
Mr. and Mrs. R, W. Collette,
cil AUvance, and Mr. and Mrs.
J. T. S nk apent Sunday after
noon wivn Miss Minnie and Mr.
Charlie ouliatte.
-rT-3.fes^rV^;F«a--Lah5KV-9i—'*^J-^^^
ton-balem, spent a while Satur
day night with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs, W. S. Collette.
Mr, and Mrs, Melvin Richie
.-ind fai.'ily spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Naylor.
Those visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Latham Sun
day were Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Patterson, of Matthrsws, Mr, and
Mrs. Troy Latham and Rodwell
Latham, of Winston-Salem.
Mr. and Mrs, Millard Latham,
Mr, and Mrs. tJverette Latham,
Mr. and Mrs. Jas M. Eaton, Miss
Bessie Lath.,m, of Courtney and
Mrs. Albert Latham, of Center.
MOCIiP CHUHCH NEWS
Rev. F, ". Howard filled his
appointmr; : here Sunday morn
ing at 11 : '.’lock. IJe i)renchod
iin insp riivr aermon on “Our
.Sjiiritual.s ' icnis.”
, Mis!3 Laura Cornatzer spent
Sundaji wi,'.; Mi.ss Ethel Jonea.
Mr. and r.Ir.s. John Evans, of
Win.stoii'Sakin, visited Mrs. 0.
F. Jones on the week-end.
Mrs. A. E. Ilavtmon and Mr.
Richard Hartman visited elatives
i;i C:iemmons Sunday.
Miss Carolyn Hartman is im-
jjroving nicely of hav.ng an oper
ation for appendicitis.
Ml', and Mrs. James Carter and
Mr. Joe Jones spent one day last
•w'eek in Winston-Salem.
T ; SALE OF LANUS
/i i :л
NORTH CAiROLINA
i)A V IE COUNTY
, Under and 'by virtue of au-
i.liuiity contained in the W ill of
Uamilla H. Steelman, deceased,
ami a judgment in an action en
titled "Wachovia gank and Trust
Luiiij);. y, E.xecutor vs. Berry R.
Lveeini.ui Lt al,” said will and
biiid ju'.’.ment being recorded in
-iU fill cj f..c the Clerk of Super
ior Co'.iit of Forsyth Couiity,
u,.iroiiiia, tho Wachovia
liuiiK il; Trust Company, in its
caiJMcity a.s E.xecutor, will sell
liu; i'lilu.wiiiK de.scribed tracts of
lavui at Ц public sale on Monday,
jniir,:!' 2, 19:!C. at 12:00
о tn ck at the Davie County
I'o!:i i.h'- .se at Mocksville, North
wi'.rolina:
J.ot No, 1: I
i!t.::,inniiur at aft iron stake on
(lu: i:;i.-t .side of United States
Hilp'hway No. GOl and being 2105
,,i(l?.'c!'North uf tlie intersection of
'•,^iji)ilo(i Stat'Js Highway No. GOl
дйгм'Дпр, Cana itoad and runniiiK
liit\r?'J'Kon!i G5 degrees East ООО
Jeot to an iron .st/iKc; thence
North 80 degrees East 2!!20 feet
to a .stoiin; tliuncc Nortii 8i) de
grees -15 minutes East 185.5 feet
to a liranch; thence at a North
easterly direction along said
branch 257 feet to an iron stake
on the North side of a road;
thence ' North 7G degrees 30
minutes West 1038 feet;
thence continuing North 68 de
grees 16 minutes West 274 feet
to nn iron stake on the South
side of said road; thence North
83 degrees 30 minutes West 2019
feftt to t\n iron stake; thence
South 4 degrees West Б61 feet
to an iron stake; thence South
22 degrees West 630 feet to an
iron .stake on the East .side of
United States Highway No. GOl;
thence along the Fast side of
said Highway 36 degees 60 min
utes East 600 feet to an iron
.stake, the place of beginning con
taining G2.4G acres and . being
known and described as Lot No.
1 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in the office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina. .
Lot No. 2: • ■
, Beginning at an iron stake on
the East side of United „States
Highway No. 601 and' being
1308.6 fo(it North of the intersec
tion of United States HighAvny
No. GOl and Cana Road and run
ning thence North 7ё degrees 16
minutes East 2G20 feet to a
stone; thence North G degrees
East G71 feet to a stone, thence
West 133 feet to a ibraneh;
thence North 33 degrees East a-
long the branch 287 feet to an
elm; thence South 89 degrees 46
minutes West 185.6 feet to a
•stone; thence South 80 degrees
West 2320 feet to an iron stake;
thence South C6 degrees West
GOO feet to an iron stake on the
East side of United States High
way No. GOl; thence along the
(Cast aide of said Highway 86G.G
feet to the place of beginning,
containing G0.72 acres, and being
known and described aa Lot No.
2 in the division of the Holman
J.J zhs’.vv
corded in tho office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No, 3:
^■Beginning at the Intersection
GOl and the Cana Road and run
ning thence along the North side
of tho Cana Road North 83 de
grees £5 minutes , East 1225.2
ieet; thence continuing along
the North side of said road North
88 degrees 65 minutes East 784
foot to an iron stake; thence
North 6 degrees East 1622 feet
to fi stone; thence South 78 de
grees 16 minutes West 2G20 feet
to an ii'on stake on the East side
of United States Highway N6,
001; thence along the East side
of said road 1308.6 feet to the
place of beginning, containing
/1.92 acres and beinii known and
described as Lot No. 3 in the
division of th Holman Farm as
shown on said map recorded in
the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 4:
Beginning at an iron stake on
the North side of the C''ana Road
being 2009.2 feet East uf the in-
tfci'soction of United States High
way No. GOl and the Cana Hoad
and running thencc North G de
grees East 2293 feet to a stone;
thence West 133 feet to a branch;
thence along tho branch North
33 degrees East 287 feet to an
oim; thence South 71 degrees 10
minutes East 1166 feet to an iron
iilong tho property line of R. H.
Neely and 0. T. Boger North 5
■logrees :Vt minutes iilast 10(i!)
foet to a stone; thence North 85
degr<’es 20 minutes West GGO feet
to an iron stake in thu branch
the pliice oi DcjiTiin;jig, contain
ing 19.10 acres and being knowif
and described as Lot No. 5 in
tiie division of the Holman Farm
as shown ~on said map rucorded
in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
I.ot No„ G:
Beginning nt an iron stake,
which is North 86 degrees 20,
minutes West GGO feet from
stone, which is tho Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P. M. Pierce, at a
branch and running North 86
degrees 20 minutes West 1651
feet to an- iron stake; thence
South 3 degrees 35 minutej West
314 feet to an iron stake on the
south side of a road; thence
South G8 degrees 16 minutes
Easjt 274 feet; thence continu
ing South 76 degrees 30 minutes
East 188 feet to a branch; thence
in a northeasterly direction along
said branch 622 feet to the place
of beginning, containing 14.34
acres and being known and des
cribed us Lot No. (J in the divi
sion of tho Holman Farm as
shown oil said map recorded in
the office 'of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
The above described property
is known as the Holman Homo
.olaco. The sale of said proper
ty will* be made upon a basis of
one-third cash and the remaining
two-thirds to '*0,- paid December
1, 1937, said obligation to be se
cured oy a note and deed of trust
upon said promises. The pur
chaser may negotiate with the
seller for other terms. Lots will
be sold separately and in groups.
'1 his the 29th day of September,
1936.
WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST
COM'PAJNY, Executor
T. Spruill Thornto-.i, Attorney.
■__________10 1 Bt.
North Carolina | In the Superior
Davie County [ Court
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Freelove (Truelove) Furches and
nusuanu, iiuxao
County,
NOTICE OF COMMlSSIONKK'S
SALE
Under and l)y virtue of a jucTg"-
ment mado and entered in the
above-entitled cause in the Su
perior Court of Davio County,
dcitod September 7th,. 1936, to
satisfy said judgment, tho
undersigned Commissioner will,
on the lOth day of Octo
ber, 1936, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, at the door of the DiuTo
County Court House, in Mocks
ville, North Carolina, sell at pub
lic auction to the highest bidder
for cash, subject to the confirm
ation of the Court, the property
hereinafter described, locatcd in
Town of Mocksville, Mocksvillo
Township, Davie County, and
more particularly described as
follows:
Adjoinin;: tho lands of Mollie
Furches and Joe Woodruff, Be
ginning at a stake and running
S. 88 deg. East 2.60 chains to a
stake; thence S. 2 deg. West 1
chain to a stake; th6nce North
88 deg. West 2.'20 chains to a
stake; thence North 2 deg. varia
tion, 1 chain to beginning. Said
lands conveyed, by deed to Free
love (Truelove) Furches, March
noon, at the door of the Davie
County Court House, in Mocks
ville, North Carolina, aell at jmb-
lic auction to tho highest bidder
for cash, subject to tha confirm
ation of the Court, tho prpporly
hereinafter described, located iu
Town of Mocksville, Mockaville
Township, Davie County, ana
move particularly described as
follows;
1 'ot N. Main St. Lying West
of N. Main St., bounded by lands
of J. F. Hanes, Dr. R. P. Ander
son and Mrs. Ida G. Nail, Jacob
Stewart and Dr. E. P. Crawford,
containing about 4 acres more or
less. Said laiuTs conveyecF by
deed to Mary V, Lash from If. A.
Neely and wife Flora Neely, on
July 24, 1926, recorded in Book
30, page 4G0-461, Office of Regis
ter of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Dated this 8th day of Septem
ber, 1936.
JACOB STEWART
9 10 4t. Commissioner
North Carolina | In the Superior
Davie County j Court
Town of Mocksville
• Vs
Rufus Furches and wife, Free
love Furches, heirs at law of
Mollie Furches, dee’d. Bank of
Davie, Mortgagee, Davie County.
NOTICE OF COMMlSSlONJiiK’S
SALE
Under nnd by virtue of a
judgment made and entered in
the above-entitled cause in the
Superior Court of Davio County,
dated September 7th, 193G, to
satisfy said pudgment, the under
signed Commissioner will, on
the 10th day oJ! October, 1936, at
tho door of tho Davie County
Court House, in Mocksville, North
Carolina, sell at public auction to
Iho highest bidder for cash, sub
ject to the confirmation of tho
Court, tho property hereinafter
described, located in ' T'own of
Mocksvillo, Mocksville Township,
Davio County, and anore paiticul-
arly described as foUows:
Adjoining lands of Harry Ly
ons and others. Beginning at a
stone and runs East 2___deg.
Var 2.78 chains to a stake; thence
S. 20 dog. West 92 links to a
stake; thence W. 2 deg. Var. 92
links thence N. 88 deg. West 2.50
chains to a stake; thonce N, 2
cieg. Var, 00 links to tho begin
ning, Containing Vi aero moris'
or less. Said lands conveyed by
deed to M, S. Furches from 2nd
Colored Presbyterian Church, re
corded in Book 17, page 498, Of
fice of Register of Deeds of
Davie County, N. C.
Dated this 8th day of Septem
ber, 1936.
JACOB STEWART
9 10 4t. Commissioner
NOTICE OF COMMISSIONEK'»
SALE
North Carolina | In the Superior
Davie County | Court
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Floyd Carter, Admr. of J. L. Car
ter, dec’d, Mrs. Annie Carter,
widow, Floyd Carter, Travis Car
ter, Markland Carter and Hauaer
Carter, heirs at law of J. L. Car
ter, dei/d., L, E. Burton and U.
S. Jortjan, Adm’rs. of .T. G.
¡Peebles, dec’d,, mortgagee, Davio
County, A. A, Holleman, Trustee.
.31, 1920, recorded in OfHce of f'take; thence South 5 degrees 41 j gf Deeds, Davie County,
minutes West along the West
property line of S, F. Hutchins
1418 feet to a stone; thence South
70 degrees 15 miniltes East 176
feet to an iron stake on the west
side of the Cana Road; thence
along the North side of the Cana
Road the four following courses;
South 38 degrees 50 minutes'
West 484.6 feet. South 63 degrees
10 minutes West 488,8 feet. South
75 degrees 20 minute,'?. .West 110.8
feet, South 88 degrees 55 minutes
West 520 feet to an iron stake,
the place of begin.’iing, contain
ing 57.81 acres, and being known
f;nd described «.s T>ot No, 4 in
tho division of the Holman Farm
as sMown on said map recorded
in the office of tho Register of
Doodti of Davio County, North
Carolina,
Lot No, 5:
Be,i!inning at an iron stake,
which i:s >’orth 85 dcgroes 20
minutes West GGO feet from a
stone; which is the Northeast
corner of the Holmiin Farm, suid
corner'adjoining property of 0,
N. C. in Book 25, page 445.
Dated this 8th day o f Septem
ber, 1936.
JACOB STEWART
9 10 4t. Comnfissioner
North Carolina In tho Superior
i)avle County Court
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Mary V. Lash and husband, ''
H. Lash, Bankers Trust and Title
Ins. Co., subtrustee, Davie Coun
ty, B, B, Miller, Trustee, Ida B,
iieronneau, judgment, A. B, Sa
leeby, Trading as Saleeby Dis
tributing Co., Judgment, The
Ilflul Estate Co. 'IVustee, Crest-
wood Realty Corp., Eugene C.
Ward,. Trustee, Universal Liq. Co.
find Univei'sal Ijiijuidating Co,
NOTICE OF COMMISSIONEK'S
SALE
Under and by virtue of a judg
ment made and entered in tho
above-entitled cause in the Su
perior Court of Davie CoTinly,
dated September 7th, 1936, to
T. Boger and P. M- Pierce, at .a satisfy said judgment, the
braucU 025 feet to au elm; thence undersigned Commiasionev will,
South 71 uegreea 10 iiiiriuto.s Ea.st on the luth day of Octu-
11G5 feet to an iron stake; thence ber, 193G, at 12:00 o’clock
Under and by virtue of a judg
ment made and entered- in tho
above-entitled cause in the Su
perior Court of Davie County,
dated September 7th. 1930, to
satisfy said judgment, the
undersigned Commissioner will,
on the 10th day of Octo-
ber, 1936, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, at the door of the Davie
County Court Houso, in Mocks
ville, North Carolina, sell at pub
lic auction to the highest bidder
for cash, subject to the confirm
ation of the Court, the property
hoi-einafter described, located in
Town of Mocksville, Mocksvillo
Township, Davie County, and
more particularly described as
follows:
Adjoining lands of Wesley
Cartner and Alice Wilson. Be
ginning at a stone, S. E. Corner
of lot now owned by Wesley Cart
ner in North line of Wilson Ave.,
thence N. 15 deg. W. 200 ft. along
the line of lot No. G in plat of
lands of A,lice Wilson to a stone
or stake,' thence N. side of W il
son Ave,, thence along said Ave
nue N, 69 deg.lV. 100 ft. to the
beginning, being lot No. 6 in Mrs,
Alice J. Wilson plat. Said huuls
convoyed to J, L, Carter by deed
from A. V. Smith and wife, May
2, 1923, recorded in Book 27, page
G8, ofiice of Register of Deeds
of Davio County, N. C.
Dated this 8th day of Septem
ber, 193G,
JA,GOB STEV/ART
9 10 4t, Commissioner.
_ _ — _ — . ^ ,
m t. K, p. ANDEKSON
iDBNTIST
Anderson Building,
Mocksville, N, C,
Phone 60, Res, 37HI * # K< »f
.lAoOB STKWART
Attorney at Law
Mocksville, N. C,
(.HftcB 111 Southern Bank &. irui<t
Company building
Office phone.................................136
Sllvertowii
S u p e r**T ra c tio it
RETREADS
We hnve recently installed in our shop the latest improved 1937 American Retread Molds with Goodrich
Silvertown' Super-traction Tread Design, Have your
tires retreaded here and laugh nt ice, sleet, snow and
mud.
And Remember: It may cost a few cents more to have yonr tires retreaded in our more modern and up-to-date
shop but we guarantee that the quality of our work will more than make up for tho difference in price.
And Aiso Remember: “When better retreading equipment is made Haden will have it.”
USE OUR E-Z PAY PLAN
H ADEN'SInnes at Lee—IPhone 267' Innes at Lee—IPhone 267 !
T H E B IG W H A L E
55 Ft. Long — 68 Tons Wt.
COMING TO
MOCKSVILLE
ONE
D A Y
ONLY VVED-OCT-7
Located on 100 Ft. R. R. Car
SOUTHERN R, R. DEPOT
GENERAL
ADMISSION lOc
ЧЛП«*-,.
m o c k s v il l e ENTERPRISE, JVÌocksvillc. N. C„ Thùredav. October 1,
Д М В ШШтЕГ-O U R COM IC SECTION
ш т
Events in the Lives of Little Men
Hackman Turns Deicctive’*
By FLOYD GIBBONS,
T H E other night, boys and girls, I got myself into a line argument
with a bird who said there wasn’t any adventure any more. Or, to
be more accurate about it, this fellow said there wasn’t any more adventure in peace time.
He said that civilization had so caught up with the world that the
modern exploring trip was nothing but a ■ eut-and-dried business of hiring a buiich of natives to carry your baggage and then going for a walk in the woods.
He said that big game hunting' had degenerated into a sort o( game of hide-and-seek with a lame elephant on a practically fenced in leservatlon. Hi) seemed lo think I had a monolpoly on
ail the adventures because 1 was a war correspondent and got around to the spots where iigliting was going on.
■Weil, sir, I ’ve been to a couple of wars where I didn’t have anything more exciting happen to me than having a family of cooties move into the vacant iiat on my top floor. And on the other hand, I had one of tne toughest times in my life in peace-time taking a trip across the Sahara desert.
Taxi Driver's Life Is an Adventurous One.
That trip was just like the exploring jaunts that bird was talking about. A camel carried my baggage. A camel carried me too— whenever I wasn’t too doggone weak from heat and thirst to stay on the doggone brute. I’d rather go through six wars thnn take that trip across the Sahara again.
But all that is beside tito point. What I w.int to talk about is exploring, and big game hunting—and taxi driving. You know
wiien that bird was through with his spiel I said to liim: “Who cares about tho explorers and tlie big game huntersV Xhey’re
not such big potatoes in tiie adventuring business. Why a New
■Jfork taxi driver runs into more adventure in the coursc of a year than an explorer does in ten.”
And maybe it’s co-incidence, and maybe it’s fate. But two days later I reach into a pile of your letters on my .desk and out comes this yarn from taxi driver Andy Muscarciia, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Suspicious Looking Fare Hires Andy for Jaunt.
Andy tells us about on adventure that happened to him at four o’clock in the morning on March 2fi, 1934. Andy had his cab parlced
in front of Madison Square Garden when a young fellow hailed him
f f o t m u o M ®
® Q m / / m /
Break crisp cooked bacon left
over after breaidast Into potato soup. It Improves the flavor.
A cloth saturated with vinegar and rubbed over brick tiling will
make the tiling look like new.* « «IWhen preparing mustard add a
I drop ot salad oil to it while mix*' ing. Tills will greatly improve th# flavor.
After frosting cakes dip a knife in hot water and smooth over th»
frosting to make it glossy.
® Associated Newipapcri.— W N U SetTle«,
KEEPS HAIR NEAT
A little MoroUne-niblxd Into tlie hair m»ÍK»
combing easy and iteeps hair neatly In place.
The lOc (Ue contain* time ai muclt'u
the 5c «1«. Try 5t today. Desnand Motollne..
M O R O L IN E
■ SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JEUY
Shallow ManIt Is usually the shallow woman
who gets a man out of 'his depth.
n
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
— AND THE -Tr u c k ) , —Wll-l- B E Ai-ON GhV ,-,,ANV MINUTE-AS
5 0 0 M A S 1 S E E IT I'LL PUT O M
By Ted O'LoughImО II/ W«(t«rn Ktviptptr Unle*Errand of Mercv
"Come On,” tlio Fellow Said, “Hand Over Your Dough.”
ond told him to drive him to an address in Thirtieth street between Ninth and Tenth avenues.
Andy had had a good day that day—one of tiie best in weclcs.He had nineteen dollars and sixty-five cents on the cloclc and enough tips to malee it ail come to about twenty-two buclcs. Slaving that much money in his pocket at four a, in. made liim sort ot carcful. And besides, he didn't lllse tho loolts of tliis new job he was being handed, , '
In tho first place, he didn't like tho fellow's appearance, and in
the sccond place he knew that Thirtieth, between Ninth and Tenth
was no residential neighborhood. But a cab driver can't turn down
everybody who looks suspicious. He could lose half his fares that way So Andy took ■ a chance.
Passenger Turns Out to Be a "Stick-up” Guy.
Sure enough, as the cab neared its destination, Andy felt a gun
thrust against the back of his neck. A gruit voice ordered i^iin to stop
and get out of the cob. As Andy stepped to the sidewalk, the gun was thrust into his stomach. "Come on,” the follow said, ‘,'hand ovor your dough.”
"Go ahead and taice it,” said Andy. He figured if the fellow went through his pockets he might leave an opening and give him a ehanue to swing a haymaker. But the fellow was too smart for that, “tío I look like a sap”? ho said. “H.'tnd it over!”
Reluctantly, Andy passed over the twenty-two dollars. The bandit
shoved him into a hnllway and ordered him not to come out for ten minutes. Through the crack-like opening out the door Andy saw him get in the cab and drive away. Then he came out, ran back to Eighth avenue and called the police.
Sleuthing Cabbie Gets Plis Man!
Tlie bandit had made a clean getaway. The police didn’t find him.
Andy went back to the oilice and told his story. The company didn’t
charge him for^ the lost money, but still he wasn’t satisfied. That
same night he told his wife he was going to get the bird Who robbed him if it took him all the rest of his life.
The next day was a Monday. Audy was back at his stand with another cab, but he was paying less attention to hack-
driving than he was lo (ho faces of the people who passed by.All day Monday and ail day Tuesday he watched without
success. He did the same thing most of Wednesday night, with
no 1uci< either. Rut along about three in the morning he got a
sort of feeling that he was going to see his man. Sure enough—
while he was cruising on Eighth avenue near Fifty-flrst street, ho
spotted him crossing the street.
It was raining hard, but that didn’t stop Andy. He cruifsed along after the man till he saw a poiieeman. Andy told his story to the cop, and the pair of them went after the bandit. They grabbed him at Forty-ninth street, took him to the station house, and after a ten minute grilling he admitted the hold-up.
"Ho proved to be an ex-conviot on six years probation,” says Andy. "I felt pretty good about catching him. I guess it ju.st goes
to show that there isn’t such a lot of difference between a detective and a hackman.”©—WNUSurvlc*.
MÁ6ICSKIN
IIMOVES IRICKUS,IUCKHUDS Ш К '-RISTORIS «EAR, lOVElY SKIN
All ;oa do ii ibii; (1) At bedikm*
(prcad a tbin film of NAVISOhA Orenm over your faco—no tnaeiai^C, no rubbing. (2) Ii«ave on while Jtou
eloep. (3) Watch .daily Iwprovojaeat— usually in 6 to 10 dayi.you vrill MA » nmrvclous transfornuvtion. Fredde«,
blaolthciids difapjieat; dull coanesed •kin booomoe oroatny-white, aatin-. flmooth, adorablot l<!ino Tcanits poaitivO'
ly Runrnntcedwith NADINOIiA—teated and trusted for nearly two gonoratlon«.
Л11 toilet oountere, only 60e, Or writ« WATONOLA, Нож 40, Pnrin, Tenn.
Purposeless Speed
Too often we speed to mak* time in order to kill it. '
G aSt C a s A li
iSi€rTSm&p€asi^t
£ a ío r S l 0 e fi
“The gai on my atomaoh wa* so Ым1 I could not «at or tiatp. Evan my heart seemed la hurt. A frlen '
Toco ToucanOf many varieties, some more brilliant in coloring, the Toco Toucan is thought to be the largest.
Measuring from tip to stern about two feet, the schnozzle-Iike append-
takes up one-third of its length.
Three inches in width at the base
it seems in no way to discommode
or over-balance the bird. Even in
flight the head is thrown back. This
IS due to the lightness of this un- wieldly affair. The plumage is
»lack with touches of white on №roat, and rump; here and there 0 few feathers tinged witli yellow and red show through. The feet are 'loticsable with tlieir two toes in front and two behind.
Origin of Beer Making
The origin of beer making is lost in antiquity. Probably the ancient Egyptians were the first civilized
people to engage in brewing, and a barley wine or beer is believed
to have been known in that coun
try as early as 3,000 B. C, Herodotus ascribes the invention to the
goddess Isis, Ale or beer was never
used to any extent in Greece or
Italy, partly owing to the abundance
of wine there, but Xenophon men
tions it as being used among the
inhabitants of Armenia, and tha
Gauls were also acquainted with it
in early times. It was in common use in Germaiiy in, the time oi
Tacitus,
THE FEATHERHEADS By OabomeФ w«ii«m Ktwipaptr UnloK
PoM f KMOV/ W HY I
Vou VslANTA PRA<y
ME (iJ H ERE —
I F E E L .LIK E A
HE-EL—
Ì Í 'HELL, STO P ■
r ACTlNä- LIKE
A L O W ONie ^
HOVJ MASJV '
MORE ARE
4oa <SoiM<T
•fo T R y ?
T
First and Last
I OH, MUSH up—
•MO.KlS CPF
T H E SE f e e l .
G jiJiT e
RlisM T ГТТ
- 7 / , - - V ' ■'
M AYBE IT
(S’ THE
F=boT—
NOT T'HE
SHOE?
EMEN IF IT IS -
D O Ч ои чл/А'МТ
M E T o CjET ^
S H O E S П
VVELL/VtoZlT
U S ilA L L V
PC?-AND Л Г-Т ер?_
|4.
I D on't KMÖW WHY
IT I s; BUT E V E R Y
T IM H 1 t r v ONI
S ^ to E S — V O ii'R e ' THe om e t h a t
psated AdlerTka, Th* firat doas I Drouahl ms rellaf. Now>l sat as wish, sleep flna and never felt .-Mrs, Jas. Flllsr.Adlerlka aota an BOTH upper and lower bowels whils ordinary laxative* act on the lower bowel only. Adlsrlka plves your system a therouoh cleans« Ina, brlnalna out old, poiaonous matter that you would not helleve wa* in your ayatem and that has been onualna aa*Ealna, sour stomach, nervouaneas and eadachea for months.Dr. II. t, Shoul), JVaw York; fitttui "In aJillllan to Infillnat tiUonilr.s, AdUrllia grtatty rrdue«« baeterta tmtt eoton haetiH»** Qlvo your bowola a REAL offlonilnd with Ad?erlkn and boo how. good you feel. Ju9t ono spoonful rellove» QA« ond oonatipfttlon* Londino DruooiaU,
HeWon^tBe B A L D !
He uses Glover’s M«ngc Meclicin» followed by Glover's """ Medlisucd Soap for the ihiimpoo. ifYOUatciiU ict- ed with Baldpess, DancltufT j or lixccMivo Falling Hair, j ttopv^otryinB abouclr. Start us<nfiGi0vcr^(0(i«yandKeci> it. Sold a? ail Dmsfiists. OrhiveyourDaibcffiiveyo«Qlovci'sttcatmcntie^ulafly.
GLOVERS
7wei5idtNf
Humble CQrn
The heaviest ear of corn bends 11» head lowest.
W h e n Y o u F e e l S lu g g is h
(Constipated)
Taixo a dose or two of Blnck- DraugUt Feel fresh for a good day's work.
Work sooias easier, llfo pleasanter, when yon are renlly well—free fror» the bad feelings and dullness oftei» attending constlpotlon.For nearly a century, DIaok' Dranglit has helped to bring promptr refreshtng relief from constipation. Thousands of men and women rely on it. ’
BUCK-DRAUGHT
A GOOD LAXATIVE
|il
Ilf
40-31
BLACKM AN
STOCKanc/POULTRY MEDICINES Are Reliable
Blackmnn’s Medlcatet! lick- A-Brik
w Blackman's Stock Powder
Bv- Blaciimon's Cow Tonic B»- Blackman's Hoy Powder
ew Blackmnn's Poultry Tafalels
or- Blackman's Poultry Powder
Highft Quality—LoweitPrlca
Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back
BUY FROM YOUR DEALER
k f'
Ш ,
JIÍ
Jt
BIACKMAN STOCK MeuiCINE CO.
Chattanooga, Tocn.
ííbl
'Л
TAGE TEN THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
\ ш l-n The W E E K ’S NEW
A FEW POINTERS— His crack at world’!
heavyweight title postponed,. Max 'Schme-
llng’a concern till next'» summer Is mainte
nance of perfect condition. Here Charles I
Atlas, noted physlfcnl culturlst, gives him few!
“MISS AMERICA. OF 1936''—j>olnters before Max’s departure for Germany, I
Queen of beauties Is Rbse Ve-
fonlca Coyle,22'year-old college
graduate of Yeadon, Pa., v/ho Is
eho.wn enthroned after winning
the title or'>“Mlss .America of
1938."
NEW FALL ACCESSORIES—
A hat of black fur felt with a
short turned-up sailor brim, red-
wine gloves,.and a large black
kid purse are the acceasorlfu
selected by Jane Hamilton, pic
ture star, to be worn with a'
frock of hlack satin crepe.
LÍ.OYD .ÛÇO naEÎ AND' HITUEft
Sm t-H b w l# Lleyd flkiqrfl« '(MO.
Prim* M.lfiittar of B b u in,
f'R iU h ifu th rar, Adolf. H itler #■
---thji <>•<'"»•" CKaf*««»-•r Mtldanc« WtiM« they
eenferrtd гмепНу^;
9T POINT-FOOTB(ALL TEAIijl "
; t oA.i'ior—|"*Vu«,oi'uv» »»., atruinoei’U^.
.’eaptain of the U. 8, Military-Acad- \
' emy iroot^iM team '(left), and Coach
Q«r Oavldion preparing for the conv '
Ing fifotball le asin .— ——
igWIALE T<? BE EXHIRITED ..HERE WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7
"VVho hasn’t heard about the
big one that the fisherman did-
'a't bring home? 'W ell, someone
caught him at last. He’s proper-
ly named coiossua, weighing 68
tons iind is over 55’i‘set long and
has caused no end of comment in
cities where he has thus far made
a “personal” appearance on ..his
tr' ' ”*>nertal'tour.
Publisher M akes D enial O f
-Statement By W h ite House
.^ew York, Sept, 20.— William
Randolph Hearst tonight an
swered a White House statflment
wn.'ch referred to “a certaiii no-
................. lor’ous newspaper owner” as àt-
trhe general représentative for tempting to give the impression
th'e i-uiiiKa Whaling Com.pany i?
in Mocksville making arrange
ments with officials to bring to
tlie c.'iy thia tiniqiu! marine exhi
bit which features colosaus.
In addition to the • monster
whale, the specially,, built bridge ' per.s here entitled “A
Bteel railroad car carries many i the President/* said:
otiier interesting species of ma- "The President has
rine oddities, among which are
two giant Octopus, Pilot Fish,
Swordfish, thfi Seattle Sea Mon-
Ihut President Koosevelt passive
ly accepts the support of alien
organizations hostile to the
.\merican form of government.”
The publisher, in a statement
issued through Hearst newapa-
Reply to
issued a
statement through a (secretary.
He has not had the frankness
tu say lo'whom he refers in tho
ster, and the only traveling exhi- fitatement, nor has he had the ............. ...................... ..... ___
bit of live PeivKuins in A m e r ic a . |•‘^’“ cerity to state hia complaint these enemies of the Amer-
An added feature of exhibit is •'Accurately. system of government, and
"Nevertheleaa, a;nee Ins con- j,eat. to de-
«erve the support of all .letade Dtmo- fi,,Hi.runti\
must ‘be beaten, say.s^ BrowTier,”
Earl Browder ia the communist
party candidate fo President.
Mr. Heart’s statement, cabled
Erom Amsterdam, Holland, con
tinued:
iDenies Statement
"Wherefore, let mo say that I
have not stated at any timo
whether the President \willingly
or unwillingly received the sup-
])ort of the Karl Marx socialists
the Frankfurter radicals, com
munists and anarchists, the Tug-
well bolsheviks and the Richberg
revolutionists which conatitute
the bulk of'his following.
“I have simply sale', aiul shown
that he does rece.ve the support
Madame Sirwell and her ti'oupe
fleas. They are- - . glomerate „arty of socialists,
trained to ride bicycles, pull tiny communists and renegade Demo- ^^d destruotUve
uai^s, juggie,,
Di'H« iind tho
kick ' tiny foot-
prinia donna is a
cralfl haa conaistently, and ra
ther ridiculously, tiued to make
ele-
.^real fan dancer. AH of the fleas I me an issue in their muddled
have a t- - collar around their campaign, I think I am justified
necks-tu M /'.icli .s fastened a tiny assuming that I am the object
wire, so there is no danger of. of the statement, and tha I may
the leadir- .ady being carfled courteously endeavor to correct
liome by the spectators. 'Mr. Roosevelt's misstatements
...ne ..wini.i'ca foul i-aiiway car . and to set him right,”
will be placed Wednesday, Octo-; The White House statement re-
J,'er 7, on a ■Riding near Southern furred to was issued yeaterday
OLI) ROOSTER tíb'TS
LAUGH ON THIEVES
II. R, Depot and tht exhibit will
bo open to the public from noon
until 11 p. ra.
___________^___________
Cincinnati, 0., Sept, 24,— The
' iyj'iRev. Charles E. Coughlin attack-
''’'Uv' v t’l/li®'! communism tonight with anassertion that "the red flag has 1 he had been informed had
been uplifted in America; we appeared in print,
must stop, look and listen lest, V'® ^ew York American, and
disaster confront us.” /I««*'«* newspapers, todayPiibliahed an article headlined
Kinston, Sept. 29.— The roost-
pr was in a position to laugh to
day.
From Trenton cams word that
, n 1 •. when Carl Thigpen went to hisby Stephen 1. Ji^arly, presiden- (.jjickun house to turn the fowls
Hal secretary, and directly dem- discovered the four hens
ed tho passive acceptance of
such support by tho President.
Early signed the statement
and declined to amplify it, ex
cept to say the articles about
Subscribe to the Enterprise
had been stolen. The rooster, was!
a dejected looking bird. From
his neck hung a square of card
board on which was scribbled,
“How sad I am.”
The report aaid ev.Ulence point
ing at neighborhood youths was
iiiuiut and threo or four were ar
rested and convicted.
“Communists can join * in * ’'ЬЕТ US DO YOUR JOB WORK
supporting Rooso/elt; Landon ,-W E WiL>L DO IT RIGHT.
SMITH GROVE NEWS
Rov. II, C. Freeman preailhed
a very interast'ng sermon here
Sunday evening, using aa his
.subject "Tho Magnitude of our
office.” This service being rin
in.stallation service for /Church
School officera.
Mrs. S. B. Hendrix will bO
■hos.tess to tho Lou Foote Society
■jn vVednesday afternoon, Octo
berhe 7 th.
ihei'e \Vill be a chicken supper
with other good eats served by
the ladies of the church on Sat
urday evening, October the 10th
in thu Sunday School annex.
Everybody is extended a cordial
welcome. Proceeds wi.-^be used
tor the church.
The Philathea ' class meeting
ivill meet at the Church on Thurs
day evening, October the 8th a'c
I o'clock. Let all members be
present at this meeting as the
election of officers will take
place at thia time.
Relatives and friends of Mrs.
J. Marvin Smith gathered at her
home on Sunday Sept. the 27th
and gave her a surprise ibirthday
dinner, this being her 50th birth
day. ihose who enjoyed the day
with Mrs. Smith wore Mrs. 0. K ..
Allen and daughter, Martha
Ucece, of Farmington, Mrs. ,J. H.'
urahani, Ul (Jiuveiand, Mr. and
Mrs. Siieek libwden and’ children,
of'Advance, iVirs. i:i. C. Toague,
of Farmington, Mrs, B. L. Beiit-
ley, of i\iocksville, Mr. Buck
AJlen, ,of New York, Mr, and
Mrs. Joe Sm.th and little son,
jf Advance and Mr. and Mrs.
Silniei' Brewer, of Cana, Mrs.
¿inith receiyea many niice gifts!
All'left \yis'hiiig her many more
-lappy birthdiiya.
Several from, here’attended- the
sliower given, th^ parsoniige . at
x'Uimirigton by the Church mein-'
bei;s, on the charge on Saturday
afternoon,! Sept. the 26J;h, ,
Th6 many friends of; Miss Vic-,
«iiiiu. SliKKk will be glad to kno'.v
Ihnt 'shp. is__Efinu^ngL^iciJiy.^
DON’T FAIL^TO MAKE PAR-
DUE’S your headquarters while
visiting the Davie County Fair.
PAllDUE’S — JUS'l REC."ilYi:D
ibig lot of Ladie.-j Fall Hals,
all colors and styles. Wear
one of these Ho. tha Fair..
CASH PAID FOR CEDAR LOGS
and timber. For details write
Geo. C. Brown and Co. of N.
C., Greensboro, N; C. 9 lOtf
A NEW SliiPM BNT .OF NEW
Fall Dresses have''.just arriv
ed at Purdue’s. All the new
est styles and colors. Priced
from 98c to .?5.00, See these,
FOR SALE-i^COTTAGE ON SAL
isbury St., Mocksville, N. C.,
close in, 5 rooms, bath.— MVs,
K. P. Briidley. See J. D. P.
Campbell. 9 24 3t.
AUCTION SALE pf LIVESTOCK
Monday Noon, Oct. 5th, Court
House, Blar^k I’ui'cheron Stal
lion, 80 mcii'iths old, weighs
1260. Broke to harness. One
Gr(,'y Golding Porchcron 18
Thursday, October 1, 1936
months old. Both of the abovu
are sons of Hector. Owned by
S. Clay Williams, weighin;? ap
proximately 2000 pounds. Two
mule coltj from Percheron
Mares out of the Laliier Mam
mouth Jack. Ages 5 and half
months. All the above coUk
'were raised at the County
'Home farm from mares weigh
ing around 1300 pounds.— A.
M. Laird, Supt. County Homo,
L. M., Tutterow, Chairman
Board ‘ef County Com.mission-
ers, ' 9 24 2t.
MEN NEEDED TO
TRAIN i’OR
AIR, CONDITIONING
REFRIGERATION
Look ^ahead. Get out of the
small'salary rut. Plan to get
•your share’dn the fastest grow
ing industries in the country.
For consideration you should
be niecliankally inc.lined and
have fair education. ' For in
terview write giving age, phono
and present occupatifon.
iNtilities .Engineering Institute
404 N. Wells St. Chicago, 111.
sMEMSMKMaMKi!asiaaMEKiaiüisH2t3BiüiS00E5aaHS3aai!!iai:iiaiMiaií3sixisi.--’?2ixi5rí<jS!!'/r m ■ • , ■ . . и .
from .an appendicitis operation,,
, Mr. Sherrill Smith had . his
tonsils i-emoved last week at t'he
Baptist Hospital and is getting
'along nicely, his Irionds will be
glad to know. •'_____^____
' Mr. m M. Foster was the ïïin-
ner guest at the Home of Mrs. J.
ri'.'Foster Sunday, ■ :
Mii. and Mrs! Dèrinont Howard
and two children, of Clemmona,
spent Sunday af-tornoon with
¿^u■. and (Mrs. Ray Howard.'
TO CLE.4*N o f f CONCORD
CEAlE'l'EiJY SATllRDAY
Air who are- interusted in Con
cord cemetery, Diivie Charge,
pliiasQ meet early Saturday
morning, Get. 3rd 'to clean off
same. Bring tools to jvork with.
l!OB[IITSOII’Sp^r[IITIllZERS
Try Rokemko For Graiii 3-12-6
. (In White Cotton Bag^s)
For Sale By
c. c. s Anford sons CO.
' ' MOCKSVILLE', N. C. ' ^
COURTNEY CASH STORE
, ' • .COURTNEY, N. C.
i.:;i'и:CDVh[rdwr,Q£■;.03у
w
>ssS3S£иsca' '¿C!KISИ•JiIXi
нхнхнхнянхнянжнжнхнкнанкнхна^анхнкнвйхнаБНзоаонамжмзвмки
* к я
Bargains!
Ladies’ and Children’s
COATS at Bargain
Prices
Sweaters .................... 50c and up
Twin Sweaters .... $1.69 to ?2,9i
Hats ........................ 97c to ifl.49
Presses ,, ................ 50c to ¡¡>7.50
Cotton Suiting ........... 24c to 35c
Sheeting .................... SVaC per yd
Flour, 98 lbs ........................ $2.7B
Salt ............................................ 97c
100 lbs. S ugar........................ ?5.1o
Kenny Coffee, 1 lb. pkg...... 12c
I.oose Coffee ............................ 9c
Pink Salmon, 15c value ....... 11c
5c Matches ................................ 3c
5c, School Tablets ...................... 3c
Blue Bell Overalls, pair ....... 97o
Plenty Pants at Bargain Prices
[ handle Red Goose and Wolver
ine Shoes, and can fit the wholl
family; These shoes aro guaran
teed to give satisfaction. Buy
now and save monoy.
I havo plenty Collar Pads, Bri
dles. 1 set Harness worth $25.00
for 5'22.00. Mowers, Rakes and
Harrows at Bargain prices.
Plenty Live Stock. If you need a
pair of first class mules see me.
Yours for Bargains
J. fRANK HENDRIX
Mocksville, N. C.
BUSINESS LOCALS
PARDUE’S HAVE THE REPU-
tation of selling good cheap
s’hoGs and have just received
a shipment of new fall shoes
for the entire "amlly. Priced
to fit your pocket book.
We wish to announce that our
C O T T O N G IN
IS NOW OPEN
EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK^ ^ I
We will pay highest market price.
Bring your cotton to us.
G R E E N M IL L IN G c o l
> 'X H- a;
sH• X H X H XuяHa-HXH3H• sKfXHXMX• ’m o c k s v il l e . N. C.к • MÆHBIKiR^2ZMSIHI&KSMSHX»SI»32l»aSK]SIH2{KISMXHSI»a2HSi:i»RMSHX»iX!Ki&HS»&MS
It’s Not Too Soon To Think Of
COAL
With the thermometer bobbing above 90 every day It takes
a lot of imagination xo picture the way you are going to
feel aibout COAL October or Novemiber, but a 'good
imagination will save you a substantial amount of your
next winter’s fuel bill if you buy NOW.
Coal Will Be Much Higher
E ICE i FOEl
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
M r . C o tto n F a r m e r
We Are Now Prepared To Buy
Or Gin Your
We Will Pay Highest Market Price.
Come to see US before YOU SELL
We Appreciate Your Business
F o s te r a n d G r e e n
Near Sanford Motor Co.
Tire NEWSIEST NEWSPAPER IN DAVIE-THK BEST FOR THE SUBSCRIBER AND ADVERTISKIT
0a'H e County’s
Best Advertising
Medium Mocksville Read By The People
Who Are Able To
Buy
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
VOÍ.UME 68
- " —-------------------------- ___ MOCKSVILLE. N, C.. THURSbAY^^OCTOHER 8, 19.16 _ .___________ No 46
LEAF SALES СОШШШ HEAVY Г Ш о Ш Ш
M o re T h a n 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0
P o u n d s S o ld O n S e c o n d
D a y O f T h is S e a s o n
More than a million pounds ot
tobacco passed through Winston-
Salem warehouse Tue.«day In the
second day of the 1936-37 selling
season, bringing an average price
of $;l0.77 per hundredweight.
The break of 1,110,360 pounds
of Tuesday, added to Monday’s
sale, sent the two-day total for
the local market to 2,474,270
pounds.
Farmers received a total of
$230,561 for the week marketed
in Winston-Salem Tuesda:;^
The rush and bustle of Mon-
tla.v’3 opening sale was missing as
the market .settled down to the
even tenor of the season’s sell
ing and to the steadying influ
ence of the millions of pounds
yet to be sold.
Offerings Tuesday consisted of
the remaining first deliveries,
/■■iich v.’crc very much Hke the
The Corner
Cupboard Column
Edited by M. J. H.
tounecos solti Monday, the open
ing day, but with the lower
grades in noticeable predomin-
nnce. However, the tone of the
• niai'ket wns more decided and the
.letter grades appeared in strong
or demand, nccordiivg. to -^J__.'I'.
Booth, supervisor of sales.
Indications are' that today’s
•siilu.s will find the warehouse
flooi's practically cleared. Mi'.
Booth said, asserting that those
Ri'owor.s who choose to sell their
tobacco at this liiao will experi-
cncfi no difficulty or delay in do.
ing .so.
The average made Tuesday is
very good in view of the count-
lest.s pilos of common and non
descript tobaccos, Mr. Booth
said. His figures on the sales
are actual, accurate, and not
compiled .by estimate or approxi
mation.
Mr. Booth advised gro'Wers to
watch their tobacco and to en
deavor to prevent its getting into
too high order during the damp
Hcason that appears to be ap
proaching, pointing out that
prices are naturally better for
toibacco in good marketing order
on the day of sale.
i He predicted that, with the
progress of the selling season,
the average of th Winston-Salem
market will make its usual steady
seasonal advance.
Democratic Ciub Will
Meet Friday Night
, .1 I — .................. I . ,
The Davie County Democratic
will hold, a meeting at the
Moelt.sville High School Friday
iiiKht, October 7th at 8 o’clock.
Evoi'yono interested in the cause
please come and bring a friend.
Davie County Dem. Club
L. G. Sanford, Chairman,
V/HY You
tOOK LIKfT HER / sisrep,'
"VVlio die luoiild luiii. «'iili
mammii must begin.''
OCTOBER f 6— Submarine destroys eight
' l|L ships off Nantucket Light,—-m..-- 1910,
9-M arv*rd ColJtffic hoUic iti
first commcncemtnt. 1642
10—A n tw e r p smrenclcrs to
tho German army, 1914
11— Daughter# Amcricon Rev.
. elution rcceWc their char*
ter. 1B90
•12—Columbui sights land at
two in the morning. H92.
13—Texas citi^cns ratify »hcli constitution, J84S.
14— W illiam Penn, founder oi
Pennsylvania, born. 1M4©iVMt
“The leaves that carpet the
woodland,
The great brown oaks overhead,
The open burrs and the acorns,
The gold and blotches of red;
;And all on the fields and road
sides.
The aster and goldenrod,
And some people call it Autumn,
And some people call it God.”
(Rankin.)
Better Home Furniture
Co. Having Fall Show
The Better Hqmes Furniture
Co., located at 517 N. Liberty St.,
Winston-Salem, is now present
ing their Fall Display of furni
ture. Mr, B. 0. Disher, manager,
invites the people of Davie and
surrounding counties to visit
his .store and see the complete
line of home furnishings now on
display. No matter what you
need for the home in furniture,
They have it and at prices that
will please you. At this time
they extend a special invitation
to tho tobacco growers and their
families, whiie on the market in
Winston-Salem, to come to their
store and see their furniture.
They assure them a cordial wel
come, whether they buy or look.
O. E. S. Officals Here
If you were not at the Davie
County Fair, you missed seeing
many interesting exhibits, and
alao missed greeting numbers of
VdUr frlftlids. Tim wti.iCTfiiH iinri
An interesting ' event in Eas
tern Star circles was the first
' official visit of the' new Worthy
Grand Matron, Mrs. Minnie K.
Lewis, of Asheville, which she
made to Chapter 173 on Monday
evening. Other prominent of- I
v.Triod displays from the homes,
farms, schools and business
firms gave a fine bird’s eye view
of the lives and intoroats of the
people in this section of Pied
mont North Carolina. Since most
.oi_ xaiir_-time—vitts-.spont -i n— the-
Sewing .'Department, the impres-
.sions WG got wore largely from
the useful and attractive articles
shown thoro. Countorpanea, both
knitted and crocheted, tufted,
dmbi'oide'red'fi'iid ap'pllqued; then
the (luilts of niodorn and antique
design, with tho tiniest of stit
ches; crocheted and hooked rugs;
dresses, men’s shirts, children’s
garments, household linens, cro
cheted mats, and other needle
work that shovifld hours of pati
ent work, 'rhra there was the
Davie County WPA display of
neat dresses, overalla, infants’
clothing, rugs, and a handmade
bed with mattress and bedcloth
es, with othqr pieces of furniture
designed from material often
thrown away. In the 4-H booth
were also displayed furniture
cleverly made from crates and
boxe.s, dresses, lingerie and can
ned goods. The Davie County
schools put on fine exhibits, and
here were arranged miniature
schools, homes and farm-yarda
that every little child wanted to
play with. Other school displays
were health booklets and post
ers, scrapbooks on history, geo-
grap.'iy, music, birds, maps and
other drawings, bird-houses, aero
¿lane's, clay modeling, collections
of moths and butterflies, trees
identified, drosses and jars of
fruit and vegetables from the
“Home Ec”, nnd of special inter
est to us wore the v/oll-arranged
Indian relics, that remind one of
the first inhabitants of this re
gion. By tho entrance door was
a sturdy automobile made by lo
cal hoys, that attracted many a
child, though the sign said: “No
Riders.” Under the first arbor
were the home' and farm pro
ducts, !ind those were very good,
in spite of tho early drought. Tho
flowers wer<i unusually beautiful
and vory tastefully displayed,
and the collection of canned
goods, preserves aud .iellies.show
ed that the thrifty housekeepers
had been quite busy this summer.
Of courso tho cakes and candy
are always most tempting,
and the goldep pounds of
butter are proofs of much
careful preparation. Strings
of bright r?d peppers, huge green
onea, plump tomatoes, corn,
beans, peas, pumpkins, pears,
muscadines and other harvest
products mado a colorful display.
Tho Kappa Club had a very at
tractive booth, with many hand
made articles and nice .canned
goods, all arranged to advantage.
As we left the booth a neatly
made long-handled broom caught
(Continued on back page)
“fTcHTS W liu ivETe vib.iuia \v c. <3
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Moag, of
Greensboro, the former being
Worthy Grand Patron, Mrs. Hen
rietta Ketchie, District Deputy,
of Salisbury, and Mrs. 'Ruth
Powell, Grand Warder, also of
that city, besides aeveral other
guest.s from Salisbury. The Ma
sonic Hall was artistically de
corated with mixed .fall flowers,
and about 35 wore present, in
cluding members from Mocks-,
ville and Cooleemeo, After the
address by the Worthy Grand
Matron, Mrs. Lewis, and other
guests, the hostess chapter serv
ed delicious blocT? cream, cake
and salted nuts. Mrs. Florence
IDipniel is Worthy jVIatron of
Chapter 173, Order of the Eas
tern Star, and Mrs. Lewis was
her guest while here,
..................—.......................
Scoool Faculty To
Be Entertained
The members of the faculty of
the Mocksville schools will be
entertained by the Mattie Eaton
Auxiliary in the ladies’ parlor of
the Methodist Church, on Thurs
day evening at 8 o’clock. Mem
bers of the Auxiliary are given
a cordial invitation to attend
also.
William Stockton
Heads Textile
Training - School
Of interest here is a recent
article in The Raleigh News and
Observer, which tells of the vo
cational textile school for mill
workers, established by the Cal
laway Mills in LaGrange,-Geor
gia. William D. Stockton, for
merly of Moc[ksville, is at the
head/ of this unique establish
ment, which ia a new undertak
ing in the industrial South. In
this school the boya nnd girls of
the cotton mill villages who are
unable to attend college, are
here given the chance to receive
practical instruction under skill
ed supervisors. The buildings ia
well-equipped-, and 150 students
attend at a timo, having three
months of instruction in card
ing, spinning, finishing and weav
iiig. From five'to six hundred
gi’aduate in a year," and the per
sonnel department selects froin
these for regular work in the
mi)Jls. Mr, Stockton is the son
of Mrs, Ollie Stockton of this
place, a.nd waii a i?tude^t at
.State L'ollo(fe. Raleigh, from
L o c a l D e m o c r a ts O p e n
C a m p a ig n S a t. N ig h t
1919 to 1923. The.article stated
that Dean Thomas Nelson re-',
garded him as one of the best
students to attend State College,
His numbers of relatives 'and
friends will boglnd to know of
-hi.4-j;e.spoiiaiblc—pofiifeion-wft-lbtho
Callaway Mil la.
Aged Minister Dead
.viRov. Stanley Ma.v,. vonerablo
and beloved Baptist niiniater,
passed away at his homo in
Yadkin County last week, nt the
advanced age’of 101, He was a
consecrated and widely-known
minister, nnd also one of the
oldest Confederate veterans ih
North Carolina, 'I’he funeral
was hold at Oak Ridge Baptist
Church, near Courtney, on Sat
urday afternoon, and about 2,000
•attended the last rites, with sev
eral ministers officiating. Among
those going from'here were Rev,
E, W, Turner,, Mrs. E, P, Foster,
Mr. N* T, Foster,and Misses
Sadie Mae and Ruth Foster, Mr.-
Foster waa a nephew by mar
riage of Rev, Mr. May.
Sterchi'S Furniture
Store To Open In
Salisbiiry Oct. 14
Sterchi’s, Well-known furniture
dealers, will open for business in
Salisbury, Wednesday, October
14th, their ' opeiiing hours being
2:30 to 6:30 and 7:30 to 9:30 p, m,
Sterchi’s comes to Salisbury,
not as a new firm, but well-
known to the people far and
wide. They, extend the people
of this section a special invita
tion to attend their opening and
look over their complete line of
home furnishinjrs.
, Hon. Walter “Pete” Murphy
will address the voters of, th'ecounty at Farmington School
Building, Saturday night, Octo
ber 10, 1936, at eight o’cTock,
The voters of Davie -will re
call with much pleasure the
splendid and effective address
of Murphy nt Farmington during
tho campaign of 1932. Diirinig
the current campaign he has
ibeen heard'by huge crowd, so
Chairman J. B. Cain is expect-
ihg a large gathering of people
nt Farminigton Saturday night.
DR. lO N G MOVING OFFICE
'Dr. W. ,M, Long, who has had
offices in the Sanford Buildingi
j is moving in the . near future-
into the front lower floor, of tho ,
Mike Bollinger of Acme, Col
umbus County, says the moat
valuable tree on his farm is the
chinquapin. He has over an acre
in theae trees.
M ocksville School New s
Senior Clnsa News
Organization of the Senior
Class took place September 24th
with the following officers being
elected: '
President ............ .Too F, Stroud
Vice-President Mary E, Smoot
Soc.-Trona....... Margaret Daniel
The Senior Clas.'f has thirty-
two members, ono of tjie largest
enrollments in tho history of ouf
school, a\nd we hope that this
spri\ig everyone will receive his
diploma. Seven of the members
of this class wore selected for
the National Honorary Beta
Club. They are: Goraldiiio-
Ijames, Ruby Collette, Doris La
gle, Cornelia Hendricks, Myrtle
Mara, Margaret Daniel and Billy
Angell.
Sophomore Ijjfews
The Sophomores have elected
their class officers which are as
follows:
President, Mary Alice Binkley!
Vioo-Prasident, Robert Hendrix;
Treasurer, John Larew; Secre
tary, Lester Craven.
Sophomore Home Room No. 1
has electnd the follnwimg offic
ers: President, Jack Sanford;
Vice-President, Wayne Ferebee;
Secretary, Edry Greene; Trea
surer, Lois Hondren.
ThO' Home Room program
Thursday opened w;th a song,
“Aniorica the Beautiful.” The
AN APPEALING APPEAU
a a » ’
The Parent-Tcacher associa-
tionT'of'the city wiii cbnducTIT"?*^!’? ’^tag day Saturday as they seek building. Carpenter work is
•to raise $560 with which to carry ami Dr. I^ong’s
on their program for helping un- tmd office will soon be in
dernourished •'•children in the readiness, .
city schools this iwintor. 'nAlRV I'-nu-i-i v
'I'l'e aasociiitlQniUn-ywirs-pnst-i—have carried".on ;their work with RODUCING COW
limited funds, and through in- ,---------' '
divuii.al ofl’ort. This yoar, they ' The advancing cost of dairy
are pooling their efforts, will menna that only good pro-
maku oiiu campaign for the en- flucing cowa will pay the dairy-
^t.ro yoar,..und 'bplievo' thovi^es- man ,a profit this Winter.' .
ponao from tho public will be auf j Low producers will bo ;ih un-' '
ficient to meet their nedea, necessary expense and they,
The $500 sought ought to be should be sent' to the butcher,
quickly given. ¡D.ollars, dimes, sa'd .Tohn A. Arcv. extension
quarters, and even a few fi^e dairy speialist at State Colloge.
dollar bills, will do tremendous | Consequently, ho added, this is
work. Tho funds will be appor- tho logical time to improve the
t.'oned to the schools 'according average quality of the herd by
to needs. culling out inferior animals.
A survey made of present con- There is no reason for keeping
ditions shows that 150 children them,
in the'five white schools of the The price of dairy feedto in
city are in^need of immediate North' Carolina haa risen more
assistance.. These children do 35 per cent since June 1, he
not receive sufficient nourish- pointed out, and there is .possi-
ment, hence they are not phy§i- ''*y ®tlli a further increase as
cally able to carry on their school a result of the roid-weatern
activities. They are alao fit drought during the past summer.
subjects for illnesa and 'disease,
and unless their little bodies are
Arey also stated on many .dairy
farms it is advisable to ;grow
class was then led in prayer,
“Imngino Fiftj' Year.'; from Now”
was read by Edry Greene and a
poem by Helen Miller. Julia
Mae Brown furnished the чре-
cial music. This program ^vas
ai'rangod by Lois. Hondren nnd
Edry Greene.
'Wo regret to learn that Jack
Sanford waa injured while rid
ing hia bicycle. Ho is resting
comfortably in Long’s Sanator
ium in Statesville.I
Organisation of the National
Honorary Reta Club
A National Honorary Beta
Club has been organized in the
Mocksville High School. This
clujb consists of twelve members
from 'ЧЬа"10th and 11th grades.'
The members were selected by
the faculty because of their out
standing character and scholar
ship qualifications. The members
are as follows: Margaret Daniel,
Cornelia Hendricks, Geraldine
Ijames, Ruby Collette, Myrtle
Mars, Doria Lagle, Billy Angell,
Louise Hethcox, Dorothy Smith,
Louise Ijames, Gertrude Moore,
and Claire,Wall. The following
officers have been elected; Pres,
Cornelia Hendlricks; Vice-Pres,,
Louise Hothcox; Sec., Claire
W all; Treas., Geraldine Ijames,
and Sponsor, Professor F, N.
Shearouse. This club will meet
once a month.
strengthened, many of them will »’«y« «« i'? summersuffer much before the year is hays to insure an adequate sup-
ended. With the coming of cold throughout the year.^Winter
weather, the number in need of hays are not affected by dry
aid will be increased, it is a cer-, weather as are those grown in
tainty, summer.
Through' arrangements with, recommends that tho fol-
the school cafeterias, those needy lowing mixture for winter hay
youngsters are given a* glass of |s’“>J‘'id bif aown diuing the early
rich milk and a food plate at Ot«bei; on well fertilized
Ihe midday rece,"!«, The work is
carried on sympathetically so I Two bushels of winter oats,
that the children receiving t h i s "»e bushel of beardless barley,
aid are never embarrassed, nor
are other children .'iwnre of the
activity. Yet, the little tots re-
one-half bushel of beardless
wheat, and either 20 pounds of
Austrian winter peaa or 15
coivo noodtd ’nourishment, , and P®“"
e t . “ grrsr
pi- s r ° ‘'"5per child for this program, and „=
we know of few places mhere one
3an do more real charity than by
contributing to ' thia activity.
There is no Rost attached to
the program; no overhead or
cereals are in the milk stage, as
the hay cut at that time will be
of better qualify than/ tliijit cut
when the crop is more mature. ’
Permanent pastures, can also
be seeded in most pai’ts of the
£ 5 ?oT;S .« v » 1„
who need it most.
Get a tag Saturday, and be
proud that you have one.
Make the campaign workers
proud thnt you have one by do
nating as generously as you can.
Large contributions will be wel
comed, but everyone is urged to
add aomeyiijig to th/. worthy
work, be the sum large or small.
— Salisbury Post, t
Guilford farmers have made re-
que.Mts for ovur 200 acres of land
to bo sub-soiled by the terracing Comics, page ........................ 9
outfit. ' !■ , ' i
circular No, 202, which may be
secured free fiorn the agricultur
al editor at Stnte College, Ra
leigh,
* IN THIS ISSUE* *
* News, page ....................... 1 *
Local News, page 1 *
^ Pictorial News, page ....... .2 *
* Editorials, page ......... 4
* Society Nows, page ........... 5 *
Sunday School Lesson, p. 6 *
Floyd Gibbons, pago ....... 9 *
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THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE, Mocltsviilc. N. C., Thursday, October 8, 1936
Scenes and Persons in tlie Current News
1—Ex-Queen Victoria of Spain in New York loolcing niter lior son, Count Covadonga, wlio is afflicted with
haemophilia, 2—Members of the Coldstream Guards, who volunteered for service in Palestine, on their way
to take ship to that country. 3—Pickets in tho lettuce workers’ strike nt Salinas, Calif., routed by tear gas
used by tho state highway police.
Keeps Eagle Eye on Penn Gridsters “INFANT TN POLITICS”
Ш ’» щ i
um m~ •fimmmmm!' * t-j
IW mmt
Something new in football fans is this falcon, “Blue Beauty,” sliown
with its owner, Alva Nye, of Chevy Ciiase, D. C., at a workout of tlie
University of Pennsylvania grid squad. Nye, who is a regular of tho
varsity squad, rai,ses the falcons for n hobby. This one will be seen
on the bench throughout the coming season.
Dean John R. Murdock of the Ari
zona Stnte Tcachers collego at
Tompe, Ariz., n self-styled, "iufant in politics," who defeated/eleven
Democrntic candidates for tho
state’s long congressional seat. His
nomination is considered tanta
mount to election.
JULIANA’S FIANCE , Two Big Ones Escaped, Says Hoover
Prince Bernard Zur Lippe-Biester-
feld of Germany, whose engagement
to Princess Juliana of Holland was
announced recently.
Still amiiing over iiii» angling sucuuati, "former President Herbert
Hoover talks over his fish and things with Lawrence Richey (left), his
former secretary, and Arnold E. Rattray after their cruise in Block
Island sound. In the four-hour fishing expedition Mr. Hoover and his
party hooked five good-sized bluefish—with two of the largest escaping
capture.
Barcelona Seminary to Be Popular University
Members of the Iberian Anart'hist federation disniantling the ancitint Seminary of Barcelona prepara
tory to converting the establishment into a university oi the Popular party.
Communist Cry
Stirs Up Heat
Real Issues of,
Campaign Turned
Aside; G. 0. P. Has
Nothing to Offer
By EARL GODWIN
W ASHINGTON. — As tho
campaign warms, there is less light and more heat,
and everyone got hot over
the charge that Roosevelt was a
communist. That whisper has been
going round and round among the
stock brokers and society folks, but
it comes out now in tlie political
debate; and it has the effect of turn
ing the real issues aside.
Hoosevelt is just ns Am ericw as
the Stars and Sttipes. In fact there
is a virility to his Americanism
that shines out.even more than that;
of some of the old timers. Any
communist who votes for Roosevelt
is voting for the best man, but he
is not voting for a President who
will compromise with American
ideals.
Progressive ideas are always
called radical. When the elder La
Follette started his progressive ca
reer which startled the industrialists, he was assailed by the old
guard as a menace to the United States; and yet out of the 35 major
industrial, social and tax reforms
that started with the elder La Fol-
lette, 32 have been written into the
law of the land. Men were called
radicals once for advocating pub
lic education—Theodore Roosevelt was tho object of a Wall street cam
paign of defamation. They said he
was a dangerous radical because of
some of the wild men who voted for
him. His answer was that there is
a lunatic fringe to every reform
movement, In this campaign there
is really no reason why political
lunatics should vote for Roosevelt
as they can locate their own kind
in any one of three or four minority
parties, such as the Lemke party,
the Socialist party or Communist
party.
All this agitation about commu
nism arises out' ot the fact that tiie
I.andon-Knox campaign has been
.largely a name calling aft'air with
out promise of a program from the
Republican party. That’s the way
the G. O. P. has so far impressed
the mass of common people who
JiavBJica!:x]_tliciiLJdol_EQosoAtcU._li(iT..
rated, but 'they nre still listenirfg
to hear what Landon and Knox can
do that will bo bettor for them' than,
that , which Roosevelt has already
done . . The masses of folks
saw the hungry fed; saw jobless
men put to work; saw factories re
open and rnon go to work at better
wages than boforo; saw the banks
reopen with insured bank accounts;
saw millions of families saved from
mortgage eviction—and they won
der what it is that Messrs. Landon
and Knox aro finding fault vvith.
Actually tho Republican party
does not оП'ог nny precise princi
ples of government at tills stage.
It seems much more interested in
damaging the reputation of the ad
ministration than in educating tho
country in that "good government”
of which tiiey speak so feelingly—
Theirs has been a mud throwing
campaign, and it makes their head
men so mad thoy can’t see straight
whon Roosevelt calmly goes ahead
about the business of running the
United States, apparently taking no
notice of what his opponents are
saying about him. Of course, a-
President con act, while all a candi
date can do is to promise; but when
you have modest candidate Landon
fumbling around for n spiech that
will not commit him to anything;,
and vice presidential candidate
Knox roaring up and down the land like a bull in a china shop—and
accomplishing no more than that
—When you have Chairman John
Hamilton who apparently imagines
all wisdom will die with him—you
have a pretty irick to educate the
mass of voters in anything at all! I
have read all the. speeches I could
get from nil three of. these Head
Republicans—but trying to patch
them together into a plan of govern
ment is beyond me,
Knox Surprises.
Colonel Knox furnishes many sur-
р. ises in this campaign—He sur
prised many of us when he en
dorsed the idea of social security
and old age pensions and jobless in
surance, because Knox is' the prin
cipal representative of the bid guard in the campaign, and the old guard
has consistently looked 'On social
sjcurity, old age pensions and in
surance against a jobless state as
completely communistic. So when
the colonel told a California audi
ence thut these things v/ere OK
with him it wns surprising, until
you realized that he was talking to
California poopio who are apparent
ly a hundred per cent sold on b if
ger and bettor old nge pensions.
And to people in tho southwest
who have had tho deserts watered
by federal reclamation project.«!, and
who have seen so much benefit
from federal public work,4, the colonel brings the assuring m^is-
sage that his party does not want
to hamper relief and cut oil public
works. In New York the colonel
and his party sot afoot a whirlwind
of propaganda nnd auubu iiguMml nil
these things—relief, social security
and public works. But in the urea
where relief, social security nnd
public works nro a hundred per
cent favored, tha colonel promises
to continue them all with bigger
and better attributes—nnd at the
same time reduce taxation, curtail
expenses and balance tho budget. The old fashioned medicine man
himself couldn’t do a bettor job at selling a bottle that would cure
hoarseness or remove warts, which
ever might be required.
Something for Nothing.
The more I read and hear about .the Landon farm program the more
it all seems io me like the old medicine man’s gag of ‘‘something for
nothing.” It is impossible for me
to understand how Landon can give
us the tremendous cash benefits he
promises; and at the same time re
duce taxes and balance the budget—
In fact I think the Governor is
talking through his hat.
The Republicans have told the city iollcs that food costs are high
because of the cash paid by the
federel governnnent to the fnrmers;
they indicate they will put a stop to
nil thnt when Governor Landon Is
elected. That’s a good gag in the
city; it makes unthinking millions
really believe that the cost of living
will decrease tremendously if Lan
don Is elected. Everybody will havo
a job when Landon is in the White
House; money will flow freely; ond
living will cost practically nothing!
Well, that doesn’t go well with
farm leaders; so Governor Landon
at Dps Moines goes through an
amazing performance which can be
likened to a magician maldng rapid
passes to dazzle the audience and
then bringing a rabbit out of the
hat. In fact Landon promises that he would give everything that Roose
velt has given the farmers; drouth
relief; seed loans; he would give
crop Insurance too; he wlll conserve the soil to a fare-ye-well—And he’s
going to give the farmers a sub
sidy; the same subsidy which his
party repudiated and rejected for
years; but this time it's actually'
going to be handed around in cash.
Every farmer with a family type
farm is going to ' havo a wad of
federal cash which will oilset the
ruination of those awful surpluses which the farm leaders talk about.
No largo commercial farms can
have those surpluses. That sounds
good until it reaches New Yorlc
whore many commercial farms are
owned by insurance companies ¡.and
wnon they hear about It In Wall
street, I fear that Governor Lan
don will he rebuked. Because, al
though Wall street doesn't like the
Idea of doing anything with farm
ers except milk them dry, Wall
street occasionally buys a farm of
Its own and wants to get all tho
federal subsidy that’s being handed
“'rouncfi
To anyone who Is looking for good
sound philosophy of government and a plan to do something for agricul
ture, the whole show is sickening.
Landon’s PromI.sos.
Practically every promise Lan
don makes to farmers has been
lifted bodily from the Roosevelt pro
gram, yet Landon has the nerve to say that a.fter nearly four years
the country is still without a settled
policy for agriculture. Farmers
¡¡now that for twelve years they suf
fered, nnd that they began to im
prove their lot' when Roosevelt took
ofHce; when Honry Wallace began
to operate, and when congress en
acted its famous series of New Deal
farm laws. Farmers know the dif
ference between their four billion
dollar, income in 1032 and their eight
billion dollar income this year;
I'he Progressives.
The progressive loaders who mot
in Chicago in September and en
dorsed Roosevelt could easily elect
London if they had swung that way.
The progressive bloc in congress,
whose leaders are such men as
Norris of Nebraska, La Follette of
Wisconsin, Maverick of Texas, rep
resents literally millions of votes;
and inasmuch as many of their fol
lowers aro nominally Republicans, this progressive consolidation for Roosevelt is vastly weightier than
the much vaunted “take-a-walk”
Democrats of the conservative
stratum.
Progressive politics means that
section of pi'blio life where human rights precede property rights with
out going insar.ft about it, I think
Senator Norris of Nebraska hit the
nail squarely when he said “Roose
velt is the only President since ills
illustrious namesake whose heart
beats in sympathy with the common
m an"—The progressives who met to
endorse Roo.sevelt represent men
who have been fighting corporation
interests in behalf of the ordinary
citizen; who have been working for
better industrial conditions and
wages, who have fought child la
bor; farm leaders who refuse to be
catspaws for industrial high tarill
schemes; labor leaders and many
others of that general class.
Noticeable among labor groups
wore’ mcn from the four railroad
brotherhoods, ono of the most pow
erful organizations in the country
and one which has steadfastly
turned toward the progressive can
didate whoever he has been. To
those men tho Roosevelt fight is
simply one long battle against cor
porate interests which have worked
in the dark In throttle the advancing
cause of tho worker. Interesting
^nlao was tho presence of Senator
Benson and Governor Peterson of iwinnofiotn, speaking for the Farm
er-Labor party,
Tho progressive conference wns
probably moro completely repre-
B«ntniivo of the average working
man nnd woman and tiie average
farm dwollor than any conference
held in /«iveral years,(('J Weilfr« Newspaper Union.
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. Mocksvilíc. N. С.. Thursday, October 8, 1936
Ш OTERFUL CflM
I t s W d f o r m e. t o ^ t l
a.i\d U n it
O r o p cndlftsj
згъ.п\з.
I ’d r b ,t b e ,r s it In
id l e n t s a
J u s t
d re n u m * .
H a n d s o m e C lo t h Is
Q u ic k ly Сгр<сЬе1есЗ
Here’s Fun for you—and Beauty
■ for your dinner or tea tnble— in a
I lacy pattern which you can cro- IchDt so Gasil> of string. It won’t
I take you enyItlic "sample’’ square design, on
¡which all the others его based.
WNU Sorvlo.,
M o n e y D estroyed
When Uncle Sam’s paper щм
oy becomes worn anc’ badly sol'
it is returned to the Treasu
where it is destroyed and brlpl
new bills issued in Its place
all denominations were thoro'ujhJ ly mixed together beforo ЬеЫ
tossed in the macerator each Ы
of money destroyed would coniaW
approximately 690,000 one-doUi
bills, 190,000 fives, 130,000 teul
60,000 twenties, 20,000 twos and в
more than 10,000 fifties and hlj]
er denominations, which provi
that the larger denominationj i not wear out во quickly, хьЗ
twenties, fifties and larger denoij
iilntions do not circulute will nearly as much velocity as
ones, fives and even the ten:
Pathfinder Magazine.
Somothlni' Amis.4
In going home from the parly, a
your wife says never о word, l
man breaks tho stillncs3 wjnj
"What inexcusable social
have I committed now?"
Beware Coughs
from common colds
That Hang On
No matter how many mcdlclntil you have tried for your cough, cheiil cold or bronchial Irritation, you can I get reliof now with Crcomulsloi Borioua trouble may bo Ijrowlns ond vntl CfXnnofc nfforcl to tnk'i n CllSK! ^ th anything less than Crcomul- Blon, which coos rlBhfc to tlio seal of tho trouble to aid nature lo soothe and heal tho Inflamed mcm< branes ns tho вегт-lndon phlegm is loosened and expelled.Even If other remedies hava fnlled. don’t bo dlscouraEccl, yout druBnist b authorized to nunrantct Oreomulslon nnd to refund you monoy If you aro not satisfied wltl ■ results i'rdmntho very lirsb TStlL Get Oreomulslon right now. (AdvJ
Pattern 5193
’rho Fcellnii Witliln
It is dlffioult to mako a ma
miserable while he feels ho
worthy of himself and cln.Ln
kindred to tho great God whi
made him.—Abraham Lincoln.
MymXERADWSED ME TO.II.
■My banUcr itaTO d i Bome foni uilvkowbea he tolti nio he caifWi roll of 'J’uiiii la b I pocket alt (Ito tiene. Il JUlt Un't «»Oli buil- neai to bo Imthtrtd wlth ocid Indiitcìtiofl. lineo TUMS Ila« b«B dlicotered."
ind to crochet a goodly number of
iquares. When you’ve enough, Join
thnm to make a beautlfiil tabl*
cloth, bedspread, dresser scarf or
pillow cover. Then sit back and
wait for compliments I
In pattern 5193 you will find
complete Instructions for. making
[the square shown; an illustration
I of it, of the stitches needed (
material requirements.
To obtain this pattern send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coini
Sreferre'd) to The Sewing Circla
;ousehold Arts Dept., 259 W.
I Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.
Write plainly pattern number,
your name and address,
|'^MrLE5Ä
Encouraging
Proud Mother — And what do
I ¡fou think of our littlo Frank as
I I pianist?
Professor—^Well, he has a nlo*
I way of closing the lid.
Pop Was “It"
Teacher—Name tho seven woiv-
ders of the world.Johnny — I only know one of
thorn nnd that was papa when h*
was a little boy.
An Iinprovomont
"You are pretty dirty, Mary,”
laid tho master.to his maid.
. ijheJjkishfid.----------------
"Yes, sir, but I ’m more pretty
when I’m clean,” she said.
Smart Boy -
Teacher—Tom, how much doog
I twelve-pound turkey weigh7
Tom—I dunno.
Teacher—Well, what time doe§
the nine o’clock train leave?
Tom—Nine o’clock.
Teacher — That’s right. Now,
how much does a twelve-pound
turkey weigh?Tom—Oh, now I catch on —nin*
pounds.
n m iE f
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makes ugly itchy
PIMPLES DISAPPEAR
IN 3 WEEK
Strength During
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Strength is extra-important for
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In such cases, Onrdul hns proved holpful to mnny women. It Increases the appetite and aids diges
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AU Too True
Tho reckless driver is neve»
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4 tis 's -------к— i-r
R EE LEEFsays
C aiM u U ite
it d U a r e á .
N EU RA LG IC P A IN
quicke^becauie
J Ù . lU ^ u id ..,
ALREADY DISSOLVED*
‘‘Disagreeable surface
nnd brlgiit red patches bro*'“ " on my face and forcheatl. i**
itched nnd my appenrancc ntf
mo misernble. I tried s“/ ' ointments to no avail. Then IP
chased some Cuticura SonP o
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complexion wns clear and sm
ngain," (S/dnocO Miss S, For'® 959 Worcester Ave,, Pasndc
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“Cuticura*; Dept, 33,Mass,—Adv.
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'The Safe Lnxátívi?'For eONSTlPATrON
AND INDICiSTIObt
THE STORY OF A FAMOUS FEUD •
By E LM O SCOTT Vy^ATSON
É PEAK of a feud and one naturally thinks of one of those
i fierce family vendettas that have made notorious certain
J sections of the mountain country in West Virginia, Ten-
Jnessce or Kentuclcy. Yet the soil of the trans-Missouri
I West as well as that of the East in times past has been
jdycd red with some of the bitterest feuds in American
‘ history.
In the West most of these feuds were “range wars"— fights be
tween two factions for control of desirable grazing country for their
herds or (locks— rather than internecine family confligts. Outstand
ing among them were the Lincoln County war in New Mexico in
tiic early eighties, and the Johnson County war, or so-called "Rustler
war,” in Wyoming in 1892. But to Arizona goes the distinction of
having a civil conflict in which was combined both a family vendetta
as fierce as any ever carried on among the mountaineers of the East
and a ‘‘range war” as bloody as any ever staged on the plains or in
the mountains of the West. And, of all places, this feud was carried
on in a locality known as Pleasant Valley!
If you have over read Zane
Grey's “To the Last Man” or
Dane Coolidge’s "The Man lCill-
ers,” you have caught glimpses
of the Pleasant Valley war even
though neither novel follows the
feud in detnll ^ nor pretends to
give an historically nccurate ac
count of It. But the war hns Its
historinn — Earle R. l?orrest,
whose book "Arizona's Dark and
Bloody Ground,” published re-
COMMODORE P. OWENS
cently by tho Cnxton Printers. Ltd. of Cnldwell, Idnho, is tho
first attempt to toll the whole story of that dark page in the annals of the Soutiiwest, In the
preface Mr. Forrest snys:
"The Pleasant Valley vendetta
ihal swept through the Tonto
Basin country in CcHitral Ari
zona during the latter 1880’s
was one of the most san
guinary and bitter range
feuds tho old West aver
knew. Its ferocity and hatreds
wore rivaled only by the bloody battles and as.sassinatlons of
the Lincoln county war in New
Mexico ten years boforo, but
It is doubtful, oven with all its
terrorism, if tho number of-
killed thore equaled the casu
alties in Pleasant Valley. Both
were born of blood feuds, and
both were fought in defiance of
the law of the land until they
burned themselves out after
most of tho participants had
cither been killed or had grown
weary of strife. Even the well-
known Hatfield - IHcCoy feud
that held the West Virginia and
Kontucky mountains under a
reign of terror for almost twen
ty years did not surpass tho
lifelong hatreds born of tho
Pleasant Valley war.”
The family element in this feud
wns iurnished by the Tewksburys
nnd tho Gruliums, the chief op
ponents in the war. But otiiers
worn drnwn Into it, some by
choice nnd some by force of cir
cumstances over which tl’.ey
had no control. For in this
confiict there were no neu
tralsAmong the others who were
dragged Into it or voluntarily
took up arms were several men
already noted, or soon to be no
torious, in the annals of the Wild
West, There wns Tom Pickett,
who had been a “wnrrlor" with
Billy the Kid in the Lincoln
County war in Nev/ Mexico but
who was then a cowboy for the
famous Hash Knife outfit. There
was Chnrley Duchet, frontiers
man and a gunfighter in tiie wild
days of Dodge City, Kan.
And there was the famous Tom
Horn, scout and packer in tiie
Apache campaigns, later a stock
detective on the Wyoming ranges
and destined to be the central
figure in one of the most baiiiing murder mysteries In the history
of tho West.
A Wild West Sheriff,-
Among the law officers who
tried unsuccessfully to quell the feud was the famous Comiriodore
Perry Owens, the long - haired
sheriff of Apnche county, a bizarre figure who might have stepped out of the pages of a
dime novel ‘‘thriller’’ and who,
during the course of the feud,
was the survivor of ono of the
most amazing gunfighta In the
history of the Old West.* And these were only a few of
the antagonists in a war waged
with a ferocity and ruthlessness
almost unpnralleled In the his
tory of the West; Before ,it was ended one family, the' Grahams, was completely wiped out and of
their allies, the Blevans, there
was only one survivor among the
father and flve sons. Of the three
Tewksbury brothers, one was
killed during the war, one died
a natural death nnd the third,
who stood trial for tho murder of
the last Graham, lived on to
become known ns tho hero of
Znne Grey’s novel and the "last
man of the Pleassnt Valley war.”
Three Half-Breed Sons.
The fierceness of the vendetta
may be attributed in pnrt to the
chnracter of one of the families involved in it. For the Tewksburys were half-white and half-
Indinn, the sons of John D.
Tewksbury, Sr., a nntlvo of Bos
ton who went to California in the
dnys of the gold rushes, settled
In Humboldt county and there
married an Indian woman. She
became the mother of three sons,
John, James nnd Edwin, wlio
hnd grown to young mnnhood
when the older Tewks’oury set
tled in Plensnnt Valley In 1880.
As for tho other proponents in
■this bloody confiict, Tom and John Graham, they were born on
a farm near Boone, Iowa, went
to California In tho seventies and In 1882 located in-Pleasant Valley. "Tom was the oldest and
because of the personal enmity
that later dovelopcd botweon tho
Grahams and the Tewksburys,
he became the acknowledged
leader around whom the cattle
men rallied when sheep Invaded
the valley. Tom Graham Is pic
tured in fiction of the vendetta
as thu leader of tiie rustlers that
swarmed through the mountains,
a ruffian nnd killer ot the worst
type. Nothing could be further
from the truth; for he was
a quiet, peaceful man and honest in all his dealings. Even after
the invasion of sheep made war
certain he refused to take human life; and his restraining hand held his followers In chock until
tlie first blood spilled by tho
Tewksbury forces made further
MRS. THOMAS n . GRAHAM
restraint impossible. But he has
been held responsible all these
years for the acts of otiiers.”
A ‘'Short Trigger M an."
Chief nmong these otiiers were
the allies of the Grahams, the
Blevans, who was known in Ari
zona as Andy Cooper, mainly
because a nheriff back in Texas,
where the Blevans came from,
was looking for him. Cooper, or
131evans, was .noted,as a "short
trigger man,” a killer by instinct, and he Mon became the leader of the rustiers who preyed
upon the cattle herds in that part
of Arizona.The origins ot the £<;ud are
wrapped in mystery. Various
reasons have been given for
the hatred which existed be
tween the Tewksburys and the
Grahams but none of them can
fully substantiated. One
story says that a woman was at the bottom ot it, that the
attentions ot a man in one ol
the factions tor tho wife ot a
man in the other taction
.■itarted it. Another says that
Uie Grahams and the Tewks-
Some of tho Hash Knife Cowboys Who Took Part in the Feud.
burys were partners in rustling
operations, then fell out over the division of the spoils. There
may be some element of truth
in both stories but the tact re
mains that tho hostility be
tween the two factions which
slowly developed might not
have burst into the flame ol
open warfare if it had not been for an event which took place just SO years ago this autumn. .
Forrest records it thus:
"The Tewksburys are driving
sheep over the rim of the Mogol-
lonsl"
"From mouth to mouth, from
ranch to ranch throughout all
Pleasant Valley this message
was carried by dasiilng young
cowboys In Paul Revere style.
The effect was like an electric
. shock and more dangerous than
a charge of dynamite. For years
the cattlemen of this little valley
In the wilderness of central' Ari
zona hnd successfully held their range against tho encroachments of sheepmen’from the north wiio
were only too eager to scatter
EDW IN TEWKSBURY
their flocks over tho luxuriant
grass of this beautiful land.
"Hastily thoso cattlemen and
their cowboys saddled their
horses and rode out to investi
gate, Perhaps it was only a rumor after nil; but with thoir own eyes they could see them in the
distance like n great mass of maggots rolling down over the
trail from the rim nnd swarming
out over the valley at the foot
ot the Mogollons like a plague
of locusts, greedily devouring the
grnss, tenring It out by the roots:
nnd nlready a cloud of dust
drifted up In the lazy morning
air from the desert :hey left
behind.
"The die was cast. The Towks-' burys wanted war. Well, they would get it;, all thoy wanted
and more than they had bar
gained for."
Cattlemen vs. Sheepmen.
' So the cattlemen and rustlers
forgot thoir own diftcrcnccs and ' joined forces to resist the Invasion of their common enemy,
the sheepmen. Daggs Brothers
ot Flagstaff, at thnt time the
leading sheep men in northern
Arizona, needed new range for
their "woolies.” They had heard
of the trouble between the Gra-
hnms and the Tewksburys and
decided to turn it to iheir ad
vantage by breaking the united
ranks of the cattlemen In Plea
sant Valley and open that rich grazing land for their sheep. So they made a deal with the
Tewksburys to send a band of
sheep into Pleasant Valley under
the protection of the Tewksbury
guns and share profits with them.
. The cattleinen immediately
rallied to defend their grazing
lands and Andy Cooper, the
“short trigger man,” proposed
to lead a party of armed men to
wipe out the sheep and their
herders. But Tom Graham held hmi in check, hoping to be able
to scare oil the sheep men without loss of life or destruction of property. However, the reckless
cowboys soon got out of hand and
in February, I8B7, they drew
flrst blood by killing a Navajo
Indian sheepherder. Soon after
wards the sheep were withdrawn from the valley but the peace which came to Pleasant Valley
was a short-lived one.
Then "Old Man” Blevans,
father ot tiie Blevans boys, allien ot the Grahams, disappeared
and was never again heard from.
In August his son, ; Hampton
Blevans, accompanied by four
Hash Knife cowboys and three
from the Grnhnm rnnoh started-
in senrch for him. They stopped
et ' the Middleton ranch where
they found Jim and Ed Tewksbury and some of their adherents. Hot words between the two
parties were followed immedi
ately by blazing six-shooters and
when the flghting was over
■Hanipton Blevans and another cowboy were dead nnd two others of their party wounded. This was
the flrst white man’s blood spilled
in the Pleasant Valley war but
It was only the beginning.
Next Jim Houck, a Tewksbury
man, klllod young Billy Groham
and in revenge for that Tom Graham led a party ot cattlemen
to attack the Tewksbury ranch.
In the siege and battle which
followed John Tewksbury, Jr.,
and ono of his followers was
killed before the attack ot tho
cowboys was beaten off. From
that timo on it was a war to the
death.
Forrest’s book Is filled with the
details of the various gunfights,
ambushes, lynchlngs, and assas
sinations which marked the prog
ress of tho war during the next
two years. It is a record of al
most unbelievable ferocity and
cruelty, yet Its dark pages are
relieved at times by the chronicle
of deeds of higli courage and
loyal devotion on tho part of botli
men and women. For the wives
of some of tho clansmen played a prominent part In the war.
By the end of 1B88 tlie war was —vlrtualiy-overr—Jim —Tewlcsbtiry-
liad Uiud uf tuberculusis. John
Graham nnd Charley Blevans
had been killed in a fight with «' posse headed by Sheriff Mul-
venon of Yavapai county. Sheriff
Commodore Owens of Apache
.jcpjjnty.Jind_hnri_hl8 JajDofluS-gua..
duel in Holbrook in which Andy
Cooper (Blevans), Sam Houston
Blevans and their brother-in-law,
Mose Roberts, had been killed and John Blevans v/as in jail.
Triumph ot the Tewksbury.s.
In the meantime Tom Grahani
hnd mnrricd nnd his young bride
hnd at last prevailed upon him
to take up farming nenr Tompe.
Ed Tewksbury nnd a few fol
lowers were loft to enjoy their
hollow triumph as winners of the
war. But they had learned thoir
lesson and thoy mndo no further attempts to bring sheep over the rim of the Mogollons, Apparently
the feud wns over. Then ns sud»
denly it burst into flnme ngnin.
On August 2, 1892 Tom Grn-
ham, while hauling grain from
his ranch, was shot from ambusli
near the Double Butte school-
house. Ed Tewksbury and John Rhodes were accused of the mur
der and placed under arrest. Dur
ing the preliminary hearing of
the, accusation against Rhodes
in justice court tho old feud
spirit flared up again when Mrs.
Tom Graham tried to shoot
Rhodes down in tiie courtroom
but failed in the attempt. Rhodes
was discharged from custody.
Nations oi the World
There are 60 notions listed in
the world, including 58 membera
of tho League of Nations and 11
nations outside it.
League members included
Afghanistan, Albania, Argentina,
AustrnHa; Austria, Belgium, Bo
livia, Bulgaria, Canada, Chili, Co
lombia, Cuba, Czechoslovakia,
Denmark, Dominica, Ecuador,
Esthonia, Ethiopia, Finland,.
France, Greece, Guatemalai,
Haiti, Honduras, Hungary. Inaia,
Iraq, Irish Free State, Italy,
Latvia, Liberia, Lithuania, Lux
emburg, Mexico, Netherlands,
New Zealand, Nicaragua, Nor
way, Panama, Paraguay, Persia,
Peru, Poland, Portugal, Ru
mania, Salvador, Siam, South
Africa, Spain, Soviet Russia,
Sweden, Switzerland, Turkoy,
United Ktagdom, Uruguoy. Vene
zuela, Yugoslavia. Nations out
side the league include B i a z il,
Costa Rica, Egypt, Gernieny, Ice
land, Japan, Nepal, Saudi Arabia,
Hedjaz, Tibet and the United
States.-
Letters on Airplanes
The letter “C” preceding th*
number on nn airplane la used
for commercially licensed aircraft
not used solely for governmental
purposes or belonging to states or
their .subdivisions, nor engaged
in racing or experimental work or
specially licensed for other pur
poses. The letter “N” must pre
cede the license symbol and num-.
ber on licensed aircraft engaged!
In foreign air commerce and, at^
the option of the owner, may
precede it on other licensed air
craft, provided that aircraft li
censed for experimental purpose«
shall not display tha letter “N ."—
Detroit News.
Fellowship
Fellowship is heaven, and lack
of fellowship is hell; fellowship ia
life, and lack of fellowship ia
death; and the deeds that ye do
upon the earth, it is for fellow*,
ship’s sake that ye do them—
WUliam Morris.
GENUINE
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!W.:
THOMAS H. GRAHAM
Then the long battle to convict Tewksbury began. Found guilty
of, the murder, Tewksbury ob
tained a new trial on a technical
ity and In the second trial in
1895 the jury disagreed. “After
the passing of another year, the
prosecution, evidently believing
that a conviction would now be
impossible, filed a motion to dls-
nilss the charge. When this was
• granted on March 18, 1898, the curtain fell on the lost act of the
bitterest blol)d feud in the his
tory of the old West—a story
that has become a legend of old
Arizona's cattleland.”
0 Western Kewspsper Union
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Mtinesin vrafera (tht orig- inal) quickly relicya acid stoiimch nnd givo necessary elimination. Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk of maffiteaia. 20c, 35c & 60c.
Watch Yo,UK .Kidtteys/
Be Sure They Properly
Cieanse the Blood
V O U R Wdncys are constanliy filter- I ing waste matter frcm (ha blood itream. But kidneys sometlmei lag I» Ihelr work-—do nol oct as natura fn- tsnded—fail to remove Impurillet that polion the system when rclalncd. Then you miy suffer nagging back- •ehs, dizziness, scanty cr too frequent uiInat|on,gelting up at night, pulfiness under Iho eyes; feel nervous, mlseta-
^ 'K n ^ “Selay? Use Doin’i Pill«.
Doan's Aro e)pcdai|v for pootly func
tioning !<Idneys« Tnoy tecom* mended by grateful users th« countiy over. Get them irom ¿ny drug$|!it«ANSPiltSm
W 'y
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UR ГНЕ MOCKSVILIJá BNTBRFlíISI!. MOCKSVILLE. N. С.Thiii'.sciay, Oclobc'i' 8, 19:í{¡
The iVl иск sville Enterprise
Published Every Thursday at Mockaville
North Carolina
A- C. Huneycutt ............ Editor and Publisher
Subscription Rate»:
?1.60 a Year; G Months 75 centg
Strictly in Advance
Entered at the post office at Mooksville, N. C.,
»8 Becond-clasa matter under the act of March':
S, 1879.
»
. •
■■ •.
■
e
» NOTJCE TO GENERAL PUBLIC* ___________
• This newspaper charges regular ad-
■ vertising rates for cards of thanks,
• resolution noticcs, Obituaries, etc., and
• will not accept any thing lees than 85
• cents cosh with copy unleaa you have
• regular monthly accounts with us,
^ . We do not mean to be hard oB any■ on«; but small items of this nature force
» us to demand the cash with copy. All
• such received by us in the future with-• out ‘.hn cash or staw.ps will not be pub-
• llshed
Mocksville, N. C., Thuraday, October 8, 193G
* » » # *• # * * * * .* ■*
* , And unto man he said. Behold, the *
* fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; and to *
* depart from evil is understand- *
* ing.— Job 28:28. ’ ** # » # # # » * * * » *
ANOTHER BOOST FOR PROSPERITY
The financial and business world received
a big boost last week when Fra'ice went off
the gold standard. The situation might have
'been different, but fov the timely aid of the
United States in coming to th'e rescue. Im
mediately upon the announcement of the
French Cabinet that the gold standard had
been pulled down, iainsla did that which ap
peared to be a deliberate effort' to toss tho
traditional monkey wrench_in the machinery.
The Bank of Rus-sia immediately offered to
unload one million pounds sterling on the New
York oxL-hange market. The United States
France and Great Britiun had agreed upon
-cooporation-for—tho-siabiliaation-of-t-he—Eng—
lish pound, the Frcnch franc and the Amer
ican dollar. Immediately,-therefore, the trea
sury department flung five million dollars of
its atabilization fund into the bxchange mar
ket to halt this apparent offort to drive down
tho pound sterling. And not only did the
~Uiried ”Stnfcu5- poniicmrpofr the— шге—TirrlÌTOTi“
pound offering by the-Bank of Russia when
it was mado on the New Vork exchange mar-’
knt, but Uncle S.im giive notice to the world
that he was ready to gq the limit in order
to protcct tho financial c(iuilibrium expuulud
from the readjustment of the fraiic and the
linking together of the currencies of the three-
great powers. The movement saved the shock
that otherwise may have haijpened to the
financial world. In other words, thè Uniteo
States, Great Britian and Franco, the world's
three great democracies, are determined to cut
their currency in the right shape to make that
of tho three nations fit in together. This
agreement between these three ij/reat world
powers will greatly assist in tha stabilization
of the.moneys of the world. It may also mean
that the financial луогк! will turn to Wash
ington, London, and Paris instead of Berlin,
Rome and Mo.scow. The arrangement -will also
uiHiuostionably stimulate international trade
i-elationships and thereby put the final finish
ing touches W tlje prosperity come back.
, , ’-----------------------;--------“CHIME DOESN’T- PAY” , ^
A!! ws know !k-whut v;e .vend in-the papers,
and we road in the .Charlotte Observer that
'John Dillinger’a Gun Moll who hy.s been liber
ated from prison is going up and down the
country in an effort to convince young Amer
ica that a life of crime does not pay. She
is quoted as having said in Charlotte that'
there is no one who should expect to beat
Uncle Sam at his own game, or v/ords to that
cffect. This is something that «very intelli
gent American youth should know already,
but it is commendable, nevertheless, of this'
-.voung woman, formerly with the underworld
gangsters, to try to save others Irom follow
ing in her. footsteps or in the footsteps of hoi'
companion, John Dillinger, who was shot to
death, by federal officers. Doubtless advice
c(jmlng from one oi this kind may have a
wholesome effect on many youths of America.
-...........---------Ü---------------
EARLY AMERICAN SURGERY
Discoveries in Mexico and Poru have, and
are .st'll, disclosing the I'act that the Aztecs
iind other Indian tribes of Mexico and the ,
Incas of Peru reached a rather high state
of civilization long before Columbus landed
on the American soil. Last week the skull
of a mummified Inca was sent to Rochester,
Minn. The interesting part about this Peru
vian skull was the fact that it disclosed that/'
the Indians of Peru had attained a high state
of skill in surgery centuries ago. The skull
shows a wound apparently made by a club or
xitonc in a battle during the Inca conquests,
It also shows signs of an operation performed
by Indians evidently highly skilled in cran
ium surgery. It was an object of much inter
est at tho Mayo Clinic.
SLANG WITH A KICK
II. L. Mencken recently wrol:e a most iii-
„tcresting- article on slang which, condensed
from the "American Language,” is carried in
the October issue of the “Readers Digest.”
One reading the article is impressed with the
large nuinber of words which bogan as slang
nnd have now become approved English. The
article shows that Mr, Mencken has made a
thorough study of the question; for it seoms
to us that in the aiVicle he made use of prac
tically every slang word known to , a ijation
of slang-mongers. Mr, Mencken points out
that many slang words have been originated
by sports writers. For instance, fun,' rooter,
plnch-hitter, grandstand"play, charley horse,
strike out, put il over, etc. Some of tho slang
erpressions for intoxicating Jiquor, many of
. them coined before the Civil War, are: pan-
ther-sweat, nose paint, red eye, coin juice,
mouniain dew, coffin varnish, bust head, stag
ger-soup, tonsil paint and such like. And for
a drunk we havo these slang substitutes: Boil
ed, an ecoekenanes, eatoin shrdiu etoin
■-'ed,. canned, cockeyed, pifflicated, stewed, tanK.
' éd, pie-eyed and plastered. Author Mencken
points out thnt many of these slang words
have th3ir few brief days and pass out of,
' Use,'while others linally get into the common
vocabulary and survive. For instance, bliz
zard, ,horn-swoggle, rambunctions, etc.
slang expressions have been traced
:'b^;ck,.ai; number of centuries. For Instance:
“■•f'6'''ÿfea3e’f foç bçide goes back to lo o c
“blow" to Doast to 14UU, -gas ' for empty talk
has -been traced back to 1847 and “jug" for
.'-priàbn Was UeCd as early as 1934; “lip” for
indolence to 18^0; “sap” for fool to 1815;
"breaa-basket” for stomach to 1753; “hush-
money'’ to 1709 and "grub” for food to 1Ü6Ü.
As ,lute as lUiiu tne nincyciopaedia Britan
nica lists'ihe. following aa American slang
terms: bootlegger, speuKcasy, dry, wet, cruok,
take, hlKc, nuuo, роррусоск anü racketeer.
^ cne writer points out that these are vuuuj
mosuy rBgiuuéü аз peiieciiy gooa Ji-ngl.sh.
iiiiynow, one reading the long list ui siang
' woius wnich have been approveu ан guou ü-ng-
i.oii anu even those whicn have not ueen ap-
,,.июс1 IS forced tp admit that many oi uicm
a “ k lC K '' U liu Ш е и caaiVC. i ' 01' 1П-
bcaiice, li oiic ^v.■(lí»/ca Lo ucaci’iue a pex'son
naye a "kick " aim aic mure e.'cpressive. i> or in-
moro expressive tnan tne worcis, “cocKeyed,”
".stowed” or “plastered.”
A LARGER SUPREME СОЦКТ
Discussing tho question of amending the
Constitution so a.s to pi'ovicie lor increasing
the number of Supreme -tourt .lustices from
five to aeven, iiifiitor i-<eo weatno^s of the
"■“ criwuTiTiTa-“srun" niuK53-ou t irTiDnvnicecrargu-
, ment in lavor u± tne amcnament wnich is to
be voted upon cU cne iNovuinuer election.
Editor Weathers oeiieves it will bo nara to
' coiiv'ince cne average vucer ox cue necessity of
increasing the court, it being a triounai
latiiei i\.iiiui.o trom Olio peoiJie. lie tneii goes
■Ijin"Tu^sno\v”th0 ioiiowiiia- very puiusiuie rea
sons lor tne amenciment:
However, a group ol men fam ilia^ with the
iieeu 01 iiieieasing iiie personnel, make out a
goou ease. I'or instance, since loay— nearly
nan a century— t.here has buen ni) increase in
the oiu't, nienioerslup, uuspite an increase in
tne sLutes pupuiacioii or io-l per cent, ciespite
tne lact tuut tne nuinuer ox Superior Court
juages nas ueen increaseo in that length of
time iroiii Iz to i!b (..nciuaing six special and
emergency judges;; despite the inciease In
nunioer 01 cases on appeal from 292 to 572.
'•'xhere is not a state in the entire United
States having less than five million and more
than two million populatiein .which has aS'
few mernuers of vhi; nighest court of appeals
as the State of North Carolina^ And ho other
state with more than three million popula
tion has less than seven members on its finar
court of appeals” continues the brief, which
asks that the matter be decided intolligontly
and on.the facts rather than upon predudice
against changing the basis law of the State
or just plain “inertia.”
---------------0---------------
[PRESS C01VÍMENT
AN INDEX OF W AR PREPARATIONS
The spectacular rise in the price of plati
num from $35 nn ounce in 3uly to ¡570 an
ounce today is linked to war preparations in
all CDiintries. The precious white metal is an
essential element in the production of muni
tions. It also is used for contact points in
airplane motors. Its limited production in
widely separated regions causes it to he close,
ly guarded in times of-stress and strife.
One of the first acts of the war industries
board was to prohibit the use of platinum in
the manuiauture of jewelry. Afl the metal
on the market w;us placed at the'disposal o f
mmiitiuns factories. Every ounce was bougi'it
up to be utilized in the intricate chemical
process by which high explosives aro manu-
lactured. Nothinij was more carefully con
trolled by the government than this precious
material produced in only small quantities
in the United States,
This year’s price functuations, however, are
not unprecedented. In 1929, as an aftermath of
the war and also because of the orgy of
spending just before the Wall street smash,
platinum jumped from a low of $5fi to $110 an
ounce. Its average price that year was ?67,G0
an -ounce, slightly lower than the present high
mark. ■
Other factor.? besides war .preparations are
believed responsible for this year's price rise.
Russia, which with Canada is one of the
largest producers of the metal, has with
drawn its supplies from the market. That
action has ciiusocl speculation.
Generally improved conditions in
the United States as in 1929 have
increased the ])opular demand.—
Louisville Courier-Journal,
Now Ease
Neuritis Pains
Fast
WHO'S WHO
IN CHILDREN'S CLflSZ;■ J
Bayer Tablets
Dissolve Almost
Instantly
In 2 Mcond« bx stop watehf fl gonuino BAYER ABplrIn Ubiel Riartfl io dlainl«gr«to end go lo work. Drop » Itarer Aspirin Ublel Into n glaM of waler. Bf ibe tlmo II hit« tbe bottom of Ihe gUM II 1« dlfllntograting. Whnl happen« In Ihl« glaM • . . happens bi fomr •tomach.
For Amazingly Quick Relief
Get Genuine Bayer Aspirin
U you suffer from pains of neuritis what you want is quick relief.Gcnuhio Bayer Aspirin tablets
give quick relicl, for one reason, because they dissolvu or diaintegrate almost instantly they touch moisture. (Note illustration above.)
Mence — when you take a real Boyer Aspirin tablet it starts to dis-
.solve almost as quickly as you swallow it. And thus is ready to sliirt working olmost instantly . . . Iiundachcs, neuralgia and neuritis pains start easing almost at oncc.
Thnt’s why millions never ask for aspirin by the name aspirin alonowhen they buy, but always say "HAYEH A Sl'iR lN ” and see that
they get it.
Try it. You’ll say it’s marvelous.
15c FOR A DOZEN
DOZEN
Virtually
Ic a tablet
W h o c jc ic re t h e t c a o s is t e r s ^
W h o - t o t h e i r s u r p r i s e -
Ib u n d t h e b e c a ;th a t t h ^ shelterec}
W a s a P r in c e ^ i n d i s g u i s e ?
DR. P. H. MASON, Dentist
ВНКМЯНХНХНЖНЯН1 ИЖИЖИХНХНХНЗИЖН1 НЖНХНСИХН8М1 НХ»аМ2»гН1Ini
I
I Sanford Building
I MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
изснггнянвнянхнзЕнзгнянямзенамзенаманвнкнвиаеавматииихЕигиЕН
L O O K r o n ТНЖ B A Y C R C R O SS
Ca MPBELL-WALKER FUNERAL HOME
AMBULANCE SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS
PHONE 48 MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
NATIONW IDE
SEE Y o m F0RE3 DEALER Ш October
Here is your chance to get a fine used car or truck— any make
or model— at the special prices of the NalionAVide Ford Dealers’
Oclober Clearnuce Sale.
You owe it to yourself to see the amazing values your Ford
dealer is oifering during this great October dearanijc sale. Como
early and get your jiick. Remember that every R & G used car and
truck is backed by an absolute money-back guarantee— and the only
place you can get a R & G used car or truck is from your Ford
dealer. Your present car may more than cover the down-payment.
Lowest prices, easy terms. Don’t miss this Nalion-Wide Octobcr
Clearance Sale of Ford Dealers’ Used Cars and Trucks. You will
save m oney and get a genuine bargain iu a fine lised car pr truck if
you will see your Ford dealer today.
A WRJTTEN ,
iVìOPiEY-BAC&C GUARANTEE
WITH EVERY
R&G USED CAlrî OR T5ÎUCK
Sanford Motor CompanyI Sanf<
Я “Ford Dealers Since 1913^’
I Phone 77 Mocksville, N. C.
Thur.sday, October 8, 193G THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.PAGE FIVE
Club Meetings
Ghurch News
Soc-ia-l Functions
Card Partleg S O C I E T Y
Local Happenings
Coming and
Going of thoae
We know
MISS MARY J. HEITMAN. Social Editor Phone 112
Mr. and Mrs. Gaither Sanford
spent Monday in Charlotte.
Tom Gregory, of Langley Avia
tion Field, Va., spent the week
end here.
----o-----
Miss Cordelia Pass, of the
Mount Ulla faculty,. spent the
week-end at home.
ends will be glad to learn.
Mr. and Mra. M. K. Pate, of
Burlington, visited Mrs. V. -E.
Swaim on Sunday.
Mrs. Birdie Mays left Tuesday
for Roanoke, Va., after a visit
to her niece, Mrs. W. L. Moore.
Mrs. Kate V. Shaw, mother of
Mrs. E. J. Harbison, was quite
indisposed recently, we regret to
state.
Mrs. R. B. Sanford and Miss
Margaret Bell spent Saturday
with Mrs. M. L. John, in Laur-
inburg.
---------o---------
Anne Martin, little daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Martin, is
ill w.th pneumonia, we are sorry
to learn. \
Misses Flossie Martin and
Haxel Baity, ot the Winston-
Salem schools, were at home for
the week-end.
Mrs. C. M. Littleton, Jr., and
daughter, Mary Lin wood,.' of
Charlotte, visited her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Grant, recently.
Marshall Sanfnrri and school
mates, Charlie Mauze, Bob Vance
and John Anderson, of David
son Collège, attended the Navy-
IDavidson game at Annapolis, Md.,
on Saturday, and spent the
week-end in Annapolis- ‘and
Washington. About 200 David
son students and several facul
ty members attended the game.
Dr. W-. B. Lee, of Sao Paulo,
Brazil, and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Lee, of Burlington, spent Sunday
with Dr. Lee's sisters. Misses
Mary and Alice Lee. Dr. Lee
Bailed on Oct. 6 from New Yotk
for his home in Brazil, where he
has been an activé missionary
Çor over forty years. He has
many friends here and through
out North Carolina who enjoyed
.seoing him during his visit this
summer.
ser, Virginia Adams and Pearl
Koon.
Mr. H. S. Walker and Mr.
Gwynn Harris, the latter of
Winston-Salem, left this week to
Httend the Ohorokeo Indian Fair.
Misses Margaret Blackwood
Ruby-.-Walker - and - Mary Waters,-
student nurses at Davis Hospi
tal, attended the Davie Fair one
afternoon.
Captain E, C. LeGrand. of the J“fKoi',ur»>v 'Грпп . c.c.c. Climi).
spent this week hero with his
family. He and Mrs. LeGrand
were visitors in Charlotte on
Tuesday. ■
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Mooro, Mr.
¡inU Mrs. Helms, I'attiu and Clar-
i-ncu Helms, ot Charlotte, spent
Sunday with-Rev. and Mrs. J. H.
Fulghum, tha latter an aunt of
?.lr. .Moore.
itoptist Stewardship
Course
/I’he Woman’s Missionary Un
ion sponsored a stewardship
course at the Baptist Church on
Wednesday, under tbe leader
ship of the stewardship chair
man, Mrs. C. R. Horn, assisted
by her committee, Mrs. S. C.
Stonestreet and Miss Addie Mae
Caudell. The meeting began at
11 o’clock, and the textbook,
“Stewardship in Missions,” by
Charles Cook, was ably taught
by Mrs. W. R. Stone, of Greens-
i.oro, .M nooti a tempting lun
cheon wus served in the primary
department, after which an at-
turnoon session was held. Mrs.
Stone, v.'ho is a v/cll kiiov.’n tea
cher of missionary topics, is
spending some time with her
daughter, Mrs. George Duprey,
ln-l;(ioleemee. Tho Vv. i\I.-Lh-felir
that they were lortunate to
have Mrs, Stone to speak on this
important subject.
Presbyterian Circles
•Meet--------^_______
Knox Johnstone left Friday
for Philadelphia, where he join
ed Mrs. Johnstone and children,
Carroll and John, at the home of
Mrs. Johnstone's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. H.'O. Sm'ith, Sr. They
will arrive home this week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sanford re
turned homo last Friday from a
trip through Tennessee, Ken
tucky, West Virginia and other
points. During their absence
Mrs. J. Frank Clement stayed
with Mrs, J, W. Speight and Jack
and Billie Sanford.
------0------
H. C. Loifie, of Midd'leburg,
Va., arrived this week, and will
bo accompanied to Williamsburg,
Va., by Mrs. Lane, who has been
vis.ting her father. Mr. Johil
Ijames, Mr. Lane will be engaged
1.. nii;nv/ay engineering near
Williamsburg for some time.
-----0-----
Miss Jane Crow and class
mates, Misses Frances Salley,
Mary I<'rances Hayworth and
lilizabcth Torrence, of Salem
i-oliego, took supper with Mrs.
E. W. Crow on Saturday even
ing. Edward Crow, of Winston-
!Sal(3m, was a Sunday visitor
here.
Circle 1 of the Presbyterian
Auxiliary, Mrs, W. F. Robinson,
chairman, met at the home of
Jliss Willie Miller on Monday
afteruoon, The devotionals were
conducted by Mrs. R. li. Sanford,
and articles on China wore given
by Mrs. Sanford and l\Irs. J. B.
Johnstone. Mention w'as made of
the Julia i'urrior Sanford High
School at Suchowfu. China, 'and
mo bai-ah Walkup Hospital at
Taichow. Members present were
Mesdames William Miller, J. B.
Johnstone, R. B. Sanford, John
l^arew, Essie Byerly and Miss
nihiu Miller. Circle 2, Mrs.
Alice Woodruff, chairman, met
at her home on Monday at the
same hour. The devotional .per
iod was in charge of Mrs. C. G.
Methodist Circles Meet
Circle 3 of the Mattie E'aiton
Auxiliary, Mrs. E. ,L Harbison,
chairman, mot in the ladles’ par.
lor of the Methodist Church on
Monday afternoon. The opening
hymn was "In Christ There Is
No East Or West,” followed by
the 23rd Psalm lii concert. Mrs.
M. D. Pass gave an article from
a Korean missionary in the
World Outlook and Mrs. E.
J. Hatlbison. spoke on! Ba
ron T. H. Yun, famous Ko
rean Christian, who studied in
Georgia under ’Bishop handler.
Korean customers were discussed
by Miss Mary Heitman. Mrs. J. H.
Thompson, president of the Au
xiliary, mentioned tlte Davie
zone meeting at Wesley Chapel
on Wednesday, October 14, 1,'e-
ginning at 10:30, Those present
wero Mesdames J, II, Thompson.
E, J, Harbison, Julia C, Heitman,
W. L. Collins, M. D. Pass, P. J.
Johnson, B. I Smith and Miss
Mary iicitman Circle 2, Mrs.. E„
W. Crow, ch'airman. met at the.
home 01 iVirs. .i. I,. Sheek on
Tuesday afternoon. The chair
man, Mrs. Crow, led the devo
tionals, and a program on Congo
missions was given. Mrs. Jack
Allison told of Congo supersti
tions, Mrs. W. L. Moore spoke
of Dr. Tabb, missionary to the
Congo, and Mrs. Crow gave
African customs, and nlso read
a letter from Miss Lorena Kel|y,
who has recently gone as a mis
sionary to that field. Miss Blan
che Eaton led in prayer. The
hostess, Mrs. Sheek, served a
salad course consisting of fruit
salad, sandwiches, pickle, choose
lil'“}y.?.! ..t.^.‘\..‘*.“‘i. .tlecorated. cakes,
carrying- out tile Halloween mo
tif in an artistic way. Those
present Wero: Mosdnmes E. W.
Crow, J. L. Sheek, W. L.' Moore,
F. M. Johnson, Sudie Williams,
Jack Allison, J. H. rhompson, B.
— Gr
standing in a little group, each ,
w’th li;ui'’s cilasped reverently, I
and ns they gazed toward the j
flower-tinted west, I heard each
one gay over ancl over, ‘God !
bless the new moon.’'
"My humble friends had seen
more than I. High above us
hun.ir the frail new moo'ri. Thé
Negroes, at sight.o fit.' instinc-
Lively turned to bless God and to
v/orshlp. .-^
Ever since that evening I have,
with a deepened respect, noticed
plantation Negroes performing
thJs joyous mystic rite. Even
little children, in the midst of
their last entrancing twilight
frolic, will, upon sneing the sil
ver sickle gleaming in the heav
ens, pause in their play to look
upward and -say, ‘God bless thé
new moon.’ A moment later,
their charming vespers done,
they will again be breathlessly
chasing: one another as childriiT
will at'diisk.
For more than thirty years 1
have neoier seen a new moon
without praying the prayer that I
first heard when my lo.wly com
rades worshiped that evening by
the forest.”— Morganton News-
Herald.
D. A. Kiser of Gaston County
says that though he had five
acres less pasture and much dry
weather, he has a better pasture
than last ye»ir due to the use of
the triple superphosphate.
JACOB STKWART
Attorney lit T,a\v
Mocksville, N. C,
OiRce 111 Southern Bank & Trurt
Company building
Office phone................................18C
Subscribe to The Enterprise
Bargains!
Ladies’ and Children’s
COATS at Bargain
Blanche Eaton and Miss Kate
Brown. Circle 1, Miss Ruth
Booe, chairman, met Tuesday
evening at the home of Blrs. J.
H. Ratledge, with ALss .less/ca
l\IcKeo and Miss l''lorence Mackiu
joint hosLessc!». The devotionals
w'ere led by Miss Martha Call,
in the absence of Mrs. M. G.
Ervin, the topic being Disciple-
ship. Miss McKee road a poem,
Mrs. Ratledge and Mrs. G'. 0.
Boose gave e.Ktructs from the
Worid Outlook, and Mrs. T. N.'
Chaflin spoke of Miss Nannie
Gaines, missionary to Japan. Mrs.
D. R. Stroud’s name was added
to the circle roll. Sandwiches,
olives, cocoanut cake and punch
were served. Members present
were; Misses Ruth Booe, Martha
.... 6ÜC and up
Я.С9 to .Î2.91
. 97c to $1.49
.. 60c to $7.50
...... 24c to 85c
... SMjC per yd
..........§2.75
................... 97c
$5.10
, 12<;
... 9c
.. 11c
... 3c
.... 3c
.. 97o
Prices
Sweaters .........
Twin Sweaters
Hats ................
Dresses ...........
Cotton Suiting
Sheeting .........-.
.'’’lour, 98 lbs ...................
Salt .......................................
100 lbs. S ugar.....................
Kenny Coffee, 1 lb. pkg.
Loose Coffee .....................
Pink Salmon, 15c value
5c Matches .........................
C>c School Tablets .............
Blue Bell Overalls, pair ..
Plenty Pants at Bargain Prices
1 handle Red Goose and Wolver
ine Shoes, and can fit the whole
family. ’These shoes are guaran
teed to give satisfaction. Buy
now and save money.
I have plenty Collar Pads, Brl-
lilcs. 1 set Harness w'orth $25.00
for $22.00. Mowers, Rakes and
tlarroR'3 at uargain prices..
Plenty Live Stock. If you need a
pair cf first class mules see me.
Yours for Bargains
J. fRANK HENDRIX
Mocksville, N.'C.
и1ннзиЕиаизнв1!ааиЕизиннаиаиа
я One Regular Size
NOXZEMA
Rev, and Mrs. H. C. Sprinkle
Jr., who spent‘the past year in
Cambridge, England, where Mr.
Sprinkle was studying at Cani-
Mex Mission in Texas, and of
the response of the iilexicans to
missionaries. Circle 3. Mrs. Tom
Bailey Woodruff, chairman, met_
at Rich Park on Monday after
noon at 5 o’clock, with Miss
Sallie Huntor as hostess. The
topic of “Christ in the Home
Laiul” was presented by Misses
Hunter, Vivian Hilton. Lois Tor
rence and Garnet Robertson. A
thank offering of ?8 was given
for m.ssion work in Stokes
County. After the program a
wiener roast was enjoyed. Those
present were: Mrs. Tom. Bailey
Woodruff, Misses Sallie Huntor,
Vivian Hilton, Garnet Robertson,
Lois Torrence, Nell and- Annie
Holthouser, Jimmie Lou Adams,
Myrtle Mars, Eleanor Woodruff
and Virginia Byerly. Tho Busi
ness Woman’s Circle, Mrs. E. P.
Bradley, hairman, met with Mrs.
E. E. Gibson on Monday even-
I COMBINATION CREAM
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The Supply Is Limited
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Foster, Dallas Kirby, , D, R.
Stroud, T. N. Chaflin. Hattie'Mc-
Guire, Prentice Campbell, Clar
ence Grant, and visitors were:
Mrs. Albert Chaflin, of Fayette
ville, Mrs. F. N. Shearouse, Mrs.
John Smoot, of Sal.isbury and
Miss Pearl Koon.
“GOD BLESS THE NEW
MOON"
bridge Universit.v, will Innd m ^„¡зу Holthouser pre-
Kortolk, Va., on Oct. 8. .They ”f.nission arti
ci '
visited also several countries on
the Continent. They hnve fre-
‘luently visited relatives in Mock
sville.
Jack Sanford, son of Mr, and
Mrs. J. C. Sanford, met with a
painful accident on Saturday,
"'hen riding his bicycle. He ran
into a parked car and cut a deep
Sash in his side wben he hit the
door handle. He was carried to
sided, and foreign
cles \vere given by Mrs. J. bee
DwiK'nns, Misses Virginia Adams
and, Pearl Koon. Mrs. Dennis
Silverdls read an appropriate
poem in closing. A new mem
ber, Mrs. F. Б. Correll, was wel
comed into the circle. The hos
tess served iingel cake with whip
ped cream, Russian tea anu
mints. Those present wore Mes
dames E. Ё. Gibson, J. LeeI J, Г» I?
Long’s Sanatorium, and is u o w D w iS K in s , bennis
Few writers can describe the
various phases of plantation life
as interestingly as Archibald
Rutledge, who gives the follow
ing iilimp.se of an old Negro su
perstition as follows:
“I remember coming homo one
April twilight along the allur
ing yet forbidding'margin of a
fragrant wild thicket. After the
lilac afterglow', dusk had swift
ly fallen, There were three
Negroes, at sight of it, instinc-
ently ordliuiTy In their powers of
feeling, which should havo been
at low ebb after the long day we
hud spent in the hot wiiderness
of a half-submerged swamp.
“Our footfals sounded lonely,
as we padded quietly along, one
behind the other. Fading light
suffused the solitary wildwodds.
I had a sense, of. being in another
world. Suddenly I was aware
that my humble comradfes had
paused behind me and were eja
culating softly among them-
HALL-KIMBHOUGH
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Phone 141
MOCKSVILLE, N. C. .
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THEATRE
Friday & Saturday
Another, good western pic
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And Our Gang Comedy
“DIVOT DIGGERS”
Monday & Tuesday
A picture everyone will en
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“THE KING STEPS OUT”
Featuring Grace Moore with
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two reel Metro Comedy.
Misses Daisy Holthou-selves. Turning, I saw them
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FROM US AS IT DID IN 19331
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1936227 tbs. o{ lioft buys 2 U.S.,Uoyal$and2U.S. Tubes.
CORN
193333 bu. of corn bought I U. S. Koy;il.
1936
. 33 bu. of corn buys 2 U.S.Roralsanda U.S. Tubu.
t
WHEAT
193319 bu. of wbeàe boughc и. S. Royal.
103619 bu. of whcnt buys 2 и. S. Uoyals.
COTTON SEED
1933131u lbs. of cotton 9l‘cd bought 1 U. S. Koy2l.
19361310 lbs. of cotton seed buys 2 U. S. Royals und 2 U. S. Tubes.
U. s. FARM TIREfor tractors anti farm oqalftmont 'Iho famous NOIilJV «lesion «Ivfs up 14) 20ÇÎ. r.iOUI- TKACTION than any other type of traction tire. Itrduccs cons-spiH'ds up work.
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4.50x21 ........... i?6.05
4.40x21 ........... $5.50
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500.419 ......... ?e.85
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U. S. ROYALS
4.50.X21 ........... $8.00
5.25x18 $10,85
(Other Sizes Priced Proportionally Low)
HORN’S SERVICE S T m
PHONE 31 MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
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T H E M O C K S V IL L E E N T E R P R IS E , Mocksville, N. C.. Thursday, October 8, 193(5
D R A G O N S D R I V E Y O U
CH A PT ER IX~Cont!nued
, —16—
Some stared at her hostllely, ns It
■he would clicnt them ot tho denth
they desired /or tho slrl In blnck be
fore them ; some thrust forward from
tha same seats ns If thoy would sur
round nnd defend the prisoner—and
her witness. Suddenly you saw faces.Mother’s nnd Bee's; nnd two who
had been In tho papers: his flrst wife,
with her daughter heslde her. How did
they feel, n few foot away from
Myrtle? Did they want her killed too?
Hero wns another fnce—an old face,
a line fnce. A littlo old woman who
had lived a lot, and never lot life beat
her. Winnie, she was. Agnes novor
hnd seen so nuicii ns a lllieness ot her,
but there was no missing her. When
aho looked at, Martin O’Mnrn, sho know Winnie was'ills 'grandmother.
Agnes sank down upon the wltness-
chnlr, and waited for Winnie's grnnd-
■on's flrst questions.
■ They were simple enough. Whnt wns
her name? . . . Whero did she live?
. .'. . . How old wns she? . . . Had she
gone to Chicago on a certain day? . . .
Did she meet nny one In Chicago?
Then what did they do? . . . After
she had looked nt the empty npnrt-
ment nnd Mr. Brnddon hnd left her.
What “did'she do?
“Now toll the Jury In your own words
what you did and what you saw nnd
, what you, yourself, hoard after the
door of the npnrtmcnt, upon which Mr.
Colver knocked, wns opened."
"I saw," snid Agnos, “n girl—a young ^omnn—I hnd never seen before. Thnt
gin there." Sho looked at tho prisoner.
Myrtle Lorrle. “She was In negligee
over underclothes and stockings. She
Wag very excited nnd disheveled. She
looked na If a good deal had just hap
pened to lier."
“I object," Mr. Nordell, tor the State,
was on hia feet.
“Sustained 1” said the Judge. “You
must confine your statement to whnt
you observed nnd hcnrd ; you must not
give your Inferences," he said kindly
■ enough to Agnes.
■ ' "I know," she said. “I forgot. I
can say I gaw bruises nnd hurts on
her. I did. I cnn say sho was shaky.
Silo y.-as. Sho was holding to tho door
knob with both hands. 'Who're you?
Wlio'ro you?’- sho asked; but didn’t
wait for mo to nnswer. She grnbbed
mo ond pulled me Into the room. She
*nld: ‘Oh, God, I’m glnd to see you—
glnd to SCO you r
, “She pulled me down Into n big, soft
chair beside her. . . . Mr. Colver, tho
¿¿ent, weut to loul: for sinelllng’Bnlta
for her. . . . I heard him call from
down the hall; 'Mr. Lorrlo! Mr. Lor
rle I’ . . . Ho came back, and he could
hardly speak, rinally ho uald to me:
•You know whnt wo'vo walked In on?
A killing 1 There’s murder here. . . .
Shu shot him! . . . I had Mrs. Lorrlo
In my arms, then., I was holding her.
8he wns lying limp noross me."
Agnes had no Idea how sho looked
as she related this. Sho was not think
ing of herself on the witness-stand;
Bho wns seeing herself hack In that
room. But tho Judge, tho Jury nnd
people crowding the benches were Htnr-
Ing nt her ns aho snt In tho big witness-
chair, young and slight nnd fnlr, and
BO completely unnfTectod and forgetful
of herself, Indeed, and so honest-look-
Ing.
OnthnI, stnnding before her, stepped
back a little as though he dared no!
trust himself closer to tho delight of
her. What a start sho was making—
beyond what ho had o.xpectedl Ho
could not possibly have planned this.
“Then did you do anything?" he
asked her very quietly.
tier bluo eyes on his' shortened their
focus from the far-nwny room which
Agnes had been seeing. For an In
stant, only, her retinas were nwaro ot
' him; then she went back ngnln.
“Yes. I tried to rouso her. 1 asked
her: ‘Did you do it?’ She couldn’t
reply at llrst. Sho didn't soom to un
derstand mo. I kept shaking her.
•Maybe I did,’ she finally said. ‘Mnybe
I did.' I snid ; ‘Mnybe? Don’t you
know?’ She didn't seem to know."
“I object!" Nordell protested.
“Sustained," said the Judge.
“I’m sorry," said Agnes. “But she
41da't.”
t “I object!"
i “Sustained," said tho Judge, and told
Agnès more sternly: “You must not
give your opinions or inforoneca.”
“I won’t again," said Agnes. "Or I'll
try not to. . . . Tho phono rang pretty
soon, then. I heard Mrs. Lorrlo say:
^Oh, God, Burt.' Then I guess he
talked to her. I mean," she caught
iierself, "Mrs Lorrlo walled and lis
tened ns If some one wns talking to
her. Then sho said ; ‘Bert, something’s
happened. . . . Charley died-today 1'
Then Mr. Colver used tho phono to
call the police; and I, Mr. O’Mara,
called you."
She stopped, aghast ut herself and
before Martin O'Mara. This wns not
at all ns sho hns reviewed and pre
pared her evidence with him ; sho had
aaid things sho had never dreamed
ot uttering, nnd omitted a score ot
Items sho had promised to repent.
But ho had no reproach for her.
Quite to the contrary! Ills own
pulses were dancing with new and
wanton pleasure. She delighted him',
«ho delighted tho Jury-men—at least
aome of them. Tho Judgo was unsuc
cessful In his severity toward her.
Three or four newspaper rdportors ro-
luetnntly left .the courtroom.
Thoy cnrrled the "heads" for tho
afternoon nows. Agnes Glenelth hnd
cnno on tor tho delense, and was
winning tho courtroom.
UattaL of course, brought her back
By EDWIN BALMER
Copyright by Edwin Balmor
W NU Sorvlce
to tho evidence sho had omitted; she romembored tho memorandum which
sho hnd made on tho morning after the
visit to tho Lorrle atiartment; and now, as Cathal questioned her, she
read It and e.'cplnined thnt sho hnd
writteu It, on that first morning, “be-
cniiso people were saying so many
things different from what I’d seen.'
This helped; but alreiidy, by tho un
planned ways bt her own, Agnes hnd
estnbllshed the feeling essential to a
favorable turn of the case. Tho Jury,
tho Judge, the courtroom hnd seen her
aud approved her; they ibelleved and
trusted what sho said. It was per
fectly plnln that only accidentally had
she become concerned with the case.
Yet, having happened to be the first
person to como In on Myrtle Lorrle
after the shooting—and having been
thu person In best position ■ to Judgo Mrs. Lorrle’s physical nnd mentnl con
dition at the tlnie when the crime had
occurred—this girl hnd not turned
against her but had set hersolf to help
her; when the agent had sent for the
police, Agnes Glenelth herself had
summoned, for Mra. Lorrle, a lawyer.
Agnos wns almost the^oflly pCrson'ln
the courtroom unnwnre of whnt she
hnd nccompllshed; sho believed sho
hnd bungled everything. Sho thought
sho hnd much moro to do when, after
she had described Myrtle’s bruises nnd
hurts as sho had scon them, Cathnl
asked :"Now, at the time you flrst saw
her and when you wore In close con
tact with her, what wns the general
stato of her mind? Did she show nny
clenr recollection of whnt recently had happened?"
"No. Sho wns both confused nnil
contrndlctory. I found her In a atnto
ot—ot shock. Of extreme—shock."
“Thnnk you," snid Cathnl. “Thnt's
nil I need nsk." He stepped bnck a
little nnd turned to tho table of tho
Stnto.
"Your witness," ho said to tho at
torneys charged with tho prosecution.
He retreoted to hia own table, that
of thit defense, whereat Mrs. Lorrlo nil
tile C.-no hnd been soatod, and hu
dropped upon a ohalr besldo hia client.
Myrtle turned to him, nnd he nodded
to her almost absently; he touched, re
assuringly, tho Impulsive ha'hd sho
strutched toward him; thon turned nnd
watched Nordell as ho came to hi*
foot for tho cross-examination.
Cathal Jerked forward to the edge of
his chair; ho kept hia iiunds relaxed,
but ho felt as It with flats clenched
ready to fight-fight ns -ho had never
fought before—If the prosecutor “toro
Into her" na ho could.
Yet, whllo hnlf ot Cnthal tingled
nnd bristled thus for tho flght, tho
cooler half, tho professional half—tho
pnrt ot ■ him which wna a Inwyer—
hoped tho Stnto would “ tonr In."
Whnt a mistnkel What complete
catastrophe It they attempted to snoer
nnd Jeer nt this girl nnd “show her up 1"
Nordell did not mnko thnt mlstnke.
“You hnvo snid. Miss Glenelth," ho
began with careful courtesy, "thnt you
happened to bo In tho building where
Mrs. Lorrlo lived, becnuse you were
looking nt nn apartment In It with
Mr. Braddon."
"Yes," said Agnes. '
"You wore engaged to bo married to
him?"
Agnos hcsltntod for the flrst time.
Engnged? Woro they ever "engnged"?
Thoy hnd been looking nt an apart
ment together; so she must have been thon.
"Yes," sho said. That was tho hon
est answer.
“Are you engaged to him now?"
“No." There It was, out. That was
honest, too.
‘‘When did you break your engnge-
mont?"
“We didn’t break It." What a thing
to talk of before a courtroom full of
people, und with reporters writing It
all down! ^
“Then wiiac^diU you do?" Nordell
demanded.
Cathal wns on his feet to help her;
but, for tho flrst timo In this trlnl, ho
was contused. He did not know how to
help her; this was all within Nordell's
right.
"We—we decided not to be married;
that’s all."
"Who decided that—Mr. Braddon or
you?"
“I objcct!" Cathal protested; but
the Judge, before ruling, looked to
Nordell.
"Overruled," he said to Cathnl. “An
swer," ho snid to Agnes.
"I did."
"When?’’
"It wns when wo were In the apart
ment upstairs. That wns why .Tob—
Mr. Braddon loft tho building."
“What enroot had this on you?”
“Kffect?"
. '*I mean," Nordell explained, “after
Just hnvlng brokon your engagoment
upstairs, did you enter tho apartment
downstairs In a calm and composed
niontal stnto? Was your own condi
tion perfectly clenr, or confused?"
“Clenr," snid Agnes. “I wns per
fectly clear In my mind," she repented.
"Perfectly clenr?"
"Yes; for I hnd not cnred—enough."
Nordoll atopped bnck. Ho hesltnted;
ho had gnined one citect; nnd he decided to rest on It. “Thnt's nil," he said
suddenly, looking at Cathnl.
“Thnt’s all," said Cathal. “You can
step down, Mlsa GleneHh."
Agnea slopped down slowly, cau
tiously. Suddenly sho had folt uncer
tain ot her foot. Sho looked down nt
th* floor, and a wnv« o t fttliituuw
passed over her. What had she Just
said uf JcbTShe halted for an Instant. “Water,”
sho heard some one say. Sho felt hands on her; strong, steadying hands;
Martin O'Marn hnnda. He hold, her flrnily nnd plcnsnntly. She folt thnt
she could not possibly fnll.
“Here's wnter, O’Mara," Mr. Nor-
dell's volco said.
“Timnks," ho said, and held the
glass to her Ups.
Agnos swallowed nnd looked up.
“Sorry—sorry," she snid.Then her mother wns there. "I’ll
tnko hor," she said to Cathal."All rlgiit now?" Cathal asked
Agnes.Sho looked up nt him. ",1eb," sho said, “—Jlr. Braddon's back In thnt
room? Tnko me bnck to him, plense," she begged Cnthal. "I want—I want to tell him myself whnt I snid."
'‘I’ll got him," Cnthal offered. "I’m
not calling him to tho stand. There’ll
bo no more court this afternoon, I
think."
"Thon," said Agnea, “toll him, please.
I'll wait for him In the cnr."
Bnlllffs opened tho way for her
mother nnd Beo nnd her. An eleyntor
lowered them to the ground;,'they
went out, through tho breathless, hazy
hcnt of mldaftornoon, to tho hot and
dusty cnr.
, O'JInra went to Jeb In the Wltnesta- room. Ho was pleased, ,Teb snw ; the
hour for him had gone well."I'm not calling you todny—or.nt nil, Mr. Brnddon,” Cathal said. "I thank
you for having been ready. But now I'll not need you. We're through with
Miss Glenelth."
“Then where la Mlsa Glenelth?"
"She's gono out. She's wniting for
you—with her mother nnd alster—nt
tho car."
“All right," said Job; nnd dcmnnded:
“Well, whnt did she do on tho stnnd?"
•*"r';-‘.'She did It," CnthnI told him. "She
turned the case."
"For your rotten little murderer
and you!"
Cnthal drew back a little.
“You damned shyster!" Jeb whis
pered from Ills soul.
Cathal heard, nnd knew ho wna
meant to hear; and he caught control
ot himself. He could not hate this
man now; ho could not envy him; to
strike him, physically, would ho silly
surplusage. He would not lot hlmsolt
deliver the blo\y he could with a few
words more. Ho said, na quietly ns hn
might In tho tension botwesn them:
"Some ovldunce cnmo out In cross-ex-
nmlnatlon which I neither knew nor
oxpected."
‘‘Wliaf bvldcncc?’’
“A statement sho made—which she
waa forced to make by the State—
concerning heraelf—and yourself."
“What did she say about us?"
"Thnt," snid Cathal, "she wishes to
toll you herself."
As Juh stepped from tho door to th«
Criminal Courts building, cnmcrns
clicked at him again; nnd tho crowd
turned. Job hcnrd his namo passed,
and he saw Ups that passed It, smile.
Ho straightened nnd fnced them. Be
hind his back, somebody laughed. .T«*>
would have liked to turn and knock
tho Idiot down. Ho would like, above
all, to knock down O'Mnrn. Damn him I
Job recognized the Glenelth car; and
he halted.
Agnes saw Jeb, and siie knew that
sho had nothing left to tell hliQ.
Ho came to the car, nnd Simmon«
opened tho door for him.
"You’d better take hor dircctly
home," Job said, looking In. Hia eye*
were upon Agnea, but they .went at
once to her mother, and he spoke , to
her. "I’m going to my oflice."
Cnthal drove north alone at nine
that evening. The ronda were choked
with cars, umny st them parked, more
ot them barely rolling as their pos
sessors sought tho night nnd relict, In
the little breezes of motion, from tho
dull nnd heavy boat.
Another day, whatever Its triumphs
and d(»palrs, was done; Its Qnnl pale
flaunt waa furled In the west. Dark
ness spread Ita trcnchorous shield to
sntlsfnctlona ot the longlnga of fleah
for fleah. Sclf-sufllcloncy capitulated;
one hungered tor nnother; everywlieie
young people pnlred, nrma nbout ench
other, lips together, careleaa whnt all*
liouettes tho hendllghts surprised nnd
beirnyed.
Niglit. For dny, tho making ot
money, liu' struggle and tho flght; for
night, rela.-ciilion and love. Night, with
Deneb, tho iiright star, low over tho
Inke—na low, almost, as tho masthead
light of n littlo yacht drifting along.
Calhal was clear of tho city. Thun
der threatened, but from fnr nwny. Be
side him, tho street-lamps censed; he
followed tho dnrk lines of cool coun
try places.
It wns unlike Cathal to falter before
a determination he had taken; yot he
passed tho gateposts of tho Glonelths'
and drove a mile beyond before he
turned back nnd entered their road.
It was ten o'clock, but he saw thnt
doors nnd windows of the lower rooms
were open; shaded lights burned wlth-
’ In. Tho family had not gone to bed.
Cnthal rang, and he said to Cravath,
who recognized him: ‘‘Ask Mrs. Glen,
elth If I may havo a few minutes— no more—with Miss Glenelth,"
Cravath left him outside and with
tho screen door closed. Mrs. Glenelth
came, with Cravath, to the screen,
and spoko to Cathnl through It.
“Whnt Is It, Mr. O'Mara? Aren’l
you through'with us? Does the law let
you nsk something moro of my daugl.-
ter?"
"Not tho law," said Cathnl, hol()lRe
hin hnt. “It’s I that do."
(TO BE CONTINVm
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY ICHOOL Lesson
Hy КЯУ. MAIlObD I,. ÌHJNIJQUIBT. Donn of tho Mooilv Ulblo Inatltuto of СЫспки.© Wontorn Nowapapor Union.
Lesson for October 11
BECOMING Л CHRISTIAN
fjE S S O N T E X T - A c ts 10!22-34, P h ilip -
p in n a ,1:7-10.GOLDEN TI3XT—Bollovo on tho Lord .loaus Christ, und thou shiiU bo Bftvod.—•
Acta 111:31.PRT.MAKY TOPIC—Two Happy P rl-
Boncra,JUNIOR TOPIC— Horooo In Prison.INTI3UMEDIATB AND SENIOR TOP-
10— How M'liy I Booomo tt Chrlatinn.YOUNO PKOPL.K AND ADULT TOPIC
—How to Booomo n Christhvn.
The conversion of Lydia and lier
gracious growth into usefulness as
a Christian is in striking contrast
with the experience that Paul had
with the demon-possessed damsel
(Acts 1G:1G-18). A satanic power
oi divination had made her profit
able to unscrupulous men. Such
men have not perished from the
earth, and there are still those who
mako merchandise of silly and sin
ful women.Paiil "commands the demon to
come out of her and at once the
issue is drawn.
I. Christianity versus Crooked
Business (Acts 10:22-24).
As long as the missionaries were
at the place of prayer and in the
home of Lydia thoy were not dis- .turbed. But as soon as they
touched the illegitimate gain of these
"business" men who were making
money from the misfortune of the
poor damsel, bitter opposition arose.
Cunningly combining the plea of
false patriotism and anti-Semitism
with the evur-poteiit argument that
bushiess was being hindered, they
raised a hue and cry which re
sulted in the beating and imprison
ment of Paul and Silos (Acts 16:14-
21).'We live in .another century, but
men are the same. Let the church
nnd its members only go through
the motions of formal service and
present .a powerless religious phi-
lusopiiy, and tiie world will applaud
and possibly support its activities.
But lot the pungent power at tho
gospel go out through its life and ministry, and deliver devU - pos
sessed men and women, let its
God-given grace expose the hypoc
risy and wickedness oi men nnd
there will soon be opposition.
- D oW , liuT lio t defeated
(vv. 25, 26).
The preachers landed in jail,
beaten, bloody, and chained to tho
stocks. 'What a disgrace it would
have been if they had como there
bccause of their misdeeds. How ashamed we are when professed
Christian leaders sin and fall into
tho hands of the law.
But “Blessed are they which aro
persecuted for righteousness sake”
(Matt. 5:10). Little wonder that
they forgot their bruises ond their
chains and began to sing and pray,
even nt midnight.
Note that ‘itho prisoners were
listening to them ." Tho words wo
speak, the songs we sing, our every
action, speak either for God or
against Him. ‘‘Whether therefore
ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye
do, do all to the glory of God."
As thoy pray God cpeaks, chains
fall away, prison doors open. Men
can lock doors; God shakes them
open.
The jailer, cruel and bold when
he put them into prison, but now
in fear, is about to kill himself.
But God has better thoughts concerning him. Paul cries out, "D o
thyself no harm " and he experiences
III. Salvation Instuad of Suicide (vv. 27-34).
Thank God for the earthquakes
in our lives v/hich bring us to him.
The jailer, being rightly exer^
cised by God’s dealings with him,
asks the greatest and most im
portant question that can .ever
come out of tiie heart of unregene-
rate man—"W hat must I do to be
saved?" Reader, have you asked this question? Then you, too, are
ready for the answer, ''Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt bo sayed."
The closing verses of our lesson
present the personal testimony of
Paul that he had surrendered
I'V. AU for Christ (Phil. 3:7-14).
AU was but loss to l-^im compared
with what lie gained in Christ. We
speak of surrendering all for Christ, but as a matter of fact
wo lose only what is of no roal value and make infinite gain.
Paul, as are all great followers
of Jesus Christ, was a "one thing"
man. All that he had or was or
hoped to be, every ounce of energy
ana love, wont into his pressing
"toward the goal unto tho prize
of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus."
Inacpendcnco ot OpinionsIt is easy in the world to live after
the world’s opinion; it is easy in
Bolitude to live after out own; but
the great man is he who in the
midst of tiie crowd keeps with per
fect sweetness the independence of
iolitude.—Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Overcoming Desires 1 count him braver who over
comes hia desires than him' who
conquers his enemies; for tho*hard.
est victory is tiio victory over fieli. ‘
—Aristotle,
Comfort, Style in Pajamas
1923-B.
This suavely tailored club style
pajam a set is tho csscnce of sim
plicity. "Whether your cotton,
satin, silk crepe, pongee or rayon
ia expensive or not you .won’t be
taking a chance with pattern No.
1923-B for step-by-step sewing in
structions are included and guar
antee to guide your every stitch.
College girls approve its con
servativa styling — busy house
wives flnd them adequate to greet
the unexpected guest and the
.business girl revels In their com
fort and ease assuring details.
The trousers are amply cut and
the soft blouse roomy enough for
nny 12 to 20’s dally dozen. A natty
pointed collar, wide cufis and bolt
add an air of distinction to your
garm ent., .............................
Barbara Bell Pattern No.
1923-B is available for sizes 12,
14, 10, 18 and 20. Corresponding
bust measurements 30, 32, 34, 30
and 3B. Size 14 (32) requires 4%
Sour milk beaten into mayon
naise dressing gives it a dolicious
flavor.• • *
"When buying flsh see that tho
eyes aro not sunken in and ull.
A fresh flsh has clear eyes and
the flesh is firm to the touch.• • •
Drain all juices from fresh or
canned fruits, store in ice box
and use for fruit cocktails or sher
bets.• • •
Before putting away garden
tools for the winter, clean them
off, rub with kerosene or grease
and store In a dry place.• • •
Do not let hardwood floors get
badly worn before having them
polished. A little polish on ths
worn places each week keeps
floors always looldng well.• « *
If the neck of a bottle is broken
when opening, tie a pad of ab
sorbent cotton over the top of
another bottle and pour contents
of broken bottle through it. Cot
ton will catch pieces of glass as
liquid is poured through.• • •
In the fall pack plenty of oak
leaves around the roots of acid
soil plants, such ns daphnes, aza
leas and rhododendrons. ‘These
leaves rot and make an excellent
fertilizer. They may be mixed
with the soil in the spring.
Bell Syndicate.— W N U Servieo.
yards of 3D-inch material. Send
15 cents in coins.
Send for tho Barbara Bell Pall
Pattern Book containing 100 well-
planned, easy-to-make pattema.
Exclusive fashions for children,
young women, and matrons. Send
flfteen cents for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circlo Pattern 'Dept., 367 "VV.
Adams St., Chicago 111.
® D=ll Syndic.-ile.— W N U Servlet
The Mind
Meter •
ßy
LOWELL
HENDEUSON
® Boll synaicale.— ÌVNL' Sur»lc».
The Completion Test
In this test there aro four words given in each problem. Three of
the four in each case bear a do-
finite relationship to one another;
for example, they may be th#
names of animals or tha names of state capitals, or perhaps
synonyms. Cross out the one word that does not belong in each prob
lem. I1. Gay, merry, dejected, frlvo-' lous.
2. Edison, 'Wliiotler, Fulton,
Morse.
3. Build, erect, raze construct.
4. Phoenix, Salem, Raleigh,
Macon.5. Arrow, bullet, cartridge, shell. 0. Inaugurate, start, introduc»,
continue.
7. Donate, pilfer, steal, embezzl*.
8. Puma, leopard, tiger, rail.
9. Candor, duplicity, openness,
sincerity.10. Bat, mallet, racquet, gim.
Auawcrs1. Dejected. 6. Continu#.
2. Whistler. 7. Donate.
3. Raze. 8. Rail.
4. Macon. 9. Duplicity.
5. Arrow. 10. Gun.
Whitens, Clears The
Skin Quickest Way
No mnttor how dull nnd dark your oomploxion; no matter how freckled arid ooiuraoned by mm nndwind,N'ADINOLA Cream 'will whiion, clear and smooth your skin to now beauty, iiuiokcst, ooBlest wny.Just njmy at bedtimo;NAI>INOi, A, tested, and.trusted lor over a gen- , begins its bcau' work while youtlfying work whilo you sleep. Then you seo day* by-day improvement until your complexion Ja rostorod to oruaimywhite,satin-smooth, _____loveliness. No disappointments, no long waiting for results. Money-bnck gunr- antoe. At nil toilet counters, only fiOo.Or ivrlto 'NAPINOLA, Box 47, Paris, Tenn.
'ÏOU Answer
Do we die of what we eat nnd
drink ov do owe live long by them?
k 40t 65c BoH!e*tlL ORUoaiSTi
But It WUl Rise Truth can be lost in a flood of words.
QUICK HEAT ANYWHERE
eCí£»!
• НШШШ.1
• low COST
• PORTABU
^ . f ' RADIANT У
F o l e m a n heater
. ______Nooonnootions. Макея and burnìUs own ffQs from untrcoted ffauolino.
Just tho iblntr for romovlnff ohill from bomot offloo, etoro or for extra warmth in aevero woathor. Costs less than 2^ an hour to operato I ScQ It at your dealer’s.
WRITE FOR FREE FOLDER. Send postcard now!
THE COLEMAN tA M P AND STOVE CO. Dent WU403. WiehUa, Kani.i Chicago, IIU FblladelphU. Ря.) Ъо» Angelcf» Calif. (6403)
V¿u«Keruau. ----------
*WktnpnrniulltlmlidHil»la!kiifVltamluB.
Q U A K E R O A T S
Thursday, Octobor 8, 193G
ш т ш ;,
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPmSE, MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
qt“SNAPSWOT CLIlt
Make .Your Own Exposure Guide
PAGE SEVEN
Ploturtt an .xposura dW .rsnt from tH H r«|Ulr«dlfor a landicape. It’« bettar to know than to gueu.
rpUB trouble with a good many lona, shutter speeds from 1/10 sec-* 1. .u---------* j g g
f.32. 'Vou havo tho family In tho
shade of s troo on a bright sunny
day. An'oxpoaure of 1/26 second at
trouble with a good many
amateurs Is that thoy nover got
hoyond tho stage ot happy-go-luoky
shutter clicking. They keep on mak
ing haphazard guesses at exposures
notwithstanding tho Indistinct pic
tures that too often result. They
would be surprised at what they
could accomplish aa a regular thing
U thoy roally knoT.- just what atop
and shutter speed aro needed with
the typo o£ camera they uso for tho
existing light conditions each time
thoy take a picture.
To bo sure, exposure Is a bit of a
bueaboo even to tho moat oxperl-
onoed, which Is why so many "ad
vanced amateurs" uso oxposuro
meters. But, If you aro still a
guossor, nothing prevents you from
learning to bo a good ono. Hero la a
auggestlon to help you lick tho problom.
Take the time some day soon to
make an exporlment with dlffaront
stops and shutter spoeds on tho
name subject, Havo a pad ot paper
'\vlth you on which you have writtou
the date, timo o£ day and light con-
--dltioBB"and-th0-tyirrT)i“flltti-."Thoa for every shot you make, put down
the exposure data, Nos. 1,2, 8, 4, etc.
Make two series o[ oxporlments Ilko
this, first with tt group ot porsons,
thou with n laiulscnpo.
For tho flr-st oxporlinont, why not
jiut tho cooporaliou ot your l':iinllyV
' Got them out nn tlin lawn Honm afl-
'crnnou am! i'ti'.rt shootlnfr, Kuiipoho
,lt. I.? nut l(.'i;.s iL:m an hour litiforo
i;tn<jot and tho sky Is bvi;’;hl;. Yoiirii
ri roldiii,!,' v.-ilii an;irUi,iiiiial,
f.8 seems right Make that exposure
No. 1 and carefully put down the
data. Thon- make three other snap
shots at f.8, No. 2 at 1/10, No. 8
at 1/50 and No. 4 ut 1/100. Then
mako four more at f.0.3 and four,
more at M l ot tho samo shuttor
Bpoeda. This assortment has pro
vided you with overoxposures and
underexposures ot the same sub-
Joct but surely several correctly ex
posed negatives at different stop
openings under the same conditions.
Now got your photo llnlsher to
mnko you the best possible prints
ot each negative. Thon ask him to
print all the negatives, la groups of
tour, on ono sheet of paper, using
the grado that will give the best
print for the beat negative ot all.
Result: you' have learned some
thing! And you will havo a record to rotor to ot what different exposures will do to a picture and among
tlie.^'tt correct'oiio to'omnlftie.
Do the samo thing for a landscape
picture, say at t.lU, £.22 and f,32.Right! Tho records will not servo prodaoly tor other light conditions, hut thoy will help you Imiuoneoly to make tho nocjoaaary adjuiitmonts. ■i'Du will Hi;o Гиг imo thing that uu- (lorcj:!i(),'uiro Is a much moro hop2- I'aIIin,'! than ovoroxposuro:
honco, in tiu! I'uUii'O, you will tend to ho ¡norc lil.eral In your ostlumtes.
.TOHN VAX aillLDKR
cuN'i'KK m w s
Cpoririii I’mvoll is S|)cnd-
ing sottio time with her .slHtor,
Mr.s. Waltur Anderson in Wins-
ton-Saium.
Tho Missionary Society wont
•to tho County Home Sunday oven
iiifi and conducted a song and
j)r.'iyer service.
Mr. and IVlrs. Spencer Johnson,
of : Statesville, woro sliakinir
)i;inds with old frioiuis at church
Sunday.
Ml', and Mrs. Danner, ol' Har
mony, wore tho dinner gnosts of
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. 'Walker Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Atlas Smoot
woro Sunday evening visitor.*» at
Mr. K. S. Powells.
Mr. Frank S. Ijames, of High
Point, spent the wsek-end with
Mr. E. R. Bnrneycaatle.
Mr. p.nd Mrs.'Fred Walker and
little Bobbie, spent Saturday
night with home folks.
•Mr. and Mrs. J. Gj DvVlggins
were Sunday evening visitors at
Mr. T. W. Dwiggins.
Mrs. Emma Barneycastle spent
last week with her daughter, Mrs.
J. C. Dwiggins in Mocksyille.
Mra. Alice Blount, of Salisbury
and Mrs. John Blount, of Kan
napolis, were Sunday evening
visitors in our midst.
Mr. C. H. Barneycastle spent
one evening in Salisbury last
v/oek on business.
Rov. Ervin and family were the
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bon Tutterow Sunday.
The young follis of Center met
Sunday night and organized an
Epworth League.
LIBERTY NEWS
Mi.ss ijiiii.'i, dT ICanciipdli.M, woro
iho woek-oiul .liiK'slii of tiioir par
ents, Mr. and Airs, C. \j. Kimmoi'.
Tho K'mnior reunion was liold
at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. C.
L. Kimmer Sunday, A'i)out a
iuindred rolativos and I’riends
wore present. 'A t noon a long
table was sol in the yard filled
witli plenty of good oats. Thanks
vi'oi'o offei'od by Mr. 0. W. Evor-
liardt. All on.ioyed tho day fine.— '-*4^-----—
AMUSING
Rev. M. G. Ervin will fill liis
regular appointment at Liberty
M. E. Church Sunday at 11
o’clock.
The Woman’s Mi.ssionary So
ciety will meet Thursday, Oct.
ath, with Rev. and Mra. M. G.
Ervin, Hope ftvery member will
be present. All visitors welcome.
Mr. Taylor Call is on tho flick
list, sorry to state,
Mr. Robert Kimmer and sister.
A printer is usually tho first
ono to catch a typographical or
otlior error in a newspaper and
ono of them compilod tho follow
ing freaks in advertising, which
shows what tho misplacing of a
word, phrase or comma does for
-a sentence. -
Wanted~A furnished room by
an old lady with electric light.i.
Wanted— A man to take care
of horses wiio can speak German.
Wanted— A room by a young
man with double doors.
Wanted— A saleslady in corset's
and underflannels.
Wanted— Ladies to sew ¡but
tons on the second story of Smith
and Brown building.
Wanted— A boy who can qpen
.oysters with airoference.
j Wanted — E.xperienced nurse
for bottled baby.
Wanted— An organist and a
boy to blow the same.
Wanted—K room for t\yo young
gentlemen about thirty feet long
and twenty broad.
Wanted— boy to be inside anu
partly outside the colinter.
Wanted— By a respectable girl,
herpassage to New York, willing
to take care of children and a
sailor.Wanted— A furnished room by
a young lady about si.xteen feet
aquare.Wanted— A cow by an old lady
with crumpled horps.
For Sale—A farm by an old
gentleman with outbuildings.
A recent cooperative order for
$400 worth cf rye, vetch, clover,
leas, oats and barley was made
by grov/ers of Duplin County.
SMITH GROVE NEWS
Rev. П. C. Pi-o«.man will fill
his regular appointment here'
next Sunday morning at 11:00
o’clock. This will be his last
appointment here before tho an
nual conference.
Don’t forget the supper which
will be served here by the ladies
of the cliurch next Saturday even
ing, beginning at 6 o’clock. The
menu will consist of chicken,
mashed potatoes, pickle, coffee,
сани лпи Ice cream at 25c per
plate. Proceeds to be used by
tho church. Everybody come out
and buy your supper.
I Miss Lorraine Bowden, of the
Griffith School faculty, spent the
week-end with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hi F, Bowden.
Mr,3. Grady McBride and chil
dren, Jane and Betty Lee, spent
the week-end with Mrs. H. L.
Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L, McClam-
rock, of Cooleemee, spent Sunday
evening with her mother, Mrs.
Sallie Smith. j
Mr. and Mrs, Ray Foster spent
Sunday with Mr. aiid Mrs, W. G.
Spry. j
Mrs, W illiam Baker луЬо nurses
Mrs. Sallie Smith spent the week
end at her home, near Oak Grove, i
Mr. Joe Foster has 'been on the
Hick list, we are sorry to note. i
Mrs, J. C. Smith spent ono day
last week with hor brother, Mr.
Bat .Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Beeding
and children spent Sunday in
Winston-Salem, the guests of Mr.
and Mrs. G. B. Taylor.
--------7~*-----------
County agents report a greatei»
SBo of ground limestone by North
Carolina farmers tliis fall than
in many years. The seedings of
alfalfa also have been increased. i
ATTEND
STERCH I’S
O P E N I N G
Salisbury, N . C .
W e d n e s d a y O c to b e r 1 4 , 1 9 3 6 -
2:30 to 6:30 and 7:30 to 9:30
M U SIC
F R E E G IFT S
- - EN T ERT A IN M EN T
Guilford farmers have made re
quests for over 200 acres of land
to be sub-soiled by the tei'racing
uUtfil.
If Onslow County farmers
would thin their woods as demon
strated by R, ,'W. Graeber on J.
W. Taylor’s farm near Richlands
recently, thoy would have plenty
of firewood for many years to
come’ ând^^v’oïïltï 'be growing rt
profitable crop of timber at tho
same time, says ' Charles D.
Raper.
S T E R C H I ’ S
QUALITY FURNITURE
124 East Innes St.Salisbury, N. C.
BELK-HARRY COMPANY
N e w F a l l C o a t s
Smartly styled, of fine new materials.
Beautifully fur-trimmed collars and cuffs.
$ 1 6 . 5 0
N e w F a l l C o a t s
in the new Fall Materisils-polo-sucde and plain
cloth. Beautifully fur trimmed, with badger, fox
squirrel, etc. Best of lining'. Colors: green, brown
rust, blue and black. Outstanding values!
OTHER COATS
Plain Oloth-Tweeds, All wanted colors, Exceptional Values
$7.95 and $9.95
Swanky New NiceShowing Of
owagger ouiis
Smartly Styled, lined with durable fabrics,
Lovely new styles.
$9.95-$16.95
Nicely made, of excellent fast colored mat
erials.
98c to $1.95
New Fall Frocks
Plenty of new styles and materials, Rebble Crepe, Can
ton Crepe and sport Frocks.
$ 4 .9 5 - $ 5 .9 5 - $ 7 .9 5 - $ 1 2 .9 5
New Fail Plain CLOTH COATS
without fur. Nicely Tailored. New
Fabrics.
$ 4 .9 5 - $ 7 .9 5 - $ 9 .9 5
B E LK -H A R R Y CO.
Salisbury^ N. C.
m\
Ì.J
1-.Î
i4 '
. f i l
( Л
' I
ji'
«ilfí v:Jd l
РЛПП) EIGHT THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. С Thur.silny, October 8, 198G
S A M i O F l-ANDS
Kv''
nil
NOirril CAROLINA
HAVH-: COUNTY
Under ;iM(l by vii'tuo of an-
Hidi'ily (.'ontaiiiKcl ill the \Vill of
Camilla II. Stuelmaii, doccased,
and a jiulKmeiit in nn action en
titled “Wachovia Bank and Trust
Company, Executor vs. Berry R.
Steelman ct al,” snid- will and
■ snid judgment being recorded in
the office of tho Clei’k of Super
ior Court of Forc-yth County,
■ North Carolina, the Waehovln
■ Bank & Trust Company, in its
. 'capacity as Executor, wi'll sell
the following: described tracts of
• land ut a public sale on Monday,
November 2, 193C, at 12:00
o’clock noon, at the Davie County
Courthouse at Mocksville, North
Carolina:
Lot No. 1;
: Beginning at aft iron stake on
’the East side of United States
; HighAvay No, GDI and being 21G5
-feet North of the intersection of
; United States Highway No. 601
' and tho Cana Road and running
. thence North G5 degrees East GOO
feet to an iron stalce: thence
North 80 degrees East 2320 feet
to a stone; thence North 89 'de
grees 45 minutes East 185.5 feet
to n branch; thence at a liorth-
-easterly direction along said-.
:‘b)ranch 257 feet to cn iron stake
;6n the North side of a road;
; thence North 7G degrees 30
(minutes West 1038 feet;
.thcnco continuing North 68 de
grees 15 minutes West 274 feet
to an iron stake on the South
side of said road; thence Nort'h
.83 degrees 30 minutes ^e st 2019
feet to an iron stake; thence
South 4 degrees West 5G1 feet
to nn iron stake; thence South
32 degrees West, 530 feet to nn
iron stake on the Enst side of
United States Highway No. 601;
thence along the Fast side of
aaid Highway 35 degees 50 min
utes East 500 feet to an iron
stake, the place of beginning con
tainin" 62.4G acres and being
known and described as Lot No.
1 in the division of the Holman
Fnrm ns shown on snid mnp re
corded in tho office of tho Re-r
gister of Deeds of Dnvie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No. 2:
B agin n 1 n K ■ at ‘H ir i roirTstake-oTi'
the -East side of United States
Highway No. GOI and being
1808.5 feet North of the intersec
tion of Unitecli- Stntes Highway
No. 601 and Cana Rond and run
ning thence North degrees 15
Ttiiniife.s Enst 2620 feet’ to n
stone; thence North 6 dearees
East 671 feet to a stone, thonce
West 133 feet to a 'branch;
thence North 33 degrees Enst a-
long the branch 287 feet to an
elm; tlionce South 89 degrees 45
minutes West 185.5 feet to a
stone; thence South 80 degrees
West 2320 feet to nn iron stnke;
thence South 65 degrees West
GOO feet to an iron stake on the
East side of United States High
way No. 601; thence along the
Enst side of said Highway 86G.6
feet to the place of beginning,
contnining 60.72 ncres, and beiny
known and described as Lot No.
2 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in tho office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot Nu. 3:
-Beginning at the Intersection
- of-United States Highv.'ay No.
GOI and the Cana Road and run-’
ning thence along the North side
■of- the Cana Road North 83 de
grees 25 minutes East 1225.2
:ioet; thence continuing along
the North side of aaid road North
-88 degrees 55 minutes ’ E ast-784
;,ioet to nn iron stake; thence
North 6 degrees East 1622 feet
Vo a stone; thence South 78 de-
-grees 15 minutes W est'2620 feet
to an iron stake on the East side
•of United States Highway No.
'C,Q1; thence iilong the East side
bf said road 1308.5 feet to the
place of beginning, containing
71.92 acres and 'being known and
described as ■ Lot No. 3 in the'
division of th Holman Farm aa
shown on said map recorded in
the office of the Reigister of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina. ' , I ,
Lot No. 4;
Beginning at nn iron stake on
the North side of the Cana Road
being 2009.2 feet East of the in
tersection of United States High
way No. GOI and the Cana Rond
and running thence North 6 de
grees East 2293 feet to a stone;
thence We.st 133 feet to a branch;
thence along the brnnch North
■ 33 degrees East 287 feet to nn
elm; thencb South 7T degrees 10
miinites East 1165 feet to an iron
■ fitake; thonc.e South 5 decrees 41
minutes West nlong the West
' property line of S. F. Hutchins
‘1418 feet to a stone; thence South
70 degi'ees 15 niiniilea East 176
feet to an iron stake on the we.st
side of tlie Can;i Uoad; thence
¡'.lung tlie North side of thu Cana
Uoad the four following courses;
South ¡38 degrees GO minutes
West 484,5 feet, South 63 degrteg
10 minutes West 488.8 feet, South
75 degrees 20 minutes West 110.8
feet, South 88 degrees 55 minutes
'.Vest 526 feet to an iron stnke,
the place of beginning, contain
ing 57.81 acres, and being known
and described as Lot No. 4 in
the division of the Holman Farm
as shown on said mnp recorded
in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot'No. 5:
Beginning at an iron stnke,
which is North 85 degrees 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone; wliich is the Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
cbrner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and. P. M. Pierce, at .a
branch 925 feet to nn elm; thence
South 71 degrees 10 minutes East
1165 feet to an iron stake; thence
along the property line of R. H.
Neely and 0. T. Boger North 5
degrees 81 minutea East - 1069
feet to a stone; thence N orth'85
degrees 20 minutss West 660 feet
to an iron stake in the branch
the place ot Degtnning, contain
ing 19.10‘acres and being'knowrf
and described as Lot No. 5 in
che division of the Holman Farm
as shown on said map recorded
in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina,
Lot No. G:
Beginning at an iron"^',-stake,
which is North 85 degrees ' ‘20
inimitus West 660 I'oet from a
stone, which is the Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P.. i\L'Pierce, at a
branch and running North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 1551
teet to an iron stnke; thence
South 3 degrees 35 minutes West
H i feet to an iron stake on tho
south side of a road; thence
South 68 degrees 15 minutes
Easit 274 feet; thence continu
ing South 76 degrer.=i 30 minutes
East 138 feet to a branch; thence
in a northeasterly direction along
said branch 622 foot to tho place
of-bMimiinff,-“” coiitiiliihig 14:34
acres and being known and des-
crl'bed as Lot No. G in the divi-
:.ion of the Holman Farm as
ihown on said map recorded in
ne office of the Register of
.eeds of Dnvie County, North
Carolina.
The above described property
:s known ns the Holman Home
olnce. The sale of snid proper
ty, will be mude upon a basis of
one-third cnsh and the remaining
iH’o-thirds to be paid December
1, 1937, snid obligation to be se
cured 'oy a note nnd deed of trust
upon said promises. 'The pur
chaser may negotiate with the
seller for other terms. Lots will
■le sold sepnrately and in groups.
'I’his the 29th day of September,
1936.
tVACHOyiA BANK & TRUST
■OMPAINY, Executor
T. Spruill Thornton, Attorney.
10 1 5t.
LEXINÜ'I ON ROUTE 5 NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nance and
family, of Salisbury, were Sun
day guests of the former’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Nance,
Mr, and Mrs, Marshall Barnes
nne two hildren, Mr. .and Mrs.
Jess Easter and family, all of
Jubilee, and F. L. Grubb, of
Welcome, apent Sunday after
noon with ivir. and Mra, W, A.
Urubb and family.
Mr, Snd Mrs. J, F. Barnhardt,
Sadie and Seagle ¿arnhardt were
I'junday dinner guests of Misa
Jane and “Doc” Shoaf, of Erlan-
ger.
Mr, and Mrs, eSabon Cope, of
Spencer, were visitors of Mr, and
Mrs, R, W, Hartley Sunday.
'Mr. and Mra. Raymond Darr
and daughter, of High Point, Mr.
and Mrs. o iiif Fitzgerald, Jr., of
Lexington, spent the week-end
with Mr. and Mrs. W. A, Darr
and iamily.
Miss Sadie Barnhardt spent
Saturday night with her sister,
Mrs. Sa mLeonard and Mr, Leo-
njird, of 'i'yro.
Miss Lena Grubb spent the
weeK-end with Mr, and Mrs, J,
И. Hnmilton, of near Fork,
Mr, and Mrs, W ill Carter, Mr,
nnd • Mrs, Lindsay Looper nnd
children, nil of Fork, visited Mr,
Uiid Mrs. Ernest Carter nnd Mr.
D. W. Barnes Sunday.
Mrs. R. L, Buie, Gene nnd
Worth Buie, wore Sunday guests
nf Mr. and Mrs. (iMcnr Barnes
nnd family, of Advance.
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Barnhardt
spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs.
Niiye Nnnce, of Yadkin,
Me.ssi's. Honry liarnhardt iind
Kii'by C.reeiir., of Churehlatid,
wore visitors here one night re
cently.
Mr. and Mrs. ,r. F. Barnhnrdt
visiteil relatives in Davie County
Saturday.
Mr. Vann Grubb, of Virginia,
visited his grnndfather and sis
ter, Mr. T; W. Hartley and Miss
Lena Grubb one day recently.
MEADOW STRIPS SERVE
DUAL PURPOSE ON FARM
Mendow strips take cnre -of
water from terraces and provide
a hay crop at the same time, ac
cording to H. R.'Tribou, agricul
tural engineer of the Soil Con-
iervntion Service.
'fhe strip is generally nbout 20
to 30 feet wide, while the length
depends upon the size of the
field nnd the area that the land
owner wants to convert into a
mendow strip.
Water flowing from terraces
emptying into the strip is slowed
up, spreacT out in a sheet, and
soil miirht wa.4h from terrace
chaiUKil.4 is collei'ted. iiliminnt-
ing ijrat'lically all .soil loss oil
the field.
'I'he j)racticabilit;,' of the mea
dow strip, said 'I’ribmi, lies in its
being easy toestablish, its per
manency and .useruiness. Mea
dow strips can be mowed several
times in one year. 'I’he hay from
the strips is often worth more to
the farmer than any crop that
could be planted on the same
area.
A very good example of the
efficiency and utility’ of the
meadow strip as terrace outlet
can be found on the farm of L.
0. Williard, who lives in the
Deep River erosion area near
High Point.
When the meadow- strip was
constructed two years ago W il
liard did not like the idea, Tri-
ibou continued. But at the end
of the first year, after he had
mnde three cuttings of hny from'
the nren, he wns particularly
pleased and reported he had made
more from the meadow strip in
the fnrm o f hay tíiaii he could LET US iDO YOUR JOB W ORK
possibly have derived from a croj) .................. .......
grown on the same iand. WHJ УУльЬ DO 11 К1&Ш.
It's Not Too Soon To Think Of
C O A L
W ith tho thermometer bobbing above 90 every day it takes
a lot of imagination to picture the Vvay you arc going to
feel albout COAL October or Novemiber, but a good
imagination will save you a substantial amount of your
next Avinter’s fuel bill if you buy NOW,
Coal Will Be Much Higher
E ICE S FUEL CO.
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
MR. B. O. DISHER
• •
PERSONALLY WELCOMES
his many
Friends and Customers
of Davie County to his
FALL FURNITURE
Through October 10th - Open Evenings 7 to 10
SHOWING EVERYTHING NEW IN
• RUGS
• LIVING ROOM
• BEDROOM
• DININGROOM
• KITCHEN
Also a complete line of Ranges and Circulators
B. J. KIMEL FRED DISHER RUFUS MATHEWS SAM FREEMAN
MRS. FRED DISHER E. A. SMITH W. P. LEWTER PHIL NIFONG
“there’s no place like home when properly furnished by^'
CO.
517.519 N. Liberty St, Winston-Salem, N. C. PHONE 2-3434
AQveniurers
Club
‘The Death That Saved’'
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter
i i T T A N G IN G by the neck.” as it’s spoken of in the Jaw books, is
i 1 generally considered fatal. In fact, the only man 1 ever heard
of who was hanged by the neck to save his life is Harry J. Perry of
New York City. It just goes to show how a dilTerence in circum
stance will change the whole picture for you. For most people hang-
wmmodating. It wa^ about the middle of February, 1915, and the cUy ol
Boston was just getting over a bad .snowstorm. A freezing "pell h K -
r f i l collected on the streets L d onthe housetops. Big icicles hung down from the roofs, threatening to fall on the crowded sidewa ks below. And before that cold s n a ^ w L over
‘"h that-threatened fo Tall Sand punch holes in the soles oi his shoes.
Harry was living in Boston in those days, and working in a
r 1“'« “ lot other roofsin tlio neigliborhooil, was frmgcd with icicles a foot long. They
liad to be cut down before they fell and hurt somebody» but when
.‘I ‘''® none of «»'em wantedto do it. Tliat slanted slate roof is coated with ice,” thoy told
him, and it s so slippery that it would be suicide to try and get out on lit
The foreman was disgusted. He called the handymen a bunch of
sissies, and he went through the store telling the world that if they'd
give him just one man with nerve enough to try it, he’d go up there and do it nimscir.
, I dpcided to be the little tin hero,” says Harry, “and volunteeredfor the job/
■Wished He Had Been Less Hasty in Taking Job.
Harry soys he was young in those days. He didn’t know much about
roofs, and he didn t realize the danger until he got up there. Then he took a look at the prospect and wished he hadn’t boon so hasty. He was eight
Ш Ш Ш Ш Ш
(Copyrlnhl. W. N. «.)
. . a E N K S
OF w o M e s /
So He strung the Noose Around His Neck.
stories up, on the ridge of a roof that was steeply slanted,'it fell away on
both sides of him, u smooth, slippery sheet o£ ice, with nothing to get a
hold on, and nothing at the edge of the root but an ice-fllled gutter. That was what he was going to have to stand on while he chopped away those big, thick icicles.
The foreman had a rope with him, to lower Harry down lo tiie
roof’s edge. He looked around for something to snub it on and
found nothing but the chimney. The chimney was square, with
sharp corners, and ho knew the rope wouldn’t slide around it, very
easily, but there was nothing else In sight, so (ho ohimnc} it
had to be. He looped the rope around it and began lowering
Harry toward the edge.
The rope was hard to maneuver. It stuck and jammed against the
sharp corners ot the chimney. I,.’ let Harry down in a series of shorl
jerks that scared the life out of him. The ice was so slippery that nearly
all Harry’s weight was on the rope~and that rope wasn’t a new one,
either. In fact, it was pretty old. Harry began to wonder if it wasn’t going
to break, and as he did, beads of perspiration began popping out on his
forehead—beads of perspiration that froze before Horry could wipe
thom off. By the time he reached the edge of the roof he )vas tremblinE
like a leaf. But the worst was yet to come!
All at Once Things Began to Go Wrong,
The gutter was full of ice, and Harry couldn’t depend on that rope
to hold him if ho over slipped over the edge. He chopped out a place to resl
his foot and, standing on the gutter, began to cut away icicles., Theii
everything wont wrong all at once. Suddenly he felt the gutter ere
under him and drew back'. But no sootier hnd he shifted his well
to the rope than he heard the foreman’s warning cry: ‘‘Don’t move,
Harry. Don’t move till we get another rope I THE EDGE OP THE CHIM
NEY’S ALMOST CUT THIS ONE THROUGHl”
Harry looked up at the foreman. “His face,” he says, ‘\vas
dcathSy ;vhitc. ¡'looked down at the ground, eight stories below.
Then I realized what a fix I was in. My senses were becoming par
alyzed, and I. felt as if I couldn’t support myself any longer. The
leg braced against the gutter began to get numb, Tho rotten
¿utter Itself would slip from under me at the least pressure, I
could see tho old rope now—badly frayed and holding by only a
tew strands, I never felt so weak in my life. I wanted to move
and relieve my numb leg, but I didn’t have the strength.
“I began to hear voices below me. A crowd had collected in the street.
I had been persiring freely, and now my underwear felt as if it were
coated with ice, I felt some slight jars as the strands of the rope broke one
filter another, and I could see the foreman, sick to his stomach now,
and hlg face green. My nose began to bleed, and the blood froze as fast
as it came out. But at last the boys arrived with another rope. They made
a noose and slid it to me.”
But still the worst moment hadn’t arrived.
Too Frightened to Put Rope Around His Waist.
They yelled to Harry to put the rope around his waist, but he was too
weak and too frightened. If he moved that much, he knew, the old rope
and the gutter would break and he’d go hurtling to the street below. So he strung that noose AROUND HIS NECK. And then, with his two hands he did hia best to relieve the pressure while they hauled him, choldljg,
to the ridge. ^ ,Harry says no torture coiiSd ever be worse than that trip up
the side ot the roof. He says he’d rather be shot than go through
it again. They got him up safely, but he was more dead than alive
when he arrived. And volunteer for any more heroic stunts?
Uai ry will be hanged if he does.© — WNU Bei vico.
THE FEATHERHEADS By Otbome.(f) W«iUn> N»wtp«p«f Uiilttii Alarming Situation
I n e v e r
'Тноиеит f '
THAT ^-4 ■
D IN M E R
LAST NISHT
\s/OilLP
L A S T S o
LOM<f-
V ÍE L L — Y o u H A ve'
T o LH T n 'H O S e
3 I& F E E P S
T A K E ' tM e iR
•^ C O U R S E -
SWELL- I F O R . ‘- Л
о м е CERTAI^JLV
CAM'T T A K E IT-
I N E E C ? М У
—1
IS T H A T
W H Y ' i o ü
(s o T IM
H E R E <7
e A R L V f
r —
N O K lP D lM — Ì
V oa'RE NO ‘л
vaíHATTAMAN-
1 B B T V o u
HATep To
H E A R ТИЕ
ALARM (so
OFF IHIS A-M. ,---
T LL S A V I p ip /
IT W O K E TME
W IF E U P T/JST
A S I W A S
,C O M lN <S Ы --- r
Self-ProelalminirDon’t forget that an honest man
never,,hna to proclaim the fact.
T O regain lost weight is a simple-, matter when ecrtoln bodily func- llona ato restored to normal. Of foremost liiiportanco Is the stimulation of
dIgcBtlvo juices In the stomachtomalte better use of tho food you eat...and restoration of lowcre<l rcd-blood-eell» to turn the digested food into firm llcsli. S.S.S. Toiile doci Just this.
Forget about underweight worrlo* If you are deficient In Btomnch dlges- tlvo julccs nnd Tcd-l)lood-ccllB...Tust lalto S,S.S, Tonic Jmmcdlntciv before
each meal. Shortly you will be delighted with the -way you will fed... our friends will'compliment you on
he way you will look.
S.S,S,TonIe Is eopcclallydeslgncd to build sturdy health, ..Us .remarkable value Is time tried and scleiitineally
nroven.. .that’s why It makes you feel like yo,ur/iclf Again. Available ot any
drugstore. O 8,8.8,01.
ÍÍ
Hi'S
Vowel Sounds Prof, R, G, Kent, secretary of tho
l inguistic Socioty of America, says:
“All languages hnve vowel sounds,
Somo forms of writing do not indi
cate the vowel sounds, but in actual
speech the vowels aro necessary to
support tho consonants. The
Egyptian hieroglyphics did not In
dicate the vowels: and neither did
tlio written form ot Hebrew until
Uie invention of the so-calied maso-
retic points. The relation of speech
to writing is a very complex one
which cannot be answered in a few
sentences.”
Everyone Can Be Hypnotized
Practically everyone can be hyp
notized, although some succumb
much more readily than others,
states a writer in the Los Angeles
Times. Because a person can be
easily hypnotized does not imply
that he is of low mentality, or has
a weak will. Instead, he seems to
have the ability to fix, to concen
trate the attention upon a particular point. “Scatter-brained” per
sons, those whose minds are con
tinually wandering, or iumping
from one problem to another, are
usually hard to hypnotize.
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
FAHMy, M e PARLIM ’— D O V E Z BE,
EM>tV CHAMCE K.HOVJ W H E R e '
M S W ADIM ' BOOTS-
B y T e d O 'L o u g h linс Пу Wf»(rrn N*w»i>np«r IJnlei»The Mind Reader
.r T
r i .
LAST O l s e e s )
t h iM - t n e y w iiz
UP IM ТИ'
ATTiC
I '
Wise nnd Otherwise
Some grow old gracefully; nnd
soma grow old disgracefully.
And Out of Tuirn
Pasalons end prejudices speak
in a loud voice, ;
1.00l<s, IQ IK E
O t B E N E E D Isi S O M E MEW
F L o ie s — I p
у
LO O K AT -ThlAr!
SM TRAlSHT A s A
A R R O W / AM'
--1 SMTROM<5---/
(D Wcarern Мф««рар«г Union
iS A i! X>0^
^ E Z B E
е м м у
CHAMCE,
•riMK 4 e z
B E Atfoifi'
FlSblíM'2
At Your Best!
Free From Constipation
Nothing bents n clean eystcm /or health I
At tho first sign of constipation; take purely vegotnblo Rlnck-Draught
for prompt rellof.
M any m en nnd wom on soy that Black- Draught brines buch re/roshlnu rd le f. By Its cicansins ncllon, poisonous cITects of constipation nro driven out; you icon feel bettor, more efficient.
Blaelc-DrnuRht costs less than m ort other laxatives.
BUCK-DRAUCIHT
A GOOD LAXATIVK
Í f i ’j
iSlspiI
lil
r‘.Tv./¿ir
i'.W'-- ■ íAi?í!k'
•VNU—7 41-38
¡W¡n%síij(thí|dtoiiic
Л"' »■ bi. fi I .1Ц1 ifoR, I f 'Í;■■■ p if.i.i—
J 'An D.A-1 . .* - - -
^ op d Oejner.al Tonic
E ir
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Т>л<'-Р THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. С Thursday, October 8, 1936
In T h e W E E K S N E W S
> K'j
EDDIE " r ICKEN-
BACKER, war>trma
■ee and leader In avla<
tion Industry, who led
a party to the rescue
of trans* Atlantic fly*
•ra Harry RIchman
■nd DIek Merrill after
they landed In a New*
foundland bog. RIcken-
backer got his atart fn
life when, while work
ing In a garage, he en
rolled for t oouree
with the International
Corres pondenoe
Schools and was able
to land a Job with an
automobile _ mnnufac*
turar.'
COAT DRESS IN FASHION—The coat dress
shown, worn by Louise Latimer, picture player.
Is made of smart pale grey wool with a White
shadow line check. It Is fastened all the way down
front with self-covered buttons. White pique
collar and cuffs add a crisp touch.
HE WAS THERE--
Mllea Vaughn, who
correctly forecast the
Rdaso-Japanese sltua*
tion In Collier’s, haa
Just written a book on
hia experiences, "Cov
ering the Far East,"
which la exciting aa
well as authoritative,
and la baaed on long
[personal knowledge of
the Orient.
SPANISH PRISONERS—A party of dejected Red Govern
ment supporters, their wristo bound with aape. are escorted
by armed rebel tro'opa en route to Insurgent headquartera;
following their capture near Bilbao.'
THE NEW AND OLD— Oley Nelson (left), of Slater,
la., retiring Commander-In-Chief of the G.A.R., con
gratulates nla eucResior, C. H. William Ruhe, 87, of
Pittsburgh. Pa., as, their 70th annual encampment
came to a close In Waahington, D. C.
THE CORNER CUPBOARD
COLUMN
(Continued from jingc 1)
the eyu. The refreshments’ stuucl
drew a mimber of pntrona, nnd
the barbecue certainly was good,
unfortunately ior us it was not
possible to visit the fine exhibits
of poultry and livestock, but the
time was limited and the wea
ther not so fair. To our mind
tho most inturcstinic part of the
Tair was meetin}? the folks from
all over Davie County. It is a
pleasure to talk to theso friend
ly people, and thus the Fair
brink's nil ' sections of Davie
County together in a great good
will fjathering.
Evnry day or so now there is
an automobile, truck or wagon
at thp door, anxious to sell "shel
ly peas," sweet potatoes, "roast’
n’ears,” cabbage, apples and
muscad'’ines. Some of these
wares are from "yond* side of
Swan Creek,” or some other
mountain section, and other pro
ducts are raised in Davie. The
names of Stark’s Delicious, Mag
num Bonum, Buckingham and
Wlnesap apQles and the “Flat
Dutch” cabbage seem to place
them on a higher shelf than just
plain apples and cabbage. The
luscious musadines seem bigger
and more plentiful this fall than
ever before, and make delicious
jelly. Webster’s Dictionary gives
this definition of tjie musca
dine:” A name given to several
very different^ kinds of grapes,
but in America used chiefly for
the scuppernong, or southern fox-
grnps, which IS said to be the
parent stock of the Catawba.”
I HaHSHSMBMBiHaHsiHaHXHiscHSicaHsciKiaHSMXiHisMSEHaiMaiKiiiMiniHiSMaiNiKcosisiN Srip We wish to announce that our g
I C O T T O N G IN I
I IS N O W O P E N I
i ' M
^ EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK |
I We will pay highest market price. |
^ Bring your cotton to us. g
I G R E E N M Il-U N G C O . I
I MOCKSVILLE, N. C. H9BaMawajOBHgHaKmiiiBMBHgMaHnciiaMBMaMBiHiiiBMBHaMEMaMBMjBmiBHSHaiHa
RHXHXMicHKDiaHSH3HaHXHBH3H3H8HaNai)aaMiaMaiiiBHXHaHxiK!SMfffixH!Ei“ • s
ii CO '&
SE 1» SS M S5
SS IKl ii
INIu1» SS H SS DO Si
£g 1» g£\!Z
'¿£
IHXHHHIHXHIHXNXHXHZHXHIEHXHXHXHXHXHXHXHXHSHXHXHIHXHSHX
ProvenFE»TIU2ERS
T r y R o k e m k o F o r G r a in 3 -1 2 - 6
(In White Cotton Bags)
For Sale By
C. C. SANFORD SONS CO.
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
COURTNEY CASH STORE
COURTNEY, N. C.
WATCHFUL WAITING— W illiam McCoy (left) and
Tony Albano, of Brooklyn, N. V.. were first In line
for a bleacher’s seat at the opening game of tha
World Series at the Polo Grounds, New York City.
They took up their positions on September 18th.
NOTICE OF COMMISSIONEK’S dated September 7tli, 193G. to
SALE' |satisfy said pudgment, the under
North Carolina | In the Superior signed Commissioner wiil nn
Davie County | Court
Town of Mocksvillo
Va
Floyd Carter, Admr. of J. L. Car
ter, dec’d, Mrs. Annie Carter,
will, on
the 10th dny of October, 193G, at
tlie door of the Davie County
Court House, in Mocksville, North
Carolina, sell at public auction to
the highest bidder for cash, si;b-
wldow, Floyd Carter, Travis Car- ject to the confirmation of the
ter, Markland Carter and Hauser Court, the property hereinafter
lands conveyed, by deed to Free
love (Truelove) Furches, March
81, 1920, recorded in Office of
Register of Deeds, Davie County,
N, C. in Book 25, page 445,
Dated this 8th dny o f Septbm--
bar,'li)3(i;
JACOB STEWART
0 10 dt. Comrtlssioner
darter, heirs at law' of J. L. Gar
ter, dec’d., L. E. Burton and U.
described, located in 'I'own of
Mocksville, Mocksville Township,
B. .Jordan, Adm’rs. of J., G .'Davie County, and more paiticul-
Peebless, dec’d., mortgagee, Davje arly described aa follows:
County, A. A. Hollernan, Trustee.
Under and by virtue of a judg
ment made and entered in the
sbove-entitled cause in the Su-
fierior Court of Davie County,
dated SeptemBer 7th, 1936, to
aatlBfy said judgment, the
undersigned Commissioner will,
cn thé 10th day of Octo
ber, 1936, at 12:00 o’clock
noon, at the door ot the Davie
County Court House; in Mocks-
wille. North Carolina, sell at pub
lic auction to the. highest bidder
for cash, subject to the confirm
ation of the Court, the property
iLSi-eiriafter described, located in
Town of Mockaville, Mocksville
Township, Davie County. ' and
- anore particulorly dosodbed ns
follows :
Adjoining lands of Wesley
Cartner and Alice Wilson. Be
ginning at a stone, S. E. Corner
of lot now owned by Wesley Cart-
. 3ier in North line of Wilson Ave.,
Adjoining lands of Harry Ly
ons and others. Beginnjng at a
atone and runs East ■ 2 deg.
Var 2.78 chains to a stake; thence
S, 20 deg. West 92 links to a
stake; thence W. 2 deg, Var. 92
links thence N. 88 detf. West 2.50
chains to a stake; thence N. 2
deg, . Var. 90 links to the begin-
iiirjgi” Containing M acre’! more
or less. Said,lands coriyeyid by
deed to M. S. Furches from 2nd
Colored Presbyterian Church, re
corded in Book 17, page 498, Of
fice of Register of Deeds of
Davie County, N. C.
Dated this 8th day df Septem
ber, 1936.
JACOB, STEWART
9 10 4t., ' Commissioner
North Carolina In the Superior
Davie County Court
'fown of Mocksville
Vs
Mary V. Lash and husband, ''
H. Lash, Bankers Trust and ’Title
Ins. Co., subtrustee, Davie Coun
ty, B. B. Miller, Trustee, Ida B.
Beronneau, judgment, A. B. Sa
leeby, Trading as Saleeby Dis
tributing Co., Judgment, The
Real Estate Co. T'rustee, Crest-
WQod Realty Corp., Eugene C.
Ward, Trustee, Universal Liq. Co,
and Universal Liquidating Co.
North Carolina | In the Superior
Davie County | Co^rt
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Freelove (Truelove) Furches and
husband. Rufas FurcKes, '’DaVi'e
thence N. 15 deg. W. 200 ft. along County. ...a. ? ‘
the line of lot No, 6 in plat of --------^
lands of Allice WilsoTi to a stone rsO'riCE OF COMlvilSSIONÎilK'S
or stake, thence N. side of Wil- SALE
son Ave., thence along said Ave- Ui)der and by virtue.of, à juclg^,
iiue N. G,9 deg. W. 100 ft. to the'm ent made and'entered . in the
beginning, being lot No. 5 in Mrs. abovo-entitlod cause in the : Su-
Alice J. Wilson plat. Said lantls perior ' Court of Davie County,'
conveyed to J. L. Carter by deed dated September 7th, 1936, to
from A. V. Smith and wife, May s:itisfy said judgiiient, thé
2, 1923, recorded in Book 27, page undersigned Commiasionçr will,
C8, office of Register of Deeds'on the 10th day of Octo-
of Davie County, N. C. I ber, 193G, at 12:00 « ’block
Dated this 8th day of Septem- noon, at the door of the DavTe
ber, 1936, I County Court Houae, in Mocks-
JAiCOB STEWART I ville. North Carolina, sell at pub-
9 10 4t. Commissio'ncr He auction to the highest bidder
for cash, subject to the confirm-
ntion of the Court, the property
hereinafter described, located in
Town of i\IocksvillQ, Mocksville
Townsliip, Davie County, and
more particularly described as
follows :
Adjoining the lands of Mollie
Furches and Joe Woodruff. Be
ginning at a stake and running
S. 88 deg. East 2.50 chains to a
stake; thence S, 2 deg. West 1
chain to a stake; thence North
88 deg. West 2;20 chains to a
stake; thence North 2 deg. varia
tion, ] chain to beginning. Said
North Carolina
Davie County
In the Superior
Court
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Rufus Furches .ind wife, Free
love Furches, heirs at law of
Mollie Furches, dec’d. Bank of
Davie, Mortgagee, Davie County.
NOTICE OP COMflllSSlUNliK'S
SALJi
Under and by virtue of a
judgment made and entered in
the above-entitled cause in the
JSuperior Court of Davie County,
NOTICE OF COMMISSIONEU’S
SALE
Under and by virtue of a judg
ment mado and entered in the
above-entitled cause in the __ Su
perior Court of Davie County,
dated September 7th, 1936, to
s,atisfy said judgment, the
undersigned Commissioner will,
on the 10th day of Octo
ber, 1936, at 12:00' o-’clock
noon, at the door of the Davie
County Court House, in Mocks
ville, North Carolina, sell at pub
lic auction to the highe.st bidder
for cash, subject to the confirm
ation of the Court, the pi’.operty
hereinafter described, located in
Town of Mocksville,. Mockaville
Township, Davie County, ana
-more particularly described as
follows: -
1 ’ot N. Mnin St. Lying We.st
of N. Main St., bounded by lands
ol J. F. Hanes, Dr. R. P.' Ander
son and Mrs. Ida G. Nail, Jacob
Stewart and Dr. E. P. Crawford,
containing nbput 4 acres more or
less. Said lancTs conveyecF by
deed to Mary V, Lash fro m li. 'A.
Neely and wife Flora Neely, on
July 24, 1925, recorded in Book
30, page 460-461, Oiflce of Regis
ter of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Dated thia 8th day of Septem
ber, 1936.
.TACOB STEWART
9 10 4t. Commiasioner
BUSINESS LOCALS
WHAT
STYLE
OF
^ ^ R O iG R A M
DO
YOU <»
PREFER
HERE. 1S_„ AN._ OEPQKIiUNI'rY
TO VVIN !^50.00— OU MAYBE
.?100.00. HERE ARE THE
KULES AND INS'l’KLCTiONy
WBIG is n.sking its listeners.to
submit a program thnt in their
opinion will Be the most popular
and appropriate for the celebra
tion of the Jefferson Standard
Life Insurance Company’s 30th.
Anniversary.
The, program idea submitted
may be musical, dramatic, or
along any other lines which in
the opinion of the contestant
might merit public approval. The
idea must be 'given in outline and
mue€‘include complete details.
The Jefferson Standard Life
Insurance Company ia the lead
ing insurance compnny in the
South. On January 1, 1937 this
company begins its 30th year of
service.WBICt and the Jeffbraon Stan
dard Life Insurance Company are
desirous of offering thia sta
tion’s listener audience a radio
program of the highest type
and nt the same time one that
will have the greatest popular
appeal.
Hcginning October 1, 1936,
WHIG will offer ?50,00 in cash
to the person ottering the best
idea for this program. The pro
gram muat be practical, it must
be interesting, flnd it must be ap
propriate.
The contest will close on Dec
ember 1st, and from October 1st
to December 1st written suigges-
tions or scripts for li radio pro-
„ gram will be received by radio
"station WBIG, and by December
ilOth the prizes will be awarded.
'The employees of the Jefferson
Standard Life Insurance Com-
I pany and radio station WBIG,
! nnd their families, are excluded
I from this contest.
I Here is ,uu additional offer,
I mado by Jefferson' Standard Life
¡'Insurance Company: Should the
winner of this contest be a mem-
Der 01 tne immediate famUy—
father, mother. Brother or sister
— in which a Jefler.son Standard
Life Insurance Company palicy la
owned, the prize will be doubled
making it .yOO.OO.
All scripts, suggestions and
ideas offered in this contost will
become the property of radio
station W lilG. Prize will be a-
warded, but the station is not
obligated о make ii'se of the pro
gram. All entries will be judg
ed by three impartial judgos.
Address all comviiuiiicatioiis to
Mr. Cotton Farmer
W e A r e N o w P re p a re d T o B u y
O r G in Y o u r
We Will Pay Highest Market Price.
Come to see US before YOU SELL
W e A p p re c ia te Y o u r B u sin ess
Foster and Green
Near Sanford Motor Co.
See Our
F A L L S H O W IN G O F
W IN T E R C O A T S
Snappy Sport Coats for the Miss er Mat*
ron. Fairs leading styles and colors.
$1 0 .9 5 u p
F u r-T rim n ie d D R E S S G O A T S
Finest fabrics and furs. Big selection of
colors and styles .to choose irom.
$1 6 .9 5 u p
Dona-Ana Shoppe
SALISBURY, N. C.
CASH PAID FOR CEDAR LOGS
and timber. For details write
Geo. C. Brown and Co. of N.
C., Greensboro, N. C. 9 lOtf
W B IG
IN
GREENSBORO, N. C.
The ANCHOR Store
Winston-Salem, N. C.
P R E S E N T IN G
O u r F a ll S h o w in g o f L a d ie s a n d
M isses R e a d y -to -W e a r. C o a ts,
S u its a n d D re sse s o f e v e ry sty le ,
co lo r a n d m a te ria l. A ll sizes a n d
p ric e s to su it e v e ry o n e .
Visit our Millinery Department. We al
ways show the latest styles in Hats, fea
turing the many new shades for Fall,
M a k e o u r sto re y o u r sto re w h e n
In W in sto n -S a le m
'ГПВ NEWSIEST NEWSPAPBlí ÏN DA V IE -T H E BEST FOR I ’HB .SUH.Si KIBEH AND ADVERTISEIT
Darie County’s г а # ■ I I IBeet Advertising Rend By The Peopl«
Medium ATlIJfLJnLo V ille IlillL e F T liriS e
Who Are Able To
Buy
VOLUME 58
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
A'PCKSyiLLE, N. C.. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1930
“Cool Knights” To Be
Presented Here Tues.
"Cool Knights,” a three act
musical comedy will be present
ed (it the Mocksville High School
Auditorium, Tuesday night, Oct.
20th at 7:30 p. m.
This play is being^aponsored
by t!ie achool and tlie caat will
be made up of local talent. A-
boiit one hundred pupils and ci
tizens will .be in the caat.
See the chorus girls in their
beaiitiful coatumea. This ia real
ly a night of fun. Plenty of
laiitrhs for you. .
In connection with the play
tlic.e will be a baby contest.
Tlie baby voted most popular
wiil receive a loVing cup,
The Corner
Cupboard Column
Edited by M. J. H.
THE BOY COLUMBUS
"With wild blue eyea he sought
the ocean’s rim
One (lay at Genoa and gazed afar,
rilled with the dream thjit beck
oned past the bar.
The call of sea and sky possess
ing him;
Cathay nnd Asia loomed full
clear, not dim.
To his far vision plain and true
Us areThose who wish to enter their , .baby are requested to do so by , «hining wonders of some
this afternoon at 4:00 p. m. For new-found star;
information call the high school. , sang,
Those who are interested in
New ways for
iiii.oe iiii,=.covcu ' youth’s ancient hymn,
their children are cordially invit- i youthful light flamed ever
ed to attend this play. Remem
ber the date, Tuesday, October
20th and be present.
NOP.TH CAROLINA LEADS
IN VEGETABLE GROWING
North Carolina leads all other
SliiLeb in the valúo of garden
veniitablea rown for home uae.
That is the conclusion reached
■by M. E, Gardner, extenaion hor-
licultiirist nt State College, after
studying figures recently releas
ed Ijy he bureau of the' census.
in his mind;
Fearless, the boy in him put his
i-'hip’s prow
Out into the trackless aeaa be
yond hia ken;
Though aged and in chaina, yet
none could bind
The deathless spirit
proved his vow,
The boy who j^ve s
world to men.”
(John L. Foley.)
thnt had
new free
October 12th is an important
date for tho nntjons of the Wes-
U. S, Department of Agriculture, tern Ileniisphere, since it was on
...'flirRirirrc^sllid'not‘cov'crlnsUyihaT“dT>“ in‘Ti^^^^
and sweet potatoes, but they in- Columbus landed on an island in
cltulcd tho other principal vege-' the “New World.” Thia first
tiihlos grown in American gar- landing place is thought to have
(ien.s. Mississippi stood next to ; been one of the Bahama Islands,
Noith Carolina,-and) 'rennessee
ranked third.
Tlie value of North Carolina’s
ci'op of vegetables grown for
home use was placed at $9,031,-
UlO. The Mississippi and Tennes-
■seo valuations were between
eijilit and nine million dollars.
In 1935, North Carolina fam-
iTs also raised 95,084 acres of
Barden vegetables for sale, not
counting Irish nnd aweet potn-
tocs, Gardner observed.
This acreage was divided tlius:
Beans, 22,009 acres; cabbage,
8,518 acres; sweet com, 9,619
.acres; tomatoes, 5,420 acrea;
waterTelona, 20,240 acres, and
other vegetables except potatoes
29,878 acres.
Gardner pointed out ttiat the
increased production .anil con
sumption of garden vegetables
over the nation indicates a
change in the dietary Jiabits of
the American people,
This ia particularly true in
North Carolina, he went on,
"hero the people are, paying
more attention to a balanced | y,'“® '1?*' “
and from there CoUinibus set
forth and discovered Cuba and
Haiti. As Columbus thought he
had found a new route to India,
he cafled the natives of this first
island Indians. He made three
other voyages across the Atlan
tic, but it is doubtful if he ever
' realized tho greatness of his dis
coveries. The date of October
12th has another interest for the
people of North Carolina. On
October 12th, 17S3, the car.ner-
atone of “Old East,” the first
ibuilding of the University of
North Cai-olina, was Jaid by W il
liam R. Davie, Gfoiei-al Diavie,
(for whom Davie county was jiam
ed), did much to «stablish this
seat of learning, Jiad is called
the “Father of the University.”
Speaking of Chapel ILi.U sug
gests a recent newspaper clipping
about discontinuing the little
ralrdad from Uni;4?rsity Station
to Chapel HilL 'The railroad ia
about lO miles long, and has been
running for 55 years, though it
paying investment.
«1еГа„Т ;;к«в|Ггтв« «7e“s^k‘: ! « e - .tly it' M a j w o « about
inir to live nt home by producing 1’®' ‘ ’
on the farm as much of their
food requirements as possible,
Tho greater ■ consumption . of
Harden veetables ia not only con-
<lueivc to better health, he add
ed, but it ia also providing many
faniihes with another welcome
source of cash income.
"Aioiif iimiclas better thanthe ant, and she says nothing." .^OCTOBER¿ a IS-SprinKfiold, 111., mo nil- ajlt ment to Abraham Lincoln— dedicated. 1874.
16—First correspondence scnool pupil enrolls. 1891
17—Boston and Maine railroad starts ita operations. 1843
0И
- M .
•'S
18—FcdcraU capture slave- freeing John Brown. 1859.
!&—Urd Cornwallis fiurren* dcrs to George Washing» ton. 1761.-
20~Last spille driven in Pikes Penli Mountain Riiltcad: JBDO.. . .•
2l-Magcllan didcuvcrs straits . now bearing bin iianie,
1520. ©wKu
which shows it
has not been largely patronised.
We remember it as a very ac
commodating little train, for it
patiently waited for two panting
young ladies, who had been sight
seeing at the University one hot
summer day. In that interesting
book, “Old Days at Chapel H ill,”
(Hope Summerell Chamberlain)
there is a reference to the build-
] ing of this short railroad in one
of Mrs, Cornelia Phillips Spen
cer’s letters. Mrs. Spencer, dau
ghter of an early University pro
fessor, wns one of the leading
spirits in causing the University
to be re-opened in the dark days'
that followed the close of the
War Between the States. In this
letter hte writes of a dinner ser
ved by the Chapel Hill ladies to
the 100 convicts who were work
ing on 'the new railroad. She
seemed to be the prime mover in
getting up this dinner, which
sounded like . Christmas and
Thanksgivijig rolled together.
Her satisfaction in the en,ioy-
ment of the convicts seemed to
repay Mrs, Spencer for all the
liard work nnd opposition she had
to overcome in planning the din
ner. "
Democratic Political
Meetings For Week
The Democratic Executive Com
mittee of Davie County give no
tice of their meetings at the fol
lowing places and time:
No. 47
Big Chicken Stew At
Cornatzer Sftt. Night
The public is cordially invited
to attend" a big chicken supper
,at the old Cornatzer School
iHouae Saturday night. October
N t h atr;;30 о^сЮ сГ Т ь Г wmSheffield, Friday, Oct. 16
Davie Academy, Saturday, Oct. 17
The above meetinga will .be
held at 7:30 p. m.
The candidates desire the pre
sence of all voters of these and
other communities at these meet
ings and also ask for your sup
port in the coming election.
;be anappy muaic, cake walking,
jvarioua guesaing contest and
¡other entertainment. A supper
consisting of chicken stew, chick
,en pie, coffee, sandwiches of all
¡kinds nnd pies of your choice.
Other refreshments will be serv
ed. Everybody ia invited to come
;nnd enjoy an old time ‘‘get-to-
'gether” with plenty to eat. The
J. Wesley Cook Accepts "'•ii ko for repairing ofthe Cornatzer M. E. Church.New Position
J, Wealey Cook, of Cooleemee,
who haa been connected with the
National Youth Adminiatration,
Diatrict No. 6, as Project Super-
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS
The annual stockholders meet
ing of the Davie .County Fair
Association for election of di
visor, haa resigned this work to' "'ill be hgld'at the Cou.n-
Advance Charge Makes
Progress During Year
Mrs. Tatnm Hostess
To Jerusalem Home
Demonstration Club
accept a position with the George '^y Court Houae Friday, October
W. Helme Co.. of New York Citv. i ¡30 p. m. Peraonal no-
' tices will not be mailed and all
stockholders at» hereby request
ed to be present,
P. S. Young, Sec.
He expects to leave about Oct.
19th, for a southern territory,
with headquarters at Greenville,
S. C.
Mr. Cook is a well known
young man whose many friends
wish for him much success in
hia new field.
BLACK AIDS
IN EROSION CONTROL
WORLD’S MIGHTIEST
CIRCUS COMING SOON
ferent Ringling Bros and Bamum
& Bailey Combined, with Higmy
Elephants and., I'ongurs from
___________ Africa, Col. 'fim McCoy and
That black locust has become' New Foreign Fea-
a large factor' in the control of ■ Oftera Epochal Pragram.
soil erosion is evidenced by the
favorable results obtained from
planiugs made by the SojJ_Cq^i>
Friday afternoon the Jerusal
em Home Demonstration Club
was entertained by Mrs, . Carl
Tatum at her home. The presi
dent, Mrs. George Apperaon, pre
sided over the meeting. Miss
Johnsie Humphreys, secretary,
read the minutes of the last meet
ing. The roll call was answered,
with tho members "giving con
structive criticism of the club.
Mias Florence Mackie, home a-
gent, gave a demonstration on
food conservation and aerving
simple refreshments in the home.
Miss Laura Ford, clothing leader,
gave a report on clothing acces
sories. Misa Annie Pearl 'i'utum
gave a humorous reading.
Refreshments wore served buf-
The work of the Kingdom has
,gone forward during this con-
.ference year on Advance Charge.
The members and friends as a’
whole have shown a fine spirit
of co-operation thia year. 'They
havo been loyal to the pastor and,
have been in sympathy with the
program of their church.
Thia Chriatian apirit haa help
ed us extend the work of our Lord
by raceiving eighty-five members
into(' our churches ancl balanc
ing the unified cV.urch budget
each quarter. The Church School
of the charge have increased in
efficiency and members thia year.
The churches of the charge are
Advance, Baileya, Cornatzer, Ful-
ton and. MockBi , Each of theae
churches have over-paid/ their
financial obligations this year.
This means that the Presiding
Elder, General . and Conference
Work. District Work, Children’sfet style in the dining room to
eighteen members and two visit- ; Pastor have been paid
ors. Miss Annie Pearl Tatum “1 1*'*» ‘’“^e. During the
and Miss Rosa Tatum, assisted between now and con-
the hoateas in aerving. making plans ___________ ___________ for the ensuing year.
MILTON GRAY CURLEE DEAD
süi'Viiiiün Sölvicü, ìiecuvding to
lîouben Margolis, forester of the
lluiiteravllle demonstration area'
at Charlotte.
With the most impressive nnd
brilliant soven-ring-and-stagc
tiroiiram-in-w-lrl.!!tlvгy7~t^re^íih!í-
ling Bros and i^arnum & Bailey
■Combined Circus, which will ex-
j hibit in VV’inaton-Salem, Tuesciay
The pastor's heart ia filled with
gratitude and praise for tho no
ble spirit and splendid co-opera
tion on the part of the members
and friends who. have made tho
The many friends of Mr. and
Mrs. George Curlee, of near
Franklin, Rowan County, will re- progress of Advance Charge pos-
gret to learn of the death of sible.
their Infant son on October G, I
1936; M iltoivGray“ was ■ fnnn i
birth thé victim.of a weak heart,
and lived just ten weeka nnd ten
days. Funeral services wero hejd
EX'UEND TIME to PLANT ~
SOIL-CONSERVING CROP
the Service plantedoffers this seaaon, i at Calvary Baptist church in
!• isi.xty thousand black locust 7 '*** .„¡i,,.Row(m. _ Mrs. Curlee was. forni-., f®
llings in gullies, and on gal-i eleplianta, erly Marybel McCulloch, daught-!;*"Pj'’\^’^‘^"t piçfe^
!in,i hiiill.r nrnrli.fl cnnta in the tirst evor to set to,ot ou uiis er of tho lato Glenn McCulloh Ciisuell, 1
Last year
over
aeedli
led and badly eroded spots in
thia area. TJiia year farmers co
operating in the aoil erosion con-
tol program are expected to plant
100,000 move seedlings.
Besides chocking erosion, blacjc
locust is a soil enricher, Margo-
lia pointed out. A le'ijume by
virtue of the nitrogen fixing no
dules on its spreading,' root -aya-
tem, it will grow and thrive on
poor, dry and eroded soil.
Gemerally where other species
will Jiot grov/ in £ullies or, on
eroded hillsides, black locust
checka aoil washinii. On better
aoils the black locust yields fence
posts in 10 to 20 jfiara. On erod
ed soils a few more .yeai's aro
required.
Where no other vegetation will
develop, black lo,cust offers a
source of useful materials to the
farmer from land otherwise con
sidered worthless.
In the Carolina Piedmont vi
cinity many Individuals confuse , ,
black locust with honey locust. liuerty act oi
coiitinein;. These tiny tuskera
are not babies, but fiiii-grown,
middle-aged midget elephants,
the rarest animals on thii 'face 0?
the earth. Accompanying them
is a herd ol miniature 'African
pongurs, the word’s smallest
ueasts ot .burden. The pigmy
elephants have proven the
greatest attraction the Big Show
has ever placed before the public
not even 'excepting its presenta
tions in the paat of the diac-lip-
ped Ubangia, the giraffe-necked
Winter loguTea nown in Octo-
I bor may bo 'countoi! ns aoil-con-
‘ serving rops under tho 1930 'soil-
program, according
of State Col
and Beulah Foster McCulloh, of „ the Turrentine Section. The] time allowed ior seeding
family has the sympathy of a j «onaorving cropa ho.a been ex-
wide circle of acquaintances. October.31, since many ________________________ fnrmera havo boon handiappod by
GUlUJiJBOOK AVAILABLE FOR ‘'‘y ho - explained.
l o c a l e le c t io n OFFICIALS 1 Krowera to take ad-_________ I vantage of the time extension and
urged by the State Board of
elections to secure and use co
pies of the 64-page Manual for
their instruction and guidance in
v.uiiiaii irom Burma, the sacred the coming election, juat brought
white elephant of Siam, Jumbo, gut by The Inatitute of Govern-' I i,»,i 'I . ... « .J /1 _ 1 i.i.1^ i 1 ' *'
The eleotion officials of thia sow enough conaerving crops to
and all its precincts are being ments possible for theT to re
ceive.
• A change in the regulations, he
added, now permita growers ta
meet their minimum conserving
'loiii 'I'luiiiii. and Goliath, the
aca elephant
Among the scores of new fea-
ment In Chapel Hill.
“'rhe most valuable election
crop acreage requirements by
sowing winter legumes on fields
where depleting crop|8 wero hav-«
vested earlier in the year. '
The minimum acreage of con-, ,, , „ guide yet made available,” Com-
uies, to say nothing of the new | «pQ^ted Raymond Maxwell, secre- . s j • r
importations from Europe and f ^he State Board. “I hope
Asia, jncludmg .the incredible |ever- registrar will be sup- 2° the base cotton,.
equestrian troupe, the great Fre-
...oiico and a free running horse.
'I'hey are two entirely dift'ei'ijiTi
trees. 'I'he wood of the black
iocu.st ia far more valuable, dur
able, and useful than that of
honey locust,
Becauae of the good practices
followed on his farm, Clyde Ro
binson ha sboen selected as the
best demonstration farmer
Watauga County.
Franl^ilin County farmers are
leaving small quantities of cow-
peas, lespedeza and other feed
crops in little nooks or corners
near the woods to provide food
and cover for quail and other
birds.I----------------------------1
.and we hope thnt many of our
readera saw it also. The news-'
pnper notices cj)uld not «ive this
production the description that
it rsally deservea, though they
certainly made an effort, Shake-
apeare’s delightiul and immortal
comady, coupled with the melo
dious music of Mendelaaohn.’a
overture to "Midsummer Night's
Dream,” and beautiful , scenery
and costumes, formed a wonder
ful combination. Unfortunately
we were “rusty” on our Shakes-
sixty niemoers, is (Joi, Tim Mc-
Ooy, the screen’s most outataiul-
ing western star, at the head of
his congress of rough riders of
the world— Cossaclis, cowboys,
cowgirls, vaqueros,. Sioux and
Blacictfe'et w'arriors and Austra
lian .bushrangers. Col. McCoy,
plainsman, calvalry officer in the
in U. S. Army Reserve and friend of
the Indian, is the idol of Amer
ican boys and girls, and he will
be seen in both the main perfor
mances and the wild wèst.
'I'he Greatest Show on Earth
heads into this territory on four
long railroad trains of 100 cars,
with 16000 people, 7 'herds of
full-sized elephants actors, 1009
menagerie animals and 700
horses. Ita tented city covera 14
acres of ground. 'There are 31
large tents,’ including the world’s
largest big top, seating 16,000
persons. I
'I'his is the peak season for
Waitto troup, the Royal Bokara ” he wrote t h e 'tobacco, and or peanut acreage t
troupe, the Imperial Vienneae g l l m f n ¿ounT; per cent of. the bas«-
last week. “I feel that it will acreage of other depiotmg cropsThis 18 the minimuT’* amount
° , growii for aiiuUier purpos«on the part of the election offi-|
cials. And these are due genei- „t f„r carrying out
■ ■Ilf* i-y-v 1« I г* n n /-I n »«or О n fin 11 n> ' n f ' . . - . _ . _ -.ally to 'a misundcrstand!ing. of
their duties under the law.”
'I'ho Guidebook for the coming
youth and beauty among rhe fauu
w'orld famous arenic artists with
the .‘jhow. Inthe air, iiv the three
rings, on the four stages' and in
the quarter-mile hippodrome
track will be seen hundreds of
pretty girls. In the 60-girl aerial
uallet, tne most beautiful mld-
puare, but giadually the familiar air (¡isplay ever proiiuued, there
plot aiid the quotations, learned are beuuiies that .evolto columna
at college uilCulded on the screen of newspaper comment where-
and the English loasona taught, ver the Ringling Bros and Bar-
Tho' most beautiful moving
picture, in regard to atagc aet
ting, that wc have ever seen ia toy Miaa Emma Lehman, at Sal-; num & Bailey Cou.bined Circus
“Midaummer Night’s Dream,” am, came .back to mind. exhibits.
result in a more orderly election
and will reduce the chances for participate in the
contests and other troubles. program.
Those usually arise because ot, .Conserving crops may also b(t
-certain commiasions or omissions I purpose: io
ecoive-
aoil--
building practices. When grown
for thia purpose, the onserving
crop muat not be placed on land' general election is the third ihe .^v^,(,re depleting crops have been
Institute has .bronrht out since this year.
1933. However, the new edition | work of checking
was completely re-written and gi.Q^yers compliance with provi-
greatly expanded. In its now aoil-imif’ovement ■
formit overs all the duties and program has been completed in -
deals with every feature respect- „^ost counties, Criswell stated,.,
ing the conduct of elutions by growers who seed conaerving,
the State and County Boarda aa October ahould report it;
well aa by precinct officials. | their county agents ao the.v
New featurea incli’de a four- credit for thV later aocd-page time-table, ahowing the du- i„gg_ ^ , ,,
ties of each official and the times ----------»...... '
for their fulfillment and a check; 'rwelve county agents from,
list of elections supplies and the western North Carolinii recently
agency. State, County or precinct, yisitad beef cattlo and sheep
which furniahea each. A aet ol Virginia and West
all forma uaed in electiona and]Virginia to study improved prac-
not furnished by the State Board ibices of feeding and management,,
has also been added. •
Poultrymsn in Wayne County
are busy housing; their pullets
and culling old birds. Many of
the pbultt'ymen beaan keeping li-
cords on October 1.
Cplumbua County , growers re
port a nexcellent crop of aweet
potatoes this fall. . The sea.son
haa been unusually fjjvorable for
the sweets, they aay.
IN THIS ISSUE♦
» ____________
* Newa, page ........................
Local News, page
Pictorial News, page .......
* Editorials, page .................
* Society No.wg,. page ........
* Sunday School Lesaon,. p.
* Floyd Gibbons, page .....
* Comic,s, page ..........
1 *•
1 *
a *
4 *
,5.(J »'
9 »
9 •»
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Ta'-'.'....... ,
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f ■< л!) ï il '■'■ к :.',Лгл!
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iт щ
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s i 'i i'J ' ’ 1.1ii И{ > ■•>
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B © ; . " Ш :
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE, Mocksville, N. C.. Thursday, October 15, 1936
Lloyd George Vs. Pershluff.
V ERN ALIS, CALIF. — That
shell of a once great mental
ity which is David Lloyd George
may be right when he says in his
latest book that Gen. John Per
shing "was quivering with suspi
cion that the British and French
meant to rob him of his army.”
A correspondent in France in 1918,
I happen to know that that was
exactly w h a t the
British and French
did try to do — to
break up tho A. E.
F.’s divisions for ab
sorption i.n t o their
own commands and
thereby destroy its
Integrity as a con
solidated fighting
force, and ii Persh
ing "quivered with
suspicion" he h a d
ample grounds ior irvln/fe. Cobb his suspicion. But I
he didn’t quiver Trom any otlier
emotions—not so as you’d notice it.
After all our bragging about of-
flciency, we did slip in the matters
of ordnance, airplanes, tanks, and,
during the first tew months, in
transport service at the front. But
there were certain elements in
which we never failed — in man
power and manhood and manly
courage.« * «
Undo Snni in the Lion’s Dom.
Ex c lu d in g Britons and Scandi
navians, ours remains almost
the only important white race that
hasn’t a dictatorship or worse. And
the high tide of communism laps
these shores, which once we thought
were insulated by time and distancq
against evil alien contacts.
We still stand aloof from entan
gling foreign nlliances despite pres
sure from within and witliout, but
no longer may we bar treasonable
foreign propaganda — not with
science making duck-ponds out ol
oceans. Moreover, sundry great
powers work to turn out warplanes
capable of spanning a sea or a con
tinent on a single hostile dash.
Isn’t it about lime we realized—
we, tho foolish virgin amongst tho
nations, we who once fondly fancied
this land was protected by its hem
ispheric isolation — that we're just
about as isolated as Daniel was ir>
the lion's den?
‘ Aiid‘Daiilef'Had a^rnlraclcId fall
back on!• • *
Bcncvolcncc in Reverse.
BY EDICT Japan has deleted from
her dictionary all mention o£
the "w ar." To the Koreans and tho
Chinese and the Manchurians Ihest
should indeed be tidings of groat
joy— to find out what's been violent
ly happening to them was merely
a benevolent brand of pence.
I; %Even so, it’s barely possible that
some of tho survivors of this neigh
borly friendship may still bo like
the distinguished American uclor—
I think it was Jack Barrymore—who
went to a luncheon where the guest
of honor, a notable from foreign
parts, was, es the saying goes,
rather chucking his weight about.
So Barryrriore leaned over to a
tablemate a n d whispered: "The
gentleman seems to bo sometHing
of a formidable ass, doesn’t heV"
“Oh, oh, I wouldn’t go so far a.«) to say that,” said the other.
"Well, at least," murmured Bar-
rymore, "he’ll do till one comes.”* * *
Great American Pests.
W HEN he’s not working ot his
regular trade, I know now
what becomes of tho gentleman with the brainpan development of a Po
tomac shad who makes a business
of sitting at the ringside and yelling
lo somo poor dub of a pugilist, while
tho latter is being whipped into a
custard, “Go on, kid—he can't hurt
- you."^ To show the other side of his
nature, this party attends picture
theaters and hisses' inadl.y as tha
likeness of the opposition presi
dential candidate is Hashed on the
scrocn.
Statistics show that his breed al
ready numbers nearly two millions
and is constantly increasing be
cause, owing to a regrettable over
sight of nature, this specics spawns
close to shore and the hatch all live.
lUVJN S. COBB.Ciir*.vrk'iU.— WNU StM vlcc*.
Butlily llcquirumcntsOur bodily requiieinents call for
very much larger quantities of air
than of food or water. The average
I'ood consumption is three pounds
of focU per person and water con-
iiuniption four pounds, while tho air
we breathe in thé course of a day
weighs thirty-four pounds. This vast
amount of air we breathe contains
much more than the principal con
stituent gases, oxygon and nitrogen.
It carries germs, mineral dust,
smoke, pollen, organic particles.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
1—-Parade of the Grand Army of the Republic down Pennsylvania avenue, Washington, during the annual
encampment. 2—New palace of the League ot Nations in Geneva which was occupied recently with dedicatory
ceremonies. 3—Harry W. Colmery of Topeka, Kan., ond Mrs. C. W. Hahn of Wayne, Nebraska, who wore
elected national commander of the American Legion and president of tho women's auxiliary at the Cleve
land convention.
Almost Died of Thirst in Desert
Some of the eight passengers nnd crew of four of the Imperial Air
ways liner "Horsn" shown ns they lay near exhaustion under tho shade
cf the piano wing, on tho Arabian desert where they made a forccd
landing recently. In the forcflround is Mrs. Wallace Smith of Brisbane,
England, the only woman In the party, who ?aid when thny wore .rn.'i-^
cued, “Had another day passed, I doubt it any of us would have been
alive." They drank dew from the piano wings.
MAYORESS FROM CHILE
Paying a long-deforred vislt to
New York is Mrs. Alicia C. De Er-
razurls, who is shown on tho S. S.
Santa Barbara. Back home in Chilo
thè sonora is mayor of Providen-
cin. onn nf thè countrv’s most aristo-
cratic residential communities. Sho
is tho flrst woman mayor in Chile.
CHINESE GIRL WINS
Little Gem Hoahing, of China,
proved herself a sensation at the
üirl’s junior lawn tennis champion-
Bhip toui-namenl at Wimbledon.
Three Steel Barons Get Together
Seldom does a photographer snare three big fish such os these with
ono snap of the camera shutter. They nre three of the biggest steel
e::ccutivec in the nation, pictured chatting in tho Union club, Cleveland,
where they mot prior to attending tho Great Lakes exposition. Left to
right: Tom M. Girdler, chairman and president ot Republic Steel;
Eugene C, Grace, president ot Bethlehem Stool, nnd William A. Irvin,
preside,nt of United States Steel.
Gathering the Grape Harvest in France
Fort Knox, niaine
Fort Knox is in tho town of Pros
pect, Me., across the rivor from
Bucksport. It was started iu 1848
but was not completed until 1B8G,
Its purpose was to protect the head
waters of the Penobscot river. Dur
ing the Spanish-American war the
fort was used as a training camp
for .suWiers, It is ths property oi
the state of Maine, by a gift de«*d
{rom Uie government.
Vineyard workers gathering a bumper crop of luscious gropes nt Vougeot, France, near Oijon, an are«
famous throughout the world for the quality of itfa'vintages.
S 9IMPROVED .
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY I
C H O O L L . e s s o n
Uy Iinv. HAIlOr-iD Ti, T..UNnQtnaT,Dean of Ibo Mootly lilblo Inalltul* of ChlcuKo.© Woatorn Nov.’flpiipor Union.
Lesson for October 18
THE SPOKEN AND THE
VVRIXXEN WORD
LESSON TEXT—Acl3 17:1, 6-11: I Tlios- »nloiilnns 2:7-ia. .. , _ . .GOLDEN TEXT—Tho V/oril of God l9 quiclt, and powcriul, nnd sharper than nny. two-odgod sword. Hob. 4; 12.PHIMAUY TOPIC—When I’eopio Ilcad the Bible.JUNIOR TOPIC—The Power ot Jesus' Name.INTEKMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —How Muy I Win Others to Christ?VOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —EvanBollsni and the Bible.
The persecution at Philippi served
not to discourage Paul and Silas,
but rather to send thcmi forward
into new territory with the gospel
message. Passing through tw o
cities they came to Thessalonlca,
then ns now a city ot considerable
importance. After a successful
though stormy ministry there they
jouineyed forty miles to Berea,
where the Word was gladly received.
The portion of our lesson from
the Book of Acts relates how the
Word was preached ond received
in those two cities, and the exccrpt
from the letter which Paul later
wrote to the Thessalonian church
shows what manner of life the
preacher sought to live among
them.I. Preaching tho Word (Acts 17; 1,
5-8).
Paul’s experience at Thessalonica
presents an excellent illustration ot
1. How the Word should be
preached (vv. 1, 5-8).
This section is incomplete with
out verses 2-4, which nre omitted
from the printed portion but should
be included in tho study of tho
lesson. Notice four things concern
ing Ills preaching.
a. The place (v. 1). Paul went
to the synagogue, not by chance
or because it was a great roliglou.'j
holiday, but because it was his
“ custom.” Tho synagogue was the
ceiitcr of Jov.'ish v.-orchip, and there
Paul met those who were ready to
receive the Word of God.
Somo Christians are content to
remain comfortably in church and
forget lo go out into the highways
nnd hedges, but there aro others
who havo become so accustomed
to going elsewhere that they neglect
the opportunity tor spiritual min
istry in tho church.b. The method (vv; 2-3). '.‘Rea
soning from the Scriptures." . No
better method has ever been devised. It is God’s method. Let
us get back to exposition of the
Scriptures—"opening" them to men •aTO'r woiincii, •' unrTgiiig7’'---ot—scctlirg-
out in order th'e truth.
c. T ho subject (v. 3). Ho
preached three fundamental doc-
trinea—the atonement, the resurrec
tion, and the deity of Christ. Scrip
ture preaching will be doctrinal.
d. The result (vv. 4-8). Faithful
preaching of God’s Word brings ono
of two results in the hearts of men
—they are either “persuaded” and
converted, or thoy become angry
and persecute. Thoso who rightly
received the truth were glad to join
with Paul; the others raised a hue
ond cry because Paul and Silas
were turning “ the world upside
down.” As a matter of fact the
world was already wrongside up,
nnd Paul sought to set it right.
It is still upside down in our day.
Coming to Berea, we find Paul’s
experience there nn illustration of
2. How the Word should be re
ceived (vv. 9-11).
Good hearers are as important
as good preachcrs. Hov.^ should tho Word be received?
a. With readiness ot mind (v.
11). This is a mark ot nobility. The world regards the sophisticated
doubter as the learned man, but
ho is not. Noble is the mind and heart that receives God’a truth.
b. Carefully and thoughtfully (v.
11). There would be less error ond
folly in the pulpit if there were
more intelligent Bible study in the
pew. Do not ossume that what
some learned professor, or distin
guished radio preacher says is true. Check his message by the Word.
In the final portion of our lesson
Paul tells the Thessa.’onlans that
when he was with them he was
concerned not only about preaching
the Word, but also about
II. Living tho Life (I Thess. 2:7-12).
Paul did not contradict his
preaching by his living. His was a
1, Sacrificial service (vv. 7-9).
The man who preaches for hia
own glory—or gain—is not a true
preacher of the gospel.
2. Consistent exam ple (vv.
10-12).
The minister of Christ must be
have “holily, righteously, and un-
blamably" if his people are to "walk
worthy ot God."
Out' Place tn the Wr^rld
Whatever the place allotted to us
by Providence, that for us is the
post o^ honor and duty. God esti
mates us not by tho position we
are in, but by the way in which we
fill it.-Tyron Edwards.
Getting Rid of Misery
Half tho misery of human life
might be extinguished, would men
aieviute tlie gunural curse they lie
under, by m utual. offices of com-
uassion, benevolence,' ond humanity,—Addison.
L ife , Is W e a lth
The'only wealth Is life: ,
Way to make the best of thi
world is to make the bent ot « I
other. For the two ore one, tu
highest gleams ever through thi,
lower. The pilgrim lo the bctljr
country is tho man who, liv]„i
or dying, knows tho bliss ot ¡¡J
peluul youth.—J. Bricriey,
If Y ou're Told
to **Alkalize'*
Try This Remarkabla
"Phillips" Way t
Thousands are Adopting
’■ - Ll ~ mil ЯШ
On ove^ side today people arc bcino urged to allcalizc their sloniach, And thus ease symptoms of “ncicl iiidigcs. tion," nausea and stomach upsols.
To cam quick alkalization, just ilo this: Tako two teaspoon.4 (if pini,
LIPS’ M ILK OF i^4AGNl';siA 30 minutes after eating. OR — tal:c t^ Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tabkli, which havo tho samo antacid cflcct.
Relief СОШСЗ almost ot oiico- imualjy in n few minutes. Nausn "ga's’ — fullness after eatliiK anj
"acid indigestion" pains leave, You feel like a new person.
.Try this way. You’ll ho siirpristd at results. Got either tho liquid ‘‘i’liii. lips” or tho remarkable, паи I'liillip;' Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Doliiihltiil to tako and easy to cany will'i you, Only a box at all drug stores.
ALSO IN TABLET FORMi
Koch tiny tablet Id tho oqutviilont o( i\ tonapnonful of 80П- ulno PhilHpa*Mille o( Mne- ncsio.
f fVIILKOF
MAGNESIA
Credit Duo
Ancestors may have built thi
family fortune, but it lakes pretty
good ability to preserve it intact,
CLEANS APPAREL.ANYTHING I
LEAVES N Q R 9N C .N D Q D Q II
AUORUOWSTS^
CAPUDINE
relieves
SIE4PACHE
quicker because
it’s liquid...
aóteaiùj lù'i-ioùreil“
I T C H I N G
DANDRUFF [
for annoyins ! itching nnd un
sightly Dan«
dtuflF, use Glov-1
cr's. Start today I with Glover’s I Mange Medi
cine nnd followwidi Glovet'aj Mcdicatcd Soap for the shampco.Sold b; oil Drug- sists.
WE WANT WOMEN USER AGENTS8«ll D-ETTES, th* nowo»t tno<hcU of V".'.* I tary nrotcoticMi. Or.fe, cofTifortehlo. «<>04**' f end offlclont iirotoiitfon wllliout railH, ioa wlinikoD.ETTCS.fcJoUtbom и)У«и1г(г1сп<М Thuy wm llko thorn. Tlioy will toll tH/ frloiidtt and your buslnoea IbuH IYou Rlart tbo buslnesa anrt yo»r bulMlt ior you.TbiH roiiuatH Itnoir uvoue «rihlncon limcB voryftttr. I'roiUs 1Iniily lureo. öoml UDo for trial imckar» iiek for UiTont’s itropoalUi)n. Wo >tl I you with 'Зио on your InlUiil iiiront'a onicr- Adilmss В-ЕПЕВ CO., Inc., Dunols, ГсппМ|
HELP
F O R _________
Warm bath with Cuticura Soap grWljji soothes and benefits. Then OPF'I 'Cuticura Ointment-effectivo ond medication for local irritation!It tonight. In tnnrjilng. dust Talcum to help prevent cdioa diacomwj ■ rRKB .BfTpl-s by wrltfas"C'Jtkuri' Dep->'<a Malden, Mosa.
U n d e r th e A s h e s
V/hlch of us that is thirty years
oid has not had his Pompeii?
0cop under ashes lies life, youth,
the careless sports, the pleasures„1C —jnd passion,
Thackeray
• »----- -» «.athe darling joy.__
Vl^eek’s Supply of Postum FreeHead llie offer made by the Postum
Company in another part oC this pa
per. Tlioy week's sup- ],ly ot health giving Postum free to
aiiyoiie who writes for tt—Adv.
Modesty’s Abode
Modesty seldom resides In a
breast that is not enriched with noble virtues.
Now Ease
Neuritis Pains
Fast
Bayer Tablets ■
Dissolve A lm ost
■ In stantly
in 3 uccondl br «(op vralch, ■ gsnnlns BAyBH Aaplrin Ubiet starts to ■ dlalntograto and go to work. Drop ■ iinjet Atplrln lablel into II il»»i of water. Br ILe timo U Ml« tlw bottom of tho glM* It la dlilntogratlng. What happona In Ihia glaaa . . . hai>;ena In roof Btomach.
for Amazingly Quick Relief
Get Genuiiie Bayer Aspirin
If you suffer from pains of neuritis wliat you want is quick relief.
■ Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets (¡ive quick relief, for ono reason, because they dissolve or disinlegralo almost instantly they touch moisture. (Nolo illustration obove.)
Hence — when you tako a real B.ayer Aspirin tablet it starts to dissolve almost as quickly as you swallow it. And thus is ready to start worlung almost instantly ., .
headaches, neuralgia and neuritis pains start casing almost at once.
That’s why millions never asK'Tot' aspirin by tho name asi)irin olono when thoy buy, but nlways say "UAYER ASPIRIN" and see that tlicy got it.
Try it. You’ll say it’s marvelous.
15c FOR A DOZEN
DOZEN
Virtually
le a tablet
LOOK FOR THK BAYBR CROSS
J'H E m o c k s v il l e e n t e r p r is e , Mocksville, N. C., Thursday, October ÏS, 1Ô36
Currency Pact
Clever Stroke
Deal With France
and England Will
Stabilize Money;
G. 0. P. Farm Plan
ïo u r Share
People who won.’t eat starling
pie shouldn’t complain ot the -nui
sance ot starlings.
W hy L axativ es
FaSISn S tu b b o rn
C on stipationTwelvo to 24 houro Is too long to watt When, relief from clogaotl bowele and constipation Is needed» for.then enormous quantities cf bacteria «'icoumu* (ato, causing QA8, indlnestlon end many restlessi sleeplees ninhta., f you want REAL, QUICK RELIEF, take a liquid .compound ouch os Ad« jerlka« Adlerlkn contains SEVEN ca* tnartio end carminative inoredienta that aet on tho stomach and BOTH bowels, Mott "overnlpht'^ laxatives contain ono ingredient that acts on tho lower bowel only«Adlerlka's DOUBLE ACTION alves •ur eyetem a thorough cleanelrjp. jrinaing out old poisonous wasto mat« ter thnt may have caused GAS pains» eour stomach, <4ioadache8 and sleepless nights for months,, Adiorlka rolleveo etomach QA9 ai «пьв anq usuaNy removes bowei con* *вв8 than two houni. No waiting for overnight results. This ^mous treatment nas been recom* mended by many dootora and drug* plats fop 3S.yfrars. Take Adlerlka one- naif hour before breakfast or ono hour 5^foro bedtime and In a short whll« you will feel marvelously refreshed, .i-entUng Drucfilcts.
Tempered Optimisix.
I The true optimism is ono that I 13 tempore^.
When Women
Need Cardul
П you seem to liavo lost some of strongtli you liatl for your lavoi-lte activities, or foryour houso- "orlc . , . nnd enro loss about your Meals . . . and suffer sovero dls-
winfort at eortaln times . . . try Cardull
'J-'lionsands and thousands of women say It 1шв liolped tliem.Increasing tho appetite, Ini- Provhig digestion, Cnrdul helps you tOKctmoronourlslimont. AsstrongtU 4!turns, nnnocossary functional «fhna, pnlns and nervousness Just scoiii to go away.
Í MiserablB
irith backache ?
W/HEN kidneys (unction badly «id ^ you tuffqr a nagging backache,
with dizziness, burning, scanty or too licqucnt urination and gelling Mp al •>¡9111; whw you feel »Irecj. nenfous, ill upset. . . use Doan'i Pllli.Doan'i «re especially (or pooiiy woikliig hldneyi. MlHloni of boxes «tc used every year. They «re tecom. "'ended Ih* counby over. Aik youi
nelghbori
By EABL GODWIN
W A.SHINGTON, D. C. -H ard indeed it is to encompass
the story ot the stabiliza
tion ot currency into a few words that will mean much to thi
average person. I remember Nor
man Angell or Henry Mbrgentheau,
Jr., or some other transcendant
mind said there ore only eleven peo
ple who understand about money. 'The New Dealers are conHdent that
Alfred Landon is not among that
eleven, now that he has left himself tied tight and short to that gold
standard he endorsed so unequivocally after his party nominating
convention had gone along with the
rest of the world, promising to mix tho gold standard with a bit of common sense.
Wo have all had to stretch our currency a bit. Now the Republic
ot France, which tried so hard to
stay on a complete gold standard,
has had to rearrange matters to
keep from a collapse and a revolt.
Then England and this country
joined with France in an agreement
to rearrange their money values so
that $5 in U. S. money would buy
the same nmount ot goods in the
other two countries, so on all around
the circle. That has now been done—
a stroke ot genius in which Roose
velt and Secretary ot the Treasury
Morgenthau played a leading part.
That is what they moan by "stabili
zation of the currency.”
Once upon a time it was safe and
sane to talk about "a currency ex
pressed in terms of gold and con
vertible into gold” as Governor Lan
don said when he telegraphed the
Republican national convention re
pudiating their New Dealish cur
rency platform. But the matter is
something like this: We drove a
strong gold peg into the ground and
fastened our cow named currency
by a gold chain to that stake. Well
it was ail right while currency coulc.
graze within the limits of that chain,
but after a while the grass gave out and the poor old cow couldn’t get
any further on account of the gold
chain. So, sensible people that wo are, we still kept the gold peg in
the ground as a ccntcr, but wc put
a bit of elasticity into that chain so currency could stretch out a bit,
have more circulation and get more
grass. That’s about what we did. We loosened up the strict gold limits
on our currency and in that way we
rnrndcd mure gruziiig- a'n;tnid=rai:
monoy.
Wall street conservatives lilce
strict gold standard because they
are well fixed. Dire need on the part
ot others would bring thousands running to Wall street for loans as in
the old feudal J. P. Morgan days Now, instead ot Wall street con trolling money, the government
representing the people controls the
people’s money. Landon, Imowing
little about money, took the word
of the most conservative Wall street
bankers—and yelled for 100 per
cent gold. Now ho is left high and
dry.
I.ANDON FARM PBOGBAM.
As Henry Wallace, Secretary ot
Agriculture, puts it, tho farm program laid down by Governor Landon is good only for ‘‘one-year think
ers.” Landon would do away with
the soil conservation act and em
bark on a plan to pay cash bonuses
to farmers without regard to curtailment. To attract attention, he
seems to mo lo promise all the cash
bonus necessary on all the wheat,
corn, etc., the country can raise,
without regard to the inevitable
crash. For in.stance, it we had good
weather for a couple of years and
we raised a normal good-weather
wheat crop we would have about
960.000.000 bushels; wo could use030.000.000 bushels and havo 330,-
000,000 for those foreign markets
whicli are gone, and even Governor
Landon admits it. Just wliat we’d
do with that surplus beside sink it in
the sen, is a question. Anyhow, Gov
ernor Landon would give in cash
to each wheat farmer what he calls
a ‘‘1агШ equivalent” on two-thirds
of that farmer’s wheat crop. Secre
tary Wallace works it out to 42 cents
a bushel in U. S. money to wheat farmers—a treasury obligation of
.$205,000,000 on wheat alone.
Now remember there is no Landon
yrop curtailment. Every farmer is
going to be a Landon lord on his own farm; and in addition to that
he is going to be a glutton for that
treasury cash. So no one stops him; and he raises all the wheat arid all
the other crops the whole surface of
the earth will hold; there will be so much ot a surplus that it will cloud
the horizon; and right there the
crash will come. There isn’t enough
cash in the country to take care of
the surpluses which America will
and would raise if we ran riot as
Landon prescribes.
Tho whole thing would smash to
bits' worse t^ian the original farm
board policy. There would be tr^ mendous crops carried over, and
nothing to do with them. And I osVievu Wallace ia right when ho Bays that after that debacle no polit
ical- party would dare go to the
farmers' rescue. By ditching Roose
velt who had given them real aid
and turning to this short sighted
get-rich-quick scheme of Landon’s,
farmers would not deserve the support of any party.
• • •
WRONG ON CHEESE.
It seems to me that the Republi
can research boys could not have
picked out a more conspicuous topic
on which to go 100 per cent wrong
than American cheese. It there’s
anything more fully reported on
than cheese, it has escaped my at
tention. Hence it seems too bad for
Landon’s personal reputation that
he crusaded against the reciprocal
trade relation treaties with a pieco
of cheese as a weapon.
The old, Republicon argument is
that high tariffs on American prod
ucts are the only thing which will
save the country. It is a theory left
over from the days when quinine was
the only remedy for colds, and sul
phur and molasses was the only
spring medicine. Both parties agree
that the farmers and everybody else
need a revived foreign market, but
the new generation of statesmen see
clearly that the old fashioned sul- phur-and-molasses or quinine tariffs
are distinctly not the way to restore
those markets. The new method of trading by treaties—“you take my
goods and I ’ll take yours,” is knock
ing holes in the world-deprOssion, but the old gentlemen of thè-oldeï
school have as yet failed to see-it.
I do not believe Governor Landon
knows what this treaty business is
all about; had he a comprehensive
knowledge he never would havo
stood up in a city located in the
center of the dairy farm country and
shivered with fright over the fact
that thu Canadians had shipped us
four million pounds (¿f cheddar
cheese, which is an increase in im
ports of 700 per cent. Nor would ho,
iiad he know;i the facts, mourned
over the olleged reduction in tho
price ot cheese which he said was
4 and ohe-half cents a potmd.
Now 4,000,000 pounds of choose
coming in from Canada may be an
increase over tho halt million
pounds of last year, but the fact of
the matter is that under the New
Deal tho American cheese industry
has expanded and increased so
much that 4,000,000 pounds of cheese
is nothing at all. Actually, the
American cheese makers did not
notice it and the cheese sent hero
by Canada made a nice little pieco
ot change for the Canadians which they immediately used in buying
American products. Tlio old story
of "you buy from me and I’ll buy
from you.”
Now, instead of this 4,000,000 pounds of Cnnndinn business .sinking the American dairy farmer and
depriving his wife and children of
tho necessaries of life it is merely a minor part of a tremendously in
creased choose business. In the
Hoover days we made and used about 600,000,000 pounds of cheese. -Tcday~A','a--ara-rn-ôîtiriii--iieuriy''-738V
000,000 pounds—and as for that four
and one-halt cents a pound reduc
tion in prico—it is to laugh.
Someone should draw a kindly
veil over this whole cheese episode,
for Governor Landon’s sake, Tho
cheese which he believes is a monu
ment to a ruined American dairy
farm business is now bringing the
farmer 18 cents a pound.
Under Mr. Hoover it brought 10
cents.
DEFEAT OF COUZENS
Not enough attention has boon
paid by American editors to tlio defeat ot Senator James Couzens, Michigan’s greatest gift to liberal
government, Couzens; richest man
in tho senate, reputedly worth $30,-
000,000 which he made with Henry
Ford, has been labeled a Republican
—but in his last political breath ho
came out for Roosevelt and so lost
the Repiiblican nomination In Mich
igan by 80,000 votes—a smashing
defeat. His successful opponent is
former Governor William Brucker.
Couzens has been a beacon light in Rppublican politics. A party
which has always been partial to
rich’men, it has never relished the
way Couzens has been flghting con
sistently for the rights of the aver
age man against the constantly in
creasing pressure from the ever
growing combinations of corporate
wealth. Actually, Couzens is a
wealthy crusader, and he has been
of tremendous aid to Roosevelt in
the New Deal. He never let tho
smoko of his money get into his
eyc-s and obscure his vision.
Republicans in Michigan—many
of them—would have willingly cut
Couzens loose; but the party spirit
is strong witliin them. He was
scheduled to be voted for in the
Michigan primary — but when he made a declaration for Roosevelt
a few days before that primary,
the old guard fell upon him and buried him ’neath that avalanche of votes. The reason for all this
hatred of one of the finest statesmen
the midv/est lias produced goes back to the terror ot the Michigan bank
holiday.Couzens, it is reported hero, told
the government at Washington that
he would blow the lid off a bank
scandal in Detroit if the government
attempted to smother the situation
with tons of money. The government
listened to Couzens. Instead of try
ing to sugar coat a bad banking
situation, the events just naturally
led up to the bank holiday and the
eventual disclosure of the unspeak
able practices of our be,it financiers.
Of course, when those bitter old
guarders got the chance they tripped
CüUütîhs. But I wonder if thd-y have
done themselves a service?<St Western Kâwspapsi Union.
So dear to our hearts—the tune
“Old Oaken Bucket,” and now',
a wall panel in its memory, which
every one ot ua will want to em
broider at once. Such a home
like scene, this, wWch is planned
Pattern 1067
for quick embroidery, with single
and running stitch used mainly,
and only a smattering of French
knots. No frame is needed—just a lining. I
Pattern 1007 comes to you with a transfer pattern of a picture 15 by 20 inches; a color chart and
Foreign Words _
and Phrasés ®
A tout prix. (F.) At anyjjrice;
whatever the cost.
Brutum fulmen. (L.) Ineffec
tual thunderbolt.
Chevalier d’industrie. (F.) A
swindler; sharper; an adventurer.
Deus vobiscuml (L.) God be
with you I
In médias res. (L.) Into the
midst, as of a subject.
Mauvaise honte. (F.) False
modesty.
Nil admirari. (L.) To wonder
at nothing.
Pate de foios gras. (F.) A pie
of fat goose livers.
Ecce. (L.) 'Behold.
Quantum aufllcit. (L.) As much
as sufTices; enough.
Savoir faire. (P.) The knowing
how to do ; address ; tact.
Revenons a nos moutons. (F.)
Let us return to our sheep; 1. e.,
to tho point at issue.
key; material requirements; illus
trations of all stitches needed.
Send IS cents in stamps or coins
(coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Neediecraft
Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., Now York, N. Y.
Write plainly pattern number,
your name and address.
Value of Accuracy
I do not know tljat thero is any*
thing, except it be humility, wiiicii
is so valuable as an incident of
education as accuracy. And ac
curacy can be taught. Direct lie»
told to tho world arc as dust iq
the balance when weighed against
th a falsehoods of inaccuracy.
These are the fatal things, and
they are all-pervading. I scatcdy
caro what Is taught to the young
If it will but implant in them th*
habit of accuracy.—Arthur Help«,
o-
O '
»n't let inter itch yoa unprepared!
с f / л N e e T O
аШКЕЯ STATEиг/А/гея ou
Give your car tho protection of Quaker State
Winter Oils nnd Gccsises, Specially refined
to flow freely at low temperatures ... yec
with the stamina to stand up under hard
driving. Retail price . . . per ijuitrt.
Quaker State Oil Refining Co., Oil City, Pa, /
PAPpy, pfEASE' HEtP V ^T o p Bother we us BUILD OUR BOAT- MB' CfiHT VoU
rr'5 FOR THE SHIP SEE X'M TRYING
MODEL CONTESTAT 1^ TO IZBAP ?
ÇCHOOL NEXT M onth/
HEV! STOP ,
THAT h a m m e r in g /
WHV POES THIS
HOUSE HAVE TO
SOUND UKB fi
Boli.E/2. FACTOW
AUTHE TIME ?
THI5 WHOLS FAMILY MUST iPEND ALL WEE/<
ГШ Ы Кт UP WAYS. TÖ ANNOV You - ON éUNPAV Í -
^ Vr You W on't help
THE 50V?W niHT«m
50AT, AT LEAST You
/MIGHT LET THEM WORK ON IT/ VOU
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...I ■!'
^THERE You GO/
NbvtR TWNK oP
ME, PO You? YOU
KNOW I'VE б о г
A 6PIITT/N6 НЕАРЛСНВ ------
WHAT POES SHE
CARE HOW BAPLYYOU
FEEL -JUST 50 SHE
■ KEEP THOSE »ÖVS ■ ^ ooroK.
You'p CUTOUT YOH, fiLL
COFFEE AND SWITCH I ^ WILL.' JUST
To PoSTUM, AS THE I To SHOW VoU
РОСТОК APVISEP;1'tA «ИЙБ Уои'О / W TMIS CoFFEE--
O f COURSE, cliildron should novor drinic coSaa,
And mnny ETOwn-ups, too, find thot tho coffoln In
cofjbo dlaagroo] with thorn. If you havo hoadaclie*
or indigostlon or can’t sloop soundly...try Postum.
It contains no caCfein, It is simply wholo wheat and
bran, roasted and slightly swootonod.
You tuay miai coQeo at first, but oftor 30 day*
you’ll lovo Postum for its own rich, satisfying flavor,
Postum comes In two forms—Postum Coroal, tha
klrid you boil, and Instant Postum, modo instantly
in tho cup. Eitljer woy it is easy to mako, dolicious,
economical, ond may.provo a real help, A product of
Gonoral Foods.
F R E E — Le< ua sent! you your first nnok's supply oi Postum/rw/ Simply mall coi*poii. o
Obnkiiac. Foods, Battle Creek, MIcb. W«A to*n«ssSood mo, without oblicatloa, a week's supply of Qlostant PoetumQpMtum Cereal (chock.kind you prefw).
City.Fill in oomplotoJy, prInt't}»mo «nd addroas, tf you Uve In Canada, addrwi : Qeneral Foods, Ct^bourff. ОпП. (OÍTer JnU* U1037.)
| | | |
Mi
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'ifl'sfiLua:...' • • •'
PAGE POUR l’HIî MOCr<SVILÎÆ ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE, N. G Tlnii'sdny; Octobai' IG,'ini’,!;
i m T h e W E E K S N E
WtNS THOMPSON
TROPHY— Michel De-
troyat pictured short
ly aftor winning the
$30,000 Thompson
Trophy Race at the
National Air Racei
The French aco’i vlc-|
lory was greeted with
muoh adverse crltl
oism istnce Govern
ment subsidy wa
greatly responsible for
the construction of his
speedy plane.
SUDDEN STAR D O M — T w o
months ago an ob
scuro 19-year-old
school girl, Francos
McDonnell, Is now
the ace diver ot the
Marine Theatre In
tho Great Lakes
Exposition In
Cleveland, with all
the trimmings of
stardom. She even
rates a special mo
hair velvet covert
Ing on her diving
board during her
spotlight solo dives.
SW AGGER COAT
O F PERSIAN
LAMB — Ginger
Rogers (how i an
early winter model,
three-quarter
length coat of grey
Persian lamb with
squarish shoulders
and a turned down tailored collar.
OLDEST AND VoUNGGST TWINS—
A. D. McCarger (loft) and L. M. Mc-
Carger hold Gay M. and Clark R. Ham
ilton, Jr. Tho men, 85 years old, and the
babies, 3 months old, were tho oldest and
youngest to attend tho Southorn Call-
lornia Twins Convention at Huntington
— • Beach. — — — —
•WIN EDUCATION —
These four youths
wero each awarded
$6,000 university
scholarships for their
skill in the Fisher
Body Craftsman’s
Guild compeiltlorK'
Loft to right Henry
Larzelore, Flint,
Mich.; Ralph Kyllon-
on, MonesGcn, Pa.,
John H. Doney, Seat
tle, Wash., and Rnlph
Schrolbcr, Faribault,
Minn., receive the con
gratulations of W. A.
Fisher, president of
the General Motors-
sponsored foundation.
TRANSATLANTIC FLYER GOES
^SHOPPING — Mrs. Beryl Markham,
whoso plane crashed In Nova Scotia
after successfully crossing tho Atlantic,
visits a Now York department store
while on a shopping lOur. Miss Betty
Wilson is showing her the very latest In
" ................. Fall dresses. - .............
SALE OF LANDS
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Under and 'by virtue of au-
tiiority contained in the W ill of
Camilla H. Steelman, deceased,
ami a judgment in an action en
titled “Wachovia Bank and Trust
Company, Executor vs. Berry R.
Steelman et al,” aaid will and
said judgment beint; recorded in
tho office of the Clerk of Super
ior Court of For:-yth County,
North Carolina, the Wachovia
Bank & Trust Company, in its
capacity as Executor, will sell
the following described tracts of
land at a public sale on Monday,
November 2, 193C, at 12:00
o’clock noon, at the Davie County
Courthouse at Mocksville, North
Carolina:
Lot No. 1:
Beginning at aft ii'on stake on
thu East side of United States
Highway No. 601 and being 2165
feet North of the intersection of
United States Highway No. 601
!»nd the Cana Hoad und running
thence North Gii degrees East 6U0
leet to an iron stake; thence
North 80 degrees East 2320 feet
;lo a .stone; thence North 89 de-
-g-rees ijri minutes East 185.5 feet
to il uraiicii; thence at a North
easterly direction along said
Iji’iinch 257 feet to an iron stake
■on the North side of a road;
Vliunue North 76 degrees 30
minutes West 1038 feet;
thonee continuing North G8 de-
,-iirees 15 minutes West 274 feet
;to an iron stake on the South
side of said road; thence North
' 81! degrees 80 minutes West 2019
feet to an iron stake; thenco
South 4 degrees West 561 feet
•to an iron stake; thence South
'.22 degrees West 530 feet to an
iron stake on tho East side of
United States Highway No. 601;
ilience along the East side of
■viaid Highway 35 degees 50 min-
■utes; East 500 feet to an iron
.stake, tho place of beginning con
tainin,'; 62,46 acres and being
J<no',vn and descrilJed as Lot No.
1 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in tho office of the Re-
trister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Caroli.'ia.
I.ot No. 2:
Beginning at an iron stake on
the East side of United States
Highway No. 601 and being
1308,5 feet North of the intersec
tion of United States Highway
No. 601 and Cana Road and run
ning thence North 78 degrees 15
minutes East 2620 feet to a
stone; thenca North 6 degrees
East 671 feet to a atone, thence
West 133 ■ feet " to -a ■- branch
thence North 33 degrees East a-
long the branch 287 feet to an
elm,; thence South 89. degrees 45
minutes West 185.5 ifeet" to a
^tone; thence South 80 degrees
West 2320 feet to an iron stake;
thence South 65 degrees West
600 feet to an iron stake on the
East side of United States High
way No. 601; thence along the
East side ot said Highway 856.6
feet to tho place of beginning,
containing 00.72 acres, iind being
known and described as Lot No.
2 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in the office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No. 3:
Beginning at the intersection
.legrees 31 minutes East 1069
i ’jct to a stone; thence North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 660 feet
to an iron stake in the branch
the placq ot ucutnning, contain
ing 19.10 acres and being knowit
and described us Lot No. 5 In
the division of the Holman Farm
as shown on said map recorded
in the office of tho Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot ..No. 6:
Beginning at an iron stake,
which is North 85 degreos 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
btone, which is tho Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T, Boger and P. M. Pierce, at a
branch and running North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 1551
feet to an iron stake; thence
Road thé four following courses :
South 38 degrees 50 minutes’
West 484.5 feet. South 63 degrsês
10 minutes West 488.8 feet, South
73 degrees 20 minutes West 110.8
I'eot, South 88 degrees 55 minutes
’.Vest 526 foot to an iron stake,
the place of begin.ning, contain-J
ing 57.81 acres, and being known
and described as liOt No. 4 in
the division oi the Holman Farm
as s'lown on saUl map recorded I
in the office of the Register of ^
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 5;
Beginning at an iron stake,
which is North 85 degrees 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone; which is the . Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T, Boger and P. M. Pierce, at .a
branch 925 feet to an olm; thence
South 71 degrees .10 minutes East
1165 feet to an iron stake; thence
along the property line of R, H,
Neely and 0. T. Boger North 5'
: v,\^y N6. GOr ahd tlip- Cana Rba’il
and running thence North 6 de
grees East 2293 feel lo a stone;
thence>West 133 feet to a branch;
thence along the branch North
33 degrees East 287 feet to an
olm; thence South 71 degrees 20
minutes East 1165 feet to an iron
f-take; thence South 5 degrees 41
minutes West along the West
property line of S. F. Hutchins
1418 feet to a stone- thence South
70 degrees 15 minutes East 176
feet to an iron stake on the west
side of the Cana Road; thence
along the North aide of the Cana
of United States Highway No.
601 and the Cana Ruad and run
ning thence along the North side
of the Cana Road North 83 de
grees 25 minutes East 1225.2
ieet; thence continuing along
the North side of said road North
degrees 55 minutes East 784
foot to an iron stake; thence
.North 6 degrees East 1622 feet
to a stone; thence South 78 de
grees 15 minutes West 2620 feet
ou an iron stake on the East side
ill united States Iiighway No.
iiOl; thence along tlie East side
of said road 1308.5 feet to tho
place of beginning, containing
(1.92 acre.s and beinu' known and
described as Lot .Vo. 3 in the
division o fth Holman Farm as
shown on said map I’ecorded in
the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 4: .
Beginning at an iron stake on
t;he North side of the Cana Road
being 2009.2 feet East of the in
tersection of United States High-
South 3 degrees 35 minutes West
314 feet to an iron stake on the
south side of a road; thenco
South 68 degrees 15 minutes
Efiftt 274 feet; thence continu
ing South 76 degrees 30 minutes
East 138 feet to a branch; thence
in a nortlieasterly direction along
said branch 622 i'eet to tho place
of beginning, containing 14.34
acres and being known and des
cribed as Lot No. e in the divi
sion of the Holman Farm as
shown on said map recorded in
..le office of the Register of
i^eeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
The above described property
is known as the Holman Home
place. The sale o£ said pi'oper-
ty will be made upon a basis of
one-third cash and the remaining
two-thirds to be paid Decem'ber
1, 1037, said obligation to be se
cured by a note and deed of trust
upon said promises. The pur
chaser may negotiate with tho
seller for other terms. Lots will
be sold separately and in groups.
'I’hi.4 tho 2i)th day of September,
1936.WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST
: roMP.-MNY, Executor
CEN'PER NEWS
Spruill Thornto-i, Attorney.
10 1 5t.
w
DO THIS when you
wake up with a
H eadache
ENiOY RELIEF BEFORE
YOU'VE FINISHED DRESSING
Bayer Tablets
DItsolve A lm ost
Iiu ta n tty
In 1 M<onda br atop watch* • gonaine BAYEB Aaplrin tablet start« lo dblntegralo and go to work. Drop a Bayer Aaplrla tablet la- to a gloM of water. Hf Ibe time It hits tho bottom of tho gtaaa It Is dlalntogratlng. What happens In this glass . • . happens In jroar stomach«
I Mr. ;ind Mrs. Roy Shelton and
! f.'unily, of ¡\Iuunt Airy, Mr. and
jMr.s, Clyde Walker, of Elkin,
■ were the dinner guests of Rov.
j W, J. S. Walker, Sunday.
' Board of Stewards of the Davie
Circuit'' and the Presiding Elder
of the Winston-Salem District:
met here Wo'dnesday night of
last week in an adjourned ses
sion of the fourth quarterly con
ference.
Reports from the churches of
the Davie Circuit wore very en
couraging. Rev. Ervin is expect
ed to be returned for another
year. Mr. W. F. Tutterow w ai
re-elected as our Sunday School
Superintendent for the coming
year. , .. ' { . , ,,
Rev. Ervin will fill his regular
appointment here iiext Sunday
night. This will be his last ap-t
poitnient before going to the
annual conference at Salisbury
the 22nd. ■
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Tutterow
spent.Saturday evening with fri
ends in Harmony.
Mr. Holt Barneycastle made a
Wlicn you wnko up with a hond- ncho, do this: Tnko two quick-nct- ing, quick-dissolving BAYER ASPIRIN tablets with a little water.By the. lime you’ve finished drcss- ina, nine chancos in ten, you’ll fed relief coming.Genuine Bayer Aspirin provides this quick relief becuuso it is rated nmony tho quickest methods for relief science lias yet discovered.Try it this way. But nsk for it by Ua full name, CAYER ASPIRIN; not by tho namo "aspirin” aloao.
15c FOR A DOZEN
1 business trip to Winston.SiiL, last week, '
Mr. and Mrs. Spencei' | .v.-jj,
,;inH, of Winston-Salchi,
Sunday evening with Mr, |
|\v. jjwig^ins.-
i Jlrs. Maggie Harp, of em;,,
spent the week-end with Mr. aii'j
s. N. B. Dyson.
■ The revival meeting began at
Mt. Tabor Monday night wii),
^Rev. Page, of Elkin doing n,e
I preaching.
j Mr. and Mrs. Vanzant .spent
Sunday evening with Mr. L, jj
. I'utterow.
' Mr. Frank Dwiggins and fani-
ily spent Sunday with Mr. Lon
nie Brown, near Chestnut Grove
Mr.s. Maggie Walker, Mr, and
Mrs. Clyde Walker, of Elkin, Mr,
and Mrs. Roy Shelton, of Mount
I Airy, were visitors at Mr. John
Dwiggins’ Sunday evening.
‘ The Center Home Demoii.str,v
tion Club will meet Friday at 3
p. m. at the school house. De
monstration Food Conservation
i with Miss Florence Mackie, Home
Demonstration Agent.
Mr. Frank Dwiggins marketed
tobacco in Winston-Salem Mon
day.
Í enjo>i that séhsé of eàôe
»CAMELS MAKE EATING a renl plcMSure," says Hunk Sicincr
{below), dccp-sca diver. Camels
speed up tho flow of digestive
fluids-^increase alkalinity.
€ М Ш € Ш
NOTED GLIDER CHAMPION
{above}, Mrs. Russell Hohler-
niiin says: "Tired and tense as
I may get, a few Camels at meal
time and after seem to bring
my digestion right back.”
C O STLIER T O B A C C O S
“ Ï 1ilcuf 1937
,Y E O
(dmjpid& Сол.- Сатр1еЬе£1|~Пецг
W ith an entirely new type o f m otor car body
— now available fo r tlie first tim e on any low-
priced car— com bining new silence w ith new
safety fo r your fam ily.
SA T .
. .¡i'' *
. f:V-
Thursday, Octobcr 16, 1936 ТИГВ MOCKSVILLE ENTBRPRISF. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.РАОЁ
Club Meetings
Ghurch News
SoC'ia') Funotione
Card Parties SOCIETY
Local Happenings
Coming and
Going of those
We know
MISS MARY J. HEITMAN, Social Editer Phone 112
Mrs. S. C. Stonestreet is in
disposed, we are sorry to learn.
■ - - — u-
Little Phyllis Johnson is on
the sick list, we are
state.
-0-
sorry to
Mrs. W. N. Clement and Miss
Willie' Miller spent Tuesday in
Winston-Salem. ,
Mrs. F. C. Efird. of Marsh-
ville, is visiting her sister, Mrs.
W. C. Cooper.
-----0-----
Mr. Jack Page, a ministerial
student at Duke University,
spent Sunday here.
-----»-----
Mr. J. W. Kimbrough, of Dur
ham, was the recent guest of his
sister, Mrs. J.'L . Sheek.
-----------o-----
Mr, and Mrs. J. L. Kimble, of
Winston-Salem, apent the week
end at their home here.
Henry Crotts, of Winston-
Salem, spent Sunday with .Mr.
and Mrs. W. M. Crotts.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Gillespie,
of Brevard, spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Call.
Miss Annie Holthouser, of thè
Enterprise staff, is sick with fUi
thÌ3 wcck, wc are sorry to stato.
Dll', and Mrs Lester Martin,
Mi.sa Sallie Hanes and Mr. J. F.
Hanes spent the week-end in
Sumter, S. C., guests of Mr. and
Mrs, T. H. Brice and Mr. 0. L.
Williams. Mrs. Brice was form
erly Miss Martha Williams.
-----------
Mr. and Mrs. Knox Johnstone
and children, Carroll and John,
arrived home Saturday from
Philadelphia, where Mrs. John
stone and children spent a month
with her parent^ Mr. and Mrs. H. 0. Smith, Sr,
by her sister, Mrs. J. A. Miller,
and they will be guests of Mrs.
Miller’s daughter, Mrs. Lewis
Christian in that city. The
chapter will meet at the homa
of Miss Mary Heitman on next
Thursday arternoon at 3 o’clock,
and the section of officers will
take place. A report from the
State Uonventlon will be given by
Mrs. J. D. Hodges.
WHO'S WHO
Ш c h i l d r e n 's c l a s s i c s
Mrs. E. L. Rsed, of Tobaeco-
vilie, has arrived to spen the
winter with Dr. and Mrs. R P.
Anderson, the latter her daugh
ter. Mrs. Reed’s friends here
will be glad to know that her'
health is improved, after a recent
illness.
I\Trs. W. R. Wilkins has re
turned from a visit of several
weeks to relatives in • iRuther-
I'ol'dti.in.
Memorial Service at Concord
An impresdive memorial ser
vice was held at Concord Metho
dist Church on Sunday morning,
when walnut collection plates
wero dedicated in memory of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Cicero Davis.
The plates were given by the!
children of Mr. and Mrs. Davis,
the latterJiaving pa.'ised away re
cently.
Mrs. C. M. Littleton, Jr., has
been sick with flu at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.
T. Grant
______Misses JHelen..Daniel..and_HelfJJt
Holthouser have been selected aa
members of the Catawba College
Glee Club.
Misses Ruby Walker and Mary
Water.s, student nurses at Davis
Hospital spent Saturday evening
at their home hero.
Mi.'ises Daisy, Nell and Helen
Holthouser and Mildred
wood spent Sunday in Charlotte
with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Holt-
hnuaor.
liavie Circuit Parsonage
Rev. and Mrs. M. G. I'Jrvin will
kuu]) open houso on Saturday
Hum 2 p. m. until 9:30 p. m. to
which the members of the Davie
Circuit are cordially invited.
Light refreshments will be serv
ed. The lower floor of the par
sonage has been painted nnd pa
pered recently, and the members
are invited to inspect tho house.
Sixth Grade News
ThF Sutn“Tirade, tlio'ugh not
the largest grade in number, is a
busy, wine awake grade. Our
grade got seven prizes from tho
iMur, so we are busy selling our
wares and collecting casn lor our
treasury, vve are auoscribing to
two magazines, "Child Life” and
“Our Weekly lieader,” wnich we
will enjoy, and will be of great
Black- “'"‘nciit to our class. Our grade
' gave a i)r;)grani in (Jhapel a few
weuKS ago.
Aid Society Meets
Mrs. J, H. Thompson was hos
tess to the Sallie Call Aid Socie
ty of the Methodist Church on
Monday afternoon. Mrs. W. L.
Moore, vice-president, presided,
and the devotionals were con
ducted by Mrs. T. N. iChaffln.
Mrs. Ollie Stockton, secretary-
treasurer, gave an encouraging
report of the year's work. Mrs.
J. L. Sheek, who has been the
capable president, resigned, nnd
the following officers were elect
ed: Miss Ruth Booe, president;
Mrs. C. H. Tomlinson, vice-pre-
sident; Mrs. Ollie Stockton, se-
cretary-treasurer. During tho
social hour the guests enjoyed a
worci contest, wiiii Mrs. V. E.
Swaim winniiig the cut prize.
The tempting refreshments'
consisted of congealed salad',
fancy sandwiches. fruit-cake
and tea, with' attractive Hal
loween decorations. Those pre
sent were: Mesdames J. H.
'iJiompson, W. L. Moore, S. M.
Call, Hattie McGuire, J. A. Dan
iel, E. P. Foster E. H. Morris, E.
J. Harbison, B. L Smith, V. E.
awaim, c. i-i. jL'omlinson, Ollie
Stockton, H. C. Meroney, T. N.
Chaliin, Sudie Williams, Misses
Ruth Booe, Martha Call and
Sarah Thompson, nnd additional
guests were Mesdames M. G.
lir.vin,_K_W—Crow.-and W. R.
VviiKins.
■-----0-----
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Leach spent
Wednesday in Salisbury.
—----0---;—
Mra. J. A. Daniel spont Mon
day with her daughter, Mrs H.
H. Bennett, in Salisbury.
»
H
sle p t in
find, fo u n d s L u h e n h e o io k e n e d ^
N e o i s ig h t s ^ s t r a n g e a n d cjaccr?
OP o w e
JACOB STRWART
Attorney at Law
Mocksville, N. C.
OlRce in Southern Bank & I'rui«!
f'oini)any building Office phone....... , i;ii
Mrs. John Smoot, of Salisbury,
was the recent guest of her sis
ter, Mrs, Prentice Campbell, and
of her father, Mr. T. L. Koontz,
at Kappa. •
Mrs. Jack Allison and Mrs. E.
C. I^eGrand spent Monday in
Charlotte. Mr. Allison accom
panied them homo, aftor a busi
ness trip to Florida,
------------o------
Mrs. Herbert Birdsall and Mrs.
Price Sherrill, of Mooresville,
and Mrs. J. C. Sherrill, lu Mount
' Ulla, were recent guests of their
mother, Mrs, William Miller.
Jack Sanford haa returned
I'rom .Long’s Sanatorium, and is
improving steadily. Mrs. J. C.
S.'inford was at her ¡¡on’s bedside
during hia stay in the hospital.
Jliss Vivian Hilton spent the
week-end in 'Charlotte, Miss
l.ols Torrence was in Gastonia
for the week-end. Miss Garnet
Robertson spent the week-end in
Leaksville.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Sanford,
Mrs. Gaither Sanford, Misses
Sarah G\uther and Sallie Hunter
intended the Davidson-V. M. L
football game at Davidson Col
lege, Saturday.
Mr. . and Mrs. H. C. Meroney,
Jlr. and Mrs, P. G. Brown and
Sue Brown spent Sunday in Len-
cir with Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Meroney, who have recently mov
Gil into their attractive new
home.
Liberty Society Entertained
Mrs. M. G'. Ervin graciously
eiuti'tainuci me L,iberty Mission
ary Society on last Thursday
afternoon, wilh nineteen present’.
Mrs. J. G. McCulloch, the pre
sident, led tne (levotlonals, the
tiicme .being puttinj? first things*
first. Mrs. G. W. Everhardt
read I'n article on tho missionary
work, and plans were made to
observe the Week of Prayer in
November. The hostess served
tempting' sandwiches, cake, cocoa
and coffee. ■
Facnlty Entertained
The faculty members of the
Mocksville schools wero guoata oT
honor at an enjoyable party giv
en by the.Mattie Eaton Auxiliary
in the ladies’ parlor of the Meth
odist Church on last lluirsday
evening. The artistic decora
tions were of autumn leaves,
dahlias, marigolds and Hallo-
Baptist Y. W. A.
The Young Woman’s Auxiliary
of the Baptist Church met with
the leader, Mrs. John LoGrand,
on Tuesday evening, at 7:30.
Miss Sarah Louise Haire pre
sented tho program, the topic be
ing Giving. Misses Ruth Angell
and Mary Lois Livengood took
part in the program, and plans
were made for a social to be held
this month. Tho hostess served
tempting hot chocolate, cake and
cookies. Those present wore
Mrs. John LeGrand, Blisses Or-
pah Angell, Sarah Louise Haire,
Jottie Smith, Mary Lois Living
ston.
Electric Refrigeration
Air Cohditionnig
Reliable men with fair edu
cation who are mechani
cally inclined and would
like to better thein.selves.
Must be willing to train
spare time to learn install
ing nnd servicing work.
Write giving age, present
occupation, etc.
Utilities Kngincering
........... Institute
404 N. Wells St.
Chicago, 111.
sum 1 Ш
CASH PAID FOR CEDAR LOGS
and timber. For details write
Geo. C. Brown and Co. of N.
C., Greensboro. N. C. 9 lOtf
WANTED — MIDDLE AGED
white woman for general’
housework. Threo in family.
Apply Mrs. W. A. Griffin, Rt. 1
Mof.kRville, w. c.
LET US DO Y W R JOB-WORK
-WE WILL DO IT RIGHT.
-'osMssMsassaasKiaMaKScasKRasMKiaa H .
M PItEVENT SMUT
IM Your V.'heat j.nd Oats by
E treatijig the saed with pro-
a per preventative nnd in the
§ proper way.
B •I Ask us for information
* ■
' HALL-KIM6R0 UGH
DRUG COMPANY
“A Good Drug Store”
Quick Delivery Service
Phone 141
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
P R IN C E S S
T H E A T R E
Friday & Saturday
Another good western pic
ture with Tim McCoy in
“REVENGE RIDERS”
And Short Reel of
“S'l’ARS OF TOMORROW ”
Monday & Tuesday
“IH E FINAL HOUR”
'Featuring Ralph Bellamy
wilh Marguerite ChnrchhiU
Cartoon Comedy and nows
iMimmumwmnmimc
FORD ‘R & G’ USER CAR
AND TíiUCív SALE
“Ford ‘R & G’ u.?od car and
trucks, now being offered to the’
public, through the nation-wide
Ford dealers’ Used Car Clearanci,'.
Sale, furnish a definite guide to
buying quality,” according to iWr.
R. B. Sanforu, head of Sanford
Motor bo.,'local fi'ord dealers.
"This merchandising policy
ween rruiierns, and the time was (means that every used car and
Mi&s Jane Crow, of Salem Col
lege, Edward Crow, of. Winston-
Salem, and Dan Gilliam, of
Washington, D..C., a student at
Davidson College, spent Sunday
with Mrs. E. W. Crow. •
Mra, G, N. Christian has been
spending the past week with Mr.
iind Mrs. 0. M. Yates, near
BrownwoOd, Ashe County. She
will also visit in Lenoir and HicK-
ory before returning home.
spent in a mimic school, with
contests, readings and music'.
Block cream and cookies weffi
served, and Halloween favors'and
prizes were given. About for
ty were present.
Mrs. J. F. Gaddy
In Wreck
Friends hore of Mrs. , W. C.
Cooper will regret to khoVv that
her sister, Mrs. J. I'’.’, Gaddy, of
Salisbury, was seriously injured
in an automobile collision, which
occurred at.a street intersection
on Oct. 9, during a heavy rain'
fall. Mrs. Gaddy is a patient in
the Rowan Memorial Hospital,
where she is being treated for
fracture of the skull and other
injuries. We hope that she will
soon recover. ,
Davie Grays Meet ^'lext
Week
The Davie Grays Chapter, U.
D. C., will meet neyt week, in
stead of this week, as the State
Convention is being held in
Durham, Oct. 14-16. Mrs. J. D.
Hedges is the delegate from the
chapter and left Tuesday for
Durham. She was accompanied
trucic oiiored ar our clearance
sale under tne 'R &■& G’ emblem
has been renewed and bears our
guarantee,”' said Mr.. Sanford.
“The policy is recognition of
the iiict tnat few used car buyers
consider themselves sufiicientiy
uxpert to juuge the mchanical
condition of a car offered for
sale. Our plan provides a re
liable guide to quality backed by
tne integrity of our organization.
The emblem is permitted to be
affixed only to cars which are
guaranteed lo meet definite spe-
ciiicatioiia. m e emuiem means
that the’car nas passed a rigid
ins.paction and measures up to
sianuaras oy tne liord Mo
tor oompa..j.
FARMS FOi: SALE—-Mo3t any
size or type, located in Rich
mond county. Terms 20% cash,
balance over period of 1 to 10
years. 6% interest. Call or
see E, G. Horn, Field Repres
entative, North Carolina Joint
Stock Land Bank, Southern
Pines, N. C-, Phone 5894. Sox
1004. 10 16 2t.’
Subacrib« te The Enterprtee
Bargains!
Ladies’ and Children’s
COATS at Bargain
Prices
Flour, 98 lbs ...................$2.75
Salt ............................................ 97c
100 lbs. S ugar........................$5.10
5c Matches ................................ 3c
5c School Tablets ...................... 3c
Blue Bell Overalls, pair ....... 97c
All 25c Baking Powder ....... 19c
8 lb. Carton Lard ............... $1.02
Pink Salmon .....................!..... 11c
5c pack Salt .............................. ScT"
Standard Keiosene 11c per gal.
Fat Meat, pci lb....................... 15c
8 oz. Blue Bell'Sanforize
Overalls ........................... ifI.lO
Henty 65c Sheets...................48c
Plenty Dress Shirts, woriil
rue now ............. .............. 48c
We have plenty men's* clothing
All sizo.s from $0.95 to $17.75
Liitues Loats .... $5.75 to $10.50
Childrens (Joats. ,. $1.94 to $4.50
Dress ,1'rints ................ 9c to 18c
Suuings ........................ 24c to 3,c
Gropes ....................... 29c to G9c
tiiiuirens Uresses .................. 59c
Ladies Uresses ....... 97c to $7.50
bianuets .................... 'ioc to_. $1.89
Latues i-tats ........... Die to’ $1.49
Vve have axes, regular price
$l.a5, now ............................ 97c
Brooms ....................................
iiorse Collars ........... 97c and \ip
We have pjenty Briciius, 'iraceo
iiuines anu riarness, lieaters
irom ,>1.40 up.
i L/OOK *iuve Worth $25.00
Now $19.50
See us for anything you need,
we will save you money, as we
sell for cash and sell for less.
Plenty Children’s heavy Union
Suits ............................... 38c up
I handle Red Goose and Wolver
ine Shoes, and can fit the whole
family. These shoes are guaran
teed to give satisfaction. Buy
now and save money.
Plenty Live Stock. If you need a
pair of first ilass mules see me.
Yours for Sargains
J. fRANK »R№
Mocifsville. N. C,
....I.'---:
кнхманхнжмхнимхнхмхнинжнхнжнхндгиасивижкжижижнянжнжижна
= DR. P. H. MASON, Dentist
a - Sanford Building
I M O CKSVILLE, N. C.
ИЖМНЖНЖНЖНЖНЖНЖНЖНЯМЖМЖМЖНЖНЖНЖМЖНЖНЖИЖИЖНШНХНЖН!
Е1нзнхи0мвнв1»1х1!(1&|)звнхихнхнгнхнв«1:гмвнв1!1анжнжижижихмяйхн1 « --------------------B B№VSp...F№ÍUZEIIS
T r y R o k e m k o F o r G ra in 3 -12-6
(In White Cotton Bags)
For Sale By
C. C. SANFORD SONS 00.
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
COURTNEY CASH STORE
COURTNEY, N. C.
HSMSHBHSIKISIÜISHSHSHiClülSCilBCOSSCilSIKISNSElISIÜISlUSMÜÍÜSHISKliüDüSHStKISHIlüH S3as
S3 M
We wish to announce that our
C O T T O N G IN
i IS N O W O P E N
EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK
We will pay highest maiket price.
Bring your cotton to us.
G R E E N M IL L IN G C O .
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
iKMBMRiiJEHaMEKBCSBMSMBMaKlSMEKIBMHKlKMEKiEIHEMSKIBMBMBMEMKHEMa
•lHaMCSMKiHiaMKMSHEMaKiBciistfasiiiaffiHaiKiaiKiHKiEKiaKiffiWBixiaKiaMaMSMKMKMa«
It's N o t T o o So o n T o T h in k O f I
C O A L 1
With the thermometer bobbing above 90 every day it takes ^
a lot of imagination to picture the way you are going to *
feel aibout COAL October or November, but a good |
imagination will save you a .substantial amount of your x
next winter’s fuef bill if you buy NOW.
C o a l W ill B e M u ch H ig h e r
E ICE J FUEL CO.
a MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
МХН«МКНСНЖИ«ИЖИХМХН1ИЖИ»НЖНЖНЖМ1 ■мжихнсижмжискаиа»
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T H E M O C K S V IL L E E N T E R P R IS E , Mocksville, N. C.
rh u rsd ay ^y O ctí^^
DRAGONS
DRIVE YOU
ByE D W I N
B A L M E R
Copyright by Edwin Balmor
WNU Sorvlco
CH APTER IX — Continued
— 1G—
“Yout . . . Wlmt more do jou want,
Mr. O’Mnro? And at tills tlmo In tho
evening?"
•‘It Imd to be tonlBlit," anld Catlml.
“Wlmt hnd to be tonight?"
"ta slie—bus sho retired, Mrs, Glen-
clth?"
“Yes.”
Then he lienrd her voice from above.
“I've not, Mother. Tell him Гш com
ing down."
“Nol” her mother said; and to Cn-
thnl: “Please, please go away."
"I want to spfcak to him. Mother,"
and she went past hor mother nnd out.
‘•I’vo aslted him to go away."
, "I ask him not to."
“I can’t havo him with you In my
house." her mother said.
"We needn’t go In. I’d rather not;
It's—cooler out hero," Agnes said. "I
need to talk to him. Then I'll come
in."
"Both of yon come In," her mother
Invited unwillingly.
Agnes turned. “We’ll go through
the house," eho yielded, “and out the
other side."
Cathal followed her, thus, through
the house; and there was tho water
before them. They wont to the edgo
of tho sand, nnd wero alono with the
lake and Denob. Over the water, heat-
lightning was flashing almost Inces
santly, nnd giving them strange, gar
ish glimpses ot each other nnd the
shore. The distant thunder became
constant.
“Why did you come tonight?" Agnes
asked Cathal.
"Now," said Cathal. “I don't know.
Awhllo .ago, I thought I did. I de
ceived myself I might do something
for you. Of course It wan for myself, solely, I came—and wouldn't go away."
''I’m glad you came. Thero was no
ono here I could talk to."
... Ы1а. pulses leaped at that.
“I’m leaving tomorrow with Moth
er," Agnes said.
“Whero to?’’
“New York; Father’s getting ns tho
flrst enlllng for Prance. It’s true I’m
all through In tho court?"
“ifhat’s true," Cathal said. "Can’t
yon believe It?”
“And—she’ll bo cleared?"
"Cleared." said Catlml, “by tomor
row nigiit, I think. I put her on to
morrow morning; wo ought to reach
our arguments by noon. By night It'll
bo over. She’ll bo elonrod,"
Agnos caught hor breath. По liear.l
It. ‘‘By me?" she gasped In hor
breath’s expiration.
“By you," said Cathal. “You turned
the case. Sho, tomorrow, nnd I—wo
Imven’t got to win It; wo simply havo
not to lose It now. Wo’ll do that."
“I know you will."
“Aud now," he said, “you don’t wani
us to.”
“It's not that—aulto." Agnes gazed
up at him, and the lightning ¡It their
faces. ''I want her free. I'm ' sure I
want her not killed, not electrocuted
or oven jailed for life. But I don't
want her paid."
V “Payment ot tho Insurance to her Is
not to be avoided when she's cleared,"
Cathal said, their faces In tho dark,
but tho images remained on their
retinas. ‘‘And out ot It comes my fee.
How much, hnve you heard?"
“Half." said Agnes. ,
“And thinking that." said Catlml.
"you wnnt nn for her—anff for me.
Halt I'm to have, I'm told. Tho opin
ion has even been put In 'print. Well,
It’s not half, nor near It; but It'll be
a big fee—If she's cleared. ,
"For sho'll havo tho money. I’ll take
a good part of It from her; and sumo
of that I’ll keep; but more I'll pass
over to tho wife that first married
him—and his daughter. Nobody knows
It but you."
"Thank you." sho said, "for telling
me."
"Win It mako tho night easier for
you? You’ve dono no wrong. Let no
one tell you that you've dono wrong."
Tho darkness was between them again.
"Myrtlo IjOitIo shot In self-defonse.
and hardly knowing—for tho Indignity
she'd endured—that she did It. For
weeks he’d tormented and beaten hor
because sho could not bear him love—
us he’d known love, before ho cast
bli her that loved him, nnd thought
bo could buy It from another. That
dny, he’d found out about Bert, and he
was worse than ever before; so his
wife grabbed his gun to scare him, but
be came nt her, and she pulled and
pulled tho trigger. She’ll tell It on the
stand tomorrow; by night sho'll bo
free. Twelve men, having hoard hor,—
and you,—will say sho ,ч1ш11 bo pun
ished no further. Thoy take tho rt-
eponslblllty; not you.
"I take It too. I came tonight to sny
that to you. I didn’t plan to toll you
about шу fee; but I did."“Гш glad you did."
“Tho lightning's brighter. I suppose
that weans It'a searer. лез; there's
the thunder." Ho waited for It to rum
ble ftWftf. “1 tboueht today I'd »»u
S littili ii lUiill
you forever as you wore on the wit
ness-stand ; and then I thought It wouM
be aa you were when I held you "or a
moment. Did you know, for a mo
ment I hold you?"
“Yes."
“Do you suppose nfter this.—when It lightnings,—I can SCO your face?
All my life, when It lightnings? It’s
my last time to see you. I can>o to
night while It was still somewheru
within-within my right. God
bless that lightning I You're still look
ing up ,at me. I’ll always see you so I
Have you heard what I’vo said—
through tho thunder?”
“I’ve heard."
“I’ve lived In this world near to
thirty years; and nothing ever hap
pened to mo like that when I lifted
my phono nnd heard youf'volco; and
you nsked me to come wliero you were.
From thon, I’vo boon counting the
times I might be near you. I’d go'to
you to review your evidence; twice I
could do that. And then tho trial—
twice more I’d be with you. And now my times aro spent; there’s nothing of you left for me In all Wio future. Thir
ty years more or longer 1 may live In
this world nnswerlng my phono, going
to them thnt call me; but I’ll novor
Iind again tho like of you7 We’ll be In
the world, both of us, but I mny never
again speak to you or see your face."
‘‘That needn’t bo true."“Do you mean that?”
“YoV’
"Oh,' Ood, let mo see you! Where's
tho lightning?’’
"No," said Agnes, and lowered her
head. “I must go in.”
“No," ho forbade, and sdissed hot
wrist. “How much did you moon?"
How flrmly yot gently ho hold her I
Not like Job, not like Rod; not like any
other man who over had touched hor.
Siio quivered In tho llrst cool gust of'tho breaking storm. “I’vo got to
go In."
Indeed, for moments they had been
calling her; her mother and tho ser
vants: "Agnes! Agnes! . . . Miss
Agnes! Miss aienelthi"
"Let thom call," said Cathal florcoly.
“Do you care?"
“No! I'vo taken your word on right
nnd wrong agnlnst Jeb nnd my father
and mother. Maybe I'll bo thirty years
Over tho Water, Hcat-Llahtning
Was Flashing Almost Incessantly.
In tho world too. Can you novor como
to any ono, Mr. O'Mara, unless sho
calls you?"
"Oh, Godl" nald Cathal, and lot her
go.
“Agnes! Agnea!" her mother wns
calling; and tho rain was coming
down.
In groat drenching drops It struck.
Cathal whipped off his coat to cover
her; but thoy wero wot through be
fore thoy gained the shelter of the
housQ.
"Aro you mad, Agnes7 Mad?" de
manded her mothor.
"I guess so," Agneg told hor.
Never as upon this night had Agnes
needeii her room for sanctuary. After
ho had gone, discussion of him with
any ono or tho presence of any one-
even of hor mother—wns unbearable.
She'shut herself In hor room, and
strangely for hor, she locked hor door.
Sho lay upon her bed, undrled. Sho
had stripped off her wet dress which
his coat had covered, but sho hnd
made ho move beyond that.
Sho thought how littio alien upon
her his coat' had felt. You could noc
bear upon you any garment of a par
son who olfondod you. How far from
oltonso hnd boon the cover of his coat
which the rain had mado to cling
upon her!
Cathal, when sho gavo his coat back,
had put It on; and ho wore it wet ns
ho drove through tho storm to the
city.
'i’he lightning continued to crash as
tho heat from the prairies broke In
the blinding shoots of rain which made
cascades ot tho streets, but Cathal got
through and scarcely considered liow.
Winnie wns waiting for him.
Throughout that day, as from tho first
of tho trial, Bho had sat In court; and
tonlglit sho hnd no doubt of the great
troublo tlmt dwelt within him.
( His mothor, assailed by the heat of
tho day, lay In the grateful dark of
hor room; nnd his sister too, when
midnight onco more had made remote
tho thunder, had dropped to sleep.
"Cathal!" sho called, whon at last
lie entered, "whero wero yo?"
“North."
“North, leekloB her, CathulJ''
"Yta."
'.‘It’s wet yo nrot" Wlnnto’i thia
hand had found hi» cont-sicevo and
moved up to his shontder, “Did slia
give yo no shelter?"
“Shelter?" snld Cathal.
He seized Winnie's hnnd gently and
put hor oft; and for onco ahe misun
derstood him. ‘•Sho didn't havo yo Inl
'j;hank God for that, Cathal I , . .
Any other—any other, Cathal; 'twould
have been tho cruel ruin of y6.’*
C H A PT E R X
Agnes and her mother—nnd Rogna
—left Chicago for Now York on the
Century tho next day. It was Satur.
dny, and throughout tho morning,
Myrtlo Lorrio was on tha wltness-
stnnd; tho noon papers were full'of her defense of herself.
Bee nnd Davis went to tho railroad station, but Jeb did not appear. Tho
Ignominious testimony in rognrd to
him, which Agnes had given on tho
previous day, had been printed fulljr
not only tu Friday’s late editions, but
was prominent In tho morning papera.
“You got complete coverage, dar
ling,” Bee assured Agnes. Bee was the
only ono ablo to nssumo any levity
over It. “Not only in the news but
la tho chatty littio social columna.
Some ono hns commented that If there
Is an absoluto zero In ways to an-
noimce n broken engagement, possibly
you lit on it.”
At Albany next morning. Agues
rend, at last, that the Jury late in tbe
evening had acquitted Myrtle Lorrie
on the fourth ballot.
They sailed—Agues and her mother
Beatrice Glonolth uud Ilogna, their
maid—on Wednesday, Bob nnd several
friends seeing them off. Tiie tiireo dnys
In Now York with lier husband had proved oven moro diHlcult for Tríelo
tlinn sho had anticipated. They stayed
at tho same hotel, of courso ; they pre
served, outwardly, nil appearances.
Trido mentioned “Cash" bût onie;
and then not oven by the name of
“Cash." Tríelo asked—nnd this wns
not until Tuesday: "Bob, Is she In
town?"
“No," Bob told his wife. “Not slnca
before you came." For he had sent
her away on Saturday. ^
Cush hnd not wanted to go without
lilrti ;. but ho had told her sho must.
No; Ito, wouldn’t like It, he assured
her; but they both must do It Thu«
ho would keep his conscience clonr;
such temporary abstinence wns enough
for virtue In thean daya,
Prosperity, power, nnd Impunities t
Thoy strutted on the ship, with their
wives or tho women whom they pro-
fcrred to thoir ivlvús—these men oc
America new to tho millions which thoy bellovod and they boasted they
liad "made,"
Thero wns no esnapo, on tho ship, from those—people ; and none, that
'summer, in Parla; for Amorlcnna, na
novor before, possessed tho city.
Beatrice Gieneith hnd novor Intend
ed to linger In Paris. She ilod to a
littio quiet village ot tlio Hautes Pytc-
neoa; nnd sho and Agnoa settled, at
Inst, In a tiny Inn a tow kilometers
from tho border ot Spain, where no
man was In tho least lilte Bob—and
the noon sunlight shone sharp and warm, but always thero was a breeze
down from MalR^etta or the snowy
summits ot Mt. Perdu.
There, week after week, mothor and
daugliter waited.
■\VnIted for wlmt?
For human nature to chnngoî For
years to rcroll themselves? For the
world to fit its ways again, as once
happily It hnd, to tho completo ful
fillment of nn individual's decent de
sires?
Trido did not donl with such mat
ters through her mind; her emotions
always controlled her. Sho wnnted
what sho had had—hor husband’s doslro nnd devotion, which she had dona
nothing to loso.
If sho had “dono” anything which
deservedly would hnve alienated him,
sho might havo seen tho “justice" ot
what had occurred; but sho had not.
Day nnd night, Trlcle rollvod bor
married Ufo In review.
A letter arrived, once a week regu
larly, from tho husband; and always,'
on tho day ono came, Trlcle answered
It. .
Bee wrote hor mother and her slater
onco a week, but alternately; and sha
always assumed that thoy shared hor
letters, as Indeed tiiey did.
Sho had moved hor household to
Mackinac Island for July and August.
Davis had boon wltli hor most of July,
but in August ho came up only for
week-ends. Jeb had appeared sovorai
times In his big boat, and always had
stopped. She—aud Davis—had gone up
with Jeb, and several more people,
Into Superior for a week.
Agnes lowered tho letter and lay
back la her gayly painted chair gaz
ing toward Muladotta but regarding,
really, her own life on tho Illlnclg
shore four thousand miles away.
Plainly sho saw herself and them
all In perspective; her homo and the
city below It, and tho long level sweep
of tho lake.
Back nnd forth upon It, Jeb jour
neyed in ills splendid luxurious ship,
picking up people, dining them, win
ning them, setting them at little tables
for bridge or to dancing on tho dock
while the ship sailed; when It stopped,
swimming and diving. .Teb paying for
It nil, nover tired of It until'he re
turned to Chicago to make mora
money, and more and moro.
She might he with him; but sho had
no wish to bo.
Here was no one, hut her mother,
whom sho well know. Here wore hours
with tlio sun, nnd tho wind from tha
mountain pns.<!cs; with the tinkle of
bolls of cattle on the hillsides; tha
herder’s whistle, and sometimes hi«
Sûng. . . , But'Agnes did not drean
of Job's big. nowi’boat.
n o BE CONTlNUBOi
F o r S ty le a n d E c o n o m y The Mind
Meter •
By
LOWELL
HENDERSON
© Boll Syndlcalo.—WNU Servie«,
ñ i ñ ñ s S R i s s
Tho Syllables Test
In this teat there are two colJ
tunns of syllables. Taka a syllabi®
out of the flrst column and unite
it with one in the second column
to form a word. When you nri
flnished, you should have ten conv.
plete words.
Second Colunm
1 eo.st2. ploy
3. slon
4. den
B. port
6. gain
7. tics
8. ject
0. look10. cor
First Column
1. bar
2. out
3. ex
4. tac
5. mis
6. gro
7. con
8. sud0. em ,
10. sub •
Answer«
1. bargain.
2. outlook.
3. export.
4. tactics.
5. mission.
6. grocer.
7. congest.
8. sudden.
9 employ.
10. subject.
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© Dell Syndlcsle,—WNU Service,
Use two spoons for turning «
roast. A fork pierces tho surfaca
and allows tho juice to etecapa. » • •
If cream or custard sauca,
curdles put tho vessel in which iV
is cooking in a pan of hot water
and heat well. It will soon beooma
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• • •
To remove lime which accumulates on the inside of a tea kettla
boil a strong solution of vinegar
inside of the kettle, then rinsa
thoroughly before putting In
water.• • •
One-fourth cup of bread crumbs
and two tablespoons of water
added to each pound of meat when
preparing hamburg steak makos
a* much lighter mixture. For sea
soning uso 1 teaspoon of salt, one-
fourth teaspoon of pepper ond
one-half teaspoon of onion juico
lo euch pound of meat.' ffl Bell Syiullcate.—WNU Service.
о т
lÄ 4^0il W ttRXR ÜL
1 WONDERFUL GIFTS
. . . Just for Naming This'Picture of Dr. Dafoe
and the Dionne Quins
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liovrolct Sedans,^irriei^flircs^
Women from Coast-to-Coast Prefer
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16 lUNCH AND DINNER FAVORIHS
TOMATO
PEA
ПЕАМ
CELERY
VEGETABLE
ONION
asparagus
CHICKEN-NOODLE
MULLIGATAWNY
MUSHROOM
VEGETABLE BEEP
CLAM CHOWDER
SCOTCH BROTH
PEPPER POT
CHICKEN
CHICKEN GUMBO
ifie S o u p s fro m
D o tvn - fn - O íx ío
PHILLIPS
Tluirsduy, Oetubor 16, 193G
p a h m in g t o n t n e w s
SASSAFKAC RIDGE ITUMS
M'.Hter Etirtur & Co.
Hit mout intvust you a bit to
l<iu)vvn as iiow .SL'unim laases
b’ilin’ is right into the moment
um of full flush jfist now, an’
accordin’ly, at this here ivritin’,
hit air, an’ we hud a right smart
timp, we did, down to Cy’ Wat-^
.son’s plant, la.'it Saiurdpy night,
we did, cause they had a sort
of combinashun of a free-fer
all candy makin’, 'likewise a
(Uvnce, an’ fiddle mus'ick into the.
bargain’, they did, an’ theys them
nil says how they mout a bin
aomethin’ some whar around to
drink, what was atronger’n cain
sorguin juice, ’cau'se the fo’ka
ehore did feel powerful good, they
did, an’ neghborly inter the bar
gain, shore as kraut,'an’ they was
II heap of jovalin', an’ jokes a
bein’ pulled, yes-siree, an’ them
thar boys a kissin’ of the gals,
an’ a gittin’ sorguni-lasses candy
into ther hair, an’ hit come purty
danged nigh a eandin’ up into
trouble, hit did, cause somebody
what felt purty reckles.s, suggest
ed playin’ a gartie called meetin’
the tar baby, yes-sirâe, er shtlgar
baby pr somethin’ of that sort,
an' whoever sot down, an’, them
. blindfolded, Into the l’nchàntéd
^ seat 'betwixt the fairy queen an’
king, they ot to .see, likewise
meet that thar same tar baby,
or shugar-baby, they did, an’
thom thar .boys an' gals they
takened an put a big tub full of
surgum-lasses skimmin’s betwixt
two chairs, they did, an’ took an’
kivcrcd it all up mith a table
clol/i. th,ey did, so ns hit looked
about as innosent, likewise
liarmlesa, fis a lazy mule on a
fust warm Spring day, yes-siree,
er maybe one of these here be-
cammy-fhigeci city flappers out
in her full line of paint adver-
tisin’, an’ they got Branck Rollins
to sot down, rail henist-to-gosh
hard onto that thar seat, they
(lid, yes-siree, an’ brack he stuck
into the tub, he did, an’ hit took
about the best can cutter what
S()uave Bixter had up to the
an’ post office, to get that thar
tub off’ri Brack's rear geafin,
I'r to git that sanie rear, gearin’
out’n thé' tub, reckin’ as how hit
war all one, likewise the same
iinyhow, how-som-ever hit saved
tfouble, hit did, cause Brack ho
got powerfully mad,- he did, yes-
siree, an' miiot a did harm to I
somebody’s person, shore aa i „ ,kraut, if he could a got right out S»t»vday evening was a very cn-
llH! Ladies Aid Society of the
M. E. Church hold tho October
meet ng with Mrs. R. C. Brown,
Mrs, Leo Brock being joint hos
tess, The meeting \vaa opened
with a negro spiritual sung by
Mrs. Burton Seats and Mrs F. I
H. Bahnson. Mrs. H .C. Freeman I
conducted the splendid devotion-'
'«'Is, each 'member tWciiig part by
repeating favorite Biible verses.
The ^president, Mrs. R. C. Browni
presided over the businesss meet
ing. Mrs. Ralph James 'gave thie
minutes of the last meeting and
Mrs. 'VV., A. Tayjor-presented'the
treasurer’s report. Motion made
and carried that we buy silver
sufficient to serve our church
suppsis. It \vas decided that tlie
Society take quilting orders dur
ing the winter months. The pur
chase of an ic'e 'ci'6ain fr'eezo'r
was ordered. Business of hold
ing the annual Baziar in Nov-,
etnber was entered into and con
tributions of foo and fancy work
were solicited. This BAzaai- fs
held 0 Saturday after Thanks
giving nnd promises to be the
best one thia, year iu ita history. I
One new member, Mrs. W. E.
Kennen was given a' cordial wel
come ‘into the society. DeiicTCtls
refreshrilents were served and a
happy social hour enjoyed at the
meeting’s close.
Friehlis of Mrs. M. M. Brock
will be grieved to hear that she
is quite sick at the hoine of her
¡brother, Mr. Alex Cooper, in
Statesville. All hope for her a
speedy recovery.
Rev. H. C. Freeman will con
duct a Bible Ptudy Class at the
Parsonage, beginning with Thurs
day night of this week. This is
held under the auspices of the
Woman’s Missionary Society of
the M. E. Church. 'Visitors wel
come.
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Hendricks,
of Mocksville, were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Ma
dison,
Mrs. M. B. Brock, who has been
quite sick for the past week. Is 1
some better. Mia.s Margaret
Bi’ock haa been spending some J
days .nt home with .her mother. , j
Sir. and, Mrs. Evan Lakey and ,
daughter, LhDeen, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Jnfr!,i!S and son, Eugene,',
wore among the visitors to tho
Forsyth Fair on Saturday.
The Church supper given in the
annex of the M. E. Church last
to onat, how-some-ever, you see
tliat thar time of waitin’ for tho
can (Uitter, likowiso the oporash-
1П1Я, hit give Brack time to git
cooled down a bit, yes-siree an'
wlion they got Brack out he look
ed more like a portable aheep-
dippin’ plant than anything else,
ho did, an’ somebody yelled meet
the tar baby, they did, an’ them
thar gals all gethered around a
hollerin’ shugar baby, thoy did.
yoK-siree, an' a makin’ like ns
how they all whantod to ktsS
Brack, they did, how-sum-ever.
Mister Editur, hit so happened as
how Brack he didn’t have m'-ich
voli.sh for nomore sweets jest
Uion, how-som-ever, they’s likely
to be a bearin’ ’fore Square Bix-
tor indurin’ of the next few
WRcka, for uotrages agin’ the
bnva nf this hero (.'.ornor of the
common wealth, fer tho ruina-
■ stum of one_pf Cy’s best tubs,
likewise Square's beat can cutter,
ail’ accordinly, Mrs, Cy’s spare
table cloth, to say nuthin’ about
assaults with intent to humiley-
ale as well as damage that thar
Jjottle-eand of said .Brack Ro.l-
iiiis person, yes-siree Mister
Kflitur, an’ weuns here-bouts is
a lookin’ ahead, we air, fer some
right lively times, indurin’ of the
next few weeks, shore азлkraut,
Any-how, Mister Editur, thar’s,
•shore to be some right good pick-
iii.4 Гог yor scribe in the way of
itums ,they is, ’til this here fra-
tu.s is settled, yiis-siree, an’ tlie
peace an' dignity of the la\ys of
Uiis here commonwelth vind.v-
';!Uo(l, an’ take hit from weuns,
,vor scribe he’s a expectin’ to be
I'iiiht onter the job, ’thout gloves
oil, shore as kruut he is, an’ 1
I'eckin’ as how them’s about all
Ihe itums for this time, only
•seuin as how you’r- a lawyer like-
''vise a editur into the bargain,
maybe we mout as well ast what
times of the moon aa well as un
der what aigns of the zodyack
(loos you'ns over to town stage
yur candy b’ilins so aa the fel-
lora what set down; into a tub ■'of
•skimmins don’t happen' to be too
bottle-eanded to git out on ther
owii free will an' accord, like
wise annishyativ?
joyable affair.
George and Lester Marlin aro
spending sometime with thoir
grandparents, Mr. ;ind Mrs. F.
H, Bahnson,
MOCKS CHURCH NEWS
Yourn fer ne\ya,
' Jimmie
Rov. 'F. E. Howard filled his
last appointment here Sunday
afternoon, before going to con
ference. We hope he will be re
turned for another yoar.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter mov
ed to Winston-Salem Saturday,
whero they both hold po.sitions.
Mr, and Mrs. John Evans, of
Winston-Salem, spent Sunday
with Mrs, 0, F, Jones.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Jones and
children, Messrs George Phelps
and Charlie Mock, of Winston-
Salem and Mr. Jethro Mock, of
Thomaaville attended service
hero Sunday.
Misa Luuru Cornaliter,■ of Bul-
.timove, spent Sunday with Miss
Ruth Jonea.
REDLAND NEWS
There will be an all day sing
ing nt Bethlehem M, R, Church
Sunday, Oct. 18th. The Chisolm'
sisters and other- good singers ^
will be there. Everybody is in
vited to come and bring well fill-,
ed baskets. |
Miss Georgia Smith spent Fri- ^
dny night with her sister, Msr.
Buck Foster, of Smith Grove. •
Mr. and Mrs. C. E, Smith, of
Clemmons, viaited Mr, Smith’s
mother, Mrs. W. D, Smith Sun
day, -
Mr. and Mrs, Willie Armswor-
thy and children spent Saturday
night with the latter’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Foster,
There will .be a lawn party Sat-,,
urday night, Oct, 17th at Bethle
hem- Ghurch. , i5ve,vybody is in-
Vitod. .............
Misses Lillie and Lessie Dunn
and Cordelia Smith visited Miss
Elva Hendrix Sunday. ;
Little Bobby Sofley, of Mockg-
vilie;; spent the paat week \yith i
Ills granilparehts, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Sofley.
Miss Marie Sofley spent the
,week-end with her mother, Mrs.
j. A. S o f l e y .____________
THE MOCfKSVILLE EN*rEKPraSE, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
Buy Your Shoes at Efird's
an
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Styled by Craddock - Terry
a'jid ^.rowjibilt. Q'xforda, ,tlei^
in black and brown kitl, and
s„ued ^ oxfords In brown.
They’re really smart.am <r
t 2 . 9 5
Novelty Styles
Included are extremely smart
buckle straps, , ties and pumps
:— in patent and bi'own nnd
black Icic', Widths A to C.
N gv/ Style Oxfords
Women’s and .missies’ black
tind brown and sUede oxfords;
also buckle rind 'T-straps. A
nice selection from which to
"’noose.
Oxfords and Straps
Brown and black oxfords. Ties
and buckle straps, crafted in
kid and suedo, contrasted with
patent and kid trim.s.
MovVi^liiilt Oxfords
for Children
Especially reco'iimended for
school wear. Plain, crea&ed
and perforated tot. Brown
and black calfakin. A real
value too!
Better BROWNbilts
for Children
Shoes for every childish occa
sion, in brown and black
leathers. Moccasin and plain
toes. Good, comfortable last,s.
All sizes.
$3 .4 5 -$3 - 9 5
CHILDREN'S SCHOOL SHOES
Buckle and laco oxfords in brown
and black calfskin. Rubber and
leather heels. All, sizes.sl*94
School oxford,? for girls. Lace
and ankle models. Leather soles,
some with rubber heels. Black
and brown.$I*4S
A large group of school shoes for
children, T-Straps and Oxfords
— with moccasin toes, crease too
and plain toes. Brown and black.
H'S AND BOYS'
Men's BROW Nbilt Dress
Oxfords QPfc
Brown and black genuine calfskin;
plain and cap toes. Leather or rubber
heels. A fine shoe at a low price.
Men's Genuine Calf
skin Oxfords
Bal and blucher models—
in black and brown, plain
or wing tip, hard or rub
ber heels.
$ 2 .9 5
Men's Best Work Shoes
'All leather,’,i'ubber or composition soles. Eubber
oc ?•. -A- shoe that will give the most
Srear per dol ar.
Men's Oxfords
W ing and plain cap toe
oxfords, in black and
brown leather. Choice o£
hard or ,rubber heels.$1*94
Boys' Oxfords
Black and brown leather. Plain
and wing tips. Rubber or leather
heels. A special value at
$ i .4 S < & $ | . 9 4
Men's and Boys' Work Shoes
The best work shoe in Salisbury for the ,money.
Leather and composition soles. Cap and plain
toes. Brown and black.$1,94,u.i vv 'ÍV
Efirel':
! tlHi,
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T h e M o c k s v i l l e E n t e r p r i s e
-' Published Every Thursday at Mocksville
;* North Carolina
ii) -------------------------------------------■'i ¡A- C. Huneycutt ........... Editor and Publisher
Subocription Rates:
$1.50 a Year; G Months 76 centg
' Strictly in Advance. .
Entered at the post office at Mocksville, N. C.,
ks Becond-class matter under the act of March
I, 1879.
NOTICE TO GENERAL PÜBLIC
This newspaper charges regular ad-
Terti»ing rates for cards of thanks,
resolution notices, O'bituarios, etc., and
wHl not accept any thing leas than 35
cents cosh with copy unless you have
regular mbnthly accounts wit/h us.
We do not mean to be hard on any
«n«, but stnaJi items of this nature force
us to demand the cash with copy. All
such received by ua in the future with
out ihe cash or stair.ps will not be pub
lished.
¿,'3iibcksville, N. C., 'Thursday, Octobor 16, 1936
, * A'bstain from all appearance of evil. *
f;, 1 Thesaalonians 5:22. . *
♦. Who can find a virtuous wonian? for *
* her price is far above rubies.— Proverbs *'
* 31:10. .* # # * •» * * *. » * * *
THE STATE'S WATER COVERED EiMPIKE
As moat school children learn early in life,
Most of Holland is lower than sea level and
is protected from inundation by dikes. Inside
of these dikes is the great Ztiider Zee which
was formerly nothing short of a part of the
sea. A section ot the Zuider Zee, containing
iorty-eight uciBB, lias alrcf.ciy been roclnimefi
and whore tho bed of the sea once was, tra
velers may nov/ see I'inlds of flowers, rye and
grain growing with here and there,a boat
that haa never been removed from the old sea
, bed. Holland is now considering the reclam
ation of the roniainder of the Zuider Zee, but
— the-problem-of pumping water o u t, ia an
enormous one.
■ This reminds of a visit wo once made in
Columbus County, this stato, where we saw
thousands and thousands of acres which had
for ages been covered by swamps, reclaimed
and .biosapming as the proverbial deaert, "like
the ro№ ‘*||^t was an inspii-ina sight to see an
entire towiif'ly.P which had been covered with
water fi‘on^™|e to five feet deep for ages
past, procltitilng.^from one hundred to one hun
dred'and vfifty' bushels of corn to the acre,
and .nfiording sites for modurn homes' for
liuppy farm families.
And speaking of. the reclamation of the
lands covered by water^ also reminds one of
the ambitious efforts ou the part ol promoters
to drain Lake Mtatamuskcet, in Hyde County,
Bovoral years ago. This was formerly one of
the most beautiiul bodies of water in the
state. There was a tradition among the In
dians to the effect that long'years ago the
ground caught on fire and ‘"uurned for many
riioons,” ana that the hole burned in the
ground filled with water and became Lal/j
'Mattan^.iskett.. But back to the reclamation
eiiorv, it proved practically a failure and w i
understand Lake Mattamuskeet ia now once
more the beautiful body of water that it was
of the former days,
One living in the Piedmonti aiid Western
. spof ion ./iCthi.s st.rili» nnd who njitv never havo
traveled over Eastern North Carolina has not
the remotest idea of the immense acreage
covered by swamps. While thousands and
thousands of acres have been reclaimed by
cir<MiiaKe\process; yet it is estimated that at
least three million acres of North Carolina’s
soil are swamp-lands. This vast territory could
be reclaimed to agriculture and in the re
clamation one of the big problems of the cast
would be solved, or largely so, to-wit, that of
the extermination of mosciuitos which are a
veritable pest in many sections of Eastern
North Carolina, and which really contribute
in a groat measure to the cheeking of progress
in those sections,
There are fertile acres in thi.s state east of
Goklsbcr.) now under cultivation and covered
by ,swam|).s, combined, .siiiiicient, if roclaimod
and prcijiiii'ly cultivated, lo feed h ilf the popu
lation in' the U'ln'ted States. And some day
Diiil V ,territory will all Ih; utilized for
a^'riculUire as eoniplelely and intensively as
the land.s now embraced in Kngiand, France
and Germany,
---------:-----0 --------------
UIUTIAN DOUBTLESS READY
1КП
That waa an awful humiliating position in
which Great Britian found herself when for
lack of fighting planes she was almost dictat
ed to by Mussolini some months ago. ■ The
world was practically dumlifounded when
Eii)/luiid was virtually forced to b,".ck dov.’n on .
the Ethiopian issue. But the British Empire
immediately started preparing;, ajid judging '
from recent utterances on the part of British
statesmen, it is plain that 'jSngland is once
more ready to take her place as the outstand-
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. G Thuraday, Octobor IS, 193G
ing woi’Id power. Neville Chamberlain in a
recent address made the following statement
which was clearly intended for the ears of
Germany and po.ssibly for Italy, loo;
"The development of aviation has to some
extent deprived us of our insular position.***
I can imagine no moro sobering thought to
any ruler who might be contemplating aggres
sion against,his neighbor than the knowledge
that within a few hours his action might be
followed by the retaliation of a force of such
terrific striking power as our new air force
will possess.”
The firmer stand which the British Empire
is taking in Palestine, the references to Bri
tain’s "terrific striking power” nnd other
utterances made by Britain statesmen recent
ly, show conclusively that slowly but surely,
British policy on the Continent is crystalliz-
ing.
Conservative opinion in Britain which had
g;rown somewhat sympathetic towards Ger
many, was completely alienated by Hitler’s
raising of the colonial issue. The Nazi dic
tator recently made it plain that Germany is
looking, forward to “Der Tag" \when Germany
shall be handed back her colonial possessions
lost as the result of tho World War. This
immediately put "John Bull” on his mettle,
for that portly gentleman has not been ac
customed in tho past to forfeiting imperial
territory gained by tho sword.
--------------0 ^----^---------
TROUBLE! AHEAD FOR FRANCE
As this is written, conditions look 'bad for
France. ; It has been our oijinion for the past
several months that France is prilctically in
the hands of the Socialists and Communists so
far as the present government is concerned.
On the other hand we have felt that there was
an opposition to tliis?,Communistic and Social
istic element similar to that which existed in
Spain prior to the Revolution. Now it looks
like conditions are developing there which
point to a I'epetition o£ what happened, nnd is
still happening, in Spain. Already tho Fascist
clement is casting about for a dictator and
numerous riots hnve occurred in the streets of
Paris.’ The wise heads of France comprising
tho leadership of both factions may so mani
pulate as to save the vountvy from whnt Spain
is experiencing, but we are predicting that,
within a very short while Franco is in for i>
jinck of trouble. Aiui siiould u lievolation
start in that country between tho Communists
and Fascists, doubtless 'both Germany and
Italy would take .sides with the Fascist ele
ment, nnd that would mean that Russia
would no doub(; come to tho rescue of the
French government ^ which event nnother
World War would bo on. And this is j ust
nbout what is likeljj,to happen before the roses
bloom again.
0-
BRITISH SOLDIERS TO THE BIBLE LAND
'.iWhen the World War closed and tho con
quered forces turned over Palestine to
Great Bvitian, it was generally expected that
the Holy Land would be made a home for the
Jewish peoples of all nations who cared to
RO there. Thousands of Jews havo since that
time moved into Palestine and (his is irking
to the Arabs. They are protesting against
any further Jewish immigration. Bands of
Arabs hiive, therefore, been causing trouble
throughout the section formerly ruled .over by
King iJavid. However, their protests against
Jewish imniigration have been_ answered by
the Bvitish goverument sending of thousands
of Britisn soldiers to enforce ii.vitish author
ity and protect the Jewish people and others
making their homes in Jerusalem and other
sections of the Holy Land. Many believe that
the trouble is caused by Italian influence, but
whatever the source is, our prediction is that
• Great Britian will hold a lirm grip on the
situationi And England will make the Holy
Land one of the (luietesc and yafest places
to live. If that should be the ca.se, witliin
a few years more the Je>vs will mako Pales
tine one of the most progressive and weal
thiest sections to its size to be found in the
world.
---------------0---------------
¡PRESS COMMENT
CAUTION NEEHED IN DRIVING
The heavy rains of the past, few days have
increased automobile accidents in this area,
and the wise driver will exercise caution
when he is on the roads. He may save his
own life, as well as prevent inuries or death
to others.
Dirt roads are rain-soaked and slippery,
Trai'flc is cutting them up badly; while a
number of bridges have been washed out, nr
mado impassable by damage to fills. Tho
highway department is working earnestly in
an oi'fort to I'opair this damage and open tho
roads, but some roads will bo closed for aev-
eral ihiys.
Even the hard-surfaced roads are more
dangerous than normally. The rains make
them somewhat slippery, while mud and mire
liave been thrown onto them in many instances
by ear wheels which ran for short distances
on tho soft shoulders.
Uain also ob^Jcures the vision of drivers, und
one accident, in which one person was ser
iously hurt, oceuri'ed from this source, ac
cording to reports.
Hard rains, slippery roads, mud and mire,
contribute to accidents, and the motorist who
exercises care and caution will lessen his
chances ¡for a wreck. 'iCarefulnesa' ought to
.1)0 the, watchword for eveiiy motorist, at all
times, but partidarly so during tho days when
tho hazards are'’increasecl by natural causes.
— The Salisbiiry Post.- ■■
TREAT SMALL GRAIN 'Г0
FREE SEED lUH.'M SMUTS
it
Smuts ill whe.'it and barley can
best bo controlled by treating
tho seeds with fungicides or hot
water to kill the fungus
i.sms.
Planting, seed that has never
been hiiactL'cl also is good, said
Dr. Luther Shaw, extension plant
pathologist at State College, but
sometimes it is hard to get seed
perfectly free, from disease.
A few smutty heads in a field
are capable of infe.iting a larifo
percentage o£ the seed produced
on the farm, and threshing ma
chines can spread the spores
from one farm to another.
Oat smuts can be controlled
either by planting a disease-
resistant variety or by treating
the seed with a. fungicide, Dr.
Shaw added. „
The treatinent recommended
differs with I'he type of smut and
the kind of seed.
Treat loose smut by immersing
the seed in hot water. Keep
wheat. 10 minutes in water that
has been heated to 129 degrees
fahrenheit. Barley should be
left 13 minutes in water with a
temperature of 126 degrees.
A fungicide dust will kill the
covei'ed smut spares. Treat
wheat with M> ouiico of ethyl
mercury phosphate dust to each
bushel of seed, or 2 to 2Vi ounces
of copper carbonate dust (50 per
cent copper).
Both covered nnd*black loose
smuts in barley may be eradicat
ed by dusting each bushel of
seed with 1/2 ounce of ethyl mer
cury phosphate 'du.»t or three
ounces of formaldehyde dust.
This last treatment will also
kill covered and loose smut irf
oats. j
The simplest and most effoc- i
tivo homc-nlnde machine to use '
in treating seed with fungicidal
dual ia the barrel mixer. It
should not cost more than $5 to
make and with proper care
should last indefinitely.
A diagrnm sliowiii;>’ how to
mitko such a duster, ,logethor
w’ith a detailed discussion of.
smuts and smut control methods
organ- may be secured Iree from Dr.
Luther Shaw, State Collego, Ra
leigh.
LET US iDO YOUR JOB W ORK
-WE W ILL DO IT BIGHT.
REVIVAL MEETING AT
MT. ГЛПОП CHURCH
Rev,W. F. Pago started a
revival meeting at Mt. Tabor
Church on Monday night, Octo
ber 12th. at seven oclpck and
will continue through the week
over Sunday, 3 services at 11 a.
m., 2:30 p. m. aud seven o’clock
Sunday night. A ll are cordially
invited to attend the aervicea.
Reddy Kilowatt
Says:
Watch YouK ■ Kidneys/
Be Sure They Properly
Cleanse the Blood
V O U R kldneyi «e eoniUnlly fliteN
1 Ing waste tnatttr irom (he blood
tireim. But kldneyi lomillmti lag In their work— do not act ai nature In*
(ended— (oil lo remove Impurities that poison the system when retained.
■ Then you may suffer nagging bock« ache, dliilness, scanty or too (roquent
uilnatlon, geUing up at night, pu(llnesi
under the eyes; (eel nervous, misera,
bic— oil upset.
Don't delay? Use Doan's PIlIi,
Doan’s oie especially (or poorly (une-
ll.mlng kidneys. 'Ihey aro rccom-
n -jndcd by grala(ul users the country c -ar. Gel them (tom any druggist.
BE SU RE
THERE IS
SUFFICIENT
LIGHT
'V Throughout The Home
Longer evenings and school days
cause more reading. Remember chil
dren have neither the experience
nor the understanding to exflain
insufficient light,.
Indirect
Floor Lamps
A lamp that tlTu entire family
will enjoy. New models, giv
ing three different amounts of
light at the turn of a sv,'itcii.
$ 1 2
95
95c Cash— $1.00 Monthly
$11.95 W ith Parchment Shade
INDIRECT
STUDY LAMP
$4.95 and $6.95
4So CASH—OSo CASH
»1,00 M ONTHLY
PIN-IT-UP
LAMP
*3.454Sc Cash
SOc Monthly
DUKE POWER CO
Moulded Insoles
will give you
iComfort
ESE one -«piece
m o u ld e d insoles
gendy bur firmly sup
port your arches and
distribute your body
weight correctly and
naturally. They’re built
high at tlie arch and low
8t the heel to lock your
foot ia the correct
■position.;
SHOES
AFFECT
ш У ihatt
Joiot'b.tb; placcî
,oÇ'jwi body cao' ijx uaôd tt> ;ca aboú, , .^.íuBdér
Bfipe»..|nd
W o m e n w L o a i e cû tistan tl\ f
"ON THEIR FEET
are
ГЛГрТЮЕ the wuuieij whose entire effic-
'-iency depends on their feet— nurses,
beauticians, professional women, and wait
resses. They realize what 11 means 10 be
fool y/ise and wear the kind of show that
keep their feet comfortable.
Такса tip from these women. Your cificiency
as a house wile is equally as important, Ifou
can’t afford to be uncomforiable.
Foot Builder Arch Shoes arc built for YOU
with special moulded insoles to support
your feet, combination lasts to assure per
fect fit as well as many other features. That’s
the reason wc say—
n WEAR
3 o o t ^ u i U i S t
A R C H S H O E S
This pattern sketched is an old favorite.
There are many щоге wjjicb are mucb
8ШйП&.§£»1Ьеш{
С. С. Sanford Sons Co.
Phone 7 Mocksville, N. C.
f i l z a
O UR CO M IC SECTION
Ш Ш
“ T hund er on the T rack'’
By FLOYD GIBBONS
i«]LT E R E ’S one for you,” says Edward Green of New York city.
1 1- And then he unwinds the story ot an cxpcrience that befell
him while he was captain, firsl-matc, chicf steward and crew of
;i oiic-man trolley car—a yarn that makes him a Distinguished Adventurer.
Now n one-man car is a gadget that was invented so there’d be something that would keep a man busier than that well known one* urmed paper-hanger with the hives.
You run them wiili Iiands and both feet like an oUl- fashloned parlor organ. Ed Grcon thought he know what U
meant to bo busy, after just a 1слу hours operating one of
those cars, but ho admits now he didn’t have any Idea of tho true meaning of the word until he tried to tako care of TWO OF THE CONTRAPTIONS AT THE SAME TIME.
Ed was working on the night shift of the New York & Harlem Rail
road company’s old Fourth and Madison avenue line. It was Christ
mas Eve, p£ tiie year 1924. Ие got to the car.barn on time that night, but the man ho was lo relievo brought the car in late, so Ed had to hurry to make up time.
Runaway Trolley Car Threatens Death to Pasatngers,
He left the barn going at a pretty fast clip, got as far as Madison and Ninety-seventh street and stopped to pick up a passenger. Tha
passenger got on and Ed shut the door with tho Coot lever while ho
made change with ono hand, rang up tho faro Viith tho othor and started
the car going witii—well—I guess it must have been his nose. Then, os
the car began moving, and Ed got a spare second, he looked up—and saw something that didn’t look altogether right lo him.
The car was on a fairty steep grade. Farther on up that
grade, at the Ninety-sixth street corner was another .one-ninn
trolley, aiul it was rolling,Ыюк toward lid’.*! car at a fast clip!
It was itild-wlntor and a nasty« night. Tho .rails wcro slippery,
and it didn’t take Ed long.to'liguro out what had happened to
that car ahead. It was out'of control. Duo to crash into his own oar in about thirty seconds! .
Ed says ho forgot everything els’b for‘a minute and began figuring
out which was tho best way lo jump and save his life, Then he came
to his right senses nnd thought,. “What'about the passengers?” . He
Tho Trolley Hit tho Taxicab With a Crash.
might save his own life, but a whole bunch of other people would
bo killed if he did. No—ho had to be a regular guy and slick to his
post. He reached up, threw off his ovorheud switch, and turned to the
crowd behind him, “Back lo the roar of the car,” he shouted, "Ilun fur your lives. There’s a runaway car heading straight tor usl"
Panic-Stricken Riders Stampede at Crash. .
In a second, pandemonium wns on the loose, Screumlng—shovlng, the passengers stampeded for the rear of the car, Al that moment tho crash come. The car ahead slruelc—v/ith such force thnt it wrecked the whole front compartment of the one Ed was opornling. A sheet ot llame shot up between the two vehicles. In the (leoting glimpse Ed got of the crash, he saw that the other car hod no motorman aboard. He had jumped for his life shortly after he had lost control.
The first car crashed—and stopped. The Impact had given It
a pause and given its sot brakes a chance to catch hold. But at
the same time Ed’s car started moving, Ed had thrown off Iho juice when he saw the other car coming, and now, his own ve
hicle without any power to control it, was running av;ay on Its own.
Ed says that, through some miracle, he managed lo keep his head.
Something had lo slop that car. He turned to the rear again-and began
iighting his way through the screaming, milling herd of panic-stricken passengers.
Berserk Street Car Butts Automobile Out of Its Path.
Tho passengers, frontlo now, were breaking windows and jumping out. Those who didn’t were fighting their way back down the aisle, Ed pushed through the mob lo the rear platform. It was the .front platform now, for the car was speeding backward down the hill. By tho time he got there, the trolley was traveling al breakneck speed. He grabbed for the emergency brake—jammed it on with all his might,
lie might as well have saved the effort. TJie car still ca
reened ahead along tlie slippery tracks. Behind hini,-riiu dared up again while tho crowd screamed and broke moro windows.
Ahead of him was a street crowded with traffic,
A taxicab shot out ahead of him. The trolley hit it with a crash and
lossed it over lo the gutter. Another car got in the way and was butted
away with a crumpled fonder and a broken wheel. Ed says he must havo hit half a dozen automobiles during that wild ride, but he was loo
excited lo keep count of them.
Ed’s Heroism Is Commended by the Big Boss.
But now the car was nearing ths bottom ot the hill. It was slowing down. Still blazing at the rear, it ground to a stop, and Ed began getting
his passengers out.Some of them walked out by themselves—and others had to
be carried. Ed doesn’t remember how many were hurt. He
says there must have been plenty, for inside of ten minués there
were at least a dozen ambulances on the scne. When all tho
injured were being taken care of, the flre put out, and the ex-
citemient all over, Ed was sitting on the step of the smouldering
trolley, a disconsolate figure, wondering whether this business was going to cost him his job.
But Ed didn’t have lo worry about that. Later on that night, tho big boss did come down to the car barn, but not to fire Ed. Instead he came to thank him personally and commend his courage for sticking to his car and thinking of his passengers at a time when the rest of them were thinking only of saving their own skins.©—W^!U Sorvlco,
Indians Cruel to Dogs The burning of a white dog was an annual religious festival of the Indian tribes of Ohio. After a pure white dog was found, his legs were tied together so that he could be hung onto a pole that strstched between two forked posts stuck in the ground. Underneath the dog was huilt a flre, and .while the redskins yelled and danced around the primitive nltar, the animal would be lo\vered to and then raised from the blaze. It was slowly tortured until
life was gone.
Value of Guinea Pigs
The guinea pig or cavy is commonly kept as a pet, possessing the advantages of being clean, harmless and without ofi’ensive odor. From a commercial point of view, his value is for laboratory and experimental purposes. The original ancestors of the dome.stic guinea pig are thought
to'have lived in the highlands oi
Peru, where they were domesticated by the Incas. They were allowed to run freely about tho homes of their owners and were probably bred for their iood-value.
Events In the Lives of LitHe Men
WüâT w ill I'f ее FOG. sou,
SIR?
\N|-!e M M AhiHooD
IMEVlTABi&T’
1 b Be. GALLED
THE FEATHERHEADS В/ OsborneФ W«it«rt> NfWkpiptr Uni««No Comeback
— BiJ-p-LiSTfetl- ' IVWAIT— I J ust—
О И - А Ш
71
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I D.OM'f Tr V To "ÜLK,'
BA CK Г о m e:—
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K n o w a k id' Th e r e's
MO TWO
A B O U T IT—ETC-
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— IF Voa
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(S H E W AS WFZOh4S----
1 W A S R1CÎHT--
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te» BE', A B L E -Tb
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H E R HAS/IMS- A •
СИАМ СЕ T o B t ir r
Ы PERFO RE 1
F lW lS W E D
FINNEY OF THE FORCE *^--And Not a Prop to Drink”
U
1 s u p e t>o
APPRECIATE’
Y o u
SNlTH M B / ALL
t H iS C A S H //
/-^'SA LL -pïOlfiHT-
f IF OMLV Y'vVASm'T
S O HOT— 0 1
•SH U RE AaA . г
I---(T H IR S T Y .' J
MB Too - SAY-
I'D TR'EAT Yo u
To A .SODA—IF I HAD AMY
- 7 M O N g y
Greeley Wislied to
Share With Others
■‘.Vl'ien Horace Greeley was In Greencastle, Pa., to deliver a lec* ture, F. M. Hitczel, a Warren, Ohio,, editor, went over to nsk him if he wouid also address a. gathering ip Warren while ha was in this region.
Tlie two men were walking
along the street in Greencastle< Hitezel urging him to come to
Warren and Greeley eating a peach. When the imtnortal editor finished tho peach he threw tha stone carefully into a field so that it might take root and develop into a tree. As he did he said;
“There, somebody may have the good of it.”
Reason Enough Man is the only animal that. blushes. , The other animals don’t need to.
LOOSENS TJGHT SCALP
Massage pure, snow-white MoroUne Int»
your «Clip to loosen itj prevent dryne« and dandniff. The 10c site contains 3^ times
aa much as die 5c size. Dioiancl Morol/nc.
M O R O L IN ESNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JEltt
Faith’s Work .Faith may create mountains iaa ivoll aa move thom.
A Three Days^ Cpugfa
Is Your Danger Signal
No matter how many mediolnofl you havo tried for your cough, chcat cold or bronchlp.1 Irritation, you con got. rellBi, now wltli. Orcomulslon, Scrioiu trouble inay be brcwlrig niid you caiinol utfoi'd to taice a onanco with anythlnK loss than Crpomul- Sion, which soos right to tho Beat of tho trouble to aid nature to Bootho and lioal tho inflamed mom- branoa 03 tho gorm-laden phlcgo» l3 loosonod and expollod.. ,Evdn if other romcdlea have iallcd, don’t bo discouraged, your, druggist is authorized to gutirontet» Orcomulslon nnd to_iipfvmd „your money If you aro hot catlsilod with resiiltoiirom the.vpry flrst bottle. Got qroomulslon right now. (Adv.)
SMALL SIZE 60c LARGE Size $1.20
i) A .— JrecognUtd Rem«dy for «ncj NfuritU iufier«rt. A pcrfeci Blood Purlfltr, Mikgf thin Blood Rich and Dulldf Stfcnglh ind Vigor, Alwiyt Ef/teHvt , , . Wliy tu/ftr?
■ •at;aluì»oo,op*^dbuq; STORES
But a VirtueMeekness is tho weakest of the virtues.
Up in the Morning '
Feeling Fine!
The rofrosliing rollof so innny folk» say tlicy gct by tiiklrig Bliick- Pnuight for coii.<itIi)atlon raalcesIhcm vnthuslosllo r.bout thia Inmoua puro^, ly vofictnblo Jnxative,DlncJc-DrnuRhl put8 tlio dlBoaUvc tract Sn bcttcr conuitlon to net rG^lllnrlyf ovcry day, wlthout your continiiolly hnvlna to tako mudlcino to movo thu bowcla.Kcxt timc, bo Duro to try
B L A ^ C K -
P R A Ü C H T
A GOOD LAXATIVE
BLACKMAN
STOCKanc/POÜLTRY MEDICINES Are Reliable
^ Blackman's Medicated lick-
A-Brik
0** Blackman’s Stock Powder
ИГ Blackman's Cow Tonic
£яг Blackman's Hog Powder
Dv Blackman's Poultry Tablets
w Blackman's Poultry Powdei
Highest Quality--LouleitPrice
Satisfaction Guaranteed or
your money back
BUY m O M У О Ш DEALER
BLACKMAN STOCK MEDICINE CO.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
'.VNU—7 42-38
AFTER Y O U EAT?
After you finish a meal can you he sura of rcRuIar, successful elimination? Get rid of waste muttrial llv.it causes gas, acidity, iieadaches.Tnfce Milnesia Wafer* for quick, pleasant eliminadon. Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuln of milk of ma«nc*iii. 20c, 35c U 60c «'drug atorc*.
Tj!l'
F/ivj
11
H s i i l
rVuf
'"i>
W Л . . ‘'ili J l L .Hili
£Ü 4t
f i
v i
k l
II.
#»< f
!t'i
1111
;* )i I i î J 1 ' ! i
I?-:
4 ,
Everyday Cooldng Miracles
BY VIRGE4IA FRANCIS
Director tiolpotnt Eteéirte Cookery JntUtutê
Said John as he adjusted his quick
ly looped tie, "Gee, Mary, you don’t
know how swell it is to havo a lei
surely breakfast with you every
morning. Somehow it just starts
the day out right. Remember how
you used to hustle around in the
Icitchen getting breakfast, fussing
■with thia and finishing up that whllo
your presence in the houre. Yort
can place tho meal in tho trusty
electric oven any time you dcsir«»
and by merely touching a few
"magic” switches this meal will be
gin to cook when, and for the de
sired length of time, you wish.
Control— that tho keynote of tuch
a feat.
There’s no wxiting for breakfast when the electric range and its timer<Iock iafeguard the meal.
I ate breakfast in initallmentH and
»omelime» by my loneBome?"
"Yes, isn’t it grand,” replied Mary,
taking the done-to-a-tum Canadian
bacon irom the oven of her new
electric range. She added with a
twinkle in her eye, “And, remem
ber, I had to tcaie you to buy this
range, too.”
But then, iteamlnK hot oatmeal,
prunea and apricoti and baked Ca
nadian bacon on a cold autumn
morning 're enough to elicit praise
and thanka from any hungry man
Such a breakfast ii honeit proof
of the aeniibiUty oi that "new fan-
gled range” which Mary juit couldn't
get along without. Kven without
knowing that the "chePa brain,” (or
automanc timer clock) cookcd thi«
breaHast while the family sl^t, it's
BtiU a "miracle” breakfast. Every-
tMng deliciously cooked, everything
piping hot and ready to serve right
on the dot.
Eroa!cfnal-by-!hr CIocIc
Tho fact of the mnttor is that this
, breakfast or any “absent" electric
copkcry meal is cooked according to
■your 'explicit directions but without
Kequirlng your attention or ever.
Time-control is the leisure-giving
feature made possible by the
“chef's brain.” It automatically aets
off and checks the flow of electric
heat unit». Temperattjre-control at-
«urea an even, inflexible'degree of
heat! moiiture-control keeps the
food moist and ir. peirfcct condition
during its stay In thé oven.
Now,. let’s re-enact the process of
preparing this dellcio^is breakfast
Oven Breakfait
Stewed prunes ' and apricotf !
Wash and pick over fruit. Place in
pan or baking casserole, and cov
er with water; cover. (While in
rults pit
eliminating soaking.)
i Oatmeal! Place 2 cups oatmeal in
saucepan or baking dish and add 2
cups water; cover.
Canadian bacon: Arrange bacon
in shallow baking pan.
Place cold food in electric oven,
the oatmeal and fruit on lower
rack, and the bacon on the upper
rack. Set Timor Clock for a cook-
ing period of \]/i hours. Set Tem
perature Control to 350“. Turn
switch to Bake.
UNIVERSALLY
POPULAR
The “Sunday School Lesson" pnlilishotl rncli week in
tills newspniier Ima licen iidoplcd liy llioiisunds of cliurch
iiislnu'tois tliro^ighonl llio UnilcMl Suites ns u regular
pari of tlieir ivcekly work.
It is a review und exposition of tlic inlernationiil lesson
for carli week, prepuri'd by Di'iiii IIiirold'L. Lundtjuisl
of llie Moody Ullile liisliliile ul ChicaKO, a recognized
leader in tliu nation’s church work. Dean Lundquist haa
been active in li'iieliing youlliful groups for jTnrs, tliereiiy
nnqniring nn insight into llie needs of these people for
underslandnlile explnniitions of Uible passages.
In view of hia aceamplislimenls ill churi*li work, It il
not surprising ihnl Dean Lundquist's wcposilion of Ihe
weekly Sunday School lesson is being used in almost
every coinniunity of the nation. As lenclier or student
you wiii'find'il extremely helpful.
^imp^ved n SUNDAY!
3 International I s c h o o l!
I-:-LESSON ¡-i
By REV. HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST Dean of Faculty. Moody Dible InitUuteofChiCflgo.O Western Newflpnper Union. -FiiiiiMiiiiuiuuiiiiiiiliiiuiiiiu
A regular
feature of
THIS
PAPER
Ca AU’UELL-WALKBR f u n e r a l h o m e
AMHULANCE SERVICE FUNERAL D|RECTORS
PHONE 48 AIOCKSVILLE, N. 0.
-4-
«Чвя
..LJ
Mr. Cotton Farmer
W e Are Now Prepared To Buy
Or Gin Your
We Will Pay Highest Market Price.
Come to see US before YOU SELL
W e Appreciate Your Business
Foster and Green
Near Sanford Motor Co.
PATHWAY'S TO THE OPEN
HIGHWAY
Kev. Norvin C. Duncan
' A minister's position demands
thnt he go bnck of all fmvticulnr
ovganized social and economic
«xpressions of principles, and
. anchor himself in those princi
ples. He must urfe'e upon his
people to follow them in their
sociul uction, but he can not, aa
a minister, align himself with
any particular party, or group.
In the capacity of citizen he may
exercise his privilege, and vote
with the party which seems to
him to best express the princi
ples to which he subscribes. It
jg R .difficult position to main-
■^teln, but hfi niiist maintii*n it, be
cause he must shepherd people
in all social and political groups.
I have devoted many years to
the study of social problems, and
have made serious inquiry into
practical schemes for tlie better
•distribution of wealth, and the
increase of life for all people.
But 1 must confess that no
scheme that I havo yet studied
eeems able to do what we wish
to have (ione. My conviclion
depends that it ia with people
that we must deal primarily.
Good people can operate almost
any system in fairness and jus
tice, but unsrupulous people pan
use the best of systems to fur
ther their own evil designs, It is
a mistake lo keep on trying VC
make the world over from with
out. It can not be done. Legis
lation which does not represent
the moral and spiritual character
of tiie people is worse than use
less, The Church must work on
the inner life, and give instruc
tion in moral and social princi
ples, and then trust the children
of the kingdom to work out a so
cial and economic order consist
ent with her high belief.
The position of the prophet is
difficult, because he must go to
the source of all high .principles
and there take his . stand, He
must be impartial in his message
to all men. It is in matters aC
the spirit with which he muat
deal, and be as unsparing in his
r ‘ ;'jjsm qf one giroup as the
[ Other. What he says to the la
borer lie must say to the capital
ist, They are not different in
spirit; it is difference in ability
and the circumstances of oppor-
tuiilies whicii throw different ’
measures of responsibility upon ’
tliem. Jesus would not identify.
Himself with any party, but He
warned all men to beware, of co-
veteousiiess. He commanded all
men to live by the law of lovo.
Men with Christ’s love in them
will use their talents and means
to serve the needs of humanity.
All o fthe quarreling and strife
will never get us anywhere in
the right directiori. If we can
just 'iet hold of this one thing—
that d'NE IS OUR FATHER,
EVEN GOD, AND THAT WE'
ARE ALL BRETHREN, we shall
walk in those social and economic
ptiths wherein we sKall LOVE
MERCY, DO JUSTLY, and
W ALK HUMBLY W ITH- OUR
GPOD. ■ ■ —
^------—r — ^
RECEIVE WORD,
.OP COUNTERFIET ,
BILL CIRCULATION
FAITH and CONFIDENCE
The mainspring of every buying decision is faith. When you part with
your money for something you buy you have confidence in the store you
buy from. The F A IT H and C O N F ID E N C E bur customers hare in us has
been won by giving New Quality Merchandise, Low Prices, Clean Store
and Courteous Clerks to wait on you.
- See Us Before You Buy Your Winter Needs -
U n d erw ear
Post offices in this section of
the state have received advices
from Washington telling of coun-
terfiet ?1, $5 and $10 bills in cir-
ciilation in many parts of the
nntion.
The department letter describ
ed the bogus ibill.s as follows:
One dollar silver ertificate—
1935 .series; check letter ‘T ’; V/.
I A. Julian, treasurer of the United
States; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
secretary of t)ie treasury, por
trait of Washington; serial No,
E142B1240N; seal and numbering
poorly executed.
Five dollar United States note
— 1926 B series; check letter “E ”
W, A. Julian, treasurer of the
United States; Henry Morgen
thau, Jr., secretary of the trea
sury; varying serial numbers; de-
cept for serial numbering, which
is heavily inipressed,and execut
ed in bright red; bark printed in
off-color green.
Ten dollar Federal reserve
note— on Federal Reserve Bank
of New York; 1934 series; check
letter “J f a c e and back plate
numbers ineligible; Julian, trea
surer; Morgenthau, secretary;
treasury; his bleached appear-}
ance wnich accentuates printing
on back and face; serial num
bering preceded by letier "B”,
whicii is not clearly impressed. i
Men’s good heavy Mayo Under
wear. All sizes.
89c to 97c
SC880L CLOTHING
Bring your children in
and let us dress them
from head to foot for
school.
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
We have a complete line
of Blue Horse School sup
¡iliHM. Also pencils nnd
fountain pens.
LADIES^ G L O V E S
That Glorify the
hands. Wool knit
many colors to sel-i
ect from - see these*
before you buy.1 9 c
C H ILD R E N 'S
C O A T S
See our line of Coats for the
kiddies. The best money can Tjny
for only
$ 1 .9 5 to $ 2 9 5
Ladies Oxford
These Oxfords are
quite smart in every
way and styled for
perfect comforti
$L69 - $2.95
LADÏES STRAPS
SI.98 to {2.
LUMBER JACKETS
The kind you
can depend on
to keep you
warm in lea
ther, swede
and corduroy,
$2.98 up
MEN’S
SHOES
Man—Wha;t comfart. You never
treated your steppers to a better
dress or work shoe than these.'
$1.95 to $2.95
Suiting « 2 2 - З З с Outing
first quality
36 in. wide yd 15c
L eath er Boots
Men, if it is leather
boots that you wanij wo
have a complete stock.
All sizes. I
Also Rubber Boots
MEN’S PANTS
We have a complete line of wool
Pants, Just the thing for win
ter wear. Come in and see our
stock before you buy. And they
nro priced so reasonable.
S? 9& AIID S3.95
O V E R A L L S
Heav.y weight, 220
blue iienim, ' Happy’
Jim, tripple stitched
seams.
$1.10
Blue Bell
Jaclcets at 98c
Swine growers of Duplin Coun
ty have purchased 77,000 pounds
of western feeder pigs this sea
son.
_ Cotton in Union County is late
but is well fruited «nd prospects
are good for a normal harvest
this fnll.
W . J. Johnson
Stores At Mocksville and Kernersville
TUB NEWSIEST NEWSPAPER IN DAVIE— THE BEST FOR THE SUBSCRIBER AND ADVERTISJSIT
Darie County’s 1 « I l 1 ^ 6
Best Advertising Read By The People
Medium V 1 Ì I 6 f L n t C i o i i S C
Who Are Able To
Buy
VOLUME 68
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
»lOCKSVILLE. N. C., THURSDAY. OCTOIÎER 22, 193ß No. 48CONGRESSMAN WALTER LAMBETH TO SPEAK HERE
Large Crowd Expected
To Attend Tonight
(■'ongroasman J, Walter Lani-
l)i;lli, of Thomasville, who re-
incsentB the Eighth Congression-
iii f):.';ti;ict of North Carolina,
v.-ill address the voters of Davie
Cmnity at the Court House on
■Jhir'uii'.y evening, Oct, 22, at 8
o’clrel:. Mr, Lambeth is a caii-
(li.;: I': for re-election on tlio Do
nnei atic ticket, and his many
II - • tiiroiighout ,Davie will
111' .irlad to have ths opportunity
tu iu'iir him speak again, lie is
SOUTH YADKIN
ASSOCIATION MEETS
The Corner
Cupboard Column
Edited by M, J. II.
I hey sa.v tliat life is a liighway
and it.4 miloiiton'oa avi' the years,
And now and then there’s à toll- gate
whore you buy your way with
iears,
Its a rough road and a steep
road
outstanding young leader, and n' .^retches broad and far,
lia,. made a record n. Congress ot .¡t to a golden
winch his constituents are proud.' T«wn
v.’here golden Houses are,”John C. Plott Dead (Joyce Kilmer.)
.Idlin Cash Plott, G3j, well-
liiiown EVivie County farmer, ' above quotation forms the
(lied at Longs San.Y.orium,' State- closing lines of Joyce Kilmer’s
.>!ville, on Oci. 19, whore he had “Roofs,” whose theme is
been a patient for the past week.home. His familiar
lii.s parents were John Plott nnd beautiful “Trees” is often
Elizabeth James Plott, of Davie. P>’inted, or heard over the radio.
The surviving family consists of I'e wrote other lovely
Ilis widow, Mrs. Lula Wood verses that are not so well
)>l(itt, three brothers, A. K. Plott, known, Joyce Kilmer was born
Koute 4, W. A. Plott, of Arkan- j» Brunswick, New Jersey,
fills, T. A. Plott, Route 3, four in 188G, and was highly educat-
si.slors, i\Irs. Sallie Hockaday, ed. He taught school and later
Mrs, Mary E, .Allen, Mrs. Cassie wns an editor. His tragic death
iMiwdun and Mrs, Nancy Riddle,: oeeurred on July 80lh, 1918, on
all Ilf .Advance, route 1, and tli"5 l^he battlefields of France, where
I'olkiwing ehildren, Laura, Mar-1 >>e was serving in the Rainbow
jiiiret, Virginia and Wilnicr Division, Another modern poet,
I’iolt, The funeral wa.s'conduct- who had a very dfferent envi-
kI at Bethlehem Methodist |''«nment, is Carl Sandburg, who
Church by the past_orj_Rov. II. G. recently at Davidson Col-
' 'l . Heth- leiie.'" '"S'an'dburg iT of Swedish
Mesdames Daniel and
Feezor Entertain, v n ^___________ I "he South Yadkin Associiltion,
Mrs. G. G. Daniel and Mrs. L. tl.e Baptist churches
I;' . 1 I- 1 IP ,1 L L • Davie and Iredell counties,E Feezor delightfully entertain- ¡„ ¡„teresting session at
ed at live tables of ibridge at South River Baptist Church on
Ihe home of Mrs. Daniel, on Fri- last Wednesday and Thursday,
day afternoon. Uo.ses and marl- 'vns largely attended. A-
gold.s formed the attractive de- principal speakers was
corations, nnd Hnlloween tallies, the I'lrst Baptist Church, Wins-weie used. Mrs. J, K, Moroney ton-Sniem. Dr. Herring is the
won a white pottery vase for son of a missionary to China,
ugh score, and Mrs, R B. San- »„d is weir versed on the sub-
tore received the aecond prize, a g-„et of missions. Among those
whlto, llower-pot. The dolicious attending from here were; Rev,
retreshments were baked ham, ¡ind Mrs, .1, H, Fulghum, Rev.
potato salad hot rolls, pickle, and Mrs. W. H. Dodd, Rev. J, F,
glazed apples, eoffoe and cup Jarrett, Rev. J. L, Kirk, Rev. and
cakes. Those sharing their hos- Mrs. E, W. Turner, Mrs. C. R.
pitallty were Mesdames Knox Horn, Mrs. J. T, Angell, T. M.
Johnstone, E. C. LeGrand, John Hondrix, and Mrs. W. R. Stone,
l.cO.'and, R. B. Sanford, Gaither' of Greensboro.
Sanford, Grady Ward, S. A. ; -------1 ._________
Harding, P. H. Mason, R. S. Me- BAZAAR TO BE HELD
Neill, W. N. Clement, R. R. AT BETHEL CHURCH
Smithwick, Clarence Grant, E. ' -----------
E Gibson, J. F. Hawkins, C. R. j The Annual Bazaar,'sponsored
Horn, A. T. Daniel J. K. Mero- by the Ladies Aid of Bethel
ney, Misses Sarah Gaither and Churcfli will be i^ld Saturday,
Willie Miller, and Mrs., C. P. Nov. 7th, at Bethel School house.
Meroney, Jr., came n for refresh Your patronage will be appre-
ments. dated.
M ethodist C onference
M eeting In Salisbury
Mrs. James H. Cain
Dead
Mrs. J, P. Green Passes Away
iMiium'an, and Rcf. R.
cu.\, on Tuesday afternoon at 3
u clock, and interment was there.
Baptist W. M. U.
The Woman’s Missionary Un
ion met at the Baptist Church
on Tuesday afi;ernoon. A busi
ness session was held from 2 to
with the president, Mrs. J. F.
descent, and was born in Illinois
in 1878, As a boy he worked at
all sorts of jobs, such as driving
a milk truck, working in a bar
ber shop, washing disihes in a
construction camp, and thresh
ing wheat. He was a soldier in
the Spnnish-American War, and
invested his first ,?100 in going
to college. He became interest
ed in newspaper work, and for-Hawkins, presicling, Mrs. P. H. ............ ____, .............
Mason presented the program on sook the sword for thé pen. His
Kingdom Giving, and Mrs. W. H ., varied experiences have furnish-
Bodd led tho dcvotionals. Mrs. | g(] ^,¡„1 ample materiaî for his
D, L, Pardue assisted Mrs. Ma- poems of real life,
son in discussing the program
and sang as a Solo, "The Ninety
and Nine.” Prayer was offered
l)y Mrs. J. H. Fulghum. Mem-
Ihm’s present were: Mesdames J.
Trucks and ears are rolling
towards the Winston-Salem to.
bacco markets theae days, loaded
with tho golden-brown “weed,"
P, Hawkins, J, H, Fulghum, P- 'and some of the quilts that cover
L, Mason, D, L, Pardue, C. K. product- certainly look pret-
Horn, W. H. Dodd, J. M. Horn, ty as thoy flash by, A recent
!'■, M, Carter, John LeGrand, S
A. Harding. J. T, Baity, Mollie
Jones, J. F. Jarrett, S. B. Hall,
article, in the Winston-Salem
Journal, tells of the beginning of
the tobacco industry that has
J. T, Angell. The Sunbeams met 11„|¡It the Twin .City, . We
oil Monday afternoon with their quote this paragraph: “Early in
icaders.
The. Rotary Club, of Franklin
donated a pure bred ^ Guernsey
Inill calf to Rogers Ammons, 4-H
cinb boy of Macon County, for
liaving tho champion animal of
Ilio local calf club'show.
1872 on a raw and rainy day
the first leaf tobacco warehouse
was opened in Winston. To the
unimaginative, it might have ap
peared to bo .just Major Brown’s
old barn, off Fourth street, be-
Mrs. Nancy Elizabeth Eaton
Green, esteemed and beloved
lady, and wife of John P, Green,
died .suddenly ut hur homo on
Saturday afternoon, Oct, 17,
aged 72, She had been in ill
health for some time, but her
dentil came as a groat shock to
her numbers of relatives and fri-
James Eaton and Elizabeth Fere
bee liatón, of Davie, She was
born and reared at Cana, and
united ^yith Eaton’s Ba.ptist
iChiirch, Mr, and Mrs. Groon
moved to Mocksviille about 31
years hgo, and have been active
in the Baptist Church here. She
was a Sunday school teacher fór
50 years, and was deeply inter
ested in W. M. U. work. Sever
al years ii|go Mr, and Mrs,
Green gave a .boys’ cottage at
Mills’ Home, Thomasville, and
their interest in helping young
people has been shown in other
ways also, A large concoui-se of
relatives and friends from a dis-1 ton, Charles Eaton, James Eaton
tnnce cnmo to pay respect to her land Wade Hutchens, nephews of
Kev. Vv. II. Dodd, a former pas
tor, nnd Dr. I, G, Greer, super-
Juteiuleiit of Mills' Hume. The
Scripture readings and songs
were selected by Mrs. Green
some timo ago. The choir sang
"How firm a Coundntion,” “Bios,
sed Assurance,” “The home over
-rlier&,“’--‘-'GlOT;r'ftTrTTrvr'‘"WTtir-sTi'nff'
as a (luartot by Mrs, D. L, Par-
due, Mrs, J. F. Hawkins, C. B,
Mooney and E. G Hendricks. The
interment took place at Rose
Cometevy, The surviving family
consists of her husband, one
sister, Mrs, J, F, Naylor, of
Cana, two brothers, J. F. Eaton
and D. R. Eaton, of Cana, and
a number of ncSphews and nieces
including Miss Elizabeth Nay
lor, who made her home with
Mr. and Mrs. Green. The many
floral tributes were in charge of
the members of the W. M. U.,
and the pallbearers were Floyd
Naylor, Carl Eaton, Hubert Ea-
Mrs, Elizabeth Frost Cain, be
loved and esteemed aged lady,
and \vidow of the late James H,
Cain, died suddenly at hor homo
ftn SnMftbury street on the af
ternoon of Oct, 13, aged 91, She
' The Western North Carolina
Conference, of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South, is meet,
ing this week in the First ivioth-
odist Church, in Salisbury,; tho
session to ¿ome to a close w ith,
the reading of tho appointments
on Monday tnorning. ’ Au unu
sual fact is that, the Confprencc-luiliuun OL wtL. XO, 11^0(1 ;M. one [a tnnnfitui* +'/-.• i-t»« 1
was the daughter of Isaac Now- 1 ¡‘„ siKinnssloii in
ton Frost and Mary Eaton Frost, v i ir„Vbionn nt f'"',„ „ i h»<i . n » , i n , „ h o, t a r u,i , , i , r r ' r
at Cana, whero sho joined Ea
ton’s Baptist Church in her-girl-
hood. For a number of years
she had resided in ■ ‘Mocksville,
and her interest in the Baptist
Ghurch here impressed all who
knew her. Her husband, who
ville-Hardison charge, nnd Rov.
M. Ct, Ervin, of. Davie Circuit,
aro attending Conference, and
delegates and visitors from here*
arc going each day. Both Mr.
Harbison an'd Mr. Ervin hnvo
numbers of friends who will bo
glad to see them and their fami-was a Confederate veteran, pass, fie rrrtu i.e d t i - pr e-1 ed away several years ago, Mrs. j congregations Pieae.ic
Cain’s gentle influence for good
was widely felt. The surviving
family consists of three daugh
ters, Miss Effie Cain and Mrs.
J. W. Rodwell, of Mocksville,
Mrs. G. M. Kirkman, oj Green
sboro, two sons, P. B. Cain, of
New York, and J. Boyce Cain,
of Cana, and a number of grand
children and several grent-grnnd
children. The funeral was con
ducted at the home on last Wed
nesday morning at 11 o’clock, by
her pastor. Rev, J. ,H, Fulghum,
•usi.sted by Rev, V, M, S'vaiin, of
Winston-Salem, Tho interment
took place at historic Eaton’s
Church cemetery at Cana, “Lot
Rowan County
Fair Oct, 26-31
The Rowan County Fair which
opens nt Salisbury next Monday
and continues the entire weo-k,
promises entertainment to old
and young. The Afericultural
exhibits are expected to bo the
finest over with' a premium list
of $3,000, The World of Mirth,
shows furnish fun on the mid
way with 20 shows and 20 rides,
liorse racing every day and auto
races on Saturday, Grandstand
1. 1 1 , , . „ acts twice daily with firoworkHthe lower lights be burning” | „j ,,t. All school children
as a quaytet at tho!..,;ii i-„ .„i».iHn,i f..,.., .TirVtVlrt l\.. TS I ~ r».. .. _1 .. .. rii'.. . ’’’ JiJ-i-J
memory,'among these being the
boys from the .Green .Cottage,
Thomasville, The last rites were
held at the Baptist Church on
Monday morning at 11 o’clock.
the deceased. The )honorary
pallbearers were L. G, Horn, Dr.
W. C. Martin. Dr, S. B. Hall, T.
I. Caudell, Dewey Martin and
T. M. Hendrix. We extend our
with the pastor, Rev. J. H. Ful- deep sympathy to the bereaved
ghum, in charge, assisted by family.
M eth o dist Zone M eeting
An important event of last District, had charge of the. rest
week wns the Dnvie County zone of the morning session. She
societies, which was hold at
tween Liberty nnd Main, with n Ghnpel on Wednesdny,
I fnncy skylight ndded; but during „t 10:30. Mrq. Min-
I the firat yenr of opcrntion 250,' ,p Bryson, of Advnnce, zone
ООО pounds of lenf tobncco trick ^^„¡¡.тпп,' presided, and Mrs. J,
led through it from farmer to p Johnson, of Farmington, wns
mnnufncturor. Late in the same secretary. The address of wel
come was made by Mrs. Harmon
MciMahan, and Мг.ч. M. G. Ervin
responded. The Davie zone is-
"The oppovrtmiiy of' a liptimi; .u'lilmii
cmtu’.s (0 50 Irtbt’/t'd *’
OCTOBER g 1 22-Saroli Bcrnhurcit, ¿real
V \ , / Prendi actress, liorn, IBIi
¿3—American iroops abandon Manliallan Island. 1776.
24—A. Taylor is first to RO ovi-i
Niagara in a barrel. 1001.
¿5—Enslish defeat the French at famei( battle ol Aem-
court. 1415
■¿•26—Massachuseits organizcs Minute M»n Militin. 1774
27~A. CUiford Rcu iirai
United Sutes baby снг*
rÍQb’e Patent. 1829
2ö—First child born ш ati airplane, near Miami, 1У29.
year, the first tobacco factory
was open #1.” Major 'Thomas
Jethro Brown was a native of
Caswell County, who lived in
Davie for several years before: vanee, Cooleemee, Center, Beth-
•going to Winston- “Prospect,” I lehem, Farmington, Mocksville,
the liome of his mother, Mrs. | j,¡ijert.v, Wesley Chapel, and two
■¿lizabeth Carter Brown, was si- „ew ones, Mocks and Bailey’s
tunted in south-east Davie, but Chapel. .Rev. H. C. Freeman,
has passed out of the family, pastor of Farmington Circuit,
Binjor Brown wna an officer o f, conducted the devotionais, the
the <l2nd North Carolina Regi- aiibect being Prayer., Mrs, H/ C,
ment, during the War Between Freeman, wlio organized the Wes
the Stnte.s, In Connor’s “Mnkers j ley Chnpel society, introduced
of North Carolina History” it is ¡the president, Mrs. Fletcher Mc-
ata'ted thnt the Indian name for Mahan. Mrs. T. H. Redmon, of
mooting of Methodist mis.s'ionnry, touched on various points of tho
missionary program, including
reports, subscriptions to the
V\'’orld Outloolc, and financial
obligations.' The Week of Pray
er observance in November wns
stressed, the objects being Hiroa'.
hima School, Japan, and seven
rural projects in the homeland.
At noon the Wesley Chapel la
dies ware hostesses at a delicious
composed of №e societies of Ad- and bountiful picnic dinner, ser-
- ■ " ved in the beautiful grove of
tlie church. The afternoon de
votionais were led by Rev. F. E,
tobacco was “uppowoc.'The Winston-Salem, mado a talk on
tradition is that Sir Walter Ra-! how to conduct a missionary
leigh introduced tobacco smoking ^ meeting, the first rule being re-
into England, bringing th e , vorence, Mrs, E. W, Crow
Howard, of Advance Circuit, the
theme being the Rural Church.
Mrs. Sterling again spoke on the
women’s wqrk, mentioning the
spiritual life group, Christian
social relations, nnd supplies.
Other vocal nu.mbers wore given,
and Mrs. J, F-..*nk Clement made
a brief talk, Cooleemee had the
largest number present from a
distance. The invitation to meet
at Center in tho spring was un
animously accepted. The irieet-
"wefrfl” from the Now World. It spnkn nn tho reasons for having ing wii.s a moat encnnrnging and
is said that when his servant zono meetings, and several vocal' helpful occasion, and much ap-
ifirst saw hi.i master smoking ^a duets wer givn by the different procintioii waa oxpr.issod to . the
pipe, he thought he was on fire, churches, Mrs. J, G. Sterling, Wesley Chapel society. A large
and tried to put it out. secretary of the Winston-Salem crowd was in attendance.
Tiome’ Cy'Hrs. D, L, Pard'iie, Miss
Frances Foster, C, B, Mooney
and Z, N. Anderaon, and “BeaiV
tiful isle of somewhere” was
sung at the oemetery. The pall
bearers were'grandsons of the
deceased: Orrell Etoliison; Ever
ett Etchison, John Henry Rod-
well, Jack Rodwell, Thonias .Me
roney and Dewey Casey, apd the
many floral offerings. S\’oj:e car
ried by the following grajidchii-
dren, Mesdames J, W. Dickerson,
Dewey Casey, T. F, Meroney,
Misses Lucile, Eleanor, Faye,
Gladys and .Mabel Cain, Emily
Rodwell, and John Boyce Cain,
Jr„ and great-grandchildren,
Louise Meroney and Jimmie Di
ckerson. Numbers of relatives
and frienda were present for the
funeral services. We extend our
until 4:30 p, ni. Tho fair this
year is under the same manage
ment as ths State Fair and is
expected to be tho best in thtt
history of Rowan Fairs. '
w . .....
Pigmy Elephants
With Huge Circns
With one hundred double
length railroad cars, bearinE
1600 people, African pigmy eJe--
phants, African pongurs, seven-,
herds of full-sized eiephanta,
1009 rrienagerie animals nnd 700
horses, the Ringling Bros and
Bnrnum & Bailey Conbined Cir
cus will arrive in Winston-Salem
Tuesday, Oct. 27th for afternoon
and night exhibitions. ■ >■
1 il. i. iT - I The circus is especially elateddeep sympathy to the sorrowing thi., season over, the L a z in g
success of the Big ^how’s sen-
Mrs. N. (S. Smith Dead sational new super-feature—-th©
first herd of African pigmy ele-'-
phnnts (tiny tuskers thnt years
Mrs, Mary E, Smith, wife of j “«o al taiiied their luii growth)'
N. Glenn Smith, pnaaed nwny at ever to leave the 'depths of
her home'nt Advfrtice on Oct. 15, darkest Africn, nnd the ’ firat ■
nged 40. She wns the dnughter, herd of African elephants, ever
of Spencer Hanes and Caroline to set' foot in America, ri The
Smith Hanes, of Wilkes County, weird midget pachyderms are
and had moved here from accompanied by a hercl^'pf^^inia-
Wilkes about six months ! ture African, , pongu\s,"‘'’:'ji^’prld’8
ago. She ia survived by her bus- smallest beasts of burcleij. ..Those
band, two daughters,' Miss Ma-j new importations have • .taken.:
delino Smith, of Baltimore, Md., America by storm.
N O T lc i W ST O C lilioi^isR S
and Miss Kathleen' Smith, at
home, a son, N. G. Smith,' Jr., a
brother, G'ilmer Hanes, a half-
brother, Robah Durham, both of
Win.ston-Salem, two si.sters, Mrs.
B. H. Bnrnett, of Wniston-Snlem,
and Mrs. George Mnthis, of
Durhnm. The funernl wri.s held
nt Advance Methodist Churcli
on Friday afternoon at 3:30,
with the pastor. Rev. F. E. Ho
ward, in charge,' and interment
was in the church cemetery.
Davie Grays To Meet
The Davie Grays Chapter, U.
D. C., will meet with Miss Mary
Heitman on Thursday aftornoon
nt 3 o'clock. This is the first
meeting of the new yenr, and
dues may be paid at this'tim e.
The election cf officers will'take
pince. Mrs. J, D. Hodges, v.’ho
represented the chapter at ,< the
Stnte Convention, will make' her
report. Members are . urged to
attend. , ■ .
The annual stockholders' meet
ing of the' Davie County Fair
Association , for election bf di
rectors will be h{ild'at the Coun
ty Court House Friday, October
23rd at 7 :30 p. m. Personal no
tices will not bo mniled and all
stockholders are hereby- request
ed to be present, '
P. S, Young, Sec-
IN THIS ISSUE
* News, page .........
Local Niiwa, page
Pictorial News, page
* Hugh Bradley Sports, pagr
*■ Arthur Brisbane, page '
* Editorials, page
•* Society Ncv/s, page
Sunday School Lesaon', p.
* Dragoii Drjyc Yoii, .page
* Dross: ’.pntterna, pft:;e ’
' I
n r '
№ W
II
¥ Ш Л
s u .fcffiiSlft'.rrl
Ы ) »ifiil
l u i
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i'zc)
Irvin S. Cobb
n n
'HhmJzd about
Salad Allxcrs dc Luxe.
L a n s i n g , m ic h . — About
oncc in so often you meet Uie
man— it’s ' alwaj's a man— who
knows how to make the p’erfcct
salad dressing, and on'the slight
est provocation does so. The
trouble with this party is \vhen
you get him off salad dressings
he’s practically a total loss.
Nevertheless, a decent salad
dressing—and n docent salad—are
boons to humanity.
The right commin
gling of astringent,
.b itterish ¿reen
things with a
smooth, bland dress
ing—there you have
something. But of
ten we are confront
ed by a monstrosity
featuring whipped
cream, nut kernels,
Eweet cheese, pre
served fruit, even
marshmallows o r pickled ginger.Such an atrocity is never a salad.
Put a crust on it and it might pass
ior pie, but would be very low-
grade pie.• • •
Concerning Mr. Enrl Browder.
H AVING boon discouraged by a
perhaps averzealous police
force from speaking in Indiana,
Earl Browder, one of the almost
countless candidates for President,
now threatens suits for false arrest.
■ As Al Smith snys, let’s look at
the facts. Mr. Browder stands for
communism—stands for all commu
nism stands for. Therefore he must
look on the Russian government as
the one ideal government, it being
the very flower and perfection of
applied comrtiunism.
Now, in Russia any man publicly
advocating doing away with the existing national system and substituting some other system therefor
would find himself in jail—or oven
in a worse flR—before he could say
Jackovitz RobertsonofTski.
So what I say is that Mr. Browder
shouldn’t crave to sue anybody. If
he believes in tho practice of what
he preaches, which, of course, he
does, he ought to go around kissing
everybody on both checks.
* ♦ •
Cruelty to-Animals.
L a t e l y a dog v/as tried before
a judge for biting a boy. And
another judge was appealed to, that
he save an elephant condemned to
die. So some one proves that,
through many centuries, animals
were accused of high crime.s—dogs,
rats, pigs, oxen, roosters, storks,
also ants, spiders, snakes, grass
hoppers, dolphins, locusts, gadflies,
eels, and, being convicted, were
burned, flayed, hanged, de.stroyed
by slow torture.
But think of the charges on which
the so-called brutes might condemn
mankind—offenses of which they
rarely or never have been guilty—
malice; slaughter of weaker things
for love of slaughter; deliberate
wastefulness, of natural resources;
wanton destruction of natural beau
ties; wars without rational cause;
unnecessary greed; bearing false
witness; neglect of our own young;
drunkenness; slothfulness; bigotry;
intolerance.* • •
Newspapers Vs. Spellbinders.
TN MY reportorial youth nearly
every newspaper, big or little,
was bitterly partisan., We distorted
facts and editorialized in news stor
ies when dealing with the accursed
opposition. Otherwise we'd have
been traitors to a sacred cause.
Those times the average paper,
big or little, .prints honest accounts
concerning both sides-their rela
tive chances as revealed by polls,
their waning or gaining hopes. The
political views of a columnist or a
special contributor may differ from
the publisher's policy—still he gives
them space. ^
But the spellbinders go right on
spouting fiction which everybody
knows is fiction. And the volun
teer debaters clamor with prejudice
and misinformation for their am
munition.
5y the way, will all those who
ever heard of anybody being con
verted by one ot these barber-shop
arguments kindly raise their right
hands?• « e
Currency Juggling.
B EING frightfully smart to begin
with, I know as much regarding
currency juggling as the next fe'ilow
—which is precisely nothing at all.
Up to, say, $18.75, most of us know
what money is—or used to be. But
when they talk in terms of billions
or trillions or jillions, they’ve got
us going down for the third timo
with a low gurgling cry.
And the more a financial techni
cian, with both his pants pockets
full of figures, tries lo explain these
governmental manipulations, the
more convinced I am tliat, like the
average specialist, he has concen
trated on being expertly ignorant
upon one involved subject ratlier
than remaining, os most of us do,
broadly and comprehensively ignor
ant upon practica'lly all subjects.
¡RVIN S. COBn.
Copyl lutol.— W.\U Bn \ leu.
Hitler Views Biggest German Army Maneuvers
Most Ambitions
Battle Practice
Since Days of ’14
With camoiifiaged machir
ners crouched at his feet, Rv., leader Adolf Hiller of Germany sur
veys the "battlefield” in Southern
Germany during tho Reich’s biggest
war maneuvers since tho dnys of
1914. The battle games were held
near Berlin. Chancellor Hitler flew
his own airplane to the maneuvers
and on several occasions watched
the progress of the contending
forces from the air. The general
stair of the Reich’s army thanked
tho realm leader for permitting the
holding’ of the maneuvers, declaring
that they were the most comprehen
sive in more than 20 years. At
about the same time, the Red army
of Russia wns holding its annual
autumn maneuvers.
First Organized Police
The watchmen of the early Dutch
settlers of New York city were
probably the first organized police.
Steel Workers Don’t Mind Clouds or White Caps
Clouds just over their heads and white caps below thoir feet are all part of the job to tho workers who aro
raising the steel reinforced slriicture for mighty Bonneville dam on the Columbia rivor. 'I’his power nnvifiatibn
and flood control project flnancca by the Public Works administration at a cost of $32,000,000 is being under
taken under the direction of the Army Corps of Engineers.
‘Swing” Time Invades Football Field
......
Coach Leonard Sachs of Loyola university, Chicago, moved a piano
onto tho playing field to see if he could put some "swing” into his back-
field. His contention is that football is a matter of speed and timing, and
timing is a matter of.rhythm and unison, so Coach Sachs pounds out
a little swing music as his players practice punting and broken field ^ velt to fUl the vacancy in the cabl-
running. The team is regarded as one of the strongest put in the field net caused by tho death of George
Ex-Gov. Woodring
Assumes Duties of
Secretary of War
Harry H. Woodring, new secre
tary of war, is actively engofied in
his new duties. Woodring, former
Demoeratio governor nf Kansas,
was appointed by President Rooso-
IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY I
CHOOL LrCSSOn
By niflV. IIAnOT.,!? ti. liUNDQtJIST.Dean of tho Moody Dlblo Inalltuto ofChlcneo.© WoBtorn NowBpupor Union.
Lesson for October 25
CIIBISTlANIXy AS l o v e '
L13SS0N TEXT—ActB 10:1-4! I Corinth.
GOLUEN TEXT—Anti nov/ nbldolh fulth, liopo, olmHty (love), tlicso three: but tho Ijrcntest ot these Is charily (lovo). I Cor.
'^PRIMAnV TOPIC—Why Pnul Wns Not
JUNion TOPlO-Courage hi the Night. INTEnMEDIATB AND SENIOR TOPIC —Wimt Christian Lovo Is nnd Does.YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Love, the Law of Life.
in recent years by Loyola and is expected to win a good share of its
games,
Dern. Gov. Woodring wns Gov. Alf
M. Landon’a predecessor.
King Edward Likes Scotch Kilts and Bagpipes
En'iiand’s monarch is very muoh at homo in kilts when he visits his estates in Scotland and is iond of
niunic. On a reccnt visit to Balmorril castle he was welcomed by kilted highland troops,. The l«og.is
I in the center, wilh his brother, the Duke of York, and Major D. Wi Hunter-Blair. ,
By way of Athens the apostle Paul
and his co-workers came to Cor
inth, one of the great commercial
and social centers of Greece. It
was a city known for its magnifi
cent architecture and its patronage
of the fine arts, but even more
widely known for its abandonment
to vice and wickedness. Here Paul,
the apostle of faith, demonstrated
that his faith was rooted in love,
and it was to the Christians who
were dwelling in this Infamous spot
of corruption that he addressed his
supremely pure and beautiful dis
course on love.The first portion of our lesson
finds Paul at Corinth, and provides
an' introduction to the study of the
love chapter from I Corinthians by
showing from his experience that
I. Lovo Is a Fact, Not a Theory
(Acts 18:1-4).
The man whom we now recognize
as perhaps the greatest preacher
snd teacher of Christian truth who
ever followed the Lord Jesus Christ
"came to Corinth.” That great and
busy city in all probability know
nothing of his arrival and cared
nothing for his message. No one Tiet the distinguished messenger of
God and received him into a home
of comfort and honor.
But God had not forgotten him.
t’or we read that Paul “ found a
certain Jsw ”—a convert to Christ,
and his noble wife, nnd “abode with
ihem.” Persecution had sent Aquila
to Corinth, and he was there for
Paul to find.
And the humility of loving service
expresses itself further in the fact
that tho one who was to bring
Corinth Ihe glorious message of the
gospel did so at his own cost. Ho
labored with his hands nt tho trade
which he, as every Jewish boy,
had boon taught by his father.
Christianity does not ask, "W hnt
tvill ye give mo?” but “Hov much
can I give?”
In his first letter to the church
which grew up at Corinth we find
tho cnexhaustibly rich chapter in
which Paul so fittingly de.scribes
'.rue Christian lovo. It is impossible
In nny short discussion of this pas
sage to mako a complete study of it,
but we note
II. Four Truths About Lnvo (I
Jor. 13:1-13).
1. Lovo is superior to the other
graces (vv. 1-3).
Life hns many excellent gifts and
men seek nfter them. How do they
compare with lovo? Glowing elo
quence, the far-seeing eye of the prophet, mountain-moving faith,
self-sacriflce-without love they all
lose their worth; in fact they are
.nothing. All tho attainments of men
apart from Christ are vain and
empty.
2. Love is necessary to the other
graces (vv. 4-7).
There is a sense in which love
's not so much a grace in itself
as the underlying and motivating
power, which shows in every fine
and noble expression of Christian
character. Study these verses to
see how patiently and unselfishly
love works.
3. Love is permanent; other
graces fail (vv. 8-12).
Some gifts will cease, for there
will no longer be any need for
'.heni. They are temporary in thciir
value or simply a means to an
end. But love—it began with God
in eternity and will go on with
him through eternity. Why then do
we labor and seek after these other
graces so diligently and neglect the
one grace which is above them all,
tor
4. Love is supreme (v. 13).
Even over those other graces
which with love will abide, namely,
faith and hope, love stands su
preme. It is the fundamental of
nil fundamentals. Without it all else
is empty and futile. And let us
remember, this is not pious theory;
it is fact and to be translated into
daily life.
Hardships
Wounds and hardships provoke
our courage, and when our fortunes
aro at the lowest, our wits and
minds are commonly at the best.
—Cliarron.
Common Sense
Common sense in one view is the
most uncommon sense. While it is
extremely rare in possession, the
recognition of it is universal. All
men teel it, though few men hnve
It.—H. N. Hudson.
An Odious Quality
Conceit is the most contemptible
and one ot the most odious qualities
in tho world. It is vanity driven
Tt'om all other .shifts, and iorcc-d to
appeal to itself for admiration.—
Hazlitt.
Foreign Words
and Phrases •
Bis d a t'qui cito dat. (L.) h,
gives twice who gives quickly,
Con amore. (It.) With lo'vo. heartily; zealously. '
Dernier ressort. (F.l Tiie lagi I
rosort.
Ein mann, ein .wort. (G.) An
honest m an’s word is his bond.
Festina lente. (L.) Mako ha.stj
slowly. '
Ici on parle français, (p \ French is spoken here.
Jubilate Deo. (L.) Rejoice in
God.
Le beau monde. (F.) • Th*
fashionable world-..
M a foi! (F.) On my faith] Bless mel
N’iniporte. (F.) , It does not
matter; no signiflcance.
Ad flnem. (L.) To the end.
DISCOVERED
W ay to R elieve Coughs
ICKLYQU
People Everywliera Are Adopiing This nemarliable-PhUllps" ll'ny
The way to gain almost inc.rcdibly quick relief, from stomach condition arisina from ovcracidity, is to iillia- lizo tlie stomach quicldy witli Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia.
You tako either two teaspoons o( tho liquid Phillips’ after monls: or two Phillips’ Milk of Magncsiu Tablets. Almost instantly "acid indicc.';- tion” goes, gas from hypcnicidity, "acid - headaches”—from ovcr-iii- dulgence in food or smoking —and nausea aro relieved. You feel mndo over; forget you have a stomach.Try this Phillips’ way if ynii hnve nny acid stomach upsets. Gel cil licr tho liquid “Phillips'' or the remarkable, now Pliillins* Milk of Miinncsi.1 Tnbiets. Only 2.^))' for a hig lio.'c ol tablets at drug stores.
Also IN TABLET FORMi /№ №
Kach tiny tablet is tho oqiiivalont of n tcaspoonful of Ronuino Phil- Una' MUkof Mognctila.
P h il l ip s »IWAGNESIA
_T H E M O C K S V IL L E E N T E R P R IS E . M ockaville. N . C.. T hursday. O ctober 22, lO.-JG
Inspiring G o o d W ill
Tlifsc who aspire to leadorslilp
iday must realize that concllia-
iijii often is wiser than coercion
,at it is more important to in
pire l!ood will than instill fear, workers nre not cogs in the
Lcliinery, but human beings of
te (Ic.'ih and blood and aspira-
Ijns us themselves. — B. C,
lorbc-s.
IT'S BY relieving both tliolrritntod IkauraolH» throat ami branchial /и*«. One not o( Insts. diente In FOLEY'B IIONEY A 1ЛП quioki» rotlovoi Uoklinp, 1шо1<1пк> роикЫпк . ; , coau nnd oootlics irritntcd tliront linlnsu to киц yoa (rom coughing. Another not aclually cnloni thi blood, rcaohoa tio nlTcoUxl bronohinl lulm loosen» phlegm, lolpe brrak up oourIi «Л 3/>tíiíJ «мигу. С look л oíugh duo V) л м\3 bn(oro it gota wor«e, before othera caldi Ц, Cbcok Jt with FOLEY’B HONEY & ТЛП. It give» quick relief and $tntdiil-up uam/i
Dignity In Argument
Be calm in arguing; for fierce, j
ness makes error a fault, and [
truth discourtesy.
To Alkalize
Acid Indigestion
Away Fast
To rcftnln lost weight Is'n elmplo
iimltcr when certain bodily func- Itlons Ilf“ restored to normal. Of fore- Itiosl Iriiportuiicc Is the stimulation of Idiccsllvi! julccs lu the etomnelilomake Ibttlcr Ч.ЧО of the food you cat.. .nml
litslornllon of lovicrcd icd-blood-cella lio turn llie digested food Into firm
Uesli. S.S.S. Tonic docs Just this.
I Forget about underweight worries lit you (ire deficient in stoinnch dlges- lllvc julccs nnd red-lilood-ccll3...Just Ilike S.S.S. Tonic Immctllntely before lia'cli meal. Shortly you will be de- Ipglitcil with the wny you will feel.,. 1,our friends win coinpllmcnt you on
: wny you will look.
S.S.S.'l'onle Is espcelnllydcslgncd to Ibnlld sturdy licnltn...lts icrnorkoblo ¡taluc l3 time tried and sclcntlllcaily
¡proven... lliat’s why It makes you feel |likc yourself again. Available at any
■drug store. О S.8.S. Ce.
Wliat Docs It Leavo You?
Only way to estimate tho valuo
[a youd time ia uflur it's over.
ill Coughing?
Ko matter how many mediclnea fou Imvo tried for your cough, cheat told or bronchial Irritation, you cnn !ct relief now v/lth Oreomulslon. Berloiu"! trouble may bo brewins and- you cannot allord to tako a chanco tlth anything less than Oroomul- lon, which goes right to tho seat ¡1 tho trouble to aid nature to iootlio and heal tho Inflamed mem- jrnnes'as the germ-laden phlegm 3 loosened and expelled.Even If other remedies havo ailed, don’t bo dl.scouraged, your IniBBlst Is authorized to guarantee Jtcoinulsion nnd to refund your money It you aro not satisfied with results from tlio very first bottle. QH Crcomulslon right now. (Adv.)
I’ralse Inspires
You can discourago somo real
ilcnt by withholding praise.
rccognlxid Remtdy fof Rhcumdlle •nd Nfurltll »Keren. A perfect BlooJ Puilllir. Mil<ti lliln Blood Ricb ind Healthy. Bulldi Strtnglh and Vigor. .. Alw.v.) Efisiüví . . . Why iii'icr’AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES
Rather Late
You don’t see the cloud’s silvetl
lining till after it has passed. |
W h e n Y o u N e e d
a L a x a tiv e
Thousands of men and wonioa
know how wlso It Is to tako BliicK- Draught nt tho llrst sign of consU- patlon. Thoy llko tha refre.slilnB №
lle£ It brings. They know Its liineiy use may savo them from feeling badly and possibly losing fin'o “• work from sickness brought on M
constipation. ,, _Ii you havo to tiiko a la.’cnllve o«',
caslonally, you can rely on
Саршйпе
N EU RA LG IC P A IN
11 q ^ u ic k e ^ ib e c a u U
M i U i^ u id ...
ALREADY DISSOLVED
Hard to Bear
cruellest kind of criticism is
I Don’t put up with useless
PAIN
Get rid of it
hVlinn functional pains of racn- ‘Hialhin aro severo, tako OARDUI. JJlt doesn't bunellt you, consult a
I’fslolim. Don't neglect such pains.
•V dopress tho tono of tho nerves,■ se slTOplessness, loss of appetite,
'Mi’ out your reslstaneo.Idei n iiotllo ot Cnrdul nnd sob whcUior Twill iicip you, ns thousands o£ womon It helped thtm,IMsitlra casing cortnin pains, Cardul aids '•uiliiinB up tho whole syatum by holp- 'f,"'™nen to Bet moro strength from tho tiioy cat.
BLACK-DRÂUŒI p ifb ü i-seîÎo F
|ЩИеу PoisonsA GOOD LAXAT!Vr:
MORNIKti DISTRESS
is due to acid, upstt oiomac»-
Milncsia wafers (the inal) qiilcklv rcliev:
stomach nnd give
elimination. Eachequals 4 tcaspoonfuls of
of maunesia. 20c, 35c ti 6»*
.E'S REUEF
. S o re ,Irrita ie d Skin
Wherever it ia—however broken IM
^surfaco-freoly apply soolliin!14
n o i
h o you suffer burning, scanty or
y too frequent urination/ backache,
fsaaaclie, dizziness, loss of energy,
•'3 pains, swellings and puffiness
I'lidcr the eyes? Are you tired, nerv-
ous—(cel all unstrung and don't
wow what is wrong?
ijlisn give soma thought ttJ your
“idnoys. Be sure they function proper-
^ lor functional kidney disorder pcr-
mlls excess waste to stay in the blood,
"Id to poison and upset the whole ’Ifilcrn.
, Use Doan'i Pllli. Doan’i are for tho
Wancys only. They are recommended
World over. You can get the gen-
"ine, time-tested Doan'* al any dnig«'lie.
U. s . Safe From
Old World Ills
Program Laid Down
by Forefathers Is
Best for Country;
Party Loyalty
By EARL GODWIN
W ASHINGTON - Wilh the
world on edge, nnd revolu
tion threatening most of the
Old, World, the wisest
course the United States can follow
is to make itself secm-e against the
evil influences of the two types of
trouble which arc now cursing Eu
rope and parts of Asia. Our program
as laid down by the founding fathers
is still the best program; Democracy
is safer thnn either Fascism or Com
munism, and the way Franklin
Roosevelt is loosening the tight
bands of the social injustices of the
present era is the best way to save
us from the sort of revolt which laid
Russia low, which has Spain by tlie
throat, and which threatens Franco.
These foreign explosions are as
easily explainable as the explosion
of a steam engine; too much pres
sure and a weak boiler. In social
matters too much pressure from the
section of the public not getting what
they should get under any form of
government causes revolt—an ex
plosion. Roosevelt’s greatest contribution to enduring Democracy is tho
skill he used in reducing that pres
sure. He gives the average man a
Now Deal in place of the pressure he
was getting and would again feel
under tho old order.
That is the complete answer to tho
discontented Democrats. The ballled
old line Democratic editors see in
Franklin Roosevelt a man who has
deserted the Democratic party.
Roosevelt is no deserter;’ ho is a
leader. He leads the Democratic
party and the nation into new fields
where true Democracy will flourish
instead of dying. And incidentally
Roosevelt will save Democracy and
strengthen It against the day when
this couvitry, too, may be overrun
with tho poisonous European theories ot liberty, which are in thoiin-
solvos the worst and most brutal
form of tyranny.« « «
SMEARING RESENTED.
I think in his heart Landon wants
lo accomplish that ^ame ro.sult.
That’s why he went "overboard in
his zeal for the New Deal when he
was electcd governor of Kansas and
Roosovolt was elected President.
Tho original publicity policy of tho
Republican National committco was
a general smearing attack on ibo
Roosevelt policies; thon an attack
on Roosevelt himsolf. This was moro
succcssful in the! beginning than it
hns boon toward the end. The Amer
ican public i.s likely to run along with
any attack until it becomes time lo
defend a boro; nnd the recent psiy-
chology of the average man ‘has
been to resent these Republican al-
lacks as being too noisy and without
basis.
Ono Republican press agent stunt
was to exhibit in a Now York shop
window, a young woman gowned in
a luxurious and expensive evening
wrap, und to show by a series of
placards how much of the cost of
the wrap went for various taxes.
Stupid I The average American
woman couldn’t afford any such
wrap as the Republicans wero ex
hibiting,V • •
BUDGET FIGURES.
Roosevelt’s chief trouble has been
the flood of propaganda on the sub
ject of taxes; I think he disposed of
the budget matter nicely by showing
that the figures used against him
are overloaded, that tho bonus is
out of the way and that even while the federal budget is still unbal
anced, the average man's personal
budget is O. K. in otl*er words, the
governmenl used its huge resources
for the benefll of tho common man’s budget—which is more important lo
tho individual taxpayer than the
federal government’s budget.
Tax figures and budget figures
roach slupifying heights, so let’s
coine down to the nvoragci man's
child—ono born in 193.'). Will this lad
be be crushed with today's debt?
Thirty-five payments ot $4,27 oach
will pay oil' this boy's share of the
debt incurred by Roosevelt to save
the counlry from collapse. Even
using the highest Republican figures
of $8,03i3,000 as the daily rate of new
debt, the 1035 baby will be rimning
into debt at the rale of only six cents
a day to alleviate a condition far
worse thnn lhat of the World war
when our debt was more—and the
money was spont for destructive
■alher than constructive purposes.
p a r t ì! LOYAI.TY.
Parly loyalty is strong in the
United Sates. One of the proudest
boasts for some men is that they
have voted as their father and
grandfather voted. This is particu
larly a proud boast when adherence
to a party is based on adherence lo
some underlying principle and not
merely to shallow prejudice. Party
loyalty means so much in the
United Stales that there never
has been a leader of presi
dential size who turned his
coat and went over lo the opposition
until Al Smith took liis walk into the Republican camp. There have
been small lim f politicians and
llme’ight seekers: lawyers with fees from "the interests" and what not—
but no man honored by his party
with tho presidential nomination
ever so dishonored himself with
traitorous defection to the other side
until Al Smith became tho Benedict
Arnold of 1930 politics.
There hnve been many great lead
ers who have had strong reasons for
going back on their party, particu
larly in these latter days when par
ties have swung violently to one
side or another. Who does not recall either from reading or personal
recollection the bitter sorrows of
tho conservative Democrats when their parly nominated the "Boy
Orator of the Platte,’’ and WHliam
Jennings Bryan caused a furor' In
the ranks of the Democrats. Grover
Cleveland, tremendous figure of courage and conservatism, could not
stand Bryan personally or politically.
It was like a violent convulsion of
nature for the Democrats to support
Bryan against McKinley, yet, while
many old line Democrats withdrew
their support, many great old line
Democratic editors silenced their
columns. Grover Cleveland himsolf
went no further than to oppose Bry
an within the lines of the party.
He countenanced the formation ot
another' wing of his party—the Na
tional Democrats who nominated
Palmer and Buckner. Just to show
what party loyalty is, in that cam
paign McKinley polled 7,000,000
voles, Bryan 6,400,000 voles, the Pro
hibition parly 141,000 while Palmer-
Buckncr could gel only 131,000.
These latter Democrats, by the wny,
were the so called “JelTersonian
Democrats” ol the "Gay Nineties.”
Bryan had not gathered all the
Democrats undor one tent even as
late as the first campaign to nomi
nate Wilson. Don’t you remember
that someone dug up a letter in
which Woodrow Wilson expressed
the wish that something could bo
done ih a "dignlfled way” that
would "knock Mr. Bryan into a
cocked hat.” But Bryán knocked
Tammany into a cocked hat and
nominated Wilson and blazed tha
trail for Franklin Roosevelt. About
that time Theodore Roosevelt lost
his appetile for William Howard
Taft, but Theodore's revolt did not
go so far as to endorse Wilson.
Teddy Roosevelt endorsed himself
as the Bull Moose, leader of tho
Republicans, and thnt is about as
far as our ideas in tho U. S. A. let
us go in the field of dissent.
Had Al Smith organized a dis
senting Democratic party, calling it
the JelTersonian Democrats, for in
stance, ho would have been within
the rules of the game. There would
havo been considerable grouching
about it—but people would havo
said lie was “abing the' proper thing
according to his lights. Ho would
still bo a Democrat. He has the
right too, lo attack Roosevelt, as
Carter Glass and Jim Reed and oth
ers havo done and will continue to
do. That’s to bo expected, but those
malcontents stay within tho party.
They take tho position <if correcting
what they feel aro errors—but cor
recting them inside tho family.
Al Smith, without giving one word
ot argument lo support his position,
goes over lock, stock and barrel to
Landon. I don’t imagine his desor-
lion of Roosevelt will carry many
voles; folks had already mode up
their minds. In New York, where
Al was the idol of .so many thousand
Irish Democrats, those who do not
know tho situation might feel ho
could lead these thousands to Lan
don. But one national trail of the
Irish is they hale a turn coat more
than anything else. - For centuries
the Irish in England were the un
derdog; they suilered greatly under
English misrule; they had many
leaders in their revolt against Eng
land, and while they could swallow
pour leadership, mistakes, setbacks
and all other kinds of hard luck—
they' could never countenance a
turncoat.Í3 WcHtcrn Ncwsii:ipcr Union,
Romantic Stile in Ireland
Lat, tho little seaport town of
Killyleagh, in Ireland, is th e
world’s most famous stile, which
has held romance for many doc-
ades. The famous stile, which in
spired Lady Dufferin to pen the
famous words: "The Emigrant’s
Farewell,” is dominated by Killy
leagh Castle. The castle was occu
pied in turn by great Ulster names,
such 9S McCartan, Mandeville and
White, and it came into possession
of the Hamilton family at the end of the Sixteenth century. Originally
built by De Courcy, it is said to
be the oldest continually occupied
castle in Ireland. In the middle
of the cemetery stand the ruins
of an ancient church, where ut its
side stands the famous stilo, as
sociated wilh name.9 which have
gone the rounds of the entire Eng
lish speaking .world. The city is
also the birthplace of Sir Hans
Sloane, the founder of the British
Museum,
Tales and
Traditions
from American
Political History
FRANK e. HAGEN 'ANDELMO SCOTT WATSON
FARM ERS’ CHAMPION
F yALL the loaders of third par-
ty movements, probably no one hns caused the two major par
ties more concern than did Gen.
James B. Weaver of Iowa. For he
was the nominee of two new parties which, at two different periods
in our history, capitalized on the
unrest of the fnrm vole and in one
case he definitely contributed to the overthrow of the party in power.
Weaver was first the standard-
bearer foi the Greenbackers, a parly which came into existence in
18G8 because of the dissatisfaction
of the farmers with the financial
policies’ of Grant's administration.
They were innationists wlio demanded that a large amount of
paper money be issued without re
gard to specie payment. They re
ceived their name from the fact lhat legal-tender notes were print
ed in green and called greenbacks.
In the campaign of 107G they nom
inated Peter Cooper, the New York
philanlliropist, but he polled only 110,000 popular voles and did not
receive a single electoral vote. ■
In the congressional elections of
1878 the Greenbackers cast a mil
lion votes nnd the Republicans in power looked apprehensively to the
presidential campaign of 1880,
especially wH'on the Greenbackers
nominated a man from the agricultural West. But their fears
were groundless, for the Green
backers could muster only a little
more thnn 300,000 votes and, al
though Garfield won over Hancock by less than 10,000 popular votes,
he got 214 electoral voles to his
opponent’s 155.
, Twelve years later the Republi
cans had muoh more to worry over when Weaver bobbed up again, this
time as the nominee of the Popu
list or People’s party which de
clared for frco sliver, public ownership of monopolies, postal sav
ings banks and an income tax. In
the slate and congressional elec
tions of 1890 they carried the leg
islatures of Kansas and Nebraska,
elected nine members of congress and forced 34 others. Democrats
and Republicans, to pledge them-
-solves-to-carry out Populist-idoas.-
In the presidential campaign of 1892 Weaver polled more than
1,000,000 votes in the West and
South and corralled 22 electoral
votes. Tlie Populists also carried
several state legislatures and sent
live senators to Washington.
Indians Good Xraderc
The Indians of Ohio liked to bar
gain for the articles they took in
exchange for skins, but in their un-
profes.sional manner they preferred
single instead of wholesale transac
tions. Customarily when they went
in groups to the cross-lanes stores
with skins, they would sit down and
light their pipes. This was a hint foi'
the proprietor to give each of them a
piece ot tobacco. One at a time they
would get up and point lo the article they wanted,: asking, "How many
buck skins for that?”- or fox skins,
depending on what they had to offer.
When tho exchange was agreed upoii the redskins would tako tha ar-.
tide and hand over the skin, com
pleting each transaction before
starting on another.—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
“SMITH FOR PRESIDENT”
C IN C E the United States has
^ more people bearing tho name
of Smith than any other iamily
name, it is only natural perhaps that there should have been more
presidential candidates by that
name than any other.
Tho first was Joseph E. Smith,
founder ot the Church of Latter
Day Saints and prophet of the Mor
mon religion, who Jn 1844 con
demned the policies of both the Whig and the Democratic parties
and announced nis candidacy for
the presidency. However, his mar
tyrdom ot the hands of an Illinois
mob in June of that year cut short his political career.
Four years later another Smith
was in the field as a candidate—
Gerrit Smith, the New York philan
thropist, who was one of the found
ers of the Liberty party in 1840 and its candidate for President in
1848, In that year he was also in
dorsed for the presidency by the
Industrial Congress at its conven
tion in Philadelphia. Again in 1852 Smith was t)ie candidate of the
Liberty party and again he was
indorsed by another group, this
time by the Land Reformers. In
neither case did Smith or his par
ty figure very prominently in the election.
In 1876 there was another one of
the name in the presidential race.
He was Green Clay Smith, a na
tive of Kentucky, a veteran of the
Mexican and Civil wars, rising to the rank of brigadier-general in the
Union army before resigning to
take his seat in congress to which
he had been elected while in tho field. Re-elected to congress, he
resigned to become the second ter
ritorial governor of Montana. Aft
er three years of service in the
West he resigned to enter the min
istry of the Baptist church in
Washington. Soon afterwards he was chosen as the first presidential
nominee of the modern Prohibi
tion party. '
Just ns this “dry” Smith failed
to win in 1876, so did a "wet” Smith fail to win half a century lat
er. For Alfred E. Smith, the Dem
ocratic candidate in 1928, suffered
tho fate of all his predecessors— defeat.O WoHtorn NownpQPor Union.
Famous Belgian Cathedral
Malines has much to interest visi
tors but the Cathedral of St. Rom-
bold is the outstanding attraction of
the city. It was commenced in the early Twelfth century and took 200
years to complete, and is one of the
finest Gothics in Belgium. It has a
solitary western tower, 324 feet In
height and out of proportlcn with
the rest of the . buildjng,,. , .Its. clock
face is enormous—moro than forty
feet across and nearly twice as large
as Big Ben on the houses ot parliament in London.
Puttering Around the House™-
Time-Wasting Work of Putting
Away Things Others Have Used
\ ^ H E N a family is orderly,
' y. no ono has to do much put
tering about. When the members
are not particular where they put
their things, it becomes the un
desirable duty of' some person to
spend much time in just this
very thing, puttering., Hours nre
wasted daily in such trivialities
as gathering up n e w s p a pers
spread about, picking up and put
ting away gloves, hats, scissors,
thimbles, pencils, etc. Whatever
it may be that has been in use,
nnd not pul away by the user,
pr has been put in the v/rong
place, must be placed where It
belongs or the house would re-
fiect poor housekeeping.
Nondescript Tasks.
The time given to these non
descript jobs should be given by
those who leave the work to
others. Putting things away is
part of the job connected with
using tho things, just aa much
as getting the things out, is part
of it. The work is regular and
legitimate and only becomes an
annoyance when left for tho v/rong person to do.
liCft-Over Jobs.
No person wants her time frit
tered away doing tho left-over
Jobs of others. Nobody enjoys
It 's t h e T a l k o f
t h e Q u i l t i n g B e e
rattern 5591
It's most certainly tlio talk of
the quilting bee—this quaint Pine
apple pattern I And why wouldn’t
it be? With nenrly_ aU-tlie-.potch
pieces the same width, you can
cut your fabric into strips and
snip off pieces as needed. Easily
made, you start from tho center nnd sew round and round till tho
block is done.
In pattern 6B91 you will find
the Block Chart, an illustration
for cutting, sewing and finishing,
together w ith yardage chart,
diagram of quilt to help arrange
the blocks for single and doubln
bed size, and a diagram of block
which serves os a guide for plac
ing tho patchos and suggests con
trasting materials.
To obtain this pattern, send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.
Write plainly pattern number,
your name and address.
having a person puttering around,
either. It is distracting to at
tention, and disturbing to tha
nerves. From both the angle of
tho person who putters about and those who have to endure the
annoyance of such activity, there
should bo somo remedy found.
Remedies Suggested.
Mothers can teacfti their chil.
dren to put their playthings away
v/hen through with them. This
is the first step to take. Then
sho can instruct tho little, folk
to put their outside things away
when they come in from outdoors. Children can get into tha
habit of orderliness by being
made to realize that what they
don’t do, has to be done by
mother , v/ho is very busy and.,
often too tired to do tho extra
tasks. Affection w ill gain tho day.
. Breaking tho Habit.
Adults should consider how to break, themselves of tho repre
hensible habit Of leaving work
they should do, to be completed
by others. If thoy really deter
mine to stop this bothersoma
fault, they will decrease tha
necessity of puttering about by
tho person who heartily dislikes
the work, but who, for tho sake
of order prefers to do it rather
than have disorder around.
© Dell Syndicate.-WNU Service.
Imprinted
"D id you learn right from wrong
at your mother’s linee?”“No, across my father's."
Hero Goes I
Motlier—Now, Johnny, you’ll burst if you eat any more.
Small Boy — All right, mother,
pass the cake and then stand bnck.
And a GuaranteeDistracted Mother — Oh, dear,
what shall I do with baby?
Young Son—Didn’t wo get
book of Instructions with it, mother?
On the Jum p
“Do motor cars make us lazy?”
is the question asked.
"No, not if we are pedestrians.”
Way Made Fl^iii
“Where is the* manager's oi* flee?”
"Follow tho passage until you
come to the sign reading 'No ad-
mittancs.’ Go upstairs till you
come to the sign ‘Keep out.’ Fol
low the corridor till you sco the
sign ‘Siienco,’ then yell for him.”
A N D 1 0 »r J A R S
THE 10« SIZE CONTAINS 3'/j
TIMES AS MUCH AS THE 5« SIZE
MOROLINE■ T I SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY
Q U A K E R O A TS
Your Advertising Dollar
buys something more than space and circulation in
the columns of this newspaper. It buys space and
circjilation plus the favorable consideration of our
readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons.
L e i ua iel.1 y o u m o r e a b o u t ii.
lOOK.PtMPlE ШТППЕМГ
TRY CUYICUR^
IT’S FINE FOR ALL
IRRITATIONS OF
^TERNAl. SOURCE.
♦ HATE
GOING OUT.
MY SKIN
tOOKS
AWFUL
YOU RE DANCING
EVERY DANCE.
YES, JAN E,
THANKS TO
CUTICURA
SOAP AND
.OINTMENT
FREE eantplo. write 'Outlcurft" Dept. 86, Maiden, Masu, ■■—^
:Ы'
I
v 7 ' .
I
■wíTímwíit • n ' '
/■ I*'
Ь‘Ж
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¡'■rt''
PAGE TOUR
The fvlocksville Enterprise
PublishutJ Every Thursday at Mocksville
. North Carolina
^ C. Huneycutt ............ Editor and Publisher
Subscription Rate»:
$1.50 a Year; 6 Months 75 cents
Strictly in Advance
Gntercd at the post offioe at Mocksvillei N. C.,;
BS second-class matter under the act of March
B 1879.
iT ^li * ’
* NOTICE TO GENERAL PUBLIC *
«. --------- •
o
m
This newspaper charges regular _ ad
vertising rates for cards of thanks,
resolution noticcs, Obituaries, etc., and
will not accept any thing less than 35
cents ciish with copy unless you have
reiiular monthly accounts with us.
We do not mean to be hard on any
one, but small items of this nature force
us to demand the cash with copy. All
.such '•eceivod by us in^ the future with
out '.ho cash or stan.ps will not be pub
lished
^Mocksville, N. C., Thur.sdiiy, Octuber 22. 1.0ПС
.... « « ■* * * *
Brothro'n; it' ii man bs ovoi'Ukon iu *a'fault;' ye which are,'spiritual, rostore «
such ah one in the s|)lnt of meokness; ''
considering thyself, jlest thou also be *
tempted.^fralatians,‘6 ;l., , *».V, V:;,'. # tt * » # * * *
•THE NEW SPAPEn AND THE COMMUNITY
iModern education of the, masses-means that
more and more the people are learning the
■value'of the local newsoaper to their com
munity. The result is that in most commun
ities the local new.spapers are fairly prosper
ous, and this enables them to be of greater
service to territory in which they circulate.
SpeakiuK along this line, here’s an editorial
taken from the Oconuniowoc (Wis.) Enter
prise which is worthy the most carsful read
ing on the part of all good citizens:
“A newspaper always is advertising its
town. No business so serves tho community
as a whole. By its very nature, it must tel!
constantly of its city to tho community aniV • the-better-that-paper, the greater- influence-
it is for good to its town.
The advertisers use it because it reaches
the people through a medium that the sub
scriber thinks enbtigh of to pay for. They
use it because they have a. business message
that tho public wants to road, and they get
results. 'Vet there are three results to news
paper advertising. First,, direct results. Se
cond, indirect rcaults from name publicity
causing buyers to think of your store when
they do want something in your line,« Third,
tho advertising ruvenue-mai<es possible a'
butter paper, which iu turn makes a better
city.
Newspaper advertising is the foundation
of all advertising. First, expenditures should
fio there as the best investment, provided in
a single cost coverage. Some other forms
are good, yet tho recoi’ds show them to be
supplementary to the paper. All great suc
cesses in merchandising lines use newspapers,
with all other forms secondary.” ,
----------— — (J---------------
SURE BUSINESS BAROMETER
Fifteen of the largest banks in New York
City, including J. P. Morgan & Co., reduced
their government securities 7.33 per cent in
the third (¡uarter of the year. This was shown
in their ,'itiitements of condition as of Sept
ember 30. Other figures gleaned from the
statements of these fifteen banks 'are inter
esting in that they show a steady increase
in bu:ii!!'dss ovtr previous mopth« of this year
and over the same months of last year. Here
are some of..them: _ '
.Loans and; discounts by the reporting banks
-rose .$52,GG8,00D, or 1.44 per cent, between
. June 30 and Sept. 30. Compared with a year
ago these two categories were higher by $296,
791.000, or 8.79 per cent.
The total of deposits with all the fifteen
banks on Sept. 30 was $11,589,247,000, an
increase of $88,57G,009,000, or 0.33 per cent
since June 30 and a gain of 51,051,940,000, or
-ÍLÜ7 per cent over Sept. 30 a year ago. Total
resources amounted to $13,302,915,000 at tho
end of last month reflecting a rise of $1,005,-
308.000, or 8.70 per cent, since Sept. 30, 1935.
These figures point unmistakably to a gra
dual rise in business, and some of them indi
cate no slight rise either.
------------_ o -------------
A W'OUTHY SUCCESSOR
"North Carolina under democratic admin
istration has made more progress during the
(last 3G years than any commonv/ealth in the
nation,” Senator Jí^yW, Bailey tpld a Gqldsr
iioro audience, recently, • ,The senior
:t1ic*n went on to say that the demmiratic qan-
• didate for; Governor, Hon, Clyde, li. IIqoy,: Is
worthy to/follow the long- line of democratic
governors starting \vith Aycock 3G;ydárs-, a'gp.
W ith thase uttereneea tliis'paper,most heartily ,.
jigrees,; And in all tl)e long Hire;., ol d^in?-
icraiic govornprs of this! state,'none''iver^
’noi)le of soul th;ifi i'n‘‘ Cleveland Cuiility ihaiV;^.;
who will 1,10 the next'governor. Moreover, theX ■
yreat progi'es.s started under thq wise adrniii- ‘V
istratioii of Aycick will ,go -on while Clyde,
e helm of this old Slup.of, .;,
/>. -
THE MOCKSVILIiE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.'Thursday, October ,22(.;'l,0.:'f
“T iIE FO R G E ”
In the Noveinber issue of the American
¡Magazine, the New York Life Insurance Com
pany reproduced in an advcrtiaomeiit, Jolin
Neagle’s famous painting, “The Forge.”
The painting is a beautiful one and like' all
other great masterpieces, it suggests fine sen
timent. The interior of a blacksmith shop is
shown with the smith standing by,his anvil
holding a sledge hammer. Behind him his
young son stands by the forge, with hands
on the bellows lever as though assisting in
the worli to be done. Though an open window'
is seen in the distance a church spire. The
faces of the tw;) workers reflect strength,
character and contentment. Looking at this
painting suggested the idea to us, ¡'HRUE’S
RUGGED liNDIVIDUALISM I'O R YOU. That
painting tells the story of what has made
America great and wealthy. .Honest, unstint
ed labor, the family, THE CHURCH. .How
wu need to get back to these in a time when
■t'Do many are iliving in luxury, while a large
percent of our population are not willing to
truat thoir fate to the strength of their strong
right arms, aiui when religion means next to
nothing lo many. Are we in 'America living
in a t''joi's paradise? ^
-------- -----0---------------
. 'I'HE LATEST SCANDAL
Mrs. EriiiiSt Simpson, American born fri
end of King Edward V lll, has brought suit
against her hu.sliaiui for a divorce, Simpson
it is said will not resist, he being a British
subject, that the w ay may be opened uj) for
liis king j;p .marry the woman Edward loves,
Edward cafls.jier “Wailio,” and for some
months has maile her his constant companion.
She was an honored liouse gue,st of tiie Bri-
this monarch at Castle Balmoral in Scotland
recently, Mrs. Simpson, due to her 1^’iendship
with the King, is the most talked of woman
in the world these days, if not the most en
vied. If King Edward and Mrs. Simpson were
just ordinary human mortals and acting as
they have been for months the law would
jail. Strange what an advantage money, or
power or prestige will give one in this old
world. Are we really civilized after all'/ Or
are we just belated barbarians?
---------------0------^---------
О YEAH?
Japan starts building an additional 2500
miles 'of railway in territory o'nce controlled
by China. 'I’hese new lines will run right up
to Russia’s back door. Tho work is planned and
will be carried out largely by the Japanese
military. When tinlahed tliese new railroads
will enable Japan to riisir'tfoops right' to't
Russian border within three days. 'I’he com
pletion of the newly planned tracks will bring
tho total mileage of railways in Manehoukuo
up to 6,000. Looks like the Jfips are plan-
hlngs a lasting peace with Soviet Russia.
0 Yeah.
-------^--------0 ----------------
PRESS C01V1IVÍENT
'ГНЕ D IV ID EN D S O F KIN DN ESS
A torching story was told recently in a
newspaper story.
A wealthy .New York broker, intent upon
leaving his fortune to some worthy cause
made a tour of Southern states visiting uni- •
versitles and colleges with the idea of endow
ing the one of his choice. Walking through
the campus of a 'Virginia college, he accosted
a studeiit who treated him v/ith such courtesy
and cordiality that he returned home and drew
up his will leaving the school a million and
half dollars.
'I’he moral of this story would seem to be:
courtesy pays. In this ease it paid tangible
dividends. But that is not often the case.
Courtesy, kindness is a thing that must be
enjoyed per se, and it pays in its own kind
a smile for a smile, a deed for a deed. From
simple ingredients it compounds the wine and
seltzer of life, the effervescent joy of living.
Those are the usual dividends of courtesy and
kindness, and they defy comparison with a
paltry million and a halt' dollars.— \Vinston-
Salem Journal.
---------------0 -----------^----
A YOU'l'H SHOWS THE WAY
R,. Иоеу is pt. tl/
. Statç,;.'""''-f
In New Brunswick, N. J., at a highwiiy in
tersection, one may see a young fellow pacing
up and down, perhaps aided by other young
sters, carrying signs reading “Drive Cautious
ly” and "Stop 'I’his Murdering.” His father
was killed at that intersection some time ago.
Most of us are prone to cali such things as
the acts of a crank. .And we dismiss them
with a wave of the hand, a sly, knowing sort
of a grin— just like w'e dismia.s most every
thing else that pertains to warnings of reclc-
less driving and slaughter on the highways.
One trouble with traffic casualties is that
w'o put up with it. We do nothing to stop it,
'I'hat boy up in New Jersey'couldn’t'do much,
but with the picture of hia father beinji
slaughtered there on that highway,',he did
and is doing the best ho can to prevent such
'things occurring in the future.
It is It, lesson that everyone should; learn.
We ar(3 traveling entirely too fast, often with
nowhere to go, but breaking all speed records
■ and ondaiigcring our own and other lives in
getting there. 'I'he spirit of that, New Jersey^
, . ,youth should sprea()-^aiid if it should we may
J,'' count on automobile .fatalities decreiising.,
• ' —-WiPHton-iSnlein Journal. ' '
. —-4-— '
Onév! i;cáson.;.y^^ í‘horsc-and-bug^y”¡, .is
popular, ih'j^cbrtaiu quarters is that'we Have
^> lp t oi naturakbpyn. horse traders left in this
SGountp’.
SUSIiSS LOCitS
CASH PAID FOJi CEDAR LOGS
and timber. For details write
Geo. C. Brown and Co. of N.'
C., Greensboro. N. C. 9 lOtf
li'ARMS FO I’ SALii— Most any
size or tjije, located in Ric.h-
mond county. 'I'ernis 20% cash,
balance over period of 1 to 10
years. G% interest. Call or
see E. G. Horn, Field Repres
entative, North Carolina Joint
Stock Land Bank, Southijrn
Pines, N. Ç., Phone; Б8П4, i'.nx
1G04. . , , / 10 15 21,-
WE W ILL PAY 90c FOR EAli
corn with'soft corn taken om,
$1.00 for nice white, dry shell-
ed corn.— Horn-Johnstoue Co,,
Mocksville, N. C.
B E L K - H A R R Y C O .
SALISBURY, N. C.
SPECIAL OFFER
$ 3 .9 5 V a lu e 32-P iece
Chinaware Set
,„$1.98
Save sales slips from each purchase you iralie irom Ociobcr 1 2 th
When you have bought $25.00 worth of meichiirdise in any part
of the store, then Uirn tht^e in ard yon get ore of thiee $3.95 sets
for $1.98. These 32-piece sets consist of the following:
G Cups— G Saucers— 6 9.in. Dinner Plates— G G-in. Pie Plates— G
5Vi-in. Fruit Plates— 1 IIV 2 in. Meat Platter— 1 3‘A in. Round Vege-
table Dish.
See 'riiese Dishes on Display In Our Windov/
ANOTHER OFFER
32-Pp. Set of China, 14-K Gold
Stamped . .
for
Regular $4.95 Set
$2.98
W ith duplicate sales tickets for $25.00 worth of merchandise, bought
in any part of our store. Every ticket dated from October 12th good
on this offer.m
To The
T obacco Farm ers
of
Davie and Adjoining Counties
We wish to say that we appreciate the busi
ness that you have given us in the past and
will greatly appreciate any business that you
bring us this season. We have the best force
we have ever had and are in better position
to give each farmer our personal attention.
We have some of the best auctioneers in the
state.
All we ask is that you give us a trial and we
w i l l do the rest.
Bring Us Your Tobacco
,4
V s
ft,/ft
' '‘r i
I ‘ / ' ' . / > •< ')'
). (/m-
n» s
A
Thuivsdtiy, 'October 22,; 193S
_ THE MOCKSVILLE ENTBHPRlSIÎ. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
Club Meetings
Ghurch News
Socia-l Functions
Card Partiee SOCIETY
Local Happenirilirs
Coming and i
Going of those
We know
MISS MARY J. HEITMAN. Social Editor Phone 112
CARD OF THÁNKS
We w’ish to express onr heart
felt thanks io our many friends
for their many acts of kindness i
Mrs.-W. R. Wilkins was a visit- Statesville. . program was presented. Mrs. R,
Mrs. Glenn Cartner, of Con- gave‘items from the
tord, and her mother, Mrs. J. W. field, and fioreij^n topics
or In Winston-Salem on i\Ionday.
-----о— i---
Miss Notie Martin is visiting
Mrs. J. F. De^dmon, in Franklin.
Mr. and Mrs. R. ,R. Smithwick
u-с.’э week-end visitors in Ra
leigh.
and expressions of sympathy
during the sickness and death of
our beloved wife and mother.
N. Glenn Smith and family ■
SALE OP LAND
^ '''•'■•'■"'-I.:— ,'^PAG^ HVB J _ _ ' -I
.''«MEMKMBMaMKMKMBMaiMK'inisflsnMitHaMffiHaMEMEMEMHHEHBMBMBKiErtiM ^
^DR. P . H . M A S O N , D e n tist ' '' ' ''■E ' ', ' ,
H ' Sanford B u ild in g
p M O C K S V IL L E , N ; C . ' ^
“I am a hearty eater and smoker”
North Carolina,
Diavie County
Under and by virtue of auth-^
ority and power in • a judgment
Jacob Stewart attended Super
ior Court of Davidson County the
week of Oct. 5th.
------0------
Miss Lucile Marlin, of the
Advance faculty, spent the week-
i!iul at home.
■ Mr. and Mrs. R. S. McNeill
.•ittfiided the Duke-Guorgia 'i’ech
ц-iime on Saturday.
iitiv. W. li. Dodd, who spent
llu,' summer at liidiiecrest, arriv
ed ht'i'e last , week,
iMi's, C, N. Christian has re-
luniod from a visit to relatives
lii Ashe County.
Roberts, of Birmingham, Ala., '’»scussed by Mesdiames ____ ..............
spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Larew, W. C. Cooper, A lice. in an action entitled, Mrs. Fan-
J. W. Cartner. | Woodruff, Khox Johns'tone, C. nie McCulloch and J. L. Holton,
in . r --------- ■ ?t‘ J- J.qhnstone.; executors of Goshen McCulloch!iBr and Mrs, Bruce Staton, of "Members present were Mesdames deceased v,s. John C. Hodges e.xe-
Ooldsboro, visited here this week, LareW, W. C. Cooper; cutpr of Rosa McCulloch Hodges
being guests of Rev. and Mrs! Johnstone, Alice W oodruff,; deceased; and John C. Hodges’
V\. C. Cooper, the latter a sister B. Sanford, Knox Johnston, said judgment being recorded in
01 Dr. Staton. . H. T. Brenegar, Essie Byerly, C. office of Clerk of Superior Court
-----o----- Cr. Woodruff, and Miss Willie of Davidson County and in of-
Mr and Mrs. Perry Ashe anti Miller,
daughter, Bonnie Brown, of fico of Clerk of S.iperior Court
of Davio County, North Caro-
iVIayodan, and Miss Kathryn ,,Mattte Eaton Auxiliary lina, 1, R. S. McNeill, Comm'is-
Brown, of Greensboro, spent the ' ’ 'I'hc Mattie Eaton Auxiliary sioner, v/111 sell for cash to the
wei;k-(ind here, met in tho ladies’ parlor of tho highest biddei, the following des-
-----u----— Methodist Church , on Monday cribed lot of land, containing a*
Mrs. F. M. Carter has return- -'‘fternDon, with Mi's. J, H. dwelling house and out buildings
ed from a visit to l\lr. and Mrs. , Thompson, president, loading the situated on West Side of South
Hix Cartr, in Winston-Salem, '.devotionals. Reports and plans ''lain Street and State Highway
Mr.s, Hix Charter is 'recovering' made, and tho Week of Prayer SO and U, S. Highway No.
Irom a serious illness. ■ |i)rogram was outlined. Members
Marshall Sanford, of David
son College senior class, spent
the week-end at home.
Mrs. J. Lee Dwiggins visited
hor aunt, Mrs. W. T. Miller, in
Winston-Salein. recently.
Jlr. and Mrs., J. H. Meroney,
(if Lenoir spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ii. C .M'Groney.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Davis mov
ed into their home on the State
sville highway last week. .
George Ross, of Wadesboro,
silent tho week-end with Mr.
and Mrs. Gaither Sanford.
Miss Emily Rodwell, of €hai'-ai'e asked to givo Octagon soap
. --- coupons to the Bethlidiem House
lotto, is visiting her mother,\in \yinston-Saiem. Mi's. 'I'homp-
Mi'.s, J. \V, Jiodwell, Mrs. Dowoy son mentioned the interesting
Casey is spending this week I zone meeting at Wesley Chapel,
with her aunt. Miss Effie Cain.,'"’hich 11 members attended. The
election of officers will take
Dr, and Mrs. Lester Blartin aro
spending some time in Florida.
Lester, Jr., and George Martin
are with their grandparents, Mr.
and Jlrs. F. H. Brthnson, in
Farmington.
In the 'i’own of Mocksville,
at public sale on IGth day of
November, 193G, at 12 o’clock
noon, at the Courthouse door of
Davie County, descrlbed jis fol-
iiuvs: A certain lot containing
a dwelling' house located in
Mocksville, said County and
State and bounded and describ- tiu as follows:
' Situated on Clement Crest
Mrs. John LeGrand supplied as
teacher for Miss Elizabeth Nay
lor the first of this week.
Mra. Ryland M. Warren, of
Washington, D. C., spent the
week-end with Mrs. C. R. Horn.
Dicjv Brenegar, of ¡Raleigh,
spent the week-end with his par
ents, Mr, and Mrs, H. T, Brene-
giir,
Marvin Loach, of tho ....nter-
prise force, met with a painful
accident on 'I'liesday m9rinng,
when .two of his fingers were
badly mashed in the press, we
are soVry to state.
place at the November meeting,
iiiid the nominating committee'
apiiointed consists of Mrs. E. W.
Crow, Mrs. C. H. 'I’omilnson and Street, in cit.A; of .MoCltsvillc, be-
Mrs. Jack Allison. Members *ots No. 39, 40 and 41 of
present were: Mesdames J. TI. ^*ock No. B, according to certain
Thompson, E. J. Harbison, J. L. " ‘“1’ '>iited Oct. 28th, 1922, de-
Sheek, E. W. Crow, V. E Swaim, Ijy N. R. Kinney, C. E.
C. H. Tomlinson, C. G. Leach, , sin'veyed by N. R. Kinney,
Dallas Kirby, Hattie I\IcGuire, "'hieh map is recorded in plat
T. N. Chailin, Miss Ruth Booe 4zu in office
H, A. Lagle. superintendent of
water works, had the misfortune
lu break his arm while cranking
a truck.
Mrs. G'. G. Daniel will spend
the week-end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fowler, In
Statesville.
Mr. and IMrs. John McKnight
and children, of Mooresvile,
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
\V. M. Howard.
and Miss Mary Heitman.
-----o-----
Waters— Adams Marriage
An announcement f)f interest
here is that of the marriage of
Bliss Virginia AdaniS and Sam
uel E. Waters, both of Mocks
ville, which was solemnized on
August 1, 11J3G, in Martinsville,
Va. The bride is an attractive
young lady, and is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs, J, G. Adams,
formerly of ForJ; M'lll, S. C. She
has been a clerk in tjhe post-
office for several years. 'Phe
groom is a well-known young
man, and Is the son of Mr. and
[Mrs. Marvin Waters. 'I'hey are
I with the groom’s parents at pre-
'I'he case of Mrs. Fannie Me- sent, but later will go to house- !
Mr. ']'. W. Rich is having a
second story added to his resi
dence on North Main Street.
The framing of the A. F. Camp-
bell home Is up, and work is
steadily progressing.
-----¡1-----
Mrs. Miiry Foster, mother of
Mrs. N. '1', Foster, had a stroke
of paralysis on Monday after
noon, nnd is in a serious condi
tion at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Foster. VVe hope that she
will recover, but much anxiety is
felt.
uf Register of Deeds for Davie
and more particularly
described as follows: Being
twenty-five U5) Ieet front eacn
and one hun'ured iiity
ieet deep.
Ihe auove described property
is known as tho Rosa McCuiluctr
JlOUgt'S lût.
'uns tne 10th day of October,
1‘JUo.
R. S. McNeill
Uommissloner
.Jacob Stewart, Atty. 10 4t
It Pa>s 'io Advertise
Iiev. and Mrs. W. L Howell
and daughter, Carrie Allison, of
liiunlet, visited Dr. and l\lrs. .'\\ •
I'l. Long this w'eek. ''
Miss Sarah G’aither spent the
•veek-end in , Gastonia, and ^ at
tended the biuke-Georgia Tech
game at Durham.
Cuiloch and J. L. Holton Exr. of
Goshen McCulloch vs John C.
Hodges Exr. of Rosa McCulloch
Hodges and John C, Hodges, in
stituted in Davie County, but re
moved for trial to Superior
Court of Davidson County, was
tried Oct, 5tii. 'i'he Plaintiff’s
obtaining Judgment against the\
defendants in the sum of .?850.00,
which was declared to be a spe
cific lien on the house and lot
known as the "Rosa McCulloch”
liroiierty on Clement Crest in
Town of Mocksville. In pursu
ance of said judgment said pro
perty will be sold at Courthouse
¡Cioor, Davie County, Nov. Ifi,
19SG, to satisfy said lien.
keeping. We join their'friends
in wishing thom much happi
ness.
»BIXIXI!<IS!»ISEiISIK!2SIXlS№:ilSI!llS:niB№l»ia
AN'WGRIPINE
For Colda and Grip
Have sold it for over !i0
Vcai's, 'i'ry a ¡jackage nt
KURFEES AND WARD
Miss Hanes Clement, of Duke
Hospital, Durham, spent the
week-end wilh her mother, Mrs.
J, Frank Clement.
iMrs, Katie Harris and daugh-
iers, Mary and- Katherine, of
Conover, were recent guests ot
I'liKs Margaret Bell.
Mr. and Mrs, R. S.’ McNeill,
Mrs. J, F. Hawkins and Mrs. J.
¡'i-unk Clement were visitors in
Kiiloigh on Thursday.
Mra. Scagle, of Rock Hill, S.
C„ who has been visiting her
sister. Mrs. W. Kobinson,
returned home Snturday.
"Mary’s Rock” and '•
Man Mtn.” “Grand
Miss Helen Betts, of
Point, spent, the week-end with
Miss Ruby Mnrtin. Miss Martin is
teaching:at.;S™th' Gvove this year
--'■ . . .
Mr. and Mrs, :S, 0. Rich, of
\V'iilce.::f’Qrest, former, residents
hero, Avère among those.,attend
ing thSivfunaral^of M rs .;J. P-
fir
iBÖrk .tò Mr. 'nhcV Mrs, F;
llubiiisoh ,oiv'í0ít;'í#.tft
1Ь, daughtôj'.^ Robinson and*
baby aro'sat Lqníí’s Sanatpi'ltim
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stewart
and son, Roger Stewart and
wife, of Raleigh, left Sunday,
Oct. 11th, for Havre . DeGrace
and Perry Point, Maryland, re
turning Thursday by the way of
Baltimore, Washington, Warren-
ton, Va., approaching the Shen-
nandoah National Park by Lee
Highway, which intersects with
“Skyland Drive” on Blue Ridge
Parkway near 'I'hornton’s Gap,
))assing
"Stoney
Camp” and other interesting
points on to "Swift Run Gap,”
beyond which the Skyland Drive
of the Blue Ridge Parkway has
not been completed. The Shen-
nandoah National Park extend
ing from Front lioyal on the
North 'to Jarman Gap on the
south viewed from the Skyland'
Drive from Us lofty peaks cer
tainly cannot be surpassed for
scenic beauty, and wlien the
Blue Ridge Parkway Skyland
Drive shall have been completed
it will bo the most popular route
from Piedmont and Western
North Carolina to the Capital
City and North Eastern cities. .
Presbyterian Auxiliai'y
’.The Presbyterian Auxiliary
met nt tlie hut on Monday .after
noon. with Mi‘s._John Larew, the
president, in : the. , chair, ,rThe
-^ibje ies,Hon .ln;GeneSiS .Avas .-.conr
'ducleci^by Mrs.’ Ii. B.' Hanford,
and a'home and forelgii missions
PREVENT SMUT
In
Your Wheat and Oats by
treating the seed with pro
per preventative and. in the
proper way.
Ask us for information
DRUG COMPANY
"A Good Drug Store”
Quick Delivery Service
Phone 141
• MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
ttitrorammwummtmmmmtmmm«
PRINCESS
THEATRE
Friday & Saturday
'Pom 'i'yler in
"‘PINTO RUSTLERS”
And two Reel Comedy
“Comet Takes Comet”
Monday & Tuesday
“TUGiJOAT PRINCESS”
imtuntutumnuutKitusxtumKtttntim
STOVES
Announcing Arrival Of
HEATING STOVES, CIRCULATORS
COOK STOVES, RANGES
Prices $1.50 to $40.00
If interested, come in. We will appreciate yoiir visit and
will quote very attractive prices.. Besides we have the
largest and most seiact line ever shown in Davie County.
Fall and Winter Lines Now in Stock
See Our New Living Room Suits.
“The Store of Today’s Best”
MOCKSVILLE HARDWARE CÜMPANV
" Patvonize 'i'our Hardware Store
N *ti* Ht t 4V
“ I M AK E SU R E to have Camels
at mciiIcimc,'’saysJohnny Murpby (below), Bowling Champion.Thc
flow of digestive fluids is in
creased when you enjoy Camels.
S u b w a y m o t o r m a n
(.above). Clyde Smith, of New
York City, likes ii big steidc—
then en/oysCamels. He siiys:’*!
eat what I want wlien I want
It—and then smoke Camels,"
ih
C O ST L IE R T O B A C C O S
“Ml
»«FARM
K i
1УЗЗ227 Ibi, (if bog bouiilit 1 U, S, Koyal.
193 G
227 lbs. of boR buys 2' U. S, Uo)'nts:iml2 U, S, Tubes.
CORN
1933
. 33 bit. of corn bought ’I U. S. Uoyal.
193G
33 bu. of corn buys 2 U. S. Koy’iils nnd a U. S. Tube.
WHEAT
1933
19 bu. of wiieac bought1 U. S. Royal.
193fi
19 bu. ot wheat buys2 U. S. Kovals.
C O T T O N
S E E D
1933
1310 Ibs.'of conon seed bouKht I U. S. Koyal.
1936
1310 ibs. of cofton seed buy» 2 U. S. Royals nnd 2 U. S. Tubes.
U. s. FARM TIRE
for iraciorM and farm
oQu/pmont
Tiio ftiiuous NOliUY design Kivcs up to 20^ MOKJi TllAcriON tbnii liny other typo of traction tiro Uoilticci costs —speeds up work.
U. s . NOBBY
TRACTIONfor poBsenUor cara and truck»
The c.xtra traction tire ior rouKh fiolng in mud, sand or snow. Staggered , nobs arc 8clf<clc;adng I nnd rldQ smoother on bard pavements. J.onficr- wearing Tempered Rub* ber tread assures more
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1 T H E M O C K S V ir.L E E N T E R P R IS E , Mocksville, N. €., Thursday, Octobcr 22, 1936
DRAGONS
DRIVE YOU
ByE D W I N
B A L M E R
Copyright by Edwin lìnlnior
WNU Service
CH APT ER X — Continued
— 17—Slie llftea her Imnd with tho letter.
"Jeb has not, sister, quit his claim
on you," Bog's handwriting assured.
“That Is not J. B. Braddon. He docs
not spenk about yon much; but ho
does a lot of listening, when you’re
mentioned. . . . He's ßlvlns you time
to get yourself straightened out."Suppose she married Cnthnl O’SIara?
What did It mean that, as she lay In
the late afternoon shadow, she so
much as played with the fancy?("And now my times with you are
«pont; there's nothing of you loft for me In all the future. We'll be In tho
world, both of us, but I may never
egala spenk to you or see your tnce.")
Agnes stirred, and twisted n little.
Sho wanted to bo In tho world with
Cathal O'Mara.
Thoy traveled slowly through Pro
vence, into northern Italy In the au
tumn, on to Intcrlnlccn below tho Jung
frau, and reachod Paris, at last. In
November; and there they wero when
tho crash came, and tho cafes and
the countlng-liousos alike—the Cafo
de In Pulx and the American branch
banks on tho Place do la Concorde
■nd Boulevard Hausmann—becamo
places of panic.
To tho crowdod hotels ot tho Rue
de Rlvoll nnd about tho Etoile tho
cables carried to Americans only mes-
Bages of catastrophe. “Millionaires"
overnight became penniless, or worse.
Ltttlo slips ot paper told them: "All
you lind Is gone; and you owe more."
A few words on a cablegram slip—
le.is than a score of gyllnblos, some
times—and a man who last week strut
ted and boasted that ho was worth six
millions shut himself alone In his ten-
room suite at the hotel nnd shot him
self,
What had changod? What curse
caused this Incredible calamity that
■pared DO one?
The Glenelths, mother and daugli-
tcr, moved aniong groups utterly con
fused. Beatrice had a cable from her
hURliand In Chicago: "All right enough
with us. Don't worry."
Sho was not dependant, as many
■bout her were, upon monthly remit
tances from home, or upon renewals
of a letter of credit. Bob had pro
vided generously in advance.
Somo wives. In her situation, wero
however cashing their letters of credit
and cabling the proceeds home. So as-
tçnlshlngly had the situation reversed
Itself I
Then the .second big "drop" came.
It had coiiie much closer to the Glen-
cUha than merely to people they knew ;
but tho two of the family In Paris
had not yet received a letter written
that day. They had only Bob's sec
ond cable to his wife: "Some tempo
rary losses of course, but nothing seri
ous; no necessity whatever to alter
any of your plans."
Bee's letter arrived the next week :
six o’oloolc, TucBdny. Juot beCore I bo to moot Davts.Well, Aenos—tor It’o your turn—wo got It. Today at noon Collltt, Ayroforth and Romblo admitted Inability to moot obüffatlone. Tl>fl nftornoon papora havo It In hoadllnosj also our phono has boon busy. It oppoars to havo aurprlsod many Irlonda,Nobody knows—or tolla—how muoh we'ro short; but It'a a tow hundred liioiisünd, not ccur.tlns Tvhat'G ov.'cd to Father whon ho throw In a lot of monoy last wooU to try to oavo Davia.Father shouldn't have done It. He’s 'boon' taktnt; loHHOH on hlu own lhat would sink anybody olso.Why did I lot Davia In for thls7 But I never dreamed ho could got In so deep. I didn't know that men could lose more monoy than thoy ovor had. It ueonia thoy can.OC courso I never flfjured that It miBht happen at a time when It would .maico so much dlfCerenco to Father. •And thoro are othors besides ourselves •to consider. Davlii seoms to iiuve dono ihia bit, you see, dear, In maklnii pau- ipers oi" many trustinfi people.I Every ono Is grateful to Job In theae days, Agnes—everybody lucky enough to have taken Ills ndvlco. He's been Inalsting on the utilities, and ospocially tho Insull properties, you know. Of course, they're down; but In comparison with other tilings, they're just Qib- raltar, A lot of people are thanking God tonight or J. 1). Braddon,I'm going to the train, now, to meet my husband.B.Both 'hjOys perfectly flne, Mother.
Bco had mailed It, her sister real
ized, ou the way to tho train; but
what a place to stjp a letter—before
fiho met ;Dov1b on tho day ho had
failed copiplotely 1
Had he couie on that train? And
how was he? Agnes iiut herself be
side ßi^ on the platforui awaiting him
for thnt meeting yet to occur lo her
mind, though her sister had accom
plished It eight days ago. She could
see him stepping from tho car slowly
but unwaveringly, with Ups pressed
tight and white; with his eyes looking
at his wife, who could not help con
trasting him on this day of his public
ii" failure with Job Braddon, whom all
people moro tlmn over praised and ad
mired.
Be« would hi—Agnoa knew tiiut Bhe
hafl been—’'good" to Davis that night.
Never would she hnvo blamed or re
proached him; sho would havo bnon
sorry for him, and shown It But that
wns what, last of all, Davis desired;
he could have borne reproach better
than. pity. Agnes wished she could
have been tliere to prevent Bee's pity
ing him; to show him something like
—admiration.
Sho did not believe that she could
have felt for him admiration; biit she
could havo feigned something to satisfy
him; she know how Davis had needed
some word of praise thnt night,
Agnos waited for hor mother to fin
ish the letter. \
‘‘Wo ouglit to bo home, Mother."
“Ves. But how cnn I go?"
"Why not?"
"I will return, I. told your father,"
her motlior said, "when he asks mo to.
I niu^t wait until ho does so."
C H A PT ER X I
Coe gnvti up her liome the week be
fore Cluistnins.
"Not hoforo Christmas I" Davis pro
tested to her.
"What would Christmas be to us In
the house, under tho circumstances?"
Beo retorted. "And tho boys are too
llttio to know. Let’s got it off our
hands."
"Oh, Godi" breathed Davia, and
held her to iilm.
Technically, Bee could have kept tho
house; it was In her name, and her
father olTered hor a monthly allow
ance large enough to pay grocery- and
furnace-bills, light, telephone and
wages for one servont; but Bee spared
Davis even discussion of this. She
dismissed all tier maids and turned
title of tho houso over to tho bank
which held Davis’ biggest note; and
sho sold everything she possessed that
would fetch a price—except her en
gagement- and wedding-ring.
So the girl whom ber father had al-
v.'ayo callcd Dark Ono returned
"home," to his houso, with her babies
and her husband.
"Bee Ayroforth Is perfectly wonder
ful with iier husband," the neighbor
hood said. "This will make them much
closer together." For tho neighbore
knew thot Davis and Bee needed to bo
brought "closer" — whatever that
meant. Tlio neighbors did not yet
Beatrice Had « Cable From IHer
IHuaband In Chicago,
know—though Davis and Bee did—
that sho was bearing him another
child. Yet Davia could not feel thnt
his wife "loved" him; and ho longed
as never before for lovo to.reassure
him and give him boldness.
Ho hocaino moro sensitive to com
parison of himself before her with
men who continued to succeed, and so
ho avoided tho homos of many of Beo'a
frionds. Bj- himself in the day, he
called on the men at their ofllccs; lie
looked up mei'o acauuliUftnees ami
even strangers who wore suggested as
posislbly having a Job open. Ue put
down hlii |)Hilu aiuicilessly, except that
he refused to take the position which
his father-in-law patently niside tor
him In his onicc.
Job was still doing splendidly. Tho
Insull '‘equities" wero still quoted
high. Jeb had proved himself much,
much wiser thnn other men; ho pros
pered In the panic; und Davis could
not bear thu thought of him. i’ct he
had lo seo Jeh at the house.
Bob Glonclth was tho one who, usu
ally, invited lilm. Olonelth had liked
him best of Agnes’ friends, and now
he was doing business with Jeb; for
Bob badly needed 'some now llnnne-
Ing which Job had proved able to ar
range. Jeb liked to come to the houso.
Not Infrequently, tliorefore, four sat
down at the dinner-table—Father in
his own place, the Dark One in her
mother's place, Davis on onu side. Job
on the other.
Cravatb still served the table; but
the house stuff had heei?, cut In two.
So there sat Duvis at the table si
lently between his wife whom he no
longer supported, nnd her father who
lodged and hoarded them both, and
who paid even tho nursemuid; (ind op
posite sat Jeb Braddon, whoso opinions
constantly were asked, and given,
when expressed, the respect and au
thority of success.
Davis, sometimes, could scarcely eat.
At night, after Jeb iiad gone, Davis
did not Klnep. He lay alone In a room
which had been a guest-chamber next
to the room which had hopn nnd now
again was Bee's, and wherein she slept
once more In her own bed.
Borne nlsht« b* never got up to dis-
turb her; but often be coulrt not keep
himsolf from entering hor room ani
waking her.
Or did ho wnko her? Had she el.
ways boon asleep?"Все."
"OhI You! . . . What Is It?"
"Do you lovo mo?"
‘‘Love you? . . . What more can I
do to show it?"
"By God, Bee, I’m going to support
you. At least support you I , .
In March, Davis got his Job; and оз
before, he acted without consulting
either his father-in-law or Job about
it. He borrowed ten tiiousand dollars
on his lifc-iusurnnco, and formed n
new partnership with Ken ПотЫо.
Business was looking up fo.' a while;
many loaders believed and proclaimed
timt the worst wns past and prosper
ity restored. But within two months
more some ot thom who hnd backed
their hollefs had shot,themselves while
"cleaning" revolvers, died of monoxldo
gns poisoning in their garages, or had
leaped—or "fallen"—from their olllco
windows.
Arthur Llnsdalo, a neighbor ot tho
Glenelths, roso from dlnnor-table nnd
wont to tho lake shoro alone and put
a bullet through lils hcnd.^ He was im
portant enough so that cabios carried
tho news that night to European pa
pers; and Beatrice Glonolth read It in
hor room at her hotel in Florence.
She sent Rogna for her daughter.
"Agnes, we're leaving for home. . . .
No; your fnthor has not cabled for'
me; and I’ve had no letter today. It’e
this: Arthur Llnsdalo’s shot himself,
He’a Just your father's age. I've often
tliought of them as alike. . . . We’re
leaving nt onco."
When Bee's mother nnd sister weiu
on tho water, she met, driving to mar
ket, a neighbor of hers whom sho had
often scon whon she had lived In her
own house. It was Joyce Moroday,
wlio«e husband, though out of a Joh
since January, had held on to their
home, though tt was well known th.ut
the grocer nnd the butcher bad not
been paid for months. The garage
men would not carry slow accounts,
and so Gone had got rid of his cnr.
Joy was walking from the market
She had had no servant since Christ
mas.
Ben asked her to lunch; and Joy got
Into the cnr casually enougli, and aa
they drove, sho referred easily to hor
children, who were boing sent to tho
public school; they took their lunch
with them to save the two-mile walk
two extra times a day. Joy was older
than Bee, nnd hor girl was ten, nnd the boy eight
It was when Bee and her guest
were ut tho lunchcon tablc, with Bobby
nnd Davy between thom, that Joy sud
denly broke down.
Cravath had just served her and'
Bee, und ho had laid before tho little
boys exactly wlint they ought to hnvo,
when Joy diopped her fork, which sho
had lifted to hor Ир.ч.
"I can’t eatl How can I eat? How
can I put this food In my mouth when
my children—my children aro hungry?"^.
Boo Jumped up and caught her in
her arms.
"Nol Nol" .Toy cried. "I can’t eat!
. . . I sent my girl nnd boy to school
again with bread with a llttio butter
spread on Iti All I had In tho house!
That’s all they’ve had for days in their
lunch-boxesl . , . And oatmeal nt
home. That’s a box of oatmeal I left
in your car; all we’ll havo tonight and
tomorrow. . . . And my Sally said to
mo this morning: ‘Don’t mind . . .
don’t mind. Mother. Nobody knows.*
You seo. Bee, they go oft by them
selves to eat,—Sally and Gene,-so
nobody does know, from thom. And
thoy eat the oatmeal morning and
night at home I They’re such llttio
sports 1"
Boo mado the mistake, that night
ot letting Davis learn of this. Sho
would not have told him, but she had
to explain two clrcumatances-Bob
by’s report to his' fnthor that a big
ludy cried nt lunch-tlmo, nnd tho fur
ther fact that Boo was without ten
dollars, which was to havo served her
for tho rest of tho week; for sho had
made Joy take it
Bee herself did not sleep too well
that night Sho hoard Davis walking
about; ho camo Into her room and bent
over her.
‘‘Hello," said Bee, and put up a hand
which ho claspod so tight he hurt her;,
but sha lot him. ^
"I’ve been looking at our boys," he.
said.
"The.v’ro all right, Dai^y.”"Ami they will be. Nothing—noth
ing will ever rob thom of thoir op
portunity 1""Of course not."
"And by God, I'll tnko care of you
—and the llttio you that's coming."
"Of course you will."
"Kiss mo. Bee."
Sho put both arms about his neck
and found his lips.
"That’s llko—old times—nlmost Bee.
Oh, God, how I want yon to love mol"
The huge ship, upon which Agnes
and her mother crossed, .was almost
without passengers In the first class.
It carried, nctualiy, moro stewards and
attendants for that class thnn trnvol-
ars.
Topics of discussion between thej
homehound passengers wore seldom!
choorful; thoy felt themselves favored
and protected people on their way to
hear, at home, the full facts of dis
asters which had been withhold or
glossed over in cables and letters.
"Why," said Beatrice Glonolth again
and ngnln to Agnes, "why did Mr.
Llnsdalo do it?"
rrO BE CONTtNVKn)
The Ргвяйп! Твпда .
The present tense of the vert
"wrought,’’ according to the висом»
bul bUBlneae man, la wor^
Wisdom Is Personal
Most of tlic wisdom one acquires
one can’t communicate to anyone
else. Eacii m an’s life is his own.
Tho “hand” who watches tho
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A monlcey never seems to havo
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No creature, human or other
wise, can welcome you quite ns
wholeheartedly as a dog.
We Are as Sheep
Most people would rather work
at another’s direction than to ac
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good executives are hard to flnd.
There is no such thing as rights
without duties.
It isn’t against the output of
foolish Ideas that society must bo
well armed. That can’t be helped.
It must be armed against so many
people believing in them, ,
Get in Trouble
One’s liberty may be restricted
but has anyone a clear idea of
what he’d do if he had a lot?
A clear oonscioncc neither fears
sound nor sight ot ioes.
Does pessimism cause indiges
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One has never fully lived until
he has spent a year on a farm nnd
explored the resources of the coun
try general store. It’s lilce Crusoa
exploring his ship.
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© llcll Syiidlcatc,— W NU .Service.
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- THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE.Mocksville, N. C., Thursday, Octobcr 22. 1936
Adventurers’ Club
“Animal Man"
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter
W 'E L L . sir, I am pleased to note that Old Lady Adventure ia
VV stiji busy initiating new members in this club of ours. The
newest IS Distinguished Adventurer Edwin da Costa of New Haven,
Conn. And Ed writes: "Many times while reading the stories in
your column I have wished I .night have some weird experience.
Well, by Jove, Floyd, read this one.”
You see, Ed is back _from South America with the tale of just
the sort of experience he d always wished ho could have. And now
U's his turn m the story-tellers’ circle, and he’s going to dish it ou^lo US.
Ed went to South America last November. Cold weather
doesnt agree with him and he’d heard It sometimes got a
mtle warmish down near the Equator. Ho landed In Brazil
hung around the coast for a while, and then took a six-week
trip up the Amazon with somo English explorers. Did Ed
get Into an adventure with those explorers? He did not.
Explorers like quiet, peaceful lives compared with us folks who
live in civilized parts of the world. Ed got into that adventure AT A I^)TEL.
Hotel Whose Guests Lived in Stucco Huts,
• , explorer friends. Ed landed in Pernambuco and
put up at tho Derby iiotol. "The hotel,” Ed says, “was located about
live miles outside the city limits, in an isolated section. Why they
ever built it there, I don’t icnow. Liko all the other hotel buildings
in mountain sections of Brazil, this one contained only an omce, dining
room and dance hall. The guests lived in individual stucco huts,
called chalets, located away from the main building near the jungle’s
edge. The space between the main building and tho chalets was fllled
with hibiscus shrubs, swaying palms, and other tiopluul plants of rare
beauty, but at night one felt very lonely, all alone in one’s stucco
hut, and I was pleased to make acquaintance of another American
who was also stopping at the hotel.”
The other fellow was a man named Kellmer—a South American representative ot a Texas oil concern. He ond Ed struck up quite a
friendship, and together they spent the long evenings strolling through tlie gardens, smoking and talking.
Ono evening at dinner, Kellmer told Ed about the Betho
—or animal man. He was a strange creature wliom tlie natives
were ail talking about—a lone robber who used an animal
jielt for a disguise. HK in n IN nAUK PLACES TO I’OUNCE
OUT ON ills VlCrilVlS. HE CARKIED A UUJ KIOVOLVEK AND
HE WASN’T AT ALL SLOW ABOUT SHOOTING PEOPLE WHO
DIDN ’T DO WHAT HE TOLD THEM.
Decided They’d Better Have Revolvers.
It all sounded like a native’s . tali story lo Ed ond Kellmer. m
flrst they laughed about it. But as the days wont by ond each one
brought a new tale of some atrocity by tho Becho, they liogan to
At
Ed and Kellmer Searched the Hotel Grounds
wonder. And ono day when tlie rumor was going around that the
Becho had Icilled another man, Kellmer bought two revolvers and
presented ono to Ed.
A few more days rolled by. Then, one night while Ed was sitting
in his chalet, he heard a knock on the door—heard Kellmer outside
calling, “For Pete’s sake, Ed, let me in i” Kellmer stood there, clad
In a black-and-white zobra-striped bathrobe, his revolver in his hand.
“THE BECHO'S ON THE GROUNDS,” HE GASPED. “I HEARD
VOICES AND FOOTSTEPS. LET’S TRY TO NAB H IM !”
It Looked I.ike Taps for Kellmer.
Ed got ills own gun. He and Kellmer started a saarch ot the
hotel grounds. Says Ed: "The palms swished spookily in the
breeze. The night was pitch dark, and before long both of us
began to shake liko hula dancers. Presently the sound of hoof-
beats came to my ears. Then thoy faded. We secreted ourselves
near the great iron gate by tlie roadside and waited. Suddenly,
a shot rang out, shattering the stillness of the nicht._AILaLjinte---
we found that we were in no mood to be siiot at by banCits.
Separating we ran like deer, Kellmer for his chalet and I for
mine*’*S£vfe inside his hut, Ed nervously Ut a cigar and awaited devel
opments. They weren’t long in coiiiiug. Sor4»cv*hcrc outside-he heard
a loud jabbering in the native Spanish and Portuguese dialect. He
looked out of the window and saw a crowd of people and half a dozen
horsemen of the Guardia Civil grouped around Kellmer’s chalet. He
dashed over to see what was wrong and arrived just in time lo see
the native Doliceman dragging Kellmer forcibly from his chalet. Kell-
m w f a r E d . ‘W HE HOWLED, “TELL THESE NITWITS WHO
I AM. THEY WANT TO STRING ME U P!” ^Ed accosted the captain of the guard. What do you want wUh
this m an?” he asked. , ^ „ u n“Senor,” replied the captain, "we have caught the Becho.
Ed’s eyes opened wider. "Why that’s not the Becho,” he protested.
“That man is a guest at tiie hotell”
“Becho in a Black and White Skin.”
The captain shook his head. "Senor,” he said “the hotó watchman
positively sáw the Bocho at the gate in a black and white skiry Ho
fired a Bhot in the air, and the Becho ran into this chalet. He is
the only man in tlie__place, and if he is not the Becho, where did the
“ ®‘=Por‘‘T m om ent!^E d was puzzled. Then rememtie^ed
black-and-white striped bathrobe and started to laugli. , I LL SHOW YOU
THE ANIMAL SKIN THAT WATCHMAN SAW, he told tlie captain.
And he went in and got the robe. “Senor Kollmer was witii me, he
explained. “We were hunting the Beclio too, when the watchman saw
him and took ths bathrobe for an animal skin.Kellmer was released then, and the police i^de away with as
much pomjj and dignity as they could muster. And the next day,
Bays Ed, “I saw Kellmer coaxing a bonfire near ins ciialet and asked
him wh¿t he was doing. He said, ‘I’m burning that bathiobe-that s
all.’ ’’WNU Sorvlco. «
U. S. Naval Academy
The United States Naval Academy
is maintained to, train young men
to be officers in the Navy. After
four years of practical and theovet*
jcal seamanship, tactics and gun
nery, each graduate is made sn en
sign. An ensign in the Navy is
equivalent in rank to a Escond lieu
tenant Ln the Army.'
Lights at Sea
At sea at night a red light can be
recognized as a red light as far as it
can be seen, which is usually from
three to four times farther than a
green light appears green. On the
other hand, a groen light can be
seen, although its color cannot bo
distinguished, many times farther
iban a red light.—Collier’s Weekly.
OUR COMIC SECTION
Events in the Lives of Little Men
ßUMOÜ 14AS IT Ш ' 1 Й&- s T ß A N ö E R . Ы T o w n is
A S C O U T ■ F O liO M e 'C iF "
MAJofS- L&A&UE- B A SE EA LL C LO ßS
'AT'S LEM PêTKS tóP ЙЕ-s P o k e T o !
(ConyrfRlii. W. H. If.)
Ü Be To B i
■ Й е М Ш Г З Ö E E r- l
•SPD+^еЧ A B O U T "
HNNEY OF THE FORCE Ride and Wrong
THE FEATHERHEADS Some Choke
SAV, FELIX— HEREIs
A S v ^ e u L <sA<x Уай
-СЛг4 SPFîiNiS- о.м
V o /JR VUIFÊ’—
B-Z-Z-Z PTC A M D THEnîX / ^
, Vo/j SAV—'* \ WAS тие
F Ö H Y o nY o/i— Л , .^Д 5
S C H O O L .— A L L ТйЕ
Q IR L S USED» T b
S T A M P A M D Lo o k
A T M E \A/|TW
О Р Б Ы ;
T Ö R Y o tl
ÖUT M O o TUe r
CsiRL WAS So
ib o L lS M
Ü
Nature Is Painting
"IJ ^ H O can paint llko Natur«t
Can imagination boast,
Amid its grey creation, huei
like hers?
Or can. mix them with that
matchless skill,
And lose them 1» each other,
os appears
In every leaf that turns?
—J. Thomson.
Performance of Duty
C O NIGH is grandeur to our
^ dust.
So near is God to mon,
When duty whispers low. Thou
must.
The youth leplles, I can.
Range of Temperature
Cities in the United Stt-tes which
havo a great range of temperatura
are Boise, Idaho, which has re
corded a difference of as much as
149 degrees between Summer and
Winter extremes; Bismarck, N.
Dak., 153 degrees; Pierre, S. Dak.,
152 degrees; Yakutsk In Siberia
has recorded temperatures as high
as 102 degrees and as low as—82
degrees, and Verkhoyansk, 94 d»>'
grees and—90 degrees (in both
cases a range of 184 degrees).— Washington Star.
DO THIS When yoM
wake up with a
H eadache
EN JO Y RELIEF BEFORK
YOU'VE FINISHED DRESSING
Bayer Tablets
Dissolve Aitnost
Instantly
In 2 flMAililn 1»va goàuhiù IIAYEII ARplrIn lablot &(nr(8 Co Ulalntotfrnto nnd go Co work. Drup a Unyor Aspirin (oblot Into a Klasa of viator, 12,r llto Cimo 1C him Cito boU lorn of Cito aloas (t Ia dlalii(oi;riiCinit. WIinC lhappona tn Cliia glun« ■ • . ItBppous iu yottf •Comach.
When you wako up with a hoad-
By the time uou ve finished dress- ina, nine cliniiccs in ten, you’ll fed relief coming.Genuine Bayer Aspirin provides this quick relief bccaiise it is rated among tho guickcat methods for relief science has yot discovered.Try it this -way. But iiük für it hy ita full name, BAYER ASPIRIN; not by tiio namo “aspirin” alono.
15c РОЯA DOZEN
Virtually
le a tablet
LOOK гол ГНК BAYKH СЯ08Ш
Self-Love
Self-love leads men of narrow
minds to measure all mankind bjr
their own capacity.—Jane Porter.
TIME IS SHORT, BUT FOOD IS TASTY...
YOU EAT A LOT AND EAT IT HASTY...
IN CASE A CASE OF HEARTBURN COMES,
WE HOPE YOU’VE ВОТ YOUR ROU OF TUNSI
TO many cauBet for add tadl({e*«ool « Hasty eating. . . smoking . . . bev«' ages... rich foods... no wonder we tunm sudden, unexpected attacks of hcartburo, sour stomach or gas I But millions havs learned Jhe smart thing to do is csmart thing to do is cany TumsI These tasty mints ¿ve scientific relief so quickly I Contain no cannot owr-alkallro y ^ .
:horough relief ilarsh alkali ■ • • t________stomach. Release just enough an ta^ compound to corrcct stomach acidity . . , ' remainder passes HM-reieased from yoitf system. And they’re ao pleasant. . . like candy. So handy to carry in pockct or purse. 10c a roll at any diueatore—oc 3- rolls for 2Sc to the ECONO.MY PACK.
forthitum4^v_
W N U — 7
Wlntersmlth's Tonic
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PAOE .8 THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.Thuraday, October 22, 19RÍ5
SALE OF LANDS
NOKTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
TJntler and by virtue of au-
tJiority contained in the W ill of
Camilla H. Steeinian, deceased,
and a judgment in an action en
titled “Wachovia Bunk and Trust
Company, Executor vs. Berry R.
Steelman et al,” said will and
Baid-judgment being recorded in
the office of the Clerk of Super
ior Court of Forcyth County,
North Carolina, the Wachovia
Bank & Trust Company, in 'its
capacity as Executor, will sell
the following described tracts of
land at a public sale on Monday,
November 2, 193C, at 12:00
o’clock noon, at the Davio County
Courthouse at Mocksville, North
Carolina:
Lot No. 1:
Beginning at ail iron ¿take on
the East side, of United States
Highway No. GOl and being 21Go
feet North of the Intersection of
United States HU(.!i'>'a.v No. GOl
and the Cana Road and running
thence North G5 degrees East GOO
ie e fto an iron stalfo; thence
North 80 degrees East 2320 feet
to a stone; thence North 89 de
grees 45 rainute.s Efist 185.5 feet
to a branch; thenco at a North
easterly direction along said
branch 267 feet to cn iron stake
on the North side of a, road;
thence North 76 degrees 30
minutes West 1038 feet;
thence continuing .North G8 de
grees 15 minutes West 274 feet
to an iron stake on the South
side of said, road; thenco North
83 degrees 80 minutes West 2019
fee t‘to an iron stake; thence
South 4 degrees West 6G1
to an iron stake; thence South
22 ^degrees West 630 feet to un
iron stake on the East side of
United States Highway No. 601;
thence along the Fast side of
said Highway 35 degees 50 min
utes East 500 feet to an iron
•stake, the place of beginning con
taining 62.4G acres and being
known and described as Lot No.
1 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in the office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No. 2:
Beginning at an iron stake on
the .East side of United States
Highway No. GOl and being
i308.5 feet North of the intersec
tion of United States Highway
No. GOl and Cana Road and run
ning thence North 78 degrees 15
minutes East 2620 feet to a
“!(me; thenca North 6 degrees
East 671 feet to a stone, thence
We.st 133 feet to a branch;
thenco North 33 degrees East a-
long the branch 287 feet to an
aim; thence Soutli 89 degrees 45
minutes West 185.5 feet to a
stone; thenco South 80 degrees
West 2320 feet to an iron stake;
thence South 65 dcgree.s West
GOO feet to an iron stake on the
East side of United States High
way No. GOl; thence along the
East side of said IfijrlHvay 85G.G
feet to the placo of beginning,
containing 60,72 a(!rca, and being
known and described as Lot Noy;
2 in the division of the Holman
.Farm as shown on said map re
corded in tho office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
feet Lot No. 3:JJcginning at the intersection
degrees 31 minutes East 1009
i'iet to a stone; thence North 85
degrees 20 minutes West GGO feet
to an iron stake in the branch
the place ol ocgtnn'.ng, contain
ing 19.10 acres and being knowit
and described as Lot No, 5 in
the division of the Holman Farm
as shown on said map recorded
in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina,
Lot No. 6:
JACOB STKWART
Attorney at Law
Mocksville, N. C.
OnicB 111 Southern Bank A TrUil
Company building
Office phone.................................130
■НЯМаИЯИНМЕИаИЯИЕИЗИЯИНИ25ИВИаИНИИИИ1!ЗНИНИЯЯЕ1ИНИ31!!'ИИНИЯ
We wish to announce that our
COTTON GIN
!S NOW OPEN
EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK
We will pay highest market price.
Bring your cotton to us.
GREEN MILLING CO.
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
ИВИЕИЯИЯИйНЕНЯИЯИЯИЯИЯЫНИКМЯОаЯИЕИЯИККИИЯИЯМЕНЕИЯИЖСаВН
вивианяияняияиЕ1!зяиакина1!11амЕЯЯ1!353нн5вЕИ8сякияииийкгги»йвивatsM
H
яMsиЯ5HsиsHs
MH
11 f L I l
’Sf,»FEI!TIUZER8
HXиXMX
Try Rokemko For Grain 3-12-6
(In White Cotton Bags)
For Sale By
C.C. SANFORD SONS CO.
MOCKSVILLE. N. C.
COURTNEY CASH STORE
COURTNEY, N. C.
НижтеихквншшвивмвмЕтинжигмвишшвкпивмвиамшвмшзих
STURDY WORK SHOES
f % u á i M fS !
W HEN your daily duties take you
into all kinds of weather, you
need good, well made, all-leatlier
shoes to protect your feet and your
health, and you get that kind when
you select ‘‘Star Brands”... the shoes
that give you comfort, long
wear, and fine value.
Slyle U liiilra le d is p r im / a t
Star Brand
Shoes are
\Oetter
C. C, Sanford Sons Co.
•IMOCKSVILLE, N. C.
Beirinning at an iron stake,
which is North 85 degrees 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone, which is the Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P. Ы. Pierce, at a
branch and running North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 1551
feet to an iron stake; thence
Road the four following courses;
South 38 deurees 50 minutes-
West 484.5 feet. South 63 degr-ios
10 minutes West 488.8 feet, South
Tii degrees 20 minutei’. West 110.8
feet, South 88 degrees »5 minutes
West 526 feet to an iron stake,
the place of begin.-img, contain
ing 57,81 acres, ana being known
and described as Lot No, 4 in
the division of the Holman Farm
as shown on said map recorded
in the office of tho Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 5:
' Beginning nt an iron stake,
which is North 85 degrees' 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone; which ia the Northeast
corner of the Hoiman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P- M. Pierce, at.n
branch 925 feet to an elm; thence
South 71 degrees 10 minutea East
1165 feet to an iron stake; thence
along the property line of R. H.
Neely and 0. T. Boger North 5
way No. 601 and the Cana Rond
nnd running thencc North G de
grees Kaat 2293 feet to a stone;
thence Weat 133 feet to a branch;
thence along ^the branch North
33 degrees East 287 feet to an
elm.; thence South 71 degrees 10
minutes East 1165 feet to an iron
stake; thence South 5 degrees 41
minutes West alnn? the West
property lino of S. F. Hutchins
1418 feet to a atone- thence South
70 degreea 15 minutea East 176
feet to an iron atake on the weat
side of the' Cana Koad; thenco
along tho North aids of the Cana
of United States Highway No.
GOl and tho Cana Road and run
ning thence along the North side
of me Cana Road North 83 de
grees 25 minutes Eaat ’ 1225,2
feet; thence continuing along
tho North side of auid road North
88 degreea 55 minutes East 784
feet to an iron atake; thence
North G degrees East 1622 feet
to a stone; thence South 78 de
grees 15 minutes Weat 2620 feet
to an iron stake on the East aide
of United States Highway No.
GOl; thence along the Eaat side
of aaid road 1808.5 feet to the
place of beginning, containing
71.92 acres and being known and
deacrlbed as Lot No.' 3 in the
division of th Holman Farm aa
shown on aaid map recorded in
the office of the Register of
Deeda of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 4:
Beginning at an iron atake on
the North aide of the Cana Road
being 2009.2 feet East of the in-
ttraection of United States High-
South 3 degrees 36 minutes West
314 feet to an iron stake on the
south side of a road; thence
South 68 degrees 15 minutes
Ka.st 274 feet; thence continu
ing South 76 degrees 30 minutes
East 138 feet to a branch; thence
in a northeasterly direction along
said branch 622 feet to the place
of beginning, containing 14.34
acres and being known and des
cribed as Lot No. e in the divi
sion of the Holmijn Farm as
shown on said map recorded in
the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
The above described property
is known as the Holman Home
place. The sale of said proper
ty will be made upon a ha.sis of
one-third cash and the remaining
two-thirds to be paid December
1, 1937, said obligation to be se
cured uy a note and deed of trust
upon aaid premises. The pui’-
chaaer may negotiate with tho
seller for other terma. Lota will
be sold separately and in groupa.
'''’’is tho 29th day of September,
1936.
WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST
E.xeeutor
T. Spruill Thornto;i, Attorney,
10 1 5t.
Bargains!
Salt ............................................. 97c
100 lbs. S ug ar........................ $6.10
All 25c Baking Powder ....... 19c
8 lb. Carton Lard ................ $1.02
Pink Salmon ........................ He
5c pack Salt .............................. 3c
6c Matches ................................. 3c
5c School Tablets ...................... 3c
Standard Keiosene 11c per gal.
Fat Meat, pei 11).'.................... 15c
8 oz. Blue Bell Sanforize
Overalls ............................
Blue. Bell Overalls, pair ....... 97c
i'lcnty 65c Sheets .................... 48c
Plenty Dress Shirts, worlTi
75c now .................:.............. 48c
We havo plenty mon'b* clothing
All sizes from $5,95 to $17.75
Ladies Coats .... $5.75 to $10.50
Childrens Coats. $1.94 to $4.00
LET US DO YOUR JOH WORK —Wfci W lbb DO IT RIGHT.
ЯИНИШШШ»ИИМИЯИЯИИВ1ИЯ)!ШМИЙ«ШШИШ«11(1«ШИИИИШ1»1й|Я1СШИИМПв
CAMPBELL'W ALKER FUNERAL HOME |
AMBULANCE SERVICE • FUNERAL DIRECTORS |
PHONE 48 MOCKSVILLE, N. C. f
«ALL-KIMHROUGH
I-------
шшашвшшЁ Ш m
LET US DO YOUR .TOR W'ORK
-WE WILL DO IT RIGHT.
Sweaters ...........,.... 50cto $2,91
Dress I’riiits ................ 9c to 18c
Suitings ........................ to 3,c
Urepos ....................... 29e to G9c
Childrens Dresses .................. 59c
Ladies Dresses ....... 97c to $7.50
tllankets .................... Vuc to $1.89
Lames Hats ........... 97c to $1.49
\vo nave axes, regular price
$1.25, now ............................ 97c
Brooms ..................................... 23c
Horse Collars ............ Uic and up
We have plenty Bridles, Traces
Hames aiui nurness. Heaters
from $1.45 up.
1 Cook Stove Worth $25.00
Now $19.50
See us for anything you need,
\ye will save you money, as we
aell for caah and sell for less.
Plenty Children’s heavy Union
Suita ................................. 38c up
I handlo Red Goose and Wolver
ine Shoes, and can fit the whole
family. Theae shoes are guaran
teed to give satisfaction. Buy
now and aave money.
Yours for Bargains
J. TRANK HENDRIX
.-Vii'
Mocksville, N. C.
Stained giinncnts ,->nd bed clothc^
ruined by ¡>reasy, diseolorhig_
salves cost you ni#y times more tliiui the salve
self—Why not use
/
S c o H
T i e a t m e n l
Soollics m'st.1«)', Killi the liny mites ifftt butrow under Ihe skin .mil cause ihe ilchlng. Clean, quick, cheap and »lire. All drjig* guU—iO<
DRUG CO.
To Ease a
Headache Fast
G et lie al Quick-Acting,
Quick-Dissolving
Bayer Aspirin
See How
Genuine Bayer
Tablet sWork
In 2 Hocomlñ bf ntop watch, n it о n u i n a lUYGU AHpirIn inblot utnrte to diHlntourutu uml go 1» >v«rk. Drup n Itoycr Auplrin (nhfol in'* lu H ц1инн оГ wutor. Пу tho timo it hitH tho bottom оГ tiiü м1пны U íh (iiuintottratliiu. Wh»t happonH in thin KioMH . . . imppotw In your stomucii.
Virtually a Tablet Now
If you suffer from headaehcs what you want is quick relief.
Genuine Bnyor Aspirin Inblcls give quick relief, for ono reason, be- eiiuse they dissolve or disinlegrule nlmost inatanlly they touch moisture, (Nolo illustration abovd.)
Hence — when you take a rcnl Uayer Asnirin tablet it starts to dissolve ¡ilniost as quickly ns you .swallow it. And li’us is ready to
start working nlmost instnntly . . . licadnelics, neuralgia and neuritis piiins'slnrl easing almost al onco.
Tliat’.s why millions never ask for aspirin by the numo aspirin alone when they buy, but always siiy “BAYP:R ASPIhlN " and .see that they gel it.
Try it. You’ll say it’s murvelouri.
2 FULL DOZEN FOR A qUAnrER
LOOK FOR THE ал YEH CROSS
Mr. Cotton Farmer
We Are Now Prepared To Buy
Or Gin Your
Q -Y f " Q ~ r ; j
We Will Pay Highest Market Price.
Come to see US before YOU SELL
We Appreciate Your Business
Foster and Green
Near Sanford Motor Co.
.ииияс11ЯИЕ1!ЯВ1!аЕ!11НсаниЕ311Н11авив1го5вив;и®икиииг!!МЯ);1!ов;взнозя!;акняте
It’s Not Too Soon To Think Of
C O A L
W ith the thermometer bobbin;,? above 90 every day it takes
a lot of imagination to picture the way you are going to
feel nihout COAL October or November, hut a goodV
imagination will save you a substantial amaunt of your
next winter’s fuel bill if you buy NOW.
* Coal Will Be Much Higher
I HOME ICE UUEl CO,
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.sN
KiaMEMKcaKMascoKijasciisiiSSBaaDiisDiiriiiDiiasiiaaniiiiKcaiisDiiiSKissDflas&JEcaasMSiJcaEHajiiiflaM^iics
PltASOfit and PBOFil
R o w a n C o u n t y
F A I R
SALISBURY, N. G.
A ll Next W e e k __
II MEW THmil EVEHy p i
CHILDREN Admitted FREE to Grounds
Tuesday of Fair Week Until 4:30 P.-M.
20 Shows - WOHLD of MIRTH - 20 Rides ~
‘'LUCKY'' TETER and His Hell Drivers
Tuesday and Friday ,
HORSE RACES Wednesday, Thursday
SIZZLING AUTO RACES SATURDAY
lilORKS EVERY NIGHT
Dazzling Revue, “Revelations of 1936”
Straight From Broadway
10—THRILLING NOVELTY ACTS-10
$3,000 in Agricultural Premiums
6 - B IG D A Y S - 6
Under Same Management as , STATE FAllC
• ■ -4’ *•t.
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VOLUME 68
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
Congressman Lambeth
Addresses Voters Here
MOCKSVÏLLE, N. C ^ THURSDAY. TOBER 29, 1936 No. 49
Congressman J. Walter Lam
beth, of Thoniasville, Represen
tative from the Eighth Congrea-
aiional (District of Noi;th Caro
lina, made a fine address to a
good-sized audience at the Court
Uduse on last Thursday, night at
g o’clocli Knox Johnstone pre-
The Corner
Cupboard Column
___M ited by M. J. H.
■‘0 beautiful for patriot’s dream
That sees beyond the years.;
rited the Davie County candi- [ '^^ine alabastar cities gleam
dates on the Democratic ticket, Undimmed by human tears.
and Chairman _J. B. Cain intro
duced Congres.sman Lambeth. In
I) clear and logical manner the
able speaker set forth the issues
of the Democratic campaign. He
to'ik up the various points and
explained them in a convincing
Iind .satisfactory way. Mr. Lam
beth is a hard-working, cons
cientious member of the Lower
House, to which he wns elect
ed in 1931. He. is held in high
regard in Washington, and is
Chairman of the Committee on
Printing, and is also a member
of the Commdttee on iForeign
Affairs. He is deeply interested
in serving his district, state and
nation to the best of liis ability.
Wc urge the voters of Davie to
support this experien.ced young
leader in the cOn[iin'¿ ‘ejection.
Methodist Ministers
Return
America, America,
God shed His grace on thee.
And crow’n thine good with bro
therhood
From aea to ahinimg aea.”
in
Rev. E. J. Harbiaon, of the
Mdcksville-I-Iardison charge, and
Kev. M. G. Ervin, of the Davia
Circuit, have been re-appointed
to their pastorates by Bishop
Paul Kern, who presided over
the meeting ■'•■ of tho Woatorn
North Carolina., Conference,
'vliich convened in the Firat
Mcthodiat Church, Sijlisbury,
Oct. 22-20. The many friends
of these faithful ministers of
ilic Gospel are happy .to have
them return to our town and
uounty. ' They and their fami-
liLs have the assurance of a cor
dial welcome from their congre
gations, and other denomina
tions alao. Other appointments
i:f interest here are; Rev. J. M.
Barber, Cooleemee; Rev. H. C.
Freeman, Farmington Circuit;
and Rev. A. A. Lyerly, Advance
Circuit, all of these able minis
ters being well-known in Davie.
Kev. F. E. Howard, who did
fine work' on Advance Circuit,
haa been transferred;' to Battle
ground Road, Greensboro, bavie
Couty, after being in the Wins
ton-Salem District for over 35
years, has now become a part of
the Salisbury District. This
change is due to the Mount Airy
district being merged into the
Winaton-Salem District. We
wi.sh for all theae ministers and
their congregations a year of
success and growth.
■ —-------o ---------
H. C. Miller of Macon County
haa applied 12 tons of lime to
Ilia crop land thia fall and says
"110 ton is needed an acre to get
good stand of clover.
LETS tav<.e Time to fioorb
This our/
c!>>w
"The old ejfei't more by cuunsi'l climi
tlie yoiiiijj Jo by acfioii"
OCJOBER h 29-.Fjfsi siPflm tJjcFtihon, is launched, 1814.
2,600 couples wed In ItaN ii*” mnrringc fesiival, 1933.
'I'here is not only "music
the air,” but politics also, as
Election Day draws nearer and
nearer. The 193G North Caro
lina Democratic Handbook is on
our desk, and is a most interest-,
ing booklet. We beg the privi
lege of quoting several extracts
from It. An excerpt from a re
ccnt speech of the Hon. Clyde
R. Hoey, Democr.'itic Nominee
for Governor of North Carolina,
is as follows : ‘T am a Pemocrat.
I believe in the principles of the
Democratic ,Pasty. i 1 am proud
of its past record in state and
nation. Its’ accomplishments en
title it to the full commendation
of entire citizenship; its achieve-
menta merit a continued leaae o£
power; its service to the average
man nnd to the maases of our
people should endear it to all
lovers of justice and fair play.
The Democratic Purty has put
into practice the principles of
equal rights to all and special
airivikvea to none, Thia haa
boon tho fundamental baaia upon
which legialation haa been found
ed. It haa been just to every
claaa and fair to every interest.
It has noithor fawned before
wealth nor patrolnized poverty.
The philosophy of the Democra
tic Party might be put into thia
pimple aentence: Youth to learn
maturity to work and serve, old
age to be secure— and a juat
syatem of taxation for all.”
Mra. J. B. Spilman, Vice-
Chairman. Democratic State Exe
cutive Comm’ltee, makes this
statement; "The women of North
Qaralina took a moi’e active part
in the recent Democratic primar
ies than in any election since
^hey achieved suffrage. Tho rea
son: The New Deal, the human-
itarianism of the national and
state governments, aijd the liber
alism of the Demolratic candi
dates brought government closer
to women than over before. Wo
man rccogni.'îo the importance of
this campaign— that iirfnciples,
not methods, are before the peo
ple for decision. Theae princi-
plea ostabliahing a more genuine
IDemocracy are not separate from
thoae whom we choso aa atand-
ard-boarers. Integrity of mind,
warmth of heart, courage of lead
ership—these qualities are the
stuff of the New Deal, these are
the qualities of Franklin D.
Clemmons Man
Killed Suii. Night
Caiilyle Jc55se Miller, 80, a
night watchman of Reynolds To
bacco (Company, was fatally
shot on the Reynolda Road on
Sunday night, and died Monday,
in a Winston-Salem hospital
The mystery of the shooting has.
not been cleared up at present/
The deceased was the son of J.-
F. Miller and Julia'.Dozier Mil-i
ler, of near Clemmons, and is;
survived by his parents, his*
wife, Mrs. Helen Sofley Miller,,
a son, Herman, one brotheri
George Miller, of Forayth. a n ^
two aisters, Mrs. W. L. Deeae
and Miss Hilda Miller, of Clem
mons. The funeral was held at
Clemmons Baptist, Church on
Monday afternoon at 2 o’clock,f
with Rev. H. C. Freeman and-
Rev. Mr. Downs officiating. In-'
terment was at Clemmons. The
family formerly lived in D'avie
Pallbearers were Charles Scott,'
Fired Teah, .Ralph Dunn, How-;
ard Ryan, W. H. Bodenhamer
and Edward Ellis, The flowers
were in charge of Mesdames B,
J, Warner, W. G, Smith, C, 0,
Byerly, Charles Scott, Jessie
Sofley, Misses Maxey Sofley,
Mary Holder and Hazel Smith,
Mrs. Mary G. Foster
Dead
Mrs. Mary Granger Foater
highly eateemod Davio County
woman, and widow of the late
.)e.sse N. Foster, ’.Confederate
veteran, passed away at the
home of hr daughter, Mrs. Na
than Foater, on Oct. 21at, aged
8*1. She hajd been in her „usual
health until Monday, when ahe
suffered a stroke of paralysis.
Tho surviving family consists of
one bruther, 'Marlon Granger, of
Cooleemee, four daughters, Mra.
Marsh Butler,- оГ Salisbury,
Mrs. Preston Redmon, of Cleve-
Iniul. Mra. Nathan Foster, of
Mocksville, Mrs. John !D\vire, of
Salisbury, tw.o sons, ,ftev. D, ,L^
Foater, of»,. New Providence, la,.
Fred ^Foster,' of Spencer, and a
step-son, Jfesse Foster, of Salis
bury, 27 grandchildren and scv-
егй1‘ great-grandchildren. The
last rites were held at Concord
Methodist Church, of which the
deceaaed was a faithful member,
on Friday morning at 11 o’clock,
and interment waa in the church
cemetery. The service was in
Jiarge of the pastor. Rev, M. G.
Ervin, assisted by Rev, E, J.
Harbison, and Rev. A, C. Swaf
ford, of Salisbury. The pall
bearers were E. P. Foster, Mil
lard Foster, Kelly Foster, Eph-
¡■aim Rodmon, Jimmie Lineberg-
ur nnd A. A. Beam. The flow
ers v.'erc carricd by Misacs Sadie
Mao Foster, Frances Foater,
Ruth Foater. Rebecca Foster,
Ruth Butler, Mildred Butler,
Mesdames Myrtle Dixon, Cliff
White, Belle Legin, Eva Line-
berger, Fannie Be.am, Ollie
Stockton, Misses Blanche Lagle,
Sarah Foster, Rachel Legin,
Paulino Gibson, Margaret Gib-
Dr. Long Now In
His New Office
Dr, W. M. Long haa moved
his office from the second floor
of the Sanford building to the
first floor of the Southern Bank-
Building on the' aqu.are. The'
building haa been remodeled and
ia a modern, up-to-date office,
one of the best locations in town.
Dr. R. E. McAlpine
Speaks
Dr. R. E.. (McAlpine, Presby
terian missionary to Japan for
46 years, made a strong and
earnest appeal for foreign mis
sions, in a splendid addreas at
the Presbyterian Church on
Sunday morning. Dr, McAlpine
a a conaecrated minister, and
vent to Japan in 1885, being one
of the pioneer miaslonariea to
that country sent by the South
ern PHesbyterian Churchy ' His
knowledge and sympathy for, the
people of Japan made his ad
dress full of interest, and a
large congregation was present
at the service. Dr, McAlpine is
making his home in Winston-
Salem since his return from the
Orient, and preaches each Sun
day at the Elkin Presbyterian
Church, Mr, and Mra, John La
rew entertained ,Dr. McAlpine
at dinner on Sunday, another
guest being Miaa Sallie Hunter,
Mocksville Win Opener
By Score Of 12-6
Mocksvillo Hiigh School fnnt-
'bull team defonted the Liberty
elevon laat Thursday at Liberty
by thn acore'of 12-0.
Most acnsntional play of the
game waa made by "liat” George
Tutterow, playing R. H. B. .for
Moeksv.iJle, intercepting a Li
berty paas and ran GO yards for
a touchdown. The next Moeks-
ville touchdown waa made by
Joe Ferebee, playing Q. B. for
Mocksville. After making two
firat downs he took the pig skin
around left end for the touch
down.
Liberty’s score came during
the laat minute of the first
period. Liberty took the ball on
Moc^aville’s 45 yard line and
made consecutive downa through
Mocksville's line off left tackle
for a . gain of about 85 yards.
Then a pass over left ond, put
the ball across the goal line.
Halloween Carnival At
High School Fri. Night
Mrs. t. R. Hall Dead
Mrs. Jeffie Benson Hall, wife
of 'T, D. Hall, passed away at,
her home at Morehead City on
Oct, 25th, aged 24, She was the
daughter of F. K. Benson arid
Mra, Belle Thompaon Benaon
formerly of Rowan, now of
Mociksviille, Mrs. Hall was a
Halloween, Friday, Oct. 80.
Supper 5t30-7:00. Program at
7:00— Spooky, Time
, Fe, fi, fo, fum, I hear the wit
ches drum, Como one, come all
and. join the fun.
And of course, you couldn’t
resist, ! 'It’s annual carnival
night at dear oid Mocksville
High. Who can foiiget'them?
beloved young woman, and had T '
many friends here who ragret the ladio,
her early death. She ia surviv- , he country
ed by her parents, her husband. ««"‘»«ate is not
three small daughters, Anna
Belle, Margaret Jane and Edith
Lorene, ahd the following broth-
era and aistera; Thqmaa Benson,
John Green Benson, Harold Ben
son, Wallace Benson and Billy
Benson, Mrs. J, F, Naylor, of
this place, Mrs, W. H. McLamb,
of Salemburg, N. C., and Miss
Dorothy Benson. The Inst rites
were condiMcted at the Baptist
Church on Tuesday morning, by
the pastor, Rev. J. H. Fulghum,
'I’uesday, and engage in
an evening of wholesome frolic.
We’re expecting the wliole
family, even Tiny Tim, and have
planned entertainment to suit
the fancy of all, xt you don’t
believe it, Juat read the menu
below. If that doesn’t thorough
ly satisfy, take a look at the
program. Even that isn’t all.
ll It's spooks .and frights you
like, sec Mr. Whitley; if games,
consult Mlss Brown; if luck, see
Miss Farthing pr Miss Koon, In
assisted by Rev. W. H. Dodd. £.et there ia not anything Uok- The burial took place at. Rose ^
Cemetery. Those acting as pall- ^iss it
bearers were John Green Ben- ‘ '
W. P. A. INSTITUTE
S'FATE-WIDE SURVEY
OF 'HHE BU N D
The Stato W. P. A. has put
into operation in tho various
districts of the state, a Survey
for the Blind for North Caro
lina, .‘jponsored by the State
Commission for the Blind.
Federal funds in the sum of
$14.484.00 have been allotted
for the work in the atate. Dr,
Koma S, Citoek, Executive Se
cretary of the Commiaaion, is
aon, Leugenia Rodmon, a num-I tj’e Pi'-3,iect, and Mr.
Roosevelt nnd Clyde R. Hoey deceased. A quartet
the women’a choicea for Preai- composed of Mrs. D. L. Pardue,
dent nnd for Governor.” ^ ,r -vt
HUIlt 4-<LU^UlHa ivciuxiuii, ¿1 111(111 ■\xr{ 11 i« rt *n »
bei- of., these being «randdaugh-! J directing the field supervision and ta
bulation.
Mr.a. J, .F, Hawkins, Z, N. An-
■ , ■ derson and C, B. Mooney, sang
Let ua alao refresh your minds | Finn a foundation,’ and
with Governor Ehrinighaua’ in- »Nenrei. „ly God to Thee.”
31—Nebraska is 36ih state to admitted lo the Union. X-3JL. 1805.NOVEMBERl—Postal money orders au* , thorized by Coneress.1864.
2—Daniel Boone, famed pio« neer and Indian fighter, born. 1754.
3—Revolutionary Army is disbanded by Washin«tv-n. 17E3.
*\«i—Abraham Lincoln if. cicit- ed 10 the Illinois LcBisla« ture, 1B34.
troduction of President Roose
velt nt the Green Pastures Ually
in Charlotte: “Voicing, as I know
I do, their unbounded'admiration
and affection, I present to a
grnteful nnd a gracious people,
tho Gideon of Democracy, who
worthily wenra its shield and
buckle;- and valiantly wields the
shining sword of its consocrnted
service— our Leader, our Cap-
tnin-Courageoua, our present and
our next President.”
Of course, denr readers, we are
hoping you will vote for all the
other worthy Democratic candi-
datea, national, state nnd coun
ty, as well na for the two splen
did statesmen that we have men-
tioned: ROOSEVELT AND
HOEY,
IT WOULD TAKE
MII-I-TOiNS TO BUY 1‘DIZ”
Delaware, Ohio, — The St,
Louis Cardinals are willing to
let their nee moundsmnn, "Diz
zy” Dean go to some other Na
tional .League dub, but there
definitely is not a cash price tag
on the ataivBranch Rickey, igen-
cral maniiger of the Cards, said
here today,
“It is true that for the firat
time we will conaider letting feasional Projects,
Dean go, but strictly on a cash
ba.sis 1500,000 wouldn't buy him.
In fnct, the only kind of cash
tran.?action that could involve
‘Dizzy’ would be one whereby
our franchise would be sold,”
The study itself will assemble
in unit form all records which
are filed with the public and
private agents within ihe coun
ty of persons with defective
sight; From these recorda fu
ture follow up work may be con
tinued by rehabilitation workers
for the Commission of the Blind,
The project has gotten under
way in District Six in the past
two weeks, and ia making rapid
progreaa. Mra. T, P, Apperson,
Jr,, of 8:^4 Jeraoy Avenue, Win
aton-Salem, N, C,, ia directing
the work in District Six, This
project falls under the aupervi-
aion of the Women’a and Pro-
aon, Burnett W;l'lhelm, Johnny
Gobble, Wadell Gobble, Doris
llall and Glenn Jarvia, and the
flower-girla were ' Mesdames F,
W, Cozart, Hubert Eaton, R, M.
Chaflin, J, B. Shumaker, F, G.
Seders, Rtith Tutterow, Ray
Smith. Waddell Gobble, Graham
Gobble, Barney Benson, F. G.
Keller, MiasfiH.' Mary Alice Jar
vis, Katherinü Jarvis, Blanche
Keller and Margaret Foster,
Rowan County Fair
Drawing Large Crowds
Judging by tho crowds in at
tendance, aa well aa by the
^m'ilea on the faces of both viait-
ora and operatora, of the Rowan
County Fair this year is the tops
of them all. Shows and rides
are furnished by the World of
Mirth Shows, numbering twenty
shows, and twenty ridea, includ
ing three Ferria Wheela, and la
being acknowledged by all to be
one of the cleanest and moat
meritorius collèction of shows
and rides ever exhibited in Ro
wan County,
'fhe liberal offers made for
agricultural exhibits h a s
brouïïht out a large, yarled,
and intensely interesting col
lection of exhibits, the races are
thrillers from the starting gun
to the finish flag, . and the
gmndstand attractions are of
the firat magnitude. Lucky
Teeter and hia Hell Drivers, by
popular demand, are playing the
Fair again today, giving perfor
mances both day and night. To
day, up till G p. m. all school
children of Rowan and adjoining
counties will ,be admitted ¡free
to the main , gate, when accom
panied by their parents, or in
groupa acqompanied by their
teacher. Profeaaional auto racea
will be the main attraction on
Saturday, featuring some of the
uest dirt track drivers in ■ the
co.untry,‘ and practically all pf
the drivers who raced at the
Greensboro Fair, witnessed last
Saturday by over 16,000 peopje.
Featured among the grandstand
attractions both Friday and Sat
urday night ia the big New
Review "Revelationa of 193G”
which waa a feature attraction
at the N. C. Stale Fair. Today
and tomorrow are the- last two
days of the Rowan Fair, so if
you havo not yet visited the
fair, do so now, ■
Chickeji salad, pimento Sand
wiches, olive sandwiches, devil
ed cggc, stuffed celery, pickles,
chess pio or cake, cojffee or
cocoa or Baked ham, potato
salad, pimento sandwich, olive
sandwich, deviled egga, stuffed
celery, picklcs, choss pie or citku
coffee or cocoa, 85c plate.
Miscellaneous; Ham’ saud-
wiches, 'Pimento Saad.wicbeii.
OBlv& Sandwiches, €ak)e, Che';,'i
Pie and Homemade candy,
Tho program for .tho ILUlo-
ween Carnival thi.s 'year will be"
something entirely new.' Many
very fine amateur artiata from
town and school havo consented
to proaent us with a major
Bowes’ Hour, We of the school
appreciate their help, ,and we
know our audience will enjoy
their program. In addition to
thia. the toy orchestra from tho
Grammar School will play and
sing several numbera. The pro-
!iram will begin at 7 ;00 p, m.
Come eai;ly so aa not to miss the
toy orcliestra which appears
first. :111. I
In»tructions To The Registrars
Of The Various Voting Pre.
cincta Of Davie County•;-W|,r,,,.. -------^
Under the ntw local law of
Davie County, we are not per
mitted to have any official mar-
!<era. If any voters deairea aa-
aiatancc in preparing' his or her
ballot he or ahe may call upon
the regiatrar or either of tho
judges for wUch asai.stance. Any
voter may bo. accompanied in
the voting booth and assisted in
marking ballota by any members
of his or her Immediate house
hold. • > . '
(No clerk or other election ot-
ficiiill exaept rogiatnaf and
judges aro allowed to mark bal- ,
lots.) ii*» '
Any voter who may appear at
,che door,of the polling place but
on account of physical disabili
ty is unable to enter polling ■
place and voting booth, to vote:
may he voted outside polling
place by the registrar and
judges.
WAGES RAISE!)
FARMERS PAY LOANS
There are thirteen (18) field
---— —
Chicago., :— Wage increases
crrantcd thou.>;anda of plant om«
ployees of the big meat, packing
concerns were expected today to
affect ultimately 100,000 work-
evu in the induatry.
I The four biig Chicago’ packing
|concerna, Swift, Armour, Cud-
lahy and Wilaon yesterday an
nounced a 7 per cent increase ,in
plant workers’ pay, effective
next Monday.
Raleigh.— North Carolina far
mers have paid ?400,000 this fall
on loans advanced them through
federal agencies last spring for
t.ne financing of their crop« nnd
regional resettlement adminis-
workera, one in each county, in ; tration officials aaid many far-
thia district who are endeavor-¡mers had paid their debts in ' night, Oct. 31. Oysters, chick
ing to do a . thovnugh piece of full, although most cf the loans en, hot dogs, hambciigcrs and
work for tho \V. P, A. and for were not due for between two < drinks. Come and bring tho
the state, , and five years. family or your friend.
Don’t forget tho Philathea
Class of Liberty Church aro
spoiiaol'ing a suppoi* HalIowfìRn
I
r'i-
■l.
- У '
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' iu, ,1' ! »'Ч * ji' t.
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THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. Mocksville. N. C.. Thursday, October 29, 1936
Irvin s. Cobb
2 L = - = _ = a b o u t :
Campaign’s Home Stretoli.
BE V E R L Y H ILLS, CALIF.
— Here the campaign is prac
tically on its last legs, when it
isn’t standing on its head and
spinning around— but yet not a
peep out of the three fairest-
haired young hopes of the New
Deal.
They’re still putting on an act— ivhat’s known in vaudeville as a
dumb act—entitled “The Bollo Boys
in a Sub-Cellar."
Horrid tales abound. 'Tis rumored that tho gurgling sound coming
from the W h ite
House dungeon is
caused by Tugweli
trying to get the
gag out oi his mouth
with both hands tied
behind his b a c k.
And a note believed
to have been written by Harry Hopkins
has been slipped
through the bars begging somebody to smuggle in a file in a loaf of bread, pichberg, once the merriest of the administration’s songsters, doesn’t chirp any more, having been induced to take on the role of the man
in the iron nias'k.
Remotc-Control Patriotism.
DII> you ever notice that these
impassioned European states-
'men, who so boldly defy tyrants in
the homeland, generally put two or three national boundaries between
themselves and the objects of their hate before cutting loose? One flery anti-fasoist waited until he got to Hoboken to tell Mussolini right to his face—thé face being only 5,000 miles d istan te x actly what he thought ,of him.-. i . ■ >
Not that I’d blame.any Ratriot for
playing safety first, dicAators .being ,'so sensitive to criticism. In fact,.! like the idea so much. I’m thinking of taking' a correspondence
course in lion-taming, myself.
♦ . •
Debunking Politics,
CAN nothing be done to stop tho
destructive utterances of this
man, Al Smith? Think of him, as ho did in that Philadelphia speech of his, urging the voters to sift the bunk out of the campaign and study the facts. Does he want- to deflate tho whole system of American politics? Would you hire a cook who squeezed all the meat out ot tho
sausage and fried the sausage skin lor breakfast?
Even so, maybe a little debunking would be gratifying to quite a lot of us who wlsli to start concentrating on football as soon as possible. I’m especially interested in
how Yale comes out on its clever little idea of selling to a commercial broadcast the radio rights for
all games played on tho home
grounds. But tho fellow who gets
the empty-botties concession is the
one who’ll really clean up.
• • •
"Lead Dollar’s”, Immortallly.HOW some old friends do hang on!
Twenty-five years ago or there
abouts, it appeared as a short story in Everybody’s magazine under the title, "The Load Dollar,’’
Twenty years ago, believing I
was using an actual occurrence which never before had been Actionized, I wrote it. too, and callcd it "Heart of Lead," and, barely ih time, was saved by Bob Davis and Charlie Van Loan from the unintentional but nonetheless serious literary crime of plagiarism.
Fifteen years ago, Octavus Roy Cohen and I just did liead off a young girl writer who already had sold the same tale to a pleased editor. I forget now wlmt ahe called
her version.
Today, practically complete in all
its sequences—poker game, bogus
money, practical jokes, good Sa
maritan, homeless girl, skeptical hotel clerk, pitiable suicide and all
—I find this dear old familiar stand
by in the current issue of a popular monthly with yet another author
sponsoring it.* • . •
Jack Garner’s Activities.
MONTH after month. Uncle Jack
Garner never said anything
but "Ouch!" and then not for pub
lication. It seemed that, if defeated, he would go back from the com
parative obscurity of Washington to the blazing prominence of Uvalde county, Texas, as the most finished specimen of sound-proof nominee American politics ever produced. But he’s no longbr a perfect example to all innocent bystanders—he’s just a candidate.
Having read his first speech. I’m reminded of the Bnglish gentlewoman who fell on hard times but did have a few iayin’ hens left and was ilriven by necessity lo peddle their product in the open street.
So she picked out a back alley- lor her debut inco vulgar trade, und,- as she crept stealthily along, whispered in u stricken undertone;
"ITresh eggs, tuppence. I hope
no one sees me. Fresh eggs, tuppence. I hope no one hears me,"
litVlN S. CUlSt!,(£>—WNll tifivici-.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News ss
1—His Eminence Eugenio, Cardinal Pacelli, papal secretary ot state, who is visiting in the United States. 2—London bobbles quell anti-fascist riots in the British capital’s east end. 3—Chancellor Kurt Schusnigg of
Austria, who has become the newest dictator in Europe.
VENUS M O D E L
Genevieve Grunt of Chicago,
called the “perfect model" ic shov/n
being measured. Miss Grant was
chosen from among 140 girls who
wero regarded as ‘‘almost perfect.”
Rotaiy Elevated Airport in Model
A model of a rotary elevated airport, designed by Captain Chui'les Frobisher was exhibited at the Inventions Expc.-iition held recently in
Central hall, London, England. Ono of the big advantages claimed for
the rotary airport is that it can be turned in the direction the wind is
blowing, thus facilitating the take-oil and landing of planes.
New Machine Speeds Beet Digging L E A G U E PR E SID EN T
Pictured at his desk in his GenevaOf almost human ability at "topping" and digging sugar beets is the recent invention of John Devey, Jr., of Glendale, Calif., shown here with his device. Weighing 3,000 poimds, 4,he machine in one operation oflloe is Mr. Saavedra Lamas of
slices the tops from tho beets, and digs them from the ground 60 times Argentina, who recently was named
as fast as the average worker. , president of tho league a.ssembly.
Family Dancing Team Saves Home
The lliO-acro farm ot Henry Spies, located a mile and a half from Massena, Iowa, like many other mid-
wt’slern farms, was plagued witli the drouth as well ds a mortgage, and things looked pretty gloomy until nil idea dawned on the family. Organizing a dancing team, consisting of their six daughters who still lived they tti "ei vmious coui'ty fairs, earning $50 a day .
--------IM PROVED
U N IFO RM INTERNATIONAL
S U N D A Y ICHOOL Lesson
liy IIRV. ИЛПОЬП L. bUNDQUIST,Doan of Iho Moody Utblo Inntltuie of СЫспко,С) Western Ncwflpapor Union.
Lesson for November 1
LAW, LOVE, AND TEMPERANCE(International Tcmpcrance Suncloy)
LESSON TEXT—nomans 13:1-14.GOLDEN TEXT—It Is l!ood neither to cat (losb, nor to drink wine, nor ony- thing whereby thy brother stumbleth. Rom. 14:21.PKIMARV TOPIC—Why We Keep Rules.JUNIOR TOPIC—Junior CUlzeno.INTERMEniATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —What Shall We Do About DrlnltlnR?YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Law, Love, and Tcrnpernnce.
Revolution, political disorder, anarchy—those are words which characterize rnuch of the world’s nows of our day. What should be our altitude toward government? Should
a Christian participate in revolts
against government? Those aro
questions that stir the hearts ot
men.The Bible has an answer, and it is found in our lesson for today. Let us study it with care and seelc
God’s message tor us and for our
nation in these utterly confusing
days.We consider together a portion
of Paul’s epistle to the Romans in wliich, having laid his superb doctrinal foundation, he turns to a
praotical application. Let us ever remember that while right doctrine
is necessary to right living, it is
never suillcient to hold the doctrine and tall to permit it to control our daily walk.
Good citizenship ot tiie tru,e type
is the result of staunch Christian
character. Much of the weakness
in our political and social life can be traced to the neglect of the
things ot God in the home, the schoQl, and -,the church.Paul presents the Christian as
ane who has the right attitude to
ward his neighbors, and toward hln own daily walk. The Christian is
I. Polltlcally-IntelliRent and Loy.
■al (vv. 1-7).
• Lectures on political cconomy are well worth while. School children should leurn to love und honor their
Dountry. But, for real intelligent
citizenship we must havo a study
of God’s Word. For , all govern
mental authority is dependent on a God-given power. No man has any right to lule over any other man except as God delegates that
right to him.
No “divine right of .kings" is justi
fied by this passage, but clearly il
does teach that government is or-
'lained ot God and functions by his providence. To resist such author
ity is to resist God.Must we always obey the govern
ment? Yes; until it commands us
to do that which is clearly contrary
to the laws ot God. We do not
resist or question the authority ot any propcrly~5"appointcd govern
mental agency, no matter how weak, or even wicked the agent
may be, as long as he acts as
"a minister of God . . . for good."
Any government is better than an
archy. But no government has the right to command any man to dis
obey God.In our land we have a powerful agency for the correction ot govern
mental weakness and error — the
ballot box. Let every Christina use
it discreetly and in the tear of
God.Before leaving the passage, note
that the Christian does not dodge, “fix," or leave unpaid the taxes which support the government un
der whose benefits he lives and
works. There is too much dishon
esty at this point, and we need lo
correct it.
II. Socially - Ilonest and Loving
(vv. 8-10).
“Love thy neighbor as thyself" and there will be no social dis
honesty, strife, ^nd ill-will. Re
member tha lesson of last week on love— Corintiana 13.
III. Personally-Clcan and Spirit
ual (vv. H-14).
The time when our redemption is to be fully completed—that is, when
the Lord himself returns — is al
hand. We therefore will not live
as those who walk in darkness, bul
as children of the light, clean in
life and thought. Wo will “put oi)
the Lord Jesus Christ."
In these days when almost every wayside store and hundreds of thou, sands of city buildings have been converted into drinking places faj) worse than the old-time saloon,
when men and women aro mak
ing drunken sots of themselves,
it is indeed time for Christians to raise their voices in protest and to act to protect the boys and girls of America.
But above all—let us win them to Christ, for it they "put on Christ"
they will “make no provision foi the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof.’’
Rcspcct for ParentsHonor your parents in youp hearts; bear them not only nwc and respect, but kindness and af- foction; lovo their persons, and
fear to dn anything that may just
ly provoke them.—Rev. W. Crad- ock.
Good Neighbors It is a small thing to a man whether nr not his neighbor ba
merciful lo him; it is life or death
to him whether or not he be meix'i-
ful to his neighbor.
Gntpefrult JcIIy iiini}
V/a cupfuls grapefruit juioj
,% cupful orange juice.
V* cupful lemon juico.
2% tablespoonfuls gelatin (»J erous measure). ‘ *
1% cupfuls sugar., % cupful cold water.1 cupful hot water.
Soak gelatin in cold water frJ
minutes. Boil sugar and hot watj
three minutes, or until dear; pffj over the soaked gelatin and li? until dissolved. Let r-ool, then aZ
fruit juice, a iev/ grains of salt a j pour into Bing. Set aside in co
place for several hours to hardei CopyrlBht.—WNU Sol vlco.
Beard in Bag
The longest beard in JapjJ
where the old gentlemen makj I specialty of lengthy facial nnen is owned by a Mr. Kato.
thirty years' he has succeeded 1
producitig one that, bccause
drags on the ground, has to I carried around in a bag.—ColUit' Weekly.
Beware Cough
from common colds
That Hang On
Iio matlBr how many incdlclnft you havo tried for your cough, chtsl cold or bronchial irritation, you cam get rollof now with OrGomiilsloa Serious troublo moy bo brewing atil you cannot; afiford to take a clian« with anything less than Crcomul.i fiion, which goes right to tho seal' of tho troublo to aid nature to' soothe and heal tho inflamed mcra.' br«nos as tho germ-laden plilego la loosened and expelled..Even If other remedies liavi failed, don’t Bo dlscouraKcd. voat druggist Is authorized to Bunra'ntea Oreomulston and to refund youi money If you aro not; satlstled vrlth results from the very llrst bottls, Get Oreomulslon right nov/. (AdvJ
fVliistling InterpretedWhistling ia as ofton a rcllel ti tho fidgets as It is an expression о cheeriness.
SOOTHES BURN$Pure and inow-wUte, Moroline applltil u a druaing for burnì protect) and loothii The 10c alte contain! 3^ times a< much u
the 5c elze, Try It today. Demand Moroltw
MOROLINE■ T i SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JElli
Self PityOne who says, "I am misunde^ Blood," is usually out ot a job.
Miss
REE LEEFsays:
CAPUDINE
relieves
HEADACHE
quicker because
it’s liquid...
altecuiÿ dUiotved
Study Them
Good pictures reveal
pected beauty and truth.
When HEADACHE
It Dud To CoiuUpation
Often one of the flrst-felt elTectt of constipation Is a headache. Tsk* a doso or two of purely vceetibll
Black-Draught I ^ThBt’B the Benslblo way—icllM*
tbe eociBtlpatlon. Enjoy tlie refresli'
tue relief which thousands of pcopl*
have reported from tbe use of niact I>raught Sold In 25 cent pacltagei.
BLACK-DRAUCHI
A GOOD LAXATIVE
3Ó0 Kitchenetti
Apartments
200 Hotel Room}
RATES
* 2
50
AND UP
At the Edge of the Gold Coast
• Walking dlstanco to tlia loop
ond thoQtrical district ond yoyjj' enough ftwoy for qulafc conifoii
Gymnaiium and Hand Ball Court Frooto Our GueUt . Ampla Pariclrtfi Spoc« Modern Gftlt Opoo 24 Hours Dally
Wo Wo/como tho Out o.' T» vn Oneii
The
Corner Uu»h nnd Ontnrlo Strcett
CHICAGOWALTEJl O, RIDDLB Manaúor TttpyhontVefawar*
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE, Mockaviilc, N. C., Thursday, Octobcr 29, 1936
Vvw , ЧЦ Л-.:..., Л.|
Finish Repairs
on White House
Mansion Put Into
First Class Shape;
Main Attraction
for Sightseers
By EARL GODWIN
W ASHINGTON, D. C.— .Sqv- ■ ernl months ago President Roosevelt determined that
no matter who lived in the
, White House tor the next four, years
ho was going to see lo il that the
old mansion was put into flrst class
shape, and just about now the paint
ers, electricians and carpenters are
leaving a repair job that has taken
them all summer and part of the
fall. Most of this wrork his been
dono under the Works Progress administration — a sort df nuhiber
one job that should have been attempted long ago. However, most presidents h a v o f e lt that they should not spend any more of the public money than absolutely necessary on the upkeep and repair of the White House. In taking this attitude, though, they have let the old house run down in several respects and it has required more
than a liundred thousand dollars to
remove fire hazards and strengthen
the construction, and bring it up to date. '
The Presidents and their families
havo lived in the upper floors oi the "White House proper"; and thq
President wilh his secretaries and
clerks have done their work (since
the Theodore Roosevelt administra
tion) in the wing of the house which
Is known as the executive offices. The lower floors of tho White House
contain several formal rooms, such as tho historic East Roorn, the Blue Room, and the Slate Dining Room. In the mornings the general public is admitted to these lower rooms and there is not a day, except Sun
day, that several hundred sight
seers are not ushered through. The White House remains one of the
most interesting spots in Washing
ton; and some days as many as
five thousand peopln ate shown
through the rooms. Meantime, the
Presidents and their families ro main in more or less seclusion up
stairs. It always seemed to me
to be a tremendous intrusion on
thoir privacy — but tho historic
value of o trip to the Wliite House is to be considered.• • «
COPIED IRISH IVIAWSION.Tho White House was designed by an Irishman who took flrst prize
in a contest nearly a century and a half ago, who modeled the building after Hie Irish mansion of a
well-known Irish peer, the Duke of Leinster. The front door ot the
■VVliite House is now on tho north
side facing Pennsylvania avenue,
but when John Adams moved in
during the year 1800, tho south ifront
was the main entrance. The south
side faced tho Potomac river, and
Pennsylvania avenue th e n ran through the White House backyard. The river, loo, then ran within a'
hundred yards or so of the front door, and President Monroe used to trot down tho lawn and take a swim, but in the passing years of a ccntury the coursc of the Potomac has been changed both naturally and artificially, and the Potomac
river is now nearly a mile south. The mound on which tho Washing
ton monument stands was once sur
rounded by water. Now a vast ex
tent ot parks and athletic grounds
spreads out soutii of the executive
mansion, nnd on this land some day I believe a fine memorial to
'i'homas Jefferson will be erected.In the passing of time, too, by a
peculiar oversight, the corner stone of the White House has been lost sight of. If there sver was a formal dedication ot the laying of the While House corner stone the records have been mi.slaid, Today there is a dispute ns to where tha stone actually is. Some ot the While House historians claim itl is the second stone from tho bottom on the northeast
corner. That’s where the architects "’ho did some remodeling thirty
years ago believed it was placed,
but otlicrs claim that the corner
stono would have been placed on
a front corner — which would place
it cither on the southeast or south
west corner, as that side was con
sidered the front when the house
was built.♦ * ♦
THE LINCOLN STUDY.On the second floor of the man
sion is the room called “The Lincoln
Study." President Hoover took
Efcat interest in restoring that room
and placing in it furniture h-'lieved
to Iinve been used in tlie Lincoln
®fa, arranging it as neaii;. uJ pos
sible like it was in the Lincoln days.
And yet, when President Roosevelt
»loved in his large family it be-
cnmo npcessary to take the old
felics out and turn the study back into a bedroom. 'Varioud changes
•jave to be made by every Presi
dent. For instance, there ia an old Wlliiird table down in the basement which is a mule relic of the day
wiipn Mrs. Lucy Webb Hayes, wife “f President Hayes, believed that
a billiard table was an adjunct
tho saloon — and had it taken’ ’J'Vay Irom the library wliero Prosi-
jlcht Grant iiad placed il. The bil-
liard table is now among tiio reKcs,
j*‘shus and silver, tourists see. Near
is a full length portrait of Mrs. “oyos, presented to the White
House by the National W. C. T. U.
whose president was then the fa
mous Prances Willard. At the time
of tlie presontation it was stated
№at the portrait would hang In the East Room _ but if it ever was nung there no ono now recalls it
and the only portraits in that fa
Georgeand Martha Washington. Mrs Hayes was a member oi the W. C
ti' or >><JUorm the While House while President Hayes was in office.4i « •
RATS CHASED OUT.
“nd formerPiesident Hoover together are re- sponsible for bringing the home and the office sections of the oxsculive mansion into iull efficiency. Once upon a lime the living quarters were
'^°wn that a man known aa the government rat catcher" took
” J u weasels into the cellar and chased out several hundred big gray rodents. That was in Theo
dore Roosevelt’s time and Teddy himself . went down ', to the cellar aiid watched the performance. Electrical appliances began to find their way into the While House in tho
r^°osevelt. era and part ol me job that had’ lo be done under
Franldin Roosevelt was to tear out all the walls and floors at the in
sistence of the fire underwriters,
a^nd pul in new wiring. The present
Roosevelts put in an electric kitchen where you can cook either a fried egg or a banquet for several hundred people. There are now elec-
tne elevators in the living quartera and the office.
BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS.Tho While House grounds covei
seventeen acres on which a flna carpet of lawn is kept in shape by a corps of gardeners under a head
man named "Bill" Reeve, said to
know more about grass than anyone else in the city. There art
some flne old trees on that seven- teen acres, some of them planted before the house was built. Other trees have been planted by varioui Presidents, but there is no accurata record ot who sponsored most of the trees. One rare acacia tree which stands right in front of the executive offices and whose woa derful blooms attract humming birds all summer long was planted by President Arthur.
During the Wilson administration a flock of sheep grazed on the south grounds. They werjs g iv e n to "Dick" Probert, then the cor. respondent of one of the press aS' socialions, now vice president of tho C. and O. railroad. The White
House dogs used to chase the sheep,
so Mr. Probert fell heir to his gift
'as a humane act. Al some time or
other in every administration there
are a lot of dogs around; and during Franklin Roosevelt’s time there
have been two splendid Irish setters
in the south grounds some of tho time. They have no sheep to chase; but they plague the hundred or more
gray squirrels which live in luxury in Ihoso big trees, largely fed by
tourists’ peanuts supplemented by peanuts grown on the historic Wakefield estate, birthplace ot George Washington, located a b o u t fifty
miles southeast of tho capital city. Most recent acquisition in tho White
House ground's is a family ot quail.
A pair ot those litlle brown game
birds built a nest close to one cor
ner ot the house and hatched out
eleven young ones.
HOUSEHOLD STAFF.
Few people realize that tiie stall of assistants at the While House remains as Presidents come and go. Only tho Presidents’ immediate secretaries aro appointed by him and leave with him. Even were there no President, the While House ofllcc machinery would move along silently and perfectly under the di rectlon ot the famous Rudolph Forster, whose title is executive
clerk—but who is really tho first sergeant of the White House clerical
staff. His immediate assistant, or possibly the word "colleague" would be better, is Maurice Latta, ono
of whose duties is to carry to congress whatever messages and documents are required lo be laid on
the desk of the senate or house — when’ the President himself does
not take them in person. T ha
smoothness with which the business of the White House is conducted
is due to the silent efficiency ot these two topnotchors, who have each been there for forty years. "Rudy" Forster as we icnow him, was a small time clerk in the first days of his career at the White House, and one of his duties then was to insaribe with pen and ink,
laboriously and with unceasing care, the President’s messages to congress. Typewriters were common
then, too, but congress said that the Constitution prescribed that the President should send communica-i tions "in writing," and that typed documents were not "writing." It was only in Theodore Roosevelt’s time congress finally broke down and permitted the use of typewrit,
ing machines) Western NewBpnpcr Union.
Wind Affects Telegraph
Standing near a telephone line in
the open and hearing its singing vi
brations, you may have wondered
whetlier they could be heard in tho
telephone receiver, says Popular Mechanics. Tlie “singing" is mechanical, caused by wind; telephone transmission is electrical. "Yet labor
atory tests now show that wind actually can disturb telephone users by vuryina the circular magncll.-.m in the wires and setting up electrical
vibrations.
Satin-Clad Brides Go Victorian
Dv CHERIE NICHOLAS
'T'HE Importance of period fash- Ions for evening this year means
that they will be refleclGd in the gowns worn at many smart autumn and winter weddings. There is a
quainlness about the early 'Victorian fashions that especially offers alluring possibilities to brides who would have a “picture" wedding scene. "
'iToung brides with slender figures
can wear becomingly these demure
gowns of 'Victorian inspiration in silk talTeta or heavy slipper satin,.
The lovely gown pictured creates
romance and poetry for the modern
wedding scene. This 1930 version
of a 'Victorian wedding gown is in
terpreted in traditional ermine-white
pure silk satin. The basque buttons
quaintly down the back. The full sleeves give the broad shoulder effect that accents, by way of contrast, the slender girlish waistline. The bride carries a prayer book v.’ilh gardenias.
, Of course one’s bridal parly must
carry out the idea so the flower
girl has a period look in a 'Victorian
cream silk taffeta princess dress that is .'./ired to flt at the waistline with a widely spreading skirt which,
by the way, stresses the now length for little girls party dresses this
season. This woe maiden ties a lavender, silk ribbon in her hair and carries a houquet of purple asters and cream colored gladioli with a
silk tulle frill.Tho bridesmaid befittingly wears a cream silk satin 'Victorian gown. The full sleeve, slender line and back fullness are important style details that present-day designers are definitely introducing in their new
est creations. A demure little brown
silk net bonnet adds to the quaint
ness of the costume. The flowera
she carries are purple and cream asters.
If one prefer that the attendants dress colorfully rather than keep strictly to cream satin, they may wear pert gowns in autumn hues
of peau de sole or silk taffeta with
pun sleeves and full skirts. As
quaint and as “period" looking as if
sho had stepped from the fashion
pages of a Godey appears a brides
maid who is gowned in a frbck of
lavender silk taffeta with a tiny wine-colored silk velvet hat surmounted with three hyacinth blue ostrich tips. An armful of purple, rich red and cream asters adds to the color glory ot the picture.
One thing is certain, whether she
is a classic bride in traditional satin
or in soft clinging fabrics, or a
bride In quaint frock of Victorian or directoire inspiration, she will be dressed In silk of one type or another.
This year it is good style to have one’s attendants wear the same style and the same fabric as one’*' own gown, only In dllTerent colors. If desired, the bridesmaids may all wear the same color, or that
which is novel and new, different
shades of a basic color, giving somewhat of an ombre eifect to the group
as a whole.For the important evening en
semble, smart trousseaux will in
clude a black velvet evening gown
which will make the bride look liko
a re-incarnation of Sargent’s famous "Madame X." Top it oil with a matching hip - length silk vjelvet
jacket and it can be worn on the
honeymoon for dinner and formal wear.<D Western Newspaper Unlati.
SILVER LAM E G O W N
Ily OIIKKIF, NICHOLAS
Never have gleaming m e ta l
weaves been more fashionable than
they are at this very moment. The interesting note about these glamorous fabrics is the fact of their importance for dressy daytime wear
as well as for formal evening. Of course Ihiir styling tunes them to afternoon as does that'of the charming dresa pictured. Fine allover pleating distinguishes this silver silk
lame cocktail gown. This very beau
tiful silk silver lame comes in beguiling color tones, which makes it particularly adaptable for the making of the costume blouse , or the
tunic that completes color harmony
for the ensembled costume.
SILHOUETTES BACK
TO FORMER TRENDS
Just when we’re getting used to
high, broad shoulders, flares, perky
short tunics nnd important long
ones, along come Paris dispatches
wilh the news that styles which immediately followed the war áre be
ginning to make their influence felt. That means a neat, plain, slim silhouette.It isn’t only news from Paris that indicates the trend. A London de
signer sends over street frocks in
the newest of woolens iviaue ou straight lines wit-h only dlicreet, expertly tailored encrustations of the fabric as trimming, at belt, sleeves
and occasionally on the skirt above a short, 'V-shapod slit in the center front to making walking easy. Even
tunics are sometimes made' on straight lines.
'T kiÍttañlllho 'O 'Ó *
^ (Ш Tales ond
¿i- Tradition»
г freni Americaa
’ Polidctl Hiitoiy
FRANK E. HAOKNAND
IlMO scon WATSON
AN EARLY “BLACK LEGION”
^ N TREES were posted mysleri- ous squares of paper, black, or while or red, summoning men to midnight meetings. At these meet
ings there were oaths and grips
und pass-words.
That was: more than three-quarters of a century ago, but members of the “Black Legion," who
created such a furore early in 1936,
would have felt pretty much at home in those meetings back in the forties and fifties. There they would have fraternized with mem
bers of “The Supreme Order of
the Star-Spangled Banner," a secret society which grow into a political party, the Native Americans, with a platform of opposition to
foreigners, the papacy, infidelity and socialism.
Later they became known as the Know Nothings because, when
member was questioned about the order, he invariably answered "I don’t know." In New 'York and Pennsylvania they elected several
men to congress and in 1847 they
held a national convention at Philadelphia. There they nominated Gen. Henry Dearborn for vice-president and recommended, but did
nol formally nominate, Gen. Zach
ary Taylor, the Whig candidate for President.
In 1854-55 the Know Nothings carried Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire,
Kentucky and Calif ornia ond looked
forward to the election of 1868 with high hopes. Soon the party threw off its secret character and it became apparent that they were
mostly Whigs. In February they held another convention in Philadelphia at which they formally renamed their party the American party. They nominated for Presi
dent Millard Fillmore, the Whig
vice-president who had served all but one month ot the term to which Zachary Taylor had been elected,
and guve him for a running mate
Andrew Donelson of Tennessee, tha ward of "Old Hickory" Jackson. Fillmore carried only one stale In the election which sent James Bu
chanan, the Democratic candidate,
to the While House and the Know
Nothings passed out of tho political picture soon afterwards.
Rich Fabrics M ark Styles
for Autum n and W inter W ear
Rich fabrics always signalize the advent of the fashions of autumn and winter. Rich lames and fur for
evening things will be used, and hats will he correspondinfeiy .resplendent. Bright flowers and leathers on velvet comprise the theme of
the new millinery. Flowers on black
velvet are especially good for a hat that is good lo pork up a late summer costume or point a new autumn dress.There is a shallow, little black velvet pillbox with dangling,
stemmed pink geraniums that is our
favorite, but we would settle for a
tall witch’s crown hut of black vel
vet, topped by perky red and white cellophane flowers.
Shining Furs
Fur capes of shining black cara
cul, -nutria ahd Persian, from waist to three-quarter le n g th ,' with squared shoulders will be a favorite choice of well-dressed women.
Fur stole collars trim tho coais of
many three-piece ensembles, gray wolf on green v/Ooi, brown lapin on plaid and leopard with rust.
“TO THE VICTORS---”“ 'T 'O THE victors belong the * spoils 1"
Although Andrew Jackson was the first exponent of thnt political creed, he was not tho first man to
express it in so many words. Tho
man who did wns William L. Mar
ry of New 'Уогк, leader of one 'of tho factions in the Democratic party when Polk was President.The division in tho Democratic
ranks was over the distribution ot
federal patronage and it centered,
ns il has so often since, in New "Vfork state. Tho faction, led by Marcy, wus callcd tho "Hunkers",
who were supported by Tammany
and who wero given that name be
cause they were always inclined to hunger, or “hunicer," for offlce.The other faction, led by Silas
Wright, was composed of dis
appointed Van Burenites — dis
appointed because 'Van Buren,
whom Jackson had made his suc
cessor, had been refused a second term by the party which’took Polk,
a "dark horse," instead. This fac
tion was called the "Barnburners,"
because, like the Dutch farmer in
Now York stale who burned his barn lo gel rid of the rats in it, they declared they were ready
to “hum their barns lo get rid of the rats," the upstart “Hunkers.”As a matter of fact they did just that in the campaign ot 1848. Op
posed to slavery, they joined
forces with the Tjiberty party, took
the name of the Free Soil party
and nominated Martin Van Buren and Charles Francis Adams of Massachusetts. This split in the
Democratic party resulted in a- victory for Gen. Zachary Taylor, tlie Whig candidate, over Van Buren and over Lewis Cass, the regular Democratic nominee.
Along with “Hunker" and “Barn
burner" is another interesting
name once applied to the Democrats, grov/ing out of the rivalry of these two factions. In tho cam
paign ot 1(140 the 'Whigs colled their opponents the “Locotocos" because at a meeting of the New 'ifork Democjats the two factions were
trying to get control of tho meet
ing. One gang turned off tl^e gas
lights and in tho darkness, the other gang, which had come prepared for just such a stunt, took from their pockets the new friction
matches, called "locotocos," struck them and by thus lighting tho room were able to continue the session and dominate it.© WoBtorn Newapapor \i7nlon.
Now Sork City Milestones.
The flrst New 'Vork City mile
stones were erected in 1769, starting from the secon^ City Hall at Wall and Nassau Streets and running along the Bowery Road to Kingsbridge. In 1801 a second
series v/as set from the second
City Hall lo Middle Rond. Tha
third series was erected in 1822 from the present City Hall along the Bowery and Third Avenue. All the stones were of' uniform size, being sixty-six inches high, four
inches wide and six inches tliick
H o w e A o t í m
® Q u e f/M f
A littio hot miUc added a littl* at a time while mashing potatoes will mako them light ond fluffy. Heat but do not boil the milk.• • •
A few bread crumbs added to
scrambled eggs improves flavo» and makes an extra serving po»- ■ible.• • *
A tablespoon of lemon juice
added to,.th(5„egg in which flsh ia.,
dipped before .frying gives it a delicious flavor.■ • • • '
Knit and crochetted f r o c k a ..
should never be hung from closet
hooks or hangers if they are 1«
keep their shape. Even eyelet
cotton frocks will stretch Jess if
folded ^ and laid flat, or h u n g
doublfiU across a wooden hanger.
Before laundering lace curtaina
■oak ' thom" ior ■ aii hour in cold
water-16 whidh d'little borax hns
been added. Th'en w&sh in warm
aoap suds.• • •
Doeskin and chamois gloves b*< .
come stiff and harsh Unless
washed in tepid suds and flnaed
In slightly soapy water.• • «
To protect paper when cleaning
paint use a piece of heavy card
board about 12 inches square,
moving it along aa you wash painVe ilell Sjrndlctle.—WNU Servlc*.
Seems Pat’s Front Had
Retreated to the Rear
Pat, being a sound aleeper, ha4 ■lept through the racket set ay
by Ws «larm clock, and, cons®- quently, when I he did awaken, found himseU late for work. He
hurriedly dressed and ruahed off. In his great haste he did pot know that he had put his trousers back to front. Alighting from the bus outside the factory, he slipped and
fell into the gutter. The conductor went tp his lissistance.
“Are you hurt?” he asked.
Pat looked down at himself awS noticed his tfousers.
“I don’t know about being hurt," he grumbled, "but I must have given myself a bad twist."
Y&it Ha/ue
ЖСМсЬ
ASK YOUR DOCTOR THIS
Ask Him Before Giving Yeur
Child an Unknown Remedy
Practically any doctor you ask will warn: "Don't give your ciilld unknown remedies wilhoul asking your doctor firsi."
When it comes to the widely used children’s remedy — ".milk of nesia,” tho standard of tho world is cstahlislicd. For over bnlf a centuy many doctors havo said “PHILLIPS’ Milk of Magnesia." Safo for children. No other is^'quile liko it."
Keep this in mind, and say "PHILLIPS’ M ILK OF MAGNESIA” when you buy. Now nl.io iii tablet form. Get tho form you prefer. But see that what you get is labeled “Genuine -............'iU: of Magccsis.”
Also IN TAÌIICT rORMi
Eacli tiny tablet UtbtequiViilonC o( в tcoapoon- ful of ffOQUlnO PhllUpo* Milk o< MagncelQ.
PMII LII>C’ MILK or r r l l L L I r b MAGNESIA
WNU—7 44-Лв'
WEEKS of thrilling
entertainment
for Ev«ry Momb*r ol Ysur
fothllv Will Ba Found In
Geae With The Wind
Tho novel which lells Iho rsol tlory of lha Civil War and
Rocbnslrucllon 01 never beforo
doicrlbed.
1037' pages - oq uol-lo FIVE
ordinary hoYols, $3,00
SEND.COVPON TODAY
TUB MACMItlAN COMPANY40. Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C. ^ ....
Send__iopy'desl of GONE WIW
THE WIND lo
hlamt—_-
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Choik d M. O. □' C. 0.0,0
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’’ АПК POUR THR MOCKSVÏLLB ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.Thuíaday/Oóíobrf 29, 193G
lìKICIITEK OUTLOOK
That bi"HK biisineHS fjniiK«!'.
tin; balu of cotton has
stai'lcd moving to the markets
ovur GaHton county. It is the
harbinger of better trade and
biiiinosa along every line.
Selling a ibale of cotton is big
news on the farm; it is good
news to the sharecropper and
tenant farmers.u It means new
и nolhing MVfd by
grc(i)’( »mtlly mIvm or bpai*
madt remedie»—and )чия ^
child juát ttiffet« lo
.'much longer,С
^ r e a t m e n TSoolhet bulnilly. Kitb iIm . lint' milea ihtl'.bMtroi under Ihe М пШ ^ -ihe iiching. Clean, qidrlt. cheap and aure, ^
HALL-KIMBROUGH DRUG CO.
Wd Yourself of
kidney Poisons
р ч О ум «iV* biming, lecnty or Ly l*ofr«qiMirt uriiMdon; badueht,
beed*dw,idi*ijne», iwoIIm (m< and
aaU«i7. Am yc« (had, nctvom—f««l
•U umbMg tnd don't know wh«l It
WMnf?
Th«» giv* мою tSovghl lo yoor
М мукВ« MM ikcvhMiction p<op«f
ly,|er hwdioMl UdiMy diiofdtr p«f-
«■HÌMnMWMltloiUy In Um biood,
■*« to poüam *od vptel tb< whol«
Um OoM^ n ik ОомЧ an for Dm
Iddhty* only. Tbty tn n eoi iHtndod
dM «ммМ over. YoM OM 9*l IIm a w
■hM, tew^Miod ОошЧ il му drag
D o a n s PILLS
clothes, new shoes, for wife and
ciiildren, needed furjiishings for
the house, Kitel'O” baijn and
elsewhere.
There are bright prospects for
il good cotton crop in this coun
ty. If the frost holds off for a
)tew more wegks, arid we have
¡some typical October weather,—
bright, sunshiny, clear and wiiP
dy— much more cotton will open.
In the meantime, much, hay is
being cut fiji.d stored and farmers
are preparing to seed another
crop of grain, oats, wheat, bat.j-
ley, rye, etc. , _ .
When- the farmer., Is-./prásper-
oüs; ■éVerylbody^ M s -prósperous.
The Associated Press reports the
following bright .,'Picti^^e( in the
country’s b u s in e s s ‘
‘'Industry quickened its i>acie
over a broad front last week and
the nation’s army of consuméis,,'
■spurred''by :spreXding Jbf C(^ol
weather in most 'area^, stepped
more ag;gves3ivply up„tq, ,rolan
coüiít'ers. • - J’’''-''-'
“The advent ofy,Q,ctqbe,r. iound
retail trade thrdughbuf tlie 'Unit
ed States well ahead;■óf>^h9 ’flftme
period last year»’’' tlie 'd¿pai‘ínlíent
of commercc said in Jts weekly
i/usiness survey bf'3é‘ (!ii;lés.-'
‘“In a very limited number of
instances there Wore.''sligj^t re
cessions from liVat'year', or, last
week due to unfáyol'abje Wdath-
er. Wholesale linés, responding
to the faster tempo ' of rt^yetáil
trade, showed marked eicpan-
sion,” the review said
"Keflecting in part a spurt in
steel output, motor production
and freight shipments, tho Asso-
ciated Press index of industrial
activity advanced to 96.4, the
higiicst since Feibruary 1930. The
previous week it stood ill 94.7, a
year ago at 70.9.
“Faster buying by the automo
bile industi-y anil most other
.sources, eXcept possibly tho
buildiiig trade, played a part in
Ca AH'UELL-WALKBH f u n e r a l HOME
AMBULANCE SERVICE FUNERAL DIRECTORS
PHONE 48 MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
■HIHXHXHKMXHXHXHaHXHXHSMSMBHBHXHXHBN&HKHXHKHXHSHIHIN»
- DR. p. H, MASON, Dentist
the rise in steel operations to
75.'1 per cent of capacity, a level
rcpruHentinji tho siu'ediest pace
sinco lii.'iO, steel men said. The
week before operation wore at
74.4 per cent of capacity and a
year ago 50.8, the ^teel Institute
showed.
“Aided by a rise in shipments
of miscellaneous freight and
coal, freight carloadings for the
week ended September 26, rose
to a high since November 1930.
The total, of .807,070 cars, report-
«d by thé;'Association of Amer
ican . Railroads, was up 2.2, per
Cent from the previous week and
82.1 per cent ahead of the like
period a year д?о.
“Electric pdvver putput for the
week ended September 26 was
under the previous week, but the
total of .2,167,278,000 kilowatt
hours was l 6.1 per cent over the
like week last year.”
SASSAFRAC RIjEKJE it u m s
Bargains!Terraces recently constructed
j in Kandoiph County have with-
I stood t!ie heavy rains in rt!C(!nt
I'lVuek.s and have won favor withI.
H¡(3Кв
Sanford B u ild in g
M O C K S V IL L E , N . C .
as
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I AUCTIONSALE
X Saturday, October 31st, 1936
i At the old Spurgeon Gaither Store Place
■f At County Line Now Occupied by W. C. Elam
X The following articles will be sold with many others too
■J numerous to mention: Living Room Suits, Bed Room Suits,
f Beds— Iron and Wood, Battery Radio, Phonographs, Piano,.
I Tvunk, Carpet, Electric Stoves.
I Sale Starts at 10:00 P. M.
l!06Eraii’Sr...F[llllZERS
Try Rokemko For Grain 3-12-6
(In White Cotton Ba^s)
For Sale By -
C.C. SANFORD SONS CO.
MOCIiSVILLE, N. C.
COURTNEY CASH STORE
COURTNEY, N. C.
■швашл
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ii
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iH
it's Not Too Soon To Think Of
C O A L
Witli Uie tlierniomoter bobbin!? above 90 every day it takes
a lot of imaidnation to jiicture tho way you are going to
fuel iiiboiit'COAL October or November, but a good
imagination will save you a substantial amount of your
next winter’s fuel bill if you buy NOW.
I
Coal W il! Be Much Higher
MOCKSVILLE, N. C,
Mister Ed|tur:—.....
You know that thar ol’ spot
ted he-gander. ol ol’ aunt Bec
ky’s? Well thatnhar kriter he
takoned an’ et all of W ill Slo
cum’s little boy’s marbles, he
did, an’ they ain’t a work-
in’ well with the inner gearin’
of his anateniy. somehow they'
ain’t, an’ the kritter hes right
poorly at this here writin’,
shore as kraut, an’ they’s bin a
heap of speculatin’ likewise for-
vvardin’ of opinyuns as lo why
ho et them marbles— some a
sayin’ as how he thought this
ei maybe that, but honist to
gosh, mister editur, hit’s tho
coriscienchus. likewise weighty
opinyun of yer scribe, as how
that thar bird never thunk atall,
jst fer all the world like a mo
dern gal, a thought would a give
him a head ache, yos-siree, hit
v/ould, shore as kraut an’ thar-
fcr. likewise accordin’ly he jest
et, he did.
H it’s awfully wet herebouts,
at this here writin’ yes-siree,
most like as hit war in the days
ot that thar man Noah what
¡ivod ’way ,off yandor mabe most
a hundar miles, somo time back
into, the days ’for tho war, you
know; mister editur,— the samo
ivhat fust got a patent on to
these here house boats, likewise
got in onto the ground floor in
thnt thar Brewery business, yos-
sir-oe, an’ ruint a thrlvin’ busi
ness by over-indulgin’ into his
ov.'n wares an’ products, but
goin’ back to the weather heru-
Louts, why mister editur, 1
whanta to say right here an’
now hit makes a feller think a-
bout bein' over to town on clec-
tun days for wetness, how-som-
.wer hit’s good on fishin' like
wise digin' of Sassafrac Roots,
an' BiirSurkeys ho says as how
hit makes tho ground so saft
that all a feller hasto do is
punch a few holes around a-
mongst them thar isassafrac
bushes, an' drap in a few grains
of corn, then climb a tree an'
watch the razor-back hawgs do
the rest, Well wouns herebouts
has helt a sort of a corcus, like-
'vise a consultashun on that thar
idea of Bill's, yos-siroe, an' de
cided as how Bill he orter a bin
pre.siclent of this here common
wealth long time ago, ho had,
likewise an’ accordin'lv ho would
a bin, only Bill ho war jest too
pinin, dinged lazy to try for the
place.
Guess them’s about all fer
this time, only while we air a-
bout hit maybe we mout as well
ast what times of the moon, as
well as undor what signs of tho
zodyaci; doog you'ns over to
town harvest yer Bull-tung
'l)acker so as the frost don't git
the truck?
Yourn .fer the news,
Jimmie.
LET US DO YOUU JOU WORK
- W li W Ii.L DO IT RIGir.1'.
Salt 97c
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Electric Refrigeration
Air Conditio'.iini'-
Men— prepare Гиг positions in
Air CiHKlitioning and liluctric
...I'rii-eration. Marvelous op-
pci’Lunities for trained men.
actually more 1оЬ,ч open than
trained men to fill them. Let
is help you get a good-paying
,'osition as we have helped
’idrods of others. Prepare
at home in spare time by low-
cost, easy-pay plan. Actual
.-TTio'p practice also included.
Fair education and mechani
cal inclination necessary to
lualify for training. For in
terview write giving- age, phone
and present occupaton,
Utililie;5 Engineering Institute
404 N. Wells St, Chicago, 111.
100 lbs. S ugar ........................ ifu.lO
All 25c Baking Powior ....... 19o
8 lb. Carton Lard ................ ?1.02
Pink Salmon .......................... He
5c pack Salt .............................. 3c
5c Matches ....................... .3ç
6c School Tablets ............;......... 3o
Standard Kotoaene 11c per gal.
Fat Meat, pet lb. 15c ;
8 oz. Bilie Bell Sanforizo
Overalls ............................ ?1.10
Blue Bell Overalls, pair ....... 97c
Plenty 65c Sheets .... ....;..... 48c
Plenty Dress Shfrts, wotifl
76c now ................................ 48c
We have plenty men’s* clothing
All sizes from $5.95 to $17.75 .
Ladies Coats .... $5.75 tô ?10.’50
Childrens Coats... $1.94 tP $4.50.
Sweaters .......... 50cto $2.91
Dress Prints .........■ 9c to 18c
Suitings .............■.......... 24 to 35c
Crepes ...................-■• 29c t.o^SOc;
Childrens.Dresses .................. 59c.
Ladies Dresses ........ 97c to $7.50
Blankets .....................75c to $1.89
Ladies Hats ............ 97c to $1.49
V.'e have axes, regular price
$1.25, now ............................ 97c
Brooms .................................... 23c
Horse Collars ............ 97c and up
We have plenty Bridles, Traces
Hames and Harness, Heaters
from $1.45 up.
1 Cook Stove Worth $25.00
Now $19.50
[ handle Red Goose and Wolver
ine Shoes, and can. fit the whole
family., Theso shoes aro guaran
teed , to give satisfaction. Buy
now and save money.
Seo us for anything you need,
we will save you money, as we
sell for cash and sell for less.
Plenty Children’s heavy Union
Suits ................................ 38c up
Yours for Bargains
J. TRANK HENDRIX
Mocksville, N. C.
larmers.
A number of small farmer.s in
Swain County will use a ti:,ii m'
more of lime each this fall ¡i.-i u
demonstration.' So far twelve
men have jiurchased 50 tons.
LET Da DO YOUR JOB WORK
—WK W ibb DO IT RIGHT.
J Y J o r r is e t t ’ S
CORNER FOURTH AND TRADE STREETS
“Live Wire Store” , Winston-Salem, N.C.
Great Ready-to-Wear
VALUE
Just received a wagpii’load of Coats,
Dr^sses> Skirtsj Sweaters and Blouses.
Come in and select your new outfit this
week.
Wonderful
COATS
$0.95
$2 5 . 0 0
500 New
DRESSES
All latest colors' and new ef
fects, including football co
lors and stiiples. All in half
sizes, regular sizes and ex
tra sizes.
i?0-95 ¡¡>0.95 $yf.y5
5 to n o
$1 Л.95
- m .
A ERIA L-T U N IN G
SYSTEM
t h a t d o u b l e s F O R E I G N R E C E P T I O N !
Through Philco’s automatic
built-in Aerial-Tuning System
you can get and enjoy twice as
many foreign stations! This
amazing invention is not an ac
cessory ... not an extra... but is
huili-in as an integral part of
every American and Foreign
Philco. And remember... you’ll
find it only in Philco!
PHILCO 610B
OTHER
P H IL C O S
up
C. C. Sanford Sons Co.
Phone 7 Mocksville, N. C.
Thursda,v, Ot tober 20, 1936
ГНЕ MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSVILLE. N. C.-PAGE FIVE
Club Meetinga
Ghrrch .Nows
Soc-ia-l Function«
Card Parties SOCIETY
Local Happenings
Coming and
Going of those
We know
CASH PAID FOR CEDAR LOGS
and timber. For details write
Geo. C. Brown and Co. of N.
C., Greensboro. N. C. 9 lOtf
LET US DO YOUR JOB WORK-WB W ILL DO IT RIGHT.
MISS MARY J. HEITMAN. Sncial Erfltnr Mhone 112
"Mr. L. G. Horn has been in
yyith__ an attack of rheumatism.
Mrs. M. D. Brown has recover
ed from-a severe? case of flu.-
Miss Ruth {Graves spent the
wek-end with Miss Helen Dan
iel.
■ Jacob Stewart was in States-^'
vilie Sat.urday on ; legal « buqii
iicss.
Raymond Moore,
College, spent the
home.
of Brevard
week-end at
Mrs. Ida G. Nail has returned
from a visit of several weeks in
Hickory.
VV. A. Griffin Has
Dinner
Mr. anjl Mrs; W. A. Griffin
¡were: hoi?t-and hostess at an en
joyable‘family dinner on'Sunday
m celebration of the former’s
72nd 'birthday. Relatives from
a. distance who shared
hospitality were Mr.
,W.. A, Kerr, ..Sr., ..Misses Teresa
and Alice Kerr; Mrs. Alice CaU'»,;
hospitality. Those attending
from here were Mesdames J. F.
Hawkins, R. S. McNeill, J.
Frank Clement, John LeGrand,
Ollie Stockton, D. L Pardue. C.
R. Horn, Misses Ossie Allison
and Mary Heitman.
PRINGgSS
ТНЕАТЙЕ
, Campbell— Kimbrough
. Engagement
^ Mrs. He'en Allison Campbell,
ble, Mrs. Tom- Oduin.-.Alberfc'^^^^ Winston-Salem, announces
Miss Louise Odum, Mr. and' Mrs; i ®"Sagement of her daughter,
P au l: Kerr'; .aijd children, all Alexander Mc-
Hickory,; Joe Pierce, of Hickory. Kimbrough. Jr., son of Mr.
Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Kerr, Jr.* Kimbrough, of
of McD'owell County; and Mrs! wedding will
Bessie House, of Philadelphia,* latter- part of
Friday & Saturday
Another good western pic
ture with Tim McCoy, in..
“ROARtN GUN^”
Auction Sale
J. I ^ a n k I je n d r ix ’s B a r n
MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
O c t. 3 0 a tv lO a , m .
Miss Kathryin
Greensboro, spent
at home.
Brown, '-. of
the week-end
who has' been spend'ing*, some
time with her sister, Mrs. Grif~
fin.
Grubb— Adams
Marriage
A marriage of interest hero
was solemnized at tho Presby-
November. The above announce
ment is of wide interest here,
and throughout the state. The'
bride-elect is a charming young
lady, and is an alumna of Wo-,
man’s ColJege, U. N. ,C. Mr.
Kimbrou'jh is a popular young
man, and is a member of the
- ----„ firm of Hall-Kimbrough Dvug
Mrs. Harold Jacobs, of New terian manse on Saturday oven- Store. We extend our bost wish-
Bern, yisited Mrs, John C. San- *ng, Oct. 24,' at 7 o’clock, when es for their happiness.
ford this week. . Miss Jimmie Lou Adams became ■ , - ____
-----o----- tlie bride of Paul Grubb, with Etude Music Club
Mrs. M. J. Holthou.’ser visited j Rev. W. C. Cooper officiating.' The Etude Music Club met on
her sister, Mrs. Alice McCall, in Ihe bride is an attractive young Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock,
Charlotte, this weok. lady, aiul is tho daughter of Mr. at the homo of thé teacher. Miss
and Mi'.s. J. G. Adams. Mr. I Helen Daniel. Piano solos were
Grubb is a woll-known young Splayed by Louise Foster, Sarah
man, and is the son of Mr. and | Fester and Mary Noil Ward.-
Mrs. D. G, Grubb. He is con- 'I’he officers elected were: Pre-
iiectod with the Gate City Insur- sident. Dorothy Thompson; vice-
ance Company. iWe join their president, Louise Foster; secre-
friends in wishing them much I tary and treasurer, Mary Noil
happiness. Mr. and Mrs. Grubb 1 Ward; entertainment- comrnit-
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Tutterow on Oct. 13th, a fine
dauii-'hter, Clara Janice.
See notice of sale of Camilla
11. Steolman valuable lands,
November 2, at Court House.
Mijs Alberta Palmour, field se
cretary of Agnes Scott College.
Ifecater, Ga., was the recent
guest of Mrs. Gaithor Sr.nford.
will make thoir
ville.
Miss Sarah iThompson will
leave Saturday) for C^loarwater,
Fla., where she will take a busi
ness course at the Spencerian
School.
Mr. C, N. Christian spent the
past week in Lynchburg. Va.,
'with his daughter and son, «Mrs.
E. W. Brokenbrough and Cephas 'ed tliem: ,‘G for a thousand ton-
B. Sharp Music Club
The B. Sharp Music Club,
composed of Mrs. P. J. Johnson’s
pupils, met at her home on Sat
urday afternoon, an interesting
program on Church Music be
ing given, Gussie Johnson play-
ftd as, a voluntary, Chopin’s Pre-
';ide, and Alice Holton played
Hie .ol'fertory. "Träumerei.” Tho
pupiKs gave tho history of the
following hymns, and then play-
Ch risLian.
—“ ---О —•—-- "
.Mr. and Mrs. Harry Osborne
and little son, Harry, Jr., of
Shelby, spent tho week-end with
i’ur parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
Kimbrough.
j gues to sing,” by Marie John
son; "Holy, II0I.V, Holy,” by
Alice Holton; “Come Thou Al-
Miighly King,” by Anno Cle-
nuMit; “What a Friend we havo
;n .ie.sus,” Lula Betts Chaffin;
I “ 0 for a heart to praise,” by
-----r----- I Katherine Harbison; “Am I a
Mrs. Horace Haworth, of High ' soldier of the Cross,” Mabel
I'oint, visited her parents, Mr. Joyce Cain; “Nearer-my God to
and Jlrs. E. H. Morri.s last week. Thee,” Gussie Johnson, During
Mrs. Morris is spending several
(l.iys wth Mrs. Haworth now.
Miss Patsey Clement, who re-
c<!nSly underwent an opoi^ation
at Long'.s: Sanatorium, States
ville, is spending some time with
filr. and Mrs. Kerr M. Clement.
tho social hour Phyllis John
son played a solo, and Marie
, .joiiii.ion rendered variations of
a Swiss song, (Beethoven). Hal
loween decorations were carried
out in detail, and tempting
grape .juice, cookies and candy
were served. Anno iiob-
yon, oV Salisbury, wns a visitor.
Jlrs. Jaek Allison spent sev-
i!ral days recently in Richmond,
Vii., with her mother. Mrs.
Charles Vaughan, Sr. Mr. Alli-
."<011 acoompanifid her homo this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Painter and
aon, Edward Painter, of Lewis
burg, W. Va., spent the woek-
oiul hero with relatives. Mrs.
Painter was formerly Miss Clif
ford Morris.
— — 0-----
Captain , E. C. LeGrand. who
iias boon fn charge of a CCC
Camp at Jefferson Cit.y, Tenn.,
lias been transferred to Kato,
Pennsylvania, where ho bo sta
tioned for .‘lix months.
home in Mocks- tee, Sarah Foster, Sue Brown
and Louise Eaton. Tempting
refreshmeu'ts were served, and
those present were’: Misses
Helen Daniel, Sarah Foster,
Mary Neil Ward. Louiae Foster,
Dorothy Thompson and, Sue
Brown.
Davie Grays Chapter
-Meets , ,
The Davio Graya Chapter,
United D'aughtei’s of the Con
federacy, met with Missi Mary
Heitman on Thursday after
noon. Mrs. E. W. Crow, presi
dent, presided, and the chaplain,
Mrs. J, D. Hodges, conducted
the Confederate ritual. The
election of officers took place,
the names being presented by
Miss Sarah Gaithor, chairman of
the nominating committee. Of-
iicors elected are: Mrs. E. W.
Crow, president; Mrs. J. D.
Hodges, vice-president and c'hap
lain; Mrs. J. H. Thompson, re
cording secretary; Mrs. C. N.
Christian, correspondiivg secre
tary; Mrs. J. K. Shook, troasur-
ur; Miss Janie Martin, histor
ian; Miss Sarah Gaithor, record-
01-,ox crosses; Mrs. Z. N. Ander
son, custodian of flags; Mrs. J.
B. Johnstone, registrar; (pro
gram committee: Miss Mary
Heitman, chairman, Mrs. Lester
Martin, Mrs. J. B. Johnstone,
iitrs. Jiodges then gave an inter-
.-isting report lif the recent C.
D. C. Convention in_ Durham, to
which she was a delegate. Tho
General Convention will be in
Dallas, Texas, and each chapter
must elect a doloigate, in order
that each State may have vot
ing strength. In case the dele-
Monday ¿c Tuesday
Jack Holt in
“END OF THE TRAIL”
■wttttmmttmmm m im m m ttaitnm w
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I GIVE THE SPOOKS A
M TREAT
I Carry a box of McPhail's
a or Hollingsworth Candies to
M the Halloween party. Fresh,
i dolicious can'dies in Hallo-M
M ween packages.
Dil
I iiALL-KiM6R0 U6 il
I DRUG COMPANY
¡J "A Good Drug Store”
n;
a Quick Delivery Service
I Phone 141
I MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
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1 car load Montana Colts, agrès from 3
months to 6 years. 30 head. ,v
2 Shetland Ponies, jpi|ff<g(l't condition.illy ,n, ,
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20 head of mares, 10 horses, 9 mule colts.
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One gallon of Hide-Kote, when properly
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Como in and let us figure your job.
Kurfees & Ward
“BETTER SERVICE”MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
VOTE FOR*
J. F rank H endrix
County
F O R
Commissioner
Altend 'Democratic
I Luncheon
j The gathering of Democratic
women of the Eighth Congres
sional District, which waif held
' iu I'homasville on Monday, Oct.
'¿(j, was marked by largo attend
ance and great enthusiasm. Tha
women of tho .Eighth District
were guests of Congressman J. ___ ........^
Walter Lambeth at a delightful i attend^ the State
luncheon at the Methodist hut. pi.ßgjdent casts the vote. Mrs.
Mrs. lfcnd(‘rson Cotti"' and
lilllo daughter, Amy Loui.su, of
.‘■I'. Potersbu.'’!', li’.'la.. aro vl.4Ìt-
from Florida to Illinois in tho
linar future.
Mrs. R. L. Reynolds, of Lexing
ton, vice-chairman of Davidson
County, presented Mrs. P. P.
McCain, Vice-Chairman of' the
Eighth District, who /presided
over Lhu mectng. Mrs. G. E.
Ci'owell, of Thomasville, extend
ed the welcome, to which Mrs.
A. McDougald, of Hamlet, res
ponded. Encouraging reports
were heard from all over the
district, whidh includes the
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Kirby
Montgumory,
Scotland. Union, Wilkes, Yadkin,
and Richmond. .IMrs. J. F. Haw
kins vice-chairman of Davio,
was among those speaking. A
îb l t^^pting ïliree-course ^luncheon‘lis. K ubys mothol, ]\IlS. Rlcl „„..«оЛ rinvino- whinh music
ai'd K. Marshall, and her sister,
Mrs. Bynum Clegg and children,
Marshall, Bynurti. 2nd, Mary and
liobby, of Greensboro.
Mrs. B. F. Bentley has return-
№1 from Montreal. Ciinad,,a,
where she spent throe weeks
■'Vith Mr. Bentloy, who is a pa
tient in St. Anne’s Hospital, in
that city. He hope,? to return
to North Carolina in the spring.
was served, during which music
and a reading were features.
Congressman ,Lambeth made
timely remarks, and Mrs. Mc
Cain and Miss Jane Pratt, se
cretary to Mr. Lambeth, spoke
on matters of interest in the
campaign. The importance of
the women’s vote was stressed.
Mrs. J. Frank Clement express
ed the appreciation of the guests
for Congre.ssrnan Lambeth’s kind
J. D. Hodges was elected a de
legate. and Miss Mary Heitman,
alternate, to tho [Dallas Conven
tion, Coffee, sandwiches and
cakes wore sorveclT Those pre
sent were: Mesdames E. W.
Crow. J. 13. Hodges, J. B. John-
Ktono, C. N. Christian, J. H.
Thompson, Julia C. Heitman, !
Dallas Kirby, Misses Sarah Gai
ther, Janie aiartin and Mary
Heitman.
OYS’PER a :-;d c h ic k e n
SUPPER SAT. NIGHT
fl'hero will bo an Oyster and
Chicken supper at the home of
Mr. George Evor'hardt next Sat
urday night, lOct. 31. Servinig
will begin about 4 o’clock. If
you are planning to go some
place Saturday night, just drive
by and eat your supper. The
public is cordially invited. Don’t
forget the place and time.
Increased acre yields of cot
ton by reason of better stands
-are reported by tho.'se men who
treated their seed laat spring.
As I have been unable to make a campaign
throughout the county this fall, 1 wish to take
this method of thanking all my friends through
out the county for the big vote they gave me
two and four years ago and I will appreciate
their support next Tuesday, Nov. 3rd. If elect
ed, I promise to do everything possible for the
upbuilding of the county, and to look after
' i
the interest of the entire .citizenship, regard
less of political affiliation.
Y our V o te and Influence w ill be greatly
appraciated.
I ■ }
(Political Advertising)
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T H E M O C K S V IL L E E N T E R P R IS E . Mocksville. N. C.. Thursday, October 29, 1936
|Ц "И Г -»Т Н U ü i
By
LOWELL
HENDERSON
The Mind
Meter •
e 0*11 Sj-ndlcatu.- WNU Sorvio«.
lb rilllllk ^ Jk » l- ¿ U i.U L » % U l
Tho Famous Men Test In the following test thera ar«
ten problems. In each one •
man’s name is given, followed by
the names of four professions, vo
cations or avocations. Cross out
tlie particular occupation or pur-
iuit in which the man la or waa
most famous.1. Arthur Briobane—capitalist,
artist, editor, composer. ^
, 2. Vernon Gomez — explorer, baseball player, physician, pi
anist. . .' 3. Benjamin N. Cardozo—reli
gious teacher, artist, jurist,
ftatincier. '4. Sinclair Lewis — composer>
iocialist, author, lawyer.6. Nellie Melba—society leader,
' circus performer, soprano, news-;
paper woman.
6.¡ Franchot Tone — composer,
actor, artist, lawyer.
7. Frjtz Kreisler—brewer, foot
ball coach, violinist, pianist.8. W alter. Hampden—flnancier,
poet, Inventor, actor.
9. Macdonald Smith—diplomat,
goUer, football coach, banker.
10. James Whitcomb Riley —
statesman, railroad builder, poet,
pianist,
' Answer«
1. Editor. .8. Actor.
2. Baseball player. 7. Violinist.
S. Jurist. 8. Actor.
4. Author. 9. tJolfer.
5. Soprano. 10. Poet.
N o w O n l y a
P e n n y a T a b l e t
f o r F a s t
HEADACHE RELIEF
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A COUGH RELIEF-THAT
ALSO SPEEDS RECOVERY
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C H A P T E R X I— Continued
— 18—They wore still two dn.vs out from
Bandy Hoolt when Agnes rend In tho rndlo news nn explanntlon. I’lilllp
Llnsdnle, brother of Arthur Unsdnlo
who hnd shot himself, wns Indlctod
with two other ofllcors of his coinpnny
for mlanpprcprlntlon of trust funds.
He hnd heen Jnlled In Chicago nnd re-
leased on « flfty-tliousnnd-dollnr bond.
Another brother, Kniery, hnd llcd to
Cnnndn.
I As there wore few on the ship, few
itood ou the dock awnltlng the Innd-
“There’s Fntherl” snid Agnes, and
ifoU choked' ns she wuveil nt him.
Her mother snw, him, nnd thnt he
wns safe. Tríele wondered whether
"Cnsh" might bo lurking elsewhere
•long the dock to look nt her. Tríele
conquered this feeling before the gang
plank wns down, nnd she went to tho
arms of her huabnnd.
He kísséd her, nnd she clung to him;
then, feeling him release hor, she let
him go. ■
"Hello, Light Onel" He caught his
daughter nnd biased her. j .
His wife watched him, her eyes
never leaving him, She wns trembling
from her eontnct with him. He turned
to her again, after he let their daugh
ter go,“You’re older, Bob, she snid bluntly.
"Xea, of course—a year," he tried to
say lightly bul ne did not like It.
"That’s all."
"Jusi oldei, Bobt she'challenged
him She had to demana It ‘of him
Immedlntely, at the very moment of
meeting. Nothing else mattereu In
comparison. He knew whnt she meant.
Had he become only older through
this year of trouble and separation?
Otherwise was he unchangedT Was hb
continuing to draw those checks to—
CashTHe answered her. If she hnd tu ask
him there on the dock, there she had
a right to know.
**I suppose I’m poorer. Tríele,’’ ne
said, and smiled ruefully.
"Pnther," snid Agnes quickly "how's
Bee?"
"Dnrk Ono'a nue, Llxht One."
"I came on account of hor. Bob,’’ his
wife cast nt him gratuitously. She
knew that hor dnughter In September
was to bear her third child. “My place
seemed tu bo with her now. Are you
going home with us?”
Bob nodded. "This afternoon. You
beard about the LInsdnlesI’’ he of
fered another topic.
“Arthur LInsdale killing himself I"
Beatrice said, and enught her breath;
“You Heard About tho LlnBdaleaJ”
He Offered Another Topic.
lho almost told her husband tliat, hnv-
Ing heard, she had hurried home to
him.
"And Phil Indicted, nnd Emnry In
Canada. Do you know who’s to defend
Phil LInsdale?"
“Who?" said Agnes.
"O’Mnrn. He’s getting a lot to do,
these days. He can’t tako half tho
cnsoB coming to him."
"From women shooting their bus
bands?” Beatrice asked.
Bob shook his head. "From people
you’d never figure would get Into trou
ble, Tricle, nnd are exceedingly llUoly,
unless Agnes’ friend saves them, to
spend their next ten or twenty yenrs
In Leavenworth or somo other Govern
ment Jnll,"
By EDWIN BALMER
Copyrlcht by Edw in Balm or
W N U Sorvloo
C H A P T E R X II
Olinngo 1
Boo out of hor house nnd bnck homo*
with Davis nnd her babies. It wna one
thing to contemplate it when you were
abroad; another to lie Id your berth
on the train nnd know thnt tomor
row morning your sister, to whom
this bad hapiiened, would meet you.
Oliange. A change In Father, more
thnn that ho was n year older, nn.l
poorer. Ho hnd lost something, A con
fidence, B certainty. Changes for the
worse,- all of these.
But there was a clmnge for the bet
ter which Agnes felt; and It plnyed
its pnrt In keeping her stirred and
wakeful.A clmnge In Cuthni O’hluta, rather
1b his regard. It had boen declared
when her father mentioned him; and
th« Ohlcai* Mwspapors, which
Agnes had procured In New York,
made It manifest.She road nbout tho LInsdale nfTnlrs
nnd the demand for tho return of
Emory Llnsdnle from Canndn: “Mr,
O'Mura promised ati answer tomorrow.
. . . Mr, O’iMara says . . . This was
denied by Д1г, O’Mnrn."
He represented nnd defended men re
cently among those llrst In the city,
mon nccuscd but not yet pronounced
guilty, men with rich and powerful
friends, who, however, Were them'selves
helpless to snve them; and so. they
had sought—Cnthal O’Mara,
As ihe train entered Chlcngo, she
sought alterations In the physical а.ч-
pect of the city to correspond to what
here hnd happened, Thoro wero noiie.
When they stopped under the sta
tion trnln-slied nnd stepped, down,
then the change was sulllclently de
clared.
She saw It, flrst, In the face of
Davis, She halted on the traln-step;
thon she sprang down and' went to him
and kissed him. Her sister was there.
She kissed Bee. "All right. Bee? All
right?”
“Of course, , . Hello, Mother I"
Job was there; her father had said
he might be,
Jeb had changed, but not enough,
Moro ought to have happened to him.
If so much had happened to Dnvls.
But sho kissed Jeb; nnd he kissed
her twice and held her.
She could feel he wns excited.
"Whnt’s the hurry, Glen? There’s no
one else here. Stay with me, now."
But she freed herself from him and
turned hnok to Dnvls, and pulled hlln
down to her and kissed him on his
tight-pressed lips.
"See here," Job complained, "He’s
married. And I think I’m pretty good
to come to meet you."
"You aro, Jeb." But she could not
feel for him ot all. Had something
more happened to Davis today?
Agnes naked Beo this, ns soon as
she got her sister aside, "No; why?"
said Bee; nnd Acnoa know ho had
broken so gradually that those with
him scarcely realized tt.
Her father did not proceed homo
with them. He and Jeb went to their
olHcos; and Davis departed to his.
Before long they heard Baskervlllo
baying; a moment later thoy were be
fore tho houae, and Solma stood with
a little boy on ench side of her, wav
ing.
Agnes and her mother were home.
“It’s a dizzy world," observed Bee,
loosening hor clothes and lying back
on hor bed. "One can’t start at any
thing, however praiseworthy at tho
moment, nnd bn sure hor enterprise
will atlll be considered crodltnble when It’s accomplished,"
“You mean?" said Agnea,
"I do, niy child. The world no longer
groans for Increase, It doesn’t want
any moro children, or cotton or wheat
or railroads, or nny of tlie good old
products nnd Improvements thnt the
boat citizens used to pray for.
•'You've lovely Instincts, dnrllng,"
the Dark One added, reaching her
hand to her sister. "It’s lucky you
don’t Indulge them.""Boo, how bad are things for us?"
"Well, Father probohly still hns a
little; not much, but maybe more thun
ho owes. Thank God, Jeb got him Into
a big block of Insull stuff; and that's been standing up. Father’s got It nt
the banks; but they give him money
on It, IIo'll keep going; but he's In no
shape to put up n quarter-million to save us agnin. Father bought him out
of tho orlglnni mess; but not even
Father cnn do It novf. After Fnther
paid his debts, Dnvls got his new start
by borrowing on his llfe-lnsurnnce;
nnd he’s borrowed tho limit since then
to keep on. Now he's nt the end of It.
Whnt's our next move? I don’t know."
Eve* Agnes’ sense of security wna
uhnken,
Job phoned; and thia wna aa It had
been a year ago.
"Hello, Glen I Hello I This Is old
timosi Lord, how I like Itl , . , I’m
alone In my oflice and on my private
wire, so we can talk. . . . Wlint’s
the inntter with you, Glon? Who’s
there V"
"Noliiid.v's here,"
"Then lull me a littlo of what It
means to he bnck to mo,"
"It's so dllforent, Jeb,"
“Not so dinierent I’ll show you.
I’m coming right out, to cheor yon up,"
"I don’t wnnt cheering up, Jeb." “You eortnlnly do,”
"Tomorrow Ihuu, please. Job,”
"Why tho devil tomorrow? Why not
now? AVhy—’’
Sho did not know why, except that
she could not feel like having him
cheer her up by reassuring her ot his
fortune; she did not feel like meeting
Ills clnlm to kiss her and hold her.
Her father came home: “When’ll Jeb
bo along. Light One?"
"Not tonight."
Her father gazed straight nt her.
"All right," he'said. "Your business."The talk nt the table, nnd luter,
whllo the fnmily stayed together, care
fully avoided discussion of thc-lr own
situation, but It dwelt on others’—and
the Llnsdales' particularly. And thia
brought mention, moro than oncc,^ of
thqir lawyer.
"Your friend's tackled a tough case.
Light One,”
It was nine o’clock when Crnvath
announced ■ to Agnea: '“Mr, O’Mnra
nska for you on the phone,"
Agnes jumped.
"He’s at Phil UnBdulo’g, probably,"
A T rio of T rim Togs
her father sold, watching her. "Phil
certainly lonns, on your Inwyer, Light
One,"
Agnes turned slowly nnd went
straight to tho phone. What wns he
to sny to her? And she to him?
Ho said: "Yesterday morning I read
at last that you had landed—your
mother and you,"
"Yes," sho aaid, "wo did.” What did
he mean by “at last"? Had ha been
rending the papers all year for report
of her return?
"Thia afternoon the papers said job
are home,’.’
"Yea,""So tonight I am at one ot yoar
neighbors,"
"Stnylng there?" snid Agnes, Whnt
wns this man to her? It wns herd
for her to spenk. ■ :
"No. I’m leaving now.'*
“Will you como here?"
Agnea returned to her family. "He's
coming here,” she told them.
•“Tonight?” demnnded her mother.
"Now." And sho left them ngnln,
nnd stood nenr tho door.
At tho Llnsdales’, CnthnI returned
from the telephone to the study, shut
olt from other rooms, where waited
the man threatened with Imprisonment
for tho rest of his life.
The room wns dnrk, snve for a
cono of yellow light from the shaded
lamp over the accounts and records
they had examined together—ovor and
over, nnd would never finish, Phil
Llnsdnle snt pushed back Just beyond
the edge of the light.
"Going now, O’Mara?"
••Yes, sir. Good night"
“Not for ■ minute, O’Mara. Give
me another minute, will you? Sit
down again. , . . That's right Mow
I’ve nothing to say. But I can’t let yon
go. What In holl will I do? . . . Go
over It again with my wlfo? Or sit
with her nnd not go over it agaInT And my daughter 1 . . . Damn It,
O’Mnra I You went to college too; did
you study Shakespeare? . . . He said too ninny things too well. To pat for
you—you can't forget them.
•“ I hnvo lived long enough; my
wny of life Is fallen Into the senr, tha
yellow leaf.’ Know U, O’Mnra?"
dll'."
•'•And thnt which should accompany
old ago, ns honor, love, obedience,
troopa of friends, I muat not look to
have.’ Thnt’s me, even If you got mo
olT, O’Mnra, Do you suppose my broth
er wns right—my brother Arthur? He
•should have died hereafter.' That's an
other great line, O’Mnrn. Macbeth said
It ot his wlfo when thoy told him she
was gone. ‘Sho should have died here
after.’ Arthur should have stayed. He
was far tho best of us. He was twice
me, twico ray brother Emory, In Can
ada, . . . Como tomorrow night early
and stay Into, will you, O'Mnra?"
Cnthal drovo slowly from the house.
He could not lot the man whom he
had loft he«r him hurrying nwny.
Agnes nt last heard his cnr.
She wns Ih white, ns he hnd left her
n yenr ago, nnd so ho saw her.
"I couldn’t come sooner," he snid.
••I know," she said. What wns this
mnn to her, when tho sight of him
and his voice, after n year, so stirred
her?Her father asked: “How’s Phil Llns-
dalo tonlghtJ”‘•He’s not changed much since they
released him on ball—and he bnrled
hlB brother.”
•'Ho can’t bo renlly guilty I" Beatrice
Glenelth protested. "He can't bol"
Cntlial looked at her, and thought of
long, long ago—11 months ago, before
any of this hod happened, and It had
been Myrtle Lorrle who had required
defending,
"Why?" ho snid,
••They ncciiso him of stenllng funds.
Mr. Llnadnlo would nover steal. It la
Inconceivable. He la a friend of ours.
I have known Mrs. Llnsdnle for yenrs."
"Yos," snid Cnthal. “She told me."
Dnvls snid nothing. He had risen
and shaken hands with Cnthal, nnd
then lapsed Into his chnlr.
Cullutl O'Mnra was changed too. It
wns not thnt his consoquence waa In
creased, She folt thnt, but not from
him; It wns In tho attitude the others
took townrd him.
There hnd been nothing tonight—
thoro could havo boen nothing—like
tho momont thoy had shared in the
breaking storm under tho lightning on
tho shore. They remnlned with her
fnmily, but sho did not wnnt him to
go; ho nroso, however, nnd she went to
tho door with him. There they were
nlono.
•• ’Twill ho strange," he said, gazing
down nt her, "not to bo watching the
social columns tomorrow. All year I've
bought every paper, every day, for
chanco ot mentlil.1 ot you. Now youll
be stnylng home?"
“Yes," snid Agnes. ••Wouldn’t you?"
••I would," he said, quite soberly,
••Especially regnrding your brother-ln-
Inw,""Dnvls," Agues nimost whispered
his nnme, “How did ho look to yon?"
Cnthal nnswered In ono word: ••Des
perate,"(TO BE CONTINUED) ’
This trio of trhn togs offers an
appealing variety to tha woman
who sews at home. Thera Is style
and economy in every design,
and a sufUcicntly wide ranga of
skes to acconuviodnta most any
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clever pattern is designed fo r
sizes: 12, 14, 16,. 18 and 20; 30, 32,
34, 3B, 38 and 40. Size 14 requires
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materiaU
For tiny tots, pattern No. 1812
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Send for the Barbara Bell Fall
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Send your order to The Sewing
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Kept Macaroni a Secret
Nnplea wnn tho center ot macaroni
ninnufncture for so many yenrs thn^
tho Pompellnn road loading Into II
waa broken to bits by the continuous
procession ot wagona and trucks haul
ing In hard wheat nnd flour, says the
Kiiropenn Cookbook for Amerlcni^
Ilomos, Tlio process for making mao*
aronrwfis kept secrot until the Foarv
teenth century, whon » Frenchman
hold ot It and took It back to FrMiori
with him.
S o n ' t l e t
W in t e r
c a t c h y o u
u n p r e p a r e d !
C H A m e T Oашквя sTAn
m N T E K 0 / Í
Ik Winter, more than ever, your (jar needs
tho extra, lubricating value that Quaker
State's exclusive refining process puts Into
llts oils and greases. Quaker Stato Oil
Refining Cbmpanyj Oil City, Pennsylvania.
.....Retail brlc* .., '^5^ 'ptr i^uaxl.
Thursday, Oiltobcr 29, 1930
PINO NEWS Stato and bounded nnd doaerib-
--------- <h1 ii.s follow.s; I
On Octobt'i- 18th, while Mr. Situated on Clement Crest i
[aither Ward wa.s uf. church, sev- Street, in city of Mocksville, be-
ci-ai of his roItitivGH and friends ‘iO and 41 of
went to his home and when he
THE MOCItSVILLE ENTERPRISE, MOCKSVILLE, У. C.
SALE OP LANDS
PA0E3 SEVEN
came home from church, a large
table was spread in the yard ;ind
was loaded down with, lots of
jiood things to eat. Between 75
block No. B, according to certain
map dated Oct, 28tii, 1922, de
signed ijy N. R. Kinney, C E.
and surveyed by N, R. Kinney,
which map is recorded in plat
book No, 23 page 426 in officeand 100 were there and hud a of Register of Deeds for DaW^ good time eating, talking and -
liaving ft Igood time. At 4 o'clock
all left wishing Mr. Ward many
more happy birthdays.
County, and more particularly
described aa follows: Being
twenty-five (25) feet front each
M ,.. W . F. F er.be, and b.by 2” » '’" '“ '" ’'*
Jarolyh, of Mocksville route 4, t Hp .iLCarolyn
spent several days visiting her
brother, Mr. Joe Ferebee, o\
Cana and her mother, Mrs. J. F.
Ward. I
Miss Margaret Miller who
holds a position in the Baptist
Hospital of WinsAjn-Salem, spent
tho week-end W th her parents',
Mr, and Mrs, L. L. Miller.
Mr. W. W. West and family
spent Sunday evening at the Bap
tist Hospital, visiting his daugh
ter, Miss Virginia wno is taking
training and she hns fallen and
hurt herself very painfully, but
is getting along nicely at the
present time.
Rev. R. G. McClamroch, of
I'^lat Rock, near Asheville, spent
a while with Mr. and Mrs. L, F,
Ward Saturday evening, Mra, B,
G, Latham went home with him
to visit'uwhile.---------O---------
SMITH GROVE NEWS
.The above described property
is known as the Rosa McCulloch
Hodges lot.
This the 10th day of October, 193G.
R. S. McNeill
Commissioner
Jacob Stewart, Atty. 10 22 4t
n o t ic e OF SERVICE OF
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
North Carolina, Davie County
In the Superior Qourt
Town of Mocksville
Vs
Mrs. Douschka Harris and hus
band James Harris; Davie Coun-
ty. ^
I'he defendants. Mrs. Dousch
ka Harris and husband James
Harris, if thoy be alive, or, i£
thoy be dead, their heirs, will
take notice that an action as
above entitled has been institut
ed in Superior Court of Davie ____ _____
County, aaid action being for the \ thence continuing North 08 de-
purpose of collecting taxes heldjgrees 15 minutes West 274 feet
visit with her parenta ^t High I'.'’ I'own of MocksviUe for the to an iron stake on the South
Point . “"il side of said road; thence North
Mr,' Theodore Howard entered ¡'h alleged in complaint, and this 83 degrees 30 minutes West 2019
tlio .'^aptist Ho.spitai Sunday fo r '““'*' action is to ei>force these I feet to an iron stake; thence
treatment for his eyes, his fri- against the real' estate South 4 degrees West 501 feet
Mrs. J. A. Smith returned
home last Friday from a week«
NORTH CAROLINA
,DA VIE COUNTY
Under and 'by virtue of au-
tliority contained in the W ill of
Camilla H. Steelman, deceased,
and a judgment in an action en
titled "Wachovia Bank and Trust
Company, Executor vs. Berry R.
Steelman et al,” said will and
s.nid judgment, being recorded in
the office of the Clerk of Super
ior Court of Forsyth County,
North Carolina, the Wachovia
Bank & Trust Company, in its
capacity as Executor, wi'll aell
the following described tracts of
land at a public sale on Monday,
November 2, 193C, at 12:00
o'clock noon, at the Davie County
Courthouse at Mocksville, North
Carolina:
Lot No. 1:
Be.ginning at afl iron stake on
the East side of United States
Highway No. 601 and being 2165
feet North of the intersection of
United States Highway No. 601
and the Cana Road and running
thence North 65 degrees East 600
ieet to an iron stake; thence
North 80 degrees East 2320 feet
to a stone; thence North 89 de
grees 45 minutes East 185.5 feet
to a branch; thenco at a North
easterly direction along said
branch 257 feet to cn iron stake
on the North side of a road;
thence North 76 degrees 80
minutes West 1038 feet;
,.,uls will be sorry to know. known and described .is a lot
Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Gobble the lands of Mrs,
and small son, of Fork C h u r c h ,P a t t e r s o n and others and
viaited her' sister, Mra, Sherrill No, 1 in the agreed
amith Sunday, "f,Mrs, Lucy McClamrock, of '‘<=c d. Sec deed record-
near Farmington, is s p e n d i n g , '^^0 office
Hunie time with hor daughter, i^c.g.ster of I^nnds oi Dayio
.Mrs, Joe Foster, , County N, C„ (and for fuller
Mrs. J. C. Smith attended a ciescriptioiv see complaint), and
birthday dinner at the home of >'« defendan s above named will
her niece, Mrs. P. J. Wagner take notice that they shall ap-
Sunday “ oifice ot the iClork
Mi^s' Mary Loio Livingston Superior Court of Davie Coun.
spent the week-end with her par- , “‘’„ .'if«nts, Mr. and Mrs. L, Livingston, “i ‘I'lrty (30) days after the last
Mrs. Sim Nelson, of Clemmons, ■ .----.....................
.•.pent one eveninig .the past week Summons by Publication,
with Mrs, J, H, Foster, or demur to the p ain-
publication of this notice of Ser-
310CKS CHURCH NEWS
aro
the
(luruiKiaiii.s aoovu named
(lueniud to be in Court lor
iniiijo.su of tins action,
ii.is uio i l Clay oi Oct., 1930,
ftl. A, llnHTMAiN
Ciuiic 01 Superior Court
Jacob Sluwart, Atty. for Piain-
im , 10 29 4t
tiff’s complaint or else the plain-
til'f will apply to tho Court for
the relief demanded in w\e eom-
'Mr, and Mr.s, M, J. Minor and and upon, the publication
children, of Charlotte, are spend-
ing some time in this commun
ity.
Mr. nnd Mra, Virgil Swaim, ol
Winston-Salem, were visitors
here Sunday.
Miss Mabel Jones, of Wins
ton-Salem, spent the week-end
with her mother, Mrs, 0, F.
Jones,
Miss Eva Phelps ia spending
some time with Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Surratts in Winston-Salem,
Miss Mattie Jones, of Lewis
ville, spont the week-end in this
community,
Mrs, 0, F. Jones spent Satur
day in Winston-Salom,
Mr. and Mrs, Roy Carter and
children, Mr, and i\Irs, Marvin
Minor nnd ehildren visited Mr,
iind Mrs. Conrad Phelps, near
Clemmons.
Mifisos -Phebo and Notie Cham
bers and Bessie Crater, of Wiii-
.4ton-Salem, were visitors at the
homo of W, J. Jones Sunday.
NOTICE OF SliJRVICE OF
SLIftllUUNS UY PUBLICATION
North Carolina, Davie County
In tho .Superior’ Court
I Town of Mocksville
I Vs
lOrnuat Brown and wifq, Mrs.
-----Brown; Davie County,
1 The defendants, Ernest Brown
and wife, Mrs, ----- Brown ii
they bo alive, or, if they be dead,
their iieirs, will take notice that
an action ns above entitled lias
been instituted in Superior- Court
of Davie County, said action be
ing for the purpose oí^co]lecting
M rs rj,H ,H ilt“onls~o7 the'sick'taxes held by Town of Moclts-
iist.
SALE OF LAND
North Carolina,
Davie County
Under and by virtue of auth-
ority and power in a judgment: others, conveyed by
viilo for the years, 1920, 1931
and 1932, us alleged in complaint
and this said action is to, en
force these liens against the real
estate known and de.seribud as a
lot adjoining the lands of Jacob
Stewart, Tumor Clement and
----to
in an action entitled, Mrs, Fan- Ernest Brown, see deed record-
uie McCulloeh and J. L. Holton, ' ed in book --- page --- office
oxccutors of Go.shen McCtilloch, of Register of deeds of Davie
deceased vs, ,Tohn C, Hod ;en exe- County, (and for tiiller descrip-
tutor of Rosa McCulloch Hodires, lion see complaint), and the de-
deconsed;' and .iohn C. Hodges, fondants above named will take
.said judgment being recorded jn noticc that they shall appear at
office of Clerk of Suiierior Court the office of the Clerk of Su-
of David.son County and in of- perior Court of Davie County, on
flee of Clerk of S.iperior Court or before the expiration of thir-
of Davie County, North Caro- ty (30) days after the last pub-
linn, I, R. S. McNeill, Commis- iication of tljis notice of Service
sioner, will sell for cnsh to the of Summons by Publication, to
highest biddei, tho following des- answer or demur to the plain-
cribed lot of land, containing a tiffs complaint or e .se the plain-
dwolling house and out buildings tift wiil apply to the Court foi
situated on West Side of South tho relief demanded in the com-
Main Street and Stato Highway plaint, and upon the publication
No 80 and U, S, Highway No. of the fourth nnd last notice the
---in the Town of Mocksvi.lle,; defendants above named are
at public sale on Kith day o f ' deemed to bo in Court for the
November. _1936,.. .'it.-12. , o'c.lock..purpose of this action,^.......
i'oon, at the Courthouse door of This tlie ^ay of Uci^ USu.
Davio Countv, described Jis fol- M. A, H A R T M i^ ,
lows: A certain lot containing Clerk of Superior Court
a dwelling house located in Jacob Stewart, Atty. for lain-
Mocksville, .said County and tiff, 10 -J
to an iron stake; thonco South
22 degrees West 530 feet to rin
iron stake on the East side of
United States Highway No, 001;
thence along tho Fast side of
aaid Highway 35 degoes. 50 min
utes East 500 feet to an iron
stake, the place of beginning con
taining 02,46 acres and being
known and described as Lot No.
1 in the division of the Holman
Farm ns shown on said map re
corded in tho office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No. 2:
Beginning at an iron stake on
the East side of United States
Highway No, 001 and being
1308,5 feet North of the intersec
tion of United States Highway
No. 001 and Cana Road and run
ning thence North 78 degrees 15
minutes East 2020 feet to a
“tone; thenca North 6 degrees
East 071 feet to a atone, thence
West 133 foet to a 'branch;
tlience North 33 degrees East a-
long the branch 287 foot to an
elm; thence South 89 degrees 45
minutes West 185,5 feet to a
atone; thence South 80 degrees
West 2320 feet to an iron stake;
thence South 05 degrees West
000 feet to an iron stake on the
East side of United States High
way No, 001; thence along the
l^ast side of said Highway 850.0
feet to the place of beginning,
containing 60.72 acres, and being
known and described ns Lot No,
2 in the division of the Holman
Farm as shown on said map re
corded in the office of the Re
gister of Deeds of Davie County,
North Carolina.
Lot No. 3:
Beginning at tho intersection
of United States Highway No.
001 and the Cana Road and run
ning thence along the North side
of the Cana Road North 83 de
grees 25 minutes East 1225.2
i’eet; thence continuing along
the North side of said road North
88 degrees 55 minutes East 784
foot to an iron stake; thence
North 6 degrees East 1022 feet
to a stone; thence South 78 de
grees IS minutes West 2020 feet
to an iron stake on the East side
of United States Highway No.
(101; thence along tlie East side
of said road 1308,5 feet to the
place of beginning, containing
Vl,92 acre.s and beinu known and
described as Lot ,Vo. 3 in the
division of th Holman Farm as
siiown on said map recorded in
the office of the Register of
.Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina,
Lot No. 4: ,
Beginning at an iron stake on
the North side of the Caiui Road
being 2009,2 feet .East of the in-
Ifsrsection of United States High
way No, 601 and the Cana lioad
and runniiiig thence North 0 de
grees East 2293 feet to a stone;
thence West 133 feet to a branch;
thence 'aTohg the " branch 'North
33 degrees East 287 feet to an
olm; thence South 71 degrees 10
minutes East 1165 feet to an iron
stake; thence South 5 degrees 41
minutes West along tho West South 71 degrees 10 minutes East
property line of S, F Hutchins
1418 feet to a stone' thenco South
70 degrees 15 miniite.s East 176
feet to an iron stake on the west
side of the Cana Road; thence
along the North side of the Cana
Road the four following courses:
South 38 degrees 50 minutes
West 484.5 feet. South 63 degreFs
10 minutes West 488.8 feet. South
75 degrees 20 minutes West 110.8
foet. South 88 degrees 55 minutes
West 526 feet to an iron stake,
the place of beginning, contain
ing 57.81 acres, and heing known
and described as Lot No. 4 in
the division of the Holman Farm
as shown on sftid map recorded
in the office of tho Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina.
Lot No. 5:
BSginning at an iron stake,
which is North 85 degrees 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone; which is the Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P- M, Pierce, at,a
branch 925 feet to an elm; thence
1105 feet to an iron stake; thence
along the property lino of R, H.
Neely nnd 0. T. Boger North 5
degrees 31 minutes East 1009
feet to a stone; thence North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 660 feet
to an iron stake in the branch
the place ot Dcgrnning, contain
ing 19.10 acres and being knowil
and described as Lot No. 5 in
the division.of the Holman Farm
ns shown on said map recorded
in the office of the Register of
Deeds of Davie County, North
Carolina. . .. .
Lot No. 6:
Beginning at an Iron stake,
which is North 85 degrees 20
minutes West 660 feet from a
stone, which is the Northeast
corner of the Holman Farm, said
corner adjoining property of 0.
T. Boger and P. M. Pierce, at a
branch and running North 85
degrees 20 minutes West 1551
feet to tin iron stake; thenco
South 3 degrees 35 minutes West
314 feet to an Iron stake on the
south side of a road; thence
South 68 degrees 15 minutes
Kns.t 274 feet; thonco continu
ing South 70 dogrets 30 minutes
East 138 feet to a branch; thence
in a northeasterly direction iiIon{r
said branch 022 feet to the place
of beginning, containing 14.34
acres and being known and des
cribed as Lot No. 6 in tho divi-
-sion of the Holman Farm as
shown on said map recorded ia
f office of the Register o f ,
•-'eeds of Davie County, N orth
Carolina.
The above described property
i-i kno\yn as the Holman .Home
olace. The sale of said proper-'
ty will be made upon a basis ot
one-third cnsh and the reiniaininir
two-thirds to be paid December
1, 1937, said obligation to be se
cured by a note and deed of trust
upon said premises. The pur- .
chaser may negotiate with the
seller for other terms. Lots will
be sold separately and in groups.
This the 29th day of Septomher,
1936.
WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST
r'OMP-'NY, E.xecutor
T. Spruill Thornton, Attorney.
10 1 Bt.
o n jy -
à o w n
50®
p e r m o n t h
L IG H T THAT SCREWS
RIGHT IN TO PLACE
HEMOVE TIIE UCIIT UUIJ) FROM THE
SOCKET . SCHEW HENUALITU IN
It^s a» S im p ie am T h a t
i OU can now have all
the light you w ant in the bath
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dark pantry. No extra wiring,
no new equipm ent, no addi
tional fixtures are necessary.
R E N U A LIT E banishes dark corners, dis
perses shadows, gives you the w ell-dis
tributed light you’ve wanted . . . and
w ithout the expense of re-wiring. RE
N U A L IT E screws right into the socket
just like an ordinary light bulb.
approved
Floor and Student Lamps
0 9 5 $
down Pif. »c.
The I. E, S, floor or study lamp will
make an instant hit with the f.imily.
You will find either of these lamps
the most useful purchase you ever
made. They are baeutiful too. These
lamps throw light directly on your
work. At the same time, they bathe
the room, with an even distribution
of soft illtimination. There is no an-
noying glare.
BETTER LIGHT FOR BETTER SIGHT
_j|
V'
t
H
I}“"»
IriiM ho»':« ;ì(iòtìi'.
i Vi'I':lii
« I I
‘Pi
m
J ( I
I i
■I
PAGE 8
The Mocksville Enterprise
PubliBhed Every Thursday at Mocksville
North Carolina
.... Editor and PublisherA. C. Huneycutt
Subscription RfltCB:
$1,80 « Year; 6 Months 76 centg
Strictly in Advance__________
Entered at the post office at Mocksville, N. C.,
M •econd-class m«tter un<ier tho act of March
I, 1*7*. ____________
;— a i i 5 • , ■ * * • •
• NOTICE TO GENERAL PUBLIC *
This newspaper charges regular ad
vertising rates for cards of thanks,
resolution notices. Obituaries, etc., and
■will not accept any thing lees than 85
cents cash with copy unless you have
regular monthly accounts with us.
We do not mean to be hard on any
one, but small items of this nature force
us to demand the cash with copy. All
such received by us in the future with
out lihe cash or staW.ps will not be pub-
Mocksville, N. C.,. Thursday, October 29. 193G
« * . » * * * * * * *
And the King shall answer and say
unto them, Vorily I any unto you. Inas
much as ye have done it unto one of
the least of these my brethren, ye have
done it unto me.— Matthew 25:40.
GOODY! GOODY!
■»
•»
if ,
*
«
Some time ngo Mr. and Mrs. Oran Patter
son Cremer got interested in “New Thought.”
They believed that ministers, priests nnd
rabbis were talking entirely too much about
hell and the pains of hell, and not enough
about the. joys of Heaven. While in this mood
they fell into the hands of one of "Father
(Devine’s” henchmen, or “Angela,” as "Fath
er Devine” calls them. Thi.s "angel,” bad
come with thirty other negroes fi'om New
York City to establish a Californin .branch
of Hoavun.” Mr. and Mrs. Cremer, although
white, fell right in with this “Father Devine”
'»cult and assisted in making tlie “iCalifornia
Heaven” juat wliat the thirty dusky “Angels”
sent by “Father Devine” thought it should
be. Soon tliey.were short of twenty-one hun
dred dollars nnd presently called upon the
"Son Devine.” so designated by “Father
Devine,” a negro by the name of Samuel ^
Alexander, supposed to be the “Head Amgel”
of thy "California Heaven.” But Alexander
not only refused repayment ot the twenty-one
hundred dollars, but the other “Angels” be
came indignant over 1:he fact that Mr. and
Mrs. Cremer would even think of such a thing
as collecting money out of "God,” or consider
any other earthly financing. Cremer was
forcod to go into Siipti'ior Court and call for
assistance in closing iho celestial doors of
“Father Devine’s” “California Heaven.”
"Father Devine,” back in New York who
claims to be “God,” and who rides in a Holls-
Koyce automobile and lives sumptuously every
day, admitted that he owned much property
and many automobiles and good securities,
but snid that the title to all this property
which he owns was in the names of various
“Angels,” nnd he snya that the names of most
of these "Angels” have been changed recent
ly. That makes their legal identification
rather an impossibility. In other words, “Fa
ther Devine” hns tlie twenty-une hundred dol
lars and Mr, and Mrs. Cremer are out that
amount, and will doubtless find them.selves
minus the same amount at the termination of
their law suit. And they got just what was
coming to them.
--------------------------u ----------------
NOVEMBER ELECTION MAY CHANGE
THIS
The Literary Digest's straw vote at this
writing appears to have Landon elected pre-
siaent. However, we have an idea thnt when
the vote of all the people is heard from re
sults will be different. Most of those cast
ing ballots ill the 'Digest’s contest are men
and women of more or less nieiiUs, many of
them \vi;altliy. The population of this nation
who will cast the deciding ballots in tlie
November election is made up of a class of
men and women thnt have not even heard of
the Literary Diijest or its straw ballots. This
is not, saying tiiat all of Koosevelt’s suppor
ters are this class of people, but it is saying
tliat the duciniiig vote for Hoosevelt will be
ea.-iL by the working people— llie common
iciK.s who have not even been given the chance
III fa.si a siraw ballot one way or the other
.since the ijiterary Digest put on its straw
ijiiiiul election.
---------------0---------:-----
M11{AGU1.0US liECOVERY OF SIGHT
A rather remarkable thing happened in
Wisconsin Hapids, Wisconsin, last week. A
man by the name of Lev; Dates, sixty-seven
years old, had bean blind for the past thirteen
years, lie went to bed as usual last Satur
day night a ,blind man. Sunday morning hd
awoke and could see as good as he ever could.
The miraculous recovery of JJates’ eyesiight
was not due to any medical treatment, “I
don’t know what iiappened or how,” ho said,
“iiut I just woke up and could see ngnin. I
wasn’t much excited.”
The firat thing Hates did Sunday morning
was to take a si.K-block walk.
THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE, MOCKSVILLE. N. C.Thursday, Oi ober 29, 19,'ÌG
MUST HE A HUIDE’S HISCUIT
.Sometime ngo W. G. Scales of Concord, N.
H. declared that he had a piece of bread
which was served to him durimu’ the Spanish
American War, thirty-seven years ago. Just
why he is keeping that particular piece of
bread, Mr. Scales did not say. But those
of us who were’ old enough at the time, will
recall some of the awful statements made by
the soldiers about the bread furnished .them
during the Spanish American War, can draw
a conclusion. Certainly. Spanish ¡American
War veterans will have a strong idea as to
tha motive of Mr. Scales preserving that par
ticular piece of bread. As a matter of fact,
the bread served to the army during our con
flict with Spain was something awful. The
boys called it "hard tacks”.
But Mrs. Nora M. Remsberg of Portersville,
Calif, goes Mr. Scales o.’ie better. She has
produced a biscuit made by her mother-in-
law fifty years ago. We have often heard
of the proverbial “bride’s biscuits” which if
shellaced would be hard enough to use as door
knobs and would stand up under weather con
ditions like the pyramids of Egypt. iDoubt-
less Mrs. Remsberg’s mother-in-law baked
that biscuit while she v/as a bride.
---------------------------0 ---------------
COTTON MANUFACTURERS IN GOOD
SHAPE
“Financial conditions confronting the tex
tile industry are the best that they have been
for a number of years,” said the president
of one of tho large textile mills of this section
to us a few days ago. This mill official went
on to say that for the first time in a number
of years the textile manufacturers are “sell
ing their products.” What he meant by this,
as he explained, is that the manufacturers
are now setting Wie price at which they sell
their yarns and other .products being turned
out by the various textile plants. “A„* few
years ago the buyers were setting the prices.
S^w we nre setting our own prices.” he went
oii 'to, say.
. V - ------------0 ---------------
EIGHTY-EIGHT HIE IN WREC14S
. ' According to a Raleigh news dispatch last
Week, carelesà, and reckless driving caused
six hundred and fifteen automobile accidents
, in this state during the niunlh of September,
As a result of these accidents eighty-eight
persons lost their lives, while seven hundred
and twenty were injured. However, );lie num
ber killed during September of this yoar was
twenty-eight Tess than the number killed in
Septembor, 1935, when one hundred and six
teen persons werc-killed-in automobile .-.cci-
dents. 'rhe above figures wero given out by
the State Highway Patrol, and while they
show some improvement over the past yoar,
they are still staifgering and appallingi, to
say the least.
------------— 0---------------
SMITHY’S PRESCRIPTION FOR ANEMICS
Old man Iver Sollid of Simcoe, N. D. has
been blncksmilhing for 77 years. He is now
8() yoars old and is still slinging a sledge
hnmmer with almost as much zest as he did
filly years ago.' lie is believed to be tho
oldest active blacksmith in the state of INorth
Dakota, if not even in the entire Northwest.
The pld gentleman says he has always been
moderate in eating and drinking, using most
ly plain wholesome food and getting plenty
of vigorous exercise in his shop each day.
His prescription would doubtless bo a boon
to many anémies years younger, than this
North Dakota smithy.
---------------0 ---------------
P R E S S C O M M E N T
1
ON “CATCHING COLD”
The season for common colds being “just
around tho corner,” as Science Service reminds
us these selfsame colds being one of tho
"most costly” as wpl! us mo.st distres.Hing of
all afflictions of mankind— tho question re
curs as to .what cannot all be kept away. The
defenses must bo within the individual. Ex
periments reported to the American Chemical
Society have souight to discover whether sus
ceptibility can be reduced. One hundred
persons underwent the tost of riding a sta
tionary bicycle. Only three rea.ched the top
rating of ability (techincally, to use 1,500
cubic centimeters of oxygon per minute for
ench square meter of thoir body surface).
Then the number of colds suffered by these
hundred in the next seven months was re-
])orted. The results showed that 04 per cent
of those in “good condition” igot through with
one cold or less, while 80 per cent of thoao
with lower ratings had four or more colds.
The 'results of these tests mei'ely suggest the
ituvice which is not now: “lieo]) fit”— for
"physical fitness” means that the body’s nio-
clianisni removes the germs faster thnn the
organisms can grow. And victories over
these enemies of human health arc difficult
to win in'overheated rooms.— New JTork Times.
---------------0 ---------i-----
BIYSTERIOUS "FATHER DIVINE”
Somothimg of tho mystery of the financial
status of Father Divine, Harlem’s negro
ovangoiist, whom his followers call god, may
be cleared-up by an examination ordered by
the Now York Supreme Court to determine his
ability to meet a judgment. And it may not.
His ability to di.spcnso great sum.s without dis
closing where they come from, or even who
legally owns them, has long baffled astuie
nnd detoi'mined investigators. — Springfield
Uepublicnn,
HEAVY TRADING IN THE
ACTUAL
Cotton 'I’rade Journal.
While the peak of the crop
movement occurred some three
weeks ago, trading in spot cot
ton in the markets of the South
last week broke all records for
the season. Thus, with diminsh-
ing supplies from the crop to
work on, the buyers took more
ctottott than over. Qine reason
for this undoubtedly was ithat
shorts were and still nre trying
hard to cover the end of October
commitments becaujse they are
alarmed at the readiness with
which the big merchandising in
terests are absorbing the crop
and they realize that toward the
end of October the gins daily
will be turning out a smaller
and smaller amount of cotton.
The most encouraging feature
of this heavy trading in the spot
department is that it points, not
only to a heavy movement to do
mestic mills, but to a heavy ex
port movement. There is every
indication that end of October
exports are going to be on a very
large scale.
As for lai'ge spot sales, it was
thought away back in September,
on the 19th, that the total of
sales in Southern spot markets
on that date of 83,142 bales pro
bably marked the heiight of the
open market demand for the sea
son. On Tuesday of this week
sales in Southern mn”kets mount
ed to 80,219 bales and on Wed
nesday the new high record of
«3,369 bnles was made. This
wns climnxed on Thursdny by
sales of 94,257 bales, one of the
most active sessions in mnny
yoars in the spot departmuiit.
On the same day the grand
total of foreign exports for tho
season thus far reached 1,115',-
099 bales ngninst 1,002,189 to
the same date last iteason and
1,029,408 to the same date two
seasons ago, There seems to be
no good reason for believing thai;
exports during the remainder of
October wi|l be smaller than they
wero a year ago, while most cot
ton men think' there is every
reason for believing they will be
larger, and possibly much larg
er. Reports from England say
that British business is on the
upgrade, which should mean that
British imports of American cot
ton will increase. Thus far this
season, Great Britain has taken
242,032 bales of American cot
ton against 186,227 to the same '
date last season. Germany has
taken 144,286 ibales against 137,-,
510, which means there is room
for heavier imports. Japan has
taken 237,778 bales against 217,-
374, which makes it look as if
should Japan catch tho uneasy
feeling provnlont in' this coimliy
over supplies, it may ensily ini;,,
much more cotton in the nexl .luw
months than it harj in the last
few.
.Many spinners abroad nppar-
ently have not walced Up to tin;
fact that supplies of American
cotton no longer are on the lavish
scale they have been for soinu
years back. It may be a ruile
nwnkening for some of them
when they do wake up to thu
facts in the situation.
JACOB STRWAKT
\ AUuruty at \*m
Mocksville, N. C.
UAei lu Southera Bank k iruot
Company building
Offic« phone...............................i!j(
It Pays To Advertise
Mr. Cotton Farmer
We Are Now Prepared To Buy
Or Gin Your
COTTON
We Will Pay Highest Market Price.
Come to see US before YOU SELL
W e A p p r e c i a t e ! Y o u r B u s in e s s
Foster and Green
Near Sanford Motor Co.
I “ '€ Ч
T H E M O C K S V IH Æ _ E N T E iy ^ N. C.. Thursday, Octobcr 29, 1936
OUR COMIC SECTION
E vents in the Lives o f Little M en
I'MSORRi ВОТ 1 OOÜBT
6ST И1Й A Complete- ifNlcl^tßBockfeß SÜIT-
fiEis T oo B/b-iTMevPON'T
MAKE 1 Ш l-V&-ALL I hlAVe ISTUlS 10N6 PANTS WILLFIT WM!
jjlE FEATHERHEADS By 0«borntf
H,ÜI?Ry,.,ÜP-You:.;S iiR E , PC- P o « &
VJi-iEM i 'io u "
T o (S-O
A'UL
■¡I A l l Ri(iHT—
ß ü T -/дй Ш '
' 4 û Ü F i O L D
" N O W -^B ü'^ Ц
SÖMETHIMCr— P E ’ME’W B E R ,
IT IS* FÖR CHARITY ,--
Back Home Again
I'M MOT G o m m a
AN>/
NAIE" G o t a I
H o tlS E f u l l Ò F
,IT N o w
ŒBGI
Щ Т П
Frisky Scotties for
Your T ea Tow el Set
, No heed for Scottie to teach her puppy new tricks—ho’s up to them
already I And what a joyous set of motifs with which to cheer tii«
towels that aerva for heaviest kitohen duty. There are seven ot
them, and see what simple afaaa
«tltch 'tis, with crosses an easy •
Miracle pn a Bridge**
By FLO Y D GIBBONS
'^'O W it’s a well known fact, boys and girls, that adventurers
^ have adventures, but why is it nobody,ever gives a thought
to adventurers’ wives? They have adventures too—particularly
if they travel around with their husbands like Grace St&nley of Falrview, N. ,J. ''
Mrs. Stanley is the wife of the late Col. King Stanley, a traveler ““Venturer of long standing. During the four years that she traveled with him, she says she had enough adventure to nil nn encyclopedia. But the one that gave her the biggest thrill—nnd also the worst fright-
happened down in the wild and woolly state of Texas in the spWng of 1026
Grace Stanley and the colonel were taking a trip by auto
mobile from Texas lo Shreveport^ La. Just beyond Marshall,
Texas, they ran into a severe storm— and when storms are se
vere down on the Texas plains, they’re severe, and no mistake.
This one was a combination of thunder, lightning, rain and hail
The' rain came down In sheets. There was no cover in sight,
and nothing tp do but go on.
They were getting close to tiie state line when- the car came
to a bridge spanning a deep cut through which ran the tracks of the
K. C. and S. railroad. As they hit thq nnd of that bridge, Grace heard
a DEAFENING CRACK. A sudden flash of light almost blinded her.
The car came to a sudden stop and the air was fllled with a sulphurous
smell. Lightningl Had it struck them? With her heart in her mouth, Grace raised her eyes.
There were three people in the cat-her husband and the driver in the front seat and Grace herself in thb rear. The men, up front; were
all right. Grace breathed a sigh of reltef. But at the same time some
thing inside of her was, telling hep tp sit still—not to m'ove even so
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
SHUR6 AM' -TiS A HOT DAV— HERE';
W H E R E O l S IT S
M B A BIG- P IS H
O ’ IC E C R R E A M
By Ted D’Loughlin О Л/ Wiilor« Ntwtpâpff UnU«Frozen Out
' vjHiJT p o V B z м е д м 'у о — ] ^ ViHUTTA We z . -DooiM ? p= L
cPFpicfcK;. ir Г"'.
The Driver Got Out on the Running Board.
much os a single muscle. Without moving her head she turned hor nyn.4 to the right, Tho sight sho sav.' there FROZE THE BLOOD in her veins.
The bolt of lightning had ripped away the entire corner of the
bridge. The car was standing on three wheels, teetprlng pre
cariously over a flfty-foot chasm. Its fourth whecl— llie left rear
one— hanging FA R OUT O VER SPACE.
Then tho Car Started fo Sag.
Tho men in tlie front seat weren’t moving, either. Thoy sat stilT and motionless, with grim, set expressions on their faccs. Then, slowly, the car began to sag to tho right—toward the broken, twisted wrecked side of the bridge. /
There wasn’t any time to waste. Quickly thoy talked the matter
over—decided the only thing that could save them was to shift as much
weight as-possible to tho loft side of tho car. Grace, who was in the
rear scat on the right side, directly over the dangling wheel, couldn’t
move because tho seat beside her was illied with luggage. It was up to the driver and the colonel to do the shifting.
The. car settled a bit more. Grace held hor breath as she felt herself sinking. The driver opened the door, slid ,over in his seat and got out on the running board. Both he and the colonel were big men—
both of them weighed in the neighborhood of two hundred pounds—and Grace found herself breathing a prayer of thankfulness for thnt. In an . agony of suspense.she watched while tho driver got out and her husband slid over in the seat to take his plaoe behind the wheel,
“ All this time,” says Grace, “ the car kept on settling down
toward the right. It was probably only a minute or two, but it
seemed like a thousand years. I hugged as close to the baggage
, on the left as I could, but .still tho car settled. It looked as if
we were going over in spite of all oiir efforts.”
Saved by Truck Driver with a Itopc.
The colonel, too, was climbing out,on the running board now—shifting
his weight as far to left ¿s possible. Still the car sagged, and there was
nothing more they could do. If they stepped from the running board the
car would go over. If Grace tried to move, it might furnish just the
vibration needed to send the car off the bridge and down to the tracks
fifty feet blow. It was a heartbreaking situation. Death was staring her in the face, and nobody dared to do anytliing about it.
But at that same moment help was in sight. A small truck shot around a corner from the opposite direction, and the, driver saw
what had happened. "He stepped on the gas arid came speeding toward them.
Again, Grace wns afraid to breathe. Would the vibration set up by the truck send them over the side?
But tbe driver of that truck bad a lot of presence of mind.
Also, be bad a rope. He leaped from his seat with the rope In
his hand, looped It around the front of the car and then made It
fast to the far side of the bridge.
With the rope holding the car, Graco could get out. She and tho colonel went around to the back of the automobiie to join the truck driver, who was excitedly crying that nothing but a miracle had saved them. The fellow was right, too.* The lightning had curled up the ironwork of the bridge like so much straw. One of the curls had ripped
off both right tires and completely ruined one side of the car. Another
curl had caught under the car itself—and that wao the only thing that had kept them from going over.®—WNU Sorvlot.
Tobacco Proves State of SoilIf everyone stopped sinoking there would still be a use for tobacco, says Tit-Bits MagaKine. Some would continue to grow it because of its pale, fragrant flower, but it would be valued chiefly by horticulturists,
who have discovered that it is a
wonderfully sure indicator of the
state of the soil. For successful cul
tivation it is necessary that the soil should contain nine constituents; a lack of one or more means sickly plants. But the tobacco pianL is so
sensitive that the absence of any of these is indicated immediately in tiie leaf. It is bright green if there
is too Uttle nitrogen, abnormally
dark if phosphorus is absent, and
the tips of the tiny leaves enclosing
the buds curl curiously if there is
too little calcium. Each reaction is
so marlcod that it cannot possibly
bo mistaken.
"Behind the 8-Ball”The National Billiard Association of America says: “It is generally conceded that the 8-ball is the most
difficult for tht player to see clearly
in the execution of his shot. This,
because it is black, naturally, the edges of the ball, or iif fact any part of the ball, do not stand out as clearly a s colored. Therefore, professional players, if possible, avoid being forced to play the a-bnll, because it is more diflicult to see
clearly, in reality, this fact was
what started the now common say
ing, ‘behind the 8-hnil,' used in the
player's vernacular in the sense that being in any kind of a diflicult point on the table, many times calls for the remark that one is ‘behind tho B-ball.’ In other words, they use
this to explain any dimoult situation which may confront them in tho game.’’
Pattern 1228
to the inch) Bono all in ono coIo»,'
they’ll mako shnart isilhoiietie*'
'gainst the, whiteness of yoUr tsa
towels. Send for tho pattern I Pat-'
tern 1228 contains a transfer pat-
orn of seven molfs (one foi:' each
day of h week) averaging about
5 by 8 Indies; materiar require
ments; illustrations of all stiichei Heeded.
Send 15 cents in stamps or coins ' (coins preferred) for this pattern
to Tho Sewing Circle Needlecrnft
Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York
NY.', -
Write plainly pattern number, ' your name and addt'ess.
B L A C K M A N
StÖGkan<f rouitRY MEMGINES A n Reliable ■
ИГ ;lla(kman’< Mtdfcalad Udt->
A-lrik'-''-''’'
■ii^, Blackni^’I S l ^
pvr'lllacMa^V.Hog Powder.
em ilatkman’s Poullry Tohlet*
a r Blackmart'f Poultry'Powder
JHilgheii QaiaUty—LowutMc»
Satisfaction Guaranteed or
your money bnck
BUY FROM YOUR DEALER
BLACKMAN STOCK MEDICINE CO.
Ciattar.eaga, Tsnp.
As a StreamA man may be slow and dull and
still not shallow. (_____ ' I
D o n H S l e e p
W h e n G a s
P re s s e s H e a t i
^ If you want to really GET RID OF QA8 and ferrlblo blontlna« don’t oKptolto do.lt by Juit dcotorlng your atomaohIh, Irritotlna nik -“ -----Moat QA&with haraltrtblete/» ___ _Btomnoh and upper
;пИо1| ап(|"а» loclggd In tha ms gnd Im ^?noonitjpat’o i bow «iir'thnt'”af« lo«d«d with in-oauslna buctorla.II your constipation I* of long atand. Inoi enormoua quantities of danoaroua booterla accumulate.. Then your dl-Keetion le lipeet. G AS often preaie* eert and (цпое, mnkinn life mleerabla. You can't oat or eleop. Your head ncheo. Your back aehee. Your com. iloxlon le lallov/ and pimply, Yeor reath la foul. You aro a sick,' erouchy, wretched, unhapmi peraon. YOijr« SY S T E M IS.PO ISO N Eb,_ Thouannda of auiforcra hnve found In Adlerlka the !qulck, aclontldo way to rid thelp ayatema of harmful bacteria. Adlerlkn rida you of naa and cftan* foul polsona out of BO TH upper and lower bowels, Give your bowels • REAt. otnanalna with AdlerlK«. Get rid of GAS. Adlerlkn does not grip* ~ la not hnbit forming. Leadlno Druofllata.
To the Extreme
A conceited man is an imaginative man.
P o o rly Nourjishcc] W o m e n s
T h e y J u s t C a n ’ t H o ld U p
Aro you getting proper nourlah-
ment from ytiur food, nnfl restftti
sleep? A poorly nourished body
Just can’t hold np. And os for tbat
run-down feeling, that nervous f»>
tlguo,—don't neglect Itl
Oardul for lack of appetite, poor
digestion and nervous fatigue, ka*
boon recommendod by mothers t*
daughters— women to women— for
over fifty years. iTry Itl rrhousand* of woratn Cardul helped them. Of course. U U 4im not benefit YOU, coiuult a phyaJej«»,
BUCK WALNUT KERNELSIBoBfbt b Larga aad Small Q atitito
HI(hettPik*»-AbKtuteR«s|i«nsibaHy i*»ArmatioH, eirculor 0Md priatMR.S.rUNtTINOOMFANV,tl.Uul*,M«. ' • Alto car load buv«ra ol Ptcaaa
C L A S S IC IE D
DEPARTM ÈN T
M U S I C
Hawaiian tiuUur. SimnlsU «ultur, Mnado- Un« VioliQ, elc.. Rlvun frco with ttaoh homa ■ tudy losHODH. SUNItlBr: HAWAIIAN CON- HISUVATOUY or MV81C, (Hmrledton^S. 0,
F L O W E R S
UoBfl Hu«bcK—QuRrAnteoil to bloom, I ущ» fltihlb’iown budfÌQd itock. ISvor bloomlaf v&rletlsa ISO ea. PoutiiM. Ca t^locue, TITIES Trier. Тсхнв, Dept, А*
- 5,_
PAGE 6 THE MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE. MOCKSvn.LB. N. С Thiusóay, Oí. оЬнг 29, 1936
И
'1и. .1,
'"Î! J'-!' Í1 / I v'lí
fíl'b 'i';;
* i ‘' i'
/Ifiv à i
ISÿM f ■Slid ■^Qí '
l i l.ï^tiî
1 Ш I
« f
j '“' ,> î(f-íVi-íiJuí-1'.'/¡ T*ñ.ri w
м !? ;
Q he SNAPSHOT CUIL
Memory Pictures of Home
Home "Interior»” leei photographed than moet lubjects, become precloua
j In after yean. They are eaay to make If time expoaure la uaed.
R ARB 1b tUe рёгвоп ot middle age
who retalne a good memory-
image ot the home or homea In which
be lived aa a child, and who doea not
wlah he could.
How the exterior ot the bo(i«e
looked, la not ao difficult to recall,
but once-tamlllar dei«lla ot llTlni
rooma, how tbe tumltur* waa ar-
' ranged, what plcterea were on the
walla, the appearance ot the Are-
.«lace, how the atalrway looked, hoy
the wlndowa were curtained, grow'
rague with the paaslng yeare— un
ices photosraphs ot those rooms
taken at the time are available to
refresh the memory,
Chnncm) aro, In th« спич of щпМ,
grown-ups of middle age and older,
no such pictures wore taken. But In
these days when thoro Is a camera
In olmoBt every household, what a
pity, reolly, to lot youngntoro grow
ap aad Icavo home, v.-ithout any plo-
turca ever being taken of tho living
rooms and bedrooms In which they
apent so many of tholr childhood
hours! It Is probably bocauao such
pictures can bo mado at almost any
time that wo aro apt to postpone
taking thom. Slnco tliaj oan now bo
made easily with any camera,' by
nrtlllclal light at nlsht, ns woll as
by daylight, why, with a-U this time
available, should wo any longer neg
lect to take them? Hero are a few
hints on taking vlowo ot Interiors;
Since no movement of the subjcct
needs to be considered, timo ox-
poBures are best, whether by day
light or artlflclal light, the time de
pending, ot course, on tho film used,
tihe amount ot. light and the stop
opening in the.Iena., ,
' A amall atop muat usually be uaed
In b/der to obtain aharp imagea of
objecta at varloua distances troa
the cameror'
Leave all the furniture In Ita uauiri
place, aa far as possible, and taka
pictures from aeveral vlewpolnta.
Do not crowd a lot 6t furniture la
a amall apace juat to ahow It off. II
will not be the naluraf am uittteiM t '<
that yon want to reme^W^
clear floor apace in the'Toregniund.
r,equlre, * ftf • »■ ■ r'riltu “■neW'by ■iflAee ot ftifrilture !‘for t((ome
views; Watch out for distracting r^
flections from mirrors or pictures,
Havo the camera on a tripod or other rigid Huppnrt, nnd plnced low
enough HO that more ot the floor than
tho cclllng can bo seen In tho flndor.
It the whole aVoa ot the plctiire Is
not clear In the flnder bocause ot
dark tones and walls, havo oomcono
hold a light near tho v/all until you
have llxed tho view exactly.
For Interiors taken by daylight
coming from only ono window, a ro-
lloclor (of white cloth or paper the
size ot a window shade) will In-
croaso tho Illumination ot the cor
ners ot tlio room. Floodlight biilba
may also bo used In conjunction with
daylight to considerable advantage.
Interiors at night may bo taken at
"time" with the Illumination ot .three
or four ordinary electric light bulbs,
but tho Inexponslvo floodilgji^ 'bulbs
now available for Indoor plctij.fo tak
ing will servo tho purpose,|)^Uerl
Care should be taken |Wlth’ 'olth|^
kind that an unshaded, fi.ii^b Is not
Included in the plcturo'qr,'‘fog”',wllj result. V. t,. , , .
JOHN VAN "'.i
мжихижнжтияихмжнжнхняихижнкнхнхнжмжикнвйжихнжна' (! «.¡I .«■
.'Ki.M'l?. ■
f Л-.
We wish to anndii;nce that our
C O T T O N G IN
11
IS NOW OPEN
EVERY DAY OF THE WEEKNN We will pay highest market priced
I Bring your cotton to us.
I G R E E N M IL L IN G C O .
I MOCKSVILLE, N. C.
sжs
s
ss
ss
ssHaHaHs»itHsN
.Al
vV!l lifon
Democratic/ Ticket
We are publishing in this issue and thè
issues to come the names of the honorable
gentlemen who will lead us to a glorious
victory in November.
United Status Senator ...
Governor .........................
Con)ires.s ...........................
Stnte Senator ...............
lieprosentative ..............
Sheriff .............................
licKister of Deeds..........
Coroner .............................
Cminty Commissioners
................ Josiah W. Bailey
.....................Clyde R. Hoey
............... Walter Lambeth
........... Wm,. H. MCELwee
......................... J. B. Cain
................. L. M. DwiKiiin.s
..... Richard R. Everhardt
.................. Dr. W. M. Long
. ............ Burma Singleton
Sheek Bowden
T. A. Blackweldex
EFIRD'S Anti-Freeze Campaign
Featuring Warm Comfortable
Blankets and Comiorts
Thursday, Friday
and Saturday
The Chatham Stratford all-wool single blankets.
Orchid, blue, green, rose, mahogany, beige
and rose.
Size
72x84
Size
70x80 $6 .95
The Chatham Salem all-
wool single blanket in
two-tone blends of such
rich colors a» green, rose,
peach, blue; etc. Size
70x80.
Chatham Stewart and
Air-loom single blankets.
Rich solid colors and
plaids. Size 70x80.
$ 6 9 5 $ 5 9 5
All wool döiiilitetii'-b|l{
plaids. Satin Binding.
in multi-colored
.Finest virgin wool.
Size
72x84 8
One group of all-wool and 26% wool blankets,-Beau
tiful plaids. 'Size 72x84
double blankets, a n d 72x84 single in solid colors.
Leaksville 25% wooi dou
ble ÎDÎankets, &iiì^|7ìb(84.
Beautiful plaid's of rich
colors.
.95 Size
66x80
7 yji O.
“ $4.95 $3.95
Part wool double blanket«. SlZ3s 70x80, 72x8‘l and 72x99. Warm, long wearing bbn'.:ot.9 ' In plalfls. Also 25% wool singles.
All-wool single blankets
In sal'ji colors. Usual
$5.95 vs^'jc. but matlo ‘
with one se.im. Spo:ial
at only
Part wool double and
singb blankets In plaids
and two-tone. SIkc.i 70x
80. Warm,'coni.'crta'jle.
Part wool doutl5 blan
kets In b-nutUul plaids.
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A pillow filled Avith goose feathers.
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EEIRD'S DEPT. STORE
Salisbury, N. C.
'ГИВ NEWSIEST mSWSPAPBR IN 0А У1в—THB B IST FOR THB SUBSCRIBER AND ADVERTISER"
Davie County’*
Beet Advertising
Medium Mocksville Read By The PnopI*
Who Are Able ío
Buy
(A HUNEYCUTT PUBLICATION)
VOLUME 68 MOCKSVILLE, N. C„ THURSDAY. NOVEMBER !5, l!gi6 No, 50
R o o s e v e l t L e a d s I n
lYTWOmVE
LEAD TO LANDON
Topeka, — Governor Alf M.
Landon turned from his unsuc-
I'cssful race for the presidency
U.dny to his joib as chief execu
tive of Kansas and to plans for
);oing duck hunting.
Pledging; President Roosevelt
thfit all Americans will work
with the administration “for the
Kood of the country,” the Kansas
governor presided at a press con-
ferenco in the state house, posed
jovially with newspaper corres
pondents for pictures, and answ
ered requests for comment on the
election with:
‘‘Not this morning,”
Puffing calmly on a cigar,
Landon greeted newspapermen
nnd photographers with, "Well,
there’s still a few of your pho
tographers'around,'.',,
Although Landon declined to
discuss his immediate plans be
yond saying ho was going duck
hunting, friends understood tho
Governor and Mrs. Landon plan
to buy n farm in locality soon.
They \yere suid lo desire to rear
their two young children, Nancy
Jo and John Cobb, in this sec
tion, W ith politics behind it was
believed they would be "shop
ping” for a farm soon.
Earlier Reports.
New York,— President Roose
velt wns leading Governor Alf.
M, Landon or had won in 4G of
'ho 48 states Wednesday in an
overwhelming electoral endorse
ment of new deal anti-depression
.uoiicies. Governor Landon con
ceded Mr, Roosevelt’s re-election
shortly after midnight.
Only Maine and Vermont re
mained true to the Republican
tradition, accordin^f to incom
plete United Press tabulations.
New Hampshire, listed through
the night as one of the little
group of three probable Landon
states shifted at 8:30 a, m. (e. s,
1,) to the Roosevelt column. The
margin was slightly more than
2,000 votes with two precincts
still to report.
The nation voted, according to
incomplete United Press returns,
to continue in power the admin
istration whch Mr, Roosevelt
promised “has only jufit ibegun
to fi'ght,” '.The PrCaiuent coi.i-
pled that platform promise with
the statement that organized
money '“met its match” in his
firsi adminisration and the hope
that it would “meet its master”
in his second.
Air. Roosevelt’s popular vote
was swelling by the minute as
returns flooded press association
"VVIini aiigc’’ fûmes in tlic door,. twiiloni U'lijjs out of the iiniuloio. NOVEMBER «iiw» 5— Roccrs makes Arst air
AIkIu across continent. 49
^ _ days. 1911.
6—John Phillip Sousa, rreat band'leader, born. I8S4.
7—General Harrison licks Infrie, dians on Tippecanoe Kiv . it. lOU.
8—Conqueror Cortez rcaches Mexico City. 1519.
______ 9—Cincinnati Sentincli firi:!western newspaper, starts publication. 1793,
lO-Quccn'i Colics:, now Rut- ' —' ' 1..СГЗ, Bi ts charier. 1766.
II—United States monument to Unknown Soldier dodi, caied. 1021 . »"■«
The Corner
Gupboiird Column
Edited by M. J. H, •
DOWN TO SLEEP
"November woods are bare and
still, .
Noveinber cfays are clear and
bright, . : ; ;
Each noon burns up the morn
ing’s ciiiii.
The m.rirning’s snow is gone by
night,
Each day my step? grow slow,
grow light.
As through the woods 1 reverent
creep
Watching all things ‘'110 down to
sleep,”
îli'Â
Elected Governor
CLYDE It. IIOEY
wires Wednesday, There never
has been such a margin of pre
sidential victory as that indicat
ed— but not mathematically as
sured— for |Mr. Rioosevelt. His
popular vote was running slight
ly less than 9 to 5 Wednesday,
Roosevelt was leaaing In Penn-
sylvjinia, a Republican strong
hold lately regarded as tlie chief
bulwark of its national strength
and prestige. The populous and
ricli Great Lakes states were
piling v.p Roosevelt p.luralitieM
and even Kansas was in the new
deal column although the count
was close and retuiiis incom
plete.North Carolina
J. Wallace Winborne, slate
Democratic chairman, predicted
that tho Democratic party in the
state had cast its largest vote
on record and rolled up its big
gest ma,1ority. ^ Returns j!rom 1,225 of the
state's 1,855 precincts gave:
Koosevelt 435,290,
Landon, 117,488,
Senator J, W, Bailey and ClycTe
R, Iloey, Democratic nominee lor
the senate and for governor, had
huge majorities o;ver their (lie-
iniblican opponents, Frank C,
Patton and Gilliam Grissom, in
the incomplete returns.
Returns from 749 precincts
gave:
(Bailey 250,203,
Patton 71,212, V
With 1,082 precincts reported,
Hoey, 332,236,
Grissom, 141,S7G,
Davie County
Sheriff Smoot led tho Republi
can ticket, his majority over
Dwiggins being 071; J. W. Tur
ner, Register of /Deeds, defeated
R, ’R. Everhardt by 617; Brewster
Grant for the House, defeated
J. B, Cain by 449, The county
commissioners, L, M. Tutterow,
0 I.. Ilarkey and J. Frank Hen
drix, defeated their opponents by
from 399 to G25 majority.
Attorney. Brock defeated his
opponent by a good majority.
Mrs. Mary W. Cartner
Passes
J. P. Humphreys
Of Davie Passes
Mrs, Mary Walker .Cartner,
widow of John Alexander Cart
ner, passed away in Cooleemee
on Oct, 28, «¡'ed 88, Sho was
tho daughter of Harrison Walker
and Sarah Chnflln Walker ot
Davie. Surviving are the fol-
Inwing relatives: one son, Boone
Cartner, of Cooleemee. lour ibro-
thers, W, S, Walker and ,F S.
Walker, of route 4, R. L, Walker,
ol this place, J, H. Walker, of
Spartanblurg. S, C., two sisters,
Mrs, Florence Smoot, of route 4,
and Mrs, Belle Whitley, of Cool
eemee, six grandchildren and 14
¿reat-grandchildren, /The last
rites'were held at Salem Metho
dist Church, of which she waa
a member, on Thursday after
noon at S ©’clock, wath the imis-
tor. Rev, M, G. Ervin, in charge.
The interment was in the chmrch
cemetery, Mrs. Cartner had
spent li'er «ntire life in the Siilem
community, where she was well-
known.
Pallbearers were C, N. Spry,
Ransom Dudley, Roy Hellard, J.
W. Turner, Ed .Walker and Hu
bert Creason, and the .liowers
v/ere carried by Misses Helen
Jordan, Sarah Jordan, Aleen
Walker, Pauline Driver- Inez
Driver, Viola Cartner, Doris
Hellard, Helen Dudley., Sarah
Cartner, Mrs, Hubert Creasoji
and Mrs, Arlene Jordan-
Wesley Class Meeting
TJie Ladies’ Wesley Olass ,of
the Methodist Church -met with
Mra. B, P. Foster last Tuesday
afternoon, with Mrs. Clarence
Grant joint hostess, IThe home
was decorated with beautiful
flowers, and the Halloween spirit
was carried out. The devotion
als were led toy the teacher, Miss
Jiuth Booe, with Mrs, J, L, Sheek
'anil Ml'S. )Dntllas Kirby taking
part, the theme being Peace and
Progress. Mrs. ,T, N, ChafHn, the
new class president, presided
over tho business meeting. The
hostesses, assisted by M.rs, Ollie
Stockton and Sarah Foster, serv
ed delicious cream and white
and yellow loaf cakes. Those
present were: Mesdamea Ollie
Sto.;kton, J, L. Sheek, V, E,
;3waim. Dallas Kiiib.v, George
Hcndricka, C. II, Hendricks, Lee
Craven, Prentice Campbell, T. N.
Ch.'iffin E. P, Foster, Clarence
Grant, E. J, Harbison, B. I,
Smith, Miss Ruth Booe, and two
visitors, Mr.i, E, W, Crow, and
Sarah Foster,
Eastern Carolina farmers who
pui'chasod feeder niu-.'! from the
drouth area of the mid-west re
port that the animals are gain
ing flesh rapidly.
, James Pierpoint Humphreys,
well known iDavie farmer died at
hia homo near Mocksville on Fri
day evening October 30, 193G,
age 68, Ho had been in ill health
for several months. He \i'aa tho
son of the late John Henry and
Sarah Ann Humphreys,
Mr. Humphreys spent his early
life in Lexin(j.ton, For the past
33 years he has resided in Davio
County at tho present home place
as a highly respected citizen. He
was a member, of Liberty Metho
dist Church where the last rites
were held Sunday afternoon at
i,:3U o'tjock with the pastor. Rev,
M, G, Ervin in charge assisted
by Rev. Barb,iir, paator of tho
Cooleemee Methodist Church,
The interment took place in the
church cemetery.
The surviving fwnily consists
of the widow, two daug.hters.
Mra. C. G, Foster of Winston-
Salem. Mias Johnsie Humphreys,
i a tcachei* in the Cooleemee
i schools, iive sons, John W. and
(James A, of Winston-Salem.
Paul N-, Carl J-, and Leo Hanes
at home, one brother, Anderson
Humphreys of Davie, three sis
ters, Mrs, J, C. Harris of China
Grove, Mrs, P. W, J2Hiott, and
Mrs, J, N, McLaughlin of Ro
wan 'County..
n’he pallbearers were F. A.
Nail, M, D, Ridenhour, W, L.
Riddle, J, M. Call, M, H. Hoyle
and 0, H, Hartley.,
Mrs. Smithwick Is
Hostess
Mrs,, R, R. Smithwick gracioua-
i ly entertained at four tables of
bridge on Friday afternoon, her
home being attractive with color
ful chrysanthemums, /The hos
tess was assisted by her moth
er, Mrs, Ross Alexander, of
Statesville, in receiving tho
guests, Mrs, A, T. Daniel won
u dainty towel as high score
prize, and Miss Helen Campbell
won the consolation, a hot roll
cover. Miss Ca'.vxu^ll, a^ibride-
elect of this montli, was also
'given a ^cookie jar. Delicious
congealed white salad, ham
sandwiches, pickle, crackers,
date bars and coffee were serv
ed, Mrs, Smithwick’s guests
wei'e: Mesdames Rcss Alexan
der, E, C. LeGrand, G, G, Daniel,
llenaeraon Cotter, L, E, Feezor,
Grady Ward, John LeGrand,
Knox Johnstone, S. A. Harding,
Gaither Sanford, P, H. Mason, A,
yT, Daniel, J, Lea Dwiggins,'
George Bryan, Misses Sarah
Gaither, Delia Grant and Helen
Campbell,----------i----
Gaston County ia harvesting
one of its largest hay crops al
though recent rain has damaged
the quality’ somewhat,
Mrs. Mary H. Doby
Dead
Mrs, Mary ■ Hughes DoI5V> wi
dow of tlio late Columbus Doby,
passed away at the home of her
daughter, ,Mrs, C. C, Barney, near
Fork, oh Tuesday evening, Oct,
27,. agcti''77, JThe funeral whs
conducted at Fork Church Bap
tist Church on Friday morning at
l,ll,..p,’olQpk,'. by.:..Rev,.,E, J, Ilarbi-
' son, and interment was there.
The surviving family, consists of
ono Ibrother, Randolph Hughes,
a son, Manuel Doby, and a dau
ghter, Mrs, C, C. Barney, all of
'Davie, 9 grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren. Pallbearers
j were Jack ‘Barneyi Bm dy Bar
ney, Davis Doby, Wiloy Doby,
.Elgin Doby and Avery Doby,
The flowers were carried by
Mesdames L. C, Wyatt, Claude,
J, L, Dwire, Annie Dean Wilson
Hughes, Charles Carter, Misses
Elizabeth Holder. Eva Mae W il
liams, Marie Doby, Mrs. E. Doby.'
Mesdames Saniord And
Long Give Tea
lNovp-"H»,r Woods are bare and
still,
NovemNr days are brjght and
good, 1
Life’s noon burns up Life's morn
ing chill,
Life'svnight rests feet that long
have stood.
Some warm, soft bod in field
or wood.
The mother wil! not fail to keep
Where she can ‘lay us down to
sleep’.”
(Helen Hunt Jackson)
I '
il
Wo wish that llelon Hunt Jack
son had written a poem for
every month, in . the year, for .wo,
love her verses on ' .Sept.omber, . <
Oftoiber and November, ' Sho
'tlso wrote the historical Hovel,
“Ramona,” that has iboen adapt
ed for tho screen, Tho picture
is in colors, and is said to bo
very fine, but we haven’t gotten
to see it yet. It deals with tho
"'v ii’ico of the white pioneer.«! on
tho Indians’ land ia very tragic.
Sometimes we wonder what those
long-ago authors would think, if
they, could see their creations of
brain and pen come to life on tho
“silver sheet.” , ^ j , ; ^ ;
-----------------
A noted sculptor, Lare'd'O' T'aft,
died last week in his Chicag»
studio-home. He was the father
of Mrs, Raymond A, Smith., o f
Greensboro, wife M Rtev, Ray-
I Mrs. Gaither Sanford and Mrs, ^ond A, Smith, who is a mem-
W . M. Long were gracious hos-, .Qer of the Greensboro Colleger
faculty, Mr, Smith is the .sonI lesscs, at tne home of the form
er, at a lovely tea on Wednea-
iday afternoon, Oct, JJ8. |The
guests 'Were greeted by Miss
Mary Heitman, and presented to
the receiving’ line, composed of
Mrs, Sanford and Mrs. Long, tho
hostesses, and Mrs, Henry- F,
I.uitg, of Statesville, and M ra.!
of Mr, and Mrs. J, E, Smith, of
Cooleemee, and is an outstanding
young Methodist minister.. A-
mong Laredo Taft's many work»
of art is tho Columbus Memorial
F/ountainj Hiear the Union Sta-
tiori in Wnshingtoii City." Most
¡of his sculpture is in Chicago orHuf™ B. S«i,fort. The living-'j,,I,,; ............
r r tlr.l re.og„i..,l wo,-I. wa.with a profusion of pink and | , tu ttr i
rose chrysanthemums and other Worlds Fair
¡ulLmn flow er^ A ;o i:; Chicago in 1893, is a ways a,
of yellow and white was carried,
out in the dining-room, where
.¥fss Sarah Gaither and Mrs, Pe-
M'ram Bryant, oif Statesiville,
poured tea. The table was beau-
lu.aiy appointed with a lace . ... . , ,
cloth and centered ^Wth a silver
'■owi of yellow pompon chrysan’. .winter. We have
themums on a reflector, while a-planning to transplant
yuiiow tapers in silver holders «ther b|Ulbs, and
and silver compotes of mints ■ beforcv
’ ?
.. ----------’ j ,
These fini^ fall days ought ,to'
a lace' 'î'° elastic, for. there are so
completed the picture, Mrs,“snow flies,” It seems' like we'
Knox Johnstone and Mrs, R, R, »‘Ways planting flowers! in;
Smithwick served delicious sand the'wrong place, and then they'
wiches, fruit-cake, cheese dates, o" «ind dwindle. Maybe they
salted nuts and mints. G o o d - ^ > o o m next spring. We hope
byes were said to Mrs. John C, November certainly is ,an
.Sanford, A number of friends important month, starting its ca-
cailed between the hours of 3:30 lendar with the all-absorbing
and 5:30 to share this delightful Election Day, and coming to a
hospitality.
NEW CONTRIHUTIONS TO
THE T. «. COTTAGE
The following contributions
have been received for the fur
nishing of. the cottage and are
much appreciated: J, M, Horn,
Knox Johnstone, J, F. Hawkins
and J. K, Sheek, Just a few
more and wo will be out of debt.
grand finale with turkey, foot
ball and Thanksgiving Day. Af-
most in the middle of the niaath
comes that blessed holiday, N’ov-.
ember 11th, Armistice Day. and
may its shadow iiever grow dim
November is a month of gras
dawns, brown fields and fallinB
leaves, Wiiiie the laiidscapci ’
lacka tho brilliant colors of Oct-
oiyar, there is a restfulness in
the sqenory that is beautiful.
(I SO.Í II
i t ’..
li
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