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11-NovemberIMisfAl; !RECEIPTS1 SHOW fM£ JteMMi ClftcOLAflON fttft LAftGEST Iii fHE COUNTY. THEY OON1T Lit' fHERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: .UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN XXXIV.MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEP; -, 1932 * _ —NUMBER 16 NEWS OF LONG AGO. Wh3t Was Happening In Davie Before The Days of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, Nov. 5; 1902 ) E. H. Morris made a business trip to Charlotte Wednesday The roof of the Methodist church is being painted. R. S. Grant accidently shot him­ self last Tuesday, inflicting a pain ful wound over his eye. Mrs E. M. Dalton has been suff ering with a seveie attack of sore throat. Elder M. V. Warner will preach at Ephesus the 3rd Sunday m this month. Miss ZeIda Parks spent Saturday and Sunday with. MissStella Lefler near Cooleemee. Mrs. Amanda Wall is quite ill at her home in Ephesus Misses Steila Lefler and Bessie Foster of near Cooleemee spent Friday and Saturday the guests Of Misses Zelda Parks and Nettie Thomason at the home of Dr. and Mrs. B. C. Clement in Mocksvilie. The election in Davie county is a thing of the past. Despite the large amount of barbecue fed to the voters by the democrats they failed to elect a single man 00 their coun­ ty ticket. .The majority given the Republican candidate were as fol­ lows: J. L. Sheek, sheriff, 165; B. 0. Morris, clerk, 133; Jas. F. Moore, register, 167; J. W. Etcbi- son, treasurer, 127; C. G. Bailey, W. A. Bailey and W. F. Furches1 commissioners, received majorities of 167 and 116. Grant, legislature 101. Mr. George Lefler. of Ephesus, and Mrs. Lizzie McCulloh, of Fork Church, were united In marriage Wednesday evening, Rev. Chas. H. Utley officiating. Henry Bailey, of R. 1 business trip to Winston week. Mr. and Mrs. William Salisbury, visited relatives here near Jericho recently. Arthur Allen and sister, Miss Blanche, spent several days in Stat­ esville last week visiting relatives. Held (or Calling Woman ‘Old Crank/ High Point, Oct. 20—Whether cilling a woman ‘ an old ’crank” constitutes an assult under the law will be determined when John Safrit local man, appears for a hearing be­ fore a magistrate at Mocksvilie. The complaint against the Hfgh Point man is an allegation that he went to the home of Si West in an intoxicated condition and attempted to assult Mrs. Beulah Thompson, calling her ‘‘an old crank.” The Mocksvilie magistrate issued a war­ rant for Safrit’s'arrest, requiring bond of $500 for his appearance. Democratic Leaders At­ tacked By Newell. El zabethtown, Oct. 17.—Speak­ ing in the Bladen county court­ house, Jake F. Newell, Republican nominee for the United States se­ nate, denounced what he called the demagoguery of the state Democra­ tic leaders. ‘‘One great Democratic states­ man campaigned through your sec tion in the primary declaring in favor of taking the tax off land and putting it on liquor.” Newell-said, ‘‘He was either ignorant of the fact that any tax on liquor must be a federal tax while the tax on land is a state tax, or he was deliberately trying to deceive the people.” Newell said the country needs “an honest discussion of the tacts and issues’ ’ rather than the “an­ cient history.” which he charges some of the Democratic candidates are trying to talk about. made a the past Booe, of and How About It, Mr. Roosevelt. According to Hemming S. Nel­ son Lake Lillian, one of ten farm­ ers’ union lerders who conferred with Gov. Roosevelt in’ his private car when the Governor was in Sioux Fails last Thursday the De­ mocratic president nominee gave these farm leaders assurance he would stand for legislation greatly inflating tlie currency. Nelsyn says that Gov. Roosevelt agreed to favor the Frazier bill to inflate the cur rency by the issue of $5,000,000,- 000 in ‘ greenbacks” or Treasury notes to refinance all farm loans at 1 Y per cent, interest; the Thomas bill, under which the Feneral Gov­ ernment would fix the prices of farm commodsties according to “cost of production;” the Wbeeler bill to remonetize silver at the ratio of 16 to I, and the Patmau bill for the immediate payment of the soldiers’ bonus through the is­ suance of $2,000,000,000 in new currency. These are startling statements, yet they are given out to the press by a responsible man, one of the leaders ot a national farm organi zatton. Gov Roosevelt has never pledged himself in any public speech to such a program as Mr. Nelson testifies he gave approval in this private conference v What will he say? Will he deny the accuracy of Mr, Nelson’s report, or will he take the public into his confidence and tell the whole world what he is said to have told these ten farm leaders? How about it Mr. Roosevelt? If you are going to favor the issue of $7,000,000,000 in fiat currency and the free coinage of silver at 16 to i, in case of your election to the Presidency the people have a right to know it. How about it? If Times Were Normal Exploit The Young— Especially Girls.If times were normal and the contest were between Hoover and Curtis on the one side and Roose- Vilt and Garner 011 the other, with nothing to be thought about, ex­ cept the relative records and abili­ ties of the respective candidates, cm anyone doubt what the verdict would be? Hoover and Curtis, each with a record of great accomplishment, sound, conservative thinking, and The greatjdanger in repealing or modifying the Eighteenth Amend­ ment is the attemptl.that will ’ be made by the makers and seiiers of intoxicating liquor to EXPLOIT THE YOUNG PEOPLE—PARTICULAR­ LY THE GlRLSv— with the same methods used in cigarette advertis­ ing. There are fifty million young pec - plunder twenty-one in this country with a definite program which hrs I among whom the liquor dealers will Norris Tags Roosevelt. New York Herald Tribune. Entrance ot Senator Norris into the national campaign as a cham­ pion of Gov. Roosevelt is not sur­ prising. Butsomehow we suspect the Democratic presidential candi­ date would be just as well pleased if thet Nebraska senator should call off his coast to coast stumping trip. Forsome time Mr. Roosevelt has zealously sought to impress upon the business interests that he was not so radical as they might have been led to believe.* * * But Sena­ tor Norris is not amenable to the strategy of the Democratic high command. He believes Gov. Roosevelt stands 100 per cent for all his liberal ideas and is npw faring Iorth to tell the world. Just at the time the Governor will be seeking conservative vqtes in the Eastern and border states, Senator Norris will be trumpeting his liberalism throughout the land. Things To Consider. Indianapolis News Why is the United States the first country in the world to show definite signs of recovery from a world wide depression? Partly be­ cause, by means of a protective tariff, we have kept our standards higher than those of the rest of the word. Partly because we have kept our gold currency unimpaired. But right at a time when the upward trend is unmistable, Jack Garner lets it be known that if the Demo­ cratic party is placed in power, its policy will favor adulteration of the American dollar; while Frank- Iiu Roosevelt pledges himself and his party to the calling of an Viu- teruational conference” whereat Europe would be invitedvto help us rewrite our tariff for Europe’s ad- I vantage.. I Send us your subscription. support of the ablest minds of the country, regardless of party; and Roosevelt and Garner, the one with a record of administration as govei- nor of New’ York so little to his credit that his support is weakest where it is best known, the other with a record of sponsoring meas­ ures of legislation which every sound thinking citizens must know would be utterly devasting in their effects upon the business of the country, neither of them having any definite program, but commit­ ted only to “bold experiments.” If times were normal, would not the election of Hoover and Curtis be looked forward to as a matter of course? But with times not normal, with problems still to be solved which calls for the widest of experience, the soundest of, judgement, the most carefully worked out measures of legislation, is it not all the more important that such men as Hoover and Custis have, proven themselves to be should be placed in charge of the nation’s business? Who Shall Control? It is doubtful if auy candidate for President was even surrounded by so heterogenous and mutually antagonistic supporters as is Gov. Roosevelt. He owes bis nomina­ tion primarily to William Randolph Hearst and 'William G. McAdou. He is supported by Senator Norris and John W. Davis and Huey Long and Alfred E. Smith (moreor less) and Senator Nye and Senator Rob­ inson—aud the list might oe con­ tinued to include scores of import­ ant men representing on one hand the most radical and on the other the most conservative elements in our political life. In the event of h:s election which of these elements will control his administration? Wili he fall in with the Hearst demand for a bond’ ssue of five billion dollars for pub­ lic works, or with the Norris de­ mand for government'ownership of power, or with the Patmau demand fot a bonus to be paid in flat money or will he iucur the bittter enmity of all these by calling into his couucils John W. Davisaud Senat or Robinson and the other moderates The point ot these questions is that nobody can answer tbeni. Doubtless the candidate himself cannot answer them His election, therefore, wouid mean a blind leap iuto the dark. Isn’t it too big a risk to take in a time as critical as this? Henry Ford Oii Repeal. “Our present industrial system simply cannot work with liquor. "We must choose between drink and poverty . on the one hand and Prohibition and prosperity on the other. There is no middld ground. "The braid of a man who drinks alcohol cannot be wholly quick and and alert. “My experience has been that there can oe no temporizing whatso­ ever with liquor. Therefore, since the very beginning we have in our industries enforced the rule of ab­ solute. total abstinence, both in and out of the shops and offlces "Brains and booze will not mix. —Ladies Home Journal. Hunch their drive for trade It will be a drive by every modern device of advertising and publicity; there will be newepaper, bill board, and radio appeals for the non-drinker to drink, and for the drinker to drink more and more liquor every year so as to insure more production, con­ sumption and profits. The taxes promised from liquor by some of the proliquor advocates would n quire an annual retail liquor expenditure of twelve billion dollars, six times the highest amount ever spent pre­ viously for liquor. If prohibition is repealed or modi­ fied the liquor traffic will claim it has received a mandate from the A- merican people; will again look upon itself as a reputable industry for the purpose of doing an enormous busi­ ness in order that it may pay the vast enormous business in order that it may pay the vast revenue promis­ ed. To produce the revenue pre­ mised the liquor traffic will have to make millions of new drinkers from those who are not now drinkers. It will have to guarantee a continuous and increasing procession of drunk­ ards. Millions of American voters who believe conscientiously that repeal or modification of prohibition will spell disaster for the American home cannot be "delivered” to any candi­ date who does not represent dry con­ victions. The supporters of the prohibition law will be well advised if they direct all their energies to electing dry con­ gressmen; to prepare the defeat of the great wet conspiracy when the issue definitely confronts the people. In this connection it is pertinent to ask a few vital quetions: 1. Wbat was the sinister motive which actuated the two political par- t es in their attact on prohibition? 2. Is it unjust to believe that a deliberate effort has been made by a small group of millionaries to. di­ vert the thinking of the nation from economic problems by raising a gen­ eral outcry for the return of the legalized liquor traffic? 3. Is the enforcement of the pro­ hibition law. more hopeless than the enforcement of the smuggling laws, or the laws against robbery, rack eteering and murdet? If so, why does the government secure a larger' percentage of convictions from its prohibition cases than iti any other class of prosecutions? 4 Is' it seriously proposed that the sale of liquor shall be placed in charge of corrupt political machines in wet industrial states by some system of so called state control, with its certainty of enormous graft and the soldifying of a tyrannical and insatiable commercial-political organization? If the Federal Government can­ not suppress the liquor traffic under the broad powers of the Volstead Act, how can it hope to prevent the saloon when its authority in the mat­ ter shall have been greatly leasened? If certain states have refused to cooperate in supporting the Eigh- teenteen Amendment to the Consti­ tution, what evidence is there that they will cooperate in protecting dry states against the profit raids of their own citizens, who are operating in accordance)with their own laws?— Biblical Recorder? Somethipg Wrong[Some Where. James A. Farley, the JCatholic chairman of the National Democra­ tic Executive Committee who was selected to run the Roosevelt caro- oaign by that worthy himself, never lets a day pass but what he tells a waiting world that Roosevelt is sure to be elected President [and that Hoover is losing ground dailey, in fact one of his latest ebullitions was to the effect that Hoover would not ctrry a single one of the 48 states but tha' Roosevelt would get them all. Ofcoursenoonebelieved such silly tommvrot. But it seems that under the sur­ face Farley is not so confident and is even calling on the poor hamstrung Democratic editors to chip in and help save Franklin D. Eugene Ashcraft who thought a right smart of Al Smith in 1928 and climed on the band wagon a few weeks before the election only to get run over and flattened out in his own state, has received the follow­ ing letter which he publishes in his household journal: "Editor Enquirer: “National headquarters urgently needs immediate funds to safeguaid present Roosevelt advantage against desperate efforts of opponents. Will vou kindly respond personally if pos­ sible and also appeal to y.our readers for immediate campaign money, for­ warding results speedily with name for record and credit to individual givers and your State quota. JAMES A. FARLEY. "Chairman Democratic National campaign Committee.” If they have already got the elec­ tion of Roosevelt sewed up why are they calling so lustily on the countrv editors for the cash? Farley not only wants Ashcraft to come across but wants him to appeal to his readers to shell out. As a suggestion, Farley might get a loan from John Jacob Raskob.—Union Republican. Fine Tobacco Crop. Why I Believe In Pro­ hibition. I believe in prohibition because I believe in the new industrial order that America is creating. Booze is as much out of place in that new order as a horse and buggy in down­ town Detroit—and a lot more dang­ erous. The Horse and Buggy order is gone and liquor had to go with it. Society could take chances back of a dash­ board that it can’t afford to take be­ hind a steering wheel! Perhaps you don’t recall the old hitching-post days. Well, a lot of folks seem to have forgotten them. They shouldn’t. The streets on Sat­ urday nights were llnbd with wagons and buggies and the saloons were filled with customers. At closing time a crowd of irresponsible men backed their rigs into the streets, the horses were headed toward home the reins dropped over the dash, and forgotten. The horses were sober. Well if we want our streets lined again with shops that do that kind of business we shall have to put up our automobiles and go back to hitching posts. Automobiles won’t g 0 straight unless thev a re driven straight, and they don’t know the way home. An industrialorder that has dis­ carded the reins, dashboards and a team-that-knows the way-homecan’t afford to line its highways with “re­ gulated liquor shops”—not with a forty-horsepower motor under the toe of the drink citizen.—Henry Ford in the Lincoln Journal. Ehringhaus And Rey­ nolds Both Wet 1 SAfter much prodding, how John Christopher Blucher Ehringhaus. the DemocraticcandidateJfor Governor stands on the wet and dry issue has finally brought results. The Btate- ment of Ehringhaus, was issued from headquartersof the state De- mocraticjcommittee and is as follows: “I am personally and politically dry. I am also a Democrat and be- Iiove that the will of the majority should control as to candidates 'and governmental policies. Believing in this fundamental principal of demo­ cracy I stand upon the platform of my partv. There is room in our ranks for every shade of opinion on this question. “I wish, however, to emphasize my opposition to and determination to fight the return of the saloons in North Carolina. I shall also vigor- iusly oppose any effort to change the law prohibiting the manufacture and sale of liqur in the state of North Carolina without a vote of the people.” Same old slush. He is for a drip, ping wet candidate for office should such a man be on the Democratic ticket. He is opposed to the return of the saloon, but does not give any remedy how liquor, can be sold in the state. Ehringhaus is like Jose­ phus Daniels, Clyde R. Hoey and other well know church members who state emphatically that they have for the handling of liquor can give you none and shut up like a clam Bob Reynolds also offered a state­ ment as to how he stood as if every, bo v didn’t already know it. Cam- Morrison told during the primary campaign where Reynolds could be found on this question. Following is ihe Reynolds state­ ment: "Naturally I am standing on the Democratic platform, and embrace that portion of it which deals with prohibition. I use every opportunity, however, to make it clear that I em­ phatically oppose the return of the open saloon, and shall similarly op­ pose any change in the law which is not first ratified by a constitutional vote of the people.” AU right Mr. Reynolds. You won ycur nomination on a dripping wet platform. You are supporting Roose­ velt who says the E'ghteen Amend­ ment "is doomed.” vou say you are opposed to the return of the saloon so what is your remedy ? Are you in class with "Cyclone” Mack who sometime ago declared for free li­ quor and more licker?—Union Re­ publican. Strange Things Happen These Days. (From N. C Christian Advocate) William Ullman of Washington in a syndicated newspaper article, tells us that estimates of how much boot­ legging of gasoline is costing various governmental treasuries range from fortv million to a hundred million dollars annually. We are told that North Carolina lost over $1,000,000 last year in, tax' on gasoline, due--to the bootlegger. This is outrageous. Why not repeal the law that lays a tax? This is the cure-all these days when a law is violated. Forty years ago the boot­ legger of liquor stole from the gov­ ernment by night and by day. He is still abroad in the land. Let the repealist turn their attent­ ion to gasoline for a spell. Moremen are bootlegging gasoline than ever before. The times are awful. W’e believe that the little finger of a working man is worth more than a loafer’s right arm. N. E Jervis, of Ivy, Madison coun- (>! ty, has two acres of land in tobacco this year that will produce 2,400 pounds of the cured weed. It is est­ imated by a tobacco buyer who has seen the leaf that it is worth more than $1,000 Illusion Dispelled. Marshalltown Times Republican. At least one result of the visit of Roosevelt to the West will not be found to his advantage. This was in dispelling the belief of some old timers that the Old Rough Rider was in the saddle again. . If the speed fiend is suddenly trans­ formed into an angel, it is all right with us. but.he has no right to try to take the load in the other car to.glory with him. Looks Like The DeyiL ' Will Warner sends the oddest shaped sweet potato to the News of­ fice by N. J. Muse that the writer has ever seen. It deflies descrip­ tion. It is a monster in size, and in appearance is a cross between a hog and the devil.—Moore County News There is a lot said and written a- bout the value of a cheerful disposit­ ion. but occasionally there is a grouch who seems to get along in spite of it. I5Hfe DAVlE RfeCORD, MoCksViLLfe, H. C. NOVEMBER :.>'932 THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD Editor. TELEPHONE I. Entered at the Poatoffice in Mocks- TiIle1 N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3. 1903. to stand on the side of the road In Fulton, in rain, sleet and snow, and wait on the school bus and then have to ride five to ten miles to school, are the ones that have our sympathy. So far as we know Ful­ ton is the only, township in this county that has been deprived of all. its white schools. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - S I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S 50 The man who will sell his vote for a couple of dollars, or two or three gallons of gas, is just as sorry a specimen ot humanity as the man who will buy it. The Record will not be printed next week until after the election. We have our roosters ready —one crowing, the other sick. We don’t know yet which one will appear in our paper—perhaps we will have to use both. The Winston-Salem Jourual says Al Smith is not fit to hold any na­ tional public office. And yet The Journal is working and voting for Al’s man Franklin, who is going to give Al the best job in the coun­ try if he is elected. This is the last issue of The Re­ cord before the election. We would beg our Davie subscribes, both men and women to go to the polls next Tuesday and vote as they pray. If you will do this, our county, state and nation will be safe. Two years ago the county elec­ tion ballots had the emblems of the two parties printed at the top of the ballots—an elephant ou one side and au eagle on the other. For some reason the ballots this year do not contain these emblems. Voters who cannot read and write will have to have assistance in voting, as all the ballots are not printed a- like. On some the Republicau can­ didates are on the right hand side of the ticket and some of the ballots have the Republican candidates on the left hand side, or at least that was the case two years ago. We don’t know why all this changing around and leaving off the party emblems without it is a scheme to fool some of the voters. Once in a while a smart school teacher will make a partisan re mark that will injure his party more than it will hurt the party he is opposing. Such an occurrence has been called to our attentiou. Teachers should use discretion at all times. A vote for Netvell is a vote for prohibition—a vote for Reynolds is a vote for wine, beer and booze. Bob says he favors the repeal ot the 18th amendment and the modifica­ tion of the Volstead law. Newell says he favors prohibition and will vote and work to keep this country dry. Take your choice, good men and women of Davie county. The Davie gentleman who says that Roosevelt will defeat Hoover by ten million majority; that Rey­ nolds will defeat Newellby 175,000 majority and that Davie couuty will go democratic by 2,000 majority is the same gentleman who told us four years ago that Al Smith would carry North Carolina by 100,000 majority. He only missed his guess by 163,000. The Record is making --.o wiid predictions and forecasts this year. Four years ago we predicted that Al Smith would carry North Caro­ lina by 15,000 majority. When the votes were counted we found that Herbert Hoover had carried the state by more than 63.000 majority. A fellow who misses the vote by 78,000 hasn’t any business making predictions. How the mighty have fallen. Hast year one of Davie’s greatest prohibition (?) democrats iold tis that he would never again vote for a whisky man. Today this same fellow is begging all the people to vote for Bob Reynolds, an avowed wet man, to represent this great state in the U. S. Senate. To com­ ment on this gentleman’s stand would be casting peals before swine. He should consult his Bible or his pastor. Cam Swats Us. Cam Morrison, once dry demo­ crat, who said he would die for pro­ hibition, and that Bob Reynolds wasn’t fit to go to the U. S. Senate calne to Davie county Friday night and spoke in the Smith Grove school auditorium. Cam is quoted as saying the Republican party did not have men capable of running the state and urged the election of the democratic nominees, including the same Bob Reynolds who wasn’t fit to go to the Senate last spring. Millionaire Cam is also quoted as saying he had rather vote for a de­ mocratic devil than a Republican saint We are glad Cara came to Davie, but.sorry that he didn’t have a larger crowd to hear his thunder. Some of the politicians are going over the county promisiug various and sundry jobs to different folks if they will vote right in the coming election, according to reports com­ ing to this office. We will bet our last summer straw hat that no Re­ publican will be given a job after the election, even if the county should go democratic. There are more hungry democrats trying to get to the pie counter now than can be taken care of in the next 25 years. A hot campaign is nearing its end in Daviie couuty. AU of the county candidates-on both tickets have done everything possible to get the voterslined upon their side. The Record is a Republican news­ paper but has tried to be fair to both sides. We have said or done nothing during the campaign that we will have to apologize for, We shall abide by the will of the ma­ jority, regardless of who is elected, provided a-fair and honest election is held. The timehascome when the good people of Davie, of what­ ever party, are demanding fair elec­ tions. Read TIiiis Record. The atteniion of the voters is cow called to the record of the Demo -ratie party in . North Carolina. The figures show that the bonded indebtness of the state, counties and tnuncipahties, with interest to the date of maturity, amounts to $t,- 085,000,000. The records further shows that a large per cent of this debt is due to graft, inefficency and waste on the part of Democratic officials. As a result of this, con dition nine tenths of the homes and farms iu the state are being sold for taxes. The people have lost hope. Debt, taxes and political serfdom have brought them to the end of the row. These are some of the things that Governor Gardner and his pre­ decessors iu office have done for the people of this state. Mr. Ehring hatts ratifies this record and calls it blessed and if elected pledges the continuation of these polities This record spells the depthknell of the Democratic party iu North Carolina. Jnsticecannot longer be delayed. I predict that Horioraole Clifford Frazierwillbethe next governor of the Oid North State. The moral element of our people will take care to see that Honorable Jake F. Newell is elected to the United States seute on that memor­ able day in November.—W. B. Rotise, in Greensboro News. Rediand News. The editor of The Record feels sorry for the good,people in Fulton towhship who have been deprived of all their white schools. Since the county government has been picked up and moved to' Raleigh we are not surprised at anything that may happen. The little six and seven year old lots who have Miss Georgia Smith spent the week-end with Miss Gladys Hanes.Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith and children, of MocksviIIe a’nd Mrs. W. D. Smith were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Smith.Mrs. Willie Armsworthy and children spent Thursday with Mrs. S. P. Cornatzer, of Smith Grove.Rev. M. G Ervin filled his appointment here Sunday morning, which was his last time before conference.Mrs. Glenn Smith spent a while one day the past week with Mrs. M. A. Jones.Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Laird and Mrs. Rod Miller made a business trip to Mocksville Thursday evening.Misses Margaret Smith and GIadysDunn were the Wednesday evening guests of Miss Dora Walker.Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Smith made a busi­ness trip to Mocksville Friday.-’Miss Ozelle Miller is spending the week end with Miss Hettie Mae Smith.Miss Geneva Smith spent awhile Sun­day night with Mrs. W. G. Spry.Howard Hanes spent Sunday night with his sister Mrs. Ollie Beauchamp.Mrs. Emma gmith spent Tuesday with her mother Mrs. W. D. Smith.Mrs. C. S. Tunn and little son Grady spent Monday with Mrs. W. 0. Dunn.Mr. and Mrs. Buford Smith were the Sunday guests of the latters mother Mrs. Julia Howard,Rev. M. G. Erviri was the Sunday din­ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Dunn.F. E. Taylor, of Pilot Mountain was a walcome visitor in Redland Sunday. .OIIie Dunn was in Mocksville on busi­ness Friday, Mrs. J. M. Sofley visited her mother Mrs. S. R. Faster Monday evening. dress at Newark, N. J., had pro­ posed to “leave the dry states over­ run by the liquor traffic.” Speaking before a gathering in the Northwest Nazarene college auditorium here, Mr. Borah said that Mr. Smith in his address in Newark, subordinated all other questions to the one question: “Give us beer, give us something to drink.” “What a magnificent political creed” the senator said. “One of the most effective speech­ es yet made in this campaign for Mr. Hoover was made last night by the distinguished former governor ofNewYork, Mr. Smith,” Senator Borah said. “Many sincere men and women have been iu doubt in this cam­ paign owing to the attitude of both parties on the liquor question. But GovernorSmith removed that doubt with a vast number of people. He denounced as bigots, cranks, hypo­ crites, and intellectual crooks all who are not in favor of tearing down all barriers against the return of the liqtior traffic. He says to them in so many words, there is no piace for you in the Democratic party.” R epubkaii And D em o­ cratic M arkers. The Davie county board of elec­ tions have appointed the following Republicansand democrats to act as markers at the November election They will assist the voters in pre­ paring their ballots. The first named gentlemen are Republicans and the last named gentihmen in each precinct are democrats: Clarksville—Tlios. L. Eaton, O M Howell. Cooleemee-Ben Jordan, C. E. Alexander, Totn Cope, Draper Wood. North Calahalu—D. G. Tut- terow. M. E G. Glasscock. South Calahaln—M. L. Godby, H. L. Ketch ie. Fnltou—Jacob Grubb. J. M. Livengood. Jerusalem—H M. Deadmon1 iS. R. Bessent. MocksviHe-R, P. Martin, A. A. Wagoner, J. C Sanfotd1 T.. JJ Caudell. Farmington—Chal. V. Miiler, E. C. James. Smith Grove-Harry Sheek,- J. M. Bowdeu. East Shady Grove—Ralph C. I Ratledge, E. T. Joyce. West Shady Grove — Waiterl Glenn Ratledge. Herman Bennett. AU Republican voters who need assistance in preparing their ballots I should see that the Republican! marker prepares same. AU demo­ crats needing assistance, should' consult the democratic marker. Fork N ew s N otes. I MastsrGene Harris Green entertained a number of small friends at a party, one afternoon this week in honor of his sixth birthday. They served weiners and slaw. Samuel Bailey has been quite sich gain this week. Mr.*anri Mrs. U. 0. Wyatt and children spent several days here this week with home folks. Arch Livengood spent one day the past week in Lexington and Thomasvile. Miss Saliie Hendrix has been quite sick for several days, 1 rl v.‘ .y*. . Stma* Mn&md %ir.l I Com fort is necessary— style is im perative—Im t qual­ ity is param ount in your shoes, for M n th o u t it th e y can nei !her look good nor feel good. wS tar B rand” Shoes liave these necessary requisites in full m easure. T hey arc stylish—and com fortable too. And w hat’s m ore, they’ll outw ear other shoes because they’re built of solid leather to give y o u lo n g , f a ith f u l service. Now get ready for the surprise. For all this fine quality, beau­ tiful style and wonder­ fu l value, o u r prices range from iisi§sm AlUtoii Yi' arson I / \. U $1.50 to $5.00 66Siar Brand Shoes are Better3f AIiss s4STASS USEVEreSES*’ S VSUilX® . . . ®s-45 E. S.T. It’s the ' Star’’ program of the air. Hear the beautiful light operas of yesteryear — and the modern pieces of today. You’ll enjoy Helen Gilligan and Milton W itson, as I cell as the Star Reveries Concert Orchestra. ColumJbiaNeticork. Helen SiIilgan SANFORD SONS COMPANY. Everything For Everybody.” ALE! Bishop Edward Penick made his yearly! §visitation here with Ascension Church Iastl ISunday and performed rites of confirms- Ition to two new members. § Miss Marylee Carter, of Redland spent! ISunday here with friends. , I Mr. and Mrs. W. M Sheek. and child Iren spent last (Sunday with relatives in' *Yadkin county. Center News. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Evans and children, of Advance, spent Sunday afternoon with Mn and Mrs. C. A. McAllister. D. G. Tutterotv and mother were the Iguests Sunday of Mt. and Mrs. H. F. Tut-- Iterow. of Winston-Salem. - i I Miss Lena Stevenson, of Winston Salem I spent Saturday night with Miss Jerry Tut- j terow. p Miss Myrtle Anderson, of High Pointi- spent the week end at home. J Mr. and Mrs. Ol 0. Tutterow1 of High? Point were the week-end visitors, of Mr. j and Mrs. L. M. Tutterow, I Miss Jerry Tutterow left Monday for: Washington, D. C., Monday where she will ’■ be the guest of her aunt, Mrs D. W. Tiffin. I Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Dyson and children, I Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Tutterow and Jefi, Mrs. i H F. Tutterow and daughters, Stella and I Polly and Catherine and Lester Anderson: attended the birthday dinner of W. O I Murphy- in East Spencer Sunday. ^ | Joseph Prevette. of Sheffield spent Sun-S day night with C. A. Tutterow, of Wins j ton Salem were visitors in the community i Sunday. , j; The friends of Mrs. T. B. Lanier will be > sorry to learn that she has been sick. Says Smith Is For Booze Only. , Sheffied News. •The people in this section are very busy - picking cotton and most of the people re­ports a bad crop of cotton this time.Johnie Smith has returned back homeTVmi,., ,, after spending several days at the Pilgrim Pj! T1 f J. / Senator Holiness AssembIynearThomasvilIe and WilliamE Borah of Idaho, Repub- reported the largest assembly that has lican, declared tn an address here been. Ionight that a speech last night by ’ Mr, and Mrs. Culvery Dyson, of Wilkes- Alfred E Smith was "one of the boroandMn andMre- Clarence Richard- most effective speeches yet made in and Mrs^PmU^fsonth parems Mr- this campaign for Mr. Hoover.” f /large crowd attended the funeral ser- Senator Borah asserted the for- vices of Sheelals Marlow Sunday at Rocky iaer New York governor, in an ad- Springs Baptist church. • REGULAR $19.75 $24.50 ■MEN'S FA'LL SUITS $12.50 Worsteds, Serges - Cheviots A Manufacturers Close Ont Of Sample Suits New Fall Colors B r o w n s , Blues ; A n d Greys. The Greatest - Clotliieg- Sale Of The Year - - B E L K - S T E V E N S CO. / I Cor. Trade and Fifth Sts. .. I- V Z - THE Ol Davie Winston-Salem, N. C ■ LOCAL If you Tbe Recorj J. FranlJ day in Clid J- J- La| weeks on : AttorneI eial days l| business. Attortiel nesday in eral court.| Renew ; Record anl manac frel J- P- bJ was in tod with old f| Rufus Davidsou | end here \1 Mrs. Cecil Mor| Winston-; H A.: spent last j Baltimnrel Mr. am daughter.l town Wed G. W. I mats of day last - Mrs. Li days last the guest I C. B. \| ricks mad niond and MissesRt son spenl with relaq ton Saleu AU me| are urged Thursday! work will] Mrs. Cl dangliterl week in tl and Mrs.] 400 Sq| Hearth 4 inch to I Md Mrs. stoin Saltj will spenl ter, Mrs. f The oil for 1933.1 and rened Record a| Miss ' went an at Long’I last Wedl Iy her frl Large I week at ings in tb| present night—tl ever grea at this p| The Methodid Winstonl Nov. 9tl Methodia will tueel date. B| linue in : Monday,| Unknc store of time Wel off severj shoes ar Entranca the glass| secured county thief or I tured. Mrs. ifili widow 01 died at h| nesday ; were con| at two church, W. Tunj was laid I yard. one sistei R. 2. 010101010101010123232301010201010101010101010101010101010101010101000101010101010001000100010100000000010200010000012353534801010201010002024801010000000202020202010148532323230000000001000002010100020101000202020101010000000002020232010102000000020202020201020201020202020201010100000201010100000202020101010101010101010000325353 THE DAVlE RECORD, MOCRSVlLtE, R C. NOVEMBER 2. the DAVIE record . Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS. Il you want land posters call at Tbe Record office. J. Frank Hendrix spent Thurs­ day in Charlotte on business. J. J. Larew spent the past two weeks on a business trip to Florida. Attorney A. T. Grant spent sev eial days last week in Raleigh on business. Attorney B. C Brock spent Wed­ nesday in Statesvilleattending Fed­ eral court. Renew your subscription to The Record and get a 1933 Blum’s Al­ manac free - J. P. Burton, of near Hickory, was in town Friday shaking hands with old friends. Rufus Sanlord, a student at Davidson College, spent the week­ end here with his parents. Mrs. E. L. Gaither and Mrs. Cecil Morris spent Wednesday in Winston-Salem shopping. H A. Sanford and H A. Lakey spent last week on a business trip to Baltimore and New York. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Clary and daughter, of Clarsksville, were in town Wednesday shopping. G. W. Ratledge, prominent mill man of Woodleaf, was in town one day last week on business. Mrs. L- P. Martin spent several days last week at Sumter, S. C., the guest of Mrs T. H. Brice. C. B. Mooney and C. G. Hend­ ricks made a business trip to Rich­ mond and Lynchburg last. week. MissesRuth Daniel and Iva Ander­ son spent Thursday and Friday with relatives and friends in Wins­ ton Salem. AU members of the Junior Order are urged to be present at the hall Thursday night. Special degree work will be given. Mrs. Chas. A. Burrns and little daughter, of Shelby, spent last week in town with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Martin. 400 Squares 29 Ga. Prime open Hearth Ga!v. Roofing all lengths 3 inch to 12 inch §3 70 Base. « Mocksville Hardware Co Mrs. Essie Byerly went to Win- stom Salem Thursday where she will spend some time with her sis­ ter, Mrs. C. A. Jenkins. The old reliable Blum's Almanac for 1933, is now ready for you. Call and renew your subscription to The Record and receive a copy free. Miss Hazel Kurfess, who under went an operation for appendicitis at Long’s Sanatorium, Statesville, last Wednesday, is recovering nice­ ly her friends will be glad to learn. Large crowds were present last week at all the Republican speak­ ings in the county. About 250 were present at Davie Academy Tuesday night—the largest crowd that has ever greeted the county candidates at this place. The Western North Carolina Methodist Conference will meet at Winston-Salem next Wednesday, Nov. 9th. The North Carolina Methodist Protestant Conference will meet at Burlington on the same date. Both Conferences will con­ tinue in session until the following Monday. Unknown parties entered -the store of Martin & Hendrix some time Wednesday night and carried off several suits of clothing, ,some shoes and perhaps other articles Entrance was made by smashing the glass in the front door. OfiBcers secured bloodhounds from Rowan county but up to this writing the thief or thieves have not been cap­ tured. Mrs. Sarah Weaver Thorton, 72, widow of the late George Thorton, died at her home-on R. 3, last Wed­ nesday morning. Funeral services were conducted Thursday afternoon at two o’clock at Bethel M. P. church, Revs. G. B. Ferree and E. W. Turner officiating. Tbe body was laid to rest in the church grave­yard. Mrs: Thorton issurvivedby one sister, Mrs. W. H. Clement, of R. 2. I Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Gillie and daughtei Lilly, of Winston Sa­ lem; Mr. and Mrs Tom Turner, of ■ Thoinssville; Mr. and Mrs. Mooney Thompson aiid daughtei Lummie Joe, of Salisbury were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. E G Price Hon. R. H. McNeill, of Wash­ ington City, addressed a large crowd of voters at the Farmington high school Friday evening. He made a fine speech. On Saturday night, Attotney F. S. Boyer, of Winston Salem, spoke to a large crowd of Republicans and democrats in the court house. His speech was well received. More than 150 Masons attended, the meeting of the 30th Masonic district held in Winston-Salem Wed­ nesday night at the Masonic Tem­ ple and heard addresses by Grand Master H. C. Alexander, of Char­ lotte, and Grand SecreiaryJohu H. Anderson, of Raleigh. Dr. Lester Martin, oi Mocksville, district de -puty grand master, presided over the meeting. Masons from lodges at Farmington, Mocksville, West Bend, Walnut Cove, Kernersville, Salem Lodge 2S9 and Winston Lodge 167 were in attendance. Two Are Held In Killing Obie B. Koonts and Charlie Jor dan were locked in the Davie coun­ ty jail Snnday charged with the murder of George Tucker, 40 year old World War veteran, who died in a StaFesville hospital Saturday from injuries received one week ago in wbat is thought to have been a free for all fight near Bixby, over one man having told another his dog lied when he treed in the ground while possum hunting. The death instrument has not been found but officials and doctors think a heavy blunt instrument was used to break the skull. The man never regained consciousness suffi­ ciently to tell how he was injured. Kooiits, 28, was arrested at his home near where the alleged drunk­ en brawl occurred and Jordan, after fleeing the countv soon afterwards, was found in bed in High Point Sunday morning. Tne killing occurred 011 the Ellis farm within two miles of where the noted Willie Beauchamp murder occurred last Februry, which was also on the Ellis estate. More than 1.000 persons attend­ ed the funeral and burial services at Advance church Sundav afternoon Surviving relatives include the father. Z. V. Tucker three brothers and three sisters. Angell To Head Davie Grange. L. H. Angell teacher of vocational agriculture in the Mocksville high school was unanimously elected master of the Davie county Pomona Grange.The county unit of the Grange is starting off with 43 charter mem­bers. On Thursday night.', Nov. 10, the degree team of 25-members of the Pomona Grange of Ruwan coun­ ty will install the (fibers and give the 5th degree to all member^ who have not already received it. The full set of officers of the Po­mona Grange include; L. H. Angel I, master, Davie county Grange; J. Wesiey Cooke, overseer, Davie coun­ ty Grange; 'Miss Amie Tolbert, lec­ turer, Smith Grove Grange; J. F. Es- sick. steward, Pmo community Grange; Rev. R. C. Goforth, chaplain Davie county Grange; S M. Brewer, treasurer. Cana Grange; Mrs. Beulah Apperson, secretary, Davie county Grange; Charlie Leagans, gate keep­er, Pino community Grange; Mrs. Mary L. Eisic, ceres, Pino commu­ nity Grange; Miss Emily Carr, pomo- na; Davie county Grange; Mjss Alma Brown, flora. Smith Grove Grange; Miss Sallie Spillman, lady assistant steward, Pino Grange.Executive committee is composed of D. J. Lybrook of Davie county Grange; C F. Faircloth of Davie county Grange, and F. R Laltey of Pino community Grange. Cana, Route One News. Over a hundred friends and relatives gathered at the home of Art Baker Satur­ day night and helped him celebrate his 58th birthday. The string music and de­ licious refreshments were enjoyed by all. The crowd left wishing Mr. Baker many more birthday of the same order. Mrs. Mayme Bowles is seriously ill. The many friends, of Rev. and Mrs. S. N. Bumgarner were sorry to learn of the death ol their son. Roy. 16. last Wednes- day night. Rev. Bumgarner is pastor of Chestnut Grove church. 1, Mrs. June Ratledge, of Forbiish. Yadkin county is visiting friends and relatives in this community. The crowd which greeted the Republi­ can candidates at Chestnut Grove schnoi house Thursday night was so large that the candidates bad trouble finding a place to StancTwhile they spoke. Misses Noami and Gmma Rollins enter­ tained a number of friends at a Hallowe'en party at theirhome Saturday night. Candy and peanuts were served as refreshments. The Chestnut Grove school opened last Monday. Miss Sophie Msroney is begin­ ning her fourth year as leader of the school. Mrs. C. C. Craven Passes. -Mrs. C. C Craven. 73. uk-rf at her home near Oak Grove Friday evening about 8 o’clock, following an illness ot pneumonia and heart trouble. Surviving Mrs. Craven is her husband and four children, two sons, G. L. Craven, of lhis city; Grover Craven, of Oak Grove; Mrs. J. B. Griffin, of Salisbury, and Mrs. W. B. Horn, of Smith Grove. An-aged sister, Miss Mary Hilton, who lived with her, also survives and is quite ill. Funeral services were conducted by h. r pister, Rev. J. O Banks, at Oak Grove Methodist church Sun­ day morning at Il o’clock, and burial followed 'at Rose Cemetery this city. To the bereaved hus­ band, childreu and sister, the Record extends.deep sympathy. Patron-Teucher-Meet-' Forlackof space several news] letters had to be left-out this week. I Our apologies to the writers.REPUBLICAN Notice ot Administrator’s Sale of Personal Property. Having qualified as Administra­trix upon the estate ot W. F Nail, deceased, the undersigned will sell publicly for cash to the highest bid­ der at the late residence of said de­ceased on the James McGuire farm one mile south-west of Mocksville, N. C . on Saturday, Nov. 5th. 1932, the following articles of personal property, to wit: Three head of good work horses, six head of cattle same being three good milch cows and three yearlings, fa lot farming-tools, binder, Ford Tractor, harrow, cultivators, and a lot of other farming tools, one cream separator, a lot of wheat, oats, corn, a lot of hay, straw and various other articles of personal property too I numerous to memtion.This the 15th day of October, 1932 MARY NAIL, Admrx. of W. F, Nail, deceased.By A.T. GRANT, Atly. f The Republican County Candidates, together with Hon. B. C. Brock, nomi­ nee for the Legislature, and Hon. A. T. Grant, will address the voters of Davie county at the following times and places: mg Patrons and teachers of .Farming ton high school held an interesting' meeting in the school auditorium iast Wednesday evening. After a short devotional service a very en­ tertaining Halloween progtam was rendered by the school children. The following officers were elected: President—Mrs. J H. Montgo­ mery. V President—Mrs. F. H. Babu- son. Secretary—Miss Helen Smith Treasurer—Mrs. A. A. HolU- ntan. Following the business session a social hour was held. Light refresh­ ments were served by the : faculty. The next meeting Wiil be held on Weduesday, Nov. i6tb I -BARGAINS! - SPECIALS THIS WEEK. Ridiardsou-Smith. Mr. J. E Smith, of Cool Springs sownship Iredell county, and Miss Marie Richardson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Richardson of near Helman’s X Roads, were united in marriage last Thursday afternoon at York S. C, Thev were married in the Register of Deeds office at York, a young lady performing the mar­riage ceremony. Mr. and Mrs Smith will make their home with the bride’s parents. The Record wishes these young people a long and prosperous married life. ADVANCE SCHOOL, Tuesday Night, Nov. 1st. WHITE’S SCHOOL H-CUSE, Wednesday^ Night, Nov. 2. BIXBY, Thursday Night, Nov. 3rd. SMITH GROVE SCHOOL, Friday Night, Nov. 4th. COOLEEMEE AUDITORIUM, Saturday Night, Nov. .5. Hon. John R. Jones, and County Candidates. MOCKSVILLE, COURT HOUSE, Monday Night, Nov. 7. Give us vour order for Rose Bushes, Fruit Trees and Shrubbery. Merouey Nursey and Greenhouse. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants— Earlv Jersey Wakefield, Copen­hagen Market Jr 00 per 1000. Meroney Nursey and Greenhouse. SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 12 When Mixed KURFEES & WARD Everything In Drugs When You Need Drugs the drug store is the r.ght place to find them. Our Medicines are the oast to be found. Prescriptions care­ fully compounded by a re­ gistered druggist. Visit Us Often Let Us Serve You. LeGrand’s Pharipacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville.N, C. Plenty Red Goose, Wolverine and Bail Band Shoes and Boots : Men’s and Boys j Union Suits bOc I Full Fashioned Hosieiy 48c I See our Clothing before you I buy. , We can and will saveIyou money. Piay Cloth all colors, and stripes, yard 8 I-3c Plenty of Outing yard 5c I have just received a Iargej sample line of notions to go- at about 1-2 price. Dresesj 25c to $2 95. 8 lbs Lard Salt Coffee Ib Crackers 2 lbs Crackers large size Salt box Carnation Milk-large can 7c,! 3 cans 20c, small 7 cans 25c: Eagle Brand Milk 20c can- 1 Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c' Seed Oats. | Flour $1.95 j Plow Points at 1-3 off list J See our line dry goods before you buy. We have the best assortment we have ever had. Felt Ijats 89c up. Yours For Bargains J. Frank Hendrix General Merchandise The voters of Davie county are urged to go out and hear the issues of the day discussed. LADIES ARE ESPECIALLY INVITED 65c, 95c, IOcj 25c H e Ibj 3c j GEO. F. WINECOFF, Chm. Mrs. J. H. Robertson, Sec. MR. FARMER! We Are In Better Position To Handle YOUR COTTON Than Ever Before We Appreciate Your Business FOSTER & GREEN Near Sanford Motor Co. Notice of Sale Under Mortgage. Under and by virtue of the pow­ ers contained in a certain mortgage deed executed by Charlie Tomlin and Janie Tomlin to G. A. Hartman on the 25th day of June, 1931, which ' said mortgage appears recorded in I Book No. 25, page 78 . Register’s cfj i fice of Davie county, N. C., default having been made in the pavment of the note thereby secured, the under­signed will sell publicly for cash to the highest bidder at the court house Ioor in the city of Mocksville, N. C., on TUESDAY, the 22nd day of No­vember, 1932, at 12 o’clock, M., the following described lands located in Farmington township, Davie coun­ty, to-wit: A tract beginning at a post oak. Moses Fulford’s corner, thence E. 2.50 chs. to a stone in Fulford’s line, thence N 50 links to a stone, thence N. 80 degs. W. 6.95 chs. to a stone, thence S 80 degs. E. 4 .45, chs. to a stone, thence N. 3 28 chs. to the b< - ginning, containing two acres more or less. Terms of Sale: GASH. . This the 22nd day of October, 1932. G. A. HARTMAN, Mortgagee. By A. T. Grant, Atty. M R , FARMER! Bring Your Cotton To Our Gin. W ePayH ighestM arketPrice. Get Your Fertilizer From Us And Save Money. J. W. CARTNER Let Us Gin Your Gottonj WE are now ready to gin your Cotton, and will pay the highest market price if you want to sell your Cotton in the Seed. We will ap­ preciate your business and guarantee first-class service. When you bring your cotton to town drive down and see u s “Yours For Good Service" Green Milling Co. 2248896882 ffflfe P a V iE RECORD, MOCKgVlLtE, ft. (X November a, t9^ 13,000,000 FAMILIES I HELPED BY RED CROSS {Distress in AU Areas Met by I Giving Food, Clothing I and Other Aid. More than 3,000,000 families through­ out the nation were given relief of various types by the American Red Cross In the past winter, to aid them In their distress caused by unemploy­ ment, disaster or other misfortune. ■ A major relief task, due to unem­ ployment and other unusual conditions !In the bituminous mining counties In Itjrenty states, was met by the Red 'Cross chapters alone, or participating •'■With other agencies. In these 143 coun- ! ties, the Red Cross aided 90,000 fami- I lies through giving groceries, school lunches, clothing, flour and other ne­ cessities to combat privation. : .‘-Flour, milled from government wheat :turned over to the Red Cross by Con- | gress, was given to 15,000,000 persons ,Jn the period from March 8 to June 30, ; the close of the fiscal year. Flour will ; continue to be given through the win- jtersot 1932-33, and Red Cross chapters !also will give cotton clothing, made Ilrom government cotton turned over (to the Red Cross for distribution. ' “The Red Cross faces the busiest !Winter since the days of the World I War,” Chairman John Barton Payne isaicL "It is organized In virtually every I one of the 3,072 counties in the United ; States, and will co-operate with all ’agencies to meet distress wherever ,found. The flour has proved of great i benefit, and the cotton clothing will be !given wide distribution.” While carrying on nation-wide these ,unemployment and other relief meas- iures, the Red Cross also was engaged I In Its regular peace-time activities in !public health nursing, service to ex- ! service men and their families, teach­ in g home hygiene. life saving and first iaid. The Junior Red Cross, composed ,of almost 7,000,000 school children, also !rallied to the support of the society’s !relief efforts, and the children aided !others of their age in practical ways. I formed sewing and food canning classes, and were of great assistance ' In chapter relief work. While the wheat and cotton were ■given by the IJ. S. Government, no money was provided to pay for the necessary work entailed. The Red Cross .will meet this expense of almost 5500,000 from its treasury. Citizens can aid by joining as members of the ilocal Red Cross chapter during the roll .call from Armistice Day to Thanks­ giving Day. : . Clothes for the Needy Women volunteers sewing for the Jieedy under direction of the Red Cross produced 296,000 garments last year, and will produce millions of garments In the winter of 1932-33. These will be !Irom the millions of yards of cotton cloth distributed by the national Red ; Cross from the 500,000 bales of cotton -turned over to the organization by • Congress. CJotb was sent to all chap­ ters requesting it, and later it was proposed to send some simple ready- .made garments, including trousers, .overalls, underwear, stockings and > BOX. SIXTY DISASTERS : IN 1932 ADD Red Cross Spends $2,760,000 To Help Victims of Catastrophes. ■ In a year of great misfortune caused by economic depression, in which tlie American Red Cross assumed heavy burdens of relief for the unemployed, the organization also responded to emergency needs in GO disasters in the United States and its insular posses­ sions. . During the twelve mouths ending ";June 30, 1932, the Red Cross gave aid Ito 75,000 families totalling 338,000 indi­ viduals, with expenditures of $2,760,- 786. These people were in distress be­ cause of drought, flood, forest fire, tor­ nado, snowstorm, mine explosion, or ;other similar great disaster. Prolonged drought caused the Red Cross to go with help to 58,000 families In the northwest. Here in 144 counties in North and South Dakota. Montana, Nebraska, Washington and Iowa the Ked Cross spent $1,930,000 from its own treasury to feed and protect peo­ ple -through the winter and spring. Other grave disasters were floods in southeastern states, where the organ­ ization spent $192,000 from its treasury and $66,000 local contributions to help 13,000 persons. . More than 50,000 people were home­ less from floods In tributaries of the vMUsissippi river and again the Red .<v Clioss faced a long relief task, aiding he'se people. The national organization . gave $108,000 and local' contributions . were $10,000. .? The Red Cross always maintains a state of readiness to meet these sud­ den emergencies, and funds and other essentials to this work are supplied, In part, by the annual roll call, held each year from Armistice Day to Thanksgiving Day. Every citizen can support this worthy activity through joining as a member In the local Red Cross chapter. Huge TasE of Nurses Red Cross public health nurses, who work in hundreds of communities, are meeting the greatest demands In his­ tory for their services, due to the de­ pression. Visits in maternity cases, protecting the health of infants and children, and aiding mothers in dis­ tress due to unemployment of the bread-winners have taken them into thousands of homes. The nurses made 1,357,000 visits to or on behalf of indi­ viduals, and irspected 949,000 school children. More than 58,000 adults were instructed in home hygiene and care of the sick. Blind Readers Get Books Books in braille for reading by the blind are made by women under Red Cross direction. Last year 2,813 such books were produced In single copy, and 3,538 in double copies. Fiction, biography, history, economics and school books were among those print­ ed in braille. The Red Cross gives them to libraries for free distribution to blind readers. Red Cross to Enlist Great Army oj Members to Fight ' Distress Last year 4,004,459 men and wo­ men joined the American Red Cross as members during the annual roll call. Armistice Day to Thanksgiv­ ing Day; A peace-time army even greater than this will be needed in 1932-33 to support and carry on the nationwide relief work of the Red Cros:. There are 3,639 Sed Cross Chapters and they have 10,000 branches. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of the Jate J. M. Jones, of Davie iounty, North Carolina, notice is hereby Jiven all persons holding claims against he said estate, to present them to the indersigned for payment on or before Jet. 7th, 1933. on this notice will be plead »n bar of their recovery. All persons in­ debted to the said estate, will please make immediate payment. This Oct. 7, 1932. s W. C JONES, Admr. of J. M. Jones, Dec’d. Notice, Change In Poll­ ing Places. Notice is hereby given that the oolling- places in the precincts in Davie County N. C. named below, have been changed as indicated; said changes being necessitated bv the inadequacy of space in the polling places heretofore designated. SMITH GROVE. From Foster’s Store Building To Consolidated School Bldg. WEST SHADY GROVE.From Walker’sJStore To J. H. Robertsons’ Old School Building. This 3rd dav of Octoher, 1932 DAVIE COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS By W. A. ROBERTS, Chairman. NorthCaroIinaj T c . „ Davie County I I" the Supenor Court Josephine T. Gregory, Plaintiff vs William W. Gregory, Defendant. Service of Summons By Publication. The defendant, William W. Gregory, will take notice that an action entitled as a* bove has been commenced against him and is now pending in1 the Superior Court of the aforesaid County, North Carolina, for the purpose of obtaining a divorce from bed and board on the grounds of: (,I) Abandonment of his family. (2) Cruel and barbarous treatment endanger­ ing the life of piaintift. (3) Maliciously turning plaintiff out of doors. (4) Offer­ ing such indignities to the person of the plaintiff as to render her condition intol erable and her life burdensome, and the defendant will further take notice that the plaintiff is seeking the custody, care and control of their infant daughter, Jose­ phine G Gregory, age 4, in said action; and the defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear withto 30 days after the 3lst day of October, 1932, and answer or demur to the said com­ plaint or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demended therein. This the 1st day of October, 1932. W. B. ALLEN, Clerk Superior Court, H. R. STANLEY. Attorney for Plaintiff. NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virture of the powers contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Mrs. Phone H. Bailey. Beal I. Smith, and Rose Smith to J. F. Moore Trustee, dated Febv 13, 1923, and duly recorded in Book 19 page 103 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davie county N. C. De­fault having been made in the paj- ment of principal and interest on same the undersigned will sell pub­ licly to the higheat bidder for cash, at the court house door of Davifi county in Mocksville, N C., at' 12 o’clock noon, on the 21st day of Nov. 1932, the following described proper­ ty, situated in the town of Mocks­ville, N. C.. and known as the Phone Bailey house and lot, being on the Eastside .of Salisbury Sts . bounded as follow?: On the North by the lands of C. C. Sanford. On-the East bv the lands of Grant Daniel and the Presbyterian Manser On the South by the late E P. Bradley, and on the West by Wilkesboro and Salisbury streets containing one half acre more or less, and being the house and lot now occupied by B. I. Smith-and Rose Smith. This Oct 15, 1932^J. F. MOORE, Trustee. "Watchdog Garner.” Kansas City Times. The Democratic handbook for the campaign informs the electorate that Mr. Garner is “the watchdog of the Treasury.” This, it ts as summed, js reminiscent of the Speaker’s determined stand for the b Ilion dollar pork barrel bill, for the 2,200-milli6u soldier bonus and for the Goldsborough inflation measuie—all calculated to stabilize the currency, balance the budget and keep the money of the taxpay­ ers safely at Washington, under lock and key. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET. This In Yadkin? It is being told that the distribu­ tion of Red Cross flour in Yadkin county is being used by the demc- Jcrats who have charge of it to secure votes in the coming election. We cannot believe that anv set of men would stoop so low as to use this method for such a purpose and we cannot believe it is so. However, if anybody has been, led to believe that this food and clothing is being fur­ nished by democrats, it should be re­ membered that it is bi ing distribut ed by the American Red Cross, after being provivei fjr by Congress on recommendation of the president, in an effort to feed and clothe those who are needy, and not for political gain.—Yadkin Ripple. FOR PRESIDENTWhO BUT MOOVEP Representative-B. C. Brock Sheriff-Charles C. Smoot. CIerk-M. A. Hartman. Register-M. G. Foster. Surveyor-W. F. Stonestreet Coroner-*W. E. Kennen.. Commissioners--L. M. Tul- terow, J. Frank Hendrix, S. M. Brewer. We want the im­ portant news hap­ penings from every section of the coun­ ty. Drop us a card or letter if a new vo­ ter arrives at your home; if your moth­ er-in-law comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything worth mentioning. There is no currency law or system of government that will make a man a living without work.. Lazy Colon Makes _ Your Life Miserable Laiiffli at money worries If yonr colon is free of poisonous waste. HeretS Nature’s way to banish sickness. If you are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, the new tonic tablet, COLOXEX, con­tains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to elimi­nate poisons, aid digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s un­natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLO-XEX tab­lets and purify 3Totir system Nature's way. This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on physician’s prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments come from clogged colon, so if you are not feel­ing well trv COIjOJfEX today on guaranteed satisfaction or money back basis IROGEN t PRESCI ALSE Famous “Akin” Health Formula, Used for Many Years by New York Hospital Physician with Remarkable Success. Sensation in S Cities in This State Wherever Introduced.—Now on Saie Here. Announcement has just been made In New York City that the Guardian Health Products company has acquired the rights to manufacture on a tre­mendous scale, and to market nation­ally under the trade name of IROGENv the famous “Akin” formula. This won­derful medicine is now on sale here. IROGEN, which was introduced into the larger cities of this state recently, has already become a medical sensa­tion here. Thousands of cases of thin, frail, weak, run-down, underweight men ancl women report that they have been completely restored to health and strength from its use.NOT A PATENT MEDICINE IROGEN is NOT a patent medi­cine, but the private prescription of 'a famous New York hospital physi­cian, used with remarkable success In his own private practice for many years and tested and perfected under his own observation in thousands of cases;Representatives, in making the an­nouncement, showed to newspaper men reports of tests and experiments, con­ firmed by famous chemists, proving that IROGEN gave excellent results in enriching the blood, improving the ap­ petite, aiding digestion, toning up the nerves, in overcoming stomach dis­orders and other physical ailments.•Authorities who have observed its power in thousands of stubborn cases, state that it is exceptionally helpful where the patient is suffering from loss of flesh. Many tests, made prior to the trans­ fer of the proprietorship of the IROGEN prescription, were prompted by amaz­ing letters and statements from men and women in all walks of life telling in detail their experiences with this famous medicine. VITALITY RESTORED An Alabama woman wrote that hard work, worry and nervous' shock had reduced her to a mere shadow of her former self, but that the IROGEN prescription brought back her vitality and strength, rounded out her figure and restored her complexion within six weeks.A North Carolina mother, terribly run down and near nervous collapse from three years of stomach trouble, took the IROGEN prescription on the advice of her physician. She' stated she amazed not only herself but her husband with her quick and complete restoration to health.By obtaininf the rights to produce this wonderful medicine on a large scale, under the name of IROGEN, it is made available for the first time to the public, at a fraction of its former cost. In tablet form it is Known as YIROGEN.IROGEN and VIROGEN tonic tablets may be obtained at leading drug stores and dealers in medicine everywhere including LeGrandjS Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleemee,N.C. NOW ONLY ONE DOLLAR. W. P. S PEAS, M. D. Room 324 R. J. Reynolds Building Winston-Salem, N. C. Practice Limited to Disease I Of The Eye and Fitting Glasses | Hours 9 -12: >;« ig. ►;« >2»»;» N tj- fr 1I11X11X1 DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. BEST IN SUPPLIES DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENrisT Office In Anderson Building Mocksville. N. C. Phones: Otfice 50 Residence 37 ^ p 0 Qpl USE COOK’a C. C. C3 Relieves LaGrippe, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years HOOVER- Old papers for sale. CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME Distinctive Fuueral Service to E^ery One jAM3ULANCE - - - EMBALMERS Main St. Next To Methodist Church jDay Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163 * r-**********************************•*•#******«*«*«■*«* £ ★* I*¥■*¥•*¥■¥■*****¥¥•****¥***** *•*** ***** ** *********************+******¥ ******•¥¥¥¥;,4.¥*★★'Ar*★★★★ it * _ ★★★★★ '• ★★★★ • ★★★ ★:Ar ★★★★*★★*★* 4★★if*£**•£ * ★ - £* Hr★%it5r. Yesterday we requested a De­ linquent Subscriber to settle his ac­ count with us, and he replied: “I am honest, and I will pay you if I live. If I die and go to heaven I will send it to you. If I die and do not go to heaven I will hand it to you.” We think most of our Subscrib­ ers are honest, but we need money now to meet obligations. Please let us hear from you. THE DAVIE RECORDo P. S. When your son or daughter leaves for College send them The Record. A special rate to students. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ *■ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ ■jr i t ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ t + ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ •*r ★ "Ir ★ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ I ★ ★ * •K ★ ★ ★ ★ * *■ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ . ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ if it * ★★$ I p o s t a l R eceip tI sh 6W t h e ftfecoi^ CiRcULAfioN fk E la r g e s t in ifilfc c o u n ty . fH fe¥ b o w f Life: 'HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE. PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN XXX[V.MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEP 9. 1932 NUMBER 16 NEWS OF LONG AGO, Whlt Was Happening In Davie Before The Days of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, Nov. 12. 1902 ) A son of Wiley Hellard, of Row­ an county, was buried at Liberty Sunday. Mrs. B. I Reavis and son, of Courtney, spent Monday night in town the guests of Mrs. J..T. Baity. The Martinsville Manufacturing Co, are at work on tlieir new lumber plant011 Depot street, T. S. Emerson made 4S2 gallons of molasses. He can keep sweet this winter. E. H. Morris spent Mouday in Winston. Mr. S. A. Dula died last Friday at Cooleemee after a long spell of sickness. He was 58 years old and leaves a wite and several children. His remains were laid to rest in Joppa graveyard Satnrday after­ noon. Dr. D. Atkins; Presiding Eider, preached in the Methodist church Sunday night. Quarterly confer­ ence was held at the home of Mrs Philip Hanes Monday night. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Cy West, of Kappa, died Monday and was buried at Salem Tuesday. Miss Mamie Starrette, of Kappa, is teaching at Gold Hill, but is visiting relatives for a few days in Davie. Marvin Lauier and family, of Statesville, have moved to Davie county. Mr. and Mrs OfBe Garwood, of R. i, are the parents of a fine son. Mrs. Sabrina Daniel died at the home of her son C. C. Daniel, near Kappa, on Saturday morning; Nov. 1st. The body was laid to rest in South River cemetery on Sunday morning. Nov. 2nd. Monroe Saunders is preparing to move to Mocksville and open up a smith and repair shop. Changing Textbooks. W ord comes out from Raleigh that the Textbook Commission is contemr plating changing the geographies now in use in the elem entary schools of N orth Carolina. There is develop­ ing in the pensive books that are used ir. the grades, knd the change will affect the children in the 4t.h, 5th, 6ch and 7 th grades and would cost at least $300,000, whicu would have to come directly out of the pockets of the parents of the children in those grades. Incidentally, these parents hiv e not fully recovered from the c'lange made in the arithm etics by the Textbook Commission last year. The State Grange has pas-ed reso­ lutions asking th at the commission do not make any textbook changes this year and. in the opinion of this paper, the resolution are wise. A reduction of from 50 per cent up in income has been suffered by the rural population of the state in recent years,and they can not afford to bny new and expensive school books when they have on hand books which were considered all right three years ago. —Ex. Very Much Alive. Jedg^D usty Roads asked tlie ne- gress on trial the following ques tions: • "W h u tis your old m an’s occupa­ tion Liza?” “.He ain’t got no, occupashun. H e’s ded. He done passed away 14 years ago, suh.” “ Then who vo all these hear chil- Iun belong to?” “ Dey’s mine, suh.” ‘ I thought you said your old man wus ded?” “ He is, but I ain’t.” The days are growing shorter and the nights longer, but it,is j'ust as hard tp get up in the morning as it was when the nights were much, shorter. -f? The average committe of three has one member who does the work' The other two tarn in the report. Fikhing the Public. It seems that operators of con­ cessions at the state fair in Raleigh became so , brazen in filching .the public that some of those "taken in’’ howled right out loud and the sheriff ot the county decided to take a baud and close the gambling, stands. The inference is that the public doesn't miud being filched if the filching is done in an artistic manner. In news stories emanating from the state capital, it was stateed that the gambling was wide open and brazen that' the authorities were fcrced to call halt, interring that there are different degrees of fish­ ing. It is difficult to differentiate between articsiic and courteous flichiug, or what have you,' and wide open bold filching. The situation reflects 110 credit on the state fair. Kor that matter the howl set up fair visitors reflected no credit upon their > sportsmanship. If that man is to be found who doesn’t expect to be filched when he plays a gambling device at a fair, he should be given a course in prac­ tical business^ No concession op­ erating without relieving the fair visitors ol a portion of their pocket change and when it reaches the point that he cannot make a living, then the concession will be closed. Our sympathy for those who are filched at gambling stands, if we professed to feel any, would be mingled with pity and we wouldn’t haVethat for those who aren't able to take theirmedicine gracefully. The general impression is that to allow gambling devices at the fair is a big digression from the" real purpose of the fair anyway and we’n as lief have',them barred from the midway^ But we do uot see the point in the iufereuce that there are different degrees of filching.— Wilkes Journal. Somebody Is Going To Be Taken For A Ride. Going to be taken for a ride means something serious in the realm s of gangdom, but here in Hickory it means ju st a big lot of fun. There is no gangster w arfare going on here so when it is announced that Charles Herm an, Hickory plum ber, or Frank Sigmon, local hosiery mill machinist, will one or the other be given a free ride on the day following' the presi­ dential election, no fearful alarm is spread but everybody looks forw ard to a big lot of fan. According to an agreem eent between the two above named men, one of ^them will be given a free ride in a wheelbarrow, and the other one is going to furnish the motive power to propel said wheelbarrow. If Mr. Hoover !'select­ ed. Mr. Sigmon will do the riding and M r H erm an the pushing, and if M r. Roosevelt is elected, the order will be reversed. Tha ride will start by the Hichory N ut Shop, down 13th street to the Hickory Hotel, around by the fire departm ent, and back down the Main D rag to the starting point. A motorcycle escort will be provided by the police departm ent, accord'r.o' to reports.—Catawba Re­ view. A Ditched Automobile. A ditched automobile with a yel­ low metal sign, "Repeal lie Eight­ eenth Amendment," on its ciurnp- Ied fender and two fuddled inmates trying io extricate, tlie car from itS| awkward plight—that is a sight that requires noi comment. But] what shall we say of the windshield stick- ers,. not u,ncompiou in these parts, which demand “Beer, Bonus, and Piosperity”? ‘ Who is it that con­ ceives such slogans, which libel the public intelligence? ._ Many aie thirsty and would welcome their beer, with or without prosperity. If theyjhad beer enough it would drive full care away. Prosperity might go hang And as for those veterans who demand cash bonus, by that very act do they uot show that they are willing to risk the general -orosperity for the sake of. a few hundred dollars cash to them in baud paid? It has been repeat­ edly shown that the revival of the brewing industry would have no ap- presiable effect on employment, on the grain market, or 011 the 'glass and cooperage industries. The false "prosperity” which some wet forecasters have predicted is based oii the excise taxes of so many dol­ lars per bairel which would pour into the federal and state treasuries. But what K.iud of prosperity is it that depends ou taxing the poor mau •.vho wastes his wages oil drink? Every honest economist has rejected that theory of wealth. A twelve- year-old knows it can't be true. As Dan Polmg says, "You can’t get beer and prosperity out of the same same schooner!” Tbe only way for America to "drink herself pros­ perous” would be by wasting more money ou beer than she ever did before the Volstead Act was written inton iuto the federal statutes Yet the fact that men intelligent en­ ough to steer an automobile will advertise their uu wisdom by past­ ing such placards 011 their cars is enough to make Cjue doubt the basic theory of a self-governing demo­ cracy.—N Y. Christian Advocate. Champion Girl Cotton Picker. Gladys Dees^ of Indian Trifil, Union county, has entered tb elistas the champion girl cotton picker of the state. She "weighed in” a'total of 486 nounds for a single day’s work this fall, working regular hours FeU people can pick as 400 pounds of cotton in a day and the average is 200 pounds. Miss Dees, a senior in the Indian Trial high school with the same ar­ dor that dominates her cotton’ pick­ ing—she,hasn’t m iked a. dry from ,school in nine years. . Some critics of the; modern age Would have us believeihat the three :R’s have been substituted .to mean, resting and radio and rag time. Must Come to This. Judge Teague, who presides over High Point musicipal court, ac cording to dispatches from the fut- iiitnre city, has adopted the policy ot depriving the automobile driver who. imbibes to freely of intoxicat­ ing liquors of the privilege of driv­ ing au automobile. Offenders, in­ stead of being slapped in jail where they board at public expense for a season, are turned loose to thier own devices and to shift for them' selves, minus the right to again so offend for a stipulated period. It must come to this. Getting intoxicated is bad enough-, but to take charge of a high-powered machine aud roam at large., endan geriug tlie safety of others, is much worse. — Judge Teague’s policy should be incorporated into the law. When a man is caught driving au aulotao- Dile under the influence cf liquor the law should say to him: ‘.‘You have not only'disregarded the lqw. for health, the law of the state and the first principles of safety, but you have also become a menace to society. Therefore, in order to pro tect society you shall not again drive an automobile fisr six months (or whajtever period would be deem­ ed best, but certainly not leijs than three moijths.)” . _ This newspaper without reserva- fiou would support such a law There may be grounds for argu­ ment as to whether the government ought to attempt to control by leg islation the nersonal habits aud de­ sires by use'of a prohibition law, but the government has thiS right and more than that, ’is obligated to protest society from’the menace of drunken drivers.—Wiik^s -Journal. Davie County School Teachers. Cherry Grove: Ruth Mangum Davie Academy: Louise Charles ^C en ter: V irginiaC irter Cheshire?: J. F i Jarrett, Louise Bum garner ggfaoah’s Ark: Tempie Smoot Cana: • W. G. Reavis1 Mrs. Lo’a Sofley Etchisun Queen Springs: Mrs. A. W. Fera- bee Chestnut Stum p: SophieM erom y Anderson’s: J. P. Crater Smith Grove: G. R M idison1P rii- cipal, C. R Crenshaw, Theima ,Eree- man, Frankie Craven, M ibel Chaffin, Dsii<i G rant, Jerry Muselwhite, AIma Brown, Nell Lazenby, Amy Talbert. Farm ington: E L. Ball, Princi­ pal, Mrs. Elizabeth W iilard, Mrs. Virginia Poe Shutt, Paul D Angell1 Addie Lois Campbell. Helen Smith, Vada Johnson, Alice Boyd, Phoebe Eaton Jerichti: Flora Thomas Holman’s: Beatrice Hill Oak Grove: Mrs J. L. Kirk. Effle Booe. Bethel: Lelia M artin , Cioleemee: E. W. Junker, P rir- cipal, Mrs. Annie Boft, Theltra Moose, Hugh 0 . Coulter, E iw atd English, M artha Saxon, Lucile W ard, Maude Graham, Mary Griggs, Mar> Hudson1Mary Z tchary1 Mary Kin­ caid, Elizabeth Mann, K ate Longt- ton, Mrs. A. D. W aters, Johnsie Hum phreys, Jane Bahnson, Thoy Templeton, Rosa Tatum , Emma .Crimes, Mrs. Creola Wilson, Flora Naile, Rachel Click, Ethel Young, Lula Young._ Shady Grove: W. M, Lovelace, Principal, Pauhne Chaffin, Maybell H onejcutt, H C L ittle, Jam es T. W hite, M argueritte B ritt. Sarah Mc- Ke lar, Alice Evans, Lucile M artin, Bernice Avett, M argaret Dodd, Sadye Lyerly, Delia Crouse, Cora Lee Dalton, Elizabeth Belvin, Edythe M arshburn. ■. Mocksville: E. C. Staton, Princi­ pal, Winnie D. Moore. Jessie McKee, Emily C arr, G 0 . Boose, M urray Firiler, Annie Maie Benton, L. H. Angell, Elizabeth Naylor, Sallie H unter, Clayton Brown, Violet Alli­ son, Mrp.. Z N. Andeson, Elizabeth Lollar, M argaret bell : Colured A. A. Ajahoe, Mamie Hairston, Sam B. Eaton, Mrs Fannie W heeler. Adelaide Srnoot, Maty Fuller Steele. L. M. Ot que, Esther Howard. Lu- telle LocKe, Juanita Seizor, Mrs. Rosa Johnson, H attie Harrison, Mamie Krider, Lucy Duiin, Vallie Lee Scott, D. W . M ontgomery, George V. McCullum, Geneva Cie- m ent. Alsie Young. IiiProhibition As Seen By ToovLate to Lock the Why Some Newspapers Are Wet! “ There is an elem ent in the m at­ ter of the w et press that I do not be­ lieve has yet been brought out and that is the fact that there are today very few of the publishers of the rank and file of the daily papers who are not beholden to their bankers who are in turn beholden to their highly paid propaganda directors just how to cause the bankers to in­ fluence the press. ' . “ Our two daily papers were both dry until control was obtained by the sam e two men who secured control of and em erged our banks; several of the directors of the merged banks were big bootleggers but now are captains of finance, naturally the m erged newspapers became dripping wet overnight. These cringing w et newpapers to show their servility to their m asters accept and publish all the jibers and wisec.rackers finding a ready field for their effusions their clatter becomes a medley.” —Prohi­ bition Press Service. Many Men of Ditto Minds E ditors who lam bast politicians for not getting to an agreem ent upon legislation . should see" w hat j 150 editors say about the same leg- jislatiotj.—R andolphT ribuue. I ' . ■ ■ -------------:---------:------ ; i Most of -thje ills which annoy man- jkind are man-made- except those vwhich are womaa m'ade. The Salvation Army. The Salvation Army, from its ir- ception, has ooenly arrayed itself a- gainst.the liquor traffic and engaged it in front-trench, hand-to-hand con­ flict. Each add every applicant for mem­ bership in its ranks m ust pledge him­ self or herself to total abstinence rom any and all intoxicating liquors. (Articles of W ar ) This has always been an unvarying rule. .2 Each and every soldier—and of­ ficer—is pledged to do his or her u '- most to»get everybody else possible to do Iikewise and to work uncom­ promisingly and unceasingly for the complete and final overthrow of in­ toxicating liquor throughout tte world This stand has cost the Army some­ thing, human lives, even, but it has been and will be maintained by us until the glorious end aimed a t has been accomplished. We have never lowered, nor will we lower our stand­ ard. Since the early eighties, or for more than a half century the Salva­ tion Army has been in vital touch with this question in these United States of America. Therefore, know­ ing, conditions as they existed pre­ vious to the enactm ent of the Eigh­ teenth Am endm ent and. since, it may be cun idered as in a position to take the witness stand and otfer testi­ mony. In Salvation Army work on the streets in w hat is called "th e lower portions” of our cities, the Army does not find, in connection with the street m eetings, the open saloon vomiting out an array of drunken men (a few of them middle-aged and elderly, but mostly young m en), as was the case before Prohibition went into effect. . The open saloon is gone and this condition of things, so far as Amer­ ican manhood is concerned, has been reduced at least 90 per cent, in 1'act the drunken man on the street i< som ething rarely seen in this day and generation. Inform ation from Salvntion Army W omen’s Homes setsforth that com­ pared with the large num ber who once came to our door begging ad inittance because of their having be^n ruined through strong drink, the im m ber that now comes from this cause is less than I per cent In fact, it is practically nil. Salvation Army Men’s institutions show a sim ilar condition of things. Men coming to these institutions now because of drink are a strong ex­ ception, whereas in the days of li­ censed liquor their nunber was le­ gion. The men in these homes today (in the period of depression) are the aged and infirm (some of whom, it is true, are sufferers from the days when liquor flourished) with a cer­ tain' proportion of middle-aged and young men tem porarily out of em­ ployment. In Salvation Army Family WeJfar.e Relief W ork in the homes of the peo pie, seldom, alm ost never, in these days, do we find the existing need occasioned by (as was invariably the case before Prohibition) addiction to stro n g d rin k o n th e p a rt'o f one or the wets to the contrary, notw ith­ standing, is gone. Previous to the enactm ent of Pro­ hibition, the Salvation Army m ade a practice of conducting "D runkards’ Raids,” “ Boozer Days,” ‘ Boozers’ Conventions,” and other sim ilar ef­ forts when we would gather in the d ru n k s'b y truckloads and busload front the saloons, the streets and the park benches until our hails would be jam m ed, cram m ed with men in ever.y conceivable state and condition of in­ toxication. Many . rem arkable and the other of the parents. It used to be this perhaps 90 out of 100 in­ stances. These da>s the heed is the result'of sickness, lack of employ­ m ent, or som e:othertem porarv mis­ fortune. In Salvation Army Indoor M eet­ ings, which once w eredisturbed. f re , quently broken up, by men inflamed and crazed by intoxicating liquor, a drunken person is now almost a thing unknown, not only because we do not get them , but because they are not Stable. “ Two prison guards have lately been discharged from the state pri­ son camp at Mocksville for neglect of-duty and disobedience of orders. Two weeks ago two men escaped while the two guards were on duty. Three months ago Clarks York and nine other prisoners escaped while these two guards were qn duty. It was with the greatest difficulty ami only with careful work and a great cost that the authorities had been able to convict York, of the murder of a well known Mount. Airv citizen. Others in the group also were desperate criminals. So ciety has beeu gravely eudangered by their escape. Appearances are that the stable door has been locked too late. Of course, it-is a fine thing to take pre­ cautions, even at this late date. It would have beeu far better, how­ ever, had they been taken earlier. Too much is involved for taking the matter of the safe keeping of desperate criminals as a light mat­ ter.— Winston Salem Journal. $600 In Old Bills Placed On Deposit. High Point, Oct. 17.—Six hun­ dred dollars in money that hadn’t seen the light of day since the new small sized bills came iuto use, turned up at the High Point Sav­ ings and Trust company this past week-end. The'cash was turned in in the old style bills by a farmer who wauted to deposit them. “Sort of old, aren't they,” asked the cashier of the ruralist as be took a glai.ee at the sheaf of 50's and 20’s. "Just been keeping them,” grin­ ned the farmer. "I want to put them back in circulation.” A smell of the bills indicated that they had been pressed between the leaves of au o.d book—a dictionary or Bible perhaps. It Depends The W ingtor-Salem Journal flung a fit b tcause Henry Ford advised his employes to vote fo r H erbert Hoover in order that there m ight be a quicker return to business recov­ ery. It jum ps all o' er the automo­ bile m anufacturer because he givea them his opinion as how to vote, and says he had no right to do so. Does not the Journal seek, day after day, to give its readers advice as to how to vote and their reasons therefore? D >es not Mr. Ford have the same right to express his opinion to those whom he employes as a newspaper to its readers. If - Mr. Ford had advised them to vote for Franklin D Roosevelt for President the same paper would no doubt be praising him fof his keen forsiggtand ability to advise those with whom he assocatos. It all depends on whose ox is gored.—Yadkin Ripple. M ost men w ant to make an honest living but there are still a few who w ant to run for office. po be gotten. The old-time drunkard, wouderful trophies of grace .are the outcome af these days, such as W hite, Jarvis. M ilans, etc. B ut today one would have to serch high and low and comb alm ost any American city with a fine-tooth comb to find a t one tim e 100 men and wo­ men of this type such as The Salva­ tion Army used to be- able - w ithout difficulty to gather by thousands when John Barleycorn held sway. In our travels/up and down we Sal­ vationists used always to be.made a- w are of the drink and its victims. It never escaped us because our uni­ form always m ade us its target. Iis victims, made maudlin and senti­ mental because of its effects, would seek us out and claim .us as their “ brother or sister” and insist on pouring into o u re a rsa sto ry of their woes, real or fancied, which ia their sober moments they would have been ready to deny,—The War Cry, H 4£ DAViE RECORD, MOCKgViLLE, N. C. N ovem ber 9. ^ THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - - Editor. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Mocks- Wlle1 N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1908. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I «0 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ SO Well, its all over—even to most of the shouting. ' Latest returns indicate that South Carolina went democratic. ' There is always something to be thankful for—it could have been worse. The candidates of both parties are glad that the election is over, even if half of them went down in defeat. The fellows who swapped par ties to get on the winning side will hesitate a long time before they will do so again. 4 The fellows who predicted that Bob Reynolds would defeat Jake Newell bv 200,000 majority had their sights set a little too high. Some of the hot heads who in suited their best triends during the campaign can uow go and ask for­ giveness and hope that the Lord will also forgive them. The prohibition fellow who pray­ ed dry and voted wet may get for­ giveness for his sins but we think he shonld celebrate his victory by getting on an old fashioned tear. Well, here’s hoping that the country will now settle down to business—that prosperity will smile upon us and that we will all be able to pay our honest debts in the near future. Thousands of supposed-to-be pro­ hibitionists didn’t pay any atten­ tion to what the preacher preached to them when they cast their votes yesterday. Thousands of people didn’t listen to the commands of the Savior while he was here among men. A lot of voters are sadlv disap­ pointed as a result of the way the Davie voters cast their ballots ves- terday. Both parties claimed a victory since early in the fall. The boys on both sides did much cam­ paigning. Half of them had to be defeated. Our friend McCoy, of North Wilkesboro, who,was running on the democratic ticket for the State Senator from Wilkes, Yadkin and Davie, seems to have gone down in defeat. Frieud McCoy visited otir town several times during the cam­ paign and really thought he was going to defeat Jeter Blackburn, the Republican nominee, or at least he tried to make us think he was going to be elected. Pep Dealers Start Uni­ que Economy Drive. "Get acquainted with motoring economy” is the idea behind an in­ tensive program of the Purol-PeD of this city.Recent check-ups by these enter­ prising merchants of motor needs, it was stated, show that Purol-Pep and Tiolene are the most economical mosor fuel and motor oil sold on this markrt. Hundreds of motorists at­ test to this fact, as evidenced by the growing sales of these products. In order that every automobile owner in this vicinity may become acquainted with these super value products, this economy drive is be­ing staged. Personal invitations are being issued to hundreds of local automobile owners and an attractive advertising campaign in the Davie Kecrd are being used.However, it does not require an in­vitation to join this drive. AU you need do, sry these Pep dealers, is to drive np to your nearest Blue and White Service Station where Purol- Pep and TioIene are dispensed, and try these “Twins of Power and Sav­ ings.”By the time your speedometer has registered a few hundred added miles of travel you will automatically join the throng of satisfied, thrifty local motorists who use only these quality products. InfantDavisDies. Richard Wane, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Rowe Davis, died Tues day evening at 7:15 o’clock, aged one week. Funeral services were held this morning at 11 o’clock, and the body laid to rest in Joppa graveyard. Mr. and Mrs. Davis have the sympathy of all our peo­ ple in the death of their first-born Davie Republican. The voters of Davie county marched to the polls yester­ day and expressed their sent­ iments in no uncertain tones. Ten of the 11 precincts in the county gave a Republican majority for the entire ticket from President down. Every Republican on the ticket was elected by majorities ranging from 65 to around 500 for Newell and Hoover. Follow* ing is the official vote fjor a part of the county officers: M. A. Hartman, Clerk of Court, 299; C. C. Smoot, Sherriff, 159; B. C. Brock, Representative, 186; Com­ missioners, Tutterow, 198; Brewer, 199; Hendricks 192; M. G. Foster, Register, 65. The biggest victory of the election was Smoot carrying Cooleemee, home of Sher­ riff McSwain, by a majority of four votes. B. C. Clement democratic nominee for Re. gisier, carried South CaIahaln by a majority of one Mocksville township the only democratic precinct in the county,' gave a majority ranging from 375 to 600. Two years ago more than half the precincts in the county went democratic. A hard campaign was wsfged by both parties, and the Republicans today are feeling^ust like the democrats did two years ago. Roosevelt Wins. From incomplete returns from Maine to California, Roosevelt has been elected President by an over­ whelming majority. The next Con­ gress and Senate will be democrat­ ic by a good majority. Hoover is leading in only 8 or 9 of the 48 states A democratic landslide. - North Carolina has elected it Democratic Congressmen and one U. S. Senator by' around 200,000 majority. The next North Caro­ lina legislature will have a few more Republican members than two years ago. Yadkin, Davie and Wilkes have elected Republican Representatives and a Republican States Senator. Kappa News. / Mrs. B. J. Foster spent Wednesday with Mrs. G. A. Koontz. Miss Edith Koontz was the guest of her cousin. Miss Verla Koontz, Sunday night. Mr?. Mary Lowery, of Salisbury is visit­ ing Mrs. B J. Foster at this time. Mrs. A. L. Daywalt entertained a num­ ber of young people at her home Saturday evening, the occasion being the eighteeth anniversary of her daughter. Miss Mary and the tweoty sixth anniversary of hsr nephew Mr. Arthur Daywalt. The home was beautiful decorated with autumn leaves and japanese lanterns. Games were played in theliving room after which the guests were invited into the dining room and were served cake, pickles and peanuts. Only the first' cousins of the honorees were the invited guests. Each guest was permitted to bring a friend. Those present were: Miss Mary Daywalt and Mr. Artur Pavwali; honorees. Miss­es Lois Smoot, Mary Ellen Smoot, Marie Cartner, Lois Prather, Viola Smith, Mae Smith, Mary Blanche Cartner, Blandena Daywalt. Lena Seamon, Reba Bvrley, Bulah Cartner and Minnie Koontz Messrs Wilburn Daywalt, Joe Johnson, Garl Stroud. Clarence Cartner, John Smoot, Tom Cleary. Wallace Green. Sid Fraither. Marshall Green. Henry Griffith, Bruce Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Daywalt, of High Point, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Daywalt I and Mesdames Charles and Atlas Smcot O N C E — Y O U B 0 A k H A S T H E A N S W E R ^ Vc * 7 * , Farmington News. Mrs. W. R. Parkin who spent the summer with her parents Mr. J. D. Furches, returned to her home at Winston-Salem. Mr. William Wagner who has been ill for some time is better we are glad to note. Miss Martha Furches spent the past week with Miss Helena West at Farmington. f TheFarmington B. Y P. U. held their regular meeting Sunday even­ ing, a very large crowd attended. Lovd Boger of New Jersey is visiting his patents Mr. L. , D. Boger. j You can buy the adtomooile on time, but you must lay co .vn tlie cash for a license tag. N e w B r o o m s Sweep the SURFACE clean — but it’s the im­ bedded dirt that does the dirty work. Beautify and protect your rugs now with nn electric cleaner. IT f iHTS THE IMBEDDED DiRT! J MR. FARMER! We Are In Better' Position To Handle YOUR COTTON Than Ever Before W e Appreciate Your Business Xgii FOSTER & GREEN! Near Sanford Motor Co. New Fall Goods We Have A Large Stock of the different items mentioned below to select from and our Prices and Quality Will Please You. Ball Bearings NoOiling ONLY $3.95 CASH Bnlancc Small Monthly t V aym ents PRICE $ 3 9 5 0 This cleaner comes complete with set of attach-- rnents for cleaning upholstering', drapes, etc. Al! for one price . . . $3 9,50. / Southern Public Utilities Company Children’s Shoes Prints 50c to $1.95 IOc and 15c Ladies Shoes Playcloth $1.50 to $3,95 8c Men’s Shoes Men’s Underwear $1.35 to $4.50 59c to 75c Sweaters Ladies’ Underwear 50c to $2.95 39c to 60c Sheeting Children’s Underwear S1I2C by the bolt 39c to 50c Let Us Have The Pleasure Out-Fitting You For Your WINTER NEEDS Of C. C. Sanford Sons Co. “Everything For Everybody” n n ¥r y T f T O d A y — G e t 'f o r : y <M O N E Y THE D Largest Davie LOCAL Mrs. T- end with A secon cheap. Mr. an- Iredell CO shapping. Dr and spent Thu shopping. Attorne business Thursday Born, White, of Nov. 2nd WANT pie, and c Mr an West Sha ville visit Hon. J North Wi week sha' ‘ Give Bushes. F Meronev Ben An classic sh town last Dr. and mother. J Salisbury, on busine 400 Sqt liearth St /3-70 Bas M The Co forced to day and p covnt of I Mr. an spent the with thei student a' stitute. Miss H music at spent the her paren Turner. Miss home last torium, S derwent a bout two Frost Early Je hagen Ma Meroney Little Kappa, h for a half which she LOST and black hole thro' be paid RATLE Mr. an and son A and daug afternoon ping- Solicito Wilkesbo shaking Jones sp Cooleeme tic audien Pearl ! the class carried a' co to W which br had some M. B. in town la Bailey h house, on move his the ne^r Fire of the resia bert McC about i No one w started, goods we. 4 rooms a Mr. McCi suranceo For the three wee covered m last week, badly by t farmers h sowing t' rain tall f double th has beeu ton crop i practicall much of i (THE DAVtE RECORD, M OOkSVfLtE, R t . NOVEMBER g', ig tf THF DAVTF RFFORD * C. L. McClamroch, of R. 2, has I H L U A iI L K L IU K L F .jour thauks for a 7}{ pound turaiD I one of the higgest ones we ever ran np against.Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS. Mrs. T- S. Haire spent the week end with her parents ia Georgia. A second hand coal stove for sale cheap. E H. MORRIS. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith, of Iredell county were in town Friday shapping. Dr and Mrs. R. P. Anderson spent Thursday in Winston-Salem shopping. Attorney E. H. Morris made a business trip t o Winston-Salem Thursday. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Lem White, of near Ijames X Roads, on Nov. 2nd a girl. WANTED—To buy poplar, ma pie, and cedar logs. J. H, Williams “The Cedar Man." Mr and Mrs. Duke Bowden, of West Shady Grove, were Mocks- ville visitors Friday. 1 Hon. Jeter M. Blackburn, of North Wilkesboro, was in town last week shaking hands with friends. Give us your order for Rose Bushes, FruitTrees and Shrubbery. Meroney Nursey and Greenhouse. Ben Anderson, who lives in tie classic shades of Clarksville, was in town last week on business. Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Lowery and mother, Mrs. M. T. Lowery, of Salisbury, were in town last week on business 400 Squares 29 Ga. Prime open hearth Steel Galv. Roofing Only $3.70 Base. Pay Np More. Mocksville Hardware Co. The Cooleemee cotton mill was forced to c’.ose'down last Wednes­ day and part of Thursday on ac- covnt of high water. JIr. and Mrs. R. B. Sanford spent the week-end at Stanton, Va., with their son Marshall, who is a student at Fishborne Military In­ stitute. Miss Hazel Turner, who teaches music at Mountain Park School, spent the week end in town with her parents. Rev. and Mrs. E. W. Turner. Miss Hazel Kurfees returned home last week from Long’s Sana­ torium, Statesville, where she un­ derwent an appendicitis operation a- bout two weeks ago. • Frost Proof Cabbage Plants— Early Jersey Wakefield,- Copen­ hagen Market $t.oo per 1000. Meroney Nursey and Greenhouse. Little Miss Geneva Koontz, of Kappa, has the thanks of the editor for a half dozen beautiful dahlias which she sent us several days ago. LOST or STOLEN—One white and black spotted Walker pup with hole through left ear. Reward will be paid on delivery. DEWEY RATLEDGE, Cana, .R. 1. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cheshire and son Alvis and Mrs. J. T. Angell and daughter Orpba, spent Friday afternoon in Winston Salem shop- ping- Solicitor John R. Jones, of North Wilkesboro, was in town Saturday shaking hands with friends Mr. Jones spoke Saturday night at Cooleemee to a large and enthusias tic audience. Pearl Richardson, who lives in the classic shades of Clarksville, carried about 500 pounds of tobac­ co to Winston-Salem last wees, which brought him, $119. Pearl had some good tobacco this year. M. B. Bailey, of River Hill, was in town last week on business. Mr. Bailey has purchased the Boger house, on Sanford Ave , and may move his family here some time in- the near futurel Fire of unknown origin destoyed the residence of MV. aud Mrs. Al­ bert McClamroch, near Oak Grove, about I =30 o’clock Friday afternoon. No one was at home when the fire started. A part of the household goods were saved The bouse had 4 rooms and was built last spring. Mr. McClamroch had only $300 in- suranceon the building. For the second time ia the past three weeks the creeks and rivers covered much bottom aud low lands last week. Corn has been damaged badly by the high waters, and many farmers have been unable;to finish sowing their' wheat crops. The rain tall for October was more than double the average, and farm work has beeu badly delayed The cot­ ton crop in the county has been practically harvested, although much of it has not been marketed. Mr. John L Foster and daughter Miss Mary, of County Line, were in town shopping Saturday after­ noon. We are unloading a Fresh Car of Cement today C. C. SANFORD SONS CO. Mocksville and Cornelius high school football teams engaged in a battle royal last Tuesday afternoon on the houie field. Both teams failed to score the wind up being 0 0 Gus Tayiorhad the misfortune to put a bullet through his right toot last Tuesday. He was standing with the end of a .22 rifle barrel on his foot when tjie gun accidentally discharged, the ball going through the foot. Dr. W. C. Martin dressed the wound. We have Received another Solid Car of Galvanized Roofing 5 V All LengthsRidgeRollandValley Iron C. C. SANFORD SONS QO. The preliminary trial of Charlie Jordan and OOadiah Koontz charg­ ed with being implicated in the death of George Tucker, was post­ poned from last Wednesday until Friday, Nov icth at 10 0,clock A. M.. The trial will be held in the court house with Esq. T. J. Caudell presiding. While coming down a stairway Sunday night, Oct. 30th, Attorney E H. Morris made a misstep and fell to the landing, his bead striking the concrete a severe blow He suffered a slight concussion of the brain and received a number of bruises on his forehead. He has about "recovered from the fall. E. D. Doutiiit Passes. News was received by The Re­ cord Friday telling of the death of Mr. Ed Douthit, of Clovis New Mexico, which occurred at the Bap tist hospital in that city on Satur­ day, Oct. 29th. Funeral services were held at the Cloyis Baptist church on Monday, Oct. 31st. con­ ducted by the pastor, Rev. J. F. Nix, and the body laid to rest in the Clovis cemetery. Mr. Douthit was a native of Farmington town­ ship, Davie county, but migrated to the west many years ago. He spent some lime with relatives and friends in Dav'e last spring His numerous friends in Davie and Forsvt.h wiil be pained to learn of his death. He was a kinsman of Mrs. C. L. McClamroch, of R. 2. Mrs. Margaret Nail. Mrs. Sfargaret E. Nail, about 93 years of age, dieffat the home of her grciit-nephew, C. M. Swice good, at Asheville, last Wednes­ day, following 'a week’s illness. Funeral and burial services were held at Asheville Friday morning at 11 o’clock. Sirs. Nail lived in Mocksville with her niece, Mrs. E. M. Swicegood, for moie than 30 years, moving to Davie.from David­ son county when she was about 17 years old. She lived in Jerusalem township for a long while before moving to Mocksville. Mrs. Swice­ good was an excellent woman, a member of the SIethodist church since early* girlhood. She bad many friends in Mocksville and Davie county who will be saddened by the news of her death. No im­ mediate relatives survive. Delightful Occasion. Mrs. A. M. Baker and daughter, Bessie, entertained at a delightful surpise supper on Saturday evening at 7:30 o’clock In honor of Mr. Baker’s 58th birthday. Amongthe guests were about eighty of Mr. Baker’s friends and relatives Each family brought an abundance of food and the sight of the heavily laden table gave no one a feeling of depression. Afterthesuppergames were played by the young people. The music furnished by the CooIee uiee String Band was enjoyed by all. The numerous friends of Mr. Baker wished him many happy returns of the day. I. S. Baity Of Courtney Dies. Yadkinville, Nov. 4—Death un expectedly claimed I. -I. Baity, 38 at his home in Courtney near here today about 1:30 o’clock. He suc­ cumbed to a heart attack shortly after noon. Mr. Baity, was one of Yadkin county’s best known citizens 'and j had long been one of the leading business men in jiis section. At the time of his death he was presi­ dent of the Baity Basket Company. Surviving are the widow, Sarah • Baity, and eight children. Redland News. Mrs. Francis McDtniel was the Mmidav guest of her sister MrF. J. M. S H■ .Mr. and Mrs. R C Smith spent Tuesday in Mocksville with- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith.Mrs. Emma Smith spent a few days the past week with her mother Mrs W. D Smith.Miss, Opal Livingston and Mr. Sherrii Smith visited Miss. Georgia Smith Monday night. -Mrs. B D. Howell and little son Charlie Holt and Mrs..Montgomery and chi'drpo all of near Farmington spent Wednesday with Mrs. C. S. Dunn. jRev. and Mrs. M. G Ervin spent lrHday with Mr. and Mrs. C. S. i Dunn. IMiss G'adys Hanes spent Tui-Fday night with her sister Mrs OMie Beau- J champ. . jMrs. R C Smith spent WedneE-'; day with Mrs. C. S Dunn. Miss Cordelia Smith spent Sunday evening with Misses Lillie and Lessie Dunn.Misses Alberta Smith and Elva Hendrix visited Miss Pauline Sofley Sunday.Mrs. A. M. Laird spent Sunday with her mother Mrs. Julia Howard. Mr3. C W. Allen spent a few days the past week with her sons Messers Clenn and Ollie Allen, of Clemmons. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Dunn visited Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Howell Tuesday evening.Mr. and Mrs, P. R. Smith spent a while Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs S H. Smith.Mis Geneva Smith and Mr. Buck Foster spent a while Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs. Willie Arms- worthy. Center News. Rev. J. 0. Banks filled his regular ap­ pointment here Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Godby and children were the Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.D. G. Tutterow, Miss P Hy Tuiterow is spending a few weeks in Winston-Salem with her brother Mr. C. A. Tutterow. Miss Tutterow and Mrs. Tutterow are planning to visit the latter’s parents the latter part of the week. Mr. Spencer Dwigg;ns spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Dwiggins. Mr. Ollie Anderson, of Winston-Salem is spending the week in this community. Mrs. Willie Collette. Mrs. Lonnie Driver and daughters Mary Nell. Frances anti Ada Ana Atkinson and Giima Collette, of Cana, were the Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Lanier. Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Tutterow spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Tutterow, of Winston-Salem. Mrs. H. F. Tutterow spent Sunday wirh Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Anderson of Winston Salem. SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed KURFEES & WARD BARGAINS! SPECIALS THIS WEEK. Plenty Red Goose, Wolverine and Ball Band Shoes and Boots Men’s and Boys Onion Suits bOc Full Fashioned Hosiety 48c See our Clothing before you.: buy. We can and will save you money. Play Cloth all colors, and stripes, yard 8 I-3c Plenty of Outing yard 5c I have just received a large sample line of notions to go at about 1-2 price. Dreses 25c to $2 95. 8 lbs Lard 65c Salt 95c Coffee Ib IOc Crackers 2 lbs 25c Crackerslargesize llc lb Salt box 3c Carnation Milk-large can 7c, 3 cans 20c, small 7 cans 25c Eagle Brand Milk 20c can I Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c Seed Oats. Flour $1.95 Plow Points at 1-3 off list See our line dry goods before you buy. We have the best assortment we have ever had. Felt hats S9c up. Yours For Bargains J. Frank Hendrix General Merchandise Everything In Drugs When You Need Drugs the drug store is the right place to find them. Our Medicines are the Dsst to be found. Prescriptions care­ fully compounded by a re­ gistered druggist. Visit Us Often Let Us Serve You. LeGrand’s Pharmacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville N. C. Notice of Sale Under j Mortgage. I Under and by virtue of the pow­ ers contained in a certain mortgage deed executed by Charlie Tomlin and j-Janie Tomlin to G. A. Hartman oiithe 25th day of June, 1931, which said mortgage appears recorded in Book No. 25, page 78 . Register’s ofj fice of Davie county, N. C., default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured, the under­ signed will sell Dubliely for cash to the highest bidder at the court house Ioor in the city of Mocksville, N. C., on TUESDAY, the 22r.d day of No­vember, 1932. at 12 o’clock, M., the following described landslocated m Farmington township, Davie coun­ ty, tc-wit: A tract beginning at a post oak. Moses Fulford’s corner, thence E. 2.50 chs. to a stone in Fulford’s line, thence N 50 links to a stone, thence 1N. 80 degs. W. 6.95 chs. to a' stone, thence S 80 degs. E. 4.45 chs. to a stone, thence N. 3 28 chs. to the be­ginning, containing two acres more or'less. Terms of Sale: CASH. This.the 22nd day of October, 1932.G. A. HARTMAN, Mortgagee. By A. T. Grant, Atty. M R . FARMER! Bring Your Cotton To Our Gin. We Pay Highest Market Price. !.of TAftaa KarfiIiTfl** KrAtn ITe An/I Qnira Mnnotr W. CARTNER “NOTICE! Axes Fo,r Sale See Our North Window/ Mann Edge Tool Co., originators of the Famous “Red Warrior.” The Axe Your Grand Father and Great Grand Father used, always have been the best, the best today. Ground thin and sharp, ready for us. Prices $1.00 And Up. Woodsman’s Supplies, Saw, Felling, Splitting Wedges. Simonds Saws 5 ft., 5,1-2 ft. and 6 ft. Logging Chains. Hoe Saw Bits and Rings. Belting, Rubber and Gandy. Belt Lace, Steel and Raw Hide. Saw and Mill Files. Various other sundries needed around the mill. “The Store Of Today’s Best” Mocksville Hardware Co. PATRONIZE YOUR HARDWARE STORE 4» 4i 4* ifri|liiintn|H|niii|iifii|i ijnfiifrifri|i4ii|i3ii;»Iitfti;ii;iftnfriiK Ifiigiifnlnlnltrlnyl Ignjngl ,^mIhIi ifr iInji 1I1 Let Us G in Your Cotton WE are now ready to gin your Cotton, and will pay the highest market price if you want to sell your Cotton in the Seed. We will ap­ preciate your business and guarantee first-class service. When you bring your cotton to town drive down and see u s “Yours For Good Service” Green Milling Co.ii ■r 4" » ♦ 4> ■!» * »1» * 4« H [■ *!■ C* 1I1 *!■ ■» if* i|t flnfni |h#hW^, Blum’s Almanacs At The Record Office TGRAMffiV; the BEST BUY IN TOWN ,,J seK fl Zmo.r thrifty f0 lksV f' .......................... ... ■*** -Cf* Hft M DAVlE RECORD, MDtKSViLte, R G. NOVEMBER 9, 1932 Join the Red Cross and Help The Distressed and Needy S H ' I-% ' //> rrc ' i f e ^ Jtite . •V i: ... ......... Is^-iSV ! i ^ * * L -i £•** A t the Helm—In Time of N eed! SMFWr I W i / . XS * A*is?2 ^ -'ss^ i ^ Mfe- w> %■*< > , N]<?>>.{<• .fy* . * ": SM ! |g ||g ||p Renew your subscription to The Re­ cord and receive an old Reliable Blum's Almanac free. 1 Women In Saloons. The sham argument that prohibi­ tion has made women drink and we must repeal prohibition to stop wo­ men drinking, meets a jolt if we go back in the newspaper flies of the bar room ers. For instance, in Nov­ ember, 1902. thirty years ago, we read: ‘ “The recent order of Inspector Shea, of Chicago, barring wonen from the saloons of a certain district if the west side has caused conster­ nation in the saloon ranks where, if is declared without the presence cf women patrons saloom ‘could not afford to remain open a week.’ ”— Union Signal, November 13, 1902. Perhaps the reason some men quit paying compliments after mar­ riage is that it requires all their time to pay bills. Administrator's Notice. HavingqunIificd ns n^ministr/jtor of the estate of the late .I. M. JwhsS. of Davie county. North Carolina, notice is hereby ttiven all persons holding claims against ‘ the said estate, io present them to the undersigned for payment on or before j Oct.7th. 1933. on inis notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in- 2 debted to the said estate, will please make • im m ediate paym ent. This Oit. • 7, 1932. W. C JONESt Admr. * of J. M. Jones. Dec’d. Ex-Senator Cameron Morrison said he would die for the cause of prohibition. Now he is going up and down the state campaigning for the man who beat him and who is as wet as the Atlantic ocean. Is that con­ sistency? No, but it is the tactics of a democrat.—YadKin Ripple. USE COOK’s C. C. C . Relieves LaGrippe, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years NorthGarolina ( , „ . ‘ .Davie County I I"'he Supenor Court Josephine T. Gregory, Plaintiff ys , William W. Gregory, Defendant. Service of Summons By Publication. The defendant, William W. Gregory, will take notice that an action entitled as a- bove has been commenced against him and is now pending in the Superior Court of the aforesaid County. North Carolina, for the purpose of obtaining a divorce froin bed and board on the grounds of: (I) Abandonment of his family. (2) Cruel and barbarous treatment endanger­ ing the life of oiaintift. (3) Maliciously turning plaint ff put of doors. (4) Offer­ ing such indignities to the person of the plaintiff as to render her condition intol­ erable and her life burdensome, and the defendant will further take notice that the plaintiff is seeking the custody, care and control of their infant daughtor, Jose­ phine G Gregory, age 4. in said action; and the defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear within 30 days' after the 3lst day of October, 1932, j and answer or demur to the said com­ plaint or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demended therein. This the 1st day of October. 1932. W. B. ALLEN, Clerk Superior Court. H. R.'STANLEY, Attorney for Plaintiff. NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virture of the powers contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Mrs, Phone H. Bailey. Beal I. Smith, and Rose Smith to J. F. Moore Trustee, dated Febv 13, 1923, and duly recorded in Book 19 page 1.03 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davie county N. C. De­fault having been made in the paj- ment of principal and interest on same the undersigned will sell pub­ licly to the higheat bidder for cash, | at the court house door of Davis I county in Mocksville, N C., at 12: o’clock noon, on the 21st day of Nov. 1932, the following described proper - 1 ty. situated in the town of Mocks-' ville, N. C-.. and known as the Phone: Baileyhouseand lot, being on the; East side of Salisbury Sts . bounded ■ as follows: On the North by the • lands of C.-C. Sanford On the Eistj by the lands of Grant Daniel and the; Presbyterian Manse, On the South : by the late E P. Bradley, and on the1 West bv Wilkesboro and Salisbury | streets containing one half acre more: or less, and being the house and lot: now occiipitd by B. I. Smith and Rose Smith. ThisOct 15.1932.. ' I J. F. MOORE, Trustee. I^azy Colon Makes 9 Your Life Miserable Lauirh at money "worries if yonr colon is free of poisonous waste* Here’s Nature’s way to . banish sickness. If 3rou are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, the new tonic tablet, COLOJfIiX, con­tains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan.-- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your hody to elimi­ nate poisons, aid digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s un­ natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLONJiX tab­lets and purify your system Nature’s way. This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on physician’s prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only GO cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments come from clogged colon, so if you are not feel- inp well Irv COLO^fEX today on guaranteed satisfaction or money back basis 5 'T h Fr RIS lif t t e n r-1 r-x: FV /T^ tf" , R -7 T>. y v/L: i.fP T ft-1 -!-W sri i Li idu i i f ! tF I'"f'it i J fcj W ■; U :•-VfA-fa I Suppose This Were The Heading Of A Newspaper ArticleAboutYOUAndYOURCar! ^ J'.YOU may be careful but your car may skid as you try to avoid a col- 'iisiibn. Property Damage Insurance protects you when you damage the property of others. Collision Insurance pays for damage to your own car. Be on the safe side! • ' E. C Morris ‘/j i.: I.'I; Ingredients^"'Lacking in Soft, Moiorr, Ec-Ir1Dd Fcoiis, and Which Have Be3ii Cos?-bine:! in a Grcnl Kca'.ih-BsllSing Prescription.—Year Own Fcsi'ly Bccior Approves for Less of Flesh and General Physical Weakness. Tiiousands of folks drag thor.i- selves about, ouiy about bait alive, witli no streustli, energy or ambi­ tion. They get up tirecl and ijo'in the day as worn put as wh^u they went to bed. This unnatural condition comes from impoverished blood, due .to the lack of vital minerals and nutritive salts in modern refined foods, -and which, physicians tell us, is/respou- sible for a vast amount of human suffering, such as sallow, pimply complexions, obstinate constipation, soft teeth, poor digestion, loss or flesh' and general Physical weak­ness. SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY In hospitals and private practice, before its introduction to the gene­ ral public, it proved a vitalizing food for the blood, a builder of firm flesh, bone'-and muscle and an in­dispensable factor in the correct functioning of the bo^dy. After takiug IRPGEN for a few days the color of the skin begins to show the improvement in' the qual­ ity of the blood, the strength and ondurouco of (he nerves and mus­ cles c.cuI-.Lally increase, and the or­gans of tlio body as a whole bscome< stronger, rcsuiting In a sonse of physical fitness and vigorous health.Since its rele^a to the geuerali pubiic, 'thousands of user:;, many of- them-citizens of this community,-as- VfOil as physicians, health auihori-j* tics and druggists, have tesiuicd to, the hn;ing fiorl JROO?N brings. • MINISTERS EMDOriSE IT Rev. M. Ia H. McMuIicnt pastor! of the Methodist Church at Monte-' Zumal- N. C .,'declares: “I do be-j Iieve your treatment lias prevented! a serious breakdown.” . ;_AnoUier strong endorser of IRd-' GiiiN, because oC what it did for him, is Rev. .I. 0. Banks, Methodist min­ ister of Albemarle, N. C.: ‘‘I have taken IROGEN with decided bene-: fits. It is a splendid medicine and . I am glad to give it my Ciidorse-)'' mont.” he writes. ; . .iROGEN’. prescription may be ob-: taincd in liquid <»r'concentrated tab-) let form frouLleading druggists and! dealers' in, medicines everywhere, including I ‘ i Rea!Insurance LeGrahdyS Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C. Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleemee,N.C. NOW ONLY ONE DOLLAR. " * * * * * * * * *•* * * * * #***< < *** * * # *** *W. P. S PEAS, M. D. Room 324 R. J. Reynolds Building Winston-Salem, N. C: Practice Limited ta Disease I Of The Eye and Fitting Glasses '* Hours 9 - 12: ►!♦’I* *** •i* •»* *iM5' *i* *i* *1* ‘i* *i* iItV4Ji DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. BEST IN SUPPLIES DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST Office In Anderson Building Mocksville. N. C. Phones: Office 5U Residence 37 WANTED! We want the im­ portant news hap­ penings from every section of the coun­ ty. Drop us a card or Ietterifa new vo­ ter arrives at your home; if your moth- er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything wos?th mentioning. Old papers for sale. CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME Distinctive Funeral Service to E^ery One i AMBULANCE - - - EMBALMERS Main St. Next To Methodist Church §Day Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163 fc*************** PAY NOW! Yesterday we requested a De­ linquent Subscriber to settle his ac­ count with usj and he replied: “I am honest, and I will pay you if I live. If I die and go to heaven I will send it to you. If I die and * do not go to heaven I will hand it * ****¥* **¥***** $♦ ¥***¥■¥¥¥* .¥ ¥*■ * -A ¥ **★**★★ .★★**He ★★5 ★★★*•- *** } now to ★★★★★★ ★★★**★**r ** *★Ir t ★5r ★★★*★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★ to you We think most of our Subscrib­ ers are honest, but we need money meet obligations. Please let us hear from you. THE DAVIE RECORD, P. S. When your son or daughter leaves for College send them The Record. A special rate to students. ★★★'k'k★•t. ★★ Ir★★★*★★+★★★★★★★★★★★ TC★★★★ . ★ + % ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★- ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 'k * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ' ★ * POSTAL fefccmPTS Sh o W THE kECORO CiRcuLATioN THE LARGEST IN THE COUNTY. THEY don ’t Life;i ' "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN." VOLUMN X X X fV .M OCKSVILLE, N O RTH CARO LIN A, W EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER t6 , 1952 \ NUM BER 17 NEWS OF LONG AGO. W hlt Wa* Happening In Davie Before TheDays of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, Nov. 19, 1902.) C. M. Godby, of County Line, was in town Saturday. Mrs. Dr. Stevenson ar.d sou, of Mooresville, visited her brother. Mr. J. B. Johnston last week. Rev. W. L. Sherrill left Mon­ day for Monroe, where he will a t­ tend the Annual Methodist Confer ence, which is in session in that city. C. C. Daniel, of Kappa, and W. T. Myers, of Bixby, were in town Monday. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Eaton, of W inston, was buri­ ed at Clement graveyard Wednes­ day afternoon. Tomatoes for dinuer Sunday, Nov. 16th. and peas large enough to eat right here in Mocksville a great climate. Dr. H. D. Gardner and Altorney Clemons, of Scranton, Pa., came in Saturday and are guests of Mr. E. H. Pass. They are down 011 a hunting expedidition. D. P. Daywalt. of Coifcord 1 has erected a- store Cooleemec on the M onis farm. The Ccoleemee streets are being macadamized, and street lights are going tobfe put in soon. Little Charlie WafTord1 of Coo- leemee.. was badly hurt last Satur­ day when he fell from a rock cart, one wheel passing over his body badly mangling it. His recorvery is doubtful. The Cooleemee graded school re­ ports an enrollment of 160. Rev. J. B. Craven is the principal. The bird hunters are abroad in the land. George Hendricks, of Tennyson, was In town Monday. L. B. Smith, of Greenville, S. C., is in town on business. Mr. Keliy, formerly with the J. N. Ledfotd Co., at Cooleemee is now' with Swink & Deadmon, at Gladstone The new addition to the Coolee mee cotton mill has been completed and the machinery is being install­ ed. Things That Cost Noth­ ing A smile. Y et m othe’s sm iling face brings m ore happiness to her family than ricoes can do. A cheery greeting. Yet it may pat a new heart into a discouraged or lonely soul. A flowering plant, “ Plants make any place seem like home—mother always ha\l blooms in the widow,’’ a man remarked appreciatively on a stormy winter day. Sunshine AU we have to do is c pen our windows to the cheering and the health-giving rays and yet some prefer to live in gloom, Fresh air. A gift to the country inhabitants and one of the main­ springs of health living. Exercise. Whatdifference wheth­ er we get it by working in our gard en or traversing the golf course; 'cleaning the house and doing the washing or struggling through a “ daily dozen’’ in the gymnasium? E xceptthattheform ercost nothing and bring greater return in sati - faction.—Farm Journal. Government Loan On Cattle. There are a great many farmers who do not yet know that if they are feeding steers, hogs for the mar ket, or any other kind of livestock that through a recent arrangement made in baliimore by the writer, Mr. Jarvis of Mayoek, and Mr. Case of the North Carolina extension serv­ ice, these people can get a loan which does not have to be paid back until next October. We have an opportunity to also get some money from the government for finrncmg purebred breeding stock, and I would appreciate it if you will put the proper notice of this in your paper. People desiring full information on this matter will kindly commun­ icate with tne writer. North Carolina needs more cattle for their poor,, woru-out farms and I think it is going to be possible for cotton farmers almost broke to get enough money from the government on three years time to buy small or large pure bred herds, either beef or milk type cattle. While all details have not yet been worked out, anyone interested in selling pure bred beef or milk cattle, or buying pure bred beef or milk cattle, will please commuuicate with tlie. writer at Mncksville. I am a breeder of registered Guernsey cattle, "/so registered Angus cattle, at Mocb^vtlle, having around 2,000 acres devoted to this purpose. H. A Sanford.—Greensboro News “I Told You So. There are some people in every community who get a big kick out of the expression, “ I told you so!” They are not to be taken seriously though, for they are not worth mmh to the community. They will not participate in any of the upbuildirg enterprises or activities so that when they fail to work out properly they can say, “I told you so.” And then they attem pt to criticise the efforts of those who did participate. In­ stead of taking an active part in trese activities and lending of their time and "ability” that they tray prove successful they consistently re­ fuse to participate but do not hesi­ tate to criticize it later, and, as is to b 2 expected, that criticism is usual­ ly adverse. The community must always tol­ erate that kind of fellow. But it is toler ation—nothing more or less. He is never a success in anything for his i ieals are too low, his minds too shal- 1 >w. to permit of such progress and he is so'disagreeable that his fellow citizens would much rather avoid him and one who is avoided can hard Iy be termed successful. “I told you so!'’ W hat a hateful expression. The intimation the ex­ pression carries. is>that you had be n warned by the speaker and that it is. perhaps for that reason that you failed. You no doubt the reason you did not heed his advice is because one who delights in the use of that expression is hardly worthy of your consideration. If you can not take part in the a - tivities of your community then at Ieastdonot berate them for their failures. They might have done better if you had done your share.— Exchange. Adjourned. Recently there was a distinct earthquake shock which disturbed a small Western city and rocked the municipal building so that the coun- cilmen, then in session, left without the usual ceremonies. The clerk, a man of rules and regulations, was hard put to give his rniuutes the pro­ per official tone. Finally he evolved this masterpiece: “On motion of city hall, the council adjourned.” It may he possible to kill an ene­ my with kindness, but as a rule the process is too slow, ia Cure. He had never struck such a stuffy hotel in hi3 life. In vain did he try to sleep. It was useless. He had endeavored to open the windows be­ fore going to bed, but found them all sealed. He tossed and turned. At last, in desperation, he got out of bed. wrapped a blanket around his hand, and smashed a window. Then he breathed deeply, got back to bed. and fell into a deep ,and refreshing sleep Next morning he had to pay $3 for smashing the front of a ward­ robe. - W orry ages as well as work. This explains how it is that some men never grow old at all. The Grange Goes March­ ing On. In the midst of unprecedented trials and tribulations, there is at least one cause for new hope and encouragement in this Common­ wealth. While the depression hrs pulled many down, the Grange has goue marching 011 to new triumphs in this State. The Grange is ti e oldest, most progressive, most con­ structive and most effective of all the farmers’ organizations in this country. Its record breaking pro­ gress in North Carolina during the last year is destined to mean more to our civilization in the futuie than most of us dreamed. We have been impressed as have others, no doubt, who have obser­ ved this remarkable movement, with tbe way in which the youth of the State have beeu rallying to the Grange. A great meeting of the organization was held in Winston- Salem Tuesday night. Many of the leaders were young men and young women. It augurs well for a “ new deal” in agriculture when the youth of the state catch a vi­ sion of what co operation and edu­ cation may mean to rural life 111 North Carolina. If it be true that “ God helps those who help themselves,'’ tfie Grange is going to have a ,power­ ful alley in its battle for tlie upliit of the North Carolina farmer. For wherever the Grauge is organized/ there will be found a group of farmers banded together to help themselves and one another. Commerce and industry, too, may well be thankful for the unprece­ dented growth of the Grange. Surely if commerce and industry have learned anything in the last five years, they have learned that business dannot survive if agricul­ ture perishes. Bv this time business ought also to liavh learned something else. It is this: Good business does not make prosperous agriculture, but pros­ perous agriculture makes good busi­ ness. Cotton, wheat and tobacco do not go up because Wall Street booms, but Wall Street booms be­ cause cotton, wheat and tobacco go up. When the farmers went down, Wall Street came tumbling after them. Tbe farmers went dow’u be­ cause they could not survive under an economic system that- forced them to buy in a high market and sell in a low market. Many shrewd' business men—or business men who thought they were shrewd—be­ lieved it would be good for business to continue such a system. But they have learned to their sorrow that business cannot prosper long unless,agriculture first prospers. As a result of the difficult times through which we are passing, thousands of business men and cap­ tains of industry are learning, we think, what our fathers knew long ago, namely, that agriculture is the nasic industry. W hen agriculture begins to come back, all industry aud business will begin to revive. If history teaches anything, it teaches that only dis­ appointment ' and despair await those who expect permanent busi ness recovery in any other way than through economic justice for agriculture It is for this that the Grange is working, and it ought to have the spmpathetic and whole-hearted co-- operation ot business men and in­ dustrial leaders of vision every­ where. We shall be greatly sur­ prised if the time tjoes not come when all of us will agree that it was fortunate, iudeed, for North Carolina that the Grange came to the kingdom for such a time as this. .—Winston Journal. Woman Sentenced For Attack On Mayor Because she became angered at M'ayor F R. Sifford, of East Spen­ cer, when he refrused to issue any more Red Cross flour upon her re fusal to dispose of six dogs at h tr home,, and struck him with a wood eu letter opener, a woman of East Spencer was seentenced to pay a fine of $1 0 or serve 30 days in ti e workhouse when tried before Mag istrate G. F Moorefield. ■ Mayor Sifford lias been issuing tbe Red Cross relief flour in bisvici uity as a part of the relief work in this area. He had informed the womau that she must dispose of six dogs at her home before she could get any- more aid. She called at bis office aud requested flour again, be­ came angered when refused, as she still had the dogs, and in her wrath, picked up a wooden letter opener, hurled it at the mayor, and inflict­ ed an ugly wound over his eye. Mayor Sifford iudicted her for as­ sault and the case was tried recent­ ly —Salisbury Postr Local Man Tells Of Ptices In 1840. R. M. Rowe, of this city, has in his possession a letter written from Brown county, Illinois, January 2 IS4 0, during the administration of President Martin Van Buren, to his grandmother, Susan Rowe, and great uncle, Heury Beeker, which among other things lists the prices then being paid for produce. Mr. Rowe thinks the comparisons might be inleresling in the light of the preseut sitbation. The 1840 prices' reported are as follows: W heat, November 1, Jfi.0 0 per bu rve Soc per bu., corn 6 5c per bu. pork Sc per pound, coffee 25c per Ib., sugar 14 2-yc Ib., calico 15c per yard, domestic 16c per yard, butter 25c 25c Ib., egge 25c dozen, flour $3 00 per hundred, labor ' on the farm J io o per day, by tie month J r6 to $25 per month, horses $ 6 0 to J 125 CCAVS J25 to $3 0, sheep J 1.50 a head; and other things in pioportion.—Lexington Dispatch Trouble In This Country As Outlined By Editors. We stiil bear talk about what are termed “ those good old days” in this country—before the many mod­ ern improvements and conveniences, all of which, it is admicted, cost money. The editor of the Mooresville En­ terprise thus outlined the trouble in this country: “ Gone are the buggy whip, corset, carriage, lamp chimney, Brussels carpets, hairpin and horseshoe fac­ tories. In their places are the elec­ tric refrigerator, automobile, radio, vacuum cleaner, rayon silk hosiery, enameled bath tub, gasoline and hydroelectric plants. Housekeeping in half a dizen petticoats, bodices and long hair, standing over hot coal or wood ranges four hours at a time, are being supplanted by young things in two or three garments who turn a few electric switches, take something out of a mechanical re­ frigerator, open a can of something their grafidmother never heard of— and call it a day’s work. Business is Cdlled upon to cater to this ‘new fret - dom.’ And it is the extra cost of equipping business to cater to its that has occupied our attention for the past several years But the ‘new freedom has had an awful wallop. And as soon as business.can get back to where it was before it began cater­ ing to fad--, the country is going to be all right again ”—Ex. Didn’t Vote For Reynolds There is no question in the minds of the informed and fair-minded a- bout the value of prohibition. Biishcp Ainsworth has well reminded us that the Soutn has been betrayed by poli­ ticians A few are left upon whom we can depend, and as for me and my house we will stand by these. The ballot box and the place of pray­ er—Almighty God—these are mighty forces for rightneousness. ■ Let the heathen range, and the peop e ima­ gine a vain thing, and the rulers take council together. They have already repealed the Ten C immandments. It may be they will be kind enoueh to leave us the stars, and God. We will then begin to rebuild our wasted fortunes.—J . R. Owen. Asheville, N. C , October 25,1932. Flower Show At Coo- leemee.i« Although the . exhibits were slightly off in number they were thought by observers to be more beautiful and artistically arranged than at any previous time and the annual flower show sponsored by tbe Ludies Aid Society of tbe Coo- leemee Methodist church held in the town hall was considered an oulstandiiig success froni every angle with an unusually' large crowd. Mrs. Lee Louder received highett honors of nny exhibitor with Mrs- S i B. Cuthrell second. Mrs. Loud­ er leceived a grand total of nine first prizes. The committee in charge and who were to a great extent respon s'ble for the success of the show Iwasconiposed of: Mrs. C. C. TiI- 1 :r, Mrs L. J. Dayjs, Mrs. *V. M Click, Mrs. T. C. Pegram and Mrs. Arnold Kirk, The judges were Mrs. J. A rthur Daniel aud Mrs. P. G. Brown of Mocksvilleaud Mrs. M. H. Hoyle of the village. Moore County News reports that all the gambling devices at the C ar­ thage fair were croolei. And what did the folks down there ex ­ pect— that, a carnival company would be giving away money in these days of depression?—Ex. Missed Preaching One Sunday In 30 Years. Dr. Emmett K. MfiLarty. Ihe Btbolarly pastor of the Central Meth­ odist church, Shelby, has missed preaching but one Sunday in 30 years and that day he was keptfrom tne pulpit on account of sickness. Dr McLarty is a native of Union coun­ ty and has filled several of the largest stations of the Western North Carr- Iina Confeierice as well as president elder. He has a son who is also a young Mr thodist minister, a mem­ ber of the conference. Advertised. , “ I say,” said the penniless Percy to his rich uncle, “ I want your ad­ vice.” “ Well, my lad?” said the old man realizing what was in the wind. “ What i.4 the best way to ap ypiT for a loan?” burst out the youth. A thoughtful look came over the old uncle’s couutenace. “ W ell,” he replied, if you wete sensible I ’d advise • you to make your request by telephone aud ring off before you receive the answer. Prison Guard Writes in Own Defense. I bad not inteuded making any statement regarding my discharge as a prison guard on account of the escape of Bobbie Jarret and John Green, as I was not on duty at tbe time. But since Supt. Hendricks hasimfsrepresented the facts I feel, in justice to myself, compelled to make a statement. On the morning that Green and Jarret escaped they obtained the key for Mr. Grave’s car from Supt. Hendricks. Supt. Hendricks kick­ ed bis office as usual batween seven aud eight o’clock and went- to Mocksville. He did not return until seut for at 12 o’clock. Jarrett and others swept the pri­ son yard as was their custom on Saturday morning. Jarrett was given permission by camp officials to wash the car on the morning of his escape. They did not escape while I was 011 duty, as C. L .' Rid- euhour had relieved me. Jarrett had beeu washing cars and fixing tires for state employees for five mouths, outside the fence. - I f I neglected ray ' duties or dis­ obeyed orders while a guard, I challenge Supt Hendricks who gave out this information to prove . it. In regard to the escape of York and nine others, I wish to state that Central Prison officials investigated tbe m atter and did not order my discharge. I made no effort then to keep from being discharged nor at this time as I did not expect to hold my job after November 8 , . I wonder why I was not discharg­ ed to save Mr. Hendricks when the buncli of keys containing the key to the cell block, commissary and other prison keys were lost on the grounds. D uringA ugustalongterm pii- srner was sent Io his borne in the mountains in a state truck, burning state gas to get apples He return­ ed after 10 o'clock at night with one peck ot apples and in a drunk­ en condition. “ Who uulocked the stable?” While a guard at the camp a pri- siner escaped from a road force and made his getaway without the guard missing him. “ Too late to lock the stable door.” The camp steward, Mr. W ellonr1 borrowed clothes from a trusty, put them on a prisoner who wa3 wear* ing stripes, took him to aUothef county and did not return until a* brut 11:30 at night. “ Too late to lrck the stable.” On Thursday afternoon before Green and Jarrett escaped, fbur gallons ot state gasoline was stolen and said :o have been put in a guard’s cir. No one discharged. “ Too late to lock the stable door.” I am making this statement ia self defense only and not for any political reason whatsoever.— Maxie Seaford1' in Winston Journal. I The average woman thinks thi/l i every otuer woman wants her Iius- ■ band, bitt the average man knows I that there are mighty few women who will pay any attention to him. Here’s the mark of a sm art young mm. Ifh e h a sto work at a poor j ib, he’li put in his spare time fitting himself for a better one. Most men who have climbed high, did it in just this way. „ ; Some men are so' anxious to take credit for things they didn’t accom­ plish, that they remind us of the old hen that cackled vociferously when the corner Btone of the church was laid. His Services Needed. The sheriff was in section recent­ ly, We wish he might come often- er and visit a number of our homes where he is least expected.—Selicia Item, Brevard News. A man will look for a half a day for the cause of a slight rattle on his automobile arjd when he gets it to running noiselessly, will go down the street with the mufflir wide open. A barber who tells a-boy he is hard to shave the first time he gets into a barber chair has a strangle holds on that young man’s future tonsetial requirements. . J The man whose place is easy to If fill is never much to the concern for which he is working It is the m an'Ji who makes his place hard to fill who ? becomes valuable. | | i Poverty may be no crime, yet i£jg.’ is punishable by hard labor for Ufe£$fi' Th e fiAViE reco rd , MftCRsviLLE, R e , NOVEMBER 16./93! THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STKOVD - ■ Editor. TELEPHONE Entered atthe Postofflce in Mocks yille, N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. Mturch 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE -■ S SO Well, we have Mr. Fnnklin Delano Roosevelt but we are minus Mr. Recovery For the next two years the -poli ticians can figure out why the folks voted as they did, and gird up their loins and take a new start. Now is the time to torget the late unpleasantness and everybody get busy and see if anything can be done to bring back the Cai Coolidge prosperity. There were a numbers of reasons why the democrats were defeated in Davie last Tuesday, but two of the biggest reasons we^e in Coolee mee and Farmington. The new faces that will be in the J933 session of.the North Caro Iina legislature have a man’s job in front of them. They a-e going to get more cussing than their jobs are worth. We hope before another election rolls around that the infamous ab­ sentee ballot law will have been re pealed. W hvhonestvotersshould want such a law we cannot figure out. We would appreciate it very much if all those hundreds who are due us on subscription would call or send us their renewals. Our creditors have been patient with us, but they are in need of what are due them. Help us to help those we owe. We hope the day is far distant when the filling stations will be dis­ pensing liquor, wine and beer. Bob said he didn’t want saloons back, but he didn’t say anything about being opposed to filling stations and drug stores selling intoxicat ing drinks. Here’s hoping that Uncle Cam Morrison will live to land some kind of a political job. Cam said last summer that he would died for the cause of prohibition but during the campaign he changed his tune and stumped the country for men who made the race for office on lop of a whisky keg. Mr. Roosevelt didn’t promise us that $10 bills would be growing on all the bushes if he were elected, but he did promise us wine and beer, and hoped that he would be able to make that promise good by March 1st. This being the case the thirsty have but a hundred days left in which to enjoy their thirst. The Record, on behalf of the Re­ publican county officers, wishes to extend thanks to the democrats throughout the county who went to the polls on Tuesday and assist­ ed in helping to elect a bunch of m ighty fine fellows to fill the va- lious county offices for the next two years. This is written with­ out the knowledge or consent of the newly elected officers. Fulton voters didn’t like it be cause all of their schools were put out of business. If the democrats will look at the election returns from Fulton thev can realize now that we knew what we were talk­ ing about a year ago when we pre­ dicted that Fulton would go Re­ publican if thev were deprived of their school. The head of the school system in Davie hasn’t for­ gotten our predictions. Voters Mistaken For a ^ Breadline. I Jacksonville, Fla., Nov. 8 .- An aged tourist from the north saw a long line of people standing in front of a little store in a suburban district today. She had her car stopped, got out and approached a woman who was standing iu line. Opening her pu-se, the tourist offered to “aid the bread line.” , She averred she had never seen such [ deplorable conditions 1 Then someone reminded her that this is election day. 1 Let's Be Fair. A report has been circulated that Davie Republicans once carried this county by a thousand majority, and that the democrats made a fine showing by cutting the Republi­ can majority, this year to such a small figure. L et’s get the facts. Davie county went Republi­ can 3 0 years ago last week by a majority of less than 2 0 0—W- A. Bailey defeating C. C. Sanford lor sheriff in 1882. Twenty years later in 1902 Davie was still going Re publican but by small majorities. Sheek’s majority for sheriff in 1902 was only 165, with the balance of the ticket running about the same. In 1916 Wineeoff, Republican, car­ ried the county by less than 100 majority, if we are not badly mis­ taken. In 1922 the county went democratic for the first time since 1880. In 1924 the democrats, were defeated by small majorities, and the county remained in the Repub lican column until 1 9 3 0, when the democrats won by majorities rang­ ing from 26 tor clerk to 452 for Re presetitative. In 1928, the Repub licans carried Davie by the largest majority in the history of thecoun ty. Hundreds of democrats refused to go to the polls that year because Al Smith was running for president. Cope, Republican nominee for slur riff, carried the county over Walker, by a majority of 8 9S. The usual Republican majority in Davie for the past 50 j'ears has been less than 300 with the exception of 1928 when there was a Republican land­ slide throughout the nation. The Republican party made big gains iu Davie this year, turning a demo cratic victory of around 300 majori­ ty two years ago into a Republican victory of about 200 majority this year. Congratulates Davie. Beaufort, N. C., Nov. n , '3 2 Dear Mr. Stroud:—I wish to con gratulate you and the people of Davie county on the fact that Davie has come back into the Republican column where it belongs. It is a tribute to the good, sense of your people that they did not yield to the clamor of Democratic politicians aud to the feeling of resentment a gainst conditions which caused so many Republicans to desert tbeir party. The Republican party did not cause the depression which has af­ flicted the whole civilized world for the past three 01 four years. Had A lS m ithandall of the other De­ mocratic candidates been elected four years ago condition would have been worse if a flood of for eign goods and foreigu labor been allowed to come into this country. The wise policies of President Hoover have laid the foundation for a return of prosperity aud if the people had reelected him and given the Republicans a good ma jority in Congress vastly improved business conditions would have been the result in a very short time. If !Ir Hoover’s prosperity will re turn any way. In fact there has been a great improvement during the past two or three months. W ith ray best wishes and regards I atn, Sincerely yours, W. G. M EBANE. Dead Democrat Votes. Norfolk, Va., Nov. 10. —T ie vote of a dead man deliberately was counted at the court house precinct in Norfolk Tuesday, it became known today. Fred W. Calvert, who was killed in an automobile ac­ cident near Charleston, W. Va., list Thursday, had previously sent in his ballot by mail to Norfolk. A Republican watcher challenged the ballot on the ground that a “dead man can not vote.” Tbe judges, however, ruled the ballot had been legally cast when placed in the malls by Calvert and ordered it counted. Mr. Calvert ryas formerly the! manager of a hotel in Norfolk and more recently was assistant manag­ er of a hotej at W hite Sulphur springs. Perhaps the reason some men quit paving compliments after marriage is that it requires all their time to' pay bills. Davie’s Official Vote. Following is the official vote in Davie for the various county, state and national offices: President Hoover, 2 .4 7 4 : Roosevelt, 2,3 8 1. Hoover’s majority 9 2: ' U. S. Senator Newell, 2 ,7 8 9; Reynolds, 2 ,2 8 3 Newell’s majority 504 Governor Frazier. 2 .6 6 3, Ehriughaus. 2 ,- 4 1 8. Frazier’s majority 2 4 5. Congress Ragan, 2 ,6 3 5; Lambeth, 2,422 Ragan's majority 2 1 3. State Senate Blackburu, 2 6 7 4 ; McCoy,• 2 ,4 7 4 . Blackburn’s majority 20 0. Legislature Brock, 2 ,6 9 4; LeGrand, 2,5 2 2. Brock’s majority 1 7 2. Sheriff Smoot, 2 ,7 1 4; McSwein, 2 ,5 5 7. Smoot’s majority 157. Clerk Superior Court Hartman. 2,7 6 0: Allen, 2 ,4 8 8 . Hartman’s majority 2 7 2 . Register of Deeds Foster, 2 ,6 5 4; Clement, 2 ,586 Foster’s majority 6 8 . Surveyor Stonestreet, 2 ,709 No democrat­ ic opponent, - Coroner Kennen, 2 ,6 2 7 ; Byerly 2 ,5 4 2. Keuneh’s majority S5 ' County Commissioners Brewer, 2,6 8 1; Tutterow, 2,6 9 9; Hendrix 2 7 0 4 ; McMahan 2 4 8 7 ; Dwiggins 2 4 9S; Hovle 2 ,5 3 9. Hen- d tis majority 196, Tuttf row’s ma­ jority 1 9 1; Brewer’s majority 173. Amendment No. 3 to protect in­ surance for widows received a ma­ jority of 5 3 3. AU the other a- mendments were snowed under. Citizens Visit Cemeteryj To Cast Tkeir BailotsJ North Wilke3boro, Nov. 8 .—An­ tioch township citizens in Wilkes county, picked tbeir way among tombstones today to cast their, bal­ lots at Antioch church, the official precinct of the township. Voters marked their preferences at the church where citizens of the section have voted since this part of the state was first settled. The spot was established as a precinct in 1837. The section is relatively isolated and. when election day falls on Sat­ urday, many voters remain over night for Sunday services the next day. Today, however, there were no services in prospect for tomorrow and so ballots were cast and citizens made their ways back home. On rainy days, the booths are mov­ ed inside the church and ballots are cast around the, pulpit. On sunny days, the booths are placed in the church yard, only a few steps awav from tombstones and wooden slabs that mark many graves, some of which are a century old. I The Election Is Over But we are still doing busi­ ness at the same old stand. Republicans In Bad Fix Lincoln, Nebr., Nov. 9.—A long cold winter wasforcastby Attorney- General C. A Sorensen for him­ self today. Lagging many thousand voters iu bis race for re election against Paul F. Good, Democrat, Sorensen issued the following statement: “ After picking out of the politi- calaishcan this morning, I find I have an overdraft of SS at the bank, several hundred dollars of campaign bills to pay, a wife and four child ren to support, and a long, cold winter ahead. “ Nevertheless, I wish the Demo­ crats the best of. luck. It is now time to forget party politics and work to get the national economic train back on the track ” Sends Roosevelt Con­ gratulations. Palo Alto,' Crlif., Nov. 8 .-r-Whi'e a gathering of friends and neighbors of the Iloo -er’js lingered in the big living room of his home, one of the chief executive’s secretaries handed to newspapermen the fo low ng mes­ sage to the New York governor: “Hon Franklin D Roosevelt, “ Biltmore Hotel, New York. “I congratulate you on the oppor­ tunity that has come to you to be of service to the country and I wish for you a most successful administra ion In the common purpose of all of us I shall dedicate myself to every pos- siple helpful effort. The President sent this telegram from his study after watching the returns pile up increasing majorities for his opponent. Plsy At Advance. “ Lighthouse Nan,” a sea-coast d ama, in 3 acts, by Sheldon Parmer, will be giv>-n by the Shady Grove Facultyat the Shady Grove sehc I building on Nov. 18. Its h.tense and human stcry vibrates with startling incidents and heart-gripping situi- tions only relieved by the cl.eanast cotnedv. It teFs the story'of a an, the little uneducated waif, mistreat ed and overworked but full of merri­ ment, kindness of heart, and sturdy good sense. The other parts are al­ most equally good:, handsome' young hero; crafty villian. Irjum Jim; Comic English baronet; bibulons and henpecked old lighthouse keeper; his 'shrewish and nagging wife; the( ad­ venturess. who stops a nothing in her war on the heroine; and the baronet’s snobbish sister. The heart of , the audience will beat in sympathy with the trials of Nan and rejoice at her ultimate triumph. Everybody come. ' ' ; Graags Meets Today. Winston-Salem:—Returning to the South; its birthplace, the National Grange will hold its sixty sixth at - nual meeting in Winston-Salem be­ ginning on Wednesday. Novemher 16th. and lasting until Friday, Nov­ ember 25th. High Grange officials, who have a'- ready begun to assemble here for the Convention, rc-gard the eomver- tion as one of the most signifigant of any yet held! These officials point out that the Grange was formed in the South about 1866 to relieve tie distressed condition of agriculture following the war between thestates. The Grange is now meeting during one of agriculture’s most critical periods and upon the heels of a na tional election. Friday, the 18th, will be the. “high spot” in the Grange Convention as the Seventh Degree will be confer­ red upon several thousand eligible Grange members This Degree can only be conferred at National Con­ ventions and by National officers. More than 1,000 Grange members are coming from all parts of North Caro­ lina to take this Degree. A monster barbecue is being planned for all Grange visitors on this day, as or.e of the entertainment features ar­ ranged by the local committee. Among the'outstandirig speakers on the program are James C. Stone, Pretiient of the Federal Farm, Board; G. G Mcser, President. A- merican Cotton Coop. Asscciatior; 0, Max Gardnor, Governor of North Carolina; Admiral Richard E. Byrd; Dr. Clarence Poe. Editor, Progres­ sive Farmer; Roy 0. Bergengren, National Credit Union, Extension Bureau; Jessie C. Harrainan. Direct­ or of Parcel Post; Dr. Frank P. Grr- ham, President of University of North Carolina; Edward A. O’Neil President of the American Farm Bureau Federation and John Simp­ son, President of the Farmers’ Union. WAGONS ForTkeBoys-AtPricerfrom Tricycles -Prom $CJtGO- lo~-$4,50 Rknges 6-HoIe~$35> ct Wool Double Blankets I’ ...........\ 31.75EaGb j Poultry Wirer Rubber Roofing, Terra I Cotta Pipe, Big lot Chicken Feed I Window Spades IOc to 50c Rain Coats, Sweaters, Underwear, [Shirts, Overaps at extremely low [prices. Century/ Automobile Tires I at prices ranging from $3.95 to $6.35 I One of the best tires on the market. § Come and see them. Full i n e John Dfere Farm Machinery Martin Brothers Near Depot 1 7 P h i l c o s NEW 1933 MODEL - ■ For Saturday's Selling Jake. However pabiic opinion may have been established against any prospect oi Jake Newell oeing sent to the United States Senate from North Carolina, there can be no doubt of the fact that Mr. Newell, himself, at no time doubted. He entered into the race against Rey nolds in perfect confidence that the people of the State would vote him in on the one issue which he para- mounted, which was that ot prohi­ bition. He frankly acvrcated a policy contrary to that of the party which he represented. He is a Re­ publican, but he based his cam­ paign ou securing ' enough Demo­ cratic votes, combined with the vote he would secure from, the Republi­ can party, to pttt him over. Tbe prohibition appeal, however, was far from productive of the desired number of votes, and Mr. Newell once more receives assignment back t > hi.- law office. But let it be under- s ood of all men that Newell is no hypocrite. He is a prohibitionist from principle and it is not his fault that this principle has met sacrifice at the'hands of tl:e voters.—Char­ lotte Observer- , [PRICE ,INCLUDES FEDERALiTAX] Pay $5.00 Down—$1.00 Week Thu mosl famous small radio in the world! TliisiBaby Grand model is the'fastest selling set ever produced.- 7-Tuhes -I Pen­ todes, Automatic Volume Control, Electro-Dynamic Speaker. Like the more expensive* models, it is a Superheterodyne. The Cabinet is Walnut with panel of imported Oriental wood. ..Hand-rubbed finish. Sold under definite guarantee - I C. C. Sanford Sons Co. | I The average woman thinks that every other woman wants her ,hus­ band. but the average man knows that there are mighty few women' who will pay any attention to him. USE MOCKSyiLLE BEST A nd OVER THE TOP FLOUR For Your Thanksgiving Baking HORN JOHNSTONE CO. THE L argest D avie LOCAL Mrs. was iu to Mrs. R day in W . Attorn Federal ThursSa J- P. stone wer day shop Mrs. Everett, day in to Give Bushes, Meroney A good in town the electi J- J- Howell Richmon G. Tal Ellis and were .VI Miss week en guest of R uth. Chas. township day to treatmeu Mr. an of near arrival of Nov. 8 th Mr. an Saturday W ilkesbc house ju Frost Early J ha gen M Mereney Mrs. V was iu to u-> a sup far whic the edito The w be verv weather from sow wheat an Armis in Mock soldier ' help cele local bus Utual wi bank. There Grove SC Nov. 19. other g" THe publ ceeds g church. The r Davie ar the road on the working highway doubt re Johu boy wb Army f spending on a furl stationed friends a again fo Mock teams m day afte game th boys pla while ag favor of fHE DAVii R ecord, MocicSviLtE, n. t. NOVEMBER 16, 1932 om “es c-ts , Terra srwear, I i o W : es 0 $8.3-5 j iarket. i .ery r § S I ek mg ii I i THE DAVIE RECORD.! Harry Stroud is recovering from _________^___________________*, a slight attack .of Au. Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS. Mrs. H. W. Harris, of Catawba, was in town one day last week. Mrs. Roy Feezor spent Wednes day in Winston Salem shopping. Attorney B. C. Brock attended' Federal court at Winston-Salem Thursday. J. P. LeGrand and Knox Jokn- stcne were in Winston-Salem Thurc- d iv shopping. Mrs. G. G. W alker and son Fverett, of Cherryville, spent F ri­ day in town on business. Give us your order for Rose Bushes, FruitTrees and Shrubbery. Meroney Nursey and Greenhouse. A goodly num ber of farmers were in town Wednesday talking over the election results. J. J. Larew and Rev. W. I. Howell made a business trip to Richmond, Va,, last week. G. Talbert, C C. Myers, T. J. Ellis and others from Shady Grove, were Mocksvtlle visitors Friday. Miss K athryn Meroney spent the week end in Columbia, S. C., the guest of her sister, Mrs. Hilton Ruth. Cbas. McBride, of Farmington township, went to Durham Mon­ day to enter Duke Hospital for treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anderson, of near Holm an’s announce the arrival of a fine son on Tuesday, Nov. 8 th—election day. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Allen moved Saturday from the Gaither house on W ilkesboro street to the Clement house just west of W alker’s store. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants— Early Jersey Wakefield, Copen­ hagen M arket §1 0 0 per 1000. Mercney Nursey and Greenhouse. Mrs. M. J. McDaniel, of Kappa, was in town Saturday and brought us a supply of excellent peanuts far which she has the thanks of the editor and family. The wheat crop in Davie will be verv short next year. Wet weather prevented many farmers from sowing the usual amount of wheat and other small grain. B. C. Clement, Register, received a majority of 5 votes in South Cala- haln prec’.nct instead of one as re ported in The Record last week. Clegg ran ahead of his ticket in the county. Mis. Hilary Meroney sent a ripe May cherry to Thei Record office Saturday morning The first crop ripened in May and the second crop ripening m November. A great climate we have in Davie. Armistic Day passed off quietly in Mocksville. A number of the soldier boys went to Lexingtou to help celebrate the day. AU of the local business houses were open as Utual with the exception of the bank. There will be a pie supper at Oak Grove school house Saturday nigbt Nov. 19. Pies, cakes and various other good things to eat will be sold, T he public is cordially invited. Pro­ ceeds go for the benefit of the church. The roads in some sections Davie are in pretty bad shape, the road force would put more time on the soil roads and less time working along the - hard surface highways the farmers would no doubt rejoice exceedingly. John A. McDaniel, former Davie boy who has been in the U. S. Arm y for the past 20 years, is spending some time in this section on a furlough. Mr. McDaniel is I Mr. and Mrs Grady Call spent Mondav in Winsron Salem. C. W. Dull, oi Pino, was a busi­ ness visitor here Monday. Mrs. Rowe Davis continues quite ill at the home of her parents, Mr and Mrs. R .'L . W alker, on Wilkes- boro street. There will by a pie supper at Coruatzer Methodist church, Satur day night, Nov. 19th; at 7 :00 o’clock. Come and bring your frieud. _ FOR SA LE—One bed, dresser, chairs, oil stove, table, dinirg room suite and other articles Call and see these articles at anv time. MRS. W. R. MERONEY. Temperature registered 26 de­ grees above zero here SIonday morning, which was the coldest of the season.. A heavy frost and much ice was observed. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnold, and Mrs. H ubert Mooney, of Wocd- bridge, Va., spent a day or two last week in town guests of Mrs. Moon­ ey’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. W alker. Little Jane Mooney, who had been spending some time here with her grandparents, returned home with her mother. FO R SA LE—At a bargain, brand new Model A Truck. See me at. once. PL A. SANFORD. E. H. Jones, of Sharpsburg, N. C., one of Tbe Record’s good sub­ scribers, has decided that prosperi­ ty is on the way. H ehasourtbanks for a nice check which pays his subscription to June I, 1935. Here’s hoping Mr. Jones will live to 'b e a hundred years old and read The Record as long as he lives. To Court For Beating Wife. Hi n-v VV- od, of Clarksville township, was bound over to the March term of Davie county su­ perior court on Friday by Magis­ trate T. I. Caudell, on charges of wife beating and nonsupport The case was rather sensational in some respects and Magistrate CaudeI 1 who on many occasions has acted as arbitrator in family quar­ rels, failed to effect a compromise as the young husband and father of two small children refused to try to support his wife. The husband was charged with choking the young woman and beating and abusing her on various occasions Infant Daughter Dies. Myrtle Marie, intant daughter of I Mr and Mrs. Carl Williams ot near Oornatzer1 died Saturday morning Funeral and burial took place at Bethlehem Methodist church Sun­ day morning at 11 o’clock. The bereaved parents have the sympathy of a host of friends in the death of of their infant daughter SEMI-PASTE PAINT [ One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed ! K U R FE E S & W A RD ( BARGAINS! Bound Over To Court. ^SPECIALS THIS WEEK. Obie Koontz and Charlie JordauS — were bound over to Davie county j Plenty Red Goose, Wolverine grand jury by magistrate T. I .'and Ball Band Shoes and Caudell Friday morning w ithout! g 0 0j‘g Mocksville Preachers Returned. The W estern North Carolina Methodist Conference, which ,has been in session at Winston-Salem since last Wednesday, adjourned Monday afternoon. The following appointments were made for Davie: Presiding Elder.— Dr Loy D. Thompson. 1 Advanee— Rev. W. M. Rathburn Cooleemee— Rev. J. A. J. Far­ rington Farmington— Rev. M. G. Ervin. Davie Circuit—Rev. J 0 . Banks Mocksville—Rev. R. C. Goforth. The Record is glad to welcome the former Davie pastors back to their former churches. Onlv one change was made in Davie—Rev. J. A. J.'Farrington succeeding Rev. J. W. Clay, at Cooleemee. Rev. Mr. Farrington has served the Coo leemec churcu once or twice in the past twentv years bond upon probable cause, charged with the murder of George Tucher 1 World W ar Veteran, of Shady Grove. Tucker died in a States­ ville hospital Oct. '29th from a wound in the head inflicted on Sun­ day, Oct. 2 3rd. Neither Koontz or Jordan took the stand Friday mor.niug or offered any witnesses to corroborate Jordan’s confession re gatdiug the alleged attempt to at­ tack Mrs Kooutz T htre is much mystery surrottudittg the case, and it is the general concessions of opiuiou of officers and others that Jordan’s confession was false aud made for the purpose of shielding the guilty man. It w asuotthought at first that Tucker was seriously injured. A large number of Shady Grove citizens were in town Friday tor the preliminary trial. The next term of Davie Superior court for the trial of Criminal cases will be held here next March. Men’s and Boys Union Suits bOc Full Fashioned Hosieiy 48c See our Clothing before you buy. We can and will save you money. Plenty of Outing yard 5c I have just received a large sample line' of notions to go at about 1-2 price. Dreses 25c to $2 95. 8 lbs Lard Kappa News. Mrs. Ray McDaniel spent Monday night with Miss Carrie Mae Seamoh, Mr. and Mrs. C. Cl Smoot and daughter Miss Mary Ellen, and Mrsi Atlas Smoot spent Thursday in Salisbury and States­ ville. shopping. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Koontz. Miss Verla. Huontz and William Green spent Thurs­ day In Statesville shopping. J. C. and Carl Jones carried a grade of tobacco to Winston-Salem last week that sold for 59 cents per pound. W. M. Walker. Mrs. Love Keller, Mrs. C. C. Smoot and Miss Mary Ellen Smoot vis­ ited Mrs. W. M. Walker at Morganton, on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Koontz and child­ ren visited Mrs. John Campbell, of near Mocksville, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Atlas Smoot, Mrs. C. C. of Smoot. Miss Mary Ellen Smoot and John Xf Snr.o it spent Sunday in Salisbury, guests 0 ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Smoot. Pomona Grange Installs Officers. Officers of Dsvie County Pomona Grange were installed on Thursday night and 47 members of the county unit given the fifth degree in grange work. The officers were installed bv Her­ man Frick, master of the Rowan county Pomona Grange. The con - plete list of officers follows: L. H. Angell. of Moeksjille, masle ; J Weslev Cook, of Cooleemee, over­ seer; Miss Annie Talbert, Advmce 1 [ lscturer; .J. F. Essie, Pino, steward; S. W. Furches. Farmington, assist­ ant steward; S- M. B :eter, Cana, treasurer; Mrs, Beulah Apoerson, Jerusalem, secretary; Chariie Leag 65c 95c Coffee Ib IOc Crackers 2 Ibs 25c Crackerslargesize . Ilclb Carnation Milk-large can 7c, 3 cans 20c, small 7 cans 25c Small size 3 cans IOc Plenty Oil Cloth, yard 15c Peanut Butter I Ib IOc : Eagle Brand Milk 20c can I Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c Seed Oats. Flour $1.95 Plow Points at 1-3 off list See our line dry goods before you buy. We have the best assortment we have ever had. Felt hats 39c up. • Yours For Bargains J. Frank Hendrix General Merchandise Notice of Sale Under Mortgage. Under and by virtue of the pow- ers contained in a certain mortgage „ , .. . 1 deed executed, by Cnarlie Tomlin andan?, Cana, gatekeeper; Mr*. Mary j anje Tomlin to G. A. Hartman on L. E-sie, Pino, cere?; Mi?s Emily! the 25th dav of June, 1931, which Carr. Mocksville, p.m.ont; Miss Al-SsaidlnortR 3-Ke aPDpars recorded in ma Brown, Advance flore; Miss Sal-’ ? on-k,NI?' 2-5’ Pa« 78 Register’s 0« * , . , , . • fice of Davie county, N. C,, defaulthe Spillman, Farmington, lady ass.is- _ havinj? been made in the payment of tant steward, 1 j the note thereby secured, the under- Theexecutivecommittee is Com-Isiknad will sell publicly for cash to posed of D. J Lybrook, master of Davie county subordinate grange; F. R. Lakey, of Pino grange and C. E, Faircloth, of Davie grange. Try This. Case Will Be Probed. Maxie Seaford 1 discharged pri­ son guard from the state district prison camp here and a former clerk of the Davie superior court, is in receipt oi a letter from State Prison Superintendent Pou inform­ ing him an investigation of the 0 h i. camp will be made at an early datestationed near Seattle, W ash, His, . , , , . ,____, ■ ; m an esfort to ascertain the facts infriends are glad to have him hom e: ..... 1 the case. Camp Suoerintendent M.again for a visit. T t t j • 1 • ' . j . t.1J. Hendricks is reported to have said. Seaford was fired for disobed­ ience of orders and permitting pri­ soners to escape, but Seaford says Mocksville and Pilot high school teams met on the local field T hurs­ day afternoon At the end of the game the score was 6 6. When our• j be was not on duty wben the boys played the Pilot team a short; esc d and Hendricks has while ago the score was 26-6 in1 favor of Pilot. Our boys played a good game Thursday. I “ told falsehoods regarding the m atter.” ’ Here is an item that should be of vital iti rest to all roof owners Asbestos product known as Leak- Seal Roofing Cement. The dealer states that Leak-Seal stops leaks, prevents rust, makes roofs water­ tight, and it is not expensive. Leak- Seal so the dealer tells us, “stays put” where ever you put it, is not affected by hot or cold weather, rain or snow and being an asbestos pro- ducr, lasts indefinitely. Itcom es in piste form for patching holes and leaks in roofs, gutters, down spouts, flashing around chimneys and fire walls and in ready mixed brushing c insistency for painting roofs. Leak- Seaiis furnished in any. quantity paste or ready mixed by Kurfees & Ward. the highest bidder at the court house ioor in the ciiy of Mocksville, N. C,, on TUESDAY, the 22cd day of No­ vember, 1932, at 12 o’clock, M., the following described lands located in Farmington'township, Davie coun­ ty, to-wit: A tract beginning at a post oak. Moses Fulford’s corner, thence E. > 2.50 chS: to a stone in Fulford’s line, IhenceN 50 links to a stone, thence N. 80 degs./W. 6.95 chs. to a ' stone, thence S 80 degs. E. 4.45. chs. to a stone, thence N. 3-28 chs. to the be­ ginning, containing two acres more or less. Terms of Sale: CASH. This the 22nd day of October. 1932. G. A. HARTMAN, Mortgagee. By A. T. Grant, Atty. Man is the only animal who tries to sing when he can’t. LEAK-SEALASBESTOS ROOF CEMENT Stops leaks; pre­vents rust and makes roofs water­tight and rust-proof. In paste form for patching,and ready- mixed form for »on hand for , a“rainy day.” KURFEES & WARD ruiiiniiiniiiiiiiiintmuiKKHiiiuuuuu I THANKSGIVING I CAKES I Flavor and Color them with the best Flavors and Food Coloring. See us for the best.. Visit Us Often Let Us Serve You. LeGrand’s Pharmacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville N. C. Farmington News. The parents and teachers, of Farming­ ton high school will meet Wednesday night Nov. 16 at 7:30 o’clock in the school audi toriuni. The Program Committee has ar­ ranged a program for that time. Business matters will be taken up after which a social hour, will be held. The hostess for the occasion will be Mrs. J, H Montgo mery and Mrs. F. H. Bahnsun. AU the patrons of the school are urged to be pre­ sent and tske an active part. Mrs. J. F. Johnson was charming hostess to the Ledies Aid Society of the M. E. church on Thursday afternoon Nov. IOth from 4 to 10 o’clock p. m. Devotions were conducted by Mrs. H H. Smith, and Mrc. J. W. Williams, a welcome visitor of the meeting led in prayer. The business ol the day was then taken up, with Mrs. Leo Brock presiding. Interesting and incourag- ing reports were given by chairman of |thc various working committees. Plans for the Bazaar to be held on Sat* urday. Nov. 19th were completed. A num­ ber of useful and decorative articles in eluding a Butterfly Quilt will be on sale, and a supper will sold. A complete meal will be served at thirty five cents a plate. After the bnsiness of the day was dis posed of. a social hour was ei j-»yed and the hostess served a delicious salad course chocolate fudge and coflee. RedlandNews. ' Little Mary Helton who has been suffer­ ing with pneumonia for several days is improving, we are glad to~note. Miss Cordelia Smith was the Tuesday guest of Misses Liilie and Lessie Dunb. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Miller were the Sun- day gueits of the ia'tter’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Wagoner, oear FarmiDgton, Mrs. Willie Armsworthy and children spent a'few days the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Howard made a business trip to Winston-Salem Thursday. W. 0. Dunn was in Mocksville on busi­ ness Thursday. ' v Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Howell and little son Charlie Holt, spent Thursday evening with Mr. 8 nd Mrs. S. H. Smith. . Mrs. Rad Miller Visittd her daughter, Mrs. J. H Smith Friday evening. Miss Margaret Smith spent Friday. eve- ning with Mrs. Flovd Smith. Mrs. Robert Riddle and Miss Alpha Rid­ dle were the Friday guests of Mrs. Phillip Helton. J. A. Smith and Roy Hendrix were in Mocksville Friday on business. Little Misses Verna and GeraIdineHew- ard spent Fhursday at Clemmons with their aunt, Mrs. Glenn Alleni ''***&,I"! Let Us Gin Your Cotton! WE are now ready to gin your Cotton, and will pay the highest market price if you want to sell your Cotton in the Seed. We will ap­ preciate your business and guarantee first-class service. When you bring your cotton to town drive down and see us aYours For Good Service” Green Milling Co.: Blum’s Almanacs At The Record Office MR. F A R M E R! Bring Your Cotton To Our Gin. We Pay Highest Market Price. Get Your Fertilizer From Us And Save Money. % J. W. CARTNER MR. FARMER! We Are In Better Position To Handle YOUR COTTON Than Ever Before We Appreciate Your Business FOSTER&GREEN Near Sanford Motor Col f ffWE DAVIE RECORD, MOClCSViLtfi, ft C. NOVEMBER 16, 1932 Conditions Are Not So!Stunt Show and Carnival Bad. A Success. Times are hard. We hear that re-J The “Stunt Show and Carnival” mark every day and have come to Jgiveu at Shady Grove school, Fri- believe it true—most of us have day, Oct. 2 8 . was quite a success, been forced to believe it. But, ss j T be auc[jtoriuni was well filled and bad as things appear to some we are j tbg gr of . present present_ in toy Koffor chano fhsn mnnv othfti* I . . . . ,sd a flue spirit or appreciation or the work done by both teachers in far better shape than many other j countries. Recent news dispatches say that mobs of unemployed are rioting in the streets of London. They do not want a change of government or some law repealed—they want bread, And they’ll get bread somehow. If they must resort to theft they will. and students. The following program was given from the stage: “ The Hot Dog Machine,” a stunt was given by the 8 th Grade supervised by Mr. Little. “ The -Hocus Pocus fjhow” was put If mob violence is necessary that 'S 011 by • 'ne njtti grade and supervis­ e e measure they wili employ. When | ed by Miss Houeycutte. Miss Chaf- t man is desperately hungry he will resort to anything in order to avoid starvation. In this country we have not come to that and it is hardly likely that we will, Americans are too independ­ ent to ever reach that stage. They are resourceful. They have initir- tive and that goes a long ways in a depression. Times are hard. We’ve heard that so much that it does not concern us. We know it. And we know that other nations are in more desperate straits than we. There is another remark that is being circulated at this time. It isn’t spoke out loud— yet. People seem to fear that they’ll get laughed out. Well, thev won’t. Come on, yell it! Conditions are re­ turning to normal—And others will take up the cry, confidence will be restored and then you can swell your chest proudly and say. “I help- e l restore prosperity.” Success or failure is largely in the state of mind. Change the present state of mind and you’ll change con­ ditions generally and ter.-to-one for the better.—Ex. This Question Of Over­ production. There are many farmers who re­ fuse to devote any time or study to increasing per acre production on their farms, since, they say, what is the use to increase their yields when the question of overproduction and low prices is something they have to deal with every year. They say it is not that they are unable to get' the production but that they cannot sell it after it is made. This is a wrong attitude to take. A little time spent in the selection of seed, ckreful planning of the crop, intelligent use of fertilizer, rotation combined with the most scientific and advanced methods of cultivation and harvesting of crops will make larger yields per acre. If a choice ihust be made between cutting acre­ age and the employment of the latest and best methods of cultivation, cut the acreage. More time and atten­ tion given the smaller acreage will offer returns that are equally great and it is certain that the less ground one cultivates the more attention he can give and the be ter the yield Use business methods in your farming. The manufacturer does not produce if he can not sell. Why should the farmer? The manufac­ turer. if he finds that in order to sell his product he must lower his price, he does so but in order to make a reasonable profit despite the cut he seeks for ways and means of secur­ ing the maximum returns with a minimum expenditure and if he finds this can be done only through the use of scientific metheds, concentra­ tion of equipment in order to reduce overhead he does these things and it is only reasonable to suppose that the farm er can do the same thing. Strive to secure the largest possible yield per acre. In the long run it will be found far more profitable than trying to cultivate larger acre­ age and neglecting those things which will give a better product.— The Tribune. Her Turn. Smith got married. The evening of his first pay-day he gave'his bride $14 of the $15 salary and kept only a dollar for himself. Blit the second pay day. Smith ,gayehis wife $1 and kept $14 himself. jiii|^ h y John," she cried in injured rfojies; "How on earth do you think ,I can manaS^'for a whole week on a paltry dollar?” "Dagnefi-jf I know,” he answered. "I ba'd' a rotten time jnyself last week. It’s your turn now.” Business men always view with suspicion the fellow who gets' mad w h e n a statement of his account is sent him. I i you want to see Old BiUSbiftless rkntsaud roar, seud him a dun.fT fin was in charge of the tenth and eleventh grades stunts, “ Car Trou­ ble” and “ Mephisto” respectively. A ftertheprogram on the stage side shows and other booths were opened and the audience was invit­ ed to visit each. The booths and side shows which were featured followed with name of the teacher who had charge oF each.” “ Mon­ key Cage,” Miss Dalton and Miss McKellar; “ Fish Pond” and “ Cake W alk,” Miss Martin; “ Queen of Carnival Booth,” Miss Chaffin; “ Fortunes,” Miss Dodd; “ House of Terrors,” Miss Belvin and Miss Marsbburn; “ Faculty Graveyard,” Miss Avett, Miss Evans, and Mr. W hite; “ Strong Man and other features,” Miss Crouse and Miss L yerly; “ Refreshments.” Miss Honeycutte and Mr. Little; ‘ Noise M akers,” Miss Britt. The last feature of the program was the Coronation of the Queen of the Carnival, Miss Dalton a mem her of the Faculty received the most votes and was crowned by her attendant, Miss Britt, whom Miss Dalton selected. The proceeds will be used for school purposes. During the past year the school purchased a mimeo graph and an expensive new set of reference books has also been add­ ed to the High School Library. The school is in need of magazines, books, and other supplies and an attempt is being made to raise money for these purposes. About three weeks from this date a Facul ty Play, “ Light House N an,” will be given. The Play has been cast and practice will begin this week. Look for the date in the next two issues of this paper. The Faculty aud students are working hard to try to equip the Library aud class rooms with ma­ terial necessary for good scholar ships. W ith students and teachers working as they are a great deal can be done this year toward im proving our school if the patrons will lend a helping hand. In this program just given, for example, the merchants of Advance and of surrounding places, as well as other patrons, showed a splendid spirit of cooperation by giving small dona­ tions, when called upon, to be usid in putting over some feature of tl.e program. This help was appreciat­ ed by the school. For our next program lend us your presences. Why Is A Woman Like A Newspaper? This reason why women are like newspapers, given by Mrs. Bruce Palmer, a subscriber, won the prize in a recent contest held by the Rec’- dling lCal ) Courier Free Press: “ Because every man should have ore of his own and not run after his neighbor’s,” Other answers sent in were: "Because their work is never d ine ” Because both are tactful, desir­ able, interesting and indispensable.” "Because they have forms.” Because they are well worth look­ ing over.” Because back numbers are never in demand.” Because thev are not afraid to speak their minds Because they carry the news whereever they go.” Because they have a great deal of influence.” “You may often disagree with them but you can’t get along with­ out them.” Speaking of wide experiences in such matters an exchange informs ts readers that at 16 a girl loves widely, at 17 mildly, at 18 nicely, at 19 dividenly, at 25 blindly, at 30 eag­ erly, and after that just lovely, Not So In Carolina. Kansas, a pioneering State in the cause of prohibition, has been the butt of many jokes because of her dry atiitude. But Bansas has, as a rult of its bone-dry law: fifty-four counties without any insane; fifty- four counties without any feeble­ minded; ninety-six counties without any inebriates; thirty eight counties without any poor houses; fifty-three counties without any persons in jail; fifty-six counties without a repre­ sentative in the state penitentiary. Yet some want beer and more paup­ ers and dependents to-support out of the tax found. Are we capable of thinking?—Biblical Recorder. W ealth doesn’t always bring hap­ piness, but the odds ase slightly in its favor. North Carolina I , . „Davie County ( In the Superior Court - Josephine T. Gregory, Plaintiff. vs WiIiiam W. Gregory, Defendant. Service of Summons By Publication. The defendant, William W. Gregory, will take notice that an action entitled as a- bove lias been commenced against him and is now pending in the Superior Court of the aforesaid County, North Carolina, for the purpose of obtaining a divorce from bed and board on the grounds of: (I) Abandonment of his family. (2) Cruel and barbarous treatment endanger­ing the life of niaintifl. (3) Maliciously turning plaintiff out of doors. (4) Offer­ ing such indignities to the person of the plaintiff as to render her condition intol­ erable and her life burdensome, and the defendant will further take notice that the plaintiff is seeking the custody, care and control of their infant daughter, Jose­ phine G Gregory, age 4. in said action; and the defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear within 30 days after the 3'lst day of October, 1932, and answer or demur to the said com­ plaint or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demended therein. This the 1st day of October. 1932. W. B. ALLEN, Clerk Superior Court, H. R. STANLEY, Attorney for Plaintiff. Administrator’s Notice. Havingqualificd as administrator of the estate of the late J. M. Jones, of Davie county. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned for payment on or before Oct. 7th, 1933. on this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in­ debted to the said estate, will please make immediate payment. This Oct. 7, 1932. W. C JONES. Admr. of J. M. Jones. Dec’d. U SE C O O K ’s C. C. C Relieves LaGrippe 1 Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years g i l y&r- NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtureof the powers contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Mrs. Phone H. Bailey. Beal I. Smith, and Rose Smith to J. F. Moore Trustee, dated Febv 13, 1923, and duly recorded in Book 19 page 103 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davie county N. C. De­ fault having been made in the pay­ ment of principal and interest on same the undersigned will sell pub­ licly to the higheat bidder for cash, at the court house door of Davie county in Mocksville, N. C., at 12 o’clock noon, on the 21st day of Nov. 1932. the following described proper­ ty, situated in the town of Mocks­ ville, N. C , and known as the Phone Bailey house and lot, being on the East side of Salisbury Sts . bounded as follows: On the North by the lands of C. C. Sanford On the East by the lands of Grant Darfiel and the Presbyterian Manse, On the South hv the late E P. Bradley, and on the West by Wdkesboro and Salisbury streets containing one half acre more or less, and being the house and lot now occupied by B. I. Smith and Rose Smith. This Oct 15. 1932.. J. F. MOORE, Trustee. Lazy Colon Makes » Your Life Miserable Laugh of money worries If yonr colon is free of poisonous waste. Hcre^s NaturetS way to banish sickness. If you are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, the new tonic tablet, COLOXEX, con­ tains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable toiiics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to elimi­nate poisdns, aid digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s un­ natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLONEX tab­ lets and purify your system Nature’s way. This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on physician's prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments come from • clogged colon, so if you are not feel­ing well try COLONEX today on guaranteed satisfaction or money back basis IROGEN1 prescription OF NOTED PHYSICM1 REAL SENSATION HERE Famous “Akin” Health Formula, Used for Many Years by New York Hospital Physician with Remarkable Success. Sensation in Cities in This State W herever Introduced.—Now on Sale Here. Announcement lias just been made In New York City that the Guardian Health Products company has acquired the rights to manufacture on a tre­ mendous scale, and to market nation­ally under the trade name of IROGEN, the famous ‘’Akin’* formula. This won­derful medicine is now on sale here. IROGEN, which was introduced into the larger cities of this state recently, has already become a medical sensa­ tion here. Thousands of cases of thin frail, weak, run-down, underweight men and women report that they have been completely restored to health and strength from its use. NOT A PATENT MEDICINE IROGEN is NOT a patent medi­cine, but the private prescription of a famous New York hospital physi­cian, used with remarkable success In his own private practice for many . years and-tested and perfected under his own observation in thousands of casesT' Representatives, in making the an­nouncement, showed to newspaper men reports of tests and experiments, con­ firmed by famous chemists, proving that IROGEN gave excellent results in enriching the blood, improving the ap­petite, aiding digestion, toning up the nerves, in overcoming stomach dis­orders and other physical ailments.Authorities who have observed its power in thousands of stubborn cases, state that it is exceptionally helpful where the patient is suffering from loss of flesh.Many tests, made prior to the trans­fer of the proprietorship of the IROGEN prescription, were prompted by amaz­ing letters and statements from men and women in all walks of life telling in detail their experiences with this famous medicine.VITALITY RESTORED An Alabama woman wrote that hard work, worry and nervous shock had reduced her to a mere shadow of her former self, but that the IROGEN prescription brought back her vitality and strength, rounded out her figure and restored her complexion within six weeks.A North Carolina mother, terribly run down and near nervous collapse from three years of stomach trouble, took the IROGEN prescription on the advice of her physician. She stated, she amazed not only herself but her husband with her quick and complete restoration to health.By obtaining the rights to produce this wonderful medicine on a large scale, under the name of IROGEN, it is made available for the first tiroe to the public, at a fraction of its former cost. In tablet form it is kuown as VIROGEN,. IROGEN and VIROGEN'tonic tablets may be obtained at leading drug stores and dealers in medicine everywhere iucluding W . P. S P E AS, M . D. I R. J. Reynolds *f Room 324 * Building; A •£•|> Winston-Salem, N. C. || Practice Limited to Disease * ^ O fTheEyeandFittingG lasses | Hours 9-12: 2 -5 ** •*«£» >1« *1« *1’ >:■ >X« *t* »1» 1P »Z* *1* »1* *1* 4* ‘I1 DR. E. G CHOATE D EN TIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building; Office Phone 110 Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C BEST IN RADIOS Y O U N G R A D IO CO. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. B E S T IN SUPPLIES D R. R . P. A N D ER SO N DENTIST Office In Anderson Building Mocksville. N. C.y Phones: Office 30 Residence 37 WANTED! We want the im­ portant news hap­ penings from every a section of the coun­ ty. Dropus a card or letter if a new vo­ ter arrives at your home; if your moth­ er-in-law comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything worth mentioning. O ld papers fo r sale. C A M PB E L L - W A L K E R F U N E R A L H O M E Distinctive Funeral Service to Hvery One [AM BULANCE - - - EMBALMERS Main St. Next To Methodist Church j Day Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163 PLEASE! ! PAY I I NOW! I LeGrand’s Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C. Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleeroee,N. C. N O W O N LY O N E D O L L A R . J Yesterday we requested a De- J * ★ I linquent Subscriber to settle his ac- | * * jf £ J count with us; and he replied: J ¥ ★ J “I am honest, and I will pay you | ♦ ★ ¥ *J if I live. If I die and go to heaven * 4 1 * ** I will send it to you. If I die and * 5 , \ ■ * i *1 do not go to heaven I will hand it ★ * *■ * . * J to you. I 2 -v * * * ^ * I We think most of our Subscrib- *J n ★ 5 *5 ers are honest, but we need money * 5 ** now to meet obligations. Please * * ** let us hear from you. J * * I THE DAVIE RECORD. I * J * N- *I P. S. When your son or I I daughter leaves for College I I send them The Record. A I* X I special rate to students. II 1 I POSTAL RECEiPTS7 SHOW THE RECORD CIRCULATION THE LARGEST IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON’T LIE. “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.” VOLUMN X X X IV .«N " M OCKSVILLE. N O RTH CARO LIN A, W EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 3, 1932 NU M BER 18 NEWS OF LONG AGO, # What Was Happening In Davte Before The Days of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, Nov 2 6 , 1902 ) Cotton prices are going higher. Better hold your cotton a little longer. G. H. Graham, of Farmington, was in town Monday on business. W. B. Naylor, of Catia, was in town Saturday on business. Mrs. W. L. Sherrill is visiting friends in Charlotte this week. T M. Brock, of Farmington, and Joe Kimbrough of Smith Grove, were in town the past week. There will be a flag raising at Cooleemee Saturday. S. F. Shore, of Yadkin, was in town on business last week. John Naylor, postoffice clerk here spent Saturday night and Sunday at his oldhome near Cana. Harold Early, who got his ankle badly sprained some time ago, is able to be out again. F. B. Frishntuth, of Philadelphia is spending the hunting season at W A. Griffin’s. Rev. F. M. Allen, pastor of the Mocksville Presbyterian church, has begun the publication of a monthly religious journal. E. E. H unt, Jr., was coufined to his room several days last week with illness. Mrs. S. A. Lowrance and Miss Sallie McPherson, of Mooresvil'.e, visited Mrs. W. L. Sherrill last week. E. H . Morris has moved into the residence which he recently pur­ chased from Mr. Brown, of W ins­ ton, The residence is located on Salisbury street. Will X . Colev, of Raleigh, was a business visitor here last week. N ext Monday, Dec. 1st, the re cently elected county officers wi'l be sworn in. We want all our friends to call on us and settle what , they owe. The Cooleemee Methodist church was dedicated last Sunday, Nov. 16th, by Rev Dr. Atkins. A new livery stable is being erect­ ed in Cooleemee on M argibalstreet- The Jericho school opened last Monday with Mr, P. Turner as teacher. Miss Beulah Allen, of Jericho, who attends school at the State Normal, is at home for awhiie. Sanford Green who has been in Indiana for several months, has re­ turned homej Mr. S. M. Dwiggins and Miss Margaret Stonestyeet, of Jericho, spent Saturday and Sunday with friends at Ephesus. W. V. Poindexter, of Advance, spent a short while in the Jericho section last week. The Cooleemee cotton mills are building an engine room, prepara­ tory to supplementing the water power. Republicans Have Eight Seats In House. Raleigh, Nov. 14.—A recheck of votes in Clay county has awarded Glover Ledford a Republican, the seat in the state house of represen­ tatives held in 1931 by Dr. J. B. Killian, Democrat, Henry London, executive reference librarian, was informed today. The first count showed Dr. Kil- Iion had been re-elected but the re­ check gave Ledford the victory by 20 votes. His election will bring to eight the number of Republicaus to sit in the 1933 house of representatives in January. Th® 1931 body had only six members of that party. TheTact that there is no place like home probably accounts for the fact thaPsome/folks don't stay there any more than they do. Strange Happenings Election Day. Fiftv-year old Gregory Makaroff kept New Ashford, Mass.. from completing its vote earlier than 6 :2 s a. mv He lives two miles from the polling place and insisted upon walking that distance, carrying a Roosevelt banner. Speaker Garner, down in Uvalde Texas, voted for himself twice— once as vice presidential candidate and once for re-election to Congress from the 15th congressional district. Senator W agner almost forgot to votein New York when he stopped to pose for pictures on his way into the polling place. The pictures taken, he started to walk off Dut he was called back. Roosevelt received 98 out of the first 100 votes counted in Warm Springs, which he cells his “ Georgia home.” Hoover got one, Thomas the other. The 10 voters in W aterville N. H., kept to straight tickets. There were six votes for Hoover and the Republican candidates for governor, senator and Congress; four for Roosevelt and the Democratic can dates for the same posts. E. L. Sloan wanted to vote in Salt Lake City at 7 o’clock in the morning. Officials arrived two minutes late so—in high dudgeon— be dropped a ballot, unmarked, in the box. The ballot was retrieved and a diplomatic telepkoue call brought Sioan back. Clayton J. Dougherty voted from a stretcheT at Harrisburg, Pa. His back was in a plaster cast. A deputy U. S. marfbal reported that white cards which could be ex changed for a dollar and a chicken were being given to voters as they left an upper M anhattan polling place. s President Hoover’s elementary school teacher, Mrs. Molhe Brown Carran, voted for him at his birth­ place, West Branch, Iowa. Charles W. Eldredge, 101, at St. Petersburg, Fla., said Hoover “ knows the value of a dollar” and voted for him. Hot Beer Battle Seen For Future. W ashington, Nov. 12.— “ Beer” barley quotations oh the Chicago Board of trade went up to day as if in anticipation of earlv action to­ ward prohibition modification but in Washington indications grew that Congress will wage a hot beer battle before deciding whether to Ieud a hand in buenching the American thirst. Some Southern days indicate they will support a beer bill in accord with the party platform. There­ fore the first move of the regular organized drys is to de’.ay action py filipustering through the short ses­ sion. They want time to fau up the folks back home. Tfie big bertha of them all. Senator Borah, makes the cryptic remark that action on such a controversial m atter cannot be had in a short session. To those" who know the situation and Borah he might just as well have announc­ ed a filibuster. The answer from the wet side came from Senator Hiram Bingham Republican, Coneiicticut, who de­ clared he wohld push actiou on beer at once. A similar answer came froni Representative James M. Beck, Republican, Pennsylvania, who urged tonight that if long de bate appears likely on the consti­ tutional amedment, that matter should be postponed until the new­ ly elected Congress comes in. Then Beck said, the present dying Con­ gress could concentrate on jamming through a beer bill. The world may owe you a living but just try to collect it! The Doctor’s Glory. This from the Raleigh News and Observer brings up a question more or less acute in this period of eco­ nomic stress: Dr. John B. W right, of Raleigh, undoubtedly speaks the absolute economic fact when he tells of the difficulties of doctors in the present depression. Doctors, like every one else, have suffered sharp decline in income aud undoubtedly the chari ty patients whom they are called to’ treat have increased enormously. But Dr. W right went 011 from this statement of ,economic fact to a generalization about the duty of the physician. He declared: " It is no more the responsibility of doctors to care for the indigent sick of the community than it is for the merchant to clothe this class, the grocer to feed and the banker to supply them with funds.” Dr. W right, speaking the Ian- guege of the market place, is abso­ lutely correct. But speaking the lan­ guage and bolding to the ideals which have blessed the medical pro­ fession since Pvthagorus, Dr. W right is wrong. No doctor can be merely a merchant of his. medicine. If Dr. W right were a business man and invented an unique aud profitable process, he would datent it aud sell it. He would hire . law­ yers to guard other men from it and selling it. But if Dr. W right, the physician, should discover a new treatm ent he would make it over as a free gift to humanity. He would despise himself unless he did. From a financial standpoint there is UOi justice in that. Eut there is also a grain. To the eternal glory of the medical profes sion. it has set for itself standards which are not the standards of the market place but standards based upon the health and happiness of humanity. These standards were not fixed by the world but by the physicians themselves. • Perhaps in a world whose stan dards are the standards of trade, the physician gives more aud gets less than Dr. W right’s grocer, clothier and banker. But once the physic- an lets his standards and his res- spouibilities fall to the level of the market place, medicine becomes a trade, and science a commodity, and the humanity of the good physician is lost forever to the world. It is the glory of the medicial pro fession that tbev do minister to the suffering without reward or hope of reward They do more real charity work—more real work for the relief of suffering tnau any other profes sion or class. It is a part of their job. They give time and strength for the performance ofVwhat is often a hard and disagreeable service when they are both doctor and nurse. They give the benfit of knowledge and training they acq­ uired at cost of physical and mental strength and actual money They often furnish the medicine f&r which they must pay cash. The doctor does that as has been said without hope or expectation of benefit. He does it frequently with the full knowledge of lack of appreciation on the part of tne beneficiary, well knowing that in some cases, if and when the beneficiary becomes able to pay he will call another physic­ ian. The trouble about this whole busi­ ness is that the doctors are expected to do all the charity work in their line simply because they are doctors. Alsoto do a lot for folks'who could pay and won't Communities are. generally speaking, unfair to the doctors They demand that they do all this work simply because it is in their line', without thought of how much it is costing them, Tif the size of the burden placed on the doctors. In these days when doct ors are many the income of the average practitioner is not large. Often he is hard pressed ,to meet'his obligations. But at that the aver age citizen, who never thinks of contributing to the cost of medical service tor charity, will pile a load 011 the doctor aud let him go on with it as best he can. If the object of charity has previously been able to pay his grocer, the grocer is not ex pected to furnish him indefinitely for that or any other reason. If he has beeu able to pay tor his clothes, the ilothier isn’t expected to furnish him indefinitely. If he paid his loans "at the bank when he was iu health and had a job, the bank is not expected to make him a loan and take chances. Nor are the merchants of the community expected to furuish supplies free for all in need, simply because some of the destitute were customers when they had the money to buy, al­ though they do bear their part liberally. Let it be said again to the glory of the meu of mediciue, who more than any other class give themselves for the service of hum anity without regard to monetary benefits, that the doctor isn’t simply a merchant of medicine. But we are too much isposed to expect the doctor to bed satisfied with ihe glory. He has to live some as other folks, a fact which is frequently overlooked. We pro­ ceed on the notion that his free service doesn’t cost him anything. Iu charity cases the people who furnish other supplies expect and do get pay. Doctors and nurses are expected to work for nothing and board themselves in charity cases simply because t)hat is their profes­ sion. It isn’t fair. It is unjust Tbe doctor can’t live on glory. It doesn’t provide for his family.' Dr. W right was evidently stating the casein terms of trade’"'in the en­ deavor to get it over to people who have no conscience about the load ,they lay on the doctor and then ex­ press amazemeu if/he is sometimes disposed to complain, to an under­ standing of the doctor’s situation To get over to them the understand­ ing that there is a limit to the bur­ den the doctors can bear.—States ville Daily. Orphans And Thanks- Advertising Appraisal. Beer By Christmas Cry Of Wet Chiefs. W ashington. Nov.fr 1.—The'drys say it can’t be done, but with “ beer by Christmas” as their slogan, backers of modification of the Vol­ stead act in all parts of the nation todav opened their drive for action in the short session of Congress which convenes December 5. Although the new Congress elect­ ed Tuesday is overwhelming for a prohibition charge, leaders of, the organized wets object to a delay of months iu converting what they be lieve is the will of the people into action. The new Congress comes into power March 4 th. , Nearly three fouths of the state legislatures of the country meet in JanuaryandFebruary. IfCongress acts oy Christmas, these legislatures will have time to consider repeal of their local prohibition laws to per­ mit sale of beer. Even if President elect Roose .velt should call a special sestion after M arch-4 to legalize beer, in most states action by state legisla tures would be delayed two years The wets are counting upon the prediction of Speaker John N. Gar ner, of the house. Senator Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas, Detno- cration of uoters on Tuesday to as­ sure beer. Robinson said he saw no reason to delay action. W hat a lot of trouble it iWould save if the women who enjoy spend­ ing money would always marry the men Who enjoy earning it. giving. The- orphanages of the state are looking -with faith and confidence to Thanksgiving Day. Those of us who have complained the loudest ought to think of the many, very many, who are tar worse off than we are or are likely to ever be. We have become accustomed to giving for the orphans at T hanks­ giving and some do not give at any other time, though the mouths of these thousands muse be fed for each 12 months. They cannot be stuffed once a year and left to live off the fat for 12 months until a- riother good intention comes to us. Their support must be sustained, regular and suffi_ient. Practically every one of us have some orphanage, or maybe more than one, in which we take a very significant intrest, feeling to some extent a responsibility fot its up­ keep. The appeal comes daily, but with full force at Thanksgiving, and the Novembes gift having been stressed to such an extent manv of us feel that all we-have to do is to give on Thanksgiving and some how the Lord will take care of the rest needed. As a result the people of the state have taken good average care of the orphans during these times. We know of but one that has been really neglected, neglected to the point of distress, and that is the one which is controlled by about the wealthiest group of people of the senate. The rest of the homes ought not to be crifrzed on account the sad neglect of this one, but that one ought to be made.to sm art in shame for the neglect. Plan now to be good to the or­ phans at Thanksgiving. But do not give on the assumption that this will last for a year, until an­ other Thanksgiving Day comes a- round.—Ex. A« a general proposition the fel­ low who would strike you on the other cheek, would also swat you in the back if given a half a chance. Campaign Suit Filed Vs. Cam Morrison. A civil suit filed by W. M. Brown of this city against Comeron Morri­ son and W. C. Coughenour. where­ by a sum of $105 and interest from July 2, 1932, is sought, will be heard before Magistrate C. E. Fesperman Saturday afternoon, November 12, at 3 o’clock. The Post learns today. The suit is an’ aftermath of the race made by Cameron Morrison of Charlotte for the Democratic nom­ ination for the United States senate in the primary last June, and a se­ cond race in July, at which tim e Mr. Morrison, incumbent, who was finish­ ing the unexpired term of the late Lee S Ovecman of this city, unsuc­ cessfully spught the norniuation a- gainst Robert R. Reynolds of Ashe­ ville ‘ 1 Mr Brown claims the amount sought in the suit is due him for con­ tract, and labor performed in con­ nection with the Morrison candidacy. Mr. Coughenhour was the- Rowan county manager of the Morrison campaign and is likewise named as codefendant. It is understood that a number of similar suits are likely to be filed here on similar claims.—Salisbury Post. __________■ Hot After Employment. At least one person in Carteret county has applied to Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt for em­ ployment in the near future. Others are applying within the next few davs. Charles R. Manson sent the fol­ lowing telegram ,parly Wednesday morning to the president-elect: “ Out of Job. Need one bad. You said you were going to give us one.” Applicants may direct their letters asking for employment to Franklitt Delano Roosevelt, ' Krum-Elbow, Hyde Park, New York. Evidently a good many of the electorate are tak­ ing the cameaign promises seriou&ly. —Beaufort News. Newspapers, depending upon ad­ vertising for their bread and butter, are enthusiastic about its virtues. The American Bankers Magazine is not bidding for business, so its esti­ mate ot the value of advertising' is worthwhile: "N o business man in any ’town should always low a newspaper.pub­ lished in his town to go somewhere in its columns. This does not mean you should have a whole, half or even a quarter page ad in each is­ sue of the paper, but your name and business should be mentioned, if you do not use more than a 2-line space. A stranger picking up a newspaper should be able to tell what business is represented in a town by looking at the paper. This is the best possible town advertiser. The man who does not advertise his business does an injustice to him­ self and the town. The man who insists on sharing the business that comes to town, but refuses to ad­ vertise his'own is not a valuable ad-, dition to any town, The life of a town depends on the live, wide-a­ wake and liberal advertising busi­ ness men.” A newspaper, worthy of the name, mirrors the progress of the community in which it exists. If it is built to serve, the readers will become interested in it, and if the paper has reader interest. It is a worthy medium for any message the advertiser has to send. If he has something worthwhile to offer the reader; if from the ad­ vertisements is gleamed information that brings 'an economic saving, then the reader is the beneficiary, and sooti comes to look upon the advertising columns as a friendly place in which to delve. We be­ lieve that our advertisings columns serve in this way, and if this be so, then it is reasonable to assume that any paper not so favored by the merchants, is failing iu its fullest service to the readers. We agree, with the Bankers Ma­ gazine that the newspaper is'an in­ dex to the sort of town in which it it published aud to sort of merchants in that town.—Statesville Record. Walked Out On Him. That fellow Blanton who comes to Congress fromN Texas has been regarded as something of a pest, but he evidently has some good points. A political meeting was held at San Angelo, Texas, and Mr, Blanton was present as the chief speaker. Clyde Vinson was master of cere­ monies. When Clyde got on his feet he kept going for 3 0 minutes, reminding of an introductory ad­ dress in North Carolina which be­ came famous. A t the end of the half hour Clyde, pausing for breath bethought himself of the guest of the evening, w hereupon-he said: And uow, ladies and gentlemen, it is my privilege to introduce the speaker of the evening, the Honor­ able Thomas L. Blanton, congress­ man from Abilene, Tex., who will address you. ~ But Mr. Blanton didn’t do any addressing that evening. W hen his long-winded introducer paused for aim to come forward he wasn’t there. It was explained that the congressman had left the hall five minutes before in a huff saying the introductory speech was too long. .Always did crave to hear of some­ body doing something to the intro­ ducers who take advantage of, the situation to ipflict a. speech on the audience and wear it down before the main performer is brought to the bat. Mr. Blanton may not have been quite polite. But neither was the man wno tried to introduce him: For walking out we are disposed to give Blanton a hand.—Greensboro News. Seud us your subscriptionu THE DAVffi RECORD, MOCKSViLtE, N. C. frOVEMSfiS 23, '933 THE DAYlE RECORD. C. FRANK STRODD ■ • Editor. 9Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoflice in Mocks- rille, N. C.. as Second-class Mail m atter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE $.1 Ob $ 50 Many chuicb aud temperance or­ ganizations are meeting and reso luting against the modification of the Volstead law and the repeal of the 18th Amendment. W here were all these good people on Tuesday, Nov. 8 th? It is too late to lock the stable after the horse has been stolen. ■The editor of The Record doesn’t claim to be a political forecaster but he,doesn’t miss county majorities S3 far. Three -weeks before tbe election we told the clerk of tbe court Hartman that he would be elected by 2 65 majority. His ma­ jority was 2 7 2 . A miss of only 7 votes. Our prediction was that tbe county would go flora 75 to 300 Republican It went from 68 to 2 7 2 . It was one of the hottest cam paigns staged in Davie since tbe editor arrived in the county in 1900. : The National Grange has been in session for th<“ past week in Wins ton Salem. This is the largest and strongest farm organization in the country, and thousands of dele­ gates from the Atlantic to the Pa- cifiic ocean are in attendance. The Grange has done and is doing much for tbe relief of the farmer—the man who feeds us all. Every soil tiller in Davie county should join this great body of producers. They stand for all that is good and for the uplift of the American tanner. Tomorrow is Thanksgiving. We have much to be thankful for de-. spite the fact that hard times have been knocking at the door for the past two or three years. Those who have been blessed with world­ ly goods shou'd give to those less fortunate—the widow and orphan. Remember the poor and needy on this day of thanksgiviug and give as the Lord has prospered you.- The Virious orphanages throughout the state are badly in need of friends to. keep their work going on. Help them if you possibly can. Ellis Appeal Be Heard ■ ' Nov. 29. The appeal of Tommie Ellis Jr., fpr a new.trial will be heard in the state supreme court on the 2 9th, his counsel, B. C. Brock announces ' wEllis was sentenced at the Sep­ tem ber term of Davie superior court to '2 5 years in the state prison w'beo found guilty by a jury of second degree murder. The voung man upon the testi Ihonv of Richmond Bailey, who plead guilty to manslaughter, then took the stand as state’s witness a- gainst Ellis, was convfcted of kill ing of Willie Beauchamp Iasf Feb­ ruary 2 0. Beauchamp’s body was found five days after he disappeared from his father’s home in that com­ m unity, secreted iu a dense pin thicket. He had been shot through the -head. In the testimony of Bailey, which convicted Ellis, the witness told in detail bow Ellis slim the lad after they had quarreled over a gallon of whiky. > ’ Bailey himself was given ten years in state prison bv the presid­ ing.judge after pleading guilty to m anslaughter to the fact. ■t Attention, Farmers. AU Davie county farmers intt rested in the marketing of seeds or poultry products are.urged to be present at a meeting to %3%<sld in the court at Mocksville Wed- , nesday night at 7:00 o’clock Nov. 30th. Mr. Satter will be present and will ex plain to us the producers exchange for poultry and poultry products and also tbe ' proposed state wide seed association. * ' The obj*ct of tills meeting is to learn . Bomethinii about these orgoniz^i'ions and jr sufficii nt interest is shown to start work on an organization for our county th it will tike care our products. Remein- Judge McEtroy To Pre­ side. The fall term of Davie superior c >urt for the hearing of civil cases inly will convene at the court house hare on Monday morning; December 5. Judge P. A. McElroy of Asheville, will preside. Several very import- a it civil actions will be heard in- c uding a number of law suits and several divorce actions. The following list of jurors has been selected: (d. R. Baker, T. M. Hendrix, B F. Dwiggins, F, P. Beachamp, J. R. Seeding, 0. R. Al­ len, J. F. Barney, Pink Foster, H. M. Daniels, H. T. Robertson, B. S. Or- rell, T. F Bailey, W. M Walker, J. J-. Griffith, Zab Burton, J. M. Liven- goud, J. 0. Bumgarner and J. L. H u tc h in s .____________ Mrs. Roy Smith. Mrs. Sally Sue Smith, 1 9, wife of Roy Smith, of Advance, Route 1, passed away W edntsday afternoon at 5 :1 6 o’clock at a W inston Salem hospital after an illness or 18 months She had been confined to her bed for several months and her condi tion had been critical for four weeks. She was born in Davie county, June 5. 1923, a daughter of W. A. and'Sally JfcBride Smith. Sliehad spent her entire Iile in Davie coun­ ty and had made her home with her gtandm other, Mrs. W. G. McBride, S'nce early childhood. She was married to Roy Smith on July 2 7, 1929. She was a member of Mace­ donia Moravian church. Surviving are the husband, fath­ er, grandmother, two half sisters and three half brothers The funeral was held at the home Friday morning at 10:30 o’clock and at Macedonia Moravian church at i t o’clock, Rev. James E. Hall conducted tbe services. Burial fol lowed in the church graveyard. Redland News. spent Suuday withjMrs. W. D. Smith Mrs. Octis Smith. Miss Cleo Dunn was the Sunday guests of Miss Maigaret Marklin. Mrs. R. C. Smith spent awhile Tuesday evening with Mrs. C. S. Dunn. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Smith spent Wednes­ day in MocksviUe with Mr. and Mrs. Ro­ bert Smith. Mr. Harmon Smith moved his family from here Wednesday to the John Foster farm near Cedar Creek. .Mrs. J. M. SoBey spent Tuesday with her mother Mrs. S. R. Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Ollle Allen, of Clemmons spent the past week with his parents Mr aid Mrs. C. W. Allen. Mr. Richard Smith moved his family the past week from the Noah Dunn house to Harmon Smith bouse. Miss Ozell Miller spent Tuesday night with Miss Lessie Dunn. Miss Gladys Hanes visited her sister Mrs. Oilie Beuuchamp the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Douthit visited Miss Gladys Dunn Thursday night, Mr. and Mrs. Mack McClearin spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Laird. From present indications this is going to -be a long and hard winter. There are a number of people in Mocksville and Davie county who must have assistance or they will suffer. We trust that our welfare officer will keep on the job of rend ering aid and assistance to those who cannot help themselves. It takes something more than flour and cotton cloth to get the destitute through four months of rain, sleet and snow. The home loan bank seeins to be gething alone fine except that, first, it is not lending any money, and second it has no money.—Ex. ber the date.L. H. ANGELL. ' | Voc. Agr. Teacher. I Notice of Sale of Note $10,000 00 C uintv of Davie, North Carolina Revenue Anticiuation Note Sealed bids for above note will be received until 10 n’cock A. M., Nov­ ember 28'h, 1982, by the Local Gov­ ernment Commission ,of North Caro­ lina at its office in Raleigh, for the- nhnve note, dated November 12th, 1932. and maturing May 12th, 1933, without option, of prior payment. Therewill be no auction The note will bear interest from maturity and will be awarded at the highest price offered on a basis not exceeding 6 per eenc. per annum. Biddtrs must pre­ sent with their bids a certified check uiion an incorporated bank or trust ■■'>mpany. payable unconditionally to the order of the State Treasurer for $50.00. The right tovreject a ll, bids, is reserved * , ■ LOCAL GOVERNMENT COM- VlISSION, By: C*>as. M. Johnson. Direct?1-: ot'L icai Government, an^ E> - offieio Secretary Of-TheCim- mission. Kappa News. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Green and family, of Jericho, spent Saturday with their daugh-. ter, Mrs. Atlas Smoot. H. C. and Carl Jones and Misses Veat- rice, HeIes and Frances Jones spent Sat­ urday in.Salisbury shopping Mr. and Mrs. Grady Cartuer and child­ ren and Mrs. J. D. Walker spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. F. H Ketchie. Miss Bertha Jones spent Sunday night with her sister. Mrs. Ernest Lagle. Miss Pauline Swicegood spent the week­ end with her father, Maxie Swicegood. at Hardison. Mr. and Mrs. J. C Jones and Miss Vea- trice Jooes spent Sunday in Iredell guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stroud. ' Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Koontz and child­ ren and Mrs. G. A. Koontz visited Mr and Mrs. W. T. Daywalt Sunday aftemwm. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hendricks, ot Mocks- ville. were guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jones Sunday. Samuel Bailey Dies. Samuel L. Bailey. 41 year old passed away at his home iu Fork Church Wednesday afternoon at 5'3 0. The deceased had been in a condition of ill health for several months. Survivors include his wife, for­ merly Miss Ethel Foster; seven children, Veigh, Myoline,1 Nelson, Foy, John, Robert and Jimmie Bailey; parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. 1 Bailey; five brothers, Swaid, Bonce, Cread, Floyd and Ned Bailey, and one sister, Mrs. Virtie Sigmon. Funeral services was held' Fiiday afternoon at 2 o’clock at Fork Church. W. S. and McKinley W alker, of near Kappa carried a load of to­ bacco to Winston Salefn one day last week. Their best grade brought $4 6 per hundred pounds. William A. Graham Comissloner of agriculture, was in towu a short waile Thursday afternoon shaking hands with friends. Mr. Graham was on his way to Raliegh from Charlotte Mr. Kurfees Honored. Word was received here Wednes day rhat J. F Kurfees, president of the J. F. Kurfees Paint Company. Louisville, Ky., was elected president of the American Paint and Varnish Manufacturers’ Association at the conclus’on of that organization’s con­ vention in Washington. D. C Mr. Kurtees served two one-year terms as director of the association. He also was president of the Louis­ ville Paint, Oil and Varnish Associa- tion and for twenty-one years was a members of the board of directors of the National Paint, Oil and Varnish Association, affiliated with the A- ,Tierican Paint and- Varnish Manu­ facturers Association. He is a member of Louisville Board of Trado. Pendennis Club, and resides at 235«South Gait Avenue. ' USE MOCKSVILLE BEST OVER THE TOP FLOUR For Your Thanksgiving Baking HORfWOHNSTONE CO. B E L K -S T E V E N S CO. W inston-Salem, n . e . A Sale of New FaH PRINTS 5,000 yards of new fast-color prints. I New designs and the wanted diag-| onal stripes. Values to 19c IOc 36-Inch Brown SHEETING Heavy fine sheeting. Priced at most| stores for more. Buy now Sc yd. 36-Inch WHITE GOODSA Iiig lot of white goods, bleached! domestic and'-long cloth. EegularlIOc value Sc yd. 81-Inch SHEETING , Fine full width sheeting at a special price 15c yd. 36-Inch OUTING Plain colors and stripes, a soft fleecy quality—15c value IOc yd. " REGULAR $1.98 CAPE SKIN CrLOVES A special lot slip-on gloves in black* hr own and biege. Plain and fancy styles. A Belk special at only 31 pair BSGUZtAB 79c FULL FASHIONED HOSE AU new fall shades iu this regular 79c chiffon hose.-A wonderful value at 47c A GREAT SALE OF — R e g u la r $14.95 V a lu e s— P O L O C O A T S , T W E E D C O A T S , F U R R E D C O A T S Colors black, wine, brown,, green, tan, mixtures. The greatest coat values we have ever offered. Every day brings us new mod­ els and new colors; the materials are of the best and there are all sizes. Polo coats in new browns or mixtures. Fur-trimmed models in black, brown and green. Regular §14.95 coats in other stores. ■ S p e c ia l! W in te r C O A TS A special coat value for those who do not want to invest a large sum. Plain polos in brown and tan. Tweed mixtures.- $7.95 values .......................... BARGAINS! N E W K ID Children’s UNION SUITS Hanes children's union suits in best grades. All styles and sizes 48c Children’s ' SWEATEES All-wool sweaters with tains to match. Xll colors and a $1.98 value Children’s SHOES Shoes and oxfords for, every child in black or brown. A super value A special lot.of women’s shoes go on sale for two days only at—per pair, $1.00 Women's SHOES Men s UNION SUITS Men’s heavy ribbed union suite. A new .low price for these garments Men s SWEATERS Men's pull-over sweaters of good grade. Heavy and medium weight. Gloves $1 A special lot kid gloves. Values to $1.98. New Pall Shades NEW LEATHER . Bags 98c New fall bags in brown and black. Special Value. MEN’S Shirts 39c Past color broadcloth shirts. AU Sizes. LADIES’ OUTING , • Gowns 39c Fine soft fleecy gowns that usually sell for 50c. Saturday special at 39c. BOYS’ Overalls 39c Good serviceable hoys’ blue denim overalls. Full cut. BOYS’ Suits 98c Sale! Men’s Fall S U I T S VALUES TO $25.00 Meni You have never seen such suits. A big clothing manufac­ turer closed out this lot at a low price. We pass on the saving to you. GEO. P. IDES SHIRTS $ 1 .0 0 SHEET "SALE A close-out of mill seconds. The very finest grade of sheeting used in these sheets. Regnlar 98c qualities. Only once in a lifetime you can get this wonderful bar­ gain. Sizes 72x90, 81x99, 90x108. Boys’ suits with wool pants and wash blouses. Extra value. BOYS’ Sweaters 48c W arn pull-over Sweaters for boys in new fall shades BOYS’ UnioiiSmts 35c A regjilar 50c boys’ union suit. Special for. Saturday at only 35c. 500 Special New H ats Every day brings new and special purchases to this store. “ NOW’ it is hats. New shapes. New col ors. New materials.9 8 c Regular 98 c Silk Hose Yes, Real 93c quality. The love­ liest you have ever seen. Just slightly imperfect, but so slight that you can hardly detect it. THE D L argest D avie LOCAL A T- A- Da to Winston Mr. an" spent two d Attorney Thursday business. M r an were in W shopping- J. C. Sa made a b<’ Friday, Give u. Bushes, F r Meroney Mr. and were in \ Wednesda. Renew \ Record a:i Almanac f Mr. and Mr. and 5 Thurday i’ Mr. and daughter ! nesday in . A Car < Just Arriv %5 75. 'A t June M the week- parents, M ney. Frank S Salem, spe the past w attack of I. W. classic sha was iu tow saver wit Frost P Early Jer hagen Ma Mercney 7. C. M our thank 7 pounps one we ha J.S . IIa day from Baltimore, of 'last wee ation. The Mo ball team team Ifrid. field by a . the best season Mrs. C. weekend Yates, wh She will s before reti Inf tin.- i. Irirnifh Jih ve;-’J'r 51 • f direct- r,- nf Jil : i 111 i \ Bi with ti!“ A- |.'arni.'h ii'ii- nf lv'-uijviiie IKi lit AV,'I',Ue'. IT m, § i ti ie m T M E P A V tS R E C O R D , M O CiCgV lLLE:, R t . N o v e m b e r 2 3, t933 XHE DAVIE RECORD. Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. lo c a l AND PERSONAL NEWS. j. A. Daniel made a business Irip to Wiuston-Salem Wednesday. jlr. and Mrs. Robert McNeill spent two days last week in Raleigh. Attoruey A. T. Grant spent Thursday in W inston-Salem on business. Mr and Mrs. J. Lee Kuriees were in Winston-Salem Thursday shopping. J. C. Sanford and J. J. Larew made a business trip to Hickor1V Friday. Give us your order for Rose Bnshes, Fruit Trees and Shrubbery. Jierouey Nursey and Greenhouse Mr. and. Mrs. Lonnie W agner were in Winston-Salem shopping Wednesday. v Renew your subscription to the Record and get a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Hr. and Mrs. J. J. Larew aud Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Morris spent Tliurday in Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Stroud and daughter Miss Louise, spent Wed nesday in High Point with relatives. . A Car of Splendid Lum p Coal Just Arrived—Price delivered, ton S5 7 5, '/■ ton $3 0 0, Strictly Cash. E. II. MORRIS. Juue Meroney 1 of Lenoir, spent the week-end in town with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mero- ney. Frank Stroud, Jr. of W inston- Salem. spent several days in town the past week recovering, from an attack of Au. I. W. D unu 1 who lives in the classic shades of West Shady Grovej W2s in town Thnsday and left a life saver with us. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants— Early Jersey Wakefield. Copen­ hagen M arket $1.00 per 1 0 0 0. Meroney Nursey and Greenhouse J. C. Massey, of near town, has our thanks for a turnip weighing 7 pounps and 2 ounces, the largest one we have seen this year. J. S. H airereturned home Thurs­ day from Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, where he went the first of'last week for a medical examin­ ation. The Mocksville high school foot­ ball team deleated the Cleveland team Friday afternoon on the local field Dy a score of 1 2 0. This was the best game played here this season j Mrs. C. N. Christian spent, the week-end with her son Apdrew Yates, who is in camp at Fort Bragg. She will spend a few days in Raleigh before returning home. Miss Virginia Byetly, a student at Draughon’s Busiuess College, Wj inston-SMen', spent the week-end in town.the guest of Mrs. E. P. Bradley. Misses Kathleen Craven and Sarah Thompson, students at Greensboro Co.iege, will arrive home today to spend Thanksgiving with their parents. Mrs. Robfrt Toniilson entertain­ ed a crocheting party at her home on North Main street Monday after­ noon. A number of guests were nresent aud a delightful afternoon was enjoyed. Center News. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Anderson and child* ren visited in Winston-Salem Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Lanier visited in Cana Sunday. Spencer Dwiggins spent the week end at-home. Mr. and Mrs. Burrils Greene of Mocksville were the Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Dyson and fAmiiy. Mr and Mr*. L. R. Dwifgins of Winston- Salem spont ta«t week wim Mr. and Mrs J. H. B Dwiggin?. Mr. B. F. Tutterow is on the sick list sotry to note. There mill he a box supper at Center school house Wndnesdny night Nov. 23rd. Everybody invited. Stores To Close. The following stores will he closed Thur^dav, Nov 24th m observance cf Thanksgiving d>*,>: S. E. Hauser & Co.; C. J. Angell, J. A Daniels, Martin Brothers, Martin & Hend­ rix. J. Frank Hendrix. Bank of Davie Uaited VarityStore1 AllisonJohnson Co.; Mocksville Hardware Co.; Merchant Whole sale Grocery Co; C. C. Sanford Sons Co.; Horn-Johnstone Co., Mocksville Enterprise.: Miss Helen Fay Holthouser speut the week-end in Winston-Salem, the guest of Afiss 3Iary Nelson An erson. a student at Salem College Farms For Sale! From four to .vix miles from Mocksville near hard surface road One place with six acres, one place thirty acres,' one place sixtv acres, one olace one hundred acres or more; one place 42 0 acres. Good Dtiildmff 011 farms and well watered aud cau be bought as low as twenty dollars an acre and bought on easv j terms. Also six Good Mules, weigh j about twelve hundred pouuds each; -ind a nice bunch of sheep. Ste F. H LANIER, Mocksville, N. C.-, Route 1, if you want a bargain Mr. A. D. Peoples. Mr. Alfred D. Peoples died at hi9 hume in Clarksville township Saturday night following a long illness of heart trouble. Funeral and burial services were held at Chestnut Grove church Monday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Rev. Mr. Bungardaerconduct- ing the services by his widow and two daughters; three brothers, John, Lennie and Puke, all-of Davie, and two sisters, Mrs. Wade Eaton, of Forsyth, and Mrs.. Jennie Chaffin, of Davie. Mrs. Peopleb was one of Davie county’s best citizens, and his death has brought sadness to a lust of friends throughout the county* MEN!Slip your feet into .these shoes. Instantly you’ll get the fit and the I feel of quality—they’re ” Star Brand” Shoes with all the snap and good looks to meet the demand of the most exact* ing. More than that, you’ll surely admire their good solid leather quality that makes them look better and wear so much longer. And here’s the sur­ prise—this model is priced at, ffSiar SSramJ Shoes Are !tetter"$1.50 to $5 F o r a Radio T h rill-itStar Reveries” Every Sunday Evening—>9:4:’ E.S. T, over Columbia Ncttvork C. C. Sanford Sons Co. “Everything For Everybody.” MR. FARMER! Bring Your Cotton To Our Gin. We Pay Highest Market Pries. Get Your Fertilize? From Us And Save Money. J. W. CARTNER THE MORRISETT CO “ LIVE WIRE STORE” W IN S T O N -S A L E M , N . C. N E W SILK SPECIALS! New blues, greys, Persian gold, new red, new rose, voilet blue-AU these new colors in Paisley Silks at , Krinkle Crepes at Plaids and Roman Stripes Lovely Flat Crepes Woolens In AU New Winter Shades At 98c DRESSES- New shipment of lovely Silk Dresses. New colors and styles $3.98, $4.98 to $8.98 COATS- New shipment of those popular Polo Caots in all wanted colors at $6.98, $7.98, $9.98 HATS- A glorious collection of new Hats just in time for Thanksgivingv Special prices 49c, 98c, $1.98. Stockings Underwear and Gloves A great collection and best prices in city. Compare our values! LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL THINGS PICKED UP IN N. Y. THIS WEEKlI Turrentine News. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Barney, of Hanes was Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Forrest. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. CurIee and children, of Salisbury ^pent the past Sunday after­ noon with Mr. and Mrs Ben Curlee. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Foster, of MocksviIle spent awhile the past Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Lagle. Mrs. Floyd Hellardisspendingthisweek with relatives, of High Point. , ^ Miss Ruth Lagle was Sunday guest of Misses Kuth and Elva Howard, of Bethel. Listen! There will be an oyster stew and barbecue supper at Jurrentine schoolhou.se on Thanksgiving night. Nov. 24th. Pro­ ceeds goes for the benefit of buying Christ* mas treat for the Sunday school. Many other things will De sold. Everybody is liivited to come. Don’t forget the date, Nov. 25th. SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed KURFEES & WARD BARGAINS! SPECIALS THiS WEEK. Plenty women and childrens Hose IOc per pair. Plenty Sweaters for all the family at Bargain Price. Plenty of Coats for men, wo* men and children. Plenty Red Goose, Wolverine and Ball Band Shoes and Boots Men’s and Boys Union Suits bOc Full Fashioned Hosieiy 48c See our Clothing before you buy. We can and will save you money. Plenty of Outing yard 5c I have just received a large sample line of notions to go at about 1-2 price. Dreses 25c to $2 95. ' 8 lbs Lard 65c Salt • 95c Coffee Ib IOc Crackers 2 Ibs 25c Crackers large size H e Ib Plenty Oil Cloth, yard 15c Peanut Butter I Ib IOc Eagle Brand Milk 20c can I Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c Flour $1.95 Plow Points at 1-3 off list See our line dry goods before you buy. We have the best assortment we have ever had. Felt hats 89c up. -YoursFor Bargains' J. Frank Hendrix Geferal Merchandise THANKSGIVING Remember your loved v ones with a package of nice Candy or other suitable gift. Let us show you. Visit Us Often L et Us Serve ifou. § LeGrand’s Pharmacy On The Square Phone 21 Mocksville N. C. uuuuuuumiiiiiiiiinmninmmmmmi NOW! This Week WeOffera Few RealBargains If Interested Come In And Let Us Show Ydui I-Only 3 piece Persian Mohair Living Room $60.00- Value for $45.00 1-10 Piece Walnut Dining Room Suite $95.00 Value $60.00 '1-5 Piece Breakfast Room Suite $16.50 Value $14.50 1-5 Piece Breakfast Room Suite $15.00 Value $13.50 1-5 Piece Breakfast Room Suite $13.50 Value $12.00 1-5 Piece Breakfast Room Suite $13.50 Value $12.50 1-4 Piece Bed Room Suite, Walnut $55 00 Value $45.00 1-3 Piece Bed Room Suite $40.00 Value $29.00 1-3 Piece Bed Room Suite $25.00 Value $19.95 I-SimmonsInnerSpring Mattress $16.50 Value $12.50 I-Simmons'Box Spring $18.00 Value $14 50 Many real Bargains for you in Furniture and Hard­ ware. Visit us often and do your Christmas shopping early. “The Store Of Today’s Best” Mocksville Hardware Co. PATRONIZE YOUR HARDWARE STORE b 1Ihi i »1» Hfrfr >!»! « ifr »1« H Let Us G in Y o u r C o tto n WE are now ready to gin your Cotton, and will pay the highest market price if you want to sell your Cotton in the Seed. We will ap­ preciate your business and guarantee first-class service. When you bring your cotton to town drive down and see us “Yours For Good Service” G reen M illing Co. iuiinmman»c MR. FARMER! We Are In Better Position To Handle YOUR COTTON Than Ever Before We Appreciate Your Business FOSTER & GREEN New Sanford Motor r*O- ,Cf? IfHE DAVIE RECORD, MOCK5VIIXE, N. C. November 23,1932 Busy Feminine Hands That « Make Tke World Go fRound S I y ><■ -x ""l^jr ^ S-4 J v o ) ) thatVERSATILE feminine « make the wond rounu small nanas. large nanus. uh-u:uiu hands . . handtf bu^y it tvpowrit- ers, . . . hands operating intricate factory machinery. hands at the wheels of automobiles or air planes. hands luuy Routing house, washing ,.I.;..Mag. prti-v ruig food, . . hands working 111 the lab­ oratory, .. . hands assssung the sur­ geon, . . hands grasping tennis rackets. . hands doing a million and one things. Hands often doing a man s work but still feminine hands. And women are determined to keep them feminine. But tins is no easv ' "»icm in a dav wiien then hands engaged ii, worn Lu.it may ncecssiuLle con­ stant washing It is this new situa­ tion,, coupled wtth the womans . t- uial* Ju.nre to retain her charm, tJi--T has led to the popularity of pure, mild soaps, such as Ivory. ,Ml,ca u»c eto.ivinicai, ana at the =5— time provide tile do&ir»*d pro­ tection to the skin.cnattei wnat women’ may be odl -'i 0non to do with thoir hands in the future it is certain tfc.it they a,Ij .,ogiect 'hesi- hinds ■‘‘ir • ;j.- Lrue todr.y as ever that hands are a syuiooJ ol wouiauly beauty Femminiiy A.dds i 0 Life’s Charm Prohibition Support Urged By Conference. Burlington, Nov. 14 —In the closing hours of the Methodist Prot­ estant conference here today the following resolution was unanim ously adopted. ‘•Whereas the wet forces of the state and nation are claiming a vie tory in the recent election, and whgreas the senator elect from North Carolina and the President elect of these United States were1 elected on a repeal platform and declared for an immediate upward change in the alcoholic content as set forth in the Volstead aet, there­ fore be it resolved, I. That the ministers of this conference are hereby urged to preach prohibition and temperance sermons, and urge their constituency to an aggressive support of the same. 2 . That the Woman’s auxiliary, the Sunday schools, the Christian Eudeavor societies and any and all other church organizations, as well as the church periodicals, be hereby urged to use every wise meaus of bringing to the attention of the public true and full information concerning prohibition. 3. That we'urge the Anti Saloon league to be more ag­ gressive in its fight for the retention and support of the 18th amendment and laws and that we give to the Anti Saloon league our whlehearted I support financially and otherwise. The stadoning comittee's report here today showed the fewest chang­ es in the last 25 years. President Andrews, following out the same idea of retiring President Taylor that the economic conditions de­ mand as few changes as possible. Rev. G. B. Ferree, who has served the Davie M. P. churches for the past three years, was returned to Mocksville, his many friends will be glad to learn. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of the late J. M. Jones, of Davie county. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned for payment on or before Oct. 7th, 1933. on this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in­ debted to the said estate, will please make immediate payment. This Oct. 7, 1932. W. C JONES, Admr. of J. M. Jones. Dec’d. A MERICAN women are returning to femininity. A few years iJgo. such a statement would have been challenged. Short skirts, boyish fig­ ures, bobbed hair—all wou'd have contradicted this statement. Grad­ ually. however, there has been a change. Skirts are longer, figures are again fashionable, hair is worn long, manners are more formal. The women of America seem to ^have realized that men prefer the “feminine” woman. They are devot­ ing more time to their appearance No longer is the devil-may care nonchalance of the flapper dav m vogue. The woman of today is vital­ ly concerned with the multitudin- deroils in keeping up her ward­ robe. Her hands have come in for new attention and she takes the jTreisits.st care in selecting a pure soap, such as Ivory, that will pro­ tect them and keep them soft' and feminine Appropriate coiffures are being used to keep the hair aHur- -Sothes are being designed with puffed sleeves and chaste neck­ lines ^o r*-frnshingly "feminine” have the women of today become, that Mid 'Victorian 'urm ture is coming out of attic hiding places and stor­ age bins to provide the proper »--.ck'Tound and setting for modern femininity. AU persons who renew their subscrip­ tions and all new subscribers will re­ ceive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Cali and get your copy today. I Suppose This Were The Heading Of A Newspaper] ■ Article About YOU And YOUR Car! \ THC courts are full of au omobiia accident cases where j lawsuits have been brought against car owners and ] large awards asked-aud very frequently large awards! Are Granted! Wise care owners .will not drive a foot! without adequate Liability Insurance. Call On This Aeency And Make Pure You Are Fully Protected I - E. C. Morris1 Real Estate And Insurance NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtureof the powers contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Mrs. Phone H. Bailey. Beal I. Smith, and Rose Smith to J. F. Moore Trustee, dated Febv 13, 1923, and duly recorded in Book 19 page 103 in the office of the Register of Deeds for Davie county >1. C. De­ fault having been made in the pay­ ment of principal and interest on same the undersigned will sell pub­ licly to the higheat bidder for cash, at the court house door of Davi** county in Mocksville, N C., at 12 ■>’c ock noon, on the 21st day of Nov. 1932, tne following described proper ty, situated in the town of Mocks­ ville, N. C . and known as the Phone Bailey house and lot, being on the East side of Salisbury Sts . bounded as follows: On the North by the land? of C. C. Sanford On the East bv the lands of Grant Daniel and the Presbyterian Manse. On the South hv the late E P. Bradley, and on the West bv Wilkesboro and Salisbury streets containing one half acre more or less, and being the house and Ior now occupied by B. I. Smith and Rose Smith. This Oet 15. 1932, J. F. MOORE, Trustee. USE COOK's c. c. c, Relieves LaGrippe 1 Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years Send us your subscription and receive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Don’t wait too long. m Lazy Colon Makes . Your Life Miserable Laugh at money worries If your colon Is free of poisonous ivaste* Here’s Nature’s way to banish sickness. If you are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, the new tonic tablet, COLONEX, con­tains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to elimi­nate poisons, aid digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s un­ natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLOXEX tab­lets and purify your system Nature’s way. This valuable formula would be very expensive .compounded on physician’s prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per cent of human ailments come from clogged colon, so if you are not feel­ing well trv COTiONEX today on , guaranteed satisfaction or money back bus:? For Nerve Exhaustion, Loss of FiesIi and Weakened Vitality, Irogen Is Ideal Tonic Remedy N orth Carolina Man Tells W hy He Thinks It Is “The Best M:d!cme in the W’orld.”—Great Prescription Qaickiy Re­ vitalizes the Blood and Restores Vigorous Health. The number of victims of nervous exhaustion and general breakdown is steadily increasing in the United States, according to the statistics of health experts. It appears, from their reports, that nature has failed to provide for. the abnormal strain of modern business and social life, and it is not surprising that the nerve cells give away. Wlien the nerves are deranged the digestive organs are impaired, food ceases to yield the proper nourishment, the blood -becomes impoverished, insomnia appears; and the usual result is .a general nervous breakdown.Men and women who get in this condition, or who feel it approach­ ing, need a powerful but safe res­torative tonic, which will build up and strengthen the entire system and. at the same time, act directly upon the digestive and assimilat­ing organs. HAS PHENOMENAL SUCCESS IROGEN’S success has been phe­nomenal. Although the first pack­age was put on the market less than a year ago, the sales in this vicinity have already run into thou­ sands of bottles, and letters are pouring in unsolicited from people In every walk of life, telling of the wonderful^ relief it has afforded from suffering and general physi­cal weakness. One of these, which is typical, comes from A. D. Ballard, of Bilt- more, N. C., near Asheville, Ihe father- of six children* Mr. Ballard writes that he noticed a Tallin ■■ off in weight, accompanied by contin­uous backache, with touches of rheumatism and weak kidneys. “After taking only one bottle of IROGENr I found that I had gained five pounds,” he writes"enthusias­tically. “AU the pains in my back have gone, I feel strong aud fit for a day’s work every morning, I sleep well aud,am always hungry at meal times. I believe it is the best med­icine in the world.”NOT A PATENT MEDICINE IROGEN is not a patent medicine. It contains Food Iron, Nutritious Malt, valuable digestives and other famed tonic jiicls of recognized medicinal value; Whnt this powerful reconstruct­ive medicine has done for countless thousands of people everywhere, score? of whom are residents of this vicinity, it is fair to assume it will do for you.IROGSN may be obtained in either liquid or concentrated tablet form. At leading druggists aud dealers in medicine everywhere, in­cluding LeGrand’s Pharmacy, Mocksville, N. C. Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleemee,N. C. , NOW ONLY ONE DOLLAR. I W. P. SPEAS, M. D. * * *I Room 324 R.'J. Reynolds * T Building | * ' Winston-Salem, N. C. *Ii * I Practice Limited to Disease || I Q fTheEyeandFicting GIasses * I Hours 9-12: 2 -5 j DR. E. C, CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. BEST IN SU PPLIES DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST Office In Anderson Building Mocksville. N. C. Phones: Office 50 Residence 37 WANTED! We want the im­ portant news hap­ penings from every section of the coun­ ty. Drop us a card or letter if a new vo­ ter arrives at your home; if your moth- t er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything worth mentioning. Old papers for sale. CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME ' Distinctive Funeral Service to Every One !AM BULANCE - - - EMBALMERS Main St. Next To Methodist Church [D.ay Phone 4803 Night Phone 4811 or 163 PLEASE PAY NOW! Yesterday we requested a De­ linquent Subscriber to settle his ac­ count with us, and he replied: “I am honest, and I will pay you if I live. IfI die andgotbheaven I will send it to you. If I die and do not go tq heaven I will hand it * to you We think most of our Subscrib- | ' * . * ers are honest, but we need money | ★now to meet obligations. Please J ★ let us hear from you. S ★ THE DAVIE RECORD. I ★«• ★★ P. S. When your son or | daughter leaves for College I I send them The Record. A I I . O *I special rate to students. II ' • * ******************************************* / POSTAL RECEIPTS SHOW THE RECORD CIRCULAtiON THE LARGEST IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON'T LIE. “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN." VOLUMN X X X IV .M OCKSVILLE. N O RTH CARO LIN A, W EDNESDAY, NOVEM BEP 3 0, !9 3* ' 1 X U M B E R 19 K \ NEWS OF LONG AGO. What Was Happening In Davie Before The Days of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, Dec. 3, 1902) The new county officers gave bond and were sworn in yesterday. David Myers, of Advance, was in town Friday on business. Miss Grace Coley who is teaching a t Cooleemee. came home to spend Tbauksgiving. Cotton has advanced from $7 .7 0 to $&. 10 per hundred for lint cotton. Dr. Kimbrough, Kim Furcbes, Chad Kimbrough. Buford Call, Alex Kimbrough and R. S. Grant went to the Kurfees neighborhood last week for a rabbit hunt. They were joined at the Champ Hotel by B. F. Stonestreet and M. B Bailey. They killed 75 rabbits, 4 or 5 ’pos­ sums and other game. V The postoffice at Jerusalem has been discontinued to take effect Dec. 31st. Jerusalem has three postoffices within !wo miles. Pat rons of the postoffice will be served bv rural route No. 4 , from Mocks- ville. Mrs. J. H. Stewart returned home Monday from Charlotte, where she has been visiting friends. The Junior Order presented the Cooleemee school with a flag and Bifle last Saturday. A large crowd was present. The Methodist Conference has returned Rev. W. L- Sherrilt to the Mocksville church Rev W. C. Willson was returned to the Davie circuit Mrs. Mary Sbive, of Kappa, has gone to spend some time with her son J. R. Shive, at Salisbury. U. S. Koontz and. H. T. Mc­ Daniel, of Kappa, have gone to Elkin this week on business. The Ketchie school will open Monday with Miss Beulah Allen as teacher. George W alker and son, of Ashe county, are spending a week with relatives in Ca'.ahaln. Jesse Lee Cartner. of Kappa, has entered Cool Spring school. Snow tell verv rapidly here for a short while last Thursday evening. Miss Stella Seaford, <of Jericho, spent Saturday and Sunday in town guest of Miss Bertha Linville. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clementspent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mr?. R. M. Allen Miss Sadie Brown entertained a number of friends at her home near Hardison Saturday evening. : i IJ The Editor’s Song. How dear to my heart is the steady subscriber Who pays in advance at the birth ' of each year— W hp lavs down the dollar and offers it gladly, And casts’round the office a halo of cheer; W ho never says "Stop it; I cannot afford it!” Or, I ’m getting more papers now than I’m able to read,” But always says, “Send it, the family like it— In fact, we think it is a household need.” How welcome he is when he steps in the sanctum— How he makes our heart throb! IIow he makes our eye dance! W e outwardly thank him—we in wardly bless him— The steady subscriber who pays in advance. — McDonogh Henry Co. Weekly. You can’t tell anything about a m an’s bank account by the way he goes down the street. The brisk est walking man in town never had a bank account in bis life and the fellow who comes down the street leisurely as if had the whole day before him bas money in all the banks. The End Of Prohibition The “ noble experiment” of pro­ hibition seems now definitely end­ ed. Before any revision of the tariff, before any thing else much is done there will be a revision of the national prohibition law. The large majoritv given the Democratic na­ tional ticket will be accepted as a mandate from the people ancTCong ress will act. The December ses sion of Congress will undoubtedly have bills before it proposing to legalize the sale of beer and wines and it is likely that the Volstead act will be amended to that extent. The repeal of the eighteenth a- mendment will be one of the ma jor matters of business of the Con­ gress which will meet next March. It is very likely that Congress will submit the question to the various states and elections by the people, or maybe it will be left to the legis­ latures. will follow. When the prohibition amendment was adopt­ ed alections were held in some of the states and in others it was set­ tled by the legislatures without any submission to the voters. Some course will be followed which will mean the dea'h knell of prohibition Last spring the Literary Digest held a nationwide poll on the pro­ hibition question. Fortysixstates voted wet and only two. North Ca rolina and Kansas, voted dry and they did it by very small majorities. It is quite possible that an election in North Carolina on the prohibi tion question would result in a wet victory. It will require three fourths of the states to repeal the eighteenth amendment and there seems little if any doubt that these can be secured.—Beaufort News. Didn’t Vote As He Prayed. Union Republician. So manv men aud women on election day failed to vote as they prayed that it has actually caused quite a few people to wonder if they havetthe pure and undefiled relig­ ion. f : We happen to know of a woman in this state who teaches a Sunday school class, who claims to be oh so pious vet on election day when she went to the polls she fell in the hands of a bunch of Democratic wet polititicns and with huad erect she marched into the voting booth and marked her ballot for the dripping wet Bob Reynolds and also for the presidential electors who will vote •for Roosevelt the man who said in his acceptance speech at Chicago that “ the 18th amendment is doom­ ed.” How they could such things is mysterious to a sinner who voted for the dry Jake Newell. We do not know the author of these lines, and it does ,not matter but they fit so well, these pious folks who did not vote as they pray­ ed: For fighting the brewer, except when he voted; He piled up his ' prayers with a holy perfection,** He knocked them all down on the day of election. But the foxy oid brewer was cheeerful and mellow; Said he, " I admire that Sunday school fellow; He’s true tb his church, to his.par­ ty he’s truer He talks for the lord, but he. voles for the brewer.” The farm er who waits until he sells out and moves to town to have the conveniences of w ater in the house and plumbing and lighting system makes a mistake. These modern im provements cost no more on a farm than they do in town and the thous­ ands of steps saved and the labor of the housewife made lighter are just j as necessary on the farm as thev seem j to be in town and would add much to the attractiveness of the farm home. Democrats Warned By Republicans. The now Rebuhlican minority party in the United States will be a nucleus for the nation's consiruc tive influences ‘ in order Io get something done in behalf of the people” while victorious Democrats wage "a very deadly fight within their, own ranks, Chairmau Everett Sanders of the Republican national committee said. " It seems each generation of A- merican cirizens needs one Detn ocratic administration as an object lesson,” Sanders said, adding that Tuesday’s Democratic landslide,' which carried national, state, and county candidales to victory was made possible by "prodigal Re­ publicans.” The cbaiiman said Republicans had no excuse to offer for losing the election and thanked party sup­ porters who fought courageously with the odds against the party. W hile the new administration haji been instructed to lulfill its pro mises with the undivided responsi­ bility, the outgoing party will not obstruct Democratic legislation merely because it is Democratic, Sanders went on. “ The record clearly shows that the Republican party, when in the minority, never played partisan po­ litics at the expense of the country or contrary to the welfare of the A- merican people',” be said. But it will “ fight Io the last dicch any politically unwise economically un­ sound proposal. “ There is every reason to be­ lieve that, before the next adminis­ tration is half over, the Republi­ can minority will have become the nucleus around which the construc­ tive iuffuetices of the uatiou will rally to get something done in be­ half people:” • Sanders then quoted former Gov­ ernor Alfred E. Smith saying he served “ formal and deliberate no­ tice” of international Democratic strife through his editorial column in the New Outlook. "T here is the very deadlv fight for supremacy within the Deniocra tic party,” Sanders said. “ The results of the election were made possible by prodigal Repub­ licans. There is no feeling of bit­ terness against them, no disposition to criticize harshly—the temptation to exferim ent proved stronger tlun party ties. “ But we feel sure one experi­ ment with Democracy will prove sufficient.” Judgment! W. M. Brown brought suit against Senator Cam Morrison aud his Rowan Cdutity manager for service rendered in the primary campaign. The plaintiff was awarded judgment in a m agistrate's court for #7 7.5 5. Defendant appealed. We know nothing of the merits of this claim but we know that other dreditor?. of defeated candidates will be watch ing the conclusion with interest. Ii is not unusual for defeated candi dates to apportion tjieir losses by permitting their creditors to share It is hardly necessary to sav that this method isn’t popular with cre­ ditors who rendered service and in cured expense in good faith, and some of them are about it.— R. R Clark in Greensboro News Bound Over To Court. Grover King, DeW itt Fogleman and Homer Johustone, all of the Randleman, were bound over to the March term of Davie superior court by Magistrate T. I, Catidel on charges of breaking and enter ing a state highway gargeand theft of gasoline. The men were picked up by Lee Craven, chief of police of Mocksviile, early on the morn­ ing of Nov. 1 3, as he thought they were attempting to enter a store. ThePeopIe HaveSpoken A period of world wide economic trouble wbich had run for three years, supplemented bv a desire on the part of millions of voters for the repeal of the prohibition laws swept the Democratic party into power at Tuesday’s election. Sev­ eral million Republican voters join­ ed with the Democrats in bringing about this result. President Hoover was the main target of the Democratic newspapers and orafors in the recent campaign but this was merely political strategy. They knew that Mr. Hoover did not cause the depres sion, on ttie contrary he has set in­ to action forces that have already mitigated it. Perhaps some people believe that the Smoot-Hawley tariff act caused the depression but as the depression started fully seven months before the bill passed this belief is an absutditv. The real causes of the economic earthquake that has shaken the world are much deeper than any acts of President Hoover of the Congressof the Unit­ ed States. AU this matters not at all though. The people want a change and they want beer. They will get both. For our part we hope that the prosperity of the people, which is of greater importauce than the election of any man the Presi­ dency or to Congress, will soon be restored — Beaufort News. Wonder If Judge Webb Voted As He Talks. In Asheville, Monday, a term of the federal court convened with a supposed to be ardent prohibitiouist judge presiding. Tbe following dispatch relating some of the tit terances of this distinguished jur ist is interesting. “ Ashveille, Nov. 14—The speak­ easy is not a child of prohibition but a pattern of the ‘blind tiger’ of saloon days, Federal Judge Edwin Yates Webo, co-author of the Eigh teenth Ameudmen, told the grand ]ury opening the November term of criminal court here today. JudgeW ebburged the jury >to to st and by enforcement of the pro hibitiou laws. "Legalization of liquor, tie said, would mean return of the saloon, jails full of blockaders and more ‘blind tigers’ than there are now.” If the ballot that Judge Webb marked in Shelby November 8 , could be located it would certainly make interesting readiug and would make a fine exhibit for tbe Hall of History at Raleigh Could Judge Webb conscientiously vote for Franklin D. Roosevelt and Bob Reynolds and then in less than a week ascend the bench and deliver a talk like tbe above? Echo an swers could he, and echo wonders did he?—Union Republican. Repeal BiilTo Be Given S. C. Solons. Hampton, S. C, — C. Lester Thomas, member of the state house of representative, announced here today he would introduce a bill in the next legislature to repeal all of Sonth Carolina’s prohibition laws: He said ' he would confer with Huger Sinkier of Charleston and Sol Blatt of Barnwell, and a num ­ ber of new members of the legisla ture known to favor repeal, in drawing up his bill. ■ / ?‘Ia view of the Democratic palt- form and the election of last Tues day,” he said in a formal state ment, “ I cannot but believe repeal will go across at the next session of the legislature by a large majority, as all members ran on the Demo/ cratic platform.” For 15 years South Carolina has been considered a stronghold of the drys, and even before that a large portion of tht) state was dry. by local option. U Soliloquies Of A Prohi­ bitionist. A prreat victory has been won Dy the Democratic party. A victory that reaches N orth, South, East and and W est: We are to have prosper­ ous times now they tell us. Pros­ perity is ju st around the corner, and will come out on us full handed just as soon as President Roosevelt, Bob Reynolds and M ajor Bulwiiikle se t to W ashington and repeal ttie 18th Amendment, and give us plenty of liquor, which they are pledged to do. If they succeed in destroying the Prohibition laws. Thave no doubt but we will have prosperity, but I am a- fraid it will be the kind of prosper­ ity that two tram ps, Mike and Pat, had. Mike and P at found a quart of whiskey, and both got drunk, Mike said to P at, “ P at, I’ll tell you w hat I have decided to do.” “ W hatis it?” said P at. “ I have decided to buy out the Southern Power Company and the Southern Railroad, and live like a king the rest of my days.” "I don’t know w hether you will or not.” said P at “ W hy not?” said Mike, “ Because I have not decided yet to sell them ,” said P at. ‘‘W e all w ant prosperity and hap­ piness, but I am afraid th at w hat we are to get through the repeal of the prohibition laws, will be of the Mike and P at kind. It certainly will be, if it comes through the once saloons. The greatest trap th at was ever set to catch votes is a bar room. Roosevelt knew th at and so he hur­ ried to endorse the w et platform , and declare th at the 18th Amend­ m ent was doomed; as soon as he was nom inated. W e have abundance proof of that fact recently in N orth Carolina A few years ago N orth Carolina voted on Prohibition and carried the State by more than 44 OOO m ajority. Since that tim e every body has con sidered N orth Carolina a dry State But not so; in the Prim ary this fall to nom inate a Democratic candidate for the United States Senate we had three aspirants. Cam Morrison, Tam Bowie and Bob Reynolds all Demo­ crats. Cam Morrison was the pre­ sent incum bent, whose term would soon be out. Morrison is a man of ability and had made a fine record. He was dry and had always been dry, and had done much to make the State dry. Tam Bowie was also a Dem ocrat of experience and fine ability, had been a Superior Court Judge, and a fine one. He was also dry. Bob Rey­ nolds had nothing to -recommend him, except th a t he was w et, and wanted Prohibition laws repealed and liquor restored to the public. Bob Reynolds got alm ost as manv votes in the State as M orrison and Bowie both. Morrison got a few more votes than Bowie, and so he and Bob RevnoIds had to settle the m atter as to who should be the no­ minee, by another election. In this second race it was Morri­ son and Reynolds only. M orrison is one of the ablest Dem ocrats in the State, and has done as much for the good of the party and the State as any m an in it • He was one of the best Governors the State ever had, inaugurated one of the finest road Iaw sin the United Statef, was al ways dry, and did much to m ake the State dry. Bob Reynolds bad nothing to re­ commend him except th at he was wet, and promised if nom inated and elected to do all in his power to have the prohibition laws repealed and the United States m ade w et again. Rey­ nolds carried the State by som ething like 200,000 m ajority. H em usthave gotten the votes of all the wets of both parties and both Sexes The Republicans nom inated for this office M r.Jake Newell, a man of character jn d abilitv, and one who w asdry.and had always been dry, and who pledged himself, if elected, to do all in his power to keep all the Prohibition laws on the books, and also to do all in his power to have these laws enforced. Bob Reynolds beat him by a large m ajority. No baic.like the prom ise of free liquor to catch votes. J. F. S p ain h o u r,-Charlotte Observ­ e r . Who's Wet? Many of those who voted for Gov­ ernor Roosevelt, especially in th ed rv South, did so out of party loyalty or with hopes of better times through a change—the liquor question with many was entiyely forgotten. As a m atter, of fact, if the people of the South had realized ju st what they were doing in castiq their , vote for the wets, we venture to say th at Governor Roosevelt's m ajority would have been considerable less and many a dry congressman or sen­ ator would have been returned to his seat as well as many new Onea who had declared themselves in favor of the prohibition laws as they now stand. It was a dear price to pay for a victory. Before they have finished counting the ballots, liquor interests have rlready stepped into the picture with tha declaration thac “ th e tr e - mendous m ajority given the Denoo- m ocratic ticket, clearly indicates what the people w ant” and they have proceed to disregard all prohi­ bition laws. The m ayor of Chicago, already has declared his tow n wide- ' open insofar as he is concerned. A judge in another city suspended sent­ ence on a man charged w ith violat­ ing the liquor laws and declared-that any sim iliar case coming before him would also be suspended. The trem em dous m ajority accord- - ed w et candidates from alm ost every corner of these United States, we will assum e were by voters who w ere in favor of im m ediate repeal of the prohibition laws. T hat is w hat the vote indicates—but we don’t believe it. Some sectious are overwhelm ing­ ly w et, it is a known fact, but take the country as a whole, it was hot a wet vote, but instead a protest vote against the depression. If this is n o . tru e -th e n bring on the light wines, beer and liquor. Every state in the union with the ex­ ception of six have declared unam - . Diously for liquor. If the people of these forty-tw o states.are sincere in their dem and for repeal, then also it . will be necessary to repeal the state laws as well. How soon will N orth Carolina and the rest of the solid South do this? E ither those voting for it w ant beer, wine and liquor or they are exactly w hat Al Sm ith cal'- ed them in his New Jersey speech. lThis is a challenge to the sincerity o f the people’s vote.—Concord Obser- What The Grange Is. ! The question, “ W hat is the G ran­ ge?” is being askeed in W ihston- Salem, despite the fact th at it is one of the nation’s m ost powerful org­ anizations of men and women. Singularly, however, the Grange was born in the South d u rin g 'th e reconstruction days that followed the W ar Between the States. It rose to a position of power and in­ fluence, spread to the E ast and W est, then became dorm ant in the South. To the gratification of untold num ­ bers it is returning to the Soutb with renewed vigor and with tbe same determ ination that characteriz- its Ieaitors a half century ago. The Grange is the nation’s only fraternal organization of men, women and thildren devoted to the- cause of bettering living conditione in the rural areas of America. It is to the country man w hat Rotary; Ki- wanis and such organizations are to tbe city man. In addition to its activitv in behalf : of remedial legislation, ir. is fraternal throughout. Its business is carried on in a fratern al, and nonpartisan wav. Hence it’s age .and strength. The G range does not Indulge in politics as such, but in its determin- ation to fight for principles which will improve our rural life, it hews straight to the line and the chips m ay , fall in either the Democratic or Re-, / publican column. The history of the G range roveals th at statesm en it) the legislative halls' of the various states and of the nation welcojne the suggestions of the Grange with the knowledge th at its econosiists, its patriots its home building and home loving m em ber­ ship, plead only for the rights of those masses engaged in agricultural pursuits and who live on the farm .— W inston Sentinel, THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSViLtE, M. C. November 30. *93j G THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD • - Editor. Member National Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered atthe Postoffice in Mocks­ ville, N. C., as Second-class Mail matter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - J I OO SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - $ 50 Talk about, the forgotten man We have decided that John Nance Garner must be the guilty party. The amendment to elect sheriffs and coroners for four years instead of two, was defeated by an over­ whelming majority. It is only four weeks until Christ­ mas! Do your Cliristniasshopping with the merchants who adverise in The Record and save money. Mr. Roosevelt is jnst as much our president as he is'the presi­ dent of Bob Reynolds or Josiah Bailey: If he needs any help at anytime and will write or phone us we will assist him in any way pos­ sible. We hope that all the 120,- 000 000 people in the United States, Deaih Follows Accident Among Our Subscribers Funeral services were held at the Hjocksville Presbyterian church on F. H. Bafcusori. of Farmington, was in town last week ou business Sunday afternoon for Charlie Ti!- and left a frog skin with us. Ier Benson, 46, who passed away early Saturday Morning from in­ juries received Thursday night will get behind Mr. Roosevelt and j when an automobile driven by S. help him to get this country on its feet. It cvill take more than one or a dozen men to get us back to where we belong. Republicans are going to help Mr. Roosevelt in every way possible. He is our president. There are many things to be thankful for. We can listen in on the radio without hearing a bunch of politicians telling us how wet or dry they are And now some of the wet ho vs say it wiM be March betore we can get our wine and beer. 'Tlnce who voted for booze may have to wait longer than they thought Just to show you how wet the North Carolina foiks were in No vemher, Bob Re> nokls. dripping wet democrat, defeated Jake Newell extraordinary dry Republican, by a majority of over 250 000. From what we van Ie nn there are many good Republicans i:i Davie county who would be glad to serve the county in any capaci There are always nior than there are political jobs. Grange Is Dry. Strengthening its age old stand against liquor the National Grange Thursday night reaffiirmed its pos­ ition for retention of the Eighteenth Amendment and also pledged its aid against any move to repeal or modify the Volstead act. It declared that ‘any plan to again legalize intoxicating beverag­ es without bringing back the saloons and all theit evils is foredoomed to failure.” As the Grange faced the end of its ten day conveution a number of business matters' remained on the agenda despite the large number of principles adopted by the delegates thus far. Policies which will gov ern the order for the ensueing year I Interment and guide its legislative program I Third Cifcek are the result of the deliberations which a-e carried on in much the same manner as a st_te cr nationa legislative oody. Independence of the Philippines “ at an early date” higher import ! duties 011 oils and fats which com­ pete. with those from American farms and use of the radio for ad­ vertising only legal commoditied were urged in resolutions and re- ! D. Daniels struck him as he was walking along the. highway south of town. Mr Benson never fu lly regained consciousness and died from con­ cussion of the brain. A coroner’s inquest was held Saturday and Mr. Daniel was exhonorated from blame the accident being unavoidable. Surviving relatives include the widow, one daugbler, Miss Claudie Benson at home; oue son, Bainey Benson, of Rowan county; a steo mother, Mrs. Bettie Benson, of Rowan countv, two brothers. Kim Benson, ot Mocksville and Joe Ben­ son, of Kunnapolis; six sisters, Mrs A B Gobble, of Cooleemee; Mrs. Charlie Carter,, of Woodleaf; 'Mrs. John Wilheru, of Albermarle; Mrs W ittEeonard.ofVlta Vista, Va . Mrs Connie H ill; of Spray and Mrs Gordon Adama, of Detroit, Mich., and two .mall grandchild- M. A. Hartman, who is going to enter upon his new duties as Clerk Shady Grove School News, "Lighthouse Nan” was given very suc­ cessfully last Friday Night November 18. 1932. but due to the rain and weather conditions a very small crowd assembled From reports in the daily press it seems that practically all the former drv democrats have turned over and are now wets. NoJonger can it be said in North Carolina that the Republican party is the whisky party. Monday, Dec. 5th, will be a big day in Mocksville. Davie Superior court convenes oti that date and in addition to court, all cf the new Republican county officers will bc- sworn in. No doubt a large cro:v; w ill be in town fot this double at traction. 1 Thanksgiving passed off very quietly in Mocksville. M,,st of the stores and business houses were closed. Services were held in some of the churches. Ws understand that praclira’.iy all the tnercliauis will close their sto.es on Christmas day this year. politicians i P3r^s <)f committees last night. ' The principle of-jural credit un­ ions was endotsed, following a fa­ vorable report by a committee which has made a prolonged study of the system. It is considereed by the Grange as a means of helping it> the credit crisis and a vehicle through which the Grange nsay further en courage thrift. National Master L. J. Taber announced. At the nooti.session Thursday the Grauge went on record as advoca ting the ta x ition of manufactured tobacco pioducts by the federal gov- iernment onlv, one sixth of the amount received from such taxation to be returned to the stales ou a b isi's of population. It was the sense of'the bodv that certain sources of revenue snouid be left to the federal government and certain ones to the states as a means of Pieventing the overlapping duplication and pryamidiug of taxa­ tion. re 11. Mr. Bmsou hid he in a resident of Mocksville for many years. followed in historic Presbyterian Ceme­ tery in Rowan coup tv with Rev. W. I Howeil, pastor^F the Moefcs- ville Presbyterian chur h, Rev. j. '■V. Foster, postor of the Coulee mee Presovterian church; Rev. R. C. Goforth and J. L Kirk, ot Mocksville, officiating The bodv was !aid-to rest with P- O S of A. honors of the Court, was 011 the stretts last; and some think it wise to present the week and we extracted a frog skin | plav^asain since there was not enough front him.marlh-to pay for time and enpenses. I tie Faculty Ptay "Light House Nan” will he given again Saturday night, December 3, on business last week and has cur ’ 1933. Everyone invited! Be sure and B. J. Foster, of Kappa, was here The next legislature is going Ir, be kept busy hunting for an ex r:t ten or twelve million dollars to keep our roads up and our schools run ring. The boys may iepeal the Turlington law and let our leading dry politicians buy their wine and bee^ in the state instead of having to go to other states for it. We are glad that we don’t have to find the money or bring back the drinks. The good people of North Caro­ lina ,piled up a whopping majority for Roosevelt and Reynolds, the gentlemen who promised us wine, beer and liquor if they were elect ed. We want the people of North. | Caroliua to have what they voted for. We believe that in less than four years the Christian element v ru cold and Il i. Redlaud News. Mr?.R. C. Smifhspem Monday with her month Mrs ’V. D. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Riddle and Mr. and Mrs. Joel Beauchcimp weje the Sunday guests of Mr J. M. Beauchnmp and family. Miss Juiia St fl-.y spent' the past week wi .ii her .sister M.v. GIeitfi Smith. Mrs. C. S. Dunn was the Wednesday g.icst of Mrs. Jiffry Beauchamp. Mr. and Mrs.-W. 0. Dunn visited Mr. and ivirs. J. is. Beiuchamp Thursday. Mr. ar.a Mis. Wiliie ArmsWorthy and children were the Thursday guests of the Fatters parents M \ end Mrs. C. M. Foster. . Mr. and Mrs R C. Smirh visited his sister Mr. J. C. Smith, of Smith Grove Thursday. Mrs. Julia Howard is spending a few chys v.uh hrr daughter Mrs. A. M. Lnird. Plans are being made for a Criristinas en<fTttwime»u h»»rc. Mr. Arthur Laird is suffering from sc- who voted for booze will h ave re- !Misses l£lv*. Hcndiix and Kettle Mae a u I Smith spent Fiiriiiy*toiih Mrs. Fred Sides, pented in sackclotn ana a?hes i T»..TTT1 ., . t , ,, , I Mi*s Milrr-d Howard spent awhile Fri-While the lamp holds out to burn Jriay e,elli„8 witb M h s s Giadys Dunn. Grange Visilors Enter- tamed At Woodleaf. The Woodleaf Grange, assisted by approximately 10 other subordi­ nate Granges of this countv, en­ tertained officials of the National Grange and state masters from 32 commonwealths last Monday after­ noon ou'.'i evening at a picnic sup­ per which following an entertain ing tour duiing ihe afternoon. These visitors were in attendance upon the National Grange in ses­ sion at Winston Salem, and came :o Rowan county .upon invitation of the local bodies. The afternoon was spent in Salisbury, where one of the large cotton mills was seen in operation, the various processes of spinning the cotton, weaving cloth and . preparing it for the market, proving ii„iisupl!y interest­ ing to the visitors. The visitors then returned to \V00dleaf. where the bountiful pic iiic. supDer tvas served from a large tabl>* emending the entire length of the gvmnasium at the school, and loaded with the many delicacies for which this county is famed. A bout 500 people were present for this feast and greatly enjoyed other features of the prog-am. The Barber juvenile Gauge sang the welcome song as National Mast­ er Lewis Taber en'ered the hall Mr. Taher acknowledge the greet­ ing in a very haocy and ph-asing manner, and then gave a short'talk in which he paid North Carolina and Rowan county a. glowing tri bute for the cord ilit/ and hospital!’ ty Shown* He said he had eaton in 48 states, but never before had he seen such a table as was prepa-ied for the event last night. -j W Kerr Scott, state master. Haw River, also made a talk to the thanks for a life preserver. Henry Jarvis, who lives in the classic shades-of Fulton, was in town last week ou business and of couse left us a frog skin. W. T. Daywalt, of South Cala haln, was in totvn last week He remembered us with a frog skin. F. W. Kooutz1 of near Kappa, paid us a pleasant call last week, and has our thanks for a life saver. E P. Ratlegd. who helps his brother George make good flour at. Woodleaf, has our thanks for a couple of frog hides. A. L. Daywalt, of near Kapoa, carried a load of of tobacco to Win­ ston Salem last week. He stopptd on his way home and left us a sim oleon. O. R. Riddle, who dwells in the Redland section, was a visitor last week and left us a steel eugraving ,I of George Washington. G W Click, of Jerusalem, was in town last week and has our thanks for a smacker. J. F Smithdeal, of Winstou-S ,- lem, was in town Thursday 011 his wav to a football game at David-J son. While here he passed us aj frog skm. j L. M. Seamon, of R. 3, was in: town Thursdav and passed up a frog skin, which was duly appre oiated. 1 J. A. Blackwelder, of near Shef field, was in town Friiiav and has our thanks for his renewal. I Amos Jones, of Cana R. 1, was Si in town Eridav and called at our § sanctum to renew his subscription. I •Mrs. R A Wilkers’on. of La-:, Grande. Oregon, has our thanks for a life preserver which artived Fri- ■’ day. R. E. Daniel, of Jerusalem, was it in totvn ciju: v:av and left us a f r o g : ^ conn I Tile fnl!owing students from Shady Grove School will appear on Honor Roll for second month, having attained an overage of 90 without being absent or tardy they are as follows: I B-A kbn Mvers. 2 A—Clenton Heae, Billy Warn Cana, Route One News.THE DA Mr. and Mrs. Moody Kearnt, of Winston- Salem, spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. KeamttS parent, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rene* gar. Mrs. Nannie Hays, of Pittsbnro, is visit­ ing her sister. Miss Mayme Rcbsrts. Mr. and Mrs. Asley Blackwelder, daugh­ ter. Virgie, and Donnie Lee Clary, all of Kannapolis, spent the week end in this community. Tonnie Richardaon. is suffering from an attack of pneumonia. M's* Nellie Bowles is \i;iting Miss Maude Clary. L. M. Blackwelder and little grandson, of High Point, were the Thanksgiving visitors of Tom Blackwelder. Miss Mary Louise Lakey returned home n I last week, after a three weeks visit with Coleen Bailey. 3 B— Bugene Bennett 3 A—RosentaryLvengoojvAnnette Bar ney, VViIma Potts, -Edith Bailey, David •Essjx, 4 A—Ralph Merrell. Lucy Foard Greene, Helen Wyatt. 5th grade. Eilly Beauchamp. Wiilie Veigh Barnhardt. Ke becca Byrson. Alma Combs. Doreithy Or rail. 7th grade—Naylor Nogler. 8 th grade —Lncy Mae Orrell. Hlth grade—Bert-Ie Hendrix. Ilihgrade—Wilma Barnhardt, Aitcn Hartman. EilitorSchool News, hir aunt, Mrs Gwyn Rooert. Mrs.-Jane Rutledge, who has been visit­ ing friends and relativees in this commu­ nity, returned to her home, at Farbush. Yadkin county, last week. Thanksgiving day was unusually quit, a* the rain prevented much hunting and visiting. Miss Jennie Moore, of Mooresvilie, has been visiting her sister. Mrs. Alfred ’ Peo­ ples, since the death of Mr. Peoples last week. ._________ Mr. and Mrs Stamy Clinard and children and Miss Lilliau Biuklev of Thoinasville spent the week-end Mr and Mrs. Richard Sle.-k and liltle daughter Anna of Winsion Saiem spent Thanksgiving with her with their tmcle S. F. Binklevr. parents Mt. and Mrs. W. E W all., .. . • », j .j Mrs. Lizzie I-Iendren and son J. MissBeriieBinklev vssiied rel- B of Pcdee N C. visited Mr. and atives in Thomasville last week. I Mrs. H. B. Ward, Sat. t& g S S E B l g g it Elizabeth Hinkle, of F ork.-Ijk low;'. Laturda'- and has our J j the vilest sinner mav return Dr. F. B.' Gailher, of Harmony, in sending us a check for his re­ newal to The Record, among other things, says: “ You no doubt hav;- ness trip to Winston-Salem one day the Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Dann was in Mocks- viile Friday on business Mrs. 0. S. Dunn arid children visited her parents Mr. and M rr-C. H. Smith Fridaj. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Miller made a busi- Sic m. Mrs was in thanks for r. big cart wheel. R L. Peoples, tit Cmiti, was in lowu Saturday and handed us a piece Of "Joiigh" te apply ou his subscript it. n J. H. Wiliiatns ‘'the Cednr Mail” has our thanks for a frog skin. W ill N. Smith, who is a clever gaiage man, handed u.-> a frog skin Monday. . Mr. and .'-Irs R'nhert Felker and little daughter, of K .ppn, were in town Monday and Ielt us a frog skin. Thanks. J . M Poplin, the “ shoe doctor," passed us a frog skin Tuesday, for which we tbajjk him, i CarJ7OT Thanks. j I wish to thank ail of the good peo­ ple of Mocksville for the many acts of kindness shown my brother and family during the terrib e experience we have just cone through in the ir - ‘ jury and death of rm brother, C. T. Henson. May Gnd bless vou one and all is my prayer. F. K. BENSON, Card of Thanks. We wish to express to our friends' our sincere appreciation for the many f kindnesses shown during the illness I and death of our wife and mother. ■' C. C. Craven and family. J James Campbell Dies. Mr. James Campbell. 36, died at; his home in this citv Wednesday! night following a long illness Fun j •I eral services were held at Hebron' Baptist church Tredell county, Fri-. Gj 'day afternoon at 3 o’clock Rev R. , . . , , . , 1C. Goforth, ot thisci'v, nssissed by cowd m wntch he tnanked'-ythfe-Rev_ ,Gradv White, pastor of Heb-|“j Woodleaf Grange and 0 hers tor ; ron church conducted the services. | the firie spirit shown, and for the re j Mr. Campbell is survived by hisj, : Ception given the visitors j widow and four small sons, -three jfl Theentireprogram was one o f' j I S a n f o r d ’s Fur Trimmed or Plain Winter Coats , $ 4 5 0 To $2 5 , 0 0 ' Tailored coats in the season’s leading materials and most popular shade.-; Luxuriously furred or self collars and cuffs. Sizes 14 to 44. Now is the time Jo select your coat while stocks are complete. Ladies Hats Fresh from th e Milliner— these Hats present smartness and value at' a- record low price. SSc to $1.98 •w-ai seen by the papers that there is 110 more Republicans in the country." I f We are to believe the democratic newspapers Mr. .Hoover received more than fifteen million votes. Wonder if the doctor thinks irreen million is not any. Perhaps he is : one of the good Irede.1! democrats; who thinks it takes a haudrcd.mil- liontoauionntto anything won I;1 counting Herbert got as uiai v votes as Al, which is pretty good in these wet days. | 0ne also survives. The grief-stricken ! is much interest and was grea.lv en j fnmilv have the sympathy of th e j| joyed Among other features community In the loss of husband j Ji shown t-he visiting party were a and father. Mr Caivphell and c b lf im gin, while in operatioa, and moved to Mocksville from . 1 - - • , , U w W siiu -I .i- Iredell countv about two vearsago.several weeks is improving very slpwly we, also a.T1S tg jIl-I cotlon, soiuelnm g . . *» ■Fib. I past week. Little Mrjry HcIton who has been ill for \•;re sorry to ootr. Mrs. Tonj Dunn has be«n suffering the past v. e<*k a severe cold. Mrs S. H. Smith onrl Mrs Tom Dunn .s-v’fit Tuesday wiih Mrs. Hairrison Dunn* Misses Lilli« and Lassie Duun spept a- hiie V/ediissday nighi with Miss Corde .lSnirh. Mis-? Ceneva Smitb and Mr. BuckFoster vH*fd Mr and WUIie Thursday muiit. cl of COlion, some of'The-visiiors bad seen but. little.—Salisbury Post. I OjyiDjg to a wreck between for Chief Nirsen Kil’ed. Fire Chief Harry Nissen,' S 19 yrars head of the LI MEN’S SUITS Grey, brown and blue in most any pattern you prefer. Stylish, long-wearing and eco­ nomical. ' Select yours now. $7.50 to $17.50 Topcoats Nobby patterns in all-wool coats; mixed patterns as well as blues, brown and tan. Belted or plain models. AU sizes. $7.95 to $12.50 Men’s Hats Brown’s and grays in the newest blocks, priced from— $1.00 to $2.95 Greensboro and W inston.Sa- Winstan-SalemFire Depart-11 lem yesterday morning, train raenf, was almost instant! No. 9, due here'at 8:12 a. p. killed early Monday morn- iiJ Armsworthy was annulled, and Mocks- ing while answering a firej ft • viile was without mail until alarm. His car was M C €. Sanford Sons Co. S-Asd us your subscription. 2:08 p. m. in col- Iision with'a Greyhouud bus.1 iimimMhha ‘‘Everything For Everybody’* Mocksville, N. C. Children’s Coats The little miss will find in these coats all of the styles and smartness that is found in Mother’s New Winter Coat. Fur trimmed or plain, in solid shades and mix­ ed patterns. Many new stylss just arrived. $1.00 to $8.50 Dresses Scores of silk and woolen frocks in the season’s most popular solid shades and mixed patterns Sizes for Women and Misses. 98c to $12.50 V-,: L arg est Ci D avie Co j: LOCAL A M r and M near Nester, , Wednesday. E K. Jam was a busine last week. Ann Marie and Mrs. A. diphtheria. Mr. and i were in Salis last week. A. T. Gra Forest David Davidson Th Mr and M and Mrs. W. day in the T MissZella Ky., was Ih of Rev. and Your little doll for Cliri" give you one Mack Cam C. State Col the holidays Mr. and M daughter M Thanksgivin Statesville. Misses Hel Benson spent Miss Mary Farmington. Put in you delivered. Miss Lucil N. C. C. W Thanksgivin parents. M r and M daughter Mi- Redland. we Wednesday. Renew voti Record and Almanac free Mr. and M sons Jack and end at Roper, Dr. and Mrs. Misses Eht tin and Mr. S at High Point for the Thau" Mrs. J. M. and Mrs. C. daughter, we Friday aftern Felix Hard and Frank St Wake Forest sgivliig in to It is only I mas. Do yo with the mer in Tbe Recor Mrs. C. F ters Misses L and Miss Lo day in Win W. H. Ch last Wednesd pounds. Mr. will have pie: ter. Mrs. M. went a seriou Sanatorium, day is getti friends will b Mrs. H. C. ter, Mrs. P. Faye Holtho ford and littl Friday in Wi Misses Ja Moore and H at Appalach Coliege, Boo giving holida parents. Miss Eva Brevard high ThaDksgivin parents, Mr. She had as h giving day M sister, Miss L News. of Winston- with Mrs. Ienry Rene • ro. is visit- erts. gider, daugh- Jary, all of |n<j in this Ing from an fiting Miss grandson. hanksgiving urned home visit with §> been visit- Iii4=I commu- |at Farbush. sually qu«t, •anting and ■esville, has \!fred Peo- ^opJes iast ;^ § | nd son J. -Vl r. and i *o. : styles /inter n frocks popular patterns 'I'sses. .50 pattern knd eco- ISO I; mixed Ind tan. bioeks, THE DAVIE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. N ovember 3o 1934 THE DAVlE RECORD. Largest Circulation of Any Davie County Newspaper. Mrs. Jack Allison spent Friday’ Progressive Music Club'Pie in W inston Salem shopping. j ® S The Progressive Music Club met C F. Meron y is able to be at for the se. ond met ting of the seas his store again after being confined i uj h |jule M ^ afet Jq Brock at LOCAL AND PERSONAL NEWS. Mr and Mrs. V. L. Boger. of near Nester, were iu town shopping Wednesday. E K. Janies, of Winston Salem, was a business visitor here one day last week. Ann Marie, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Daniel, is ill with diphtheria. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tutterow were in Salisbury shopping one day last week. A. T. Grant took J n the W ake Forest Davidson football game at Davidson Thursday. Mr and Mrs. W. F. Dwiggins aud Mrs. W. N. Smith spent Fri­ day in the Twin City shopping. Miss Zella Bryant, of Middlesboro Kv., was the Thanksgiving guest of Rev. and Mrs. Gilmer Prcctor / Your little girl or boy wants a doll for Christmas. We want to give you one free. Read our ad. Mack Campbell, a student at N. C. State College, Raleigh, spent the holidays here with home folks Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Daniel and daughter Miss Pauline, spent Thanksgiving with relatives in Statesville. Misses Helen Daniel and Claudie Benson spent Thanksgiving with Miss Mary Louise Lakey’ near Farmington. Put in your order for coal $5 75 delivered. E. H. MORRIS. Miss Lucile Horn, a student at N. C. C. W ., Greensboro, spent Thanksgiving in in town with her parents. Mr and Mrs J. H. Smith and daughter Miss Georgia, of near Redland, were in town shopping Wednesday. Renew your subscription to the Record and get a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Sauford and sons Jack and Billy, spent the week end at Roper, N. 'C., the guests of Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Speight. Misses EWa Cartner, Ruhy Mar­ tin and Mr. Stilon Ferr.ee, students at High Point College, were at home for the Thauksgiving holidays. Mrs. J. M. Horn and ,daughters and Mrs. C. G. Woodruff and daughter, were in Winston-Salem Friday afternoon shopping. Felix Harding, Paul Heudricks and Frank Stonestreet, students at W ake F'orest College spent Thank­ sgiving in town with their parents. It is only four weeks until Christ­ mas. Do your Cbrisimasshopping with the merchants who advertise in The Record and save money. Mrs. C. F Stroud and daugh­ ters Misses Louise and Jessie Ltbbv and Miss Louise Smith spent Fri­ day in Winston-Salem shopping. W. H. Cheshire killed a fine pig last Wednesday which weighed 508 pounds. Mr. Cheshire and family will have plenty of meat this win­ ter. - Mrs. M. B. Stonestreet under­ went a serious operation at Long’s Sanatorium, Statesville, last Tues­ day is getting along nicely her friends will be glad to learn. Mrs. H. C. Meroney and daugh­ ter, Mrs. P. G. Brown, Miss Helen Faye Holthouser, Miss Agnes San­ ford and little Sue Brown spent Fridayin Winston-Salem shopping. Misses Jane McGuire, Amy Moore and Helen Grant, students at Appalachian State Teacher’s Coliege, Boone, spent the Thanks­ giving holiday in town with their parents. t ) his home for a week by illness. Robert Hall, a student at N. C. State College, Raleigh, spent the week end in town the guest of his brother Dr. S. B. Hall- Petty 17 inch dolls free to all who subscribe of renew their sub- sc iptions to The Record. Callnow and get yours. L i'lle Marie Johnson had the mi;- fortune to get one of her arms br< - ! ret ken last Wednesday afternoon while playing. She was carried to Long’s Sanatorium, Statesville, where the broken bone was set. Miss Mary Nelson Anderson, a s udent at Salem College, snent the Thanksgiving holidays here with her parents. She had as her guest Miss Erska Marx, of Nazareth, Pa., a student of Salem College Supper At Grove. Smith There will be a pie supper and her home on Salisbury street Sat- plenty of good things to eat at urdav afternoon. S nith Grove Methodist chnrch The subject for the afternoon , Saturday night, Dec. 3rd. Pro was a study of the life of Schubert, jceeds wiH go to the Sunday school, the great song writer. A sk. tch , The public is cordially invited to of his life was given by JIiss LouiseNome out and enjoy themselves. Stroud, followed bv a quiz. Ethel „ . j IL L atham then rendered Schubert’s v O l t d l ( j H l !I IJIg K C p O T t. famous ‘'Serenade.” Other piano: Adcording to the government re- s .-lections wete rendered by M arga--port issued at W ashington Mon- Jo Brock and Jessie L ibbyjlJayi 10 532,745 bales of cotton has Stroud. A poem was also given Jleen gjniied so far this season, by Margaret Jo Brock. A musical: ^ orlh Carolina has ginned 5 5 1.901 contest was enjoyed, T heoleneIlaJes Ward winning the prize. [ ---------------—— — —— .— —------- Delicious refreshments were ser ved by the little hostess, assisted!Farms For Sale! Renew your subscription and get a prettv doll for votir boy or girl free. Call or seud. We can’t mail these dolls. Frank Hendrix can run for coun­ ty commissioner and be elected but he can’t go hunting and get any fresh meat for Thanksgiving. He spent one whole day last week hunting and didn’t kill a thing. A prettv doll free to all new or old subscribers who pay us gi.oo or more on subscription before Christ­ mas Call or send 11s votir renewal. We cannot mail these dobs. _ We are told that the black bear Lewie Todd killed last week 111 Farmington township weighed 105 pounds. Surely that wasn't the 30 0-pounder that a number . of Mocksville citizens chased some days before. Mr. Todd has 110 doubt killed the first bear that has been shot in Davie since the Civil War. by her mother and little brother, j From four to six miles from consisting of fruit jello with whip- Mocksville near hard surface road, ped cream, two kinds of cake, and i One place with six acres, one place c I■». 1 u 1 * /mi j Ithirtv acres, one place sixtv acres,fancv little baskets ulled with can- < - J1 , ,- lone Dlace one hundred acres or dy. Those present were Iithel La [more; one place 42 0 acres. Good tham. Theolene and AJargaret W ard; niiiltiing on farms and well watered JessieLibby Stroud, Margaret Jo [ aud can be bought as low as twenty Brock. Mrs. B. C. Brock, John Ta-Ido 11SrS an acre aud bought on easy bor and Frances Brock, and two visitors, Virginia Clement aud Mo- zelle Howard, and Miss Louise Stroud, the teacher. i terms. Also six Good Mules, weigh i about twelve hundred pounds each and a nice bunch of sheep. S<e F. H LA N IER, Mocksville, N. C., Route I, if you want a bargain. w. § „ PRETTY I DOLLS GIV-S £ EN AWAY. Pd = = = = = = = = = = = = ^ The Record has a pS limited supply of pret- E ty 17-inch dolls that F" we are going to give to our subscribers free of charge. All old or new sub­ scribers who pay $1 or more on subscrip- r™ tion between now and jim Dec. 24th, will be giv- en one of jhese pretty IW dolls free. Bring or I® send us your subscrip­ ts tion today. Frances Caroline, 2 (4-year-old daughter of \lr. and Mrs. Milton James, of near Redland, died Thurs­ day evening, following an illness of croup Funeral and burial services were couducted bv Rev M .. G Ervin at Bethlehem Methodist church Saturday morning at 11 o’clock. Surviving is the parents and one little sister. The bereaved ones have the sympathy of a host of friends. „ Kurfees-Meroney. Miss Kathryn Kurfees, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Kurfeesand Mr. C. F. Meroney1 Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. F'. Meroney, were united in marriage Thursday morn­ ing at io o’clock at the home of the bride’s parents on South Main street. Rev. R. Cl Gofortli; pastor of the bride, officiated. Mr. aud Mrs. Meroney left immediately after the marriage for a trip to W ashing­ ton and other points of interest. They will make their home on Sails bury street where Mr. Meroney has Miss Eva Call, a member of the' Drsr completed an attractive bunga• Brevard high school faculty, spent I™- Only the immediate family ThBDkstriving in town with, her were present at the marriage. The parents°M r. and Mrs. W ' L. Call. Record i 01" 3 thelr manV trie° ds »“ S b eh ad as herguestsfor Thanks- • wishing for these young people a giving day Mr. Melvin Gillespie and ' lo“e a«d successful journey through sister. Miss Louise, of Brevard. Ihfe M. S. Elects Offi­ cers. Mrs. W. A Taylor aud Mrs. A. A. Holleman were hostesses to the Woman’s Missionary Society of Farmington M. E. Church recently at the home of Mrs. Taylor, with fourteen members and two visitors, Mesdatnes John and Speer Harding, present. During tlis business session splen did reports were heard from the various committres and officers for the ensuing year were elected as follows: Presideut, Mrs. J. C. John­ son; vice-president, Mrs M. G. Er SEMI-PASTE PAINT One Gallon Makes 2 1-2 When Mixed K U R F E E S & W A R D BARGAINS! SPECIALS THIS WEEK. Plenty women and childrens Hose IOc per pair. Plenty Sweaters for all the vin; secretary, Mrs J. C. James; family at Bargain Price. treasurer, Mrs F . M. Lashley. f p jen ty o f Coats f w men> WQ. Impressive devotional exercises I , , ,j t ; i r A1 ^ r I men and children.were conducted by Mrs. M. G. L r | win and an interesting leaflet en-?*^en*Y ReH Goose, W olverine titled, -’The Woman’s Missionary I and Bail Band Shoes and Society iu China,” was read and Boots the final lesson of tie mission study] Men’s and Bovs book was conducted by M rs. George j U n jQn b 0 c Sbutt Jr. This completed! be third s — „ . . , u .. . t . , . , < ruil Fashioned Hosiety 4 8 cbook studied during tbe year by the * ^ 8 8See our Ciotnmg before you We can and will save II b u y . society. A tthe conclusion of the business; a delightful social half hour was you money. .enjoyed and hostesses, assisted by PJe n ty 0f QuttPg yard Miss Helena Weit, served a deli­ cious sa'ad course with pumpkin tarts, puts and coffee. Don't W orry Over Your RADIATORS These Cold Nights We have the Alcohol and Glycerine That Will Save Them. Tiolene M otor Oils ToSuitTheW eather “BETTER SERVICE” Kurfees & Ward Mocksville, N. C. MR, FARMER! * •• ’’ Bring Your Cotton To Our Gini V-' We Pay Highest Market Price, t : Get Your Fertilizer From Us And Save Monby. J. W . C A R TN tR Card of Thanks. 5c I I have just received a large j sample line of notions to go f at about 1-2 price. 25c to $2 95. 8 lbs Lard Salt Ib ■Dreses 65c 95c IOc 25c llclb 15c IOc We wish to thank all our friends who were so kind to us during the illness and after the death of our hus- Coffee band and father. We will never for- Crackers 2 lbs get the many acts of kindness and . , the help given as during our time of Grackers large size need. May God bless you all. I Plenty Oil Cloth, yard Mrs. Jas. Campbell and ' children. I Peanut Butter I Ib j Eagle Brand Milk 20c can 11 Ib Can Pork and Beans 5c D - . r.u .i - ,[Flour $1.95B yvirtueoftheauthoritygivento . " the undersigned Trustee in a certain I Plow Points at 1-3 off list Deed Of Trust executed by Jerry j See 0Ur line dry goods before Lindsev and h>s wife, Mary Law I . Su u u " Lindsey, dated December Slst, 1930 you buy. We havethe best and recorded in the Office of Regist- j assortment we have ever had. er of Deeds of Davie county in Book- 24 of Mortgages on Page 451 2 (de Notice Of Sale! fault having been made in the pay­ ment of the indebtedness thereby se­ cured), the undersigned Trusteewill offer for sale to the highest bidder at the Court House Door in Mocksville, North Carolina, the following de­ scribed land at 12:00 Noon, on. v Tuesday. December 27th, 1932 - Beginning at a stone .on the North side of the public road, Hege and Jordan corner, them e with the road partly in George Frv’s lino 137 poles to a stone in the road. Lanier’s corn­ er in Fry’s line; thence in Lanier’s line South 70 degrees East 32 poles to a stone, Lanier’s corner; thence South G degrees East 43 poles to a stone on bank of Yadkin River, La­ nier’s corner; thence up the river 49 poles to tho mouth of a branch where * it empties into the river; thence up I g the meanders of the branch 33 poles I ” and 13 links to a stone, Hege’s corn-' er; thence East 10 degrees North 4 poles in Hege’s line; thence North 8 degrees East in Hege’s line 127/poles to a stone in Alex Hege’s linejlthence < in his line North 85 degreestWest 24 I poles to a stone the beginning,/con-j B taining Forty-nine and (49 75) acres, more or less.’ILessffJneZ (I) acre sold off to George Fry, anGf Felt hats 89c up. Yours For Bargains J. Frank Hendrix General Merchandise Let Us \ Gin Your Cotton WE are now ready to gin your Cotton, and will pay the highest market price if you want to sell your Cotton in the Seed. We will ap­ preciate your business and guarantee first-class service. When you bring your cotton to town drive down and see us “Yours For Good Service” Green Milling Co.; T * Ifr >!■ »1« >1» III IfI ♦ ♦ »1» »E * COUGHS Beware of a cough that hangs on. Ask us about the Guaran­ teed Cough Remedy and Cure- the Cough before something worse develops. .Visit Us Often Let Us Serve You. Three (3) acres sold off to Jacob I Hege1Jr. TERMS OF SALE: This the 23rd day of 1932 J. BENBOW JONES,'Trustee, Cash. j ! November, § IGrand’s Pharmacy g On The Square jj I Phone 21 Mocksville N. C. g i S MUtuiiiiiiiitiinm niiihttnimiiiiiiiiiuin MR. FARMER! W e A re In Better Position To Handle YOUR COTTON Than Ever Before We Appreciate Your Business^- • FOSTER & GREEN Near Sanford Motor Tc BUXL ffHE DAVlE RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, K C, NOVEMBER 30, How Poor Is North Ca- Vj rolina? ' We have done so much boosting in the state, over whn we are and what we have done, thnt we grow accustomed to the large figures offer to speak for some of our possessions and doings. On the other hand we complain at times of <>ur provertv. It is interesting to read these facts and figures from the University News Letter, coming from Dr E. C. Branson: “ We are so noor that our insur­ ance policies of all sorts in 193L a- mounted to only $2 991,310 000 Sup­ pose we spell that out and Iouk at it for a moment. Two billion, nine hundred ninety-one million, three hundred fqrty thousand dollars is the tjtal of the risks we paid insurauce premiums on in 1931 The premiums we paid on this volume of risks in 1931 was $56,562,- OflD. Which is only ten million dol­ lars less than the tntal value of man­ ufactured products r.f Giston or Mecklenburg county in 1930 For every dollar of state and local taxes paid, we spent another 60: in insurance premiums. -For every dollar of school taxes paid, we spent another $1 20 in in insurance premiums. For every dollar of state and local taxes paid in 1928, we spent another $1.10 on luxuries "Necessities are the things we can’t do without and do; luxuries are the things we can d > without 2 nd don’t.” said a graceless wag the other dav Whatever the dnfinrion, nnr hill for luxuries in 19i8 was sixt>--ix million dollars. But that isn’t al1. F >r everA' do1- Iar we spent in star» and locai taxes 1-1 1931. we spent SI 5» on automo­ biles and their upkeep Our automotive bill alone was more than the total gross cash in come of the farmers of North Caro­ lina in 1931-32—more by hear 20 mil­ lion dollars. A people that can spend §56 562,- OOO in insurance premiums, $65,937,- 000 on luxuries, §96.000,000 in state and local taxes, and $143,105,000 on motor cars, tires, repairs and re­ placements, license plates, gas. grease and oil can hardly De called poor.” _______________ Join The Marines. The United States Marine Corps Recruiting Station, Post OEBce Building, Savannah, Ga., under the command of Major E M. Reno lias announced that a limited uum ber of vacancies for that branch of service will be filled ciuriag; the month of December and January. Careful selections will be made in filling these vacancies as the duties, of: the Marine Corps are varied and require men who can learn to fami­ liarize themselves with ali the va­ rious features of the military sei- vice ashore and afloat. Application bv mail or in person ot. high school graduates of good character between the ages of 18 and 30 will be giveu consideration. ■ Scientists tells us a blow on the head or sudden shock sometimes transforms a man of gloomy or stu­ pid cast of mind into an active and alert citizen We know several a- round here who might be greatly benefited with applyiug this re­ medy by a sleuge hammer blow. Baptists Reiterate Pro­ hibition. "W e solemnly and earnestly pro­ test any and all proposals and efforts 1 to have the Volstead law so amend- |ed.or changed by the Congress of . the United States as to legalize so- called light wines or beer or both ” ’ This crisp and unequivocal protest I was approved by an overwhelming Ivote of lhe Baptist State Conven j tion at Charlotte Tuesday. It was introduced bv Dr. W. L Poteat, president emeritus of Wake Forest College. N j one knows more : about the effect of the liquor traffic from a scientific and sociological standpoint than Dr. Poteat. , Though rmblic addresses and writ . teu articles he has been doing heroic work in recent years as a champion of prohibition. W hat he says is not mere words but facts, aud facts cannot be erased. The Baptists intends to send their resolution to the members of the State’s delegation in Congress. It would be well also to send copies to i members ot the State’s General As semblv. It is to be expected that [ efforts will be made during the next ses>ion of the Legislature to loosen up the Tarlington Act which is the prohibition law in this State supplementing the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act. And ali such efforts should be t ff^ctuallv blocked at the outset. Xow that two Christian denomt nations with as large memberships a* the Methodist aud Bapti-st bodies have declared emphaiicallv and di­ rectly that they are opposed to any weakening of the prohibition laws, the chanct of changing the laws in the State seems remote indeed.— . Winston Journal. Libby And Ab Free. W inston-Salem, Nov. 15.—H alt­ ing a pretty larceny trial for a brief and unspectacular interlude, the state of North Carolina today wiped out the murder charge it had placed against Libby Holman Reynolds and young Albert W alker shortly after the shooting last July of Smith Reynolds, tobacco millionaire husband of the former and chum of Walker. Solicitor Carlisle Higgins nol prossed the case with a brief an noun^ement that a thorough study of the evidence agaisnt the erst­ while idol of Broadway and the 1 9- year old Winston Salem youth con­ vinced him the state would not be juslified in pressing the charges. "In my opinion,” he said, "a trial up the evidence we have would prbduce one result only—a verdict of acquittal.” The case was officially ended at 1 2:20 p. m., when Judge A. M. Stack, presiding in Superior court, directed the clerk to entef the order of nol pros, discharge the defend­ ants and release their$2 5 ,0 0 0 bonds. Adventured In Crime. Considering the general practice in such cases the three young people who robbed the bank at Rockwell were entitled to the parole. But one could wish that the governor had not injected tnto it the state ment that it “ is the general feeling of those familiar with the facts that the crime was committed in a spirit of adventure ra*her than any crim­ inal intention.” How do they gtt the distin tion between adventure and ciimiual intent? The young people deliberately planned the hold-up and carritd it through. They divided the money and invest­ ed in clothes. Oh, ves it was an adventure. But it was the same sort of adven­ ture that any robber engages in when his purpose is to get money for his own purposes. There was no evidence of a pu.pose to repent and return the money; to carry it back and laugh it voff! as a joke. If it be said that these young people are so simple-minded that they did not discern the euormity of the crime, and one ol them a school teacher, then they should have Deen sent to an institution for morons instead of state prison. We mav all hope that the punish­ ment has been sufficient to make an impression not only on the vic­ tims but on others who may have such form of adventure in mind. But the sugg<-stion that the roibery was prompted by a spirit of adven­ ture rather than by criminal in­ tent—which mav be expected from defense counsel pleading for 'len- ie-icv—appears in the light of an excuse when coming trom the gov­ ernor, although he is siuiplv repeat­ ing what may have been said to him. It is calculated to modify the gravity of the offending and to modify the impression that might be made for good. The a;t showed the intent and there was nothing in it to indi cate that the robbery was not seriously iutended.—Greensboro News, Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of tbe late J. M. Jones, of Davie county. North Carolina, notice is hereby 1 given all persons holding claims against the said estate, to present them to the undersigned for payment on or before Oct. 7th. 1933. on this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AM persons in­ debted to the said estate, will please make immediate payment. This Oct. 7, 1932. W. C JONES. Admr. of J. M. Jones. Dec’d. The fellow who advanced the theory that ‘Man wants but little here below,” must have but a limit­ ed circle of acquaintances among h s fellow men. AS a m atter of fact there is little man does not want here below. And what he fails to fret in this world he expect to find in the next. Some of the worst slams we’ve ever heard on a fellow citizen’s good; name name from men v.ho boasted of the fact that they never drank- smoked, or used profane language. It is always amusing to hear the fellow who has lied out of 98 per cent of his taxes ,tel’, how the coun- tvyppuld save money 011 its pur ■ chases and employes. Claim Wets Will Rule House. New York, Nov. 11—Wets have piled up a rock bottom strength ot 259 votes, in the 1933 congress, which probably will meet next Spring in special session on call of President Roosevelt. Drys were beaten down to 78 seats I in tlie 1933 bouse. Thirteen new c mgi essmeu promised during the I campaigu to support their respective 1 national phttorni prodibition planks ; bot hof which were pledged to !change prohibition. I There are 85 new congressmen j classed as doubtful. These figures ; in every case tend to minimize wet gains in the 1933 house of repre­ sentatives. They are not based on I classifications of organizations op­ posed to or supporting prohibition. The figures were comgiled by the I United Press through checking every congressional cannidate dur­ ing the campaign.—Ex. AU persons who renew their subscrip­ tions and all new subscribers will re­ ceive a 19-33 Blum’s Almanac free. Call 5tnd get your copy today. No New Lexington Post Master Soon. Lexington Democrats who might like to be postmaster in the David­ son county capital will be in no par­ ticular huri;y about starting cam­ paigns to that end. The j ib won’t be open .vet for about three and a half years, as Postmaster T. E. Mc­ Crary received his third four-year CrImmission last May. About 20 years ago a dispute arose between contestants and a new appointment was delayed for many months, then a four-year commission was issued, the arrangement has not since been disturbed and the last D ^mocratic postmaster served through Harding’s shortened term and well into the first C 'olidge administration before leaving office. USE COOK’s C. C. G Relieves LaGrippe, Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat and Croup. In Successful Use Over 30 Years Send us your subscription and receive a 1933 Blum’s Almanac free. Don’t - wait too long. Lazy Colon Makes . Your Life Miserable Laugli at money worries If your colon is free of poisonous waste* Here's Nature’s way to banish sickness. If you are constipated, bilious, have indigestion, dyspepsia, sour, stomach, the new t6nic tablet, C0L0NEX9 con­tains pepsin, yeast, bile salts, pan- creatin, peppermint and vegetable tonics—the very same agents Nature manufactures in your body to elimi­nate poisons, aid digestion, and cause natural bowel movements. It’s un­natural to drench the system with artificial enemas or powerful drugs. Take a few pleasant COLO JTEX tab­lets and purify your system Nature’s way.' This valuable formula would be very expensive compounded on physician's prescription, but you can get a sani-taped package‘containing 28 lemon-colored tablets for only 60 cents at any drug store. Ninety per. cent of human ailments come from clogged colon, so if you are not feel­ing well try C0L0NEX today on guaranteed satisfaction or money back basis For Nerve Exhaustion9 Loss of Flesh and Weakened Vitality, Irogen Is Ideal Tonic Remedy North Carolina Man Tells Why He Thinlts It Is “The Best Medicine in the World.”—-Great Prescription Quickly Re- - vitalizes the Blood and Restores Vigorous Health. The number of victims of nervous exhaustion and general breakdown is steadily increasing in the United States, according to the statistics of health experts. It appears, from their reports, that nature has failed io provide for the abnormal strain of modern business and social life, and it is not surprising that the nerve cells give away. When the nerves are deranged the digestive organs are impaired, food ceases to yield the proper nourishment, the blood becomes impoverished, insomnia appears, and the usual result is a general nervous breakdown.Men and women who get in this condition, or who feel it approach­ ing, need a powerful but safe res­torative tonic, which will build up and strengthen the entire system and, at the same time, act directly upon the digestive and assimilat­ing organs. HAS PHENOMENAL SUCCESS IROGEN’S success has been phe­nomenal. Although the first pack­age was put on the market less than a year ago, the sales in this vicinity have already run into thou­ sands of bottles, and letters are pouring in unsolicited from people in every walk of life, telling of ths wonderful# relief it has afforded from suffering and general physi­cal weakness. One of these, which is typical, comes from A. D. Ballard, of Bilt- more, N. C., near Asheville, the father of six children. Mr. Ballard writes that he noticed a fallin- o£f in weight, accompanied by contin­ uous backache, with touches of rheumatism and weak kidneys. “After taking only one bottle of IROGEN, I found that I had gained five pounds,” he writes enthusias­tically. “AU the pains in my back have gone, I feel strong and fit for a day’s work every morning, I sleep well and am always hungry at meal times. I believe it is the best med­ icine in the world.”NOT A PATENT MEDICINEIROGEN is not a patent medicine. It contains Food Iron, Nutritious I’.lait, valuable digestives and other famed tonic aids of recognized medicinal value. V/hr.t this powerful reconstruct­ive medicine has done for countless thousands of people everywhere, scores of whom are residents of this vicinity, it is fair to assume it will do for you.IROGEN may be obtained in cither liquid or concentrated tablet form. At leading druggists and dealers, in medicine everywhere, in- cJuding LeGrand’s Pharmacy, Mocksville, Ni G. Cooleemee Drug Store, Cooleeraee,N. C. N^W ONLY ONE DOLLAR. J W. P. S PEAS, M. D. * I Room 324 R. J. Reynolds | T Building | Winston-Salem, N. C. *4* J Practice Limited to Disease I I Of TheEyeandFictingGIasses $ I Hours 9-12: 2 -5 ** DR. E. C. CHOATE DENTIST Office Second Floor Front New Sanford Building Office Phone HO Residence Phone 30. Mocksville. N. C > BRST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE, N. C. B E S T IN SU PPLIES DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST Office In Anderson Building Mocksville. N. C. Phones: Oiiice 50 Residence 37 WANTED! We want the im­ portant news hap­ penings from every section of the coun­ ty. Drop us a card or letter if a new vo­ ter arrives at your home; if your moth- er-in-Iaw comes on a visit or dies; if the son or daughter gets married or anything worth mentioning. Old papers for sale. CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME Distinctive Funeral Service to Eirery One [AM BULANCE - , - - EMBALMERS Main St. Next To Methodist Church Day Phone 4803 ' Night Phone 4811 or 163 i'm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ii»;:ii:m »»m in » iiHKKH«iii»i»»m»iiin»n iin ii»m a a PLEASE PAY ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ t'¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥*★★.ft★★*★★*it-A**AA**A A ★ • ★★★*★★★★Ir★★★★**i*★*★***★t* k / * 1 *★** . K Ar ***★ NOW! Yesterday we requested a De­ linquent Subscriber to settle his ac­ count with us, and he replied: “I am honest, and I will pay you if I live. If I die and go to heaven I will send it to you. If I die and do not go to heaven I will hand it Ar★★★★★A-+ *★★Arit★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★Ar★★★★★•*•★★ ★★★Ar★•Ar to you We think most of our Subscrib­ ers are honest, but we need money now to meet obligations. Please let us hear from you. THE DAVIE RECORD. P. S. W hen your son or daughter leaves for College send them The Record. A special rate to students. •Ar Ar -Ar ★ •Ar •Ar £ Tr Ar Ar , Ar •A* ★ * * Ar ic ★ Ar ★ ★ ★ k Ar A* Ar *rAr Ar Ar ★ .* + v ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ "Ar ★ *• Ar ★ ★ . ★ ir 'ir Ar★★★ $