Loading...
07-July' -L • :'7 ■ 7 ^ ■ ioistrator’s m ,, Uualifiedasari - V%Miss Jennie B niiri*strator f OfDaviecounry f c 11' <2 * hereby given Jfi Z th C ?Samst the said es,5 SOn6 C S ,tOhaI uOdersignedta^ . to »sa.d estate. areAU PertoA nmedia(ieH ^ P o . : Miss Jennie f A5 AM. AdA l ■ROCK, A tty Howell,D^ r f ts r IN r a d io s ^ N G R A D IO C o m ocksville N r I sSTIN Su p p l ie s JNERAL HOME EMBAfjJJgJjg ^dist Church fo K ^ i * Wtt M ceitb CiRcyLAtibN THE d a y I N f o r I I 2C p ERMILE “K t d " T,CK™ . eS S 1'15 “ *>■ t Traveled j paym ent of proper 1Jo surcharge. Jime and using the Southern Service pf T rain Travel. Charlotte. N. C. S y s t e m e ie rd l d e s t , M o s t | d P a p e r ! o u n t y . Only Year. I i p t j o n T o Y o u r s I n D i s t a n t T h e y W i I l ^ k l y N e w s H o m e C o u n t y IECORD O f F e a t u r e s F i n d I n A n y i i s C o u n t y * t o p r i n t y H IAfcGEST IN THE CdUNTY. THEY DON’T LIE. "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS ftUINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAlN.' VOLT N P Whi ' Th / I .M O C K S V IL L E , N O R T H C A R p L iN A 1 W E D N E S D A Y ; JU L Y G hei bur ONG AGO. A ng In Davie Before nobiles and Rolled fo*e. icr I, June 29 . 1909 -) ■j T. B. B ailey spent ton shopping. .. R . P . A nderson t in A sheville. y R attz is visiting Jter R attz1 in Salis- : • Baker, w ho h as been q ch better. = > Heitm an and d a u g t- l I a y are visiting rela- 1 tinia \ia K ing w ent to Corne- ■n to vi iit friends. ' -Ttle G raham has retu rn eii: r.. from a visit to friends Th Leu • - Jl,. Helen M eroney returned TfWiy from a delightful v isit w ith re.atives at Lenoir. Cleve Kimbrough spent S unday wLh relatives at M t. U lla. T. J. Byerly spent S atu rd ay w ith friends in Salisbury. Mis. Helen Rich, of F arm ington, sSr', last week In tow n w ith h er parent Mr an<i M rs. M . R Cd.’ffia His n -n,a will be sorry to learn ch Ae ;;rj,ts Jiness 0f B r. Jam es iJiusire at bis hom e here. G. W. H errick, of C ollege Station, Texas, was in tow n a few days last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. G F u rch es1 of 0lHesyille1 snent last,w eek w ith re- Mrs. J. F. M ooie and children are spending some tim e w ith rela tives near Calahaln. Master Tom W hitley h ad th e misfortune to fall and get h is leg torn very badly on a nail T uesday evening. Dr. M artin dressed th e wound, which will lay T hom as up for a week or two. Miss Lillie Foster, w ho has been quite ill for sevetal weeks, is som e better. The Kincaid lum ber m ill near, the depot, will begin operations at an early date. Dr. E . M. GrifBn has com pleted his new. residence at F arm ington, and moved into th eir new hom e last week. T he b u ild in g .is very pretty, and it strikes us th a t th e doctor will not rem ain single very much longer. Misses M arjorie and M ary N ell Hartman and M argaret B row n, of Farmington, visiten a t th e hom e of T. Max Brock S unday. A new coat of paint has been given the M ethodist parsonage at Farmington, w hi .h adds m uch to its appearance. A num ber of M ocksville and Davie county people w ent dow n to Raleigh on th e excursion S aturday. The big lot sale in M ocksville' last Saturday w as w ell atteuded. The lots brought from $ 45 to $ 2 0 0 each. T he lots are on M aple A ve­ nue, and a num ber -of those wbo- purchased lots w ill build on them in the near future. Thos. W . Bost, form erly of South' River, b u t now of D urham , will wed Miss A nnie K izer, of S alisbury, m St. John's L uth eran church.. Tom holds a position as reporter on the D urham H erald . " Frank Spencer, ah old D avie boy, but now of S outh C arolina, w as 3. >935 N U M B E R so VaIueOf Owning Home. D urham — M iss H elen C orpening, pf N ew ton, w as declared w inner of the $ too first prize in the K eesler essay contest, sponsored annually am ong h ig h school students by the N o rth Carolina- B uilding and Loan league, at its recent convention in W inston-Salem , according to a state rnent issued by W . A . B iggs 1 of D urham , president of the league. M iss K ath erin e Jackson, of Eliza- th C ity, w on second prize of $50 and E ugene F rancis, of W aynes ville, won th ird prize of $25. T en contestants participated in th e state contest, w hich is th e culm ination of school, county and district contests ‘•T he K eesler E ssay Contest” M r. Biggs stated, is sponsored by the league p rim arily 'to prom ote habits of th rift and saving and to create a desire for hom e ow nership am ong th e high school students of the state. A great deal of enthusiasm w as dis played in the contest th is year, w ith several thousand students partici pating. M iss C orpening represented C ataw ba county and district 9 in the contest. H e r essay follow s: T h e V alue O f O w ning A H om e H o m eisw h ere the h eart is, or so w e have been told countless num bers of tim es, but it seem s to m e th at th e h eart is w here th e hom e is.’ Y o u tn o w yourself th a t your hom e m eans m ore to you than any other place on earth ; you do your best to m ake it com fortable,' attractive and livable because u is your hbm e and it does belong to you alone, , Do ypu not feel a gfaw .of pride, .sweep.- Iatives neat F S r a ln g to f i i^ ^ ^ Tng^Ver^YO^W TreneVer ^ o u ^ m n n united in m arriag e. last w eek to Miss G ertrude Brow n, of W inston. Little Miffi L ouise S m ith visited' relatives in S alisbury last w eek. * M. B. . R ichardson started th e new year? w ith 150 h e n s,'w h ic h from the egg and chicken recepts, up to this (time, .has brought him WtU 1165 . H e.spent'$ 9 0 for feed which left him a profit of $75. : 7 Let's see! Can you nam e.th e Iat ®st m°vie a c to ro r ess who is suing » r divorce? 7 " of hom e? 'D o you-not feel a surge .of lo y a lty and inexpressible love every tim e .‘hom e’ is m entioned? Y ou are happy in the assurance th at you have a hom e in w hich it is your privilege to. live your Hfe w ith no shadow 'of a landlord hanging over you. Y ou'rest secure in the know ­ ledge th at w hat you p u t in to th at hom e is p u t there to stay forever if it pleases you. B utT he m an w ho lives in a rented bouse —does he ever w ant to beauli fy th e place - or presere it in any way? Does he w ant to plant flow­ ers and shrubbery or have the room s redecorated? O f course not! If an y th in g like th at'sh o u ld be done, he leaves it up to his landlord and m ore th an likely he never gets bis desired im provem ents. If he does,- rest assured th a t he will pav again and again for his acquired house beauty w hen he pays his m onthly sents. M orever, in renting a house a ten an t is never able to secure his ideal hom e; he m ast tak e w hat he can get and be th an k fu l for it. T he hom e-ow ner builds his ideal hom e, furnishes it according to his own desires, and lives- happily in b a r m'onious surroundings. - T o the juvenile court in-N.ew Y ork city m any.children are brought each w eek for slight and serious m isde m eanprs. A c'investigation into the lives of the different children show ­ ed th a t over three fourths of them cam e from tenem ent districts or lived in rented houses w here little o r n o th in g is done to m ake, the hom e and the life there: pleasant ail'd attractive. W hen asked as to -why ,they did so very’.little to beautify th e ir abodes, the parents of the children responded-, - “ W hy should we? W e don’t ow n. these places w hy, w e m ay not even be living here a m onth from now .” Sb i t is th a t the children of today, the citi­ zens of tfae future, rem em ber, suffer because they-do not have w hat-they can call a real borne. C areful stir veys of train in g schools and prison cam ps show th a t few of the inm ates .ever Lrieyv any actu al; hom e; Nfow they, too. suffer because they received none of the7 ad vantages th e hom e. . Do you want; your child to becom e as one of these j u s t m entioned? H e will and correct'environm ent in hit youth. It is not difficult to see w bv tenem ent sections of a city haye- s_ m uch low er m orale than’th at. JsfTy. section of hom eow ners, for dwellers, in rented houses are usually. Ihecjast; of people who haven’t enough pride enough am bition to secure for them - selves'and th eir fam ilies a real hom e: As a consequence, their-children are handicapped. On th e other hand, a com m unity of hom eow ners develops pride, am bition, culture,, stability, and establishes a habit of thrift T h e : children of such people are those whom A m erica is proud to claim as her ow n. Do you not, see, therefore, th e'v alu e of really living-; in a hom e Instead of m erely existing in~a rented-house—if not for your selves, at least for your children? . N ow . in conclusion, let m e say th a t hom e ow nership is congruous w ith, and com es from m an’s love of hom e; th a t hom etiw nersbip.does not dw ell m erely in ; the present but- reaches far, far into the future, and so m akes every m an a builder-for Omi com ing years; th at hom e ow nership brings about the w orthy practice of tn rift, and as a result, is a blessing to our co u n try ; th ath o m e ownership; instills dem ocratic principles and prepares for com m endable citizen-: ship. C onsidering those facts and also the fact th a t the building and loan associations of today offer siich excellent opportunities for acquiring a system atic m ethod of saving and; m ake it possible for every m an W hd so desires to become.4t hom e owner;- do you not th in k th a t every A m eri­ can citizen,,. w het h erhe;b.e^rea.ttoi; sm all, rich or poor, snbutcTconSiaet it not only a privilege, b u t. a duty as well to own bis ow n.hom e? A nd then surely his heart could- be w here his hom e is! Listen To This. Betw een 150 and 200 “ Deserving Dem ocrats” applicants to r the_~65 places as Btatewide patrolm en will shortly begin training U nder-Ofiicers of the present patrol. A fte r. study- for four to six weeks,-the successful recuits will enter services on the highw ays w ith the 56 m en now mem­ bers o f the patrol. This will , then m ake i 2 1 .of these m en on the high­ ways. w ith Captain. F arm er in his swivel office chair directing-opera­ tions from Raleigh. W hatw e would like to know is, if-,the taxpayers of the state will be called upon to pay the salary and expenses of these 150 to 200 D em ocrats while they are taking their training? W e don’t suppose they are so. patriotic that they would give th eir tim e and board them selves for four to six weeks and take a chance ton being one. of the lucky'65 to ride around over the state on one of thejshiney new motorcycles th a t the state has recently purchased. The state-w ide patrpl is a costly luxury b u t the D em ocratic hetm en m ust be-served.—U nion Republican. fement Committees Of The 57th Annual Masonic : Picnic at Mocksville, N. 7 C., August 8th 1935. M anagers: ■I B. Johnstone, C hairm an ' K nox Johnstone W . I. H ow ell i R . B. Sanford : S7 R. L atham H E . Barnes ' Jacob S tew art R . C. G oforth B ask tt Com m ittee: J J- L arew 1 C hairm an 1 C. G . Leach F. H . Bahnson • J. P. L eG rande L P . G raham H . C. M eroney ? . G Brow n E . P . F oster D r. W . M . L ong - J. F . Johnson W . I. H u n t T . C. Pegram • Si. A - C arnes - W . A . K irk F. R . G arw ood. R adio Com m ittee: : 'H ; C. M eroney, C hairm an R. L. F ry v P. S. Y oung " R . L - LyerIy G ates and G rounds: ’ J. W- G artner, C hairm an E . P . F oster G cH vT bm iinson s.'< E :,caiL and TaW es; E P. F oster ' . E . E . K oontz C. A . Sm oot ; H om es F or O rphans D r. R . P . A nderson, C hairm an B. 0 . M orris W . I. H ow elf Refreshm ent Com m ittee: Z N . A nderson L- M ^T ntterow M. W aters H . H . L anier W N . A nderson W- M H ow ard K nox Johnstone, Chairm an P. S. Y oung . ' E . C M orris. 63 N. C. Plants Raleigh, June 15. — Tixty-three m anufacturing planta in N orth Ca­ rolina dosed, their doors during the period from M arch I’ through June 8. the state departm ent of Tabor re­ ported today, butassigned no parti cular reason for. the action. From reliable sources it was learn­ ed. however, th a t th e- departm ent had been inform ed by mill operators' th a t the processing taxTvas.the mgr jo r cause. 7 F ifty-four of Jb b 63 w ere textile establishm ents; w ith the rem ainder hosiery plants. In addition . to the outright closings.2 1 otherraills have cut off one shift: and are now operat­ ing on a half-tim e basis.^ Of this num ber. 14 are textile mills and sev­ en hosiery plants. V ^ Because o f-: the curtailm ent and 9lT48afifsons hspe" beep throw n out of em ploym ent. *the de- lih rtn i^ it^ lie p iS te ^ ;. ‘ In M onticeilo 1 Indl;: W.VP: G afr field floticed.a hard -obiect in. his m outh'and rem oved J t; : to. discover fiis7 Reminder Of “Old 97.” The Southern Railway Co., will at an early date sta rt tearing up the tract betw een Danyille and ^Lim a, Va.. on which a discontinuation of service, has been authorized by the I. C C. The short stretch of two miles was form erly the trunk'line betw een A t­ lanta and W ashingtonTtut was.aban- doned when m ajor im provem ents w ere undertaken 1 m any years ago. T he old cur ing trestle over which the fam ous “ Old 97” plunged to de Struction one Sunday afternoon many years ago, will also be torn - a- way. In th a t wreck, the engineer, firem an , and trainm en as well - as m ore than a dozen .railway clerks w ent to th eir doom. Pay 6 Million Dollars Taxes. - According to figures released from th e internal revenue office in -Nash- viliej the people of Tennessee; during the last'eleven m onths have paid, in processing? taxes on coin, w heat, hogs; cotton, etc., the staggering sum of $6,193;101. C ; r ' LThe m oney has gone to .pay for corn. w heat. hogs and-, cotton th at was.'never raised, and it all cam e off the consum er who. had no sponsor no-code and no .profectipn against the unw arranted raised ;in his cost of living.^ Johnson City News. .-. |T h e recent h a i l p f o r |||n ^N ash1 C ounty devasted -vstotiou tw o m iles w ide and abbut^i 5'-m iles long w ith cotton (being dam aged, m ore th an tobacco. - .G et your fabts firat and then you Cap’n Farmer’s Band. W hile it w as anticipated th a t the enlarged highw ay patrol would be in evidence next m onth it appears that the 64 m en to be added, selected from the m any hundreds of applicants,: will be trained for weeks and it will not be until A ugust th at the full force get under way. The training and selection, one is left to believe, will be a m a tte r of m erit, the perm anents selected from those showing under training the best qualifications Which seem sto m ean tb a t the high­ way force Will have the m erit of qualifying under training rath er than political influence—if it w orks out as it sounds.' > The division, or the full force will be divided into three troop®, each with a lieutenant, four sergeants, four corporals and 31 m en. T nat is the idea of the division com m ander, Cap’n. F arm er, who should evidently attain higher title—m ajor a t least, or probably ,colonel. H etm an F ar­ m er would have troop headquarters in three definite sections of tbe state with 20 definite and established sub stations to r each troop, a total of 60 substations to be located in county seats and principal cities.' Instiad of the increased pay authorized by the legislature Com m ander Farm er would have th e state provide sub­ sistence for its troopers, for each of them a definite'and easily accessible home:- It is the hope th a t the system of substations can be sec up and co­ ordinated- w ith the . contem plated radio spstem and w ith the sheriff’s forces in the counties. The present pay schedule is $90 per m onth for m em bers.of the patrol,.$100 -for ser­ geants and (^rpni^ls .jtn d f $ to r Tieotenan Farm er him self doing the talking*: The pav of the m en will be increased or they will be given subsistence,’the Farm er preference being for sub­ sistence. I t is noticed th at tbe patterroller’s will be organized down to the last word under the F arm er schedule, with com plete equipm ent and every­ thing... Reading the Farm er plans as detailed by tbe Raleigb News and Gbserver the wonder grew w hether the com pleteness 0 f detail bad crowded out the'real purpose of the organization and the reason for the increase in num bers and the m any hundreds of thousands Iof dollars provided fo r equipm ent and cost of operation. B ut as an after-thought the hetm an is quoted: We are going to reduce fatalities on the highways. I’m . sure. W e've got to reduce them . The people of the state are dem anding it. Saving lives.and property, on the road is our job.—The-few er people we have to arrest, the better we like it. The dem and of th e people to r re­ duction of casu alties is recognized and tbe farm er believes, it can be done. B ut the well-wishers of the patrol may be jarred by’the in jection of the idea th at m ore lives and pro­ perty can be saved w ith few er ar rests. Causes one to wonder-w heth­ er the Farm er has yet caught tbe full purpose of the patrol. H ilfherto he has operated it on the idea of an escort, fo r funerals and parades and the prom inent. H e seem s to recog­ nize th at there ,is dem and fo r real work b u t still be shies off, from- ar­ rests, o ris concerned [that- they be few " .'•,.■■■ ...'■ r V —- W ell, we shall see.; The training and the selection by jh e ^ t—if th at is it—sound fine. B ut w e are yet t0 see w hether th at training includes the best and m ost efficient m ethods of laying the reckless w reckers by the heels and landing them - in jail. T hegood fellow, arid political pur­ pose idea has not;-been obliterated from the F arm er m ind. — Greens­ boro News. To Get Booze Stores. W ilsou ®hd E dgecom bej-the tw o cohfiSpi to voteTiTst o n tef. the lo- cal .option act passed b y th e . last •leglsiature ia itri ^ n a l hours— piled up overw helm ing m ajorities . last w eek in.favor O f' abandoning the. statu tp rv d ry regim e of ahe T u r­ lington act for th e legal sale of Ii- ,U ,t c e . m m m Lawless, Reckless Was Patrol Escort. (R. R. Clark, in Greensboro News) Item s from .report of patrpl es- Tt: ; Traveling over Route ! by way of Henderson, the patrol-escorted car . bearing the President’s w ife m ade the trip from the border to Raleigh in one hour and TO m inutes. Tbe distance is approxim ately 75 miles Which m eans th at the law ■ and speed records w ere broken under the guidance of the highway patrol escort, headedb? Cap’n Farm er ,th e chief thereof. The high and lawless speed w as unneccessarv to m eet'an - em ergency to. land M rs. RooseVelt in Raleigh one tim e. I t was publish­ ed th at she told her chauffeur, w hen she left W ashington, th a t she Lad to be in Raleigh a t 4 o’clock. It w as also published th a t she reached there a t 3:15, w ith 45 m inutes to spare. The 45 m inutes used on - the tr ip . from the V irginia line to Raieigh would have brought the'speed easily w ithin the lim it specified.by'law , which highw ay patrols are supposed to enforce, Landing in RaleigH Mrs. Roosevelt was quoted as Bayingath a t the speed was faster than she w as accustom ed to travel b u t that:;she, felt safe w ith the escort. Intitna- tion th a t it was faster- ^than ^she would have directed of her own mo­ tion b u t she felt compelle) to keep a- Iong w ith the escort and being a guests didn’t feel a t liberty to /call them down. Since she g o t to the destination whole she felt . it neces­ sary to express satisfaction for, ..that altoohgh ahe did: m ention the 'spieed- was faster than she- trdveled' r.i--.- ; Lltiseem s'toatr'w heri'T^ tokei-Pto i^ e n m t^ cttizen B in a to w t h ^ feetitneceffiarjrtosriiashsiieeSj lim its. :It doesn’t m ake a good ;im- . pression on th e-plain'U itizenrv'''th at Governors, wives of Presidents "and the like are hurled a t breakneck speed in dt finance of the law and w ith some peril to the traveling pul - lie who may not have been w arned to keep out of the way, to g et off the-road. N either is it complimen* tary to prom inent guests to m ake them unwilling parties, as M rs, Rooseveit was to such lawless per­ form ances, not to m ention tbe dang­ er which may m ake them nervpus. But it seems th at the officials escorts N orth C irolina provides have no better sense than to feel tb at reck­ less speed on such occasions is a p art o f th e j)b . Tdmadge Con inues Attack. " v G w ernorE ugene T alm adge,H e - m ocrat.^of Georgia, renew ed his b it­ ter attacks on the Roosevelt adm in­ istration in a speech W ednesdayiof the past week before the Chfcago Association of Commence : “ The experim ental legislation (find the policies of the- present adm inis­ tration in W ashington,” - be 'siid, “ have retarded-and suppressed a natural: sound, healthy recovery th at was due to th e Am erican peo- ple. • . “ We w ere due fo r a? n atu ral"re­ covery* beginning in the sp rin g of 1933... ?■... tV “ The present adm inistration spent millions of dollars destroying w heat, corn,- cotton, arid cottonseed, and fol­ lowed up this destruction w ith a 'd e ­ liberate plan of curtailm ent. Then, the taxes, started. . “ These taxes have bled; the Am eri­ can'people w hiter T h isp o lic y to o k millions of dollars out of the cfipn- - nels of trade, caused billions - of . A- meaican. dollars to be ^ se n t to ‘:for- eigri shores to im port the very things we had destroyed.” Big Gastonia MiiI Re- opens. '■ The Firestone ..Mill, of GaBtjgiia, form erly know rias L o rw M ill.^brie of tbe largest textile plants in,»the South, will reopen July 2i it ia ra n f norinced by the Firestone JireT rind;. Rubber Co . of A kron, Ohio, w hore-:. cently purchased the mill. . ■ T he plant will operate a t first on a 1 one-Bhift basis and will employ ap- . proxim ately SOO workers. . w .- ••. D'-' ' - .'t :S*’ ~ i'Jr WjVtZE1 ....'-“’.j '-.i-.-Si.-"; ■ V ^ ¥ S 1 D A flS RECORD, M b d tS V ftffi & 6 j ^ 3 . t93S IfiVi I If: THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRAME STROUD ■ • Editor, M em ber National Farm G range. TELEPHONE Bhjtered a t th^Poatoffice in Mocks- rille, M. C., as Second-class Mail m atter, M arch 3,1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - * I 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE - S 50 T he Record is short a few su b ­ scribers this week. A n honest m an w ill pay the editor as well as the preacher. F olks who read, a news* paper two or three years and then send word to stop the paper, that he doesn’t iDtend to pay for it, is too sorry to spend m uch tim e talk ­ ing about. H e m ay Ret by in this w orld, but the devil will get him in the next one. GOOD MAN GONE WRONG. W hen F ranklin Delano Roosevelt was running for President in 1932 he m ade m any speeches throughout the country. H e had m illions of adm irers who believed ju st about everything he said. M any folks have forgotten the w onderful prom ises he made during th at cam paign. N ext year the battle will have to be fought over again. It is m eet that we should at this tim e quote a few of the sayings of of the Piesident during the last cam paign. Listen to this prom ise: “ If you will elect m e as President, I will put every unem ployed m an to w ork, and will also reduce the fede­ ral debt 25 per cent, in one year af­ ter taking office.” T hese prom ises m ade m illions of votes for M r. Roosevelt, and as a result of them he was elected. H as he kept these promises? H e has held this im portant office for m ore th an two years, and up to this tim e he has m ade good on one prom ise, nam ely, to repeal the prohibition law s of the country and legalize the sale of liquor throughout the U nited S tates. A t the tim e he m ade these prom ises there w ere 12 ,000,000 un em ployed, and today M r. Roosevelt _ says him self th at the G overnm ent is feeding 21 ,000,000 people, to say nothing of the unem ployed that do not have to be fed. T he national debt, at the tim e of his promises, stood at about $17,000,000,000 T oday this debt has grow n to ap proxim ately $34 ,000,0 00,000, an in­ crease of about 100 per cent, instead of a decrease of 25 per cent. I t is tru e that the codes increased labor about 10 to 15 per cent, over wages received in 1932 , but w hat has this cost every m an, woman and child in this country today and for years to come? O ur taxes at th a t tim e am ounted to about 14 per cent, of b'ur incom e, b u t they now figure about 33 per cent, of the national incom e. Since the inflation of 40 per cent, of the gold content of our m oney, add to this your sales- tax approxim ately 7 par cent, on the 'average, also the advance in prices of every description. W e have about 11 per cent, increase in wages to those fortunate enough to have a job, and over 100 per cent, in crease in cost of living. W hen Mr. Roosevelt goes on the stum p next .year we w onder ju st how he is going to explain this w onderful prosperity to th e m illions of people whom he fooled in 1932 . In 1918 , M r W ilson w as elected on a prom ise to keep us put of w ar. H e was elected and asked Congress to declare war in a m onth after he was inaugurated. A s old A be Lincoln once rem arked, •‘.’Y ou can fool so m eo f the people all of the tim e, and all of the people som e of the Iime5, but you can’t fool all .of the people all of the tim e ” Bound Jo Federal Court. P aul E llis, of Cooieemee, and R obert PenniDger,: of Row an, w ere bound over to the OctoBer term of Federal court at Salisbury, on W ed­ nesday bv U. S. Com m issioner ^F. R. L eagans, on charges of violating the U . S. In te rs ta te Commerce laws. T he young men were charged w ith the larceny and receiving of a s e w in g m achine from a Southern Railw ay car in Cooieemee last N o­ vem ber. T he m achine was found in possession of M rs. G lenn Johnson near N orth W ilkesboro. who claim ­ ed she bought the m achine from the defendants last Decem ber. T he boys denied the charge, but after hearing the evidence w hich was presented by J. H . Payne, Southern Railw ay detective and an operative o fth e-U . S. D epartm ent of Justice,' the Com m issioner found probable cause and held the defendants for the Federal court, and in default of $1,000 bonds each, the defendants were comm itted, to the Davidson county jail at L exington, by D eputy U. S. M arshal Blalock. Ellis gave bond T hursday and was released from custody. Play At Farmington. A play entitled, “Mrs. Briggs of the Poultry Yard,” will be presented at Farm­ ington school auditorium, on Saturday evening, July 6th. at 8 o’clock. An admis­ sion of 10 and 15c will be charged. Pro­ ceeds to go to Farmington Gall Club. Add­ ed attractions will be string music and ice cream. Grant Lanier Passes. G rant L anier, 21 , died at the hom e of his parents, M r. and Mrs. H . H . L anier, in N orth M ocksville. T hursday evening, June 27th , fol­ low ing a long illness F uneral services were held at the hom e Sat­ urday afternoon a t 2:30' o’clock, conducted by bis' pastor, Rev. E . J. H arbinson, and the body laid to' rest in Rose cem etery. Surviving is the- parents, aDd a num ber of brothers and sisters. T he Record extends sym pathy to th e grief stricken fam ily in the death of their son and brother. G rant w as a good boy, and had m any friends who w ere saddened by his death. W. S.Guffv. M r. W infield Scott .Guffy, 77 years old, died June 23rdi at the hom e of his nephew , M r. D. A . G uf fy, in the Cool Spring com m unity. M r. Guffy had been in declining health, for the past tw o years and was critically ill for a week prior to his death. H e had m ade his home w ith his nephew at Cool Spring since last February. M r. G uffy w as a native of Davie county, having spent m ost of his life in this county. H e w a sth e la si of a fam ily often chidren. M r. Guffy was never m arried. F uneral services were held June 24th from Society B aptist church, conducted by Rev. J. G . WinkTer and Rev. W . L. M cSwain. Big Fire xVisits Mocfes- ville. Oneofthe w orst fires in m any years occurred in M ocksville shortly after 3 o’clock la s t'' W ednesday m orning, w hen the plant of the W . L. M oore L um ber Co., near the Southern depot, w as com pletely de­ stroyed, together w ith iIwo sm all cottages ow ned bv I. T . L yons and R ufus F urches, colored, and__occu- pied by E ssie Cam pbell and L illie B rittain, colored. Som e of the household goods w ere saved T he fire w as though to have started- in the boiler room of the m ill. T he local fire departm ent did fine w ork and saved a good deal of lum ber on the yards, and the sm all office build ing. M r. M oore did not have any insurance, and the loss, am ounting to around $10 ,0 0 0 , is a heavy blow. T h e entire tow n is sym pathizing w ith him . T he plant w orked num ber of m en, w ho are throw n out o f em ploym ent. I t is hoped th at M r. M oore -will be able to re build. So far as we can learn, there was no insurance on the two dw elling houses th at w ere burped A t least 500 people w ere present a'nd w atched toe flames. Attention Juniors. Mocksville Council No. 226 will have special features at m eeting July 11th. AU m em bers are requested to be present. ElbavilleNews ' M r. and Mrs. Claude Halcum , Al- phus Sherm er. of W inaton-Salem spent Sunday w ith their parent’s Mr. ; Mrs. gjpsrmer. -Mrs. Luiherripaiiey sp en t* a^while Sunday afternoon-w ith Mrs. N. B Bailey. '''V". The revival m eeting Will begin; at Baileys Chapel, Sunday, July 7 a t 3 o’clock in;the afternoon, 'w ith Rev. Mr: P. B Howard in charge Every- h uly is invited to attend this m ee‘- »“*• / Mrs. Sallie Howard. Mr>. Sallie C. Howard, 75. died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. 6. D, Moore, in Charlotte, on June 25th, following so extended illness. Funeral services were held at Fork Baptist church last Wednes day, conducted by Rev. J. L. Kirk and T I. Caudell, of Mocksville, and Rev. Frank Garrett, of Carton. Tenn. The body was laid to rest in the Fork graveyard. Sur­ viving Mrs. Howard, is eight children, 6 I. M. C and C. C. Howard, of Knoxville. Tenn.; Mrs. 6. D. Moore, of Charlotte; Mrs. L. G. Williams, Walter, L. B. and J. R„ Howard, all of Salisbury. Three sisters, Mrs. T. L. Howard, of Cornatzer; Mrs. Belle Davis, of Fountain City, and Mrs. Emma Everbardt, also of Tennessee. Mrs. How­ ard was a member, of Fork Baptist church, and had resided in Davie practically all of her life. Center News Burn Elkins, of Winston-Salem, spent the week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. S- Powell Missfes Pauline and Alene Walker, of near Mocksville-spent Saturday nite with Miss Polly Tutterow. Mr.. and Mrs. Winefield Cheshire of Har­mony visited at-the home of Mr. and'Mrs:B. F. Tutterow Saturday night. Miss Margaret Julian, of Kannapolis is spending sometime here with .her cousin Miss Johnsie Boger. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Greene and family spent Sunday in Winston-Salem the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cling Greene. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Dyson .spent Sunday in the mountains, of Western, N. C. Ray Dwiggins, of Winston-Salem spent the week-end here with his parents.. Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Murphy and family, of Salisbury visited here last week. . Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Dvson spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J,F. Ratledge. Mr. Mullis, of the school of Religion Duke UniversitK-rtsohd ucti^. a training , course at Center last week, which was well f • attended. Tv I There will be a IaWn party, here Satiir I day night July 6tb. sponsored by the Wo-1 mens Missionary Society. Everybody is invited. ^ *0 . e ^ ’ c o f ' 30 M o n th ly P ajT n en ts B alan ce. $5.00 CASH Allowance -For Your Old Stove ^ O n •i.: The.postoffice, bank arid som e of the M ocksville stores will close . to­ m orrow for the Glqfrious F o u rth .- (Formerly S. P. U. Co.) . N o, a p p lia n c e is b e tte r th a n th e serv ice b e h in d it. Fork News Notes. Mrs George Y oung, of W inston Salem, spent Iaat week here w ith her narents, M r. and Mre..John Dowell. Mrs. Stokes Shuler, and M rs. Allan Spillman, spent W ednesday w ith Mrs. J. M. Livengood. -• Peggy, small daughter-of. Mrs. Titi C arter, has been quite sick. The funeral of Mrs. Sallie H ow ard who passed away in C harlotte, was held here a t the B aptist C hurch on W ednesday afternoon, and the body laid to rest in Pork cem etery. Mr. and M rs. U . D. W yatt1 and children, and M rs. J. B. Sm ith, -of W inston-Salem, visited relatives here Sunday. ' Mrs. C. L. Aaron, and M rs. N ed Bailey, spent W ednesday afternoon in Mocksville. Mrs. L. R. C raver, and sm all daughter, Joanne, of W inston-Salem spent last week here w ith relatives. ; Mrs. H. B. Snyder and M rs. Bill Leach, of Mocksville, visited rela here Saturday. . Notice Of Classes For Davie County Midwives It is hoped that every person in the county that is interested in midwifery will attend at least one of these classes. We also hope that the mothers especially ex­ pectant mothers that depend on midwives for their care at child birth will attend one of these meetings. Each midwife is asked to bring her bag of equipment to the meeting for inspec­ tion, and-at this time their letter of re gistration will be renewed and new ap­ plications will be considered. We hope that the Drs. and Registers qf Vital Statistics will attend meetings and help with the instructions. A list of meet­ ing places. Advance—Community .Building, Friday, July S, 1935 at 9 a. m. Mocksville—High School Building, Saturday July 6, 1935 at 9 a. m. Farmington—High School Build­ ing, Monday, July 8,1935 at 9 a. m. Cana —Cana School.Building; Tuesday, ■ July 9 1935 at 9 a. m. . FLORA RAY, State Norse, LESTER P. MARTIN, County Physician Davie County Budget Appropri»o&$, T h e C om m issioners m et in reg u lar session this th est day 0f I A ll Present ’25 *55 00 f .36o.oo ^0.00 Ju ly . 1935- L . M . T U T T E R O W , S. M . B R E W E R . - T F R A N K H E N D R IX T h e follow ing budget w as presented, approved, and t l sani« or. dered filed in th e office of tb e R egister D eeds for a perion rtWeoty days as required by th e statu tes; EXPENDITURES: ^ 1 G eneral F u n d C ounty P oor F u a d C apital O utlay D ebt Service F u n d — R oads Schools: C u rren t E x p en se $ 971.88 D ebt Service 18 ,900.00 T o tal REVENUE: T a x L evy (0.75 on $10,5 00,0 0 0) S undry Incom e T otal SUMMARY OF LEVY: G eneral F u n d P o o rF u n d D ebt Service— C ounty C apital O utlay Schools: - C urrent E x p en se ! • D ebt Service j T o tal N T h e sam e ordered published and sent to Local Gov^ntneniCoi m ission at R aleigh for th e approval of sam e. I B O A R D O F C O U N T Y C O M M ISSIf/ L M . T utterow 1 Chairna A ttest '— ]■ W . T u rn er, C lerk. I {>7l'/5°oo .20c .61 c .279c .0 20c .19 c • 75C & T h e b e s t a s s o r t m e n t w e h a v e e v e r d i s p l a y e d - t h e b e s t p r i c e s for t h e s a m e q u a l i t y m e r c h a n d i s e i n m a n y m o o n s . E v e r y t y p e o f new m a t e r i a l f o r h o t w e a t h e r , w h i c h w e n o w b e l i e v e i s o n . L ookata f e w s p e c i a l s l i s t e d b e l o w ._____________________________________________ L A D IE S A N D C H IL D R E N ’S SH O E S 'S ty le s fo r e v e ry ' sum m er .sport and d re ss occasion, all w h ite k id ties, pum ps an d strap s. S ty les sm art, and cool. ' M E N ’S W h ite S H O E S T h e v ery n ew est sum m er sty le s in M en’s White S hoes a t a p rice you'll say is too good to b e tru e — $ 1 .99 .98 CfflLDBEiVS W H ITE SHOES A N D SANDALS 7 5 c t o $ 1 .1 9 W h i t e H a t s S hapes-.that a re sn ap p y and- new . - - -Look a t o u r p rices— 98c D r e s s P a n t s ;M en’s well-jm ade, fu ll-c u t sum m er dress p a n ts. W hite an d strip es. R educed to sell q u ic k — $ J.4 9 to $ I W a s h D r e s s e s A fin e new group ' of cool H ouse D resses in all th e leading new. m a­ terials. S tripes, checks, p laid s and p rin ts— S i l f c D r e s s e s - f SrouP of m ost charm ­ in g sum m er styles in plain an d p rin te d silks and voiles. M e n ’s R a i n P r o o f S U M M E R H A T S M e n ’s S t r a w H A T S * s P a n t s L o n g a n d S h o r t a l s o K n i c k e r s O N T H E SQUARE? M O C K SV ILLE, N f a s c in a t in g t ,] O F LOST M il I Qwjt.u. O y EdH ha l>.| Id u t c H -IR ISH m i ORT Collins, Colo., was I In early days, and thcT fat erg were much like ttJ intensely interested in I ipenings that came to I jn.'go, when an Irishman an came to Fort Collins| i gold and proceeded to 1 Iree1 the soldiers noticed I [s was repeated several jan to wish that the! tirce of all this wealth.^ jnt so far as to hire jilow the pair on their ne day the partners sd clie-la-Poudre, and their] ked behind Just out ofl Illan bad made one misl it figured on a long jol id not taken much In thd ilons with him. After! smell from his quarj ew to be entirely too tad tfian took time out to f jd prepare a square meal id while he was followf I a deep snow fell, blif is of the two minors, lie to follow them farthj On a later visit to Fortt Id pair invested In a bif elr packs, and a little id ised of the small beast! os. Apparently, businif ,en, one day, they caral ■ed and disgusted, and J Iar had killed the ox. ilt was during tills visit I id Dutch temperaments • each other. The two 1| ’ore, and bad got over ; I battle took place. Iij moment all past friend [tten, and each man triij ier. The Irishman wasl the two—the Dntchniaf fd died as a result of hi ow was a splendid cq jidiers to satisfy their fey grasped It eagerly, as a murderer, and mus| |unless he might be pera ie secret source of thef rope around his neck,| gued by the men in un jas his only chance to Iil ike it? Tell his secret 1 refuse, and be hung for| Perhaps the prisoner raid out-bluff his _cap| ‘opted, he Wonldi felt' Id die rather than Ifj ie; source of his gold I "Let's hang him a littj : him the feel of the ropef will loosen his tongue,” gestlon, and the unfortuj S i? ■..was hoisted Into the ► f him down,” and the rod -!/!!•jMed But the ezperimel Mtenient1 fear, and rough! iroved too much, and tlief ead. IgBilIy MelIns left Neba Bd went to Fort CollInJ fer for a sawmill on the [ Heoftenstoppedatt alfway on his route, Sn. One Saturday nlghtl ome tourists were anxioa on, who bad ridden awa| Dd had riot come back. an unsuccessful searcfl (lowed up next day, a | range story to telL E He had become confuj 0on before, he said, ony started to follow anl pghtfall. he was glad e| {ie animal Its head, deserted cabin, where I ox lay before the ddf PeCimens of ore sat on I Mellns was Interested, ue lost mine that the Pe Dutchman had worka _ °'d prospector, a b| Bhose mind had gone I to the mountains, and to find the cabin, oy’s story. J Sure enough, the cabinj |e had said, and a dim e trail to the mine—IeJ anyon. The old prospj anIty at the sight He Jath, and Melins hurried I see him dash into a Host Immediately dash owed by a bear! The or waS wild with rage. I pe leaped at MelIns1 a if he yonnger man coaid pw elf and get the old ^ mP- After that MeliI pore trips In search of 1 Previous to this time n I large number of murde Pverland trail. Men rel California, bringing sack! Bhow the folks back Ea|^aylaifl and killed> and en. xhe criminals h aught. t, with the death c— Jonie partners, the depredl pome one who had a mla hi° an^ *wo’ I5eSan to in| 18 ls what he learned: There never was a n “ 0 his pony, and BilljL crazy prospector, eithl K1 w®fe Part of the Iegenf L r the source of the Dul In no Colorado oref t8.of the murdered RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. ropriNoas. Ithis the‘st day 0f and tl same or- I a perion r tw^nty r55 oo ^■360.00 0r)o.oo 9 7 1 .SS ,9 0 0 .0 0 ~ $ S ^ 6 33 G o l d e n p h a n t o m s f a sc in a t in g t a l e s o f LOST MINES ©w.n.u. B h Editha L. W atson K $75,750.00 I 936 88 "£ S p S6 88 Ial G o^rntnent Com- IlSST tterow, Chaim'11, p r i c e s f o r | y p e o f n e w L o o k a t a Ch il d r e n ’s DE SHOES sID SANDALS to $1.19 roof ATS i n d S h o r t s r s u p <. c. DUTCH-IRISH m y s t e r y , Fort Coliins, Colo., was really a fort in early days, and the soldiers of tliat era were much like those of today intensely interested In the curious liappenmgs that came to their atten­ tion.So when an Irishman and a Dutch­ man came to Fort Collins with a load of gold and proceeded to go on a Uvely spree, the soldiers noticed It, and when this was repeated several times they be^an to wish that they knew the EOurce of all this wealth. They even nent so far as to hire an Indian to follow the pair on their next trip out. One diiy the partners set out up the Caclie-Ia-Poudre 1 and their red shadow Iinlied behind Just out of sight The Indian had made one mistake—he had not fisured on a long journey, hence Md not taken much In the way of pro­ visions with him. After three days, tlie smell from his quarry’s campfire crew to be entirely too tantalizing; the Indian took time out to hunt a deer and prepare a square meal for himself, anfl while he was following this new trail a deep snow fell, blotting out all slsns of tlie two miners. He was un­ able to follow them farther. On a later visit to Fort Collins, the odd pair invested In a burro to carry their packs, and a little later they dis­ posed of tlie small beast and bought on os. Apparently, business was good. Then, one day, they came in on foot, tired and disgusted, and said that a bear had killed the os. It was during tills visit that the Irish and Dutch temperaments began to pall on each other. The two had quarreled before, and had got over it, but now a real battle took place. In the heat of the mnment all past friendship was for­ gotten, and each man tried to kill the other. The Irishman was the stronger of the two—the Dutchman went down, and died as a result of his wounds. Now was a splendid chance for the jiildiers to satisfy their curiosity, and they grasped It eagerly. The Irishman was a murderer, and must be punished —unless he might be persuaded to tell K pl the secret source of the gold. With a rope around his neck, he was ha­ rangued by the men In uniform. Here was his only chance to live; would' he take it? Tell his secret and go free— or refuse, and be hung for murder! Perhaps the prisoner felt that he could out-bluff his captors. No, he shouted, he woulJ Kfr^tFottiTbgTI ~He would ale rather than let them know the source of his gold! “Let's hang him a little, boys—give him the feel of the rope. Maybe that will loosen his tongue," was the sug­ gestion, and the unfortunate Irishman was hoisted into the air. “Now - let him down,” and the rope was slack­ ened. But the experiment failed: ex­ citement, fear, and rough handling had proved too much, and the Irishman was dead. • • * Billy Melins left Nebraska In 1889 and went to Fort Collins to haul lum­ ber for a sawmill on the Cache la Pou- dre. He often stopped at a mining camp, halfway on his route, called Manhat-: tan. One Saturday night he heard that some tourists were anxious about their son, who had ridden away on his pony and had not come back. Melins joined In an unsuccessful search, but the lad showed up next day, and "he had a strange story to tell He had become confused the after­ noon before, be said, and when his pony started to follow an old trail near nightfall, He was glad enough to give the animal its head. The trail led to » deserted cabin, where the bones of an os lay before the door, and some specimens of ore sat on a shelf Inside. Mellns was Interested. This must be the lost mine tbat-the Irishman and the Dntchman had worked. He found an old prospector, a half-crazy soul ®l>ose mind had gone wandering oat ‘Ho the mountains, and the two set out to Jnd the cabin, guided by the boy’s story. Sure enough, the cabin was there as ae had said, and a dim trail—evidently we trail to the mine—led back up the canWn. The old prospector lost all sanity at the sight He rushed up the Path, and Melins hnrrled after, In time l<> see him dash Into a tunnel and al­ most immediately dash out again, fol­ lowed by a bear! The crazy prospec­tor was wild with rage.' In bis'fory. ne leaped at Melins, and it was all theyounger man coaid do to protect Imself ana get the old fellow back to camP- After that MeIIns ,made no ®°re trips In search of treasure. • • • Previous to this time there had been large number of murders on the old 'erland trail Men returning from Mlfomia1 bringing sacks of gold “to ow tlie folks back East” had been Iat5laitl and kjllWl. a“d their valuables Ben. The criminals had never been WDghL But, with the death of the quarrei- °ae partners, the depredations ceased. “Be one who had a mind for adding 11,1- Jna t'V0, beSan to investigate, and what he learned: Smf1T,6 never was a mIne- The boy 0 his pony, and Billy Melins and crazy prospector, either told fables I,. v™e Pnrt of the legend themselves, was 1 source ot the Dutch-Irisb goid Diiown 00 Colorado ore, bot In the 13 »f the murdered travelers. E n i g m a o f L a w r e n c e o f A r a b i a R e m a i n s U n s o l v e d ‘Uncrowned King” Carries Secret to Grave. London.—Col Thomas E. Lawrence, “uncrowned king of Arabia,” was bur­ led In a simple ceremony from the Sev­ enteenth century English church at Moreton. The funeral of the hero of the allied campaign In the Near East In the World war was lacking in pomp and ceremony—a lack which had been one of the attributes of the life of the man who was widely known as the war’s greatest individual leader and most baffling enigma. Even In death Lawrence remained a puzzle. A week before his death, he was flung 100 feet through the air as he attempted to avoid a.bicyclist At the time he was traveling at high speed on a motorcycle. While he struggled for his life It was rumored that he had been the victim of mysterious assassins. It was relat­ ed that the attempt on his life had been made to forestall the completion of work which he was supposed to be doing on a secret machine of war. These reports were denied by govern­ ment officials. Great, but Unpopular. Before the outbreak of the World war In 1914 Lawrence, then twenty-six years old, was an obscure archeological student poking about in the Hittite ruins In the Valley of the Euphrates. With the outbreak of the war he re­ turned to England and attempted to enlist for active service. Eejected for combat service on the grounds of phys­ ical unfitness, he was commissioned* a second lieutenant and assigned to the map department at Cairo, Egypt A strong Individualist and intense hater of discipline and routine, Law­ rence was not popular with his staff officers. Perhaps his very unpopularity was the primary stepping stone to his great­ ness. Almost whenever he wished he was permitted'to go on a junket When RonsJd Storrs, oriental secretary of the BriHsh high commissioner for Egypt, set out for Jidda to present his com­ pliments to the sheriff of Mecca, later King Hussein of Hedjaz, who was lead­ ing the Arabs In revolt against the Turks, Lawrence asked for and re­ ceived-permission to go along. Arrived at Jidda he heard that the ■young Arab leader, Feisal, was besieg­ ing the Turkish garrison at Medinah. So he went on north to meet Feisal. From that meeting sprang the alliance that was to result In driving the Turks from the Arabian peninsula, In the area .from Mecca-- to -Ddmas (Bamnsr CDS). With Lawrence as the brains and the driving force, Feisal rallied the Arab tribes under the banner of revolt against Turkish rule. The tribes, for the first time In six- centuries, forgot blood feuds and Intertribal warfare in the common cause against an'enemy. Refused Decorations. The combined forces swept the east­ ern half of the Arabian peninsula from Mecca to Damas. Lawrence personal­ ly led many assaults upon the •forces of the Turks. For his valuable serv­ ices In cutting communications along the Hedjaz railroad, between Medinah and the North, he was offered high mil­ itary decorations by both the French end the English. He would accept neither. As the revolt spread, recognition of Lawrence’s services In the East grew. He was finally supplied with money and ammunition with which to foster tbe movement against the Turks. The end came when Lord Allenby, tbe con­ queror of Jerusalem, broke through the Turkish forces on the east coast At the same time Lawrence and Feisal led a wild attack which resulted In the capitulation of Damas, where Feisal was enthroned.. When Lawrence, at the peace con- Touring Bees Work , ‘ Winter and Sumpner Sturbridge, Mass. —No NBA codes for William C. Davenport’s bees! He’s found a way to make ’em work both winter and summer. In winter he carts them to Flor­ ida where they harvest from orange blossoms the makings of honey, In summer the same bees come north. Davenport arrived here recently with 150 swarms of bees and four tons of honey, part of his winter’s crop from the South. Some of the local folks say his bees have acquired a southern ac­ cent ference in Paris, attempted to set up Arab independence he found—as he had long suspected—that he had been binding the Arabs with promises which he could not keep. Feisal remained loyal though dis­ heartened, when driven from the throne of Syria by the French, to whom the territory had been mandat­ ed. Lawrence did not give up the struggle, however, and when Iraq was mandated to ;the British, Feisal, through Lawrence’s efforts, was en­ throned in Bagdad on August 23, 1921. But the man who might have been the emperor of Arabia retired to ob­ scurity as an aircraftsman In the Brit­ ish air force. ' Three Governors Go Afishing A Left to. right: Gov; Charles H.-Sm^B' of Vermont, Gov. Harry NlcSibfi Maryland and Gov. Louis J. Brann of MaiSe, photographed at Moosehead lake, Maine, while they were enjoying a fishing trip: Mr.'Brann was the host Nazi Restrictions Cut German Crime 50% <$>- H a b itu a l C rim in als A re to T ra in in g C am p s. S en t Berlin.—Germany has no rackets, but the Nazi police have now complet­ ed a system of crime prevention by the systematic observation and control of known criminals that Is probably far more thorough than the new meth­ ods developed by tbe New York, police. Not hindered by considerations of !per­ sonal liberty, which are ont of place In a totalitarian state, a system has been evolved In which every person sus­ pected of being a habitual criminal is under control constantly. The result has been a 50 per cent reduction In the number of arrests on criminal charges. The control consists of various forms of what amounts to permanent custody. Sometimes the police merely order the suspect not to enter betting rooms, cafes or saloons which Jrecelvers of stolen goods are known to frequent Others who have robbed stores and houses at nlgbt are ordered to stay at home every night ..from 11 p. m. to 5 a. m. Criminals who traveled to avoid the police or to commit crimes were or- M IS S F R A N C E i&mi Giselle Preville, sixteen-year-old Par rlslenne, who was selected as Miss France U> a beauty contest The jury first picked Elizabeth Pitz,'a Saarland­ er who took French nationality after the plebiscite, but the spectators start­ed such a riot that Mlle- PItz declined the title. dered not to leave their home cities except by permission of tbe police. Criminals with long records of con­ victions are held In concentration camps known as training institutions. This form of detention Is not the re­ sult of a court sentence and Is not in­ tended as punishment but Is a preven­ tive police measure. Theoretically the police can force a habitual criminal to serve a life term In such a camp. Internments are also ordered for those who disobey police orders about fre­ quenting certain localities and going out at night. France Has Monopoly in Finding Work for Idle Paris.—This country of government monopolies has just created a new one In an unexpected field. To fight unemployment the labor, ministry established an unemployment bureau,' and it has just been discov­ ered that the decree creating it is so worded as to give the gbvernment monopoly of finding work for the job­ less.- • . ■ " ' : .- The organization .which made that discovery was the Foyer Hotelier, a welfare organization In the hotel In­ dustry which was 'engaged in finding Jobs for unemployed hotel workers. The labor ministry complained, and the appeals court sustained the -min­ istry, fining the welfare organization for bslvlng offered its services, which were free, to the jobless. The court handed down the opinion that the letter of the law makes It Illegal for anyone to tell an unem­ ployed person where he can get a job. PhiladelpHlian Rejects $3,000 Offer for Fish Philadelphia.—Gustav G. Armbrus- ter, fish grower, has refused an offer of $3,000 for 76 discus fish and their parents, which he has raised.' The offer was from a commercial concern, The discus, pompadour fish, or blue scalare, as it, Is variously known. Is a native of the Amazon river. Arm- bruster believes he Is the only person to have kept them alive more than a day or two after" batching in cap­ tivity. He said that even with the most careful care more than half of the. delicate hatch died within a week. Great White Father makes his medi­ cine. The tribesmen organized behind ed­ ucated and- cultured Thomas Largo, their sachem, who charged: “Not one promise made by the gov­ ernment In its treaties of the' 1850s has ever been kept with the California Indians.”A survey of California reservations made by five delegates of the associ­ ation revealed, Largo said, that “the Indians 11# round with nothing to do except when they are given, employ­ ment on, nearby farms and orchards.” “They could be busy raising enough vegetables and crops if the govern­ ment would develop water and give them tools and horses,” he said. T E S T O F N E W B A L L Indians Consider Old Promises; Demand Action Los Angeles.—California’s 23,000 In­ dians' are on- a warpath, white man fashion,5 organizing the ‘-‘California In­ dian Rights association” to make them­ selves heard In Washington, where tbe Alex Ednie, pro■' at Shelter Rock Country club. Long Islapd, recently drove a spun latex ball through a phone book almost an Inch thick, con­ taining more than 300 pages. Stand­ ing the book on end without support 4 feet In. front of the tee, Ednie sent the ball through with such force that it carried and rolled 100 yards beyond. Traveling at the rate of approximate­ ly ! 114 miles an hour, the ball wag averaging : 167 feet a Becond when it bit the book. • The drive, declared im* possible by golfer and nongolfer alike, was made to test the new spun latex golf ball, a.United States rubber prod­ uct Made of materials never before used In' golf ball construction, the new ball is notable for its power and dis­ tance. Tbese qualities' are acquired primarily from a high-power winding of thread spun, direct from liquid latex, the natural milk of the rubber tree. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY ICHOOL uesson By REV. p. B. FITZWATER, D. D„ Member of Faculty, Uoody Bible Institute of Chicago.- ©, Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for July 7 MOSES (LEADER AND LAWGIVER) LESSON TEXT—Exodus 24:3-8, 12.18. GOLDEN TEXT—Blessed is the na- tlon w hose God Is the Lord.—Psalm 33:12a. -PRIMARY TOPIC—Moses B rings » M essage From God. JUNIOR TOPIC—The Law s God Gave H is People. INTERM EDIATE AND SENIOR TO P. IC—AVhat It M eans to Be a P atriot.YOUNG PEO PLE AND ADULT TOP­IC—Religion in N ational Life. I. Moses Prepared (Exod. 2:1-22). 1. His birth (w. I, 2). Both his father and mother were of LevltIcal stock. At Moses’ birth -his mother was assured that he was to be the deliverer of the chosen people, and she was confident that God would somehow save him from the hand of the cruel king. 2. HispreservatIon (vv. 3, 4). While his mother had faith, she did not Ignore the proper use of means. Per­ haps the story of how Noah and his family were saved suggested the ex­ pedient of the ark of bulrushes. 3. His education (w. 5-10). Moses was educated first at his mother’s knee. Here his mind was filled with the Word of God and acquainted with the Jewish hopes and prospects. He was further educated at the Egyptian court where he became acquainted with all the wisdom of the Egyptians. 4. His exile and marriage (vv. 11- 22). Moses was obliged to take his flight from Egypt at the age of forty years because he prematurely at­ tempted to enter upon his work as the deliverer of his people (Acts 7:25). While in exile, God taught him and qualified him for his work.. During this time of rejection he secured a bride from among the Gentiles. Jesua Christ, his great antitype, while now In the place of rejection by his brethren, is getting a bride, his Church, from among the Gentiles. II. Moses Called to Deliver His People (Exod 3:1-14). 1. The Lord spoke from the burn­ ing bush (vv. 1-6). It was while keep­ ing the flock of his father-in-law in the desert that tbe Lord appeared to Moses In the burning bush, which sym­ bolized the indestructible people of God. 2. Moses commissioned (vv. 7-10). In this commission God showed hl3 active interest in . his people. He as­ sured Moses that he had seen their ; affliction, and heard their cry. It was because of his grace that be obligated himself to deliver the people. 3. Moses’ objections removed (vv. 11-13). Four objections were offered, each one of which God met and re­ moved. a. Personal unworthiness (v. 11). b. The difficulty of the-people to under­ stand Moses’ relationship to God (w. i3, 14). c. Unbelief on the part of the people (4:1). d. Lack of elo­ quence (4:10). III. Moses the Deliverer. 1. From Egyptian bondage (Exod. 12:29-36). The culminating blow was the death of the first-born. There was death that night in every homo through Egypt: where the blood was ' not found. This Is typical of the com­ ing day of God’s wrath when all who are not resting under the shadow of Christ’s blood shall perish. 2. At the Red Sea (Exod. 14:1-3). Hemmed In on either side by moun­ tains, the Red sea In front, and pur­ sued by the Egyptians from the rear, God interposed, enabling the Israelites to cross dry shod. IV. The Giving of the Law (Exod. 19-24). 1. The covenant proposed (ch. 19). This is the beginning of the theo­ cratic kingdom. The Lord through Moses proposed to the people that on condition of their obedience he; would constitute them 'his' peculiar people* (w. 5, 6 ). To this the people heartily responded, engaging themselves to obey him (v. 8). 2. The content of the covenant (ch. 20). This embraces the Deca­ logue or Ten. Commandments, setting forth obligation Godward and man- ward.3. The Statutes of Moses or Sec­ ondary Laws (chs. 21-23). These laws pertain to a. Servitude (21:2-11); b. Personal safety (21:12-32); c. Property (21:33-22:15); d. Conjugal fidelity (22:16, 17); e. Miscellaneous laws (23:1-9); f. Set times of Jehovah (23 :10-19). ’ g. Personal piety (23: 20-23). 4. The covenant ratified (Exod. 24). When the law had been duly set forth, the people were called upon to accept its obligations. The law was reduced to writing. The people were then called upon to commit themselves to personal acceptance of their responsi­ bility. Tbe covenant was then sealed by blood. - Secret of ^Iappiness 1 "The real secret of happiness Is to be in love with your job; to do work that you like to do; that Interests you; that you believe In.” That Is, let us add, not only^the secret of happi­ ness, but the secret of success. Revenge We cannot honor our country with too deep a reverence; we cannot love her with an affection too pure and fervent; we cannot serve her with an energy of purpose or a faithful­ ness of zeal too steadfast and ardent Housewife's Idea Box To M ake Soap Last Longer When soap Is well hardened, It lasts much longer than when- It is soft You can help it to harden. Buy soap In quantities. ’ As soon as you get it remove all the wrappers. Pile up (he bars irregularly on your pantry shelf. You will find tfiat this process does a great deal to harden the soap. THE HOUSEWIFE. Copyright by Public Ledger, Inc.TVNU Service. M useum Timepieces New York university recently an-' nounced the acquisition of 14 early Japanese clocks, which, added to the eight already in the collection of clocks and watches donated to the university by the late James Arthur, make one of tlie most complete sets to be found in any museum. The Japanese clocks are among the most Interesting specimens in the collection of about 2,000 time­ pieces because of the unequal length of the hours under the old system of timekeeping in Japan. The Japan­ ese day was divided Into 12 hours, six hours daylight and six hours night, which varied in length to match the seasons, Prof. Daniel W. Herlng. curator of the collection, ex­ plained. Professor HerIng also announced the recent acquisition of a Black for­ est wooden clock, brought to Amer­ ica In the 1860s and made, appar­ ently, In the early Nineteenth cen­ tury. LESS TIMEWITH IHE P o l e m a n » [ r o n Sedaee your ironing time o n e-th ird . your labor one-half I Iron any place with the Golemazu It's entirely self-heating. No cords or wires. No weary, endless trips between a hot store and the iron­ ing board....... The AteVfta gn^ Imma its ownApe? • Xiishts instantly—no pre-heating. Operating cost only an hoar. Perfect and right weight make ironing just an easy, galdiag, gliding motion. See your local hardware or house- furnishing dealer. If he does not handle write us. TTie Coleman Lamp 6*Sistve Company Sonotof Oattrio* Casads (»09) At Least9 Not Always No UvIng man tells tlie whole truth. There Is no need for it How Cardui Helps Women to Build Up Carduistim ulatestheappetiteand improves digestion, helping women to get more strength from the food they eat. As nourishment is unproved, strength is built up, certain functional pams go away and women praise Cardui for heJpmg them back to good health. . . .Mrs. C R Ratliff, of Hinton, W. Va., writes: “Alter the birth of my last bab7, I did not seem to pet my strength back. I took Cardoi agam and was goon sound and well. I have given it to my daughters and recommend rt to other ladies.” . . . Thousands of women testily Cardui benefited them. If it does QOt benefit-YOU, consult a physician. Show Us Hocus—Where do these scenario writprs- get their Ideas? Pocus—What Ideas? KtLL BLACK WIDOW • T h e J e a d iy BIacfc W idow s p id e r's b i t e is d e c id e d ly d an g ero u s to p eo p le. K ill AU S p id e r s ...WatcK for them in garages, corners of porches> etc. The minute you see them spray THOROUGHLY with FLY-TOX. It also Mils FLIES, MOSQUITOES and ether inwet*. so7 Se’ sure you get T* W N U -7 » —35 NO MORE WORMS “ DEAD SHOT” Dr. Peery’8 Vermifuge kills and expels Worms and Tapeworm to a few hours. Good for grown-ups, too. One dose does the trick. Dr. PeeryrS* DEAD SHOT Vermifiige i H P i WijgiiracBubOo^OO aSflS/JiK. atr, Ot-SEEN THAT CAR HtT sZEZ- Ot S qt HIS NUMBER— EE H ez HliRfifT? \MELL. HOW VO H ex f e e l ? ' ^-----------'i—il R E C O R D , M O C K S V IL L E , N . C B f OAomoO VtaUm Kempspsr OabaTHE FEATHERKEADS FINNEY OF THE FORCE O Of VtiUn Hnnptftr OaWs MESCAL IKE B r s. l . h u n t l e y h e -y : OlOJ C* H SA R TH' W SW S ?_ . IV lA K S • SOM M A BE A SUieLC (-X LAW SU IT O n th e W in g "th am k ( J o o p n e s s 2=U ffot •THAT FLY— IVE BEEM VsQoak VlOMEM NEVER ^lY OFF YHB . HANDLE— UMTtU they iose YHEIR VtHAT Po YouYmNt'? S y m p to m s /VtELl-MY BACK AN* J M ARMS AU LEfiS HtlRT-M-Y HBAD _ FEELS D axY -D oJ MAVBE JTS ONLY T H ' g R lP P g M u le y G ete H is N e c fc O u t ACCOUSJT OFr H U L EV 6 A T E S A-GlTTl KJ HIS NlECA CAUGHT INl M Z E & B O G S S ', /% m N D O W A W , H IT A IN JT H IM _ „ u « HOLU G R ^ O U S . t a '5 W A S H E ijt a -SOIN-1 ^r- SUlKS a W INDOW UotiTA-' 193«, by & A Huntley, Trade MUfk Bek. U„ S. Pal, Omce> StMATTER POP— Now, Pop Is In For It By C. M. PAYNE C o n s a 1R h( CH iIfco-PoaiiST S lf W U N lC lt- » MAW S o m t -H (© The Bell Syndicate, Inc.; “REG’LAR FELLERS” O lD I S E E . T O U R U A T IN lG W IT H T H O S E M 6 H O O L I £ |f tN . B O Y S A K T E -R A U U I T O U O V O U ? 27 Good Points A W , T H E V R - E ' A W F O U i M I C E , M O N A T H E T C A M D O T H E B E S T H f t N D S P R I H l a S O M T H E B L O C K . A M ’ G tE O R jS lE I S T H E EAR--W KalftUIM,' C H A M R E E M * I A W A T H ie tH "YOU R E W R O H C iABOUT THAT, M O M ,' EVERT T l M E T H E T FlG W T VOU CAM H E A R , 'E M S IX 1B I-O C K SA w A V I ) The Aaoclated Mewspapera » O u r P e t P e e v e ByMG-KElJNER RECEPTION COMMITTEE By GLUYAS W ILLIAM S \ S 0S1 V •V-.-NN-J /J p i*yjTh/v, Af Yt-S5Cc- g i T ~ l MjjftiA c t L 7 I (CopJTlg f fff ft I ■-T IT— I. UVX TJ XumA* I i< /«I jy. OPENS FRONT POOR 111 RESPONSE TO RING tk K K W S n K f f i S . SttYATERJVfiERErofWl. VMt* n„ MOTrtER IN? AFTER A l£WS WlAlte RETURNS PRKEHlW DISAPPEARS SILENav ©SWING CAT WHidH DOWN HAIL SHEP1ANrs IN Z v LERNS IN Uvms-ROOM DMRVftV1 PICKINS SHViy AT HER DRESS AND 6AZ- WO At LADV IrtsnOlC ; VfoOVRBfStt 6Ef RBIifeS 8 leans m poorwav S tw ups Thumb and siLENavUfM^UlitA lk«.l .ketft _AttMe ILE tAm, breaks silence i& re-Wchinv lady vjsii&r MARK THAT MOTHER IS-ITriHiv Vlisi- VJdIIUIYfoO HAPPENS H0ffoClOYJfi Wt WCHES,LAW VlSlwiuiA|i5 SSSHl ~w fcHuy Vlhl-TDRVftlR RAPIDLY DOWN loseAppeals t o f H f ’--p i?- p Oan ton "he Xi Jy K A T H L E E N I Oopyrtglit Hy K athlel WNXI sender SYNOPSIS Capes? Everybody Iovetor they’ve descended upon fasht** April showers. AU sorts Nras In this charming dress tteafeb Quence is minimized, but UhsH to advantage. Joining In fronts, raglan sleeve, and cat In «*0 the yoke In back, these cape stej give grace and proper proporttej to the mature figure. A email h adroitly placed, adds a wlnsomelt! at the bodice. Ton’ll find the cat the skirt excellent, too. It's a pad dress to make np In a Hewerpct or a solid sheer, or In voile or fin for the heat waves to coma B: capes may contrast. Pattern 9342 may be ordeRlml) In sizes 16, 18, 20, 34,36,3S, and 44. Size 36 requires 8?5 jafi 39 Inch fabric. SEND PIPTEES CESTS in cdnp or stamps (coinspreferred) fori pattern. Be sure to write pistojBi^ your NAME, ADDRESS, Sm J NUMBER- and SIZE. EjL Completev diagrammed sew etef Included. I ,Send your order to Sewing OrtJI ^f Pattern Department, 232 West Elilj eenth StreeA New York. PLACE OF SPEB> “Harry Brush,” said Anfi®" he settled down to wait te®* the barber shop, “is alwap W about his home town. Dojoip where he came from?” , “Yeah,” replied Whizz KW was there once. It’s places where they think WJ crowdin’ Father Time when Mt yesterday’s city paper tomorrow . N. A. How*. It Holding OntI “Well, old man, what are J™ Ing these days?”Tm selling furniture. “Are you selling muchr “Only my own, so far. That Was Different .“It’s awful how close them)^ people sit In a rumble dad.“Yes,” smiled mother, Qrwt how you used to Hate the ^ mock because it had such way of pushing us so close ns too.” I T he B oston L aw rences Urn Ia a t th e beginnlni nsh b u t th e holdings G ve sh ru n k to a sm all Sjd fam ily hom e In Clip SSventy-five, has gone grorks, G all to th e pub] Edith to th e’ book del bore. Sam ts in school, Aear-Old A riel Is becom: Ih tl ts fascinated by £ lly C ass, w hose husban ner. Y oung V an M urchis w ealthy fam ily, retu rn s g all h as visions, through Elm of th e tu rn in g of lic k . D lck Stebbins, Ph lie ru n of th e house. S hts sisters’ consterna G vite D ily C ass to th e h< B ith V an fo r a w eek fhipps, h is uncle and ai elved coldly. A t a roadl (jie l. a t m idnight. Next ilts she w as a t the piad o rem orse. A policemaL ome, announcing th a t a l Uled in an autom obile [ ras driv in g one of the - , w ho h as been a has th e case a g a l „,™ ed. G all suddenly r<f Sves D lck and no t Van C H A PTER V II- —16— ; He had nn money, bj Bred, he was only the ; |ie who rented the old Bver in Stanislaus—it gall, who had always ville limited and bd erseif quite willing—al ling!—to live conted sville forever, or outf |ius ranch forever; If I at Ariel or Edith : sudden altering of I Ivas nothing; there wa| jkhere, except DickI : All life was a miracll jralked In the glory of ody lifted above the appy old customs tl.atg ad known for years f rith new joy and Dick joined the familyl §yas only a little more j ivhen he did not comej And meanwhile Van more comfortable fool awrence honse than el !while he and Ariel did | actly flirting—exactly] pair—there was a far ; Ijbase to their relation! !friendship with Gall hsj Very quietly, In an aln riel told her sisters : that Van was goi| work. [ “No more college?” JtuNo,. he wants to I -';::'.’B'ess. ,His father says I '■'-'pin the New Jersey pla* “Then he won’t con llll'jpersvllle?” ‘Yes. He’s going to! reek In January. That) tter next !” ‘He’s coming back al iid, when she and Gq ‘Oh, Ede, it does Io Gail’s imagination Ariel married I 'onng- Van Murchison; [and Sam living on [house; herself and But this last snatchd [Herself and Dick. Pa brary would glance a t| [gaged; she’s going to I lawyer, Richard Steb Dick would have [would study every deti and keep up with hlm.| have babies—babies -among the flowers. Happiness, happine be married to him, to | herself! The miracle amazing flaming glory j her with a cloud of of fire by night It began to seem happening in Clipper The sluggish current < stirred in many ways. I [that PhU got a rak Murchison might ma was working for a might actually win a | bia! Columbia univer: GaU was assistant IibJ the name “AbigaU La] I® gold on the library salary of fifty-five doll And then Christmas I ways exciting, it seemf year. She fairly dance mornings, and Edith -.. In the darkness of fivj her singing over In the kitchen. Dick was boarding [ for his mother had gd stay with a daughter] and there were only i lalaus ranch. There was one clou be sure. GaU and Edll Its existence bravelyf evening when they thought PhU really < “That’s a hard que. IHck said, with a fa sigh. “Do yon Uke her, “Well—she’s not my «n awfully sweet Utl “Is she divorced, “No. Bnt there’s : “If she were, do really would marry hi A pause. Then DicC Would you girls carl “You’ve answered!”! * brief, mirthless Iau lppeals t of H RECORD, MOC KSVlLT.Ig. N. C. 1 0 rIThose ^ 5W ''M Z "he Lucky Lawre nces K A T H L E E N N O R R IS OopyrlBht by Kathleen Norrla WND Serrioe <S>— SYNOPSIS Jb e Boston Law rences cam e to Call- Jrnla a t the beginning of th e gold fish, but the holdings of th e fam ily »ve shrunk to a sm all farm , and the H fam ily home In ClippersviU e. Phil, jrenty-five, has gone into the Iron prks, Gail to the public lib rary and ^itb to the book d epartm ent of & Jore. Sam is in school, and seventeen* far-old Ariel is becom ing & problem . iJjU is fascinated by " th a t terrible" i]y Cass, w hose husband h as deserted I r Young Van M urchison, scion of & la lth y fam ily, retu rn s from T ale, and £11 has visions, through m arriage w ith jjn of the turn in g of th e L aw rence gck. Dlclc Stebbins, P hil’s friend, has run of th e house. P hil suggests, I his sisters* consternation, th a t they ivite Llly Cass to the house. G ail goes Titb Van for a w eek-end w ith th e fcipps, his uncle and aunt. She Is re­ vived coldly. A t a roadhouse G ail sees Iriell at m idnight N ext day A riel ad­ mits she w as a t the place, and displays \ remorse. A policem an b rin g s A riel Jome. announcing th a t a child has been IiHed in an autom obile sm ashup. A riel fas driving one of the cars. D ick Steb- ijns, who has been adm itted to the fer, has the case a g a in st A riel d is­ missed. Gall suddenly realizes th a t she ves Dick and not V an. fpes? Everybody Iotpj [ ' ^ descended °P°n ^biOBte jl -.iio^ers. All BortSCfcajc, r ls jamming dre» the%^ jice Is niimmized, bat It Is advantage. Joining in front ^in sleeve, aad eut ja ^ ^ J oke in back, these cape skew I grace and proper proporli* ’ he mature figure. A small tat. ilcly placed, adds a Winsometmf lie bodice. You’ll find the cot Cl fekirt excellent, too. It’s a graaj 93 to make up In a flower print I solid sheer, or In voile or lam Jthe heat waves to coma Tie Ss may contrast. |ttem 9342 may be ordered only zes 16, IS, 20, 34, 36, 3S, 40,41' 144. Size 36 requires 3% yards Jich fabric. f.VD FIFTEE.Y CEXTS In coin lamps (coins preferred) for tbli fcrn. Be sure to write plaln\ NAME. ADDRESS, STYLD _3ER. and SIZE. ,j iiDDlete, diagrammed sew chan lded.and your order to Sewing Clrdi Ern Department 232 West Eteht- L Street, Xew Tort. . P L A C E O F SPEED Iarry Brush,” said ^ Iettled down to wait Ms . jj jfiarber shop, “Is always W It his home t>vn. ^Do rot1® Se he came from';" , leah,” replied n ils ^ !there once. It’s one Js where they Idin’ Father Time when Wj? Irday’s city paper tomorto*. I H ow tB I t KoM ing OutT fell, old man, wlint »re J These days?'1 n I selling furniture.Ve yon selling much!" ply my own, so far, i T h a t W as DiSere»1 Is awful how close the*!F Ie sit In a rumble seat, «■* j>s,” smiled mother, irI r®ef^ jr<m used to hate tW j because It had such pf pushing us so cJos - H s w m C H A PT ER V II— C ontinued —16— KBe had no money, he was country- Brcil, be was only the son of the peo- Ile who rented the old Lawrence place |yer in Stanislaus—it did not matter, gail, who had always felt that Clip* IersviHe limited and bound her, knew Rerself quite willing—ah, breathlessly lilling!—to live contentedly in Clip- iersville forever, or out on the Stanis- |ins ranch forever; tf Dick so decreed, hat Ariel or Edith would think of Ms sudden altering of all her dreams bos nothing; there was nothing any- pere, except DickI i Al! life was a miracle DOW, and she Rafted in the glory of it like some- (Ody lifted above the earth. All the niHiy old customs that she and Edith Bad known for years were touched iritli new joy and new pain. When Diet joined the family circle the air bras only a little more electrified than jrhen he did not coma And meanwhile Van had established more comfortable footing in the old awrence house than ever before, and while he and Ariel did not seem to be !exactly flirting—exactly having an af- Ifair-there was a far more substantial fbnse to their relationship than his !friendship with Gall bad ever known. gVery quietly, In an almost bored tone, Jiel told her sisters In early Novem- ! *r that Van was going east to get I work. ; “Ho more college?'* “No, he wants to get into busi­ ness. His father says he’ll start him the New Jersey plant” “Then he won't come back to Clip- §fj>ersville?” “Tes. He's going to be back for a fweet in January. That’s—that’s month [after next!” ••He’s coming back after her!” Edith {said, when she and Gall were alone. “Oh, Ede, it does look like It!” Gail’s imagination was OS at full I speed: Ariel married at eighteen to | young- Van Murchison; Edith and Phil [ and Sam living on here at the old [house; herself and Dick . . . But this last snatched at her breath. I Herself and Dick. People In the li­ brary would glance at her: “She’s en­ gaged ; she’s going to marry that young j lawyer, Bichard Stebbins.” Dick would have .cases, and she S would study every detail of every case j and keep up with him. And she would have babies—babies tumbling about among the flowers. Happiness, happiness, happiness—to | married to him, to have Dick all to hsrself! The miracle of marriage, the amazing flaming glory of It, surrounded her with a cloud of mist by day. and of fire by night It began to seem as If things were happening In ClippersviUe, after all. The sluggish current of Gail’s life was stirred In many ways. It was not only that Phil got a raise, and that Van Murchison might marry AHeL Sam was working for 'a scholarship, and nlglit actually win a year at Colum­ bia! Columbia university In New York. Gail was assistant librarian now, with the name “Abigail Lawrence” printed to gold on the library windows and a salary of fifty-five dollars a month., And then Christmas was coming. Al­ ways eieiting, It seemed .doubly so this year. She fairly danced to work In the mornings, and Edith would come home In the darkness of five o’clock to hear her singing over dinner preparations in the kitchen. ' Dick was boarding with them now, lor his mother had gone to Oregon to stay with a daughter newly widowed, and there were only men on the Stan­islaus ranch. There was one cloud In the sky, to be sure. GaU and Edith acknowledged its existence bravely one December evening when they asked Dick If he thought Phil really cared for LUy Cass.: “That’s a hard question to answer,”, Dlck said, with a faint frown and a *igh. “Do you like her, Dick?” “Well—she’s nat my type. But she’s an awfully sweet little thing, really.” “Is she divorced, Dick?” “No. But there’s talk of It” ‘If she were, do you believe Phll really would marry her?” < i I)anse- Then Dlck asked slowly, 'Vould you girls care?” 'Iou’Te answered I" Gal! said, with “Mef, mirthless laugh. “I suppose I have.” Dick sighed again. “There—there never was any­ thing wrong with Lily,” he offered, doubtfully. “No!” Gall agreed forcefully. “Ex­ cept that she was as common as fruit files, and ran with that terrible box- factory gang, and chewed gum In church, and talked way up in G ma­jor.” This rather finished Lily’s case for the moment But a little later Gail said apologetically, “I don’t know why I got so wild about poor Lily. She certainly is having a rather tough time of it" “I’ll tell you!” Dick said eagerly. "Phil’s the quiet 3ort He loves Clip- persville; he wouldn’t change places with the President Phll wants to stay here and develop, the place, and he loves Lily—or if lie loves her—’’ Dick floundered, turning red, and correcting himself hastily. “We know he loves her; you needn’t be so scrupulous!” Gall said with a dry Uttle laugh. “I believe you’d stand up for PhIl If he went out some night and cut somebody’s throat!” But she loved Dick for his loyalty none the less, and curried the mutton stew with one idea in her mind, “They all eat it and. he loves it curried!” Christmas falling on a Tuesday, they all went up to the woods on the Sat­ urday afternoon preceding it and came back laden with evergreen, scar­ let toyon berries, crisp, polished huck­ leberry branches, and the one great bunch of mistletoe that Dick climbed high into a dying oak to secure. Gail, frantic to start tying bundles and mixing batters, had to spend the wet Monday In the library. She walked up to Muller’s at five o’clock, not only to wait for Edith' but to help her effectually whUe she was waiting. Edith was In an exhausted whirl of last Christmas sales; Ariel also was there as one of her Christmas assist­ ants, at two dollars a day. Bain was twinkling and sparkling In the black night as the Lawrences came wearily, excitedly out and started for home. Ariel was very silent But Gail and Edith were gay. Christ­ mas eve, at library and shop, was over, and nothing but fun and holiday ahead. Edith thought of the tissue pa­ per and ribbons in her lower bureau drawer. She would begin wrapping and marking packages right after dinner; she had completely ruined herself on presents, as usual, and she felt the usual joy In her plight. Gail thought of presents, too. She wondered if Olck would give her a present—of course he would! She would not care what it was; it would be the most valued thing she received. She Felt Weak, Helpless. Dlck needed socks and ties and belts and gloves—if he went to 'Los An­ geles next week he would need-gloves —but she had dared give him none of these. Books. She had two books for him. In one, with a fast-beating heart, she had written, “Dick, with love from A. L.” Love. Love from Abigail Law­ rence for Dick Stebbins! “Perhaps we’ll be married by next Christmas!” thought Gail, running,rac­ ing, hurrying home in the black, rainy darkness of Christmas eve. It seemed to her the most wonderful Christmas they had ever had. From the hour on Christmas eve when she, Ariel, and''Edith got home wet cold, anid tired to the warm kitchen and to planning and laughter and tea, toast and jam and wrapping gifts and sur­ prises, until the two o’clock dinner on Christmas day was safely served, there was not a flaw. They got all their' presents ready and at eleven o’clock set the table for breakfast then walked under warm shining stars to church a t. midnight Every one stumbled back utterly ex­ hausted, to go to bed heavily and blind­ ly, fingers sore from strings and tinsel, backs and: feet aching, hands scented with pine resin, hearts filled with hap­ piness. And then it was Christmas morning, and every-one was thanking every one else and Gail was honestly amazed at all the things they got—and such beau­ tiful things. Tables were loaded with boxes and bundles. Everybody got ev­ erything; there was no end to the gifts, nor to the tissue paper and ribbons that rained on the floor for somebody always, to gather up and heap on the fire.Breakfast leisurely and late, was wonderful, and by eleven o’clock the scents of the early , afternoon meal, were In the spicy, warm Christmas- scented air. Dick was leaving for Los Angeles at sevens Ariel had promised Miss Lizzie Vail, with whom she had been studying dramatic expression, to' have supper with ,Lizzie and her mother. “But come home early, darling, for tomorrow’s your birthday, and we' have to celebrate all over again!” Thus Gall, as she flew about the ldtchen in the full glory of dinner- getting. “Oh, I will, Gail.” Ariel was very docile. She seemed to her sisters to be at her sweetest today. Van had sent her. no .present that they knew of. But Christmas mails were always late. Phil and DIck walked down to the post office at noon, returning laden with - cards and smaU packages.' Bui if Van had sent either to her, Ariel gave no sign. At two they sat- down, ravenous, to' the feast Everything was perfection. Long after three o'clock the sextette lingered at the table, nibbling raisins and nuts, trying the German honey cakes that had come as a greeting that morning, sampling the. Christmas candy.- And when finally there was a stir, It was only after an unanimous decision to abandon all plans for supper. PhU went off to some point unknown— probably to see LUy—Sam helped clear the table, Dick had to walk down to his office to get some papers, and Ariel herself suggested that she walk with him because she had a present for Mary Binney, and could leave It by the way. “But please leave the silver and glasses for me to wash—please,” Ariel pleaded. “Oh, nonsense !” Gall said. She and Edith made short work of the clearing up. The short day ended with them both stretched luxuriously on Gall's bed, reading at intervals, talking desultor­ ily, waiting for night to bring the other members of the family home. “How long will Dick be in Los An­ geles, Gail?” “Only about two weeks. It’s a ship case. A great chance for him.” “I think he’s such a dear. I’ve grown awfully fond of him this fall,” said Edith. “He’s a darling.” Ariel put her head In the door. “I’ve been asleep;’’ she said, blink­ ing. “We looked in and saw you when we came In.” “I’m going to Mlss Vail's now,” said Ariel, who was hatted and coated and gloved. ‘TH be back early.” “Dick will be gone when you come back!” "I know it I said good-by to him.” Ariel looked very pretty In her dark blue coat and . snug blue hat She came In, kissed GaH1 kissed Edith. “I don’t want to gp!” she said, with a weary sigh. “I hate to have you,” Gall said af­ fectionately. “Think of being eighteen tomorrow,' baby. Mother’s poet, eighteen.” “Mother’s nothing!” Ariel said bit­ terly. I “Gail,” Edith asked, when Ariel had gone, “did she get anything from Van?” “Not that she told , me.” “It might be delayed in the mail." “A telegram wouldn’t be.” “I know.” There was a silence In the big, shab­ by, pretentiously furnished room. Gail roused herself,. stiff and drowsily. “I told'Dick I’d start packing his bag for the trip,” she said, with an exultant rise at her heart “We’U miss him.” “Oh, won’t we!” Edith yawned agonizingly. Gall crossed the hall to Dick’s cold big bar­ rack of a room to find him done with his packing and ready for good-bys. He looked almost handsome—or at. aU events Gail found the lean, big-featured face handsome—as he belted his coat and pulled on the new gloves that Edith had not been too self-conscious to give him, if Gail had. “You’re worrying about this case!” Edith accused him. For he seemed un­ usually grave. “No. ¥es, I’m kind of worried,” DIck said. “Ariel’s gone to the Vails’, Dick, and Phil isn’t back. Sam!" GaU called. “Come out and say good-by to Dick.” “I think we ought to kiss him good-by on Christmas night!” Edith said gid- dUy, In a rare mood of daring. For answer his big-coated arm went about her, and he kissed her so heart­ ily that she emerged breathless .and protesting. Then it was Gail's turn. The clean-shaven hard cheek was against her own, his tremendous grip lifted her, held her Shoulders tight? she felt weak, helpless, she drank the deliciousness of that first.kiss as If it were a draught of heady wine. For an instant she was his, dazzled and ecstatic. Then panting, laughing,, she was squarely on her feet again, StHl close to him. “Well, Edith! The next time you have a bright Idea you might , take Dlck and me into your'counsels!” “Don’t worry—about anything that comes up, GaU,” Dick was saying rather confused and breathless him­ self, very big, \ery much the man. ‘Til be back in a few-days. Everything will come out aU right!" - He was. gone; They heard the engine start in the yard, and laughed at each other as they wandered down to the kitchen. ' Edith and Sam had tea and ,cold turkey, after all. But Gall, although she sat with, them at the table, was feeding on finer food, and could not touch their tangible viands. Her mouth, her whole being, still pulsated to Dick's grave, hard, definite kiss. How he had kissed her !TO BE CONTINUED. Bamboo Grows Fftst Bamboos grow to a Ueightr of 50 feel or more in four to six weeks, Lights of N ew York by L.L. STEVENSON Julius Jonas was blinded completely by a gun cleaning accident when he was forty-eight years old. He man­ aged to learn Braille; but ahead of him ,seemed to bft only years of broom and mop making—rather a bitter prospect since the accident had not only cost bim his sight but a fine Income as well. Refusing to accept such a fate, Jonas went to one of the large life insurance companies and appUed for a job. He got it Now at sixty-two, he is one of the most successful life insurance men in the city, his income being far larger than many men with, sight In­ cidentally, he has never capitalized his Infirmity, his selling being strictly on the merits of what he has to offer. • • * Having proved to himself that it could be done, Mr. Jonas began giving attention to other blind men, his thought being to teach them to help' themselves. Having found no BraUle books of insurance rates, he had made one for himself. From that, he made copies which he presented to other blind men whom he persuaded to enter the business. At present, there are about 200 In the city. Not satisfied with that he wrote Braille books on insurance and followed those with books on salesmanship, so that now there is a complete course for the blind. And all because one man re­ fused to surrender to blindness! *. • * In one section of New York, a moth is not merely a household pest but Public Enemy No. I. It is the crowded blocks between Sixth and Eighth ave­ nues, Twenty-sixth and Thirty-first streets. That Is the fur district of the city and In it is concentrated about 75 per cent of the entire fur business of the United States. As the fijr busi­ ness of the country amounts to about half a billion a year at retail prices, it is easy to get an idea of the value of the pelts handled there—and why moths are enemies. More than 12,000 persons are employed by the various fur houses' and last year the pay roll amounted to almost $25,000,000. • » * Heard about an artist who came to the manager of the syndicate for which he works In great distress. It seems that his wife had learned the size of his weekly check and was furious be­ cause he was not earning more. So he wanted to be allowed to pay the ac­ counting department $5 a week In cash with his check hoisted accordingly, thus causing the wife to believe he had received a raise. The arrangement was entered into and the artist has home peace now. ,The incident strikes me as curious since with artists and newspa­ per men, the wife is usually the last to hear of a raise. * • * Anthony Rocco, who plays a seven- stringed guitar In the El Patio lounge of the Rockefeller VCenter Roof, Is the same Rocco who played but one note in a recent broadcast He was engaged to play a long, whining note on his gui­ tar and bis transportation was paid from Chicago. At the last moment,* the note was eliminated. But the produc­ er was informed he Would have to pay Kocco anyway. So the note went back into the score.• . * * Edwin Ross, author of “One Being Living,” is an ERB worker, being con­ nected with the‘drama department of the PWA .as a play reader. Born In San Francisco two years before the earthquake, he became an orphan at seventeen. In 1932 he married an orphan. His first work was published during his first year of marriage and his second during his second year which' may or may not be an argu­ ment for matrimony. He maintains that his latest work was not done on government time.• * » Heard about a well-known man whose hobby Is. collecting ash trays without the formality of paying for them. It seems that whenever he en­ counters one not In his collection, he can’t rest until it is acquired. His wife keeps careful track of him and whenever it seems that trouble or embarrassment may ensue, she ar­ ranges a settlement which she is care­ ful to keep from him so as not to spoil his pleasure. © Bell Syndicate.—WNtJ Service. Mushroom* His Meat Mechnnicsburg, Mo.—George H. ■ An­ derson claims the mushroom hunting championship with a record of 512 specimens In one day’s hunting. , Dust Storms Reveal. Old Indian Flints Wichita. Kan1-The dust-produc- , Ing winds from the Southwest, which have eroded .farm lands, have brought nothing but Ul fortune for most. farmers, but for their chil­ dren they have produced a new sport with a' cash angle.J Hundreds, of Indian arrowheads, long buried,'have been brought to light by the shifting-soil and week­ end expeditlQDS .are organized by school children’ of southwestern Kansas to hunt for them. * The children report particularly good "pickings” at scenes of early day skirmishes between the pioneers and the Indians. Old camp sites along. the Santa Fe trail, Point Rocks, In the extreme southwest cor­ ner' of the state, and Wagon' Bed Springs, 'down the Cimmaron, are favorite hunting spots. B RU TA LITY IN JA IL S IS LAID TO A U ST R IA Women ' Political Prisoners Beaten by Police. Prague.—An account of callous treat­ ment of Austrian young women and. girls arrested for distributing forbid­ den Socialist party literature or at­ tending party meetings Is given by a woman who was an Austrian prisoner, In the current number of the Austrian Socialist organ Arbeiter Zeltung, which is printed by Socialists In exile In Czechoslovakia. * Your correspondent is privately as­ sured that the account Is .absolutely reliable. It contrasts sharply with Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg’s denial In a speech in Vienna" that ' Austria treats poUtical prisoners barbarously. Describes the Conditions. The Arbeiter Zeitung article gives the following picture of conditions In Vienna; Young women, when first arrested, are detained one or two weeks In police stations, which have only one cell for women. The political pris­ oners there are herded together with criminals and prostitutes! to whose professional anecdotes young women, whose only offense is their political attitude, are obliged to listen through­ out the day and night.Washing is practically impossible, only about a cupful of water being al­ lowed to a prisoner. Sanitary condi­ tions are indescribable. The cell con­ tains no ordinary beds but only plank beds, with thin coverlets even in win­ ter. ' . From the police stations prisoners are transferred to the central' police prison, which is so overcrowded that, cells built for one woman always con­ tain two or three. Straw sacks are provided for beds, and these are re­ moved from the cells In the day and In­ terchanged among the prisoners 30 that all run the constant danger of contracting diseases. Beaten by the Police. The women were allowed only two fifteen-minute periods of exercise In fresh air weekly until a recent hun­ ger strike. Since then they get a half hour of exercise thrice weekly. Wom­ en political prisoners unlike men po­ litical prisoners are not beaten by the jailers, but In many cases they are brutally beaten by the police imme- ditely after arrest Even children are sometimes Im­ prisoned for political offenses. Re­ cently a boy of fourteen and a girl of eighteen were locked In the same cell and treated as adult prisoners. Re-, cently a girl, sixteen, the daughter of a Czechoslovak citizen, smuggled copies of the Arbeiter Zeltung into Austria. She was arrested and sen­ tenced In each of two different courts to six months for the same offense. Time Is Turned Back 15 Years by Operation Los Angeles.—Dr. Serge Voronoft, re­ juvenation specialist whose monkey gland operations make people look 15 years younger, believes man should live 140 years. “Every animal on earth should live seven times the time it takes to reach first maturity,” he explained. “Man is mature at twenty. Therefore, I give him 140 years to live.”Doctor Voronoft made the surpris­ ing estimate that nine out of ten times monkey gland seekers are men, rather than women.“The glands restore mental as well as physical power,” the specialist re­ lated. “Many men stlU must work at sixty-five or seventy, and need new mental strength. “But the women—they come for coquetry. That’s why there are few of them.” For three months after the gland operations, no effects are felt, he re­ lated, and then—“For seven months the improvement Is continuous. A man sixty-five finally takes on the appearance of a man of fifty./“The effect lasts ten years. Then it can be done again, but I think that the patient wlU get the benefit of only about six or seven years the second^ time. We never have made a third op­ eration.” Autogiros to Land Mail on Post Office Roofs Washington.—Anticipating changes In the aviation industry, the federal government has decided to equip all new central post offices In large cities as airports.Post office officials disclosed they ex­ pect within five years autogiros will be delivering air maU right on the roof of post offices. The new post office buUdings at Chi­ cago and Philadelphia already have faculties for landing maU and pas­ sengers via their tools. Others will be built in New York and in key cities throughout the country* Important saving In time and coat are expected from the new method, which government engineers- have de­ clared entirely practical. Ohio Woman Was First to Hold Federal Office Troy, Ohio.—Mrs. Harrlette Drury,' who served as Troy’s ^postmaster” from 1867 to 1875, Is believed to have been the first woman In^ the United States to hold a federal office; Rec­ ords of her service have JUst been uncovered herft. .Residents of Beivt dere, 111., had believed that a woman postmaster there from 1871 to 1875 was the first woman office holder. c o l o r A n d l if e IN “POSTER GIRL" Br GRANDMOTHER CLARK $ $ If you want to make a‘ quilt with lots of color and life, the “Poster Girl” will be your selection. The quUt shown above Is made from -block number 95^4, which Is one of the six different girls in which this assortment comes. Make the quilt either by using all the blocks of one design or assorted. The blocks are stamped on white 18-Inch squares, and die applique material is-stamped with the necessary designs and cut­ ting lines. Twelve 18-Inch blocks are generally used for one quilt With twelve 18-inch blocks, 4-inch strips between blocks and a 9-incb border all around, allowing % inch for seams, the finished quilt will meas­ ure about 77 by 98 Inches. Four yards of 36-lnch material is sufficient for border and strips. Send 15 cents to our quilt depart­ ment for one block No. 95-A Uke the above. Make this up. You will like the beauty of design and can then decide what designs you want A picture of the six designs will be mailed with your order, from which to select. Price per set of six stamped blocks with applique patches 75c postpaid. Address—HOME. CRAFT CO.— DEPT. D.—Nineteenth & S t Louis avenue, St Louis, Mo. Enclose a stamped addressed en­ velope for reply when writing for any information. How A bout It, Parents? A physician decided to. help the- unemployment situation the other day by giving his young nephew, who bad just passed his bar examination, some of his bills to collect He in­ structed him to make a report on each of the debtors. ■ One morning the physician found In his mall the following note: “Dear Unde—I went to see Mr. X yesterday to collect the $20 he owed yon. I found that he had five chil­ dren bnt no assets. BilLn —New York Sun. Biliousness S o a r S tom ach G as a n d H eadacho dm to Constipation $50 A WEEK WITH A KODAK Particulars free. Dept. C* Eeystune Sales Service* Box 413. Portsmontb, Ta. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAMEegreeiDaDifrqff-SfopaHairffaigag I Imparts Color and a sI Beauty to Gray and Fadea HairI 0^0$ at J^nsgtots.'HI ihit Chan. Wfca^PtttgpcnmefN.!. FLORESTON SHAMPOO—IdMl fOT mtta Uii soft uni BnSfy- GO ce^* brmailoratdrog- SiafeHIaeaEe 'E ChemicalWodoii FatebCffDei N.Y. s n i l i r I T W C Dr.SOUer\ 9 U K I v J!r I EyeLotUmfolieyes and cares sore and Inflamed eyos In 24 to IS boom Helps the weak eyed, cores wttftonf Pgn. -------- ordea]er for HAX.TERS. OnlrP.O. Boy 131, At.lrtnui.On N EU T R A L IZ E E x cess A c id s — b y c h e w in g o n a o r m o re M iln e s ia W afe rs Von can obtain a tbli size 20c package of AClsesia Wafers containing twelve full adult {loses by furnishing us with the name of your local druggist If hi does not happen to cany M ilnnii Wafers in stock, by enclosing IOC in coin or postage stamps. 'Address SELECT PRODUCTS, INC. ___4402 23rd S t; Lons Island City, N.Y. MrNamtA-------------------------------------------------. . . . . . . . Street A4Jrm . . . . . . . . . . . . .l __________ Town & Stole ---. . . . . . . . . . . . . i i . . . . . — M>DrugsWs . SlreetJJdtttt ------. . . . — -------------- Toum & State -——-------------- MiLNESiA H l i i m m y * R e c o r d , n . c . BRISBANE T H I S W E E K W ealth Is W ages M ost Constant M arket W ages and Prosperity Long W ants Chunks The American Cotton Manufactur- Ars' association, at Charlotte, N. CL . promises not to re­ duce wages or in­ crease hours, an ex­ cellent pledge, as important to the employing, prosper­ ous class as to workers. This was well put by W. J. Cameron, speaking for Henry Ford, an­nouncing restora­ tion of the six dol­ lars a day minimum wage, which will cost Henry Ford $2,000,000 a month! A rthur B risbane SaJeJ .jjr. Cameron: “The finest possible method of dis­ tributing the nation’s goods is through wages. They represent work done and useful wealth created; they never drain or tax the country—they add substance and strength. . . . "It is impossible to exaggerate the dependence of the country upon wages earned and paid, or the happy effect of a return of wages after a period of decline. . . . The expenditures of the rich cannot support any basic business in this country; for In the first place we have very few people who can be called rich; and In the second place, neither their needs nor their buying power is sufficient to support even a medium-sized industry of any sort “The largest, most varied and most constant market in the world is the wage- earning American people. They handle the bulk of the money; it is their needs and standards that keep the wheels turn­ing. If they can’t buy it doesn’t matter who else can or does and their buying power is wages.” Business meh who think wealth can be taken out of the wages of working men, should read those words in italics, carefully, and they should be read by any workers that have listened to dema­ gogues telling them, "Take it away from the rich. That is the way to'be happy.” There are not enough “rich” to go around, but with full production, full consumption, good wages and rea­ sonable leisure, affording time to spend ' and enjoy the good wages, American prosperity for all that has grown stead­ ily In the past would continue to grow. Have wages ’ and prosperity in­ creased? They have. First, a President of the United States once complained,' publicly and without rebuke, that you could not hire a good worker in this country for less than $100 a year, about 30 cents a day. Second, McMasters, the : hlptorian,, tells you tbat in the early days only' one American mechanic, a New Eng­ land carpenter, could earn as much as one dollar a day. * Third, In 1914, when the automobile Industry was young, Henry Ford’s minimum wage was $2.34 a day. It ,was In January, 1914, that the new minimum was changed to $3 a day. The senate rejects Senator Long’s proposition to spend five thousand million dollars a year benevolently, and raise the money by taking “chunks” out of large fortunes. This process, the senator’s "share- the-wealth” idea, might last a little while, but after the large fortunes were all gone the “share-the-wealth” gentle­ men might begin taking “chunks” out of each other. J. Pierp'ont Morgan of New York, who sold valuable pictures here, and sold them well, proving business abil­ ity, in London is selling costly minl-; atures. Some ask why Mr. Morgan, who is prosperous, sells works of art that ■ cannot be replaced. The reply might properly be “That is my business.” Perhaps he sees ahead conditions in which “real money” will be better than miniatures. Telegram, dated Washington, from Congressman P. L. Gassaway. Try to be as cheerful As he Is: "Just returned from trip through Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Crops are good out there: Prosperity is cer­ tain. Couldn’t get breakfast In rail- . road restaurant .pn account of crowd.” New's Review of Current Events the World Over President Offers Higher Tax and Wealth Reduction Pro­ gram—Social Security and Wagner-Connery Labor Bills Passed. B y E D W A R D W. P I C K A R D © Western Newspaper Union- Sen. Wagner Lloyd George says: “Signor Mus­ solini is bent upon the conquest of Abyssinia. Lust is in bis eye and it makes his speech wild and inco­ herent He resents all interference from outside with furious anger.” Mussolini’s speech may have been “wild and incoherent,” but there was common sense in it when he reminded' the.British that they didn’t invite.or listen to criticism while they were building up their empire: - Jackie_Kaul, a New York boy, five years old, thought kidnaped, is found in the East river, drowned, by acci­ dent,'undoubtedly. ■ -After dreadful anxiety, to know the! truth brings relief to the parents. The' sad death Of this child shows how faith and a belief In the - hereafter ,console human beings. Faith that their child is happy In another world, and has been happy and safe ever since they first' missed him: makes their grief bearaole. . ©, K!og Features Syndicate, Inc.: WNU Service. S' PURRED on by the White House, the house, after a hot debate, passed the Wagner-Connery labor dis­ putes bill by acclamation, and Presi­ dent William Green of the American Federa­ tion of Labor hailed it as a “magna charta of labor.” As is well known, the federation is the chief beneficiary of the measure, and Green and other labor union leaders had worked unceasingly for its passage. Opponents of this bill, including consti- tional authorities in both parties, have asserted repeatedly that it is uncon­ stitutional, and it' is most probable that it will be carried to the Supreme court for an early test Every attempt to give the employer an even break with labor was voted down, but the house did accept an amendment making the new labor board an independent agency instead of a part of the Department of Labor as Secretary Perkins had demanded. As passed by the house, the Wagner- Connery bill provides: 1. For the setting up of a permanent labor relations board of three mem­ bers, appointed by the President, as an independent agency. The board, or its agencies or agents, is authorized to supervise elections, conduct hearings, and issue cease and desist orders for “unfair labor practices,” which are en­ forceable by the courts. 2. That representatives selected by a majority of a unit of employees for the purpose of collective bargaining shall have the exclusive right to nego­ tiate with the employer. The board may determine the appropriate unit for collective bargaining, whether by plant or craft, etc. 3. That it is an unfair labor prac­ tice for employers to restrain, coerce, or Interfere with employees in their organization for collective bargaining.- 4. That it is an unfair labor prac­ tice for employers to “dominate” or contribute financially to any labor or­ ganization. 5. That it is an unfair labor prac­ tice to encourage or discourage mem­ bership In any labor organization for the purpose of making closed shop agreements.6. A fine of $5,000 or a year in prison for anyone interfering - with agents of the board, snch as refusing to permit‘access to books and'-'records.: EVEN Huey Long cheered when Pres­ ident Roosevelt’s unexpected mes­ sage on redistribution of wealth and Increase of taxation for the rich was read to congress. The Chief Executive offered a program that'he hopes will pay part of the vast expenses of the New.,Deall and at the same time break op some huge fortunes and check-the! growth of big corporations. He doesn’t expect congress to do the entire job at this session, and the administration leaders at once set about stopping the. radicals who wanted Immediate enact­ ment. The President’s taxation plan is frankly aimed against the wealthy, especially the men with million-dollar incomes. Of these there were 46 In 1933. The following legislation he recom­ mended for enactment during the pres­ ent session in order to obtain ample revenue without hampering enterprise and to distribute tax burdens equi­ tably': 1. High inheritance and gift taxes ■ on “ail ,very, large amounts recelved.-byj any one legatee or beneficiary.” Seg­ regation of this revenue for reduction of the national debL 2. Tax levies to restrict “very great individual net incomes.” 3. Substitution of a graduated cor­ poration tax ranging from 10%-to 16% per cent for the existing 13% per cent rate. For consideration at the next ses­ sion of congress the President pro­ posed : L Elimination “of unnecessary hold­ ing companies In all lines of business,” by discriminatory taxation."* ‘ 2. Discouragement of “unwieldy and unnecessary corporate surpluses.” 3. An amendment, of the Constitu­ tion to abolish tax exempt securities by authorizing the federal government to tax subsequently issued state and local obligations and state and local governments to tax federal securities. Treasury officials estimated tbat about one .billion dollars could be ex­ pected ultim- tely from the tax. plan submitted. ‘ jaa Doughton-of the house ways ?..*• means committee promptly Ctaied . .5 body together to consider the proposals. . tIXTITH only six senators voting in VV the negative, the senate passed the tremendously important social se­ curity bill" that already had gone through the house. During the five- days of debate a number of members. Democrats and Republicans like, hadi iirgued ■ earnestly that this measure never would stand up. In the Supreme court, but when their names weye called nearly, every one of them voted for IL The oniv consistent ones were Moore of New Jersey, Democrat, and' Hastings of Delaware, Hale of Maine, Metcalf of Rhode Island, Austin of Ver­ mont and Towhsend of Delaware, Re­ publicans. This social security meas­ ure will affect about 30,060,000 -bene­ ficiaries In the immediate future and by 1960, it is estimated, will cost the federal government more than $3,000,- 000,000 a year. . These are its main features: 1. An appropriation of $98,491,000 for the fiscal year 1936, including $49,- 750.000 for grants in aid to states for old age assistance. In addition there are authorized annual appropriations for the old age reserve fund, graduat­ ed from $255,000,000 in 1937 to $2,180,- 000,000-In 1980. 2. Income tax on employees and ex­ cise tax on employers, for old age benefits, beginning in each case at I per cent of the pay roll in 1937 and reaching the maximum of 3 per cent In 1949. In addition there is a pay roll tax on employers for unemployment insurance, beginning at I per cent In 1936, increasing to 2 per cent in 1937, and to 3 per cent, the maximum, In 1938. 3. Grants in aid to states on a match­ ing basis for assistance to persons six­ ty-five or older, the government’s con­ tribution not to exceed $15 per month. 4. Old age benefits after January if 1942, ranging from $10 to $85 per month, depending upon the total amount of wages earned after Decem­ ber I, 1936, and before reaching: sixty- five years of age. . . 5. A 90 per cent credit to employers for taxes paid- into state unemploy­ ment insurance funds, the other 10 per cent to be apportioned among the states for administration of their un­ employment insurance laws. 6. Grants in aid to states for aid to dependent children, the federal gov­ ernment putting up $1 to the state’s $2. An appropriation of $24,750,000 is authorized for the fiscal year 1936. 7. Grants in aid to states on an equal matching basis for maternal, and child • health -services. An annual ap­ propriation of $3,800,000 is authorized. 8. Grants in aid to states on an equal matching basis for the care of crippled children. An annual appro­ priation of $2,850,000 is authorized.. 9. An annual appropriation of $1,- 500.000 through the children’s bureau for aiding state public welfare ,Pgeiirr. cies in the care of homeless or neglect5 ed children. 10. An annual appropriation of $1,: 938.000 to be apportioned among the states for vocational ■ rehabilitation. < 11. An annual appropriation of $8,- 000,000 to be apportioned among the5 states for public health services. 12. Grants in aid to states on an equal matching basis for assistance to the blind. An annual appropriation of $3,000,000 is authorized. 13. A social security board of three members .in .the,-Department of Labor., to be appointed-by-tlie President; each member receiving $10,000 a year. GREAT BRITAIN’S realistic govern­ ment finds the best path toward genera! peace in Europe is conciliation of Germany, so it has yielded to Hit­ ler’s naval demands and concluded a bilateral pact with the reich, disre­ garding entirely the desires and fears of France. The agreement acknowl­ edges Germany’s right to build a fleet up to 85 per cent of the tonnage of the British empire, and, what is more important, permits Germany 45 per cent, and in certain circumstances, parity with the empire In subma­ rine tonnage. Submarines were forbid­ den, to Germany. by the treaty of Ver­ sailles.1 EHVING Y. MITCHELL, whom Pres- ident Roosevelt ousted ,.from the position of assistant secretary of com­ merce because he could not work in harmony with' Secre­ tary ,Roper, retaliated with public charges that “special inter­ ests” dominate the Commerce department. He cited especially a .government, contract with the Dnited States lines "for' the perma- nent lay-up of the - : H steamship Leviathan, E. Y. MitcheM assertinS thal « whs .. _ against the public in­ terest and that “those interested In the Companyr including P. A. S. Frank­ lin, John M. Franklin, Vincent Astor and Kermit Roosevelt” stood to behe- flt hv it- He also Severely criticized the bureau of air commerce and the" steamship inspection, service:. ■ No one ln the administration seemed disturbed by Mr. Mitchell’s outbreak; but the senate .committee on commerce at once summoned him to explain and expand his charges.' Mr. Mitcheii turned out to be an excitable gentim man, prone to jump to conclusions and to voice his opinions rather than facts. He talked a lot about Inefficiency, "sinks of corruption,” “favoritism and graft” and such things, but he didn’t tel] the committee, much that it didn’t already know. He asserted thq United States lines, a subsidiary of the Inter­ national . Mercantile * marine, had re celved a “gift’' of $1,721,000 through the retirement of !he Leviathan. o FNATOR JAMES COUZENS of S Michigan has given to the federal ^vemmenf $550,000 to finance a f ooo-acre residence colony for ,par time industrial workers in tee Detroit “ ea, A tract has been purchased nine * ^ s south and west of Pontiac. The nroiect will be controlled by a non- nrofit corporation and Senator Couzens wiM have^nothing to do with its man- agreement rV)RTY prisoners in the Kansas penl- r tentiary at Lansing staged a spec­ tacular revolt against what they said was poor food, and refused to come out of the prison coal mineuntil their demands were granted. They fires to keep the.guards away from the shaft, but the smoke from these was turned backward and the mutineers tamely surrendered. P OOR old NRA, now just a thing of skin and bones, has a new set of managers. President Roosevelt Issued an executive order extending the emacl- . ated affair until April i next, in accordance ] with the resolution, adopted by congress, and then announced ( y i T that James L. O’Neill, vice president of the J H U R Guarantee Trust com- gIjteW j pany of New York,* WOyi<j serve as admin* istrator. Assisting the fSiaf r * hanker in the effort topersuade the pubiic, !-• Berry business men -and la­ bor., to. abide voluntarily by the codes: no longer enforceable, and In the as­ sembling of statistics, are Leon C. Marshall, director of the division of review; Prentiss L. Coonley, director of the division of business co-opera­ tion, and George L. Berry, assistant to the administrator, representing la­ bor. Mr. Berry, who has been serving as a code administrator, is,, president of the International Pressmen’s union and was once a candidate for nomina­ tion for Vice President of the United States. O’Neiil, Marshall and Coonley were made ,directly responsible to the Pres­ ident An advisory council of six members was named to help them. On this council are Charles Edison and Howell Cheney for industry; William Green, president of the American Fed­ eration of Labor, and Philip Murray, vice president of the United Mine Workers, for labor, and Emily Newell Blair and Walton H. Hamilton for consumers. AFTER three bloody riots In Oma-. ba’s street car strike, in which one man was killed and nearly two ’hundred' were' injured,- Gov. R. L, Cochran of Nebraska took charge of the. situation. State troops were called out to preserve the public peace and the governor, meeting with "representatives of the traction Com- Ipany, the'central labor union‘ and the strikers, ordered that the dispute be -arbitrated immediately.' ' 1 Illinois National Guardsmen were sent to Freeport where strikers at the Stover Manufacturing plant had fought.with deputy sheriffs.. Gov. Hen- ry 'Horner intervened and a basis was reached for settling the strike,- which had been in force since May 7. The men were, granted a wage increase at least until September I next President Roosevelt succeeded In averting the threatened strike of bi­ tuminous coal miners. Both the oper­ ators and the United Mine Workers agreed to a truce until,-,June 30, .be­ fore which time it is hoped a new wage scale can be formulated and- accepted. SECRETARY OF WAR DERN ex­ onerated MaJ. Gen. Benjamin D. Fonlois of biame for the army air-mail fiasco and merely directed that he be reprimanded for mak­ ing. “inexact,, unfair and misleading” state­ ments to the house military affairs com­ mittee. This didn’t suit certain members of the committee who insist the general should be\removed from1 his !command of i] the army' air' corps. Representatives wil­ liam H. Rogers of New 6en- Foulois Hampshire and Lister HIU of Alabama said they would carry the matter to the floor of the house and there re­ view the evidence the committee took. In holding that FouIois should re­ ceive more drastic punishment than a reprimand, Representative Rogers made public a letter from Secretary. Dem to x the committee. The letter followed an .official' War department statement clearing Foulois, whose •friends.insisted.he was-being made a scapegoat-for-tire administration air­mail blunder. . “It is affirmatively established ” Dern’s letter read, “that General Foulois violated the ethics and stand­ ards of military service In making statements- before your committee which not only were unfair and mis­ leading to the committee Itself but which also reflected upon the integrity of his brother officers.” P RESIDENT CARDENAS3 CL Mexico I appeared to have come victorious out of a crisis that was precipitated bv Plutnrco- Elias Cailes, who was ol posing Cardenas’ economic policies The young president forced his entire o M r6s gn and formed anothW.hat would support him. wholehearted The Mexican City Catholics, who are i.retty much suppressed, took advTT .age of the presence In VhTSptonS thousands of Rotarlans attoomT * international convention, and held’6^monster parade win, ; ecl a for . religious liberty. 8 cauIng National Topics Interpreted i by William Bruckart N ational P ress B uliaing ________________W ashington, D, C. Washington.—President Roosevelt appears to be facing a considerable amount ot trouble as Trouble for Ms plans move for- RooseveU ward for admlnlsta- Kooseveu ^ $gooo. 000,000 works-reUef fund. The diffi­ culties. confronting ,the President are of two kinds, each likely to prove em­ barrassing. At this writing it Is im­ possible to forecast what the end will be but the circumstances of the situa­ tion that has been brewing some weeks seem to warrant A recital of the facts. It will be remembered that during the long drawn out congressional fight preceding passage of the $5,000,000,000 appropriation there were numerous open accusations and many more mum­ blings underneath that the fund would be' used by the administration to some extent at least for political purposes. Most observers thought at that time that the accusations were simply rep­ resentative'of a boiling political pot It was felt also that opponents of the President, were fomenting discontent and defections In Ms ranks In order to establish a record for later political campaigning. Now, however, s’ different aspect ap­ pears. The patronage. question has bobbed up. It is coupled with com­ plaints in .many, states against federal encroachment upon states' rights. So, It is made to appear that Mr. Roosevelt Is faced with a determined element wMch is battling against his policies not so much because he Is' a New Dealer as because they believe federal power has been extended to a new boundary and this breeds a fear of fur­ ther subordination and subjugation of state authorities. The recent meeting of the governors’ conference at Biloxi, Mlss., constitutes ample proof, If fur­ ther evidence be needed, of the up­ rising out In the states against en­ croachment on state affairs by the Washington administration. History records numerous instances where here­ tofore the Washington government has sought to extend the scope of Its power In one way or another, usually In minor matters. In every Instance this move has been met by a solid phalanx, of. state, officials and. state leaders who have promptly put the federal government back In Its con­ stitutional place. As far as recearch discloses,, however, the Biloxi govern­ ors’ conference is the first instance In which; the--chief executives of ‘states have come out so openly with their declarations that the federal govern­ ment . had gone tob far. The Biloxi pronouncements take on added sig­ nificance as well through the fact that leaders who were the most critical of President 'Roosevelt In that? meeting were governors of traditionally Demo­ cratic states.• • • The other phase of the difficulties faced by Mr. Roosevelt links possibly '■ t . more directly withPoUtical the politics In the Phase situation than does that which I have Just discussed. While, the states’ rights question'and the’ jiotebtiaMies of a further subordination of state au­ thorities to the will of the federal gov­ ernment ties in directly with the President’s expressed desire- for con­ stitutional revision, the second factor carries possibilities of Important po­ litical defections In the ranks of the Democratic party: Again, the governors’ conference gives a clue: State officials must main­ tain their own political organizations. Unless they do so they sink quickly into oblivion. During the last fifteen years the office of governor In a good many states has been looked upon as a stepping stone to the senate or to the Presidency. Consequently, unless the, govefppr-who . has ,',political aihbi- j Hons holds' his ;own ’lihies' fast- Ms chances are gone. Since tee federal government has so mnch money to spend. In each one of the states It be­ comes obvious that the -governors look with longing eyes at the cash. If they control the expenditure they wield an enormous power. Tbe trouble Is un­ der Mr. Roosevelt’s policies the gov­ ernors In most States are not being allowed a voice In this expenditure. Anbrey Williams, assistant emer­ gency relief ' administrator here, let the cat out of the .bag in his speech to the governors at Biloxi.- Fiew-plain­ er words; could have, been-.' chosen- than were used .'by Mr.' Williams In impart­ ing to the governors’ conference the information that Relief Administrator -Hopkins and Works Administrator: Ickes were going to pick their own, men in most, if not all, states. Nat­urally. the governors began to wonder what was left for them. WheU tbey discovered they were holding'an empty bag containing no checks which they can sign, their wrath knew no bounds. And there are further complications In the works relief spending .' program. . ’ I*- win be 'recalled H - J T e r . that a g<*od manyDifficulties senators and repre­ sentatives did not conceal their antagonism for Secretary Ickes while the $5,000,000,000 bill was before them.. Indeed, some of them laid down an Irrevocable poslUon demand­ ing that Mr. Ickes,public works ad- “ inistrator-under the old order, should- have nothing-to do with the new fund, whereupon the President soothed their hurts by saying that he" Mmself would V-' I-.. I gest Circulation: gvie Counbr Nev S w T S f o U N D direct the spending, and hi, „ . are regarded as having When the new set-un wa,« I however, Mr. Ickes was foZ'?ltH part of it It is true that theorpH Ihis position Is of less conseq J ^ that of Relief Adminis^ator IccN I A tli$ f h a A L a I . . , *and that he is also subordina7:7' I way to Frank C. IValker J 'I brought in as a new co-ordin,,,! ^ . ment. As the program derew? I Hopkins appears more and S, I be the big shot His Innuence c? dominates. It must be SddJ P I ever, that his policies and ZL merated by Mr. Ickes are not Li5 cord. ^ The divergence of views betas,,«. Hopkins and Mr. Ickes was shmLT illuminating fashion the othu T when these two officials held J? conferences on the same day. Mr. Ickes, who believes the ata !station never has made a real Z “pump priming” by use of It3 IL works program, argued the law! Mlity of conducting real public * on any substantial scale nnjer ^ present Roosevelt program of w - ing. Mr. Hopkins, on the other Wa discoursed at length on his fatofi! theme, the necessity of plan* projects from the standpoint of p<fc tials In providing employment Tb Hopkins policy takes no account cffc question of permanence of the profed It contemplates only the fsclm Is volved In getting immediate wort k Ickes takes the position that rwny’ cannot be gained unless public wh projects serve not only to give JohH to induce other lines of businesses ti commence operation. Mr. HopkinspttJ to previous experiences in the prsai administration with these attempts t priming the pump and causing tdaSJ jobs to prosper, while Mr. Tckes Inta- entlally, at least, holds that It Is bet­ ter to continue trying to prime tie pump than to give up the Job or Pa the money In the Hopkins fasWm While this little difference of opinlin between the two high ranking official! may not seem important, the consensu is that it has had the effect of slowing up the work of spending the vast SM of money. Most folks believe It si take much longer than a year in which to spend the $5,000,000,000 anyiray Si that any additional delay puts further1 back the ultimate consummation of tbi works relief, program There Is another element of this situation deserving of consideration, j- It is Mr. nopkins who is picking fto President’s representatives in the vari­ ous states where the federal govm- ment has taken over the manageira of relief expenditures. Mr. Hopo is not a politician, has never hadn- perience in that field and givgs uffl appearance of being wholly cerned about political advices, w suit naturally is that Mr. Roosttih being "placed on the spot lntT 1, ber of Instances through Mr-Hopmi appointments. PollUcal observers - are watching these developments closely they see-In them the germsofbiltojuivy DW--ji* «-*•'•»“ — - . cma political enmity that may Mr. Roosevelt so well In the nest Hon. The sleepy Republicans show £!g0 of arousing. The administration m Republicans Awalung been trying to ■« nore the Spring conference ofW Roots” BepubWJ and has succeeded except for F man Farley. Mr. Farley,asheadoi DemocraHc national commiras postmaster general and PolItica'?. w age dispenser, had to shoot b ^ characterisUc' fashion. ot?er Ve0 outburst, silent treatment ^ the medicine prescribed respecting Republican uprising.If M r. . Roosevelt kept Ws “ turned on while the sPrins8gsi0Ili BlI of Republicans was In must have harkened back ^ ^ circumstance involvinglns P „er3 0 j Herbert Hoover. Political * . ^ I Washington and a Sood “ ot ,esSt I franker poliUcians coal fi[!i drawing a parallel on the Sp meetlnf and tee strafing 1R J frs. J- S peight Im ontb^ w ith friends! f rs /jT M . H o rn and i !,u cile. sp en t F rid aj ISalein shopping Ir. and M rs. R . P . R u p ert B oger, sp ifinston Salem sh o p p | /illiam S tockton, of , spent a few days la In w ith bis m other, pkton. - . th e tobacco, refered Lweek th e vote in D aJ I and 25 against. R ol fo r and none against. I Iiss R n th D aniel left | (A th en s, G a., w herd st h er b ro th er. Jam e^ (photographic busine hcob G ru b b arrived (k after spending Ik s at th e U . S. V eted |a t O teen, tak in g tre l i o r S ale o r T ra d l Lidson m otorcycle rea R . R t. 3 , n earl iss M abel Chaffin, o | rsday for D uke :ham, w here she w illl .s atten d in g S um m el .ev. and M rs. R . G .l fee, R ector of the I rch at P ittsboro, w erl rs. J. C. S anford oij |h. L . H odgson, of H d ind J. B. G arw ood, o l e in tow n F rid ay anij is w ith us fo r w hich ’ inkful. Ib ert Chaffin has ical aviation corps of and left last- weelf ;g, w here h e w ill ,me tim e. i||i$ i§ |p f e e children of M r Billy, J. G . and - ““-led to th e P resbyte: fa t B arium . S prings'! I h y R ev. W . I. H ov irs. C. M . L ittleton |g h te r, of C harlotte, j I days last w eek in T parents, A tto rn ey a | |G ra n t. iiss Jan e W oodruffl !appendicitis operatic spitai, S tatesville, F d H e r m any frienq ; an early recovery. R ev. and M rs. R . L . ftghters, M isses Ila ! I R u th , have returne Si, W ashington co u l fy spent about tw o 1 H eth co x assisted ij |le aw ay. Democrats gave then « 'tbat 5» nolitica®course, every one knew Hoover was too thin^ l811nliicl,ine P character!5? to stand UP under fire. Few of us exPcctnn racte, Roosevelt had the same < ^ because he had been u _ ^ir. gun fire much more tl1,0 * ' sne«* Notwithstanding tthlte Jle J1Owerfl-' on the Springfield meotmg, the word leaks out tii. ,isgUstei has been much irked, j 0f $ b, the attack can« JPPob vulnerable5 New Deal. It will be rell'cn'!' n 0ppv for the first Hme the ItepuM' siUon singled 0»t ich‘..„,„pnlble sp*11 believe to be eighteen to the New Deal proSranrerrerS i . Here In Washington ' J10ff Iffi watching closely to dm ^ Bep0P President intends to oH-e ^ ^ lican criticism. If and j tactio*1 back, it is believed his ” losea. plan for 1936 will be publicans also are ' > so-caBf* are to be more of tl^ and Ifti “Grass Roots” con e ,,isbj chance the Fresm jre i» Reraise, little daugh M rs. C harlie W ard Jraine B ow denfdaugil 1 M rs. H . F . B ow del |h a d th e ir . tonsils 8. A . H ard in g Bg» F rid ay m orning.] Vbout 17 m em bers Irih L eague of the I Ithodist ch u rch a tte j pt m eeting of th e ’ st M ethodist churc i T hursday, evening. | (tubers w ere p re se n t: i.t. and M rs. K nod fin W ashing ton C ity l felt to attend, th e' mariT Tinstone’s b ro th er, H | .to M iss-D ial, a ln stp r D ial,, of S o u l raich occurred in th a tl ur. and M rs. G eo. ... (ijdren, o fH c m e sle a J Irived at their, hom e here th ey w ill spend' | f® rge..grows'tom ato J y r Vegetables duritiid sprincr Jn o n tIls ju t| “w ers.^ : '-• any chance tne n w> are before these other ® epUb!ienns I insiders among the 1 P (llii adftf | they are prepared to - tage of the dlScIosn -er oai«“© WMlern Newspaperv s, -K&ffs, w age c u tsb r h i ^fU ngD fialersfT W eP around em plovine itatfij- tra d e fu ll lid F ,es and-, householj F rirm ak ejs 4O-OO wed (rite quickly. I-C -H E B E R L IN G t *797 Bloofl '- 0 I K It Is tr ne taha- °“C'i to ^ i nn Is of less cnr, theOreticalU 1 h iief Ato!a® ^ 3 1It hp 'S also SubnrO- opaBl -I F ra t* a W aiter 1S * in as a new co-oro'i *H s p rograia devnaaDSels appear. fflore " J etoMlfc Ib ig s h o t H is |nn mote b it m u s r ; e nafld7 00^ - . t his POHcies and t t 'I * “■•• M.. "i Ja* § v ergen ce of views “ an d .Mr. Ickes ^ bng fashion the ^ l l hose tw o officials held ic e s on the sam e day * * Ik e s , w ho believes the «1 , I n ev e r has m ade a real prim ing" b j D5e 0f Us pI " I" crram , argued ts* I ^ ^ I con(Incting real p u b lic ^ ' s u b s ta n tia l scale R oosevelt program of ^ ■ H opkins, on the other ban Hl a t length on his £ 5 I £L Hwisitr 01‘ PtaMh- from the standpoint of potei I provitung employment S I policy takes no account of the perm anence of the project! gm plares only the factors fo. g ettin g im m ediate wort Mr kes th e position that recovery gained unless public sorts J s e r v e no: only to give Jobsbut He o th e r lines of businesses to : operation. Mr. Hopkinspolttj , experiences jn the presat atio n w ith these attempts it Ith e pum p and causing relate! p ro s p e r, w hile Mr. Ickes infer- J a t least, holds that It lsbet- fo n tin u e trying to prime tie |a n to g:ve nr- the job or use : In t:i? Hopkins fashion little difference of opinion I th e tw o high ranking officials I seem im portant, the consensus : h as had the effect of slowing cork of spending the vast sum M ost folks believe it will |:n longer than a year In which th e Sn.r-vtp.vhv-O anyway so additional delay pnts farther I [ u ltim ate consummation of the P iief program, is ar.o-iier element of this " deserving of consideration. H opkins who is picking the i t 's representatives in the vari- Jes w here the federal govera- Is ta k en over the management expenditures. Mr. Hopkins politician, has never had K- th a t field and gives every of being wholly oncon- Ib o u t political advices. There- irallv is th a t Mr. Roosevelt Is b la red on the spot" In » p““ ; Instances through Mr-Hopkics ' observers -are watchin* developm ents closely heca« L m them the germs of bit1« enm ity th a t may not serrt ev e lt so w ell In the next d ef : * • • eepy R epublicans ing. T h e adm inistrate been trying to H licans nore the S p rin g ^ k in e conference of Gr k m g R oots" Repnblto"' succeeded except f°rJ P °ev. Mr-Farley, as head of O tic n ational committee an er g en eral and polJtJ^fetoU i had to sboot baca u> fashion. O ther thanW int treatm ent has nrescribed respecting bis radio ssIon, I* a sinillat edecesso" vrlters # ny of JW iot resin ipringflb. vhich ta iver. « - that Mf- I politiraW chine that 5,0racteristro . politic01 . Hoover- s'e sileneo boweven oft"* d that oppo,neat1 are th« s iical Re- , ier« ' - * r - * - .. ........ ...... DAVIE RECORD. AnyLest Circulation of Lie County Newspaper, E W S AROUND TOWN. ■s. J - ^ BontbJ t : s f ' / u . Speight- is spending -m onth/w ith friends at Roper. Its fT H °rn and d au g h ter _s£ucile, spent F riday in W ins- |Sa!em shopping fr. and Mrs. R- P- M artin and . Rupert Boger, spent F riday Vinston Saletn shopping. Pilliam Stockton, of L eG range 1 , spent a few days last w eek in i with bis m other, M rs. Ollie jjktou. Sd the tobacco referendum held Iweek the vote in D avie w as 6 6 1 land 25 against. R ow an voted Ifor and none against. difs R uth Daniel left T hursday lA theus, G a., w here she will Jst her brother. Jam es D aniel, in !photographic business. Iacob G rubb arrived hom e last Ik after spending aoout tw o Iks at the U. S. V eterans H ospi- J at Oteen1 taking treatm ent. > o r Sale or T rade— H arley- lidsou m otorcycle reasonable. R . R . F oster. R t. 3, near C ornatzer. Iliss Mabel ChafiBn1 of R . I, left Jyrsday for D uke U niversity. |bam . where she will spend six Iks attending Sum m er School. Rev. and Mrs. R . G. Shannon- lse, Rector of the -Episcopal fhrch at Pittsboro1 w ere th e gbesls Jts. J- C. Sanford one day last ?ek. . L. Hodgson, of H arm ony, R . ndj. B. G arw ood, of Jerusalem fre in town Friday and left frog s with us for w hich we are duly iinkful. Albert ChafiBn has joined the jlical aviation corps of the U S jiy and left last w eek for F o rt |g g , where he will be stationed iome time. E^hree children of Mrs. Cleo A m - Bs1 Billy, J. G. and Dallas, w ere ried to the Presbyterian O rphan- t at Barium Springs last Tues- by Rev. W. I. Howell. Irs. C. M. Littleton and little hghter. of Charlotte, spent sev Bi days last week in tow n w ith ■ parents, A ttorney and M rs. A. I Grant. Iiss Jane W oodruff underw ent [ appendicitis operation at L oug’s pspital, Statesville, F riday m orn- Her m any friends wish for Ir an early recovery. |Rev. and Mrs. R. L. H ethcox and iughters, Misses Ila Rose, Louise |d Ruth, have returned from Cres (11, W ashington county, w here jty spent about tw o weeks. Rev. . Hethcox assisted in a m eeting pile away. Louise, little daughter of M r. I Mrs. Charlie W ard, and Miss |raiue Bowden, d au g h ter of Mr. I Mrs. H. F . Bowden; all of R I had their tonsils rem oved by I s- S. A. H arding and W . M . pag, Friday m orning. !About 17 m em bers of the E p- pth League of the M ocksville ptbodist church attended- a dts* fel meeting of the L eague at the |rst Methodist church a t L exing !Thursday evening. A bout 175 N bers were present for the m eet- r |Mr, and Mrs. K nox Johnstone BinW asbington C ity, w here they Sat to attend the m arriage of Mrs. fhnstone’sbrother, H arold Sm ith, tP Miss. Dial. a . d au g h ter of Pnator Dial, of S outh C arolina, Jhich occurred in th at city yester py. 'v - Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W . Sm ith and llJdren, of Homestiefidf F la., have rived at their hom e at. R edland, here they will spend' the sum m er, "irRe grows tom atoes, celery, andpbervegetables during the w inter ‘L and of V ,ad spripcr m onths in the 1 !lowers.’J j SAXESMEN --^tA N T E D — -.No fri, ,?•’ waRe cutspr hard tim esfor peberhng Dealers. • W e ofifer steady- J w around em ploym ent sell direct T atm trade full line hom e re- Itanles an^ household products. ir,-v taaLe $40.00 w eekly or m ore. rvHte quickly. Ben?- h e b E R L IN G C O M PA N Y I :797 Blooniington, 111; S A I f f B B l d O f e D , j u p 3 . t9jg - T - - V ■ E . H . W oodruff and 'fam ily. of G adsden, A la., are S pending-this week in tow n w ith relatives and friends. O n account ot t he spread of infan-" tile paralysis th ro u g h o u t the S tate th e aunual S pry hom ecom ing will not be held this year, A lvis C heshire, of this city, will again be heard over radio station W SJS, W inston-Salem , on F riday afternoon from 1:15 to 1:30 o’clock, T une in and hear him . ' O ne case of typhoid fever w as re ­ ported in D avie county last w eek, th a t of Joe S m ith, of A dvance, R. r. N o cases of infantile paraTvsis have been reported in this_ county so far this year. “ L addie” is playing at T h e P rin cess T heatre W ednesday and T h u rs­ day Ju ly 3-4. John W ayne in “ T exas T erro r” also first chapter “ T he Lost C ity” F riday and S atu i- day and “ R oberta” M onday and T ues. D on’t miss either ot these. M r. and M rs. L onnie L anier, of A thens. A la., cam e in F riday to at­ tend the funeral and burial of M r. L anier’s brother G rant. T hey will spend tw o w eeks here w ith hom e ^olks before retu rn in g to A labam a; A . U. Jam es and F ra n k H oney­ cu tt, W orld W ar veterans, returned last w eek from the U . S. Soldier’s H ospital, Johnson C ity, T enn., w here they spent three w eeks under­ going treatm ent. T h eir friends are glad to have them hom e again. Grove Seniors Fnterlained. / T h e follow ing yonng m en from D avie left last w eek for A ndrew s, in Sw ain county, w here they will be stationed in a CCC cam p; Claude Boger, 4 ; Jam es F Beam, Coolee-. m ee; W’illiam H . H ilton, A dvance;' G ilm er C ham berlain, Cooleem ee;] . » . . • . Connie M ack L ong, R. 4 ; W illard A d m i n i s t r a t o r S N o t l C e . A . W aller, A dvance. Miss Pauline Chafiin very, inform ­ ally entertained the 1935 Senior Class of Shady Grovp H igh School, Friday! evening a t her hom e ■ " I Several gatjies w ere played on' the ; law n a fter which" the ,hostess invited ’ the gueBts into the living room for a m iniature new spaper contest. Miss A nnie R uth Koonts, the w inner for th e girls, w as presented a m in iatu re: new spaper, . “The Senior - Echo,” , events of the senior class. T urner . Robertson, w inner for the boys, was given a souvenier of the occasion. 1 A t 'th e close of. this contest, the, hostess, assisted by her siBter, Miss J Mabel Chaffin, and by Miss O neita Fitzgerald, ser e d 'refreshm ents to the follow ing guests: • Misses Louise -Todd._ W yolene Bailey, K athleen B ennett, M ary Jarvis, M areta Bailey, R uthe Foster, M adeline Sm ith, Thelm a - Shuler, M arie B arnhardt, Blanche Foster- Annie R uth K oonts, and Elizabeth Holder;.M pssrs W . A, Bailey, Gilmer Livengood, B ickett H endrix, Billy Ellis1K O .-M inor, M eroney Essex, and T urner Robertson. Help Distressed Farmer, j The Farm D ebt A djustm ent Com-1 m ittee will m eet in the Relief Offi- e at the C ourthouse Saturday, July 6 a t 2:00 o’clock p, m . The purposeof this com m ittee is to help the distres­ sed farm er adjust his farm debt problem s in order th at he may be able to m eet.his debts. Anyone de­ siring to m ake application fo r a hear ing before this com m ittee should ap­ pear before the com m ittee on -July 6,1935 E verybody’s T alking A bout Our Summ e r M ercha n use And there’s a reason: for it, because we have one of the best stocken in the coun­ ty. We invite you to inspect it and see the new summer merchandise arriving daily. Here Are-A Few Of The Many Items To Be Found In This Store. M r. and M rs. G. I. H ow ard, M r. and M rs C ~C . H ow ard, and M. C. H ow ard, of K noxville, T enn.. cam e in last w eek to a tte n d ' the funeral and burial of th eir m other, Mrs; S allie,H ow ard. T hey returned to their hom e S aturday m orning. M r, M. C. H ow ard spent F riday , after­ noon in tow n on business, M r, and M rs. R yan M cBride and daughters, M isses Many E lizabeth and F rances, and son Toni, of Rae- ford, spent several days last week in tow n, guests of M r. and M rs. Boone Stonestreet. W hile here they enjoyed a reunion of the R attz fam ily on W ednesday, at-the hom e of M r. and M rs. S tonestreet. A bout 20 w ere present, and the day was one long to be rem em bered. Notice is hereby given th a t the undersigned has qualified as adm in­ istrato r of J. A r Hege, deceased. AU persons having claim s against the es­ ta te of the said, deceased, will pre­ sent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day "of June, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar 0i their recovery. All persons indebt­ ed to. said estate will please m ake im m ediate settlem ent. ' This 29th day of June, 1935. W.‘ T. S. MYERS, A dm inistrator" of J. A. H ege, deceased. ROBERT S. M cNEILL, A ttorney. Card of Thanks. We wish to thank all of our neighbors and friends for the many acts of kindness shown us during the illntss and after the death of our son and brother. Mr. and Mrs. H. H Lanier and Family. NOTICE! Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d. no tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims againBt the estate of said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of June. 1936. or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of any recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned and make prompt settlement. This the 28th day of June; 193S. BEULAH APPERSON, Admrx. of George Hendrix. Decs’d. By A T. GRANT, Atty. ' GrAN!.?oidnoon w ttttv ULTEES PAINTiLL COLORS r F H J E c l e v e r w o m a n o f t o d a y d o e s * her floors with a coat of Kurfees Qciii'! toid—overnight it dries hard and iSmGoth* with a glossy finish that is easy to fceep clean.: Just mop it up—the gloss will not rub ;off.V Kurfees Granitoid is ready to use, right out" of the can. . Beautiful enamel and varnish . stain colors. Let us show you what a quart will do for your floor. K U R F E E S & W A R D M 0C K 3V ILL E, N . C. Enjoy The Hhme-Like Atmosphere Of Jv j: v BOGLE INN a r r t i . y ^ h . s , c J : V , J -.- ■ C orner Chestnut . And 3rd S treets - ; - ■ Sea Food. Com fortable Rooms.vRunning W ater In R oom s^ -V Rates F or Room- And Meals $1.75 And U p P er Day. - : Special Rates For Week-End P arty On 5 Robm Apartm en t-F u rn ish ed MRS. C. E. BOGLE, Hostess. - 9 8 c to $ 2 .9 8 Practical in th at you can wear them m ost any place . . . for sports . . . fcr shopping . . in the home. Colors th a t will keep through no ending of tubbings. M en’s Sum m er SUITS $9.95 Summer Pants ^ * Men-’s Sum m er Pants, L ig h t P atterns Well Made and Priced Right $ 1 .0 0 U p SHIRTS 75c to $1 39 TIES 25c to $1.00 A nice line of Shirts and Ties-for your Inspection. AU The New Shades. See O urs Before You Buy. WHITtSHOES For W omen ~ Cool sm art straps and i ties. Shoes th at add beauty 1 0 sum m er costumes. $1 50 to $3,50.- HOSIERY AU the new colors in genuine first quality pure thread silk, full-fashioned hose. - 50c, 79c And $1.00 WHITE SHOES For Men $1.98 to $3 50 The Season’s Snappies Styles. Wear. W hite Shoe3 For The 4th O f July. Men's Hats, Sox, and Underwear' At Reasonable Prices. A ll Silk D resses In O ur R eady-T o-W ear D epartm ent Have Been Greatly Reduced. See Our Bargains. C. C. Sanford Sons Go. "E verything For E verybody” ■ ■ ! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I Mocksvilie, N- C. I Warm Weather Is Here. V isit O ur Soda Fountain For AU Kinds Cold D rinks And V Delicious Ice Cream . FreBh Candies Always On Hand Try Y our D rug Store First; ' L et Us Serve You LeGi and’s Pharmacy O n T h eS q u are Phone 21 Mocksvilie, N. C, uu u m m iiiiiiiiiirnm m r .ym m trm nniinm iuim niim im m am i DR. R. P. ANDERSONI DENTIST I AndersonBuiIding n '• . Mocksvilie, N. C. i Office 50 *- Phone - Residence 37 " G M M fD O M h se ry o m w m CAMtLS NEVER , GET MY WIND I THATS CONVINCING EVIDENCE OF THEIR MILDNESS I I S I P ' I l f I AGREE WITH _ j ^ MR. ARMOUR ABOUT h I i CAMEL'S MILDNESS- 1 AND THEY- NEVER-' FRAZZLE.MY NERVES’ | ...................................... TOMMY ARMOUR, famous golf champion «... YOU W A N T ! a i . n Y O O C A N S M O K E ALW so_M iW 5- COSn/IR TOBACCOS/ Sample Suits. Just received Saturday, a big lirie'dry goods samqles,- consisting of women’s sum- mer.dresses 79c. up. Under-, wear, hosiery, sox, etc. Also m en’s summer suits $2.50 up. Acompiete line of high grade samples at a price that will delight you.-. Come and look them over,* Ship Stuff " ; Large' L aundry Soap, 7 cakes 25c 3 lbs C rackers 40c A lIO ilC loth 23cyd, Potatoes ; 7. 9x12 Straw R ugs S; < . : $2 39 - Salt 5c package ; 7 ^ - - 3c. E^it Fish \ ■: 5ic lb See Ouir Line O f Farm M achinery : ;■•it;-' -. I ■ • • •• ''-L O T IC E ! The Law Requires Me To Garnshiee Fhie Wages Of Persons Who Have Not. Paid Their. Poll Taxes, ... , And To Levy. On Personal Property And Real Estate For Other Unpaid Taxes. Sb, Pay Your 1 9 3 4 County And State-Taxes NO]\V And Avoid This Additional Cost. All Real iEstate Will Bfe Advertised In ' .5 August If^TPai Is Not Paid On Same. ■\K' Ydurs Foir" J. Frank Hendrix j - v -Vr-'•‘-"’-.Ss■- 5-*» ? I ‘3. j M B apBgBtB^BgBBffi^ B a p fasaasBiaKBHgapwgi^H a ^ B s f f lE B ^ f e ^ ^ s ^ ? ^ '- "* ' r\- ■ \ I I f I i S f lg g D A V Ig RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. ft jmMs. 'n t? THESJkMEGOItNTRY. I By ROBERT V. FLEMING 1 I Viee Prtsiienti American Banters ■ i ’ Attoeiaiion ■■ There la ft growing appreciation, both 'on the part ol the people and the Gov­ ernment,. ot the earnest and sincere efforts being made- by bankers to aid In recovery. It Is desirable tbat we miss no opportu­ nity to foster pub­ lic understanding of the bankers’ problema We are living In an age ot complex '■ and upset economic conditions. Our af­ fairs are closely Inter-related not -only within the •' *" V' confines of our O1WnvbOrdersint; extend to other coun­ tie s throughout the world. TieGreatestDifficnlty f I think the greatest difficulty we have to: oyercome in America today is due' to our impatience with the progress we are making towards recovery. We must realize that while the Government can help by directing, some measures for re­ lief and recovery, we must help our­ selves by dolng:our share to give Im­ petus to the Government’s efforts. We have the same country and basically the same businesses, factories and people we had prior to the depression, and Business initiative muat step forward if real recovery Is to be achieved. ?The theory we often bear expressed •that banks create business activity ts Wrong. Banking can only make a sup­ plementary contribution to business ac­ tivity; Bankers have the Jaciiltles and the desire to extend credit, but busi­ ness, must initiate activity by seeking the credit which is readily available to all worthy borrowers. • Let it be said for business; however, that business men are as eager as bank­ ers to contribute towards recovery. I OiInk some of the trouble lies In the fact" that too’many legislative measures have been proposed for reform which leave an uncertainty In the minds of business leaders as to their eventual outcome and effect. Consequently, they hesitate to expand until the probable effects of such legislation are known. O k l a h o m a Q u a d r u p l e t s 'D o g s a n d H y d r o p h o b i a . T a M i v l t N a v I I i T a r A l i l i a I T h e edict com ing from th e city1 0 V I . »lt N o r t n C a r o l i n a . I p o jic s ,3epartm ent to th e effect th at The only quadruplets th at medical reports record as having lived to m aturity celebrated their 20th birth­ day a t Holis, Okla , recently. They are the fam ed K eyi sisters, Mona. R oberta, Mary and Leota, who have ju st com pleted their sophom ore year a t Baylor university, a t W aco, Tex. Their celebration follows two other such occasions in the last tw o. weeks —the fifth aniversary of the quad­ ruplet daughters of Carl A. Moriock, of Lansing, May 19, and the first an­ niversary of the am azing Diorine' quintuplet sisters,. May 28. Strangely enough, a period of scarcely m ore than two weeks covers the birthdays of the m ultiple groups, all of whom, by another coincidence, are girls. Q uintuplets are so rare th a t no ration has been com puted, accord­ ing to Dr.* M orris Fishbein, medical authority, of Chicago. Records of the Am erican Medical association show tw ins occur once in 80 births, triplets once in'6,400 birtbs and quadruplets . once in 512,000 births. The survival of quadruplets or quintuplets is even m ore rare and notew orthy, says D r. Fishbein.; Keenly interested in the; Moriock quadruplets and the little Dionne?, •‘the bunch of K eys” give a clue to w hat the other m ultiple sisters may expect of life -arid it is a bright pic­ ture. . Radiant, tall and sunburned, the Keys sisters are able students, talent­ ed musicians, and fond of outdoor sports. They all dress alike though they look no m ore alike than ordinary sisters. They- will tour N orth Carolina soon, visiting m ost of th e principal cities in the T ar Heel state, singing and playing under the auspices of civic clubs and churches. dogs running loose are to be .killed to prevent an epidem ic of rabies ?■ m ong th e canine and huiuau fam i­ lies of wholly com m endable. .. T h i legislature passed a law m aking it m andatory, th a t a ll dogs in N orth C arolina be vaccinated a- gainst rabies.-^. A lthough the law has its goods points we never have been enthusiastic about it and ques­ tion its efficiency and enforcem ent. F o rsev eral years we have had a Iiw requiring people to keep their dogs confined and we are not - able to understand how the vaccination law can. be enforced any better than the. form er law , w hich -has been, disregarded m ore.-generally than even th e law s against liquor possession and liquor traffic. / T h e one sure w ay to prevent ra­ bies am ong dogs is to kill th e dogs. W e are not predijuced ag ain st dogs and a really good dog is a' prifced yossession w hich the ow ner will take precaution to keep-up and out of th e w ay of stray dogs th a t are Common carriers for the disease that is fatal to m an as well as dogs in N orth C arolina are of the w orthless type and their ow ners hardly ever know w here they are. If -they are not going to keep up w ith them , how are they going to m anifest enough interest to have them vac­ cinated? - If the people who have, good ,dogs will keep them confined-and have them vaccinated and if officers will kill sjtray dogs there will. be; -no rabies and innocent children w ilt not have to suffer the P asteur treatm ent or death by hydrophobia.— W ilkes P atriot. - Tbe difference tw een the CCC re­ cruit and-a vacation cam per is th a t ose of them gets paid fo r all the hard work he <Joes.—Boston H erald. On the average throughout th e world it takes seven acres of land to feed one person. \ - - MAKING IT HARDER FOB BANK BOBBEBS < Mechanical Devices That Impede j the Work of Bandits De- ! scribed by Bankers As* ! sociation Official 1 " The impediments which the hard .' working bank robber now meets in ply- I Ing his trade among small as well as : large banks are described by James E. "Baum, Deputy Manager American i Bankers: Association In charge of Its I Protective Department, In an article In I “Banking” published by his organiza- i tton.' ' "Protective equipment will minimize ! If not prevent’loss,” Mr. Baum says, j “such as the silent automatic type of i alarm, approved tear gaB systems, sev- I eral styles of' bandit resisting enclos­ ures and tlmelocks, or safes equipped with tlipelpcks, which can be set for intervals of. a-few minutes. / “The silent automatic alarms operate in the beginning of a holdup and through actions carried out by the bank- employees In obedience to the bandits’ own commands. They are adaptable to the smaller banks which continue to be easiest targets for tank robbery. Tear.Gas Syitemi - "Tear gas systems have;thetr advan­ tages as self-contained protective units where outside aid Is inconvenient: or too remote !from the bank to be effec: tlve. One objection to the use of tear : gas in preventlng holdup is the need of \ pressing a lever or button to discharge I ILAltbough this necessary action seems i too much-to expect of the victims In a !.crisis where their lives are in jeopardy, j ithe-.fact remains that tear gas systems ^jjia,Ve defeated bank, robbery. Its de­ terrent valqe-ls also ImportanLV - '•ipifterent/styles of bandit resisting enclosures are available. The lock man- : utacturers also produce timeldcks I which can beset to open at Intervals of i five minutes or longer. These locks are : especially adapted for attachment" to ! small safes or xhests for safeguarding surplus funds while the bank is'open i tor bnalaeBS." ' Stock of Central Banks ! ^ Usually Privately Owned y Of ali the . central banks at present existing there are only four whose stock Hs owned by the government. The new­ est central bank ts that of. Canada, 'which opened ,Its doors only a few months ago after. a most exhaustive study bad been made of the experience of„all nations wlUi. the result that-the stock of the Ba.nk:o£ Canada is privately, owned. - N orth Carolina ) !B soperiorcollrt Davie County I M. C. Cain, 0 . L. H arkey. L attie H arkey, Lula Reavis, M ary E tta H am ilton, M ildred C. T horn­ ton. M attie Sprinkle. M ag- : gie M artin, Lena Cranfill, H attieB arron, •V8 . . M. C. Fowler. Gidebn Fow ler, Clyde A ustin, Louise Fowler, E enneth Fow ler, Nellie Olive. Connelly W indsor, Gilm er W indsor, K ate Thomasson, Moroison W indsorandH ow ell ' W indsor. Notice of Publication. The defendants, Gideon Fowler, Kenneth' Fowler, Gilnrer W indsor and Howell W indsor above nam ed, will take notice th a t an action enti­ tled as above has been commenced in the Superior C ourt of D avie coun­ ty, N onh Carolina, asking for a sale for partition of the lands of R. L Cain located in Davie and Onslow counties, said action being fo r tbe partition of saidlands by sale there­ of fo rth e purpose! of division; and the said, defendants will fu rth er take notice th at they and each of them are required to appear a t th e office of the Clerk of the Superior C ourt of Davie County, N orth Carolina; within ten days from the 3rd day of July, 1935, before M . A. H artm an, Clerk of Superior.C ourt, and answer or dem arr to the com plaint o r pe­ tition in said action or this plaintiffs will apply to the court fo r the relief dem anded in the com plaint. ThiB tho 8th day of June, 19^5. 'V ; M. A. HARTMAN. Clerk of Superior Court. “ Only a fool is certain about any­ thing.” declares a college professor. A re you certain about this, doctor? —Mobile R agis'er A d m in is tr iB L ln H aving q u a lifie d ^ ' A dm inistrator of M ary Jones, deceased: notice is hereby given to all persons holding claim s against the estate of said de­ ceased to present th e sam e to the undersigned on or before th e 24th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead in b ar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please call and settle w ithout delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. . - G. F . CORNAZTER, A dm r. of M ary Jones, deca’d. A. T v GRANT, A tty. - A d m i n i s t r a t o r ’s Having* qualified as adm inistrator of the estate of G eorge F; Feezor. deceased, late of F orsyth County, N orth Carolina, this is ,to nptity all persons paving cairns against tbe said estate to present them to the undersigned a t 610 Reynolds Build- in'g, W inston-Salem , N. C.. on o r be­ fore the 29th day of M ay, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in 'b a r of their recovery. AH persons indebt­ ed to said estate will please, m ake im m ediate paym ent. -This 29th day of M ay, 1935. e s t a t e s A d m in is t r a t io n , inc Adm r. of G eorge F. Feezor, Dec’d Executrix’s Notice. H aving qualified as executrix of the last will and testam ent of B. L. C arter, deceased, late o fiD avie coun' ty, N orth Carolina, notice is. hereby given all persons i holding claim s a- gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or be fore May 11th. 1936. or this notice Will be plead in bar, of their.recovery. All persons indebted to said' estate, are- requested to m ake im m ediate paym ent. _ This M ay 11th, 1935. MRS. A LIC E B. CARTER, E xrx. of B. L. C arter, Dec’d. JACOB STEW ART; A tty. ,* Returns forjthe 'first quarter of: 1935 for ■’industrial* corporations publishing quarterly reports show net profits; 21 per cout more than for the‘same In 1931. The total farm value of sili. Important crops, exclusive of livestock, rosa. In 1934 to $4,782,423,000, as compared with $4,114;265,0b0 1n the prevlousyear end {2,883,?95,000tol932. N orth Carolina • I . „ i. •_Davie County j In Supenor Court M. C. Cain. 0 . L. - H arkey, L attie H arkey, Lula: Reavis. M ary E tta Ham ilton, M ildred C. Thornton —M attie Sprinkle ,1 Majrgie Mar- ' tin, Leona CranfiIK H attie „ B arron ^ ; M. C. Fowler, Gideon; Fowler; Clyde . Austin, Louise Fow ler. K enneth ' Fowler, Nellie Olive, CoimeDy W indsor, K ate -Thomasson, .. M orrison Windsor, and . Howell W indsor. Notice of Publication. ■ Conaelly W indsor, one of . the de- •fendauts above nam ed, will, take no­ tice th at an action entitled as above has beeh commenced in the. Superior C ourt of Davie County. N orth Caro­ lina, asking for the sale for partition of the lands of R: L. Caih1vIpcated in Davie and Onslow counties,: N orth Carolina; Baid action being fo r the partition of said Ianda by a sale thereof for the purpose of division; and the said defendant will fu rth er take notice th a t be is required to"ap- pear nt the court iiouse, a t the office of tbe^^CIerkiof --Sujperipc* G durt^of- Davie CountViM bcksvillei N orth Car­ olina, not later than te n :.days after the 17th diw of. JrU ly ilS ^ith eiB am e being the'last publication pffthis no-, dee. before M. Af;' H artm an. Clerk of Superior C oui^ and"' answer, or dem urr to the dpm plaint or! petition in th is/caa8e ,o # s th e ; pIm ntiffs;w ili apply-to tfie court fo r'fu fth er relief dem anded in th e; cdtoplaint.:; ^ h is June 19..-1935'.:''-'i.. : -Ml* A i^A R T M A N :r; D A V IE CAFE “ On The Square” Mocksville, N . C 1 N ext To PostofRce And Ju st As Reliable R egular Meals > . ! : . . . . ; . 35c Ice Cream , Soft D rinks, S hort O rders. Every H our. P. K. M AN O S, Prop. n l % kdtJiIeen Norris Ik A D e l i g h t f i i l ' L o v e S t o r y o f T w a S i s t e r s R e a d th is n e w sto ry fro m 'th e p e n o f o n e o f fime^ca_sbest-loyed woman writero-KathleN o rris. S h e te lls' a liv ely a iid ieen f o r t u “ ’6is o f in t e r e s t i n g f a m U ^ 6 6 6 UQUiD-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE DROPS >■ ' checks ■ MALARIA in 3 days COLDS first day- TONIC and LAXATIVE NOTICE! - Having qualified as Executor of the Inst Willand testament of Tempie GvBaggarly notice is hereby given to ajl persons hold­ ing claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the S®™e- Prf°Pf r!,y fiied on or before the 4thday of May, 1936.. or this notice'will be: plead IPj bar ot re­ covery. AU persons indebted ttvsaur es­ tate will please call unon . thei undersigned to make settlement. -This May 4th. 193S.- p. R. WOOTEN. Exr-of ; Tempie C. Baggarly By A. T. GRANT. Atty. Admmistratc ^ NotJce ed, late of Davie counts, i-crth V etejJ notice is -hereby gi .’en a.’ 1. 50n« IreK claims against the said is-, them to the undersignpt April I, 1936, or this nev in bar of their recoverj. debted to said,estate, C: / make immediate paym 1st, 1935. 6. H. GRAi Mies Jennie B. Hi B. C. BROCK. Atty. to p or Plesj I '“•it ~IT1T11I Mill.................... BEiST IN RADIOS- YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C . B E S T IN SUPPLIES ...... i V O L U M N X X X V lI IEWS OF LO home embalmers CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL AM BULANCE ■ - V y : - T e le p h o n e 4 8 : ' M ain S tre et N ext To M ethodist Charch ^..■ii.-.MtHmHimiMiiHwiiiiiiiiiHiniiiiiiu iiiiiiu w n n m m ii Mini in Iiiiiiiiiiiiilj t , T ravel an yw h ere . . an y day Ilj o n th e S O U T H E R N for ' • PEfiMlLEA P are F or E very P a rse : IJc : P er Mile * 2c F er Mile * 2Jc ■ P er M ile * 3c P er Mile O N E W AY and R O U N D T R IP COACH TICKETS . . . fo r E ach M ile Traveled. R O U N D T R IP TIC K ETS—R eturn Lim it fo r Each M ile Traveled. 15 Days RO U N D T R IP TICK ETS—R eturn Lim it 6 I . . . . fo r Each M ile Traveled. O N E W AY TICK ETS , ; _ . . - . fo r ESch M iie Traveled * Good in Sleeping and P arlo r C ars on paym ent of proper charges fo r space occupied. N o surcharge. Econom ize by laa ving your A utom obile a t hom e and using the Southern E xceIIentD iningC arS erV ice Be C om fortable in the Safety of T rain Travel. R, H. GRAHAM , Div. Pass. A gent . . . Charlotte, N. C. Southern R ailw ay System Clerk of'Supertor ^Coutt, «IlflL ........*. Sn th is p a p e r . D o , n o t est and Most Only $1.00 Per Year. Send A Y ear’s Subscription To Your R elatives W h o L ive In Distant C ounties O r States. T hey Will A p p reciate A .W eekly News L etter From T heir O ld H om e County . THE DAVIE RECORD ,C arries A N um ber O f F e a t u r e s . T h at Y ou W ill N ot Find In A n y O ther P ap er In T h i s C o u n t y . K m m m m T h e R e c o r d is * p r e p a r e d t o p r i n t y olJ J ^ sh p rfeln ^ ticei p V h a t W»» K appeoing l ' T be D ay* of A utom obl H o le. O D avieR ecord1 J t Sheriff S heek m aj trip to W inston last M iss S w annie R a! C hurch, w as in tow nj ping. B orn, to M r. and son, on F rid ay , a find M iss E lla W alker, | in tow n F rid ay on hJ friends a t H olly S pril H . L . A ustin and I w ent to S alisbury F l friends. M isses M am ie anci houser are spending th eir g ran d fath er at M iss E ssie McClac I day for K ansas C ityJ [ she w ill spend som e ' sister. M rs. W . T . S taJ taking treatm ent in at Statesville, continij T he school board night and elected Prq Jonesville, as superii M ocksville graded s( F loyd G aith er, w the R . I. R- Toba headquarters in M ou is spending som e tim ents here. J. F . S tonestreet1 E y ., is visiting his an d M rs.-B. F . Stone: 'Jam es M cG uire, Ji ed his position as . surer of th e M ocksvif M . C. K urfees, K y ., is spending sev | . his brother, J. L ee I . .Z i N . A nderson h i m anager of th e Merq sale G rocery C o., to | Call. M rs. C arolina S trj L ine, died M onday at Salem ch u rch w as about 80 years leaves m any relative: A num ber of M oc w ent to E ato n ’s chu assist- F arm in g to n O ing m em orial servi grove of T . L . W hit R ev C. S Cashw ter M iss M ary, an M oore attended the 1 a t th e ' T hom asville week. Miss B ertha L invilj cam e over F rid ay to 1 who w as seriously day. Miss M am ie Clem at the M asonic O rph arrived hom e last wei sum m er w ith h er pa ^ r s J. H . Clem ent. W . M : C rotts Statesville M onday been for several day^ of his w ife w ho unde ation a t - L o n g ’s Sa week. M rs. C ro ttsil nicely. M issSallie-FerabeJ 50 years, died last low ing a lingering ill! tisipi rThe body w as -Baton's graveyard T | eraI - brothers • and survive. . M rs. J. H . D w igg hom e - in Cooleemee oeath resulting, from “ody^ w as laid- to - ^ r?X ^‘ard S atu rd ay . ®re sorry to Ie B a y lo r, of cH tically iH. _ „ ^ jj? ? H ° w in g R epl V °% !f^ 'b een -srjg g 1^egslatnre ;E ..H . ®v^ iV oB let;;regist4 ^?ff?>;Gierkrjf'. R . M | * G reen; surveyolj cProner, D r. T . T . Vli ^® Sissjo'ners,-.?W H i f O. M . gpe Undetdignec- . ffl36. or this notice - gbeir teoovety. ai ' gsfcid-estate, are1 ; Spnediate paym*,n; ... «. H. GRAii \ |0CKJA«yeB H N; I e s r i n ra d io s - Ju n g r a d io co f m ock sv ille. N.C ^s t IN SUPPLIES | a 1JERAL HOME EMBALMEgg jhst Church p tttmnaanm -HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS MAINTAIN; UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAOC VOLUMN X XX VI.MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA; W EDNESDAY, JULY to, i93S. I iy day 1 1 N for I 2 PERMil e I 1P COACH TICKETS !Traveled. J5Jru rn L im it 15 Days !T ra v e le d . R etu rn L im it 6 Months !T ra v e le d . !T ra v e le d Etayment o f proper |o surcharg e, ne and u sing the Southern Jrvice T ra in T ra ve l. C harlotte, N. C. System ie rd [dest, Most Paper |ounty. Only Year. ^ p t i o n T o Y o u r In Distant They W iil ikly News I Home County [ECORD >f features rind In Any iis County* id to print y°ur [NEWS OF LONG AGO. iWbat Wa* HappeninK In Davie Before ' The Day* of Automobiles and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, July 6 , 1910 ) Sheriff Sbeek made , a business trip to Winston last week. \ Miss Swannie Rattz, of Fork Church, was in town Friday shop­ ping- Born, to Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Dat- san, on Friday, a fine daughter. Miss Ella Walker, of Xappa, was id town Friday on her way to visit friends at Holly Springs. H. L. Austin and son Francis, went to Salisbury Friday to visit friends. Misses Mamie and Jessie Holt- houser are spending this week with their grandfather at Troutman. Miss Essie McClamroch left Fri­ day for Kansas City, Mo , where she will spend some time with her sister. Mrs. W. T. Starrette, who is taking treatment in the sanatorium at Statesville, continues to improve. Theschool board met Tuesday night and elected Prof. Pardue, of fonesville, as superintendent of the Mocksville graded school. Floyd Gaither, who travels for the R. I. R- Tohacco Co., with headquarters in Montgomery, Ala., is spending some time with his par­ ents here. J. F. Stonestreet, of.Louisville, Ky., is visiting his parents, Mr and Mrs. B. F. Stonestreet, on R -1. James McGuire, Jr., has resign ed his position- as SecretaryiTfea-* surer ot the MocksvilIe Chair Co. > M. C. Kurfees, of Louisville, Ky., is spending several days with bis brother, J. Lee Kurfees, on R. I. .Z. N. Anderson has been elected manager of the Merchants’ Wbole-- sale Grocery Co., to succeed W. L Call. Mrs. Carolina Stroud, of County Line, died Monday and was buried at Salem church Tuesday. She was about 80 years of age, and leaves many relatives and friends. A number of Mocksville Jun’ors went to Eaton’s church SiiUday to assist Farmington Council in bold­ ing memorial services over the grove of T. L. Whitlock. Rev C. S Cashwell and daugh­ ter Miss Mary, and Miss - Susdn Moore attended the atinual meeting at the Thomasville . Orpanage last week. Miss Bertha Linvilte, of Winston, came over Friday to visit her father, who was seriously injured Thurs­ day. Miss Mamie .Clement, a teacher at the Masonic'Orphanage,- Oxford, arrived home last week to spend the summer with, her parents, Mr. and Mrs J. H. Clement. W. Ml Crotts returned from Statesville Monday where he had been for several days at the bedside of his wife who underwent' dn oper­ ation at Long’s. Sanatorium last week. Mrs. Crottsis getting along nicely. ; Miss Sallie Ferabee.-of-Cana, aged 50 years, died last 'Wednesday fol­ lowing a lingering illness of rheuma­ tism. The body was laid- to' rest- in Eaton’s graveyard Thursday. Sev­ eral brothers/and many, relatives survive. ; !.! . .!« Mrs. J. H. Dwigging died= at her home in Cooleemee- on--July- 1st,, death resulting, from measles. The body, was laid” to--rest'in Center graveyard Saturday; ' We are sorry to-learn-' ' that - Mrs W- B. Naylor, of- Cana, remains critically ill. . ^be following. Republican <oounty ticket hasbeeiir^gi^eiiftn^avie: LegUlatnre =E,. H;>MOfris;’isheriffi' E-E VoglerJ registeri-B-Xj; Wil- liams; Clerk, J. R. Maspn; treasurer E- P. Green; surveyor, Me C. Ijames coroner, Dr. T. T. Watkins; county, commissioners;?W- -A; Bailey; W.. %-Hobsqn; Share The Burden. . Senator Borah has supplied the right word tax "program that would elevate the rates on inheritances, op larger corporations and on larger incomes. Itis “a share the burden of government program.” -‘‘Soak the-rich" is sin apt expression that seems to fit but it is really mislead ing, Additional tuxes will be put on wealth, if the Congress is strong enough to overcome the power of wealth, because the money is need ed, must be had, to bear the burd­ ens of government. I t ' would be foolish to pretend that taxes will not have, to be increased to meet the billions of increased debt. Where can new taxies be' properly levied? The answer of course is on those most able to bear them. Cer­ tainly the limit seems-to have been reached with poverty. If it is as­ serted that new taxes on wealth, on" those who have great abundance, is a ‘'soak-the-rich” program, which would mean taking the money from those who have it simply because they have it~w hich is misleading and untrue—Mr. Borah invites at­ tention to the '-‘soah the-poor” pro grams of sales taxes so popular, in this country the past few. years. The sales taxes—and tbi's taxes— and;this tax had popular 'support for a federal levy and there is no assurance that we may not have that sort added to the federal pro­ gram—were not levied to “soak- the-poor,” to punish the poor be canse of their poverty. They were Ieyied because more revenue .,was needed, much more, and'="fhe' s'aies1 taxes offered the line of least re­ sistance. Poverty bears the burden of these taxes aind poverty has jit tje strength to fight back. Wealth has strength, tremendous strength. Itiss o strongtbat it dodges and evades the taxes justly levied a- gainst it, which are honestly due Recall the revelations brought out by the senate committee on bank­ ing and currency,' the " things that Ferdinand. Pecora dragged into the, open. Only with a copy, of the record would it be possible to enu­ merate the fraudulent practices, evansions, the downright crooked ness practiced by the big bankers, the millionaires, to evade taxes. The government is near all the time prosecuting suits against tax evaders of great wealth who em­ ploy the smartest lawyers money can hire to show them how to get around the tax Iaws1 The evidence of tax evasion by men of great possessions so. often coming to light is evidence of the enormous extent of the practice. They do not pay jwhat they honest­ ly owe. They do not bear-their fair share of the burden. The pro­ posed increase is a share-the-burden- of-government plan; The people who have most benefits from tbe protection of'government, so much that they dodge their just share of the cost, should be made to - bear their part. Few of them are pay­ ing their part. . -Higher taxes for them are. not a ’ 'redistribution of wealth” in the sense these words are used They are not ’ soak the- rich;” 'T hey are,a demand for the lust proportion! to what they have. The poor pay sales taxes on their actual necessities The richshould pay'dn:tlieir;abuhdance.—Greens bbro-Newsi ' ^ Road To Blowing Blowing’Rock-.r-The work oh'the Lenoir-Biowing-iltack road has-beeBr atojtoed;Whicli means that- traffic may Uow use the road.' The worjc Was stopped in order that the 'largq number of visftors: to the resort lowp may not be-denied the pleasures of the mountain in this section. NUMBER 51 A Dreaded Menace. | Infantile paralysis, that- dreaded disease that makes cripples out of normal children and often results in' death, has been reported in. many; sections of the state and drastic ac? tion is urged by health authorities' in order to prevent further spread, ofthediseasev More than one:- dozen deaths! among children of the state recently, have been attributed' to infantile paralysis and it is feared the disease- wili spread throughout the state Utf people heed the warning of, health authorities. J Measures that can be carried out; to prevent spread of the disease are' of major importance because the; old adage about an ounce of prevent tion being worth a pound of cure is most certainly adaptable to the pres ent situation. Health authorities are advising? that children not be taken into crowds, and more especially into crowds where children may be pres ’ ent from widely separated sections. It is also advised that they not be taken into any part of the state where a case has been reported State College has canceled plans for the 4-H club short comse as a preventative measure and- orphan­ ages are adopting the policy of keep?! iug their children close in and allow­ ing no more entrants until the epiv demic has subsided.' At first glance the situation .,may? not appear so serious when it is cojirj sidered that less than 300 cases; ;tiayi£ been reported ifi thq stit^^bnLi I M should sphad to more alarming'pro ’ portions-hundreds of homesV.would be'saddened by the death of. chil­ dren or the permanent-crippling of children who are now normal and enjoying happy .and carefree lives. —E x ___________ Stanly Republicans Dis- ' own Primary. The age old custom of selecting of candidates of the Republican party in Stanly county by the convention method, will be adhered to. despite the action of the last-General As­ sembly in placing both parties under the’provisions ,of the primary law, according to statements made by several -leading Republicans! The party according to those inter­ viewed, will come up to the letter of the primary law, in-that ^they will hold a regular primary, Prior to the date of the primary, however, it is stated that they will hold a conven­ tion, as in former years, and! that the names of those selected by the con­ vention will go on 'be primary ticket. Riding For A Fajl. In a Raleigh dispatch a few days ago we note .where the state-wide patrol, is adding another expense to the taxpayers of the state. Having already bought more than l(M)shiney new motorcycles for The patrolmen to sail around over the state %n order is'now to be placed for 28 roadsters to be used by Jhe 11 Iieutepants who are too high ahd mighty to ride on an ordinary motorcycle. -The new roadsters are to be speciallybuilt and are said, to be capable of making 120 miles an hour ahd are.built low- wii I* short wheel base so that they will ^tick to tbe\ road . while; going at a 'terrific rate of speed. The first'lieu- tenant that is caught going' above the state sneed limit. 45 miles an hour, ought to be indicted. It is not stated what kind of a chariot will be bought for Captain Farmer, head man of the outfit, but we. -imagine nothing short of a Roils-Royce would be befitting to a man Of his station. —Union Republican. le m ^ o j r e iA il npem plyjrei CrsonsjVqf ' to :er the tocome the ERA office at,4iln early date and register. /,The more you observe, what the niU lfohsfallfp^t^:'^ore yt|U- won- Sales Tax. Nashville, Tenu.—A sales tax In Tennessee will work against the national recovery 'program, it was contended today by the retail Mer­ chants Association 'of Tennessee in reaffirming their opposition to such a tax ^ The merchants declare the sales tax will naturally curtail consump tion right when the Federal Gov ernment is striving desperately to Stimulate consumption to revive prosperity. will further oppress the poor, drive business from the state, bankrupt merchants encourage extravagence- among state officials and bring a bout bootlegging of all commodi­ ties just as cigarettes are bootleg­ ged In Tennessee today. Morever, member of ' the Assp- ciation today pointed to what is happening in North Carolina and Other states where the sales tax is in effect. To substantiate their position they made public an inter­ view given by Willard L. Dowell. Secretary of the North Carolina Merchants Association on what the sales tax has done in that state, Mr. Dowell said; . ‘‘A three per cent sales tax in N orth1Carolina has driven $100,- '000,000 worth of business out of state in! the twp years it^has ; been in effect. This has brought lots of our merchants to bankruptcy while many others are hanging on .the ragged'edge. "The sales tax InTbis'state has put an extra heavy JjjKidenonrfhe, man with; a;small income;'; The person whoronly. has' $1,000,000 a vear to spend must pay out $30,000 of that amount In addi tionai taxes. As a result many families have . been compelled to skimp on what they need and this has cut down consumption to the minimum. . • ,The way thisTax has hit the poor in this state shows it is unfair, un equal, unsound-and obnoxious. A sales tax cannot be anything but an eXtra burden on the poor- and a drain on business In this state it has cut tbe tax on big fa.tories and passed it on to the underpaid work­ ers; it has cut the tax of big land owners and passed it on to the im­ poverished tenants. V “ The only interests in North Car- Iina that favo'r the sales! tax are the large tobacco companies, the rail­ roads, the large land interests and the power companies. 2“ As a result of our sales tax bootlegging of ail' commodities is common in North Carolina today and the people are becoming a race of tax dodgers, People with auto­ mobiles drive over to Virginia to buy their clothes and do their shopr ping; they; even go to Virginia to buy their automobiles. Of course they are out of their gas and oil but that is less than the tax. ’ “ Tennessee should look upon North Carolina as the horrible’’ex­ ample for- the - sales tax curse. There aie more practical and bene­ ficial ways ot balancing a budget.” Dayie Short One Teacher Teachers allotments by county, and city units for the 1935 36 school year, were made public Thursday by the state school commission. Davie county was dlloted 107 teach­ ers last year, and this year we get 106 teachers. With all the extra1 taxes that have been put on the people by the last legislature, it would seem that more teachers could be employed insteaad ..of ; reducing ti e number. . . ;!V:\ Relief Money and Alcohol. Governorship Comes High. Judge Wilson/Warhck, after re “It may have been because-news viewihga case whereiu a defendant (w&8 scarce the past week and , that iat Is n 1913; the cost of government •^!federal, state?add' ldcal^was less t^ p :$3 .ooo,oo6 ,p6o. In 1934? >t Wds $ i5 ,5<to;6oo,oob—a gain of 431 per cent.. . . . ii^Eyen stolen happiness seems tp, ^iO TdjdyTorsom e f ' :ii ' charged-with violating'the liquor laws admitted he used relief money to buy the-stuff, suggests that- it would be well'for relief authorities to drop into court anon to find out how many defendants are in the habit of using relief money for such purposes. The suggestion is pertinent and timely! The; government is spend i ig millions of dollars to help people in this country who-really need help. •This money is supposed to be used to buy. food, clothing and other necessities of life for the families of workers who are unable to. secure employment. Not any of this money is being paid out knowingly, we take it, for any purpose other than that of bringing relief to the unemployed and indigent. But when individuals whom the government is trying to help take the money and waste it in the purchase of things that will actually make their condition worse and tbe need of their, families more acute, a miscarriage of relief plans is going on which should be cir cumvented. Continued practices of this sort will do irreparable dam­ age to the entire relief money in this manner should either be brok­ en from'the habit through /prison sentences, persuasion or whatnot, or else be denied participation - in the fundr ^ The Iatter is the harsher plan, snick the families of such per sons once learn that society will provide for their-families of such persons may be in dire need. - But ii 'such persons once learn that so­ ciety will provide.for their family but not for them, a graver sense of self-respect and responsibility may return.—Twin City Sentinel. Bishop Cannon Flays Relief. ! San Diego, Calif.—Bishop James Cannon, Jr., asserted in a sermon that “those who can get work and will not do so, should 'be compelled to work, if they eat, so that they may no longer be an oppressive bur­ den upon -the honest, industrious, self-respecting taxpayers of the na­ tion. Dr. Cannon, bishop of tbe Metho­ dist Episcopal Church, South, and ardent supporter of national liquor prohibition, spoke at the Pacific In­ ternational exposition. While he believes the “ hungry should be fed and the naked should be clothed” be said, “ present re­ lief metboda are causing increasing concern. “ Under the present system,” he said, “ there has been, developed a veritable army of relief workers, the interest of many of Whom^seems to be,' not to reduce the number of those receiving relief or to discour­ age additions to tbe rolls, but to in* creaBe the workers multitude that the relief workers may have more money to-distribute and that their jobs may be more-secure/ Two Collegesto Reopen ; ThkTalL;;:; Hickory—Rutherford college, a pioneer denominational institution, will reopen next-fall under the Me­ thodist Church,] again after two years in which the college .bulld- ings were leased to the Bnrbe coun­ ty school board ? Trustees of Davenport College at Lenoir, will meet in Cbariotte in the -next few.; weeks to discuss plansMor reopetttegStbatdtetitutipn in the fall of 1936,!* waS announc- ed heie by F. CGSherrill, P t Coiv neltUsi'chairman of the board of 1 trustees; . --.L-J: Teportenyrere hard put to it to find something of interest ?to write a- bout.” says Charity and Children, “ but there was right much - written of tbe possiblity o.f a McDanaId- Lumpkin ticket for Governor aid Lieutenant Governor. -The concen­ sus of opinion sfeemed to bq that they would give the other candidates a great run for Their money if They only could finance their campaign. That possibly seemed remote !for a campaign that would cover the state or wonid.be/ieeded would coat- Uf- wards of $50,000 and neither -Mc- Donald'nor Lumpkin ever saw that much money and furthermore’ the interests that had the money and might be interested in a campaign would give it to defeat rather; than fco elect that pair. If a governorship costs $50,000, who puts up thejmoc- ey? And why would any man or in­ terest put up $50,000'just to give a man an office? Spepding $50,000 in order to elect a mah Governor sounds more like an election; - How much of that $50,000 does tbe hirel­ ing. who copies names from- tomb­ stones for absentee ballot, purposes, get? Those who knpw about'!such things Scoff at the puny $15,000 that McDonald thinks he needs and some of them put the figure as high as - $100,000. We are not thinking of any possible campaign issues; wie are only thinking that $50,000 is a pret- ty high price to pay for a ’Governor and we can’t see how be would be ' worth it, but; wq; supppse/tiio^rijfh0 ; buy Such thfhps'as. GoyaffijrefKmwi''' the value' of thei'r'purchases.’’ Ii it possible that some of the most cruel and twisting human deformi­ ties are to be straightened out .-and cured by the use of plain of'plain salt and water? Demonstrations-at the recent scientific exposition ot the joint meeting of the American Medical Association, and the Cana­ dian Medical Association, indicate that this has reached the stage of probability. ; Brain wash it is claimed that it is the method of use. rather than the medicine” which gets results. The plain salt and water solution is, in­ jected into a vein and at the same time a hollow needle is .inserted- in­ to the spinal cord to draw off- 'fluid. The salt water dilutes the blood .and washes the inflamed areas, which in case of infantile paralysis. St.. YitUS dance, sleeping sidkness7etc., ie;thd brain. Tbe wasbingcarries off Ithe waste which passes from the-bfain : down, the spinal cord, to be drawn off through the need Ie. 'The wpate m atter thus washed froin tbe brain has been chemically analyzed so that- its volume is known. ; It is reported -that six cases’ of .human infantile paralysis have ’ been treated at Syracuse. Four .were caught before paralysis.had appear­ ed.; AU recovered completely, !With­ out a sign of paralysis.- Two -were treated after paralysis started. : One died and the other, a girl witi|.{pa­ ralyzed throat, paralyzed facejimd difficulty in breathing !had partial relief within an hour after the Wash­ ing started, and after three wash­ ings recovered; completely. - - v Giyen time,' medical science jwill formulate: weapons against all" di­ sease but ft is not'often; that Hoia- mon factors, such as plain salt.-and Watori are resorted to and depended upon .to relieve the worst of human sufferings.?—Ex. -; ; !!,; Never Too Old. | Mrs. Sarah McNab, 8l. of Donip- ban, Mo., after 65 years of married. life has applied for a - divorce from her 85 year old husband whojshe says accused her j ’runnhig aSnnd with other men” Judges Cope^be* fdre whom the action was brought, ordered McNab to pay his wife ' $10 monthly until his final decision is,, handed down.. Asked how long tbat Wbuldbe. Judge Copesud. “pnlitos l .The first!pubiic library in- North :tow» ... ... _ ^. ... . . ..... ... v m m * if! ja-' I® , I ^ .VS, .-■ II; IS* I KrL THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - ■ Editor. Member National Farm Grange. te le p h o n e ; Entered at the Postoffice in Mocks- ville, N. C,, as Second-class Mail m atter. March 3 .1903r SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE - $ .1 00 SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE > $ 50 .The youug democrats, consisting of,, men of all ages from the cradle ' to the grave, met in Raleigh a week or two ago. They seemed to have endorsed everything from franklin Delano .down to BIiIcher Ehringhaus.: Many of them seem­ ed to be in favor of more liquor . and more pie for hungry democrats. S lt appears to us that the people of Mocksville would be much better oflrfinancially with more hogs in pans and less dogs on the streets. Thereis aiaw makingit a misde­ meanor for, any dog to run loose on the streets without a muzzle. The city fathers passed this law several years ago, and so far as we know, it hasn’t been repealed. The town officers' should get on their., jobs and ■ enforce the local laws. ■ One child’s life is worth more than all the dogs in-town. The 57th annual Masonic picnic will be held in Mocksville on Thurs­ day, Aug. 8th. Thousands of peo- .ple will no doubt be here on that date, as it has become a ■ home­ coming day to hundreds of former " Davie people who have moved to other counties and states. There ,will be many worth-while attrac­ tions, and the program by the children from the Masonic home is always good. . Make your plans now to come and. enjoy this big day with old friends and neighbors. The fine -dinner alone is worth coming many .milesto enjoy. ' Notice Taf^AlI Masons. There will be a called meeting of the Masonic Lodge to discuss plans on Thursday night July n th , at 8 p. m. AU members and particular­ ly all committee members of the va­ rious Picnic committees are urged to be present. IMPGRTANT. . W. J. HUNT. W. M. ;iZ . N. AEDERSON, Sec. Boys To Visit Washing­ ton. Prof. J. W. Davis, agricultural teacher in the Mocksville high school, is making arrangements to take the members of the high school agricultural class on a camping trip to Washington City, ^bout July 22nd. Prof. Davis and the boys will be away about one week. They will travel in a truck and take their camp equipment with them While in the capitol they will visit historic Mt. Vernon, Arlington National Cemetery, Washington Monument,. Lincoln Memorial1 Bu reau of Engraving and Printing Zoological garden, Congressional Library, White Houses Capitol - Washington Cathedral, and Smith­ sonian Institute. The boys will also see the Cleveland and Washington ball teams jn action, and mil visit - the: Government experiment sta­ tions. They will return home -by the Shenandoah Valley route, visit ing the endless : caverns. Prof-. -Davis has made this, trip several times with students, and says the cost per student will not exceed $5.- 00 . Allstudentslnterested m mak mg this trip should see Prof. Davis as early as possible. J. W. D. Baity Passes. — that’s just the 1935 way of saying w hat C hesterfields have been saying for years C h e s te rfie ld s d o a b o u t e v e ry ­ th in g a c ig a re tte o u g h t to d o . C h e s te rfie ld s h a v e T A S T E —-y e s p le n ty o f it. But n o t to o s tr o n g And C h e s te rfie ld s a re M IL D — b u t th e y ’r e n o t in s ip id o r flat., "go to town” W e s i0 ie ' J 01935, Ijggbtt & Tobacco Co. he Lu\ [gy K A TH LE EN OopyriStt W Kathleen WNU Service I SYNOPSIS Farmington Newsf The many friends of Wade Futches will be glad to Ieam thet he is somewhat im­ proved from bis illness of last week. Frank Farches. of Salisbury spent the week-end with relatives in the Farming­ ton Community. Miss Kate Brewn will return to her du-‘ past record of the country from the origi ties in Washington. D. C.. after. spending nal 13 colinies od through the days of the her vacation with her parents, Mr. and. war for Independence led by the great Mrs. R. C, Brown. i General Washington who later became oiir . Henry Furches. of Crystal Lak was a re­ cent visitor ofhis parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Furchea. "i' ■-■ -John-Wilham David -Baity. 80 -died at. his-home.at Courtney Wed nesday afternoon, following a long illness. Mn Baity-was a native of Davie county,, and-.spent his entire life in this, and Yadkin county. He was a member -of the Courtney Baptist churtb. Surviving is : the widow and- four daughters, one son rbrothefejtj&i&ye sjstei Seral waS'^ES^ETbursda Ij[oon at 3:30 Qtclock at Courtney Baptist churohji-conducted by Revs V M Swatm and I. P. Davis. Burial followed in the church grave yard. - MrkBaity was one of Yadkm - county’s best known and ,beloved citizens, and his death has caused : sadness throughout -tne entire com- jnamty in which be Jived. .. P. 0. S. of A. NewsJ Cooleemee Camp held a regular meeting and after the business session was oyer the President A. L. Lowder recognized Grady Spry who introduced the speaker ;of the evening. Past County President C. N. Spry, who very interestingly reviewed the first President on April 30, 1789, showr ing the growth of our nation from a sin#B Republic of 4 million people to a great na- Mr. and Mrs. Max Brock and MisaEIiza- tion of over one hundred and twenty mil-' beth James were the guests of Mr. .andjijoa. The speaker also.viewed !our first Mrs. Herman Lowe, of Moravin Falls for * fog with the pictuie of a rattlesnake; coil- the fourth. Mrs. Lawe will be remember-' ed ready to strike and the printed' words ed as Mis® Cornelia. Brock. " I (Don’t Tread On Me) to thedays on Betey Mrs.-M. C Ward has been confined to Ir0SS sitting in her arm chair making the her room on account of serious illness.. , 8tars and stripes known as' Old . Glory Captain Guy L. .Hartman, of Atlanta,(which we are so proud, of today.- Brother, and New York, spent last week with his) mother. Mrs. C. A. Hartman. j ~ ~ T ~ ■- ■ ■-■- . •'. ~ Burr Brock, Jr., awl Edwin Johnson. are jJ H I B spending this week with friends at Myrtle Beach. Miss Margaret Brock spenr her vacation with her parents Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Brock. Miss BrocTs holds a.position In the U.' S. District Attorney's Office in Greensboro Mrs. Leiter Martin will be hostess to the Ladies. Aid Society Thursday afternoon. Little Mary Ann Brock is spending a month with her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Green, in Boone. A home coming day is being planned for the second Sunday in July at the Bap­ tist church. A rather interesting and in­ structive program.is being planned for the day. Ever; one is invited to attend and bnng a well filled basket. . . Saturdny closed the first half of the baseball season for the Bi-County League. Farmington winning, the victory over' Bee­ son Brothers gave Farmington the' winner of the firot half. The game Saturday after­ noon proved to he cine of the most inter- mg games of the season. J. Frank Furch- es hurling for Farmington held the Beeson Brothers to 3 scattered hits: to lead his mates to a 2 0 victory.1 : Furches fanned 16 men during the game. Miss Jane Bahnson is spending a week in Boone as the guest of Miss ^Virginia Helms. - 7";!’ Mrs. W. E. Kennen, of Danbury and Miss Dorothy Norringtoh; . o f: Winston-Salem were weok-end guests at Kennen Krest. Mt. aid Mrs. J. Frank -Johnson has as their dinner guests Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. G R. Green and .children, Alberti Helen, and I^ura Jane, of CleyelandtOhio. and Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Green, of Boone. Dr. and Mrs. Grady Harding. Mr. and Mrs. Edjar Mickey, and Ra; Ingram, of King Bpimt Thursday with Dr. Harding's mother iMrs. G. B. Harding. Spry also told .his hearers how glad he Was j to be-back in the ball as his job has kept him from attending the meetings for the first six months of this year. C. B. Hoover and R. V. Alexander reported two visits to Winston camp during the past month and Was proud of the splendid progress that camp was making as a start for the new convention year as they’ added 6 new members to their roll in June and was looking forward to great gains in thisvear. C. R. Cheek, one of the twelve from North Carolina winning a free trip to ' Washing­ ton, D. C., with all expenses' paid and a guide furnished also made a fine report on bis tour of the Capitoi City, it was bis first view of congress in session and was delighted to see our congressmen in action as well as the museum and other points of in terest Attorn* y Archie EUelge, of Win ston Salem, was in town last week looking after some legal matters. Dress Up The Home With Party. Mrs. 15; E. Koontz delightfully entertain ed a number of young people Saturday night, July 6th, in honor of her daughter, Anna Lee's fifteenth birthday.Many Interesting games w e re p la y e d on the lawn after which everyone 'gathered around a table and were served1 delicious cake and ice cream. - #5' Those enjoying this occasionwere: Miss es Annn Lee1Koontz, LiUietta aiid !'Louise Greene. Lois Vickejs, Edna Sw leki' Ja^au Mae; arid Bealah7^Brav ' Brown; BeSttice Seamon, Ruth Drivec and.HegieMason Mesaert. MarshalLGreene, '!Mike11Walkerv Bill Walker. “Biicl^CeUer,;)IFi|lie BrownErnest Koontz. BnicaTurner. Edd Clauson J. K. Pierce. Jatne8 ^afford.?Lester,,Carl and RobertRichie; Avery arid: Jack:/ Bow­les. “Chuck” Brown.'Japes-Walker.. J - S.- Greeoe, 'Jr., Paul Hendrix^ana/jMamn Gaither.-EveryonejrepOrtedvanicestime and-lefi^wisHing^Misl'Eoolaix^wfe'mQre' Low Prices at Sanf ord’s does not mean inferior quali­ ty. It means extra value! For oyer 60 years the keystone of our business has < been satisfaction and fair dealings to our jiatrons. You ean buy with con­ fidence at Sanford’s regardless of price. Impressively Smart 3-Piece B E D ROOM SUITES ‘ Designed On Gracefully Curved And Squared - Lines That Do Justice To The Beauty Of The Softly-Grained Woods. ■ You’ll Be Decidedly Impressed With The Simple, Dignified • Styling Of These Suits. $55, $60, $ 6 5 , N Oil Stoves We Carry The Famous Florence & Blue Ribbon Oil S t o v e s . You Will Enjoy Cooking On :/ Of These— $27.00 to $37.50 '“--W '.'.V .- '=:-' ..r'V W- • :• ‘-I- Living Room Suites Styled On Such Striking Lines Beauty Literally' ; - Makes You Gasp.: X': $29.50 to $62.50 Porch Chairs We have a beautiful line of - ■Porch.Chairs.' ,'Unusual values • in these chairs. See them— . $2.00 to $5.00 Floor Covering Colorful patterns that will add a mellow touch of antique , beauty to a room. - ’ ; ■ $4.95 and Up Gliders $10.Q0 to $16.50 C, C. SanM Sons Co. Evw lhin8 f o r Everybody" . M o c M e , N. C. Happy Family Re-Union SoinethIng in ‘the nature of a family re­ union has been taking place the past week at The Maples, home of Colonel and -Mrs j. D. Hodges, of Mocksvilie. R. 4, with tlie visit ot all three daughters of the family: Miss Mary M. Hodges; of Brooklyn, New York; Mrs. Charles Bordne, of Rosella Park, New Jersey;^ and Mrs. George F. Eliot, of Brooklyn, New York, who was ac ­ companied by her husband, .Major J.: F-. Eiiot Colonel Hodges'son, Mr Paul Hodges and Wife (lateiy-:Miss ,. Sadie; Jordan, of Cooieemee) have been frequent visitors at The.Maples daring the week's stay; of the three young ladieis and full advantage has been taken of the opportunity to express the pride and delight of the younger mem­ bers of the family in the extraordinary honors extended, at the recent Duke Uni­ versity commencement, to Colonel Hodges, as the oldestlivingalumnus of that his­ toric institution. J, W. Gartner, who - was bitten by A poison spider last last Thurs­ day morning, is much better. He Wjs in a serious, condition for two or three days.' Birthday Dinner. On Sunday July 7th, 193S a delightful birthday dinner way set at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cheshire, on Clienr street. : Thetablewas loaded with everythin good to eat, such as chicken, ham, muttoc, cakes, pies, pickles and sandwiches. In the center of the table »asa beauti­ ful cake decorated with fifty-nine candles. The dinner was set in honor of Ur. W. H. Cheshire. Those enjoying the dinner were Mr. .and Mrs. W. H. Cheshire, Ut.andMis. Alvis Cheshire, of this city, Mr. and Mn. J. S. Landreth and children, oi StiaUotd. - T'he Glorious Fourth passed 08 very quietly in Mocksvilie. Most of the stores, the bank and post- office suspended business for the day. So-far as we know, every­ body remained sober and in their right minds. No fights, no auto wrecks and but few visitors were observed on the streets during the day. . Only $5.00 Down 30 Monthly. Payments i K k m s ,-H otpolnfsnew ,Hi-Speed cooking cai!rgiT 4ss,£ew new econ* fe H ? SjpS 1 : Ti* nmgt tilsutraud iitbt .■Chicagoan, tht most popu&rstjU 'Jtadtrof Hotpohtt tltctric range*. M.bd«m: as tomorrow's sun • Fo11 ’porcelain enamel • Aufomotie tom” peratura control • Hi-Speed CaIroa cooklng colls .• Thijckly ln*uloted ovan-V' Newest fabla-top de*lfln ^ ,8eo the beautiful new Hotpolnt Elecaic Ra0S Qtuttotepr ittdieElecttic Company- heater*BllCTRICRANOESondW ATER ^ The Boston Lawrences Sornia at the beginning tush, but the holdings ^ I ave' shrunk to a small Rld fam ily home in Clippl S-wenty-five, has gone i | Lorks, Gail to the publiJ riSdith to the book <lepa Store. Sam is in school, a j Sear-old Ariel is becomin- Pbil is fascinated by "L Fjjv Cass, w hose husband! fcer. Young Van Murchiscp feealthy fam ily, returns fi Gail has visions, through r Iim of the turning of fack. Dick Stebbins, PhiIi J£e run of the house. # E his sisters’ consternati ftivite Lily Cass to the hoi ifrith Van for a week-tf Ehipps, his uncle and auil Ieived coldly. A t a roadhl \rie l, at m idnight. Next L & its she w as a t the p la c j Eo rem orse. A policem arf1 Some, announcing that a i killed in an autom obile s %as driving one of the ca| ifiins, who has been adir s ar, has the case agam missed. GaiI suddenly red feves Dick and not Van. CHAPTER V II- —17— Pbil came in at nine, aJ flly until tbe clock ami jtrilsing ten. Then eTerjl It once, and Gail wentf llione. If Ariel was asj Ihil must go get her. IJ polred so tired! “Let m e.run npstairsl [leaded, “and see if slie T and gone to bed! SlJ |ie Vails’ this late." “She’s there if old maij I started on the Civil i |red. JThey were still laughiI then Edith came dowif ltter In her hand, anj Ice.“It was od her pillow! “What!” Gail whispJ OTing her eyes from Ea ien the sealed envelop^ "She’s goDel” Phil sa| 'Eloped with Van ‘Head it,” Gail whisd ie written sheet to PhJ Phil read it slowly, “Gail dearest, and alll ive us; We had to do il asons we’ll write you.f ‘‘It’s always been Dickj de knew, months ago.f Telt anyway. But I ne| Ie felt, until, lately. . “We’re going to Losj ^’11 be married then .!,rtand the gossip at hod DO money for clothes o| * “I Te told eTery one 1 innt down South—it’s I I’m going to try to get i[ ‘ Please tell eyery on> flmtil we’re married, Gi iy hitch, I neTer can ere won’t be. Dick s: re. We’ll write you here we are, and evi “Don’t tell anyone—(I ail. Just tell them I! job in the movies, a| L If I don't maki ring me home. Expect a telegram IoTe you, Gail, and I’l It was signed, “Ariel “My G—d! Dick d, in a long silence. ‘Gail, doD’t look Si embling, crying. “!Si ick! Maybe—maybe ing that could have Gail moTed her lips ibout to speak, swall ead. She got up and d took a glass of rned toward the roo: When she turned ieemed oddly changed, was older, somehonj eary. Her hand we; ater, she brushed hei om her forehead; he] ith water, too,..as Sb “Well,” she said qn[ ersational tone, her hi ed In a faint frown. “ ’t it? That’s that. • * * * Edith and Gail had | [tage at Carmel for twe tfeeks, easily managin| Itheir table allowance !week, and reveling in i Jof pines, sea air, goll arming, friendly, irifl Carmel abounded in I iwho found Gail and their turn. These were peaceful| [tappy days. “I feel as If I had | IoaCk again,” Gail I thought, somehow—I nl t somehow, at twenty-sfl |be a ClippersTille old : | as if half to herself, as j Edith was silent a “You don’t haTe to I fold maid, Gail,” she si |; but with a touch of p j “I suppose not." Ga [ turn. “You mean OlJ I asked Indifferently. r “OUie. Or GregoryI |-Mrs. Gregory Own-Yol ^ Westgate Gray,” EditlI Gail mused on this, f drawn. “Soniehow .it doesn’t | -, how—well, it would ■ out of my senses w it 5 to hare two or-three ' RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. fences KATHLEEN NORRIS CfcFiTigtt by Kathleen Norris -VTNU Service SYNOPSIS iday Dinner, |Ju!y 7th. 1935 a delightful |er way set at the home of 3W. H. Cheshire, oa Cherry tas loaded with everything Iich as chicken, ham, mutton, Sickles and sandwiches, er of the table was a beauti- ated with fifty-nine candles, las set in honor of Mr. W. H. pose enjoying the dinner were |W. H. Cheshire. Mr. and Mrs, |e, of this city, Mr. and Mrs, and children, of Stratford. jrious Fourth passed off Iy in Mocksville. Most ps, the bank and post­ ended business for the ar as we know, every- Ined sober and in their |s. Np fights, no auto but few visitors were the streets during the Ithly Payments - x .Spit stbe Itr style fouges, r*s sun • Automatic tsro* .Speed Cairo** Jckly Insulated I l a - t o p d e s ig n L o in tE I e c tr ic K S D ^ * ' IcCompanyi and WATER HEATER? Co. Tht Boston Lawrences came to Call- Iornin at the beginning of the gold Lsh but the holdings of the fam ily Snve* shrunk to a small farm , and the fid family home in Clippersville. Phil, veriy-flve, has gone into the iron n-orks* Gail to the public library and Edith to the book departm ent of a feiore SajjT JS in school, and seventeen- wfar-oid Ariel is becoming a problem. Phil is fascinated by “th at terrible” LiJv Cass, whose husband has deserted her Young Van Murchison, scion of a wenlthv family, returns from .Y ale, and bail has visions, through m arriage w ith Jiim of the turning of the Lawrence Buck- Dlck Stebbins, Phil's friend, has |he run of the house. Phil suggests, his sisters’ consternation, th at they !invite Lily Cass to the house. Gail goes with Van for a w eek-end w ith the Chlpps. his uncle and aunt. She is re- Hbeived coldly. At a roadhouse Gail sees Ariel, at midnight. Next day Ariel ad- iits she was at the place, and displays remorse. A policeman brings Ariel foome. announcing that a child has been Jkilled In an automobile smashup. Ariel Sras driving one of the cars. Dick Steb- ns, who has been adm itted to the Ebar/ has the case against Ariel dis­ used. Oail suddenly realizes th at she poves Dlcit and not Van. CHAPTER VII—Continued —17— Flii) o.ime in at nine, and they talked Idiy until the clock amazed them by Ifstrikrag ten. Then every one was up ut once, and Gail went to the tele- fnlione. If Ariel was as late as this, PJiiI must go get her. Poor Phil, who Booked so tired! "Let tne run upstairs, Gail,” Edith Jpleaded, “and see if she hasn’t slipped jjn ami gone to bed I She can’t be at ftiie Vails’ this late.” ' . “Site's there if old man Vail has got- Ieu started on the Civil war,” Sam mut- jftered. Tliey were still laughing at his tone rten Editb came downstairs with a letter In her hand, and a whitened jfoee. g "it was on her pillow, Gail.” -What’” Ga!) whispered. Without noting her eyes from Edith’s, she tore |ojien the sealed envelope. "She's gone!” Phil said. - “Eloped with Van!”. Sam suggested. “Head it,” Gail whispered, kandiDg |the written sheet to Phil. Pliil read it slowly, aloud: "Gail dearest, and all of you: For- Igive us. We had to do it this way for !reasons we’ll write you. "It’s always been Dick, GaiL I think I Ede knew, months ago. Knew how I i.felt anyway. But I never knew how |he felt until, lately.. .. “We're going to Los Angeles, and ire’ll be married there. I couldn’t. |jltand the gossip at home, and having no money for clothes or anything. §r; 'Tve told every one that I have an E'aunt down South—it's true—and that ® I’m going to try to get into the movies. H “Please tell every one that. At least j antil we’re married. Gail. If there is Enny hitch, I never can come back. But Ithere won't be. Dick says there won’t I be. TVeTl write you everything, and I where we are, and everything. “Don’t tel! anyone—don’t tel! anyone, I Gail. Just tell them I’m trying to get I n job in the movies, and let it go at j that If I don’t make good, Dick’ll I bring me home. "Expect a telegram tomorrow. I do I love you, Gail, and I’m sorry.” It was sigDed, “Ariel.” “My G—d! Dick Stebbins!” Phil I said, in a long silence. "Gail, don’t look so!” Edith said Trembling, crying. “She’s safe with Dick! Maybe—maybe it’s the best thing that could have happened!” Gail moved her lips as if she were I about to speak, swallowed, shook her I head. She got up and went to^the sink I and took a glass of water, her back I huned toward the room. When she turned about her face S teemed oddly changed. It was white, it was older, somehow, and infinitely weary. Her hand wet with the cold wtter, she brushed her hair feverishly from her forehead; her lips were wet with water, too,,.as she spoke. "Well,” Stle saia quietly, in a con- J versational tone, her heavy brows knit- 1 ted in a faint frown. "Well, that’s that Isn’t it? That’s that” *«**»•• Edith and Gall had the Wilcox cot- i tage at Carmel for two dreamy August neeks, easily managing to stay under ! their table allowance of ten dollars a 'reek, and reveling In the atmosphere of pines, sea air, golden dunes, and charming, friendly, informal neighbors. Carmel abounded In interesting folk, ^ho found Gail and Edith interesting ill their turn. These were peaceful days—definitely taIlPy days. “I feel as If I had gotten my soul Mck again,” Gail said. "I never thought, somehow—I never saw myqelf, somehow, at twenty-six, contented to ho a Clippersville old maid,” she mused, as if half to herself, as if thinking aloud. Edith was silent a minute. "You don’t have to be a Clippersville, old maid, Gail,” she said then, lightly, out with a touch of pain in her voice. “I suppose not.” Gail paused in her turn. “You mean Ollie Chase?” she asked indifferently. . • “Ollie. Or Gregory. You could be Mrs. Gregory Own-Your-Own-Home-in- Westgate Gray,” Edith said, Gail mused on this, her heavy-brows drawn. ' "Somehow it doesn’t click, Ede. Some- ow—well, it would have driven me out of my senses with joy, at twenty, o have two or-three of Clippersville’s rising young citizens want me. But now it just—doesn’t click, that’s alL Im vaccinated.” - “Was it Van, Gail?”’ They had been to the edges of this ground before many, many times. But in the .more than two years since that fatal Christmas night that had ended one phase of the Lawrences’ life for­ ever, Edith had not quite dared this much before. “Yes, partly, I suppose," Gail an- swered simply. mYou did care for him, Gail?” “Oh, no; not that!” Gail laughed a little wearily, without much mirth. “No,” she said thoughtfully. “He wasn’t the sort of boy* for whom-one • cared. But .I rather went crazy that summer, Ede, and it’s that that I hate to re­ member. “I was sick of Clippersville and pov­ erty and. dish washing, and when Van came along I sort of lost my bearings. I thought you could force your—well, your fate; Grasp what you wanted. I did everything he wanted me to do, went about with those rich people al­ though I knew all the time I didn’t belong there, and that they didn’t want me. And in the end, I had nothing to show for it.” N “As if that wasn’t natural enough, Gail, for a girl your age!” “Oh, it was natural enough. But if I didn’t have much sense at twenty- three, Ariel was only a baby at seven­ teen. She saw me discontented and reekless. “It was half a joke with me. But it was deadly serious earnest with her. She wasn’t going to be caught in the trap you and I were in—perfectly re­ spectable, and not having any fun!” Her words carried Gail over that wearisome road her thoughts had beaten flat in the last thirty-odd months, and she could not go on. Jeal­ ousy and pain mingled ,together like suffocating fumes in her heart Ariel, Dick’s wife. Ariel.for more than two wonderful years Dick’s wife —sharing his breakfasts, meeting him at the door at night, close in his aims when fires were lighted on winter eve­ nings. and happy on the front- seat of Dick’s car when summer expeditions were afoot It wasn’t fair—it wasn’t fair. / These agonies were routine now. She knew how long the spasm of sheer physical wretchedness would last how long it would take her to return, sane and weary, to the routine of library and kitchen, Clippersville streets and the company of old books again. From Dick there had come but one brief letter, received on the New Year’s day just one week after he and Ariel had gone away. Ariel was well, the “W e Can’t Stand It!” Gail Said to Edith. letter had said, and they were to be married tomorrow. There had been de­ lays because of residence, and other legalities; they would write full partic­ ulars In a day or so. Meanwhile ‘the family was please not to say anything about it And he was as ever theirs affectionately, Dick. And after that the long months had spun themselves to a year, to two years, to more,_and there had come no other word. Clippersville was perfectly satisfied to hear that Ariel Lawrence was staying with an aunt, down Pasa­ dena way, and working hard, to get into the movies. There was nothing to bring Dick back to the home town, with his father dead, his mother living with a widowed sister ’way up North, and the Stanislaus place rented to strangers. So Clippersville dismissed Ariel and Dick as separately solved problems; Edith and Phil philosophized about having the youngest member of the family settled, and it was only In Gail’s heart that the pain and the sense of loss lived on. When Phil, only a few weeks before these happy holidays at Carmel, had told his sisters that some time this summer he was to be married to Lily Cass, widowed now, it was the usually quiet Edith who broke into tears, pro­ test, and pleading, and the usually ipa-: petuous and proud Gail who said gently: ' . “If you love her, Phil, Blde and I wouldn’t want anyone who—who loved anyone—really truly loved her—to be unhappy.”' ’ . . .“Gail, you’re so'sweet!” Phil, taken unawares, and completely disarmed, had sgid gratefully. ' “go that’s the next thing we have to face!” iEdith had'said when the sis­ ters were alone. “I suppose so.” 4Td like to know how he thinks we’re going to manage financially I” ' Perhaps renting the corner t° the gas-station people.” “Which we’ll never do!” Edith had said hotly. She had hesitated, sur­ prised at the expression on Gail’s face, and had added, quickly, “You wouldn’t, would you, Gail?” “Well, we’re getting more and more into the downtown streets, Ede. We’re going to be forced out, some day. And a hundred a month-is big .money for that empty corner. “If Phil marries Lily," she went on, after a thoughtful interval, “I mean to act well, with all the character—I mean with all the—well, philosophy I CSD scrape together. I’m going to act as if she wasn’t Lily Wibser of Thomas jStreet hill, but Phil’s wife. Not the one we would have chosen, maybe—” “Gail, you’re, so wonderful!” Edith said passionately, as she paused. “I think you’re the most wonderful worn an alive!” “I used to think I was unusual,* Ede,’’ GaiI had said in a sudden humility. “I. couldn’t help it—the way things went at school, the literature prizes, the grades I skipped. But if I am, what has it gotten me?” “Oh,' Gail, you can’t tell what’s ahead! We don’t know’what’s comiDg!” “I know Pm. twenty-six,” GaiI had said seriously. >CHAPTER VIII They came home on a hot Saturday afternoon, wearied, sunburned, and content from their vacation at Carmel. “It’s good to get home!” Gail said, luxuriously unpacking, undressing, bending her slender-body dduble to brush her inverted fluffy mop. “But I could live at Carmel for­ ever!” Edith said. And then'suddenly there was Phil flying upstairs, and the thunderbolt of the news. Phil married! He and Lily married this morning, partly because Lily’s house had burned, down yester­ day afternoon with all her clothes and all the children’s clothes. And Phil only waiting his sisters’ return to in­ vite his .wife and the three tiny step­ sons into the Lawrence house for the time being, anyway, “until we can find some place. . . . " Lily helped Gail get supper that eve­ ning. Wolfe, Miles, and Daniel Cass played in the Lawrences’ side yard, under the willow, where Phil and Gail, Edith, Sam, and Ariel had all played a few years ago, and their father be­ fore them, ■ Lily was nearly thirty; she knew lit­ tle of books, art, culture, social fine­ ness. But about other things—men, life, wifehood, motherhood—of course LTly knew ?. great deal. 'Between her and GaiL as they worked together, there rose a strange wall of silence. Their conversation became monosyl-. labic, carefuL considerate. .. Gail was very gentle; she was con­ scious of an inner trembling. There was a jar, a shock In Phil’s marriage, but it was a fact accomplished now, and Phil must not ever know bow his sisters felt She and Edith must' just make the best of it—Lily and the chil­ dren would not be under their roof for long, anyway. The children were round, sh a g g y lit­ tle fellows, with Celtic blue eyes and dark hair. Dan, the three-year-old, still retained a certain babyish uncertainty of outline, his wet little mouth hung open, his face, hair, hands were caked with dirt His blue eyes were affec­ tionate, hopefuL As he ate his supper he leaned comfortably against Gail’s knee. .Gail, .peeling , apples, found the feeling of the soft, warm, boneless lit- tie body-rather disarming. It seemed utterly unnatural for life to go on in its old grooves—the old grooves that were so incredibly the new. To dress and breakfast and walk to work with Edith every morning, leaving ISily Cass pretty and compla­ cent in the home kitchen, simply was not a possible situation. Gail felt dis­ turbed and nervous, she began to hate to go borne. Even Edith, whose main effort was to preserve peace In these troubled days, found Lily’s self-satisfied young wife­ hood trying beyond bearing. Phjl saw nothing of his sisters’ at­ titude; he was In a seventh heaven of happindss. But Lily saw enough to convince her of Gail’s and Edith’s con­ tempt and dislike, and, having the whip hand, took ber revenge in a hundred little ways-quite invisible and unimag­ inable to PhiL “We can’t stand it!” Gail said to Edith, lunching with her at the Wom­ an’s exchange. ‘ “Well, why don’t they find a house?” “Oh, I don’t believe they’re even looking!” “Why should they? They’re perfectly comfortable, and you and I do all the dinner, dishes!” “Has'Phil gone crazy?" Gail would ask gloomily. '‘What does he think we are, to put up with it?’ “You know what she said, after that very first night. Remember when she came down to the library and said, ‘Phil and I intend to get out of here at the first possible moment’?" “I remember. But then she told Sam yesterday that the house was as much Phil’s as ours.” “Well, it isn’t!” Edith said stubborn­ ly and fiercely. - “I suppose it is." And Gail would shut her lips in that new, firm line, and knit her thick Lawrence brows Un­ til they almost met, ’ “What can yrfe do, Gail? We can’t go on Rke this.” “I don’t know wbat we can do,” GaU would ponder darkly. “No use in the world appealing to Phil!” she said more than once. TO BE CONTINUED. Still Much in Evidence Curiosity'was the beginning of phi­ losophy and science. ,".-Co SEE SPIRITS OF CRATER VICTIMS Ghosdy Visitors Bring Fear to Japanese. Curling up in the smoke which rises from the crater of Mihara, Japan’s famous suicide volcano, the ghostly images of three girls were seen by terror-stricken' villagers on the island^of Oshima; Remembering that Mihara rose to fame as a lov­ ers’ death tryst following suicides of three high school girls, the villagers said the specter of the girls was an Ul omen. Frightened, the superstitious said the volcano’s “nushi” (master) was about to “rise from the land of fire” to lure visitors to “jigoku” (the abode of the devil). Three days later visitors from Tokyo, just across the bay, swarmed to the island, partly out of curiosity and partly because it was Sunday and she island’s natural beauty and warmth attracted them. At 10:30 a. m. about 100 spectators were gathered on the spot from which persons committing suicide plunge to their death. Suddenly a ybung man, scarcely twenty-five, ran forward and flung himself headlong Into the crater. As the spectators, horrified and speechless, looked at each other, another man, a tew years older, came out from the throng and without saying a word, walked as though in a trance and dropped into the fiery pit. Nervously the spectators moved away, afraid that some unseen hand might pull them into the smoldering inferno. Suddenly another youth, 'about twenty-three, ran to the edge of the crater, stripped himself of bis kimono and, with nothing on ex­ cept shorts, stepped over the brink into the world beyond. Hardly had the talk of these sui­ cides died down when, two days later, three more men flung them­ selves into the fire-emitting abyss, one after another, as many specta­ tors looked on. The police have.decided that here- ITCHING TOK Burning .sore, cracked, , ,soon relieved.and healing aided : with safe.soothing- yjsaSfe: R e s i n o l f after all visitors to the island will be questioned before being permitted Io land. Those suspected of suicide In tentions will be barred from landing All visitors must buy round-trij fares. Officials of the home office In Tokyo are frankly pessimistic. Last year more than 800 persons lost their Uves in Mihara’s crater despite every effort to put a stop to the suicide craze. The crater is seven miles around and it' is not humanly possible to net-in this vast territory as have been other suicide-trysting places. Quick, Spf.e Refiefi For Eyes ‘Irritated By Exposure' - To Sun. Wind and Dust — I R lS L FDR YnliR- E Y E S Wash Pants *1. $1.49, $1.99: stripes pro- shrunk and sanforized. Boys: 91, $1.49» PlEBCB MUXS - CHAMBLEE. GA, O c e a n - f o r e s i T HOTEL MYRTLE BEACH* r- Modem: fireproof; *§■11 all r.ooms' wliK .-bath; cci'o I,- a u d healthy pllmsle RATESjSG u p AMERICAN,PLAN AMERICA’S HNEST BEACH HOTELDance, Swim, Ride, and Golf in the Cool, Refreshing lnsasry o f Ocean Forest p | W IN A WEEK'S VACATION Write a letter of 150 words or more.telling us “Why Mvrde Bcdch is the Ideal Spot for a Vacation and the Ocean Forest Hotel tho Best Place to Stay.1* Winning letters entitle a couple to one vyeek^a room and meals here as oar guests during August. SAM J. LmXEGREEN JAMES LYNCHLESSEES O C E A N F O R E S T ; * jB t ACH'. ‘ 'L 'S'OIUT'H *.*£ A R O L I M JA ‘ > * Pifie and H em orrhoid Swffeffers You owe it to your health to try PILE TABS— a famous doctor’s prescription approved by New York Medical authorities. PILE TABS will give you lastiug relief from pain, itching and bleeding. • N d M O R F SU FFER IN GN O M O R E OINTMENTSEXAMINATIONSINJECTIONSOPERATIONS PILE TABS are small tablets taken after meals. Thousands of users say they relieve almost immediately and prevent recurrence of future attacks. PlLhi TABS are available for only ?L00 in cash or money order from Dept. W-10, MEDICAL CENTER.LABORATORIES,6 0 3 FifthAvemia - NewYorkCHy W 1SsSV slides for a pufouf .ft! Ijfj SPEED ITiUP ! MAYflE WE CAN NAS HIM ! HELP! A HOLDUP! HE SKIPPED OUT THE SACK WAY I HIT THE DIRT I I K 'I # LOOKOUT! HE S G.OT A AUN I n THAT S ONE FOR THE BOOK ! OLD OIZ GETS A PUTOUT ON A HOOK SLIDE I C GOSH — IT DIZZY DEAN AN I M SORRY I HAVEN'T COT MY SPIKEO SHOES ON GEE, DIZZY, I NEVEg THOUGHT i'O MEET You! THANKS, OIZZY. I MWELG YOU MUST TOOK YOUR TIP. TOO,! SE PLAYING ON AND EAT CRAPE-NUTSfTHE ENERGY TEAM. FOR BREAKFAST— I ’CAUSE GRAPE-NUTS JUST LIKE YOU OO . I HAS A LOOO BAT­ TING AVERAGE WHEN IT COMES TO MAKING ENERGY THATS GREAT, SON. ANDVOU GET AN ASSIST ON THAT PUTOUr OLO OIZ MADE I BELONG TO YOUR CLUB, TOO. SEE MY MEM­ BERSHIP PIN? Dizzy Dean Winners Membership Pin. Solid bronze, with red enam­ eled lettering. Free for I Grape- Nuts package-top. In ordering membership pin, be sore to ask for Prize 301. * Dhzy Dean Winners Ring. Some- thing you'll prize. 24-karat gold- plate. Free for 2 Grape-Nuts pack- age-tops. In ordering ring, be sure to ask fbr Prize 307. G irls t.. o Get Valuable Prizes Free! Join the Dizzy Dean Winners.. .wear the Member­ ship Pin... get the Dizzy Dean Winners Ring ■ Just send the top from one full-size Grape-Nuts package, with your name and address, to Grape-Nuts, Battie Creek-, Mich., fbr membership pin ^nd copy of club manual: "Win with Dizzy Dean ,“ containing Ust of 3 7 nifty free prizes. And to haveloads of energy, start eating Grape-Nuts right away. It has a win­ ning flavor all its own. Economical to serve, too, for two tablespoons, with whole TnUif . or cream, provide mare varied nourishment ; many a hearty meal. (This offer ex- . pitesDeCi3lr1935.N6t£QodmCaiiada.')APzoduct of QenetalFooda ■SI 5Im w C H A R M IN G F a o -» F O R A F T E s i L 1 PATTans T)::i, ^fl RECORD, MnrFSVlbLE, N. C. Not Cut Out for a Cook SE FEATHERHEADS «„*:I KuOVfl—b u t *yhey , s e n t ONH "WAV VJASJjf S t-IC E P ./ MAttfA VIOMANi (F SHE HAP To SUCE HER OWH LOAfi VlOULP BE 0REAP _ BOREP SorkjJ-D EA R-But t . ] CANfT MAKE Xou ANY I T O A * T j-_ _ _ — ^ THANKS, DEAR-TusT SOME TEA AHP ToASTVlELL-IF- You FEEL SO-BADLY- YoiJ STAY IN BEO AND I’LL <3ET YoiiR b r e a k fa st— v ih a t do You VlANT ? ,ViHY NOT ? t h e r e IS A NEW LOAF OF b r e a d DowN THERE BODUiSfifiER FIMNE/ U nconscioiisH eroI7OSJNEY OF THE FORCE O Br KtUtrn Ncnppr Unlaa —an1 o i beT th im boards H l AIN'T NERY s T lR O N S- SOMEBODY MOlSHT FAtL THROO AN’ HilRRT TH IM SELVES LoOKlT THAT NOvlj EHHY BddY could PO W H THERE AU TH' PLACE Y El SHOULD ALLOS 6TT TH’ PROP OM A CROOK SUPDEM LOIK6~ H e D idn’t Have a ChanceMEBCAL IKE By S. L. HUNTLEY Il THEM'S HISOVXJNI OlCEi. CAMTT VOO ©OVS e P M o U b j'?o o som ethin iS about No matter what your ageorwefgH there’s one indisputable roadtogaaAlMT'fHAT CWIUO OCtMBLlMG mer Chic—that is, to mate JolrsJ an irresistible picture of daint, inity. Pattern 9320 shown tali Ej easiest road—via flattering feminine softness gathered into a jam yoke, and dainty loose Ilaringsita that lend grace to any arm. Jifj make the picture more complatj Interesting, the notched collarct belt detail inject a tailored a Vou’Il find the dress a joy to ES* and there’s a real thrill tcjssj and choosing from the wealfldsft able fabrics offered. The feat* tons are lovely. Pattern 9320 may be ordered «ilj in sizes 12, 14, 10. IS, 20, 30, S1H 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 reqe-i 3% jards 39 inch fabric SEND FIFTEEN’ CENTS in or stamps (coins preferred! far Ih pattern. Be sore to write plain' your NAME, ADDRESS, STTX NUMBER and SIZE. Send your order to Sewing Pattern Department, 232 West eenth Street New York CCooyfEsht, 1034. by S. I* HunUey, Trad* Mark Res, u, S. Pat. Office) By C M . P A Y N ESjMATTER POP— His Imagination Was Perfect WeHJiE tH av T rtw rlCD*? Tfoo K"mow vmHaT wiu--Ha"PPeM ip Tow &o OOT AMD STa-RT -AMorrtETK MUS TrtKowtM*, Oo m v e s t I TrtiS IS SoA-P MDTrtlS IS ■A TSfJostl! CawYso Iwi ASiUE T rtefE esT T MAtfO- MsAW <S»oiT FeiiSrtTSMiM M a ; (© TneBall Syndicate, Inc.) mREG1LAR FELLERS”Exercising The Imaginataon TOFB -(SE./=)!- <SEMA“, Wtt-WE. EJOE-KCie-E. t MKB SW Itw atH IN O IA ht CUUBS B e s t ' HOT M E M lH B B C O C O A M U T PUHCHl m© T hj Asoctated Newspapers OurFetPeeve ByRLG-KETTNERa>TRADERS By GLUYAS W ILUAM S SiuSfrtB P 5 tw w n sL by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 60£S OlfER Tb EODIB SEtZER1S TO TRftPE SfhMPS FWPS Tilisr EPPIE HASNff AW1 WPtlOSIES TdAT hewants OOEStHOWElIER,CbVEf REfdRNS HOHE Wllil ED EPDIE'5 'RAINBOW SIREAlf PlE Ib SEE IF HE CRN DlS UlRE1 WHICH EDDIE IfIlNkS UP ANVtHlNS Tb ARp Tb is WDRfH MORE TflAN IRE IHE SlhMPS BUL6ABAiUlfeMFK^sjriA)|feDARN THE luck/ I LEFt MyMATCHESHOME f (Oopntatt S h ip s Rk TAKING ADVANTAGE Irate Owner—Don't you SK U sign, “Trespassers will be prose® to the fullest extent of the law Trout* Fisherman—Sure I« Irate Owner—Well, sir! 9®“ J loiow that it means just « ' says? .Tront Fisherman—IVeH I to I Tm the prosecuting attonU- Far Cry From to die Dugout I Washington.—When largest ship afloat, stea York harbor, another thl was written In maritime| Her quick crossing New York, her air-cool^ laminated glass decora swimming.-pool and scl outstanding features w f modern traveler’s cravif size, and luxury. “In every age, ships I the culture of their era,] tlonal Geographic societ; •Tt’s a far cry from ' Normandie to what wad first boat, a tree trun savage clung. Transitio] to a dugout canoe, to planks calked with pit! early in civilization. Vikings In their sturdy I ed, overlapping oak tin green combers of stofl seas, and the oars of lo| flashed in the sunny Many of the galleys scu der a square sail, but pelled ,chiefly by the slaves.' Galley slaves p | as 1830, when captive the ships of Barbary I In the Middlel I “The Phoenicians, firs] plore the. full length the Mediterranean, modi Afraid of being swamptf seas breaking over it, stern of the craft “During the Middle to travel longer distan abandonment of oars f J sails of the Spanish galleons. In galleons, reached exaggerated picturesque but clumsy j primarily to transport . of gold and other prec| for speed. : “Built for rougher chase fleet schools of I [' boats were sturdier and! of the boats which daif around the ponderous ! were the small, fast b<| fishermen. “Since the time of Al) Bngland has maintaine tect her from attacks I 'the king’s ships meal 'shown by the fact thnl *3 the Eighteenth cent| riors were painted re bloodshed In naval ba •bus. ’ v “After Vasco da Gan •ra^the Cape of Good Hcl '-Si'' the Malabar coast, flef HpiJdiamen began sailing i ships carried 20 or 30 | give and rather slow. ‘ “Ships built to run i dles, on the other ha| 'because they carried ■ Ttalns referred to as goes’—fruit, and sla| ,‘spoon-fasbion’ below slaves, opium, and te Weather ban* 4ii Ah, Hai “If I marry you, you’ give up your job.” “But, my dear man. f°“ seem to realize you're in B tleth century.” , “No, but I know tbs > working for.” ____ Dairy Specialist* . Jean—Do you know; wM , might be called tlte dairy the United States? Jane—No, why? Jean—Because that s w cream of society goes to » rated. .Three Posts Ope Better Ser W NU-7 Washington.—The bl f United States weathtf moved to divide up _ for forecasting hurric Too often, it appe rlcane service, centra... ton, been caught ,napj vent of a hurricane tant Caribbean. To secure quicker ; rate forecasts the Ag , ment asked congress I , $80,000 for the weathq , tablish hurricane fore I at New Orleans, Jack [ Juan, Puerto Rico. E. B. Calvert, chief [ I service, has already cl| > region for allotment stations, as follows: New Orleans—Cove MARINES’ Al IHtERESfS EDDIE IN THE REfflRfl. © Ep0^ HEHMANlSjOF A CHEM- HOflSE Tb SEE WHAT I ,ior - . ■ - ICAt SEftBUf WONTPart ’ CAtf RE DONE ARoiU-'/r TEN AND PENiWlftl IffOR OUST THE TOllriT ,SEffBRTidEUDieARIAN- SfAMfSlTRECHEMICALSEf MNALlY AGREESlbTOKE LURE AND PEN AND PEMOL EDDIE’S MOTHER WOtffLEf HIM TRADE HIM PEN AND PENCIL SEt; BECAOSEAflrti EM BAVetftfHIM1ANp! .TrtEWHOLEDEALIBOFF ‘ U eut CoL Ross e I -Uewly appointed chiefl Uon units of the ma| Jed- the marine aviatl -campaign in Nicaragul -Vd the'stunt pilots off .jJent national air races T l ft IR M IN G p S o c '° “ a ftRSko0i, RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. IW TTon ,. 3 .-.) m m i ■& I [VI Itx _e%. d % ^9320 batter what your age or welgtj I one indisputable road to Sun.U u-c T 1t Jla t is- t0 ma^e joiitselflpsistible picture o£ daintj fa I Pattern 9o20 shown takes tts I road—via flattering femiolu, Fs gathered into a saw® Iintl dainty loose flaring Sleeta Ind grace to any arm. JeI n Jthe picture more complex ns jting, the notched collars* Jetail Inject a tailored mfe. [find the dress a joy to mate, liere’s a real thrill In pitting loosing from the wealtb of soft. Jibrics oftered. The sheer cot* are lovely. Ie rn 9320 may be ordered only | s 12, 14, 10. IS, 20, 30,31,34, 40 and 42. Size 16 require* Jd s 39 inch fabric, |d FIFTEEX CEXTS in coins nps (coins preferred) for this _i. Be sure to write pfalnlr j NAME. ADDRESS, STTQ PER and SIZE. your order to Sewing Circls 1 |n Department, 232 West Eight !Street, New Tork. J J J TAKING ADVANTAGE 5 Owner—Don’t you see that Trespassers will be prosecots fullest extent of the law"! it* Fisherman—Sure I do. I Owner—Well, sir! Don’t I* that it means just wn»« t Fisherman—Well, f u the prosecuting attornej. Ah, Hal I marry you, you'll » p your job.” . my dear man, pm :o realize you re in ^ u T l "know the man fOU'« Dairy Specialists ■ Do you Icnoiv ^ 'v^ .or ol I called the dairy ed States? STo, why? tt8 because that's w society goes to be Ships Have Mirrored Culture of Their Era <$>---- Far Cry From Normandie to the Dugout Canoe. Washington.—When the Normandie, largest ship afloat, steamed Into New York harbor, another thrilling chapter was written in maritime history. Her quick crossing from Havre to New York, her air-cooling system, il­ luminated glass decoration, immense swimming pool and scores of other outstanding features will satisfy the modern traveler’s craving for speed, size, and luxury. "In every age, ships have mirrored the culture of their era,” says the Na­ tional Geographic society. "It's a far cry from the stream-lined Normandie to what was probably the flrot boat, a tree trunk to which a savage clung. Transitions from a log, to a diiaout canoe, to a boat made of planks calked with pitch were made early in civilization. Soon armored Vikings in their sturdy boats of rivet­ ed, overlapping oak timbers rode the green combers of stormy, northern seas, and the oars of long' low galleys flashed in the sunny Mediterranean. Many of the galleys scudded along un­ der a square sail, but they were pro­ pelled chiefly by the efforts of weary slaves. Galley slaves persisted as late as 1S30, when captives still manned the ships of Barbary pirates. In the Middle Ages. "The Phoenicians, first sailors to ex­ plore the_ full length and breadth of the Mediterranean, modified the galley. Afraid of being swamped by following seas breaking over it, they raised the stern of the craft "During the Middle ages, the desire to travel longer distances led to the : abandonment of oars for the crowded ! sails of the Spanish and Portuguese [ galleons. In galleons, the high stern I reached exaggerated heights. These I picturesque but clumsy craft were built I primarily to transport large quantities I of gold and other precious spoils, not I for speed. ! "Built for rougher waters and to chase fleet schools of fish, northern boats were sturdier and swifter. Some of the boats which darted like wasps around the ponderous Spanish Armada were the small, fast boats of English fishermen. “Since the time of Alfred the Great, England has maintained a navy to pro­ tect her from attacks by sea. That the king’s ships meant business is shown by the fact that until the end *2 the Eighteenth century, their inte­ riors were painted red to make the bloodshed In naval battles less obvi­ ous. ’ “After Vasco da Gama sailed around the Cape of Good Hope and reached the Malabar coast, fleets of East In- fiiamen began sailing out to India. The ships carried 20 or 30 guns, were mas­ sive and rather slow. “Ships built to run to the W est In­ dies, on the other hand, were faster, because they carried what cynical cap­ tains referred to as ‘perishable car­ goes'—fruit, and slaves packed in ‘spoon-fashion’ below decks. Trade in slaves, opium, and tea, as well as gold rushes, Ied-to rivalry among American and English shipyards in building large, fast sailing ships. These found their climax in the clipper ships, the first of wliich was built in Baltimore about 1830. Most of the clippers from New England shipyards carried tea from China, or gold seekers to San Francisco and Australia. Dramatic River Races. “With the opening of the Suez canal and the growing use of steamboats, the popularity of clipper ships waned. In 1807, Robert Fulton’s Clermont steamed up the Hudson at five miles an hour, while a man on its deck ran about listening. Wherever a hiss told of es­ caping steam, he stopped up the leak with molten lead. By 1818, steamboats reached the Great Lakes, and by 1832 they moved up the westernmost tribu­ taries of the Missouri, carrying pio­ neers into the great Northwest Fuel­ ing these wood-burning boats was a problem, as cottonwood trees near the banks made poor fires, and to saw wood inland meant risking attacks by Indians. “In the latter part of the Nineteenth century, over 2,000 steamboats regu­ larly plied the Missouri, Mississippi aud Ohio rivers. From 1850 until the Civil war the winding reaches of the Mississippi resounded with splashing paddle-wheels. Rivalry was intense between passenger steamboat captains, who engaged In races as dramatic as those between clipper ships. Steam­ boats dashed past each other, furnaces stuffed with tar and resinous wood belching flames that lit up the night Dog Beggar Accepts Only Good Nickels Pauls Valley, Okla.—Plug nick­ els aren’t good enough for Jack, blueblood bird-dog owned by Ed­ gar Long,- local hardware merchant. With the bird season over Jack, to earn a living, becomes a pan­ handler. He treads the streets of Pauls Valley with a paper sack dangling from his teeth begging merchants from door to door to drop in a nickel so he can buy meat. Shopkeepers try to dissuade the big English setter with pennies, plugs and washers but he won’t ac­ cept them. The donation must be a nickel and it cannot go into his sack until he examines it When Jack acquires ■ a nickel he goes immediately to a nearby meat market,, enters the front door, ap­ proaches the meat case and points, true bird-dog fashion, to the meat he wants. Butchers have learned not to “short weight” the dog nor to sell him tough steaks. He detects dis­ crepancies as readily as does a housewife and refuses to trade with short weight artists. skies. In one famous race, when fuel gave out, stateroom partitions, benches, .and even, fine furniture fed the boiler fires of the winning ship. “Although primarily a sailing packet that used its sails most of the voyage, and steam only part way, the Ameri­ can ship Savannah is generally credit­ ed with being the -first steamship to cross the Atlantic. In its wake came a long line Ot ocean-going liners bnilt in rapid succession and culminating in the present' crown of modern mari­ time achievement, the Normandie.” One First Lady Greets Another i -** Mra Franklin D. Roosevelt is here Albert Lebrun, wife of the president of a guest ati the White House. seen welcoming to Washington Mma France. The distinguished visitor was Weather Bureau Will Watch Hurricanes Three Posts Opened to Render Better Service. 1 Washington.—The big chiefs of the Dnlted States weather bureau have moved to divide up the responsibility for forecasting hurricanes. Too often, it appears, has the hur­ ricane service, centralized in Washing­ ton, been caught .napping on the ad­ vent of a hurricane arising in the dis­ tant Caribbean. To secure quicker and more accu­ rate forecasts the Agricultural depart­ ment asked congress to appropriate 580,000 for the weather bureau to es­ tablish hurricane forecasting outposts at New Orleans, Jacksonville and San I ^"an, Puerto Rico. r E. B. Calvert, chief of the hurricane ' sefVice1 has already charted the storm Kgiou for allotment among the three stations, as follows: New Orleans—Covering the Gulf of MARINES’ AIR BOSS £ Ueut. Col. Ross E. Rowell is the aewly appointed chief of all the avia­ tion units of the marine corps. He led the marine aviators on the last campaign In Nicaragua and has head- ^ the stunt pilots of the corps In re- . 4 national air races. Mexico and the gulf coast west of longitude 80 W. Jacksonville—Atlantic coast south of latitude 35 and the gulf and Caribbean areas not otherwise assigned. San Juan—Caribbean sea and islands east of longitude 75 and south of lati­ tude 20. ’ In addition Jacksonville will Issue daily weather forecasts warning of cold waves and frosts In the fruit belt and take over from Washington a twice daily wind and weather forecast for marines from Cape Hatteras to the western Caribbean. Teletype will connect Jacksonville and New Orleans with ten gulf coast cities during the five months’, hurricane season, while radio will flash signals from co-operating vessels plying the Caribbean. 125-Year-Old Church Is Dissolved by Court Writ Lisbon, Ohio.—The 125-year-old Trin­ ity Reformed church In Hanover town­ ship, near here, was dissolved under an order issued by Columbiana County Common Pleas Judge W. F. Lones. A 40-acre tract was divided. The synod was granted the church and its site. The parsonage was awarded to the Central Theological seminary and the cemetery adjoining the church was as­ signed to. the Trinity Retormed Church Cemetery association. The parish wa3 established in 1810 by Rev. John Stauzh, a German Luth­ eran minister. He served as pastor un­ til 1847. Black Hen Broth Fouiid Cure in Hiccough Case Beaumont; Texas. Hiccougliers needn’t suffer long from violent nerve- racking spasms, P. W. Gillespie. sev­ enty-five, who had’’ them biriself, writes* ’' He was.exhausted after four days of, violent hiccoughing. Medical aid failed to give.him relief. His family appealed to the public for. home remedies.Responses came, from Louisiana and Oklahoma by the hundreds. One per­ son telephoned, from -Kansas City. -- The remedies include: Rress ears against head for' two minutes; hold tongue out for a minute; drink water through linen handkerchief; placq brown paper bag over face for five minutes; drink pineapple juice; hold head back and swallow water slowly; turn backward somersault; take flight in airplane. An unknown sympathizer telegrphed from Ada, Okla., that Gillespie drink black hen broth. He did and the at­ tacks became intermittent and soon stopped. Gillespie said he always would be grateful to a little black hen.- i SETS WORLD RECORD Helenf Stephens, twenty-year-olf track star of Fulton, Mo, running at Kansas City, bettered by two-tenth* of a second the world IOOrmeter dash, record for women, which bad been held by Stella Walsh. She ran the distance In 11.0 seconds. Robin Disrupt* Railroad ' Chicago--A mother robin interrupt­ ed a railroad’s schedule here when she selected a box car for her nest of four eggs. A brakeman who discovered the nest called his foreman. “Switch the car to a siding,” the foreman ■■ ordered. “We can’t disturb that family.” Let Our Motto Be GOOD HEALTH „ BV DR. LLOYD ARNOLDProfessorof Bacteriology aod Prevearive Medicine, Uolversitr of Illinois, College of Medicine* SPRING FEVER AND AUTUMN DOLDRUMS Do you ever get spring fever when you feel dull and listless and sleepy and you aren’t able to concentrate on anything? And all you want to do is to sit looking out of the window, or, better, to sit out­ doors in the sun­ shine? If you don't, you aren’t quite normal, for that’s quite the human way to feel at that time. And in the fall is there a pe­ riod when, if you have neuralgia or rheumatism, it aches worse than ever, and your eyes, for no apparently ac­ countable reason, seem so weak that you wonder whether you shouldn’t go to an oculist for glasses? And you have a touch of melancholia—you know, “the melancholy days of fall are here" attitude? That again is quite the proper reaction. We can’t any of us avoid being part of the tremendous change that goes on in all nature the two times in the year when the sun reaches its exact period of twelve hours above the horizon. AU animal life feels that change; every ceU in our body feels it. AU the visible forces of nature seem to awaken from a resting period and become active In the springtime. Flowers, grass, trees, birds and ani­ mals all take a new lease on life. The hibernating animals arouse from their winter sleep. Seeds of the vegetable world, begin to undergo some internal changes that initiate germination and sprouting. The sap begins to rise In trees, followed by the appearance of buds and leaves. Man changes jnst as much as the plants, the trees, and the other animals during the transition pe­ riod from winter to summer. The body seems to respond with greater ease to many disturbing influ­ ences. Eczemas and itchings of the skin become' aggravated. Tuberculosis is usually more active as a disease, process. People suffering from certain types of goiter become worse, and a great many types of asthma and hiv,es are aggravated during the spring months. Spring weather stimulates us. It is nature’s way of causing a period of housecleaning. We burn np and get rid of useless accumulations. During .ihe. summer and fall we enjoy good health and well being after this reno­ vating and rejuvenating springtime. Bqt during the cold and depressing winter months we again have so many sluggish and hibernating cells with their slow and lazy response to our usual demands that by the time spring comes around, the freshening np proc­ ess has to.be repeated. These seasonal changes in the func­ tion of man are of major significance from the standpoint of public health. We have no more control over these factors than have any of the other liv­ ing cells in nature. The forces of na­ ture cause us to become good soil at one time and poor soil at another time for disease production. The season of greatest hazards is the cold winter season. When spring comes we should clean out our bodies, just as the housewife feels the urge to clean house, and men get out the rake and gather up and burn the winter’s rubbish before they start planting, and school children joy­ ously enter on clean-the-city cam­ paigns. Spring is a cleaning out proc­ ess; that’s why symptoms of disease Become more pronounced—our body forces have a flare-up of stimulation. We all have an urge to eat green things at this time. Our grandmothers thought calomel and sulphur and mo­ lasses were called for. But they also anxiously waited for the first rhubarb to become long enough to cut and for the asparagus to push Itself up, and dandelions were cooked or made into a salad with vinegar and hard-cooked egg. It was really these things that refreshed the body, and not the sul­ phur and molasses. Today with re­ frigerator cars that bring us spinach and fresh fruits from California and Texas and Florida all through the win­ ter months, we do not IjlIive the same urge for a diet change that our grand­ mothers did. But still, psychologically as well as physiologically, we Ho crave gneens at this season of the year. Tears of joy run down the southern­ er’s cheeks at the thought of “pot Iik- ker” and greens—mustard greens, dan­ delion greens, sorrel and thistle shoots. Even the confirmed hater of spinach will eat spinach In the spring 'time. It is nature’s way of getting our in­ testinal tract in order, for summer is the time of greatest incidence Of1 ty­ phoid fever and'of diarrheas of various kinds. ' And the better our Intestinal tract works, the better chance we have of ’going through the Sutniner wlthout hav­ ing to spend valuable time In bed clear­ ing up some intestinal trouble. In the autumn, if you notice, people instinctively seek the sunny side of the street, and there is the urge to .spend every warm day in the out-of-doors. Winter is the season of respiratory dis­ eases, and this instinct to be outdoors Is nature’s way of-storing sunshine In our bodies against the dark months ahead. ' >. © Western Newspaper Union. w w n m v IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAylCHOOL Lesson By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D- Member of Faculty, Moody Bible . Institute of Chicago.<gL Weatem Newspaper Union. 17. Lesson for July 14 NAOMI LESSON TEXT—Ruth 1:14-22; 4:14-r. GOLDEN TEXT—A woman that fear- eth the Lord, she shall be praised__ Proverbs 31:30. PRIMARY TOPIC—A Happy Harally. JUNIOR- TOPIC—M aking a Happy Home. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP­ IC—Living Our Religion. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP­IC—M aking Religion Attractive. In teaching this lesson it will be nec­ essary to cover the entire book of Ruth. I. Naomi’s Sojourn in IVIoab (Ruth 1:1, 2). On account of famine In the land of Judah, Naomi with her husband and two sons emigrated to the land of Moab. It is-strangely Inconsistent for a man whose name means "my God is King,” who has a wife whose name is “the pleasant one,” and who lives in a town which means “house of bread,” to sojourn in the enemy’s country on account of famine at home. II. Naomi’s Bereavement (Ruth 1:3- 5). After the death of her husband, her two sons married Moabltish women. In a short time, her. sons also died. This Is a dreary picture—three widows In the same home in a short time. III. Her Return to Bethlehem (Ruth 1:6-22. Having heard that the Lord had vis- Ited his people in Judah In giving them bread, Naomi decided to return to her home land. After she had experienced chastisement she returned. 1. Ruth . accompanies., her. When the time came for NaomI to go -from Moab, Ruth and Orpah accompanied her for a distance. She frankly placed before them the difficulties which would confront them, and repeatedly urged them to turn back. a. No chance to marry again. She reminded Ruth and Orpah that she had no m ortsons for whom they could wait b. Their heathen gods must be re­ nounced (v. 15). She made it quite clear to them that idolatry could not be practiced in the land where God’s people dwelt. c. Though Orpah went back, Ruth stood the test Her mind was fully made up. She was willing to accept as her God the One who was able to produce in his subjects the nobility of character she observed in Naomi. 2. Naomi’s reception. Her arrival made, a stir in Bethlehem. The people recognized her and perceived a marked change wrought in her: Ten years of such trials would make a noticeable change even outwardly, but the change was mainly inward. She asked that her name be changed to Mara. IV. Naomi’s Gracious and Tactful Behavior (Ruth 2, 3). 1. She remembered her wealthy kinsman (ch. 2). In the case of a for­ feited possession, it was Incumbent upon the nearest kinsman to redeem It. Boaz was a kinsman. It was nec­ essary for both Naomi and Ruth to have food. Barley harvest afforded that opportunity. The divine provision was made for the poor when the har­ vest was gathered (Ley. 19:9, 10; 23:22; Deut 21:19). The matter was talked over between Naomi and Ruth, and arrangement was made for Ruth to glean in the field of Boaz. 2. Naomi seeking rest for Ruth (ch. 3). This rest was to be In the house of a husband. Other things being equal, such is the only real place of rest ’for a woman. Naomi instructed Ruth as to her toilet preparations so as to be attractive and then also as to presenting her claim upon Boaz to perform the duty of a kinsman In re­ deeming the forfeited estate because of the sojourn in Moab. The redemp­ tion of the estate involved not only the ability to pay the price of the for­ feited possession, but also the marry­ ing of the woman. V. Naomi’s Reward (4:14-17). 1. Blessed by the women of Bethle­ hem (vv. 14, 15). The birth of a son to Ruth was the occasion of this blessing. It meant the perpetuation of the line of kinship, and looked for­ ward to the true Redeemer, our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ 2. She became the nurse for her grandson (v. 16). This not only pro- vided her with a home and living, but with the opportunity of helping on the purpose of God In the coming re­ demption. 3. The baby given a name (v. 17). “Obed” means “servant of God.” Ruth thus became a link in the ancestral chain of our Kinsman and Redeemer, Jesus’Christ The introduction of a Gentiie into this line indicated the outreach of the redemptive purpose of God, which extends to the peoples of the whole world. ProgreM A ■ marked., characteristic, of the progressive man. is-'thait he is always Improving something somewhere. He has a horror of posslble^deterioratibn, and he knows the demoralizing, disin­ tegrating power of familiarity with In- feriority.—0. S. M. Children A child Is traine'd much, more by example than precept Parents s.hdnld therefore be most careful to act np Jo what’they profess; and to let their actions be a reflex of their words. Strong Favorite of Quilt Makers By GRANDMOTHER CLARK J The “Irish Chain” quilt can be found In almost, every collection, and quilt makers will make at least one of these simpie chain patterns. The single, double, or triple Irish Chain has one, two, or three blocks In the chain. The background is white and the squares are a solid blue, red, or other dark mixed colors to give con­ trast The squares in this quilt measure 1% inches without seam, and'they are appliqued on two dif­ ferent nine-inch blocks; one all checked, the other with a square in each corner. These are assembled alternately to give above effect. Seven 9-Inch blocks are used across top and nine blocks on side. With a 6-lnch border quilt will measure fin­ ished about 72 by 90 Inches. This quilt is simple to make but cutting of patches and blocks must be accurate to produce good results. This quilt Is one of the 33 popular quilts shown In book No. 23, which will be mailed to you upon receipt of 15 cents. .Cutting charts, Instruc­ tions and valuable information for quilt makers will be found In this book. ^ ADDRESS—HOME CRAFT CO., DEPT. D., Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Inclose a stamped addressed en­ velope for reply when writing for any information. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. Wet Weather Sign It is said to be a sure sign of rain when the flies.bite. , . Biliousness Sour Stomach Gas and Headache due to Constipation Pimiples Completely Gone After Using Cutieura Soap and Ointment “My face broke out with pimples that came from surface Irritation and were quite large. It itched and’ burned and at night would Itch so badly I would scratch, and the pim­ ples finally turned into eruptions. My face was disfigured for the time being; I looked as if I had the measles: "Then I read about Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I got great results so I bought more, and I used only twov cakes-of Cuticura Soap and one box of CutIcura Ointment and the pimples were completely gone.” (Signed) Miss Mayme Michelsen, Weeping Water, Neb. Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. One sample each free. Address: “Cuti- cura Laboratories, Dept R, Mal­ den, Mass.”—Adv. KILL ALL FLIES Placea WWWheiAaDaUv FWIYrm«»F attmctn Bnfl Ulla flies. I Guaanteed, dJectfve, Neat* I convenient—C a n n o t I Winnota^ orlnjareanytUnr 1 Xasts all season. 20o at * aaiowl Batold Somers. Jnt DAISY FlJYj KILLER P < r\T llM » T W C Dr. Salter \ a ,.J ^ 9 EyeLotion relieves and cnrea sore gad lnflaicedeyeg In (I to 43 bonis. Helps tbe weak eyed, cores without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer lor 8 AIiTEH 8» Onlr bom BefbEaSLspaxaary P.O. Bor 151, AtlastalQa SALESMEN WANTEDPbr most a maxing patented Invention to chum butter In T to 10 minutes by hand. Botalls for SL2S. No competition. Protita from <15 to (20 per day. Send (LOO tor sample Uaaheraod get started nowl mmmimo CO. Box 321. IfcnBK.. Twn. Ij Ii| ] i yij ' 5 U 'I n ill S " / : m m m m"■ ’IsfeSSt sSlsf-ys-f SviS ■ ■- ■ v , ; . ^ : '■ •;> :, . II I t! if { I « ■ B R IS B A N E T H IS W E E K We Know How to Spend Only the Electric Chair Anglo-French Rift Surprise for Blue Eagle Uncle Sam is learning to spend. A tew lines tell yon that the Bhnhhead' bill, m ak in g the government g u a r- antee a loan of one thousand m illio n dollars to help ten­ ant fa rm e rs buy th e ir fa rm s, is passed. No fuss or excitement about It S e n a to r King wanted to cut the one thousand mil­ lions to two hun­ dred millions, bnt w as "sh o u te d down.” Do you recall the Arthor Brisbane excitement w hen Theodore Hooserelt wanted to build the Panama canal for two or three hundred millions'? Now "one billion” is almost "small change.” Some young criminals, apparently, can be adequately managed only by the electric chair. In their case it seems useless to tali of reform, or "another chance.” They are distinctly of the rattlesnake class. Consider a twenty-five-year-old ma­ chinist, captured in Peoria, who con­ fessed to murder when the dothlng of a dead girl was tossed into his lap. “Yes, I did it,” he sobbed. This young murderer kept a diary,, which In one month recorded 18 attacks on young women. The electric chair should cure his sobbing. In the lute of Anglo-French friend­ ship and understanding there comes a rift, wide enough to let a ceach and four drive through. England, dealing directly with Germany and Hitler, now rejects the French suggestion of a "consultative pact,” which would com­ pel Britain to consult France before reaching any important diplomatic con­ clusions. That ought to interest this country, which agreed to consult everybody on earth before building more ships, or tilting its big guns to the most ef­ fective angle. It Is stated, bluntly, by British of­ ficials: "Britain is placing greater stress on friendly co-operation with Germany, ..closer consultations with the British dominions, and a steady drift toward co-operation with the United States.” News from the Department of Com­ merce would surprise the recent de­ ceased Blue Eagle, and others: “Busi­ ness shows sharp upturn throughout country since death of Blue Eagle.” This is the skeleton announcement; the details show retail sales increas­ ing, In spite of abominable spring weather, In some of the big cities. Union labor demands that all United States railroads be,nationalized, ,Oyraed by the people, run by the government' Season? Private owners do not know how to run them. The roads would be ' bought not confiscated, presumably, which would mean twenty to thirty more billions of national debt Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Laura La Plante—surely you know her_ after work on the set near Monte Car­ lo’s gambling room dressed up and pre­ sented themselves for an evening’s en­ tertainment The doorkeeper said bluntly: “You work In Monaco, so you may not enter the gambling rooms. That’s the rule.” To their amazement they did not enter the gambling rooms, -although young Mr. Fairbanks is said to have threat­ ened to buy the whole Institution. Monte Carlo wisdom Is Tn that rule. The Casino spreads money among Mon­ aco’s inhabitants, bnt will not take the Inhabitants’ money, and so avoids trouble. Another wise ruler is Mr. Bradley, who owns the tourists’ “wide open” gambling house at Palm Beach, but will not allow natives to lose In his place. When you gamble, you know, you lose. If you do not know It, try. Mussolini has a habit, annoying to Britons especially, of digging up past history. He is expected to tell (he British: “I want a protectorate over Ethiopia, with a free hand, and I In vite you to remember what happened to Germany’s colonies after the war. You promised to give Italy her share if she joined the allies, which she did. The war ended, and you British gob­ bled up all the German colonies worth having.” Sheriff Miller of Martinez, Calif., - knows that the weakest thing . In superstitious man is his mind.. Attack that and you have him. Anacieto Tor- rest said he had not killed Area Cab­ rera. In a locked drawer In a cell occupied by Torrest the sheriff con­ cealed a loud speaker, muffled to make it sound ghostly, and continually Torrest, not knowing whence it came, heard, a yjoiee. saying In Spanish: “You killed me: I. am Area’s ghost You had better confess. You know you , sailed me.” Torrest thought It unwise to Ignore the advice of a ghost and confessed accordingly..L < & Ktog-FecltWM Syndicate, la*- - WND Service. News Review of Current Events the World Over Nye Committee. Points-Need of Protecting Defense Funds From Shipbuilders— Congress Divorces Tax-the- Rich Bill From Nuisance Tax. By EDW ARD W. PICKARD © Western Newspaper Union. poor circumstances, has been one of the most discouraging aspects of the entire depression. SENATOR NYE of North Dakota and his committee on munitions do not have a very high opinion of Amer-* ican shipbuilders and they feel that strong legislation is needed to keep them from confusing “pub­ lic defense needs with their private pocket- books.” Therefore the committee, in a pre­ liminary report, asks that laws be enacted to do these things: I. Prevent “c o llu ­ sion” in bidding for navy ’ constructionSenatorNye }oh& 2. Prevent American patents from getting into the hands of foreign pow­ ers. 3. Limit profits to 5 per cent ff the total cost to the government, in cases where the government assumes the risks of the enterprise, or to 10 per cent where the government does not. 4. Bequire that shipbuilders’ “lob­ byists” register with the government and disclose their income and expen­ ditures. The committee finds, in the matter of collusion, that there was “tele­ pathy” among shipyard officials so that in bidding for many contracts each concern was able to get the contracts it wanted at profits that ran as high as 36 per cent. It says the navy lias been at the mercy of the shipyards in preparing plans for war vessels and also in determining what were fair prices. Construction of naval vessels is de­ clared to be more costly in priiate yards than in government yards: 'While the evidence is not all in,” th report says, “the indications are that the private yards cost the gov­ ernment from one to two million dol­ lars more per cruiser than the navy yards.” The' committee charges big shipbuild­ ers with breaking up the Geneva naval limitation conference in 1927 and im­ mediately launching a price-increase campaign that “made profits of 35 and 25.4 and 36.9 per cent on the cruisers.” LEGISLATIVE administration lead­ ers, for a while in a frenzy of anxi- ify to hitch the President’s tax-the- Uh, program to the resolution extend­ ing the so-called "nuisance” excise taxes, thereby speeding it through the Washington legislative factory in four days, suddenly disclaimed any intention of such procedure, and let the $500,000,- OOO tax extension ride along unappend­ ed. Congress will consider the new tax­ ation program during early July. This program is expected to produce some $340,000,000 in new revenue, prin­ cipally from inheritance and gift taxes, increased taxes on the highest Income brackets, and corporation taxes grad­ uated-frqm 10 per ceht tol7%-percent. The program has been held up as a sweetmeat to placate the sugar palate of Louisiana's Kingfish. Actually, a wealth of $340,000,000 shared among 120,000,000 Americans would amount to about $2.83 a- head—all of which would be applied to a public debt of $29,- 000,000,000 and a budget of $8,500,- 000,000, anyway. The net taxable worth of the 133 estates which paid taxes based on a valuation of $1,000,000 each in 1933 was $284,000,000, If the government had taxed these estates 100 per cent, seiz­ ing them entirely, they would have been worth only $2.37 a head to the American" population. If the govern­ ment confiscated all income of more than $1,000,000 In 1933, it would have taken an army of trucks loaded with small change to distribute it, for each American would get only 45 cents. And the general opinion of administration leaders in the senate was that the taxes obtained from the rich might possibly eliminate the necessity of the “nui­ sance” taxes after another year. YOUTH Between sixteen and twenty- five will be served $50,000,000 for a nation-wide job hunt and further train­ ing of young men and women to hold jobs after they- get them, through Pres­ ident' Roosevelt’s new "national youth administration,” itself administered under the works-relief program by Miss Josephine Roche, assistant secretary of the treasury, and Aubrey Williams, assistant to Harry L. Hopkins, works- progress administrator. The new organization will endeavor to: L Find employment in private in­ dustry for unemployed - youth. ■ 2. Train and retrain for industrial, technical and professional employment opportunities. 3. Provide for a continuing attend­ ance at high school and college. 4.. Provide work-relief projects de­ signed to meet the needs of youth- The average payment for. youths on relief work will be $15 a month; those going to high school would be given $6 a month, and those_attendmg college $15 a month. .. The problem of what to do with the -youth who finishes school, supposedly equipped to make-his real start in life, and finds what -few jobs there arc are given to older and married men and’women, as well as,the yontb who is unable to finish school because oi LIKE most Utopias, the new one in Alaska’s Matanuska valley has been reported a nest of discontent; the disillusionment apparently was manifest even quicker than usual in this case. Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin farm families who made up a large share of the recent expedition to begin life anew in the North Pa­ cific territory drafted a list of griev­ ances for the FERA trouble shooter. Eugene Carr. Many of them said the project was misrepresented, that the land is poor and that housing is not what they were led to believe would be. Neith, er are medical service, school facilities; seeds disbursed for planting, the cli­ mate and prices for groceries meas­ uring up to advance word-pictures. There is considerable jealousy existent over the distribution of farm land. And to top it all off, the' Utopians want government pay for their work. GEN. HUGH S. JOHNSON, once ambitious to direct the $3,000,000,- 000 public works program, was named to direct a comparatively small part of the President’s now $4,000,000,000 works-re­ lief schedule. As direc­ tor of works-relief In New York city, he will co-ordinate the pro­ gram in that area. With the famed fight­ ing jaw determinedly set, he revealed the four conditions under which he. accepted the new job: He will get no pay, only $7,800 for a year’s expenses. (He got $6,000 a year for this purpose dur-; ing most of his time as keeper of the Blue Eagle.) His job will end October I, unless he. and the administration agree that it shall continue. He will devote a minimum of four days a week to his official duties. And he will consult with Mayor Fiorello Hl' La Guardia as far ..s possible, but will be responsible to Harry L. Hopkins alone. Gen. Johnson NEW YORK’S Harlem and its kin­ dred negro populations through­ out the land resounded in jubilation, with chicken an’"' ham in every fryin’- pan and-juniper, juice ,flowing freely, as Joe Louis, the first great brown hope of pugilism since Jack Johnson, established himself as a real threat to the world's heavyweight boxing championship. Showing ring generalship far beyond his brief professional experience, box­ ing ability conspicuous by its absence from the heavyweight ranks since the days of Corbett, and.a wallop like the kick of a'cotton-belt mule; the dusky Detroiter cut Prlino Camera, Italian human skyscraper, to ribbons for five rounds, knocked him down three times in the vSixth, and was de­ clared the winner by technical knock­ out in a bout at the Yankee stadium. »«t ABOR policy in a democracy is not a program conceived by a government It is a program of ac­ tion which the people who earn their living as wage earners and those who employ them In profit-making enter­ prises must work out together.” So asserts Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins in her annual report to congress, and she sets/ forth these six specific duties of the government in, this respect: L To do everything in Its power to establish minimum basic standards for labor, below which competition should not be permitted to force stand­ ards of health, wages and hours. 2. To further peaceful settlements of controversies and relieve labor of the necessity of resorting to strikes in order .o secure equitable conditions and the right to be heard. ' 3. Through legislation and fostering co-operation between employers and workers to make every job the best that the human mind can devise as to physical conditions, human relations and wages. ‘ 4. To encourage such organization and development of wage earners as will give status and stability to. labor as a recognized Importanti group of. citizens having a contribution-to make to econoihic and political thought and to the cultural life of the community 5. To arrange that labor play- JtB part In the study and development ofany future economic policies. - ■ 6. To encourage mutuality between labor, and employers in the improve­ ment of production and the develop­ ment In both groups of a philosophy of self-government In the public inter-- est Os SPECIAL interest to the crim-' inal-lawyer who Is more criminal than lawyer will be the news of Atty Louis Plquett's conviction In Chicago He was found guilty of having. - har­ bored- and. concealed Homer Van Meter,' rigbt-hand roan- of-John Dillinger, dur­ ing the summer weeks of 1934 before' both these public enemies were - slain by “G-men.” . fsPITE’ Germany’s promise never to engage in unrestricted subma- marine warfare, France entered an Rm mediate and strong protest to the reich’s bilateral pact with Great Brit­ ain, permitting Germany to increase naval tonnage. Capt. Anthony Eden was hurried over to Paris to explain the British action and justify it Prm mier Laval told him that the French national doctrine was and would con­ tinue to be that organization of col­ lective security must precede any legal­ ization of German rearmament Capt Eden then went to Rome and Mussolini told him flatly that he sided with France and could not approve the manner in which the Anglo-Ger­ man accord was reached without con­ sulting Italy and France. No more success did Capt. Eden have in trying to get Il Duce to sub­ mit to a compromise allowing ■ Italy certain concessions In Abyssinia in return for the guarantee that there would be no war with the African monarchy. Mussolini refused to talk about it Great Britain was faced with two remaining choices: .To influ­ ence the Abyssinian government to accede to Italian demands in toto or simply give up. and let the apparently Inevitable war go on. CDB some reason that isn’t entirely F dear an attempt was made to blow up the American embassy in Mex­ ico City. A bomb made of dynamite abd percussion caps was hurled from an automobile into the embassy garden where it exploded, tearing a hole in the garden wall and breaking a window In the private office of Ambassador Josephus Daniels. No One was injured and the damage was slight Mr. Daniels said the Incident was “of no importance at all” and declined to make a complaint, but the acting secretary of foreign relations, Senor Cenieeros, called to express re­ gret and extra police and- detectives were placed about the embassy. Josephus Daniels CONGRESSMAN MARTIN DIES of Texas has before congress a bill the enactment and enforcement of which would evoke cheers from mil­ lions of tax-weary citizens, for it pro­ vides for the deportation of about 6,000,000 aliens who are receiving dole or holding jobs that should be held by citizens who are on the relief rolls. A campaign to get congressional ac­ tion on this measure has been started by 155 organizations" estimated by Mr. Dies to represent 5,000,000 people, and he says at least 150 congressmen have promised to support the bill.' Outlin­ ing the provisions of the measure, Mr. Dies said: “First, It bars all immigration of pioneer immigrants' who do not have relatives in this country. “Second, it makes mandatory de­ portation of 3,500,000 aliens estimated of illegal, entry. “Third, J t gives about 4,000,000 aliens legally in this 'country-12 months in which- to become citizens, or go homL ,“Fourth, all aliens must secure La­ bor department permits. to work and permits would be issued only when em­ ployers show they can’t find United States citizens to do the job. “Fifth, it provides for gradual re­ union of families not likely to become public charges when the economic sit­ uation isvimproved.” CITIZENS everywhere were urged by Atty. Gen. Cummings to assist the federal government in "cracking down” on bucket shops which are swindling the public out of millions of dol­ lars. He declared that a nation-wide chain is operating. M ost of their victims are doc­ tors, lawyers, profes­ sors and business men, he saiid. “W e khow th e names of the ringlead­ ers,” said Mt. Cum­ mings, “but it will- take co-operation of both the public and legitimate brokers to put them where they belong—behind the bars.” Most of the victims believe that they have lost their money legitimately, he said, and are afrqid of complaining to federal officers because they are in debt after they have been “cleaned.” Atty1-Gen.. Cunimings SECRETARY of the Navy. Swanson' asked: bids from private yards on 13 vessels and was- prepared to nego­ tiate for 11 more, launching the navy’s 11935-36 construction program Within 2« hours after receiving the required' funds from congress. Included in the program are-: Two new cruisers o( 10,000 tons each, equipped with -six ‘ inch guns and at least'four airplanes apiece; one aircraft carrier, three heavy destroyers, twelve light destroy era and six submarines. HERE is something to make the men chuckle. At a conference in ■ Atlantic City the National Women's party adopted resolutions advocating equal, rights, before, the law for men and women, equal pay for equal work equal domicile, property, and guardian­ ship rights, and “equal alimony T n cases of divorce and equal considera .for„ meD ‘b cases of breach of promise.” “ 01 ,,ib,™ , " o S S T A ? ; „ * ” »•> were sentenced to Hf® I1L tv hers‘ >nd seven to twelve yeara s i^ 6”1 were acquitted for. lack «f ev id e n t" National Topics IutM prcted by William Bruckart National Presa Building’Washington, X>, CL Washington.— President Roosevelt took the country by surprise when he suddenly dispatched P la n to a message to con- S o a k th e R ic h S*ess asking for a new tax law Uiat would have the same effect, although In a limited scope,r of. the “ehare-the- wealth” program advanced by Senator Huey Long and Faiher Coughlin, the radio priest It may be said that the President not only surprised but stunned congress by the proposal. It "was a move concerning which there hah been no forecast and it has taken some research to show how it 'links with other New Deal reform plans. But a link does exist Of that there can be no doubt : Succinctly, Mr. Roosevelt has de­ manded that congress enact a tax law Ihat wUl yield, according to estimate, sffluetliing like $1,000,000,000 annually. It is designed to place the heaviest drain on the rich, whether they be rich corporations or rich individuals. In terms, the President observed that It was a program to' tax "static wealth” and increase purchasing power of those not blessed with this world’s goods. The key to the program is the tax on Inheritances and gifts. These two taxes must operate jointly if they are to succeed at all. If an individual of wealth wants to avoid already heavy inheritance taxes, he has only to give away his property before his death. In the new Roosevelt proposal, those who receive these gifts would have to pay a tax upon them as they would on any other income. There is a question as to its constitutionality but many, able lawyers believe the gift "tax will be sustained by-the Supreme court The-,second phase - of the new tax bin -boosts rates of taxes on Incomes. At present the Individual with an in­ come of $1,000,000 Is taxed at exactly the same rate as the-individual having an income of $5,000,000.. Qf course, the $5,000,000 income pays more total tax but lie point Is the rate is thp sb me as on the smaller income. Mr. Roosevelt proposes that the rate should be gradually increased above $1,000,000 just as It is graduated from the lowest 'income taxpayer - to .those -receiving $1,000,000 annually. Thereseems to be little opposition to this particular item In the bill although it is natural to expect that attempts will be made to. alter that suggestion since there Is a school of !economic thought which, Insists that tax rates can be high' enough to discourage investments bringing a return to the Individual of a size large enough for the government; to take the bulk of that Income. The third major- item In the Presi­ dent’s program provides for a gradu­ ated tax on incomes of corporations. Corporations now are taxed at the rate of 13% per gent of their net in­ come whatever it may be. Mr. Boose- vent thinks this basis is improper. He proposes to have smaller corpora­ tions pay only 10% per cefit, and that, as the capital, of the corporations In­ crease, they be subjected to a gradnal- ‘ Iy higher -rate until, a top of 16%, Js applied, on, the Incomes- of, the, largest corporations. - Certain modifications or classifications were offered tn this connection so that some types of cor­ porations may not be compelled to pay the maximum rate. • * • The president's program for new taxes was received without particular en-. thusiasm In con-IH ore G ro a n s gress except for a T h a n A p p la u s e loud “Amen” by Senator Lphg. In­ deed, the President’s message was right down Senator'Long’s alley. The Louisiana senator has made hundreds of speeches advocating some parts of the -proposal ■ nowoffered -by the Chief Executive. Congressional reaction to the Presi­ dent’s message Included more groans than applause. A political campaign is due next year,. DemocratiCJeaders in many instances face re-election. It does'not require the services of a soothsayer to tell yon that new taxes are hard for a political candidate to defend.' - Superficially, therefore, it would seem that Mr. Robseveit was playing bad politics when he proposed a tax bill at this time: Such-is-not' the case. Editorial conclusions by dozens of newspapers which ,understand the po­ litical-situation -In Ihisreauntry-at-this time are unanimous: in terming It a political maneuver: Their conclusions are based on the fact that » candidate seeking political office can go out and say to people of small incomes:-“Look what we are doing to the rich.” Thus it is made to appear that a new wave of soak-the-rich propaganda is ■ about to engulf-us;- - "-------- _Business Interests naturally are alarmed over - the prospects. Thou­ sands of . corporations have barely been,able to-make ends meet In-these depression, years. Now that there is a prospect for some additional business and meager profits, they are confronted with a Washington program of taxa­ tion,designed to go beyond the present tax burdep. • . . . It . is true that some-of them will be benefited by lower rates but many economists are of :ths opinion that these corporations receiving the benefit of lower rates.actually. are in thebest financial condition , of any-in the conn: i ^ l “tr?ry' *** the argument often heard, the truth seems to be that the smaller business entities through Hie depression than ttwic® ““"a ten™than those units^th aunfe> ' and great capital funds. Th® f “Wjl lies in the fact that in the L ^ smaller corporations, Uie s J i Wltt is closely held and tliev are ™!"*5 the most part indlviduallv L In the case of the larger thousands of stock holders hav® ”5 In selection of the corporate •ment and this management c a 2 t half as flexible as In instances^ the word or direction of one Vl!? controlling. In addition, small c o i ­ tions are not subjected to greatT” head expenses like the larger W -bodies. The large c o rp o ra ,^ maintain its organization ana L i even when work Is slack cut fixed charges such as iMZ ? debt and plant operation to » same extent. So, there are maoL believe the high rate of tas w l a penalty, the main object of rt.u Is to break up large corporation I,,,, smaller business units. • * » The Republican national O0wb is sitting virtually asleep in it, p n chair, butR o o se ve lt lt, * * o n a H o o k lenge of Snpi® .. . . „ “ “rt decisions Bjhis demand for constitutional ret®, is not being allowed to die Rett where around Washington, 0pM» of the New Deal are making attens to keep that issue alive. TiieircVa is that Mr. Roosevelt put Wmtelitu political hook when he offered criSts, of the Supreme court, a co-orti® branch of the government. Thejtj determined to keep him on that hi if they can. It is interesting to note ho* & Roosevelt, observing a bad readies; Ms initial statements concerning fi NRA decision, has maintained Ste on the point since. It is equally k teresting to note how some ofhirira- stays and advisers have kept the ter bobbing up here and there throrita the country. Such men as Sab Hoblnson of Arkansas, senate it jority leader, and Senator Byrne t! • South , Carolina, probably the Piri dent’s closest friend In the seasle, have made speeches lately using iamb the same tone and language as did lie President in that memorable press con­ ference. Every other administration -spokesman has done the same thing These speeches together with tne con­ tinual jabbing and poking by SewDeal opponents are serving to keep Us question before the country. Kr* Deal opponent? frankly are joyful a ihe opportunity they say the Preside: provided them. In the meanwhile, as said above3 Republican national committee a been doing next to nothing. The?* dition is serving to build a fit* sic Henry P. Fletcher, chairman Ol 8 national committee, and is dnrik criticism as well to Senator of Delaware, and Representatiw w ton of Ohio, joint chairmen of then* atonal congressional committee.- Sun Republicans are saying that the Soc* velt opposition is being allowed wander without guide or anchor v that a golden chance to gain ifflPort results Is being wholly wasted, becae. of the Inactivitly of these two te mittces. Considerable discussion Is heard these days concerning the a - Sity for getting new Wood into national organization and its - quarters. My own conviction s Mr. Fletcher is due to go before He has failed to win the conn of the several factions In Re w llfean party and has operated on tinctly do-nothing basis. ? «' ator Hastings nor Represent:! _ ton has set the world afire Htical initiative or use of pouu ^ portunity available to tne question naturally then i ^ How can the Republicans and i Deal opposition generally expe # feat Mr. Roosevelt for 00L t» 1936 unless virility is shown party leadership? • • * PAVlEcffl Lgest C irculation avie C ounty N ew s IiW SLS o U N D ^ U13i G . G.* W alker and Jastonla, , were Mocksv I T hursday. LI,., and M fa John Vogll |ce, were Mdcksville vi| , last week; ffr and Mrs.' Troy V aj Suston Saietu, ' were ItorsThorsdav- j j s s Madaiihti Goron1 Bgland, is the guest of Tjford, on Maple Avenu Iohn F Smithdeal, jltor of Winston Salen In one day last week on Jjiss Frances Collins, oi Inding some time with I fents. C d. and Mrs. Jsj Jiss Lelia Hunter, of Iient at Long’s Hospit: |e , where she is undergj |nt. lrs. G. T. Fisher, of _nt several days last we Ih her daughter, Mrs. 1 to An old tale about th« B1“* eL 'd! St come to light 1J {te, ti closed until ad­just P ro p h e tic Blue Eaulehdtrt underW o rd s buried »--- _ % avalanche « preme court decision ^'"forr If codes unconstitutional, ^ volves the patenting of ]f .= Artists conceived -the Blue; jrf the NBA insignia. To protec ^ )f prevent unauthorized use signia the design was rn» ^ the United States patent otn ^ design was then turned over jtio1; at the patent office 'u L t5" Jcgnirrf to make the necessary P - {or ? by law.. He had proceei e ^ leg tbrlef period on the i53-1(a e r . bis desk to notify the comm^ M 11 patents of what he n.or(js I mistake In the design. .j01) to!t prophetic.' He «>,led a,he Blne •fact that one wing of the oth*01 contained more fo^^iers and added: can I “Any bird built like ‘nat fly In a Circle.” Iet Jt rf To shorten ,the narrati » said fbat the artist w ^ (et jt t* proceed with his work. * added, the Blue Eagle did »- a circle. Pu1'0-© Weatem NewspaPer m in MoeksvUle ? Wete on their'’ attg iierl ay W qshiil sis'a s ienb.;. m i.i ■ ,C , C-OHt D, C. IiSincss entities Pe depression I unitS with crest i Lcapital ^ n a s . T he rP o rs tio n s /tlie 's tp ? 6 of' Inaoagftlbf -...... IPiiesn notions;Jeinnsily ssleep iR it belt Io o fe eL:Ur- tllJ-c-eest chah Pj Stpreo6 Veit': lence court decisions a»a I1 i0r cpnStitntionsj rerjof |n?.allowed to die. ^ I-Des s-"iD?t°tD- «»«* I nt a1L mskinj attests* _ lrslle allTP- Tiieir date Eoosevelt pm himself CE 6 I when he offeree crificiij, Ipreme court, a ccorfc"[ Uie government. Tha Jft to keep him on Jhattcci Iterestinc to note bow Mi.I observinc s bad reactions; statements concerning tit lion, lias maintained siieo# Jnt since. It 5= eqsaliv Ifr |o note how some of his ads- advisers have kept the Issue I) here and there throv;hmt p.. Such men as Senaicr or Arkansas, senate ma­iler, and Senator Byrnes of rolina, prohaWr the Presi- ]sest friend in the senate, speeches isreiy using much |one and lfinguage as did ths that rnajun-aMe press cod* Jl’very c.rher sdminfcfration has dnr.e tiie same thlngi- ■:*hes together Trith the coa- Jiinir and pflr.DC by KewDeal .are serving tn keep ths Inefore the country. Kew lnenrs frankly are joyful ct JnnitT they say the FresideDt ahem. Iieamrhile. as said above, ti-e national committee ias next to norhing. The cot |orvinz to build a Sreuwfct Fletcher, chairman of tie !committee, and is drawee s Trell to Senator Hastings re. and RepresentatiTe BoV i. joint chairmen of the sen- gressionnl committee. Soise as are savins that the Roose ,sUion Is being sliowed to iirhout guide or anchor sn iden chance to ?ain important lheinz tv hoi IT wasted, becanse Iactivitly of these two com- Irahle discussion is Wnt T=e days concerninr the ne«-- ettinn new blood into | r i innizntion and its »«- Mv own conviction is « Siier'is due to go before W failed to win the Iveral factions ^ t^e Ka and lias operated on Ji !-nothing basis- ^ elt 8l lings nor RpPresentntlTi^c, le t the world afire w® • pintive or use of Ppiul available to them, naturally then Jthe Republicans anu tn lsition generally expp )t Roosevelt for re-eiect^. L s virility is snown In ^ idersbip? 1C- T B B i)AVtB i t S c o i t f i , M d e K S Y i t t E 1 i t , f t IE PAVlE RECORD. L est Circulation of Any Iavie County Newspaper, hf;V£ ®.Uch bettL i f estae0£ Part individuaiiv of the larcer stock holders Iia^ wliois In o£ the corporate n? V°1[t this management cin^*8* Mible as m instances • or direction of one V s* In addition, smr.u <£? 15. pt subjected to great ses iike the lamer W*'" larSp corporation ®ess ts organization anr n - slack ctff do"0*1 SCS such as intere? ^ * * hish'ra'te oL m ® ^the main 0fije« L ^ up large corporation. £ 'mess units. ‘6 ltale about the Bhie ^ to light. It waE [iefic M s tie the not "closed until Ofter Blue Eagle hnfl 1 buried bnfier .Jju-avalanche ct e Sourt decision aplfil^ oru W- Constitutional. Thp -- ^ Je patenting of Ille le «s gonceived -the Bhje■ I a0Sinsignia. To Pr0t the W-Iunauthorized use • .JirOaftlIe design was msned .Wfl patent officeed States: then turned over J0 a” Ji0IiS latent office with i - ref|11irei the necessary pnn - {or s I He had Proeeefie^henCe Ipfl Iiod on the wo:rl> . =ioner d Ito notify the conunis- ^ a |„f what he ee^ 01ClSVf n the design. His (() tW> , He called attellL lie Eflg!0 H one Wing Of t^s^ 0tHet Si more feathers tn - Id: fhat can »B,ybird built hhp that Icircle.” iet It 1,8In-ten the narrative^^ )0wasdire<at the artist Jwith his T*ork. lie Blue E«gie <*ld * And let h o niy JP ) Western NeJWSpaP6r XJpIcBr gWS AROUND TOWN. ilrs. G- G- Walker and children, jjbastonta, were Mocksville visit [ Thursday. ^Jr. and Mrs. John Vogler, of Ad- |,ce Were Mocksville visitors one I last week. lr. and Mrs. Troy VanZant, of Jnston Salem, were Mocksville fitors Thursday. Ljss Madaline Goron, of London fgland, is the guest of Mrs. J. C. iiford, on Maple Avenue. F Smitbdeal, prominent |]tor of Winston Salem, was it jra one day last week on business Jiss Frances Collins, of Gates, is IndinR some time with her grand- lents. Cd. and Mrs. Jacob Stew Miss Lelia Hunter, of R. 2, is a Ejeut at Long’s Hospital, States ^ip lei where she is undergoing treat- Hnt'lplrs. G. T. Fisher, of St. Paul, S n t several days last week in town Mth her daughter, Mrs. T. J Cau- I r §§Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Dodd re' J tS r n e d last week to their summer ! P m ' at Ridgecrest, after.spending ®8 |o weeks here. jjjltev. J. H. Fulghum left-Sunday pjgbt for Rome, Ga , where be will Jiist in a series of meetings at the f e s t Rome Baptist church. MissLouise Chaffin, who holds a iition at the Methodist Children's tome, Winston-Salem, spent Wed- |sday in town with her mother. Mr and Mrs. J. C. Church and iildren, Miss O'.eta, and Masters !ward and Harlan, of North ifilkesboro, spent - Thursday in iwn with friends. ■ Woy Call, who has been spending jo weeks here with home folks, re­ fined to Mashville, Tenu., last teek, where he holds a position as ioe salesman. I'Gerald Montgomery and family, IfDetroit1 Mich , spent one day last leek in town with Mr. and Mrs. S. ?. Binkley. They were enroute to Isit relatives in Georgia. HarryOsborne is spending six 'eeks at Raleigh, taking training j|or a highway patrolman job. Well iere’s hoping Harry will land one J these political jobs. A. Hartman is a farmer as 'ell as Clerk of the Court and a lairyman. He has just threshed !74 bushels of barley and oats on iis farm in Shady Grove township. The Davie county commissioners lave reduced the county tax rate [rom 76c on the #100 valuation, to '5c. Small’favors thankfully re- :ived—larger ones in proportion. M. A. Hartman is the efficient -Ierk of the Superior Court in bvie county, instead of Register If Deeds, as one would be led to 'elieve by reading the Davie Conn- |y Fair premium list. S i ^-J-Johnson and daughters Gus- ||S le' Marie and Phyllis, Anne Clepi k;|§"1 and Miss Helen Campbell spent fast week at Carolina Beach with [Mr and Mrs. Jack Allison, who are ^pending the summer there. Mrs. Fiank Clement’s Sunday School class enjoyed a delightful pic* Pic at Mrs. Clement’s home Thurs- Iday evening, July 4 th. Interesting !games were played after which a |bcm ittous supper was served the |guests present- Ted White, of Asheville, was I seriously injured Thursday night, JWben his car, a Pontiac _ left the !highw ay, near Center, turning over !three times Mrs. White received IcaitnUi tut not.senous injuries. SThe Campbell Walker ambulance j was Silmmoned andaTtdrfiemg given first aid m Mocksville.- Mr. - White sod wife were carried^to: Asheville^ [They were on their way to visit a daughter at Washington. Wet Pavements is assigned as the cause °f-the accident.. The carw as bad*. JTJtV to; i<533 _ Sheriff C. C; Smoot. Mrs. R. Li' Keller and J. N. Smoot spent the week end with relatives at K uox Ville1 Tenn. '■ ■ - Just.Received—NewCropTurnip Seed. Mocksville Hardware Co. John Taylor, of Mocksville, re­ ports a cottoa bloom in his field- on July 5th. He brought a bloom to our office that opened on. July 8 tb. M yentire stockof summer hats on special sals during July. ANNE P. GRANT. There willbe preaching at Cor- .natzer Baptist church Sunday even­ ing at 7:45 o’clock. Thepublic is cordially invited..'- _ Miss Frankie Cornatzer, a nurse at St. Leo’s Hospital, Greensboro, is spending a two week’s vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Cornatzer, on R. 2. Tim McCoy in “ The Westerner,’’ at The Princess Theatre Friday and Saturday "Behind Green Lights” Monday and Tuesday. M r.' and Mrs. M. M. Kurtees and daughter Miss Elizabeth, of Louisville, Ky , spent the week­ end in town with Mr and Mrs. J Lee Kurfees They have many friends here who are always glad to see them. F O U N D —Pair new shoes on Statesville - Mocksville highway. Owner can get them by calling on P. M. Cartner, Mocksville, R. 4 . R. L. White and H. H. Miller and daughter,«of Hickory, were in Mocksville Friday morning looking after the badly damaged aiilomo* bile of Mr. White’s son, Ted, who was seriously injured in a wreck near this city Thursday night. The personal property will be sold at the late residence of R. J. Brown on Saturday, July 13th, be­ ginning at 10 o'clock a. m. There will be a cake sale Thurs­ day afternoon at the Methodist church, beginning at 5 o’clock. These cakes will be baked by the best cooks in Mocksville. Come early and get a cake. One cake will be given away. This sale is sponsored by the Epworth League. Invitations have been issued to a Birthday Party of Mocksville Chap­ ter No. 173, 0 . E. S , on Friday evening, July 12th, in Masonic Hall at 8 p. m. Ah evening of fun with a little play, “ The. Never Gossip Club.” The following Davie boys left Mon­ day for O'd Fort to enter the C C Camp, located there: Joe Lang ston, Theo. Benson, James E- Ho­ ward, of Jerusalem; Walter Heth cox, of Mocksville, and Thos, M. Myers, of Shady Grove. Meets Horrible Death. John Linzy Ward, 7 -year old son of Mr- and Mrs. W. L. Ward, of Advance, was instantly killed last Wednesday afternoon when he fell beneath a threshing machine operat- .d by Wiley Potts, at Advance. The threshing machine was being pulled by a steam engine operated by Potts and a tongue was used to connect the two machines. The little boy ,"who left home unknown to his.mother, tried to get on the tongue, and fell beneath the ma­ chine, the heavy wheels passing over bis body causing instant death Surviving are the parents; three brothers, one sister, and the grand­ parents, 'M r. and Mrs Charles Ward, of Advance and Dr. and Mrs. T- T. Watkins, of Clemmons. The funeral was held at the Ad­ vance Methodist church Thursday afternoon at 5 o’clock, condhcted by Revs. W. H. Howard, of Ad vance. and E. W Turner, of Mocks­ ville, and the body laid to. rest in the church cemetery. The grief stricken parents have the sympathy of a host of friends to the death of- their little son. -mtnrnmtiiiniiininitHHUIHHIKBttW Warm Weather Is Here. Visit Our Soda Fountain For AU Kinds Cold Drinks And Deticious Ice Cream. - Fresh Candies Always On Hand Try Your Drug Store First. LetUsServeYpu L LeGiand’s Pharmacy. ■ ' . On The Square -I", Phorie.21 MockBville. N. C; Miss Hendm Bride Of Mr. Chas. G. Boger. Announcement is being, made of the marriage ofv Miss Mary Allen Hendrix, daughter of Mr. find Mrs. T- M. Hendrix, of Mocksville, N- C., to Mr. Charles Cook Boger, Bpn of Reverend and-Mrs; W J • Boger, of Newton, North Carolina. The wedding ■ was '■ solemnized in the Lutheran' church at. Newton, at' five-thirty o'clock July 3. with the groom’s fattier hearing the vows and using the .ring ceremony. There were no attendants- and only rela­ tives of the bride and groom were present. .. Mrs. Boger received her educa­ tion at Meredith and Catawba Col- and was a member of - the Walkertown faculty until the past year, when she was made a member S u i facu,ty o f Boyden HighM Salisbury, North Carolina. Mr Boger. received his education aj fjRnor-Rbyne and is now connect­ ed with the Ford Motor Company, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. GiIbert Kurfees1 of R'cbmot d, Va., are spending sever at days in town with tbeir parents. McBride-Richie. HeDry Richie, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Richie," and Miss Leona McBride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johu McBride, both of Cana1 R. 1, were.united in marriage at the Bap­ tist parsonage on church-street, Wednesday,-julv 3rd, Rev. E. W, Turner performing the1 marriage ceremony. Ed Lagle, of R. 4, brought us a cotton bloom Saturday that opened on July 5th. This was the first- bloom reported in Davie this year. Attention, Farmers. There are probably some cotton producers ,in Davie County who still have 1934 Cotton Tax ExemDtion Certificates (Gin Tickets.) For these to be used on the 1935 crop-they will have to be sent to Raleigh office for cancellation and new certificates is­ sued in their places. AU who have such certificates should get them- in­ to the County Agent’s office at once so that the reissuing may be done. Mrs Cooper Edwards, of Colum­ bia, S. C., is the guest of her par­ ents. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Meroney. CHEVROLET rUoWtWotf ECOXOMr THE MOST FINELY BALANCED LOW-PRICED CAR EVER BUILT TEST ITS POWER AND ECQNOMY, SPEED AND SAFETY, KNEE-ACTION COMFORT AND STABILITY. LEARN THAT BALANCED MOTORING IS BEHER MOTORING Youx Chevrolet dealer cordially invites you to drive the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet without any obligation! He wants you to learn all about this car . . . how much more smoothly it rides. •. how much more perfectly it combines power ’ with economy, speed with safety, gliding comfort with road stability . •. and how much more finely balanced it is in all ways! See him and ' drive the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet—today! y CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN j Compare ChevnUft toieielwtredprices and easy GJlf^A.C, terms* A Genavl Motors Vatu* . [ -- C MaAteSiSDje jfiuoe, '• CH EtVROLET DEALER ADVERTISEMENT M R NCED B I) I LT Home Chevrolet Co., Inc., Mocksville, N. C. Leo Alien,; Tom Kiger and H. A. Wisbou,- white, Ffilix Frost and eph Lyons, colored, were given a hearing before Eeq- F. R. Leagans last week, charged with an affray with deadly weapons; AIlfive were bound over to August Superior court under bonds- ranging from $50 to $150. The boys staged a fight at-Farmington on June 30th. The Allen boy' received a bad gash in the head. AU the boys are from Farmington township. Sample Just received a big line of dry goods samples, consisting of women’s summer dresses 79e up. underwear, hosiery, sox, etc, also men’s summer suits $2 50 up. A complete line of high grade samples at a price that will delight you. Come and look them over. Flour $3.15 and up Feed . - " “ V $1.90 CottonSeedMeal - $175 Salt $1.10 Salt. 5c package : 3c SaltFish 5Jclb Crackers, I Ib- 12c GrackerB, 3 Ib 35c Pmk Salmon, 2 caans . 25c Herrings, 3 cans .■ 25c Coffee, bulk ' .19’ Ih I lbKenny packages . . ■. 15c Rice Ib 5c and up Large Laundry Soap, 7 cakes ... 25c AU Oil Cloth, yd ; - 23c 9x12 Straw Rugs $3 39 25 Straw Hats. $1.00-... $1:50 value, each ". 50c Felt Hats, each 70c up I have the biggest as ortment of Shoes I have ever had-and my price is right. Come in and look them over. Assorted colors for men, wo­ men and children. : \ For mowers, rakes.’disc^and sec­ tion harroW, see-me forqJrices I handle the Massey-Harris line.-- Just received a large shipment of; plow castir g and my price is right. ' : See Our Line Of Farm Machinery Yours For Bargains' J. Frank HeniIrix Auction Sale! The Reynolds-Lybrook Farms Co., located on West side of Yadkin River, in Davie county, near Winston-Salem-Mocksville highway, is to be liquidated at an unreserved public auc­ tion sale, on Tuesday and Wednesday, July 16-17. At this sale the farms, all the farm machinery and live stock will be sold. Included in the list of machinery to be sold, are the following articles: One Farmall Tractor, 7-foot mowing machine, McCorm­ ick Deering Power Binder, McCormick threshing machine, seven wagons, one Papec hay chopper and silage cutter, one corn busker, two manure spreaders, one cultipacker, one bush and bog plow, one Martin Ditcher, Hay Rakes, Tractor plows, 4 20 Oliver Plows, Chattanooga Road Plow, mowing machines, corn planter, corn sheller, grain drill, cultivators, cider mill, wood saw, potato planter, potato digger, spray pump, sweep rakes,-hay: stacker, bull tongue plows,- plat­ form scales, press drills, sets bolts, stocks and dies, anvils, vices and other shop tools, forge, emery grinder, grindstone, Wagon jacks, wire stretchers, hillside plow, book-keepers desk, typewriter, steel bffice desk, adding machine, fire ex­ tinguisher, ^electric fans>, time clock. First class Vance saw mill in gdoid condition, and other useful articles too numer­ ous to mention. Four work mares and one yearling stand- dard bred colt of excellent breeding. : : : • I IiBIM SLcl-*- W f [j- f^fy • j - m m ! ■!I!-■ Si ;§ 5: -J -~ •I ill Il 5 { I !«5 IK Iir' '1.1 i; irM P lfIM *1« U - lHt: $! ■I - '■?}>:? ) :n Lv : 1.1 I . .Ejf: x-ftt 'e '--7 i i ■&IPif SI ■.‘I ■ XS1-S-; . |l:lR . i ! W Tl' R d . ju lV 16! S f - D A ^ ^ D d O R D , Administrator’s N Having qualified as admiHighway Deaths Con­ tinue To Gain. According to the report of the state motor vehicle bureau.; a total of 397 persons were killed as a result oif automobile wrecks during the first five months of this year, as compar­ ed with 334 during a similar period in 1934. In May. 75, persons were killed as compared with 72 in April and 77 in May last year. In addition to the deaths 495 persons received injuries during the month from accidents. A- total of 377 accidents were re­ ported. Intoxicated drivers figured in HO fatal and 33 non-fatal accidents. Among the 75 killed, eight were persons under 14 years of age in­ cluding four children slain while playing in the street. Twenty-four pedestrains in air were included in the fatalities. Five deaths resulted from automo­ bile wrecks, and 21 were caused from non-collision accidents such as speed­ ing and on curves. One death re­ sulted from a bicycle-auto wreck. Uore persons were killed on Sun­ days in May thah on anv other day, 26 having died on the Sabbath. Dur­ ing the hour from 3 to 4 o’clock in the afternoon 29 deaths resulted from accidents, to lead all other such periods. From 7 to 8 p. m., with 27. and 8 to 9 p. m , with 26 followed as the most fatal hours. Involved in the 377 accidents 67 fatal and 310 non-fatal—were 69 pri­ vate cars in fatal accidents and 434 in non-fatal. Ten trucks were ir- volved in fatal accidents and 44 in non-fatal crashes. Three taxicabs and three buses were involved in non-fatal accidents but none was in* volved in fatal wrecks.—Ex. Blasting Away At The AAA. The opponents of National policies have now hissed the dogs on the AAA seeing as how they did a rather suc­ cessful job'of getting the NRA blast­ ed by a blunt blow from the Su­ preme Court. What they are especially after in this latest instance is to have the processing tax policy outlawed, and with some chance, it must be ad­ mitted off-hand, of succeeding if the courts rule'into this issue the same philosophy of absolute State con­ trol as against Federal authority that .ended the brief life of the NRA. ...Millers are attacking the right of the Government to collect taxes . on .wheat. * The same right of the Government to tax the mills on cotton is being challege, and that close by us, by the Cannon Manufacturing Cohnon Man­ ufacturing Company. It inserts no prejude into the is- sue to remark that should these protestants succeed in keeping the collectors of the processing tax a- _wav from their plants, the whole structure of the. AAA blows down. Thesetaxes are-the pillars upon which it Btands. Without them, the philosophy of control of production of farms becomes wholly impossible ' to operate in practice. — Charlotte Observer. Forty-two of the 55 highest moun tiin peaks in the United States are in Colorado. • The 24,000,000 moter vehicle own- 1 ers of the United State burn 15,000,- 000,000 gallons of gasoline a y.ear. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of George F. Feezor, deceased, late of Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to notity all persons having c.aims against the said estate to present them to the undersigned at 610 Reynolds Build­ ing,'Winston-Salem, N- C., on or be­ fore the 29th day of May, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their .recovery. AU persons indebt­ ed to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 29th day of May, 1935. ESTATES ADMINISTRATION. Inc. Admr. of George F. Feezor, Dec d. !Executrix’s Notice. Havingqualifiedas executrix of the last will and testament of B. L. Carter, deceased, late of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina, noticeJs hereby given all persons holding claims a- gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or be­ fore May 11th. 1936. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate, are requested to make immediate payment. ThiB May 11th, 1935. MRS. ALICE B. CARTER, Exrx. of B. L. Carter, Dec’d. JACOB STEWART. Atty. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of Mary Jones, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate will please call and settle without delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. Gi F. CORNAZTEK, Admr. of Mary Jones, decs'd. A. T. GRANT, Atty. Almost Repulsive, This. About the only kind thing to say of the policy of the State in laying its sales tax against the homeliest provisions, fat back. meal, molasses, turnip greens and whatnot, is that this is going, to make it easier for tXe collectors to get the money and for the merchants to keep their books Over against that assets is the lia­ bility, damaging and unwarranted ..on. its face, of the State pressing with the-same relentless brutality the humblest and hungriest of its most affluent, luxuriant. The sales tax: was once characteriz­ ed by a high. State official who is still holding office as “a tax on poverty and: that was when none conteznplat ed reaching down to basic foods. Now that 'this margin" has been covered and every conceivable pur­ chase made subject to the same lax, -it will become,- in .many cases, a levy against penury and-abject destitu­ tion. When the intelligence and con science of our- citizens come face - to fjge.,with the equities of this now ex- ^^ptionlesa-Sali^'^. it'is net think SBl^that they wiilihink well of it — Chariotte Observiets: Io Superior Court NOTICE! Having Qualified as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d. no­ tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against.the estate of said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of any recovery.AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned and make prompt settlement.This the 28th,day of June. 1935.BEULAH APPERSON, Ad.nrx. of George Hendrix. Decs’d. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrator s is hereby given that the sent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar i f their recovery. ’ AU persons indebt­ ed to said estate will Ple^se make immediate settlement. This 29th Hav of June, 1935. .W T. S. MYERS, Administrator ’ of J A. Hege. deceased. KOBERT S. MCNEILL. Attorney. Land posters for sale. North Carolina I Davie County { M. C. Cain. 0. L. Harkey. Lattie Harkey, Lula Reavis, Mary Etta Hamilton, Mildred C. Thorn­ ton, Mattie Sprinkle. Mag* gie Martin, Lena Cranlil I, Hattie Barron, vs M. C. Fowler. Gideon Fowler, Clyde Austin, Louise Fowler, Kenneth Fowler, Nellie Olive, Connelly Windsor, Gilmer Windsor, KateThomasson, Moroison Windsor and Howell Windsor. Notice of Publication. The defendants, Gideon Fowler, Kenneth Fowler, Gilirer Windsor and Howell Windsor above named, will take notice that an action enti­ tled as above haB been commenced in the Superior Court of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina, asking for a sale for partition of the lands of R. L Cainlocatedin Davie and Onslow counties, said action being for the partition of said lands by sale there­ of for the purpose of division; and the said defendants will further take notice that they and each of them are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, within ten days from the 3rd day of July, 1935, before M. A. Hartman, Clerk of Superior Court, and answer or demurr to the complaint or pe­ tition in said action or the plaintiffs will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. This tho 8th day of June, 1935. * M. A, HARTMAN. Clerk: of Superior Court.- old-B p s s -“ You wear a very fashioned coat in the office.” , , Clerk— “ Yes. it is. old-fashioned I bought it when I had :my last false, ”-~- North Carolina I t a . „ ‘ Davie County f In suPenor Court M. C. Cain. 0. L. Harkey, Lattie Harkey, Lula heavis. Mary Etta Hamilton, Mildred: C. Thornton Mattie Sprinkle^Maggie Mar­ tin, Leona Cranfill, Hattie Barron vs - M. C. Fowler, Gideon Fowler, Clyde Austin, Louise Fowler, Kenheth Fowler, Nellie.OIive, Connelly Windsur, Ktiite Thomasson, Morrison Windsor and Howell Windsor." Notice of Publication. Connelly Windsor, , one of the de­ fendants above named, will take no­ tice that an action-entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of: Davie County.-North Caro- i|na, asking for the sale for partition of the lands of R. L. Cain, located in Davie and Onslow counties,. North Carolina; said action being for-,the partition of said; lands by a sale thereof for the purpose of>division; and the said defendant, will further take notice that-he is required to ap­ pear at the court house, at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County, Mocksville. North Car­ olina. not later than ten days after the 17th day of ilaly, 1935, the-game being the last publication of this no­ tice, before M. A Hartmann Clerk of Superior Court, and- answer or demurr to the7 complaint or petition iu this cause, or; the plaintiffs will apply to. the court fof further relief demanded in- the complaint. This June 19. 1935 i ’ M. A. HARTMAN. Clerk of Superior Court; State And County NOTICE! The Law Requires Me To Garnshiee The Wages Of Persons Who Have Not Paid Their Poll Taxes, And To Levy On Personal Property And Real Estate For Other Unpaid Taxes. So, Pay Your 1934 County And State Taxes NOW And Avoid This. Additional Cost. AU Real Estate Will Be Advertised In August If Teuc Is Not Paid On Same. CHARLES C. SMOOT, Sheriff. DAVIE CAFE C,“On The Square” MocksviIIet N Next. To Postoffice And Just As Reliable Regular Meals . . ;; ... . . 35c Ice Cream. Soft Drinks, Short Orders, Every Hour. P. K. M AN O S , Prop. . in ; % Kathleen Norris n i $EftVICt ,w . A Delightful Love Story o£ Two Sisterfi ? ea?_sth ^ LneY.,stor? from th ® Pen of one o l it m oving story Norris. She tells a lively and ,of th e f o rtu n e s-of a n in te re s tin g fam ily. ^THE WICKV ^WRENCK” wiil ann-- . in this paper. Do not m iss the :— « ?r~Ser,a**y UQU1D-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE DROPS clucks MALARIA in 3 days COLDS first day. TONIC and LAXATIVE NOTICE! J K S X S S S3?”notice is hereby given to all persons hold­ ing claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same, properly ven- fiied on or before the 4th day of May. 1936.or this notice will.be plead in bar of re­ covery. AU persons indebted to said es­ tate will please call uDon the undersigned to make settlement.This May. 4th, 1935.P. R. WOOTEN. Exr. of Tempie C. Baggarly By A. T. GRANT. Atty. estate of Miss Jennie B. ^atratoroi ed, late of Davie county Nn«k ^ ec notice is hereby given all p i S - claims against the said estat?,“s S them to the undersigned ™ pttsS April I, 1936, or this notice win I' ■in bar of their recovery. All . e Ptjj debted to said estate, are Tp^lson' in. make immediate payment -,^ steii ti 1st. 1935. B. C. BROCK1Atty6 ^ ^owell- DtT 1 BEST IN RADIOS , YOUNG RADIO CO MOCKSVILLE, N C B E S T IN SUPPLIES TtTTnT iiiiinm m iiinnniiiii ....... CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE _ EMBALMERsi Telephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church niiiiiinriiiin ....... Travel anywhere . . any day the SOUTHERN foron I A Fare For Every Purse PERMile lie ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS Per Mile .- . . fpr Each Mile Traveled. * 2c ROURD TRIP HCKETS-ReturnLimit 15 Dav3 Fer Mile . . . for Each Mile Traveled. * 2ic ' ROUND TRIP TlCKETS-Return Limit 6 Months PerM ile . . - . for Each Mile Traveled. * 3c ONE WAY TICKETS Per Mile . . . for Each Mile Traveled * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Southetii Excellent Dining Car Service Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel. , R. H. GRAHAM, Div. Pass. Agent . . . Charlotte, N. C. Southern Railway System m s mmim Is The Oldest, st and Most County. The Price Is Only $1.00 Per Year. Send A Year’s Subscription To Your Relatives Who L i v e In Distant Counties Or States. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their OlctHome County THE DAVIE RECORD A Number Of Features You Will Not FindInAny In This County. Record notice VOLUMN XXX NEWSOF What W u Happeni The Day1* of Auto H (Davie Record, Frank Rattz s Salisbury. Mlss Julia Pee spent Sunday in Marie Allison. E. E Hunt, Ir asville Tuesday o tives. W. R- Clement| visit to Jamesto turned home. - Chas. A. Leon was in town Mon with friends. Mrs. E. H M spent one day las parents near Cle J. A. Daniel, Red Front Cas Monday in Winsi Elder M. C. protracted meeti: Sunday. Mrs. I. E. J home after an e uncle Burt Henl Va- Mr. and Mrs. a week’s visit to turned to their h] S. C. Dr. Weaver, port College, L ~ day and Tuesda A. Allison. Misses Helen left last week fo ‘ • to visit tbeir urn The 29th ann will be beld-at day, Aug. 8th . Kluttz, of SalL the annual add J. A. Daniel grocery store in| The ball gam at Cooleemee - and Cooleemeel of 5 to 3 . Mrs. N. A." Julia Chffiu, of guests of Mrs. The Methodi ciety will give on Friday nigh Mrs. J. O. Kin Dr. .and Mr spent several d: last week, the < N: C 'D ental A I. A.. Daniel press agent at -A. Allison has ' W. C. Whit joicing over tb new son at his last. week. Miss Sallie f who-won a fre the Industrial sail on July 26 H . S. Stro visiting relativ around Count O. C. Wall. Elsie Lefier Ephesus, spen Lefler’s, near C. M. Godb spent Saturda 1Tames Ratle rler.on R. 2 , ness_visitor he: Thos. N. C quite ill for better at this -J; J. Starret| pa'undertaker day on busi manufactures kS||& £ lull Si - Streamlined ( 8ai3(ta>be a- now,the turtll . the inspiratio| - .cars—he’s be Centuries. mm i^ N 0titt ialified as admin: 'ss Jensie B Fr ^ t Or Oavie counfy. & “• * S j j * b y given all De S Catolin!' If !st tA6 8^id estate to bayillS ji s undersigned “ P'estl ^5 orthl8 on or ^ S.. sir recovery. All i be Pte II M estate, are ren?,'50"8 k T t e ' a IN RADIOS l| JNG RADIO CO gjOCKSVILLE. N C ’ T T IN SUp p l ie s -RAL. HOME e MBalm ers fct Church |y ^ a y I I i for I t PER MILE I COACH TICKETS (raveled. am Limit 15 Days !raveled. Ium Limit 6 Months Taveied. paveled ?ment of proper surcharge. and using the Southern Hce Jrain Travel. Charlotte, N. C. System lest, Most Paper »unty. (Only ear. ItionTo Your In Distant IThey Will }ly News Iome County :c o r d Features Ind In Any County. to print yo* - . . r .. . .... . .. ■ ' - ' " '--JC-.- J--Sr _ ' „ >«■:' ' r - ■ •- '■ ^ r- ^ M - ...; 'S \7 ^STAL - tlli -ted R D tiRCULATlON THEtAMfeST IN-THE COUNTY. TMIV DON'T LIL “HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN; UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN." VOLUMN X X X V I.- M OCKSVILLE.NORTHCAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. JULY 17, I935 NEWS OF LONG AGO. KOMBEIt-52 W hitW aa Happening In Davie Before The Dayi of Automobilet and Rolled Hose. (Davie Record, July 11, 1907") Frank Rattz spent . July 4 th in Salisbury. Miss Julia Peebles, of Advance, spent Sunday in town with Miss Marie Allison. E. E Hunt, Jr., went to Thom* asville Tuesday on a visit to rela- tives. W. R. Clement, after a week’s visit to Jamestown, Va., has re­ turned home. Cbas. A. Leonard, of Statesville, was in town Monday shaking hands with friends. Mrs. E. H Morris and children spent one day last week with her parents near Clemmons. J. A. Daniel, proprietor of the Red Front . Cash Grocery, spent Monday in Winston. Elder M. C. Kurfees begins a protracted meeting at Jericho next Sunday. Mrs. J. E. Jones has returned home after an extended visit to her uncle Burt Henley, at Richmond, Va. Mr. and Mrs. W. E.- Hall, after a week’s visit to relatives, have re­ turned to their home in Rock Hill, S. C- Dr. Weaver, President of Daven­ port College, Lenoir, -spent Mon day and Tuesday in town with G. A. Allison. ... ... Misses Helen and Annie Allison left last week-for Knoxville, Tenn.,' ' to visit their uncle. L. L. Morris. . The 29th annual Masonic picnic will be beld at Mocksville on Thurs­ day, Aug. 8th Mr. Whitehead Kluttz1 of Salisbury, will deliver the annual address. _ ... • . J. A. Daniel is opening up a cash grocery store in the Red Front. The ball game played Thursday at Cooleemee between Charlotte and Cooleemee, was won by a score of 5 to 3 . Mrs. N. A. • Peebles and -Miss Julia Chffin1 of Hall’s Ferry, were guests of Mrs. J. L. Sheek Sunday. The Methodist Ladies' Aid So­ ciety will give an ice cream supper on Friday night at the- residence of Mrs. J. 0. King. Dr. and Mrs. R. P. Anderson spent several days at Morehead City last week, the doctor attending the N. C.'Dental Association. ' I. A. Daniel has resigned as .ex­ press agent at Mocksville, and G. A. Allison has taken-charge of it. '• W. C. White, of Advance, is re­ joicing over the arrival of a fine Qew son at his. home in Advance last week. Miss Sallie SueEllis.of Advance, who won afree trip tp-Europe in the Industrial-' News contest-, will sail on July 26 th. H. S. Stroud. of-H ickory, -is visiting relatives and friends in and around County. Line this week. 0. C. Wall,'and:-Misses Lenaand Elsie Lefler and' LUla Miller, of Ephesus, spent Sunday at A . T. Lefler’s, near Cooleemee Junction C. M. Godby1 of County Line, spent -Saturday in'-town on business! Tames Ratledge1 -rural letter car. rleron R. 2, Advancei was a-busi­ ness visitor heie one. day lastweek. Thos. N. Chaffin, who has been quite ill for. some time,- is much better at this writing. J. J. Starrette, the popular Kap pa undertaker,-was; in -,town Mon-. day on business. > Mr. Starrette manufactures walnut caskets, and k^p s g lull siippl^dn^hana' :at all times. %• ■>;... Women Who Smoke. The great tobacco concerns today are putting forth the greatest effort we have.ever realized to put a ciga­ rette in the mouth of every girl in America, and to spread the curse to every nation. Common sense to say nothing oi medi.al science, tells us this-wrong. Cigarettes-have never been - a blesssing and never will. They tremendously injurious to man, - but much‘ injurious to woman. ■ Any doctor Who is honest will tell you that cigarettes are abso­ lutely destructive to the physical mental, moral and spiritual-being of woman. - They are not strong enough to withstand and throw off the poisonous nicotine, which is one of the most deadly poisons known to man, that they get from cigarette smoking. Consequently they are greatly injured in body, and this is followed by a moral and spirtual decline. Cigarettes rob one of his will power to resist evil, therefore he fallsan easy prey to wrongs- of various kinds, .as well as diseases;. Cigarette smoking girls not only greatly shorten their lives, but they are absolutely unfit for moth­ ers. In fact they bring sickly, weekly, diseased children into the world. It is said that sixty per cent of habies born to cigarette smoking mothers are either born dead or die at ’ infancy... Now' if tlie tobacco concerns put millions of our girls to smoking can you realize what a curse they. are going" to> bring upon our ^ati.on? They are doing this for the money they get out- of it. Exactly. It isn’t that - they want to benefit.. Women kind. " No indeed They know they shall not benefit them in the least, but what do they care just so they are getting rich? And they are getting rich, too. Getting nch at the sacrifice of the manhood and womanhood' of America-; getting rich by putting multitudes in their graves. O neof the most disgust­ ing, sickening sights in the world is to see a cigarette-sucking, beer- drinking, red lipped, half-clad-wo- man. It' is so disguesting that multitudes ought to rise up against it. Amen —Walter E. Isenhour, in Charlotte Observer. Streamline^ anything cannot be said'to/be as modern -hobby. Take now, the turtle* whfcWias-furnished the inspiration for today’s motor f o r . - r . Cats and Dogs. Cats roaming at large have been added to the list of nuisances, along with dogs, that citizens have to, con tend with. Thecats1 it is said; are about as bad, or worse, than the dogs, and some means should be taken to protect property anti the citizenship in' general from these animals as well as protection from the dogs. ~ However, at the piesent writing there is little protection from the dogs. The police have a haird time and cannot cope with the situation unless the citizens co-operate with the'police. It is suggested that if a dog in the -community is being al­ lowed to run at large by a neighbor who utterly disregards the rights of his neighbor, then the police should be notified and the dog killed.' The same thing should apply to cats, The two,'working sometime to­ gether. are causing ; considerable damage tb flowers and other proper­ ty in various sections of the city. Th^re }s alwavi. the nuis.ahce of- barking dogs and whining cats -at night, or in the daytime for that matter. It may be hard to do, but some me^ns should be devised -to protect the people from these pests Tf a person loves a dog or a cat to the extenrof caring for .that animal In bis home, then he should be made to keep the animal in bis home and not allowitto run at large.-Tw in City Sentinel _ _ \ A jyertiBing may not break records in 1935 but Record! Here is a look at thefactSjof Roosevelt's record, j ust what he;|fias done: (1) He legalized liquor.-'|:He made bar-rooms and saloons ($ow called taverns), legal. ; (2); He !de­ valued the currency; * First ;bep>r- dered people to surrender gold in exchange for paper of a specified gold value. Then he made .!'the paper worth only 60 -per cent; as much in gold. With the 4o;pen|ent profit (if you call it profit) he trades secretly in the world money -market. (3) Hecarried on Hoover!s ideas of the Reconstruction corporatioot^nd the home owners loans. (4 );liHe fixed prices under NRA. F ro^the cost of pressing a suit to determining that a purchaser might not pic^Jbnt the chickens he liked, he undertook to regulate the trading of the peqple. Alleged violators he had tried before administrators who.acted as. court with judge, jury and prosecuting at torney combined in . oiie. (5)3 He. ordered- crops 'reduced under 'A'AA. He paid farmers not to plant, fcot ton exports-decreased by about, half. The crops Cif 1Egypt1 Braziiland other nations were increased by as much. (6 ) He collected processing taxes. From the proceeds be; put up farm prices. and. mad«:; manu- facturers pay the bill. Manufactur­ ers paping processing taxes, an^ in­ creasing labor pay must: compete with the growing industry of-Japan. (7) He trades in tariffs. Hehats not reduced them as a whole.; EylSent- believes. Hoover .^S^slight iesaldi that grass;woB^grpw 'm -o ^ s tre e ts ifta riffs ?:w e t^ ^ ^ in - doned. His reciprocal tariff‘trades thus!far. have covered but .a.few mi­ nor items with a few nations. (8); He is spending millions for increased armaments—more than any other peace time President. He has strut ted our navy two to three thousand miles from our shores in the .face of Japan. (9) He has appointed neg toes to high office. A native North' Carolina negro he appointed as judge in Washington and another he appointed as assistant ^attorney general, (io) He has borrowed billions. He is spending it for relief and in building golf courses and country clubs f o r G reensboro Where does the money come from? The purchasers of bonds. Whoare they?; The insurance1 companies, the banks. W howilIpay it back? We and our children in taxes from our labor Or it will be cancelled by further devaluation—inflation makingour savings in insurance and deposits -worth that much less.— W ATCHER, in Greensboro News. A Blackberry Market Several years ago many thousands of dollars came into Wilkes county for canned blackberries and late? this source of income, dwindled for severalreasons. Thisyear the people of this section are again going- to have an unlimited market for the delicious berries that grow wild and-as; free as mountain w ater.. / It cainnot be expected that the sale of blackberries will be.a bonanza or that anyone wiil..get rich by thiB medns, bnt we do want to pause, to mention that the revenue from this source will be a great help to; many families in thiB rural communities. We should always show an interest in anything that will provide an in­ come for it is a cerbiin fact that we naust get money before we can spend it and. improve business.—Wilkes Journal. ■ - . Marv Has A Run-Im Mary had a little-calf, .- And ’twas as white as snow, She sti aggecf heFhose Htid ^ierever she Roes The calf is -su‘re-7to show. . — Debts of afl kinds in this country amouut to $28 i,o<jo,ooo,oop; which is nearly ■ equal toi -all ktnds iol a t . A Sober Fourth! K Announcement made prior tc Iuiy 4 stated that Governor Olic D. Johnston ordered all liquor stores in Sotith Caroliaa closed on the Fourth of July. JJMerchants in South Carolina no doubt closed their places of busi­ ness for two reasons. They want­ ed a holiday for themselves and their clerks, and secondly, there would be few customers on a holi­ day anyhow. But Governor John- stou was not thinking about giving IiiJuor dispensers a holiday, nor was he thinking about a possible lack of tracje He was thinking instead of too much trade. i ‘‘In acting for a sober Fourth;.” the news dispatch states, “the gov­ ernor exercised his authority to shut liquor stores on the first gen­ erally observed holiday since legal sales began May 27.” That is liquor control. The gov­ ernor has to step in and ord<;r li­ quor dispensaries closed in order to have a safe and sane Fourth. Ifit ii advisable to keep people sober on the Fourth, why is it not advisable to do so all the rest 0 1 the days in the year? The people of South Ca­ rolina, it seems, cannot be trusted with liquor on a holiday, although they have access to it at all other times, • The queer logic by which a State may regulate a people’s conduct and control its thirst by prohibi­ tion for one day only, yet .claim that it is all wrong to prohibit 365 days, is .difficult to understand. -r Winston Jourfialril- . ■ r Blease Raps Democrats. Rutherfordton —Cole L- Blease. former United States' Senator and twice governor of South Carolina, denounced the National administra­ tion in a Fourth of July address here for what he termed its en­ croachment upon state’s rights. The veteran South Carolina cam­ paigner said he had retire^ from politics but might re enter "to fight for states" right if the occassion de­ ni tnds.” Blease, in his Colutfibia state­ ment, attacked Byjnts for met* tioning the possibility of broadened congressional power to regulate in­ terstate commerce, blit did not re­ fer to Byrnes in his address today, nor did he refer to President Roose­ velt by name. Bleaseattackedthe Wagner la­ bor bill, now up for the President’s signature, as “ a curse to tbe Soutfr and denounced the administration for it refusal to pav the soldiers bonus. •‘I can’t see how they can stand there and say .the United States is not able to pay the bonus and yet vote five billion dollars to give jobs to people who are too damned lazy to work,” Blease said. “Thiere are too many cowards in Congress- Every Iawyer in. Con­ gress knew the NRA was uncon. Mitutlonal when it was tip for con sideration.” Urging that the country 4'return to constitutional government, Blease praised Abraham Lincoln, Calvin Coolidge and the late Sen­ ator Lee S. Overman of North Car oltna as champions of- this form of government. . Blease. said. • “ We must get .back to God and country. - Don’t blame the Demo­ cratic party for this drift from con­ stitutional government^ Blame some of the men in Congess .and kick them out; I am out of poli­ tics but if the occasion demands, I will get back ih andfight; for states’ lfghts. I shall .I^ a y s " l^ f S ^ d fighting for the people as.long as I live. ‘I advocate theTtmVe Democracy of Zeb Vance, Chatles Aycock, Ben Tiliman aud others.”- __ CrackingDownon WhiskyAdTertisers. Joseph H. Choate Jr., director of the Federal Alcohol Control Adminis- :ration, has read theiriot act to the iistillers who recently-opened a cam­ paign.of sugar-coated advertising, addressed directly to women, softb persuading them in dulcet, enticing tush to recognize the “change in feminine taste and custom” and “en­ joy an excellent cocktail and a smooth iighball or an after-dinner liqueur.” Mr. Choate’s words were dynamic, ind wore whiskers According to jress dispatches, ,they brought from the distillers an instant and emphatic promise that they would never do it again. ' _ Intheiradvertising which brought che rebuke from Mr. Choate, the distillers sought to make a friendly approach and ingratiate themselves into the favor of the ladies by stat­ ing: "Not so long ago (most of us can remember it), smoking by women was seldom seen. Today—universal- ] ’—it is a socially accepted custom ” Prom there on the sales patter was easy—“ times continue to change women have discovered that they too can enjoy—private stock rye—full body and richness—that softness and satin smoothness that a discriminat­ ing woman naturally seeks—we feel confident'that you will appreciate—in this era of temperate drinking which you have done so much to create— this mellow whisky is selected by so manyAmerican women.” .The eager acquiescence of these distillers with the barbed criticism of the federal director Should deceive no _one., These individual distillers; may^eeptheiTproOTsehever'’fo‘'do it again. But the liquor business will continue to exploit womanhood, youth and even childhood and the home, for the very simple and, to them, conclusive reason that there is profit in it. In the meantime, no. one should forget that what these distillers real­ ly are offering the women-is alchohol and one of the greatest orators of all time on this continent once described that poison’s effect rn our civilization as follower I: covers the land with misery, idleness and crime. It fills your jails, supplies your almshouses, and demands your asylums It crowds your penitentiaries and furnishes victims'foryour scaffolds. It counte­ nances the liar, respects the thief, esteems the blasphemer. It incites the father to butcher his helpless off spring, helps the husband to masta- ere nis wife, and the child to grind the paracidal I axe.’’—Winston Jour- nal. - ; The Long Suffering Motorist. - The motorist is a helpless victim of taxation because there, is no practical substitute for gasoline: For almost any other commodity the consumer can use a substituted But when it comes to. gasoline, it’s pay the tax or stop-driving. ' “The states started taxing gaso­ line “ moderately” but, as with all special taxes, the gas tax soon be­ came exorbitant.?' Then the federal government de- cided to take, its pound_ot flesh from tbe motorist. * . Motorists have it in their - power to demand a reduction of exorbi tant gas tax, inciouding, the actual repeal of the federal gas tax. They also have the right to de­ mand that gasoline taxes be not used for other than road purposes. When taies TUn from 2 5 - to 50 per <>ent of the retail price of any article.'as the gasoline tax does, it is high, time to correct-tbe abuse. 'ftHfrnahifi to haxse-'a stairway, Mrs. Mary Fuler, 104,'of Stanford, Ont., Cahada, climbs a ladder to her bed- rob.m.!f : ■" mu The Other Side. While Superior Court Judge Friz- zelle and Williams declared unconsti­ tutional legislative acts granting-cer- -. tain-counties the. privilege of decid­ ing by ballot whether they would remain prohibition under the Tur­ lington act or set up liquor Btores under special acts passed for these counties;-Judge -Devin could; see nothing wrong with the legislation under State or federal constitution?. It has not yet been declared beyond the legislative power, said Judge Devin, to permit counties to exempt, themselves from State-wide acts, and whether the exemption is made , it the time of the time of the. pass­ age of the act of at a later session the rule is the same. That is a hit. It is common prac- ■ tice in the North Carolina legisla­ ture for members who oppose a State-wide act to exempt their comi­ ties from its provisions. TheyVare granted that privilege as a right and its validity has not been challenged in the courts, or at least not succeFE- fully- Thus a minority, unable to' vote down a State-wide act, has been able to defeat its'purpose by exempt­ ing counties from its provisions^ The notion here ,has always been that this is wrong. A State-wide a-t should be State-wide. If it can’t be voted down the minority, should not' be permitted to exempt their cpuntieB, without reference to ;a c ­ tion by the home folks, simply- be­ cause they do not like it. But this is the rule in North Carolina. If it is good, says Judge Devin, and it has been accepted as correct, it follows that counties may, at . another ses­ sion, of the. legislature, claim-, tie privilege of taking, themselves. frcm . 'UndeFany^ StatertidS^act T)y voting' down the proposition. Prohibition cime to follower in North Carolina1 by counties and towns taking . them­ selves from under Iiqmr laws by vote. They adopted prohibition until the sentiment was so built cp the State voted dry. From the or­ dinary. view it would follow that counties might vote ihemselves un­ der liquor laws, on the local option principle, which was not questioned in the dry laws. It does not sppear that it bas been held that once .a State has voted dry there may be no. more elections. Voting wet in form­ er times did not fix a dt finite statur. The Iolers could come again. Judge Devin believes it would be better if “liquor control” laws; are to'be passed that they be State-wide and' the sale of liquor under State control- But at that he can Eee no reason why counties may not have the privilege af.voting dry in a ,wet State! Thehigh court Las th e‘last word on that.—Statesville Daily.' Liquor Stored In Beie ; Hive. Havehoney bees taken to moon- shining? is a question that was "con­ sidered here when Patrolman J. E. Walker, of the city police force, look­ ed into the top of a bee hive^and found six half gallon fruit jars, well filled and capped but with moonshine whiskey. Thelower section of Uie hive was occupied' by a busy colony of bees.'. ' r The bee hive was located opt. the porch of Silas Johnson on C street near the business district of this city. The police department had received reports that liquor had been sold at that household,, but^revious investi­ gations h ad revealed nothing.— Wilkes Journal-Patriot.: • ,. ' Wondier what reader of this news paper started at the youngestage to make a living for himself. " Won­ der who is the oldest person: now making bis own living. We’d) like to have their names, and a story a- bout what "they are doing now. Two men have been indicted , for conspiring to wrepjt the interior'pf a Broadway theater; It must ;have been a very bad.play iudeed.~Tbe New York Times;- - ^ Life Important Lesson': Never waste time trying to ^conyinee a partisan, who is giire that be knibiws The basic idea of the big business boys is that the country I exists for big business and the people are fat- : to' frc • pickri -■MZ-i&k-z-s; i! «f ViS ' X ... !'!!ISI Ss J !r>>. ii- H l Isf Ife- W II [II! Ji i. SHi-a ipi Ii 11:: M■p it-.VI ir i| S i U I fiES THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD . . Editor. Member NaKonal Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Mocks- villa, N. C., as Second-class Mail m atter. March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE % I 00 S 50 Every time you buy a loaf of bread or a piece, of meat, give thanks to the great Ehringhaus1 governor of: North Carolina, who promised the people that he wouldn’t stand for a sales- tax. There is still a few sections where people don’t want legalized liquor, Rockingham county went dry last Tuesday by a majority of about 306. A number of Eastern Caro 'lina counties have voted for the re­ turn of the liquor stores. The woods are full of huogry damocrals who have already an nounced, or who are getting ready to announce themselves as candi dates for the various state offices from governor down. It is nearly a year until the primary, but the boys can’t wait. Some of the democrats are run­ ning on a platform to remove the sales tax and legalize the sale of •iquor in North Carolina, getting •tax from liquor to take the place of the tax on other articles. The sales tax is bad enough but to sell men’s souls is worse. It .seems that Congress is about to desert President Roosevelt. For the first two years of his reign he had the backing of (he entire coun­ try, but today his glory seems to be fading. He has done some good things for the country, and has made some big mistakes. Tbe country would no doubt have been in better shape if he had tried to run it with Congress instead of sur­ round himself with a big bunch of Drain trusters. In the death of Bowman Gray, Winston Salem millionaire and pro- rninent business man, the state lost one of her best known citizens. Mr. Gray died on shipboard while on his way for a six weeks Euro pesn tour. Mr. Gray was 61 years of age, when stricken. He rose from a poor boy to one of the wealth iest men in the state. He donated much of his wealth to deserving ob jects His passing is mourned by thousands of friends. Declares President Is : Liar And Faker. i.- New Orleans, Tuly 8.—United States Senator Huey P. Long, in a speech here tonight called President :Roosevelt a ‘‘liar and a faker” and defied "them” to “ indict me for that.” SenatorLong madethe statement during the coarse of a review of the work of the recent special session . of the Louisiana legislature at which he personally directed the enactment of-25 laws designed to tighten his grip on the State government and ; Strip his political enemies of their patronage. Discussing-a resolution adopted by the legislature calling on -the congress to replace the recently en acted old age pension bill with measure drafted by Senator Long, the Louisiana “dictator’ ’ said: “ Let me tell you about this Roo$e . velt pension plan; Under it there are 280,000 persons in Louisana.wbo would qualify, and Louisiana would get about $1,000,000 which would mean that the State's old age pen sioners would get S3.60 a year or a little less than one cent a day. " T h a t’s , what-' Franklin Delano Roosevelt sends you down here. ; “ Franklin Roosevelt is a liar and a faker. Now IettBem indict me for that and I ’ll prove him a liar.’ '- Funeral sendees were held at IJix- . by Presbytenanchurch Sundayaffer- njori for Gaither Wood, 76, who.died in a Stqtesville hospital Saturday, fol­ iowingfl short illness. No immediate relatives survive. Interment follow­ ed in the iElbaviIle M. P. Chnrch cemetery, witU Kev. J. W. Foster of­ ficiating. Mr. Wood spent prastic«il- all of bis life in Davie.. feSdOfti). MdGittivftM , & MY & ms hatHs the ~yardstick for a cigarette.• • Take mildness for one thing—-how does,it measure up for mildness? Chesterfields are m ilder— not flat o r insipid, of course, but with a pleasing flavor. Then take taste for another thing— does it have plenty of taste? Chesterfields taste better— not strong but just right. In other words, They Satisfy— that’s my yardstick fo r a cigarette. n? sSiSsSKs - T . - 7I 5* , jw m t Lawrei * By Kathleen Oopyrigbt by Kathlesj WNU Servia SY N O PSIS! ) 1935. Liccett & Myers Tobacco Co, C te s te r fie ld ...the cigarette tk a t’s M ILD E R Chesterfield ... th e C igarette th a t TASTES BETTER N. B. Hardiman, of Henderson, Tenn., jyill Begin a Protracted Meeting at Jericho the 3rd Sunday in July. You Are Cordially Invited to Attend These Services and_Hear the Gospel in its Full­ ness. Services Through/the Week and Will Begin at 8 O’clock. !e x t r a n e w s r! ForkNewsNotes. Billy Don, three-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lanier had the misfortune to get bis hip crushed in a fall from a barn loft, be was car­ ried to a Winston hospital, where h< was put in a cast, so he could b< j brought home, he will have to be in the cast for several weeks. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dees, on Tuesday. July H th a fine son, Mrs. C. L. Aaron and Mrs. Ned Bailey spent Friday afternoon in Mocksville. Miss Edna Gobble has been: spend ing several days with Mr. and Mrs. George Gobble, Mrsi George Gobble has been quite sick. Mrs Scott Stewart, who has been very sick is much ,better. 'ITewshasbeen received here, of the death of Lee Jarvis, at-a Raleigh Hospital, where he had been taking treatment for about four years. He was a son of Hiratn J Jarvis, of the Hanes farm near here. Mrs. Hugh Mason was called to the bedside of her daughter, Mrs. Floyd Trexler, Friday; Mrs. Trexler was reported to be in a very critical condition. Miss Ruth W. Hairston, who hap bean very sick, is now much better, her host of friends will be glad to learn. Rev. F. E. Howard, filled his rp- cuIar appointment at Fulton M. E. Church. Sunday, tie had as always, a wonderful message for his congre­ gation, and at this service' administ­ ered'the “Lord's Supper." The re­ gular appointments for service at Fulton, are, Sunday school each Sur- day a. m., 10 o’clock. Preaching each 2nd Sunday 11 a. m , and each 4th Sunday evening 7:30. Every­ body cordially invited to attend. Uncle Johq Mason, a highly es­ teemed colored man of our commu­ nity is in a very critical condition at his home here, two of his sons, and a daughter from Philadelphia, Pa., (have arrived to be at his bedside. He is well known throughout Davie and other counties,, and is held high esteem. North Carolina | In The Superior Court.) bed property, to-wit: A Motor Fuel that destroys Car- J bon, keeps it out—increases com-f pression, mileage and top speed— ItV ' . ' > ' I SUPER-S0 LVEN1ZED PUROL PEP \ I Colored Purple, for Identification | * ■ '■ .■ SI Only, and Sold Exclusively Through | p i M e ^o ii: s t a t io n s . I Use it---Haye the Most Ferfect Mo- J ¥• ;v ■ I tor You Ever Owned. t ' - \ Davie County ( Before Tbe Clerk Mary Dismake Mavberry and Betty Dismuke Alieri vs John Dismuke, Samuel Dismuke. Lillian Dismuke. Lizzie Dismuke, and J. Irving Fulton, Executor of the Estate of Adam Dismuke Notice Of Re-Sale. UnderJand by virtue of authority conferred upon the undersigned Commissioner by the terms of a cer­ tain judgment entered by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie Coun­ ty on the 27th day of May, 1935, and pursuant to.an order of ,re-sale en­ tered on the IOth day of July, 1935, by the said Clerk of the Superior Court, the uridersigned will offer for re-sale, at the Courthouse door of1 ,. , . , ..Davie County, in the City of Mocks jsition-in a Philadelphia hospital, b ville, on July 30, 1935, at 32:30 spending two weeks with home o’clock p. m/, the following descri- f >lks in and around town. "Aiijoining the land of Caleb Bow­ den on the North (now Lou Smitii and Alice Spillman); Luckett Bi* son on the East (now B. W. Allen); Albert Phelps on the Soath (now John Long) and Mary Ann Beaa- champ on the West (now C. M. Fost­ er) containing 25 acres, mote or less.” ■ The above described property is located in Farmington TownshiD, fronting on the hard surface road leading from Mocksville to Winste- Salem. ’ Bidding to start at $199.10. This July 11.1935.... ARCHIEELLEDGE, Cnmmisiimer. E L L E D G E & W E LLS. Attorneys Woodrow Wilson, whoholdsapo- Redland News. M'. W. D. Smith is spending a few days in Winston-Salem'the Cuest of her sen.- Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Smith. Mrs. C. L aDuuq was the Monday guests of her parents, Mt. and Mrs. C. H, Smitb.. Mrs-TaylorFosterwho has been con­ fined to tier room for the past week is im- proviog we are glad to note. ' 1 Those visiting Mr. and Mrs Wilhe Arraa- wortbr Sunday were: Mr. and‘Mrs. C. M. Foster, Mr. and Mn. Buck Foster, Mr. and Mrs- S. R- Cornatz,er and little daughter, Florence, Mr. and Mrs. Will Spiry and child­ ren all of Smith Grove. . Mrs. Oscar Riddle is on the sick list her friends will be.sorry to Ieam but wilS be glad to know that Qscar Riddle is improv­ing. Mrs. B. D. Howell and Mrs, Montgomery of Farmington spent Wednesday with M e C o rm tc k -D e e rin g 1 0 -2 0 TKAtTOR rB^HE McCormick-Deering 10-20 Tractor is a power plant for the moderate-size farm, designed to give one man control of all farm operations.It daughter, Mrs. C. S. Dunn. Mrs. W. 0. Donh visited her Mrs-TaylorFoster Thursday. Mrs, Buck Foster, spent Thursday night with her patents, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. S. H: Smith. of Thanks. We take this opportunity of thank­ing: our many friends for the kind* ness shown us during the illness andafter the death of our uncle, Gaither Wood. S i SXM ,. Branson and Relatives. saves a Jot on costly labor charges throughout the year;'it gets Vork done faster; it reduces expenses all along the line. The 4-cylinder, valve-in-head engine of the 10*20 produces abundant power that can be extensively app ed through the drawbar, belt, or power take-off* A reserve of power is developed to meet emergencies that are bound to arise. uI O ^ Sb0ut t^le P0Werful McCormick* * Put one on your own farm M c C o r^ V ^ °PP°rtunities. We also have the *nick-Deenng 15-30 and FarmaU Tractors. realize; We Carry A Complete Line Of McCormick-Deering implements and Repairs* See Us For Your Needs In TBis Line* C. Sanford Sons Co* . . JJ0Cksville'N- c> Th© Boston Lawrences | Ifornia at the beginning !rush, but the holdings Ihave shrunk to a small Sold fam ily home in Clipi itw enty-five, Is w orking !w orks, Gail In the publ SEdjth In the book dep fetore. Sam Is in school, % fyear-old Ariel is becomi Iphil is fascinated by * |L Ily Cass, w hose husbam jiher. Young Van Murchis aw ealthy fam ily, returns SGaIl has visions, through! Ikini, of the turning o f f liuck. Dick Stebbins, P h i| Sthe run of the house. Iv a n for a week-end w i| Ihis uncle and aunt. S l| !coldly. At a roadhouse fat m idnight. Next day I Ishe w as a t the place, arj irem orse. A policeman !home, announcing that a J !killed in an automobile ^as driving one of the cd bins, who has been adm it! has th e case against A g ItGail suddenly realizes Oick and not Van. SteblJ jelope, according to a girl. CHAPTER V III- —18— “Oh, no use at all.” “He told me that the ie could move to, with Iren—and I dare say 'Oh, Gail, no!” ‘Well, I wouldn’t bel irised. He told me thal int places he could fit d seventy-live, and t | Wouldn’t pay It. They ra[ ore than two hnndrej ou know, when Lily’s cf rarned up.” ‘I know. Invisible 'ourteen-doilar hats!" e pause. “And now that Joe CaJ -iSsilttiiy getting nothing fr. W S M suppose Phil can’t aftoi -i-sj^^bad any too much, as it ;'Kf?MnipIy added four more A' You'd think,” said scorn, "that Phil might I coming!” “I try—I reaiiy do tiJ to Lily,” Gail said a f| try to think up things «st her, and be reasond t ‘‘helping me In the kite! hear a thing like hi hat Phil has as mucl j^ouse as we have . Another silence. Th^ .^ery low, “Something soul, and I feel that her!” “I wish we could get I ad L” "Oh, I mean to !” "It we could Uve in | “I know. And if we her for a gas station, had that, we could Iivd “Then that reconciles! itation!” Editb said, f<T “I suppose," Gail suJ Jiomberly1 “the only del gpnly square thing—is tcf Pt It It’s one of tho ![would be so darned e | ^sque in a book. And The voice that to Ed prave ana gallant faitei pail wanted no sympa: scowl between her ej ^er aspect that repu This effort to make jvon t get us anywhere,' Yet Edith was quite potice the courage with . ^ e whole situation ptmosphere, which in t Phll’s “ arriage ha dangerous elect! i ^ail was not only nic ^seemed able, with heif [Winning sweetness, to ^ s place. It was aa Part to play, and was! to its utmost Iin For the first time, ton ” the marriage, its si ■wrprisp. if m y suspI Sering trace of apolod Save no sign, but she , in 81,(3 t^e dinner t | JL Its oW self than it I“ e Saturday of Edith’s turn. _ ln the fatuous bll I PrtLradiant with saIrtf. Eelt that he w | I1t^ yc conId all go on t definitely—the happy 1 Illeveare S° patheticallI he won’t do thl *or I’m g0iDg. t0 £aJkI ♦1 and ^et e'erythinj «ed. Then we’U only toward our goaL Enoi „ smallest overhead e: aOage1 and then you of Clippersville fcj rH.A ^ove Clippersville tdreamiiy. -j don-t thinL1L6 a plaee more- I alI flppersViUe as the swl |ty, to-wit: ne the laud of CalebBow- I Xor-th (now Lou Smith Spillman); Luckett Etchi- JEast (now B. W. Allen); elps on the South (now t) and Mary Ann Beau- Ihe West (now C. M. Fost- pin); 25 acres, more or we described property is Farmington Townshin1 the hard surface road Im Mocksville to Winston- fto start at $199.10. Lily 11. 1935. ARCHIE ELLEDGE, Commissioner. : & WELLS. Attorneys Iw Wilson, who bolds a do- J Philadelphia hospital, is I two weeks with home pd around town. ieerinl O B tractor is a power irm, designed to ■I operations- I* j throughout the U du ces expenses i g i n e of the 1 0 - 2 0 m be extensively or power take-off- deet emergencies fu l McCormick- ow n farm and Fe also have the Imall Tractors- Line Of ;ring Repairs* In Tbis Une. ions Co. UockB-Wle. N- RECORD. MOCKSYILLE, N. C- Jj'J* The Lucky Lawrences ♦ By Kathleen Norris Copyright by K athleen M onia W NU Service SYNOPSIS The Boston Lawrences came to Call- I fornia at the beginning of the gold \ rush, but the holdings of the fam ily ; have shrunk to a sm all farm , and the fold family home in Clippersville. Phil, & twenty-five, is w orking in the iron ; works. Gail In the public library and \ Edith in the book departm ent of a I store. Sam is in school, and seventeen- * year-old Ariel is becoming a problem. i phi! is fascinated by “th at terrible” I Lily Cass, whose husband has deserted {her. Young Van Murchison, scion of a ( wealthy family, returns from Yale, and J Gail has visions, through m arriage w ith j i jni, of the turning of the Lawrence I luck. Dick Stebbins, Phil's friend, has I the run of the house. Gail goes w ith I Ve.n for a week-end w ith the Chipps, I his uncle and aunt. She is received I coldly. At a roadhouse Gail sees Ariel, I at midnight. Next .day Ariel adm its f she was at the place, and displays no ^ remorse. A policeman brings Ariel I home, announcing that a child has been I killed in an automobile sm ashup. Ariel I was driving one of the cars. Dlck Steb- l bins, who has been adm itted to the bar, I has the case against Ariel dismissed. [ Gnil suddenly realizes that she loves E Dick and not Van. Stebbins and Ariel X elope, according to a note left by the I girl- CHAPTER V III—Continued “Oh, no use a t all.” "He told me that the cheapest place (be could move to, with the three chil­ li dreo—and I dare say another com- |lng—” "Oh. Gail, no!” “Well, I wouldn’t be one bit sur­ prised. He told me that the only de­ cent places he could find were sixty and seventy-live, and that he simply couldn’t pay It They ran up a bill of more than two hundred at Muller’s, you know, when Lily’s clothes were all burned up.” "I know. Invisible stockings and I fourteen-dollar hats!” Edith said in |the pause. ’ "And now that Joe Cass is dead andI Lily getting nothing from her people, II suppose Pbll can’t afford it We never fhnd any too nineh, as it was. and Phil’s pimply added tour more persons to the st” “You’d think.” said Edith in patient :corn, "that Vliil might have seen that fcbming!” “I try—I really do try to be decent I to Lily,” Gaii said after awhile. “I |try to think up things that will lnter- |est her, and be reasonable when she’s ^helping me in the kitchen. But when II hear a tiling like her telling Sam Ithat Phil has as much right In the f house as we have . . .” Another silence Then Gail added, I very low, “Something rises up In my jf soul, and I feel that I could murder r her!” m ‘‘I wish we could get away, Gail, you s® and I.” “Oh, I mean to!” “If we could live In Carmel!” “I know. And if we rented the cor- j ner for a gas station, and you and I j had that, we could live there” “Then that reconciles me to the gas < station!” Editb said, fervently. “I suppose,” Gail summarized it all : somberly, “the only decent thing—the ! only square thing—is to make the best i of it it’s one of those things that nOuld be so darned easy—so pictur­ esque In a book. And it’s—so hard—” The voice that to Editb was always brave and gallant faltered a little, but Gail wanted no sympathy. There was a scowl between her eyes, a gruffness In her aspect that repudiated IL "This effort to make the best of It w°n’t get us anywhere,” she said. Ttt Edith was quite keen enough to notice the courage with which Gail car­ ded the whole situation that night The a,tmosPhere, which in the three weeks since Phil’s marriage had been charged with dangerous electricity, cleared. Gad was not only nice to Lily; she seemed able, with hear oyvn peculiar winning sweetness, to put herself in -v’8 Place. It was as if she had, a Part to play, and was determined to P'ay it to its utmost limits. for the Brst time, tonight she spoke W the marriage, its suddenness and prise, if Lily snspected some lin­ gering trace of apology in this she nuTe Dff sign’ but she brightened vis- *wy. and the dinner table was more hke its old self than It had been since Saturday of Edith’s and Gail’s, re­turn. Phil, In the fatuous blindness of love, was radiant with satisfaction, and , th felt that he would feel that hey could all go on living together MeHnltely-the happy family in which Iieve8re S° patbeticaUy eager to be- he won’t do that!” said Gail. ®r I’® going to talk to-him tomor- Um Vm1 set everJthing definitely set- . rhen we’ll only ..have to worktowardthe °Ur eoaI" Bn°ugh money for smallest overhead expenses we can hhage, and then you and I’ll get out ut of Clippersville forever!" dr ‘ Jeve Clippersville,” Edith said love * ** ^on t think anyone could Clinn8 place more- I always think of persvHle as the sweetest place In the world,” the younger sister pursued. “Just the same, Fm going to get out, Edith Lawrence!” "And just the same, I’m going with you, Abigail!” This on a Monday, the last of Sep­ tember. On the Tuesday, on the Wednesday, Gail looked for her chance to talk to Phil, in vain. On Thursday Gail went home to lunch to find Edith and Lily in a glory of housecleaning. They appeared to be working* together harmoniously enough, and Gail walked back to the library at one o'clock mor­ alizing in her own soul upon the de­ sirability of making the best of things in this curious world, putting up with what could not be changed, enduring what could not be cured. Tbe only way to get past certain things in life is to plunge right through them, like them—or pretend you did— learn from them, and go on to other IessonA The early October day was somber and overcast without rain, but equally without sun. Leaves were turning restlessly in the gardens; other leaves, heaps of them, were being raked into damp, somber piles that smoked In the lifeless, ominous air and scented the world with autumn. "A strange hush lay over the town; something was ex­ pected, something was drawing nearer and nearer across the great range of the eastern mountains and under the pale cool sky. Edith and Gail almost always walked home together. But Edith was not downtown today, and Gail had no need to stop at Muller’s book department as usual. It- was the third, the night they called the “house’s birthday,” and Gail —reflecting rather ungraciously that, they might as well break Lily into some of the customs of the Lawrence house­ hold, since the poor little creature appeared to be only too anxious to copy her new family’s ways and ideas, stopped at the hardware store and bought twelve new drinking glasses. ^ “Did you wish them wrapped as a gift, Miss Lawrence?” “Well, yes,” Gail said, with a whim­ sical twist to the corners of her mouth. “Wrap them as a gift” “We haven’t given PhiLand Lily any­ thing,” she thought as she walked on. “Well, they didn’t give us any warning. Perhaps Edith and I’ll make some ges­ ture—some day, before we leave And Ariel—Mother’s poet! To have no wed­ ding, no fun, no beauty. And not to have loved us. She couldn’t have loved us, to walk out that Christmas night and send us no word—never to write. “It’s a funny world. Things seem to happen to us Lawrences. But such queer things, and In such funny ways.” The two older Cass boys—they were to be Lawrence boys soon, for Phil, in his gentle way, adored his stepsons and was eager to have them take bis name —the two older Cass boys were dig­ ging contentedly down at the end of the garden where the grass was sprout­ ing green and pale in the shadow of the heavy evergreen fenca Gail waved at them as ’she followed the uneven, discolored flags of the path to the side door. And then Phil In the kitchen chop­ ping ice—chopping ice . . .? And Lily flying down the back stairway, with a terrible face—a terrible face. “Gail! Edith was hurt” “Edith!” “She fell. She struck her head.” This was Lily. -She gestured with an arm. Gail ran. Edith was unconscious on the couch, her eyes dosed. Her soft tawny hair was damp, her forehead wet A girl— Mary Rumbold—was there, white and concerned, not touching Edith. “I thought you were the doctor, Gail,” Mary said In a still voice. “We took off her shoes,” she added incon­ sequentially. Gail was breathing in great spent breaths. She could not speak. Her Ups moved soundlessly. “She fell—?” asked the silent, mov­ ing Ups. “No.” Phil was beside his sister, his arm about her. She leaned against him, suddenly spent “No. It was the statue—the Neapolitan Boy,” he said. “One of the kids—Danny—ran against it Mary and Edith were just going out and Ede leaned over and caught at the pedestal—and it toppled and struck her.” “How long ago?” “Ten minutes. We telephoned you.” “Doctor?" “He’s on his way.” “PhU—Phll—’’ she whispered, swal­ lowing.“I don’t know, Gail. We don’t know. Lily says that one of her brothers—” Lily knelt beside Edith, and with her gentle, common, stubby little hands fitted an improvised ice bag on Edith’s head. “Ah, that’s lovely, Gail!” Edith said unexpectedly In a clear, low, happy voice. “Are we swimming? Green— green—green water—Uke emeralds— wet emeralds.” She lapsed into silence again, sigh­ ing contentedly. “She’s coming out of it; it was only a shock,” Phil said, frowning, with a reassuring nod and glance for GaiL Gall was not conscious of the passing of time. She was conscious of but one thing—Edith, She must hold Edith here, by the sheer power of that sis­ terly love that was the strongest love In her life; - Doctor Peters was here; and Doctor Reynolds. They wanted another opin­ ion, a man from San Francisco. Con­ cussion, undoubtedly, and possibly fracture, but it might be that both were slight In undertones, in the haU, old Doctor Peters told Phil of other cases —cases from which one never wpuld have supposed that Uttle boys could recover. But they had. ^ “Doctor Remsinger from San Fran­ cisco is coming,” Phil told Gail when she emerged, white apd « from the sitting room at ten o clock. He IJ be here about three. And Dr. Peters says that If Edith goes on all ri£ until this time tomorrow, she’s got good chance.* 1 The weary eyes were raised. “Then the only thing to do Is—live, until this time tomorrow.” Lily brought her warm wrapper, her slippers, downstairs, set a cup of hot coffee before her. “Oh, thank you, Lily,”'Gail said, with the first honestly affectionate look she had ever given her little sister-in-law. “Oh, Gail, if it hadn’t been Danny!” Lily said, weeping. “Poor Danny I”,Gail murmured, with a steady, dry-eyed shadow of her old smile. She went back to her post, sitting In the low chair that had been “Moth­ er’s rocker” for twenty-five years. Old Doctor Peters came and went In the quiet room. Lily was up all night; Phil and Sam kept vigil In the kitchen. Sometimes Edith murmured. At about two o’clock she opened her eyes, looked straight at Gail, and said, in her own smiling way, “I’ll teU you, GalL I’ll go first and get the cottage ready, and be waiting for you!” “All rlghb my darling,” Gail’s trem­ bling, tender voice answered. “Put that comforter over her feeb will you, Lily? She doesn’t feel any too warm.” Lily had been kneeUng. - But she was on her feet now, and as she brought the comforter a strange expression came into her face. “Let’s say some prayers, Gail!” she said suddenly, in a frightened tone. “Ah, as if I hadn’t! And she did, too,” Gail whispered back. “We said our prayers together, just as we used to, a little while ago, and she seemed so sensible; just—hungry—for them.” “Doctor Remsinger is here,” Phil an­ nounced in the doorway. “Phil!” Lily mid quickly, running to her husband, catching him importu­ nately by the arm. “Take Gail away— Phil—” “Take—?” Gail echoed. She got to her feet, looked dazedly from Phil to the doctor. The San Francisco physi­ cian was beside Edith. He had straightened up—had said something to Doctor Peters. They were trying to make her leave Edith, and she would not go. She looked from face to face, terrified. Then she was conscious of choking, and of seizing Phil with both frantic hands and of trying to scream. Then the room roeked and the world rocked, and there was nothing but blackness everywhere. CHAPTER IX Gkil went to the strange country of grief. She saw the sunlight changed and sickly, the trees brassy and dead ; the. country town, where all her life bad been spent, was a pasteboard town now, a place of unrealities and emptiness. Every one was kind to her. She was amazed at the kindness, at the pains these good folk took, to help her through the echoing, queer days. She thanked them absently, came suddenly to consciousness, confusedly thanking them again. Letters brought her beautiful mes­ sages; she found other beautiful words in books. "Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted.” Grandma Polk, foremost In suffrage and prohibition and social work gen­ erally for half a century, copied out a poem for her in ajtrembling, beautifully clear old hand. I shall go gently, never fear—give little warning, Say not good-ntght, but In some happier sphere. Bid you good-morning. Old Man Whitman, who had known Stevenson, sent her the exquisite verses that genius bad written for one in grief: He is not dead, this friend; not dead. But in the path we m ortals tread Got some few trifling steps ahead.and nearer to the end. So th at you, too, once past the oend Shall m eet again as face to face this trtend . You fancy dead. Push gaily on, strong heartl The while You travel forw ard mile by mile He loiters w ith a backward smile Till you can overtake And strains his eyes to sdarch bis wake, Or w histling, as he sees yov through the- brake, W aits on a stile. “The dove, finding no place to res her foot, returned to him in the ark,* said the priest gravely at Edith’s fu­ neral. And browsing among the books to which she turned with the sure in­ stinct of the living creature that must fight for its life, Gaii thought In lines of music. “Oh, lyric love, half angel and half bird ...” she whispered, walking alone to the library in the cool winter mornings. * “Oh, Edith, Edith, come back to me, beloved, or I die!” Miss. Mary Tevis, the rich, eccentric old maid who had once given Edith dresses and hats, took Gail with her to Santa Barbara for Christmas. They drove down in the big Tevis car, and stayed at an enormous hotel, saw movie queens entertaining hilarious friends at dinner, spent whole mornings swim­ ming, Idling on the sand. They went to a big inter-Colleglate game’ In Pasa­ dena, and came ’ back to Clippersville feeling that somehow they had.cheated the year, and that there had been no Christmas at ail. TO BE CONTINUED. Use of Jams and Jellies Either the English have more of a sweet tooth or Americans make more of their own jellies, for studies show that America uses only one and one- half pounds of manufactured jams and jellies for each person, compared with twelve pounds for each Englishmaik IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY IcHooL Lesson Bjr REV, p. B. FITZWATER, D. D.. Member of Faculty, Moody BibIo Institute of Chicago.©, Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for July 21 DAVID LESSON TEXT—I Samuel 46:5-13; H Samuel 1:23-27. GOLDEN TEXT—Loolt not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others.— Phllipplans 2:4. PRIMARY TO PIC-D avid and the Sleeping King. JUNIOR TO PIC -D avid and the Sleeping King. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP- JC—David tIfe G reat-H earted. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP­ IC-—A Generous A ttitude Toward Others. David is one of the most prominent of Bible characters. His many-sided life and bis close association with Christ give him a place of Importance second to none In all the Bible. It Is in this light that this great character should be viewed, and not merely as “David (The Great-Hearted).” I. His Birth and Youth (I Sam. 16; 17:15. 34). , Bethlehem was the place of his birth, ks well as that of his greater Son (Matt 2:46). He was the youngest of Jesse’s eight sons. His young manhood was spent as a shepherd. This was the first period of his schooling and prep­ aration for life. From the brief de­ scriptive word we learn that in his per­ sonal appearance he had auburn hair, fair eyes and a beautiful countenance (16:12). His life as a shepherd was attended with real hazards (17:34-37). II. His Anointing (I Sara. 16:6-13). God had revealed to Samuel that one of Jesse’s sons was to be the new king. In determination of the divine choice, Jesse’s sons passed before Samuel In order, beginning with Eliab. the oldest. ElIab was rejected in spite of his fa­ vorable physical qualifications. His in­ ner condition as seen by God disquali­ fied him. Al] glorying In the flesh must be set aside In the choice of a man for a place in God’s program. David was chosen because of his fidelity as a shep­ herd boy. When the anointing oil was being applied, the Spirit of the Lord came npon him. David’s attractiveness as a young man, and his unusual gifts were all to no avail without the Spirit III. David’s Life at the Royal Court 1. As a harpist and armorbearer to Saul (I Sam. 16:13-23). He was brought to play his harp before Saul in order that the evil spirit might be allayed. 2. His triumph over Goliath. For spme reason David returned to look ’after his father's sheep. On being sent on an errand to his brethren in the camp, he saw the Philistine giant, Go­ liath. defying God and the army of Is­ rael. He volunteered to fight, skillful­ ly slung the stone which felled the giant and with Goliath's owu sword cut off his head. 3. Won the friendship of Jonathan. This. friendship has been immortalized In the world’s thought It was unique In that It occurred between two men of rival worldly interest Jonathan was the crown prince, heir to the throne. David was heir to the throne according to divine purpose. Knowing this, Jonathan waived his rights. IV. David's Life as an Outlaw (I Sam. 21:70-31:13). Though God anointed him king, Da­ vid wandered for years as an outlaw to escape the. murderous frenzy of Saul. During this time he did some foolish things, but he also learned many things in this bitter school which better fitted him to be a king, statesman, and poet, leaving to the world a rich heritage V. God’s Royal Covenant (II Sam. 7:8-16). On the ground of the setting forth of this covenant, he Is the legal heir to the kingdom. Jesus Christ shall one day occupy the throne of his father David (Luke 1:31-33). VI. David’s Reign as King. L Made king of Judah at Hebron (II Sam. 2:4-5:3). A long war was waged between the house of David and that of Saul. 2. King over all Israel (H Sam. 5:4). The elders of Israel at last invited him to be king over all Israel accord­ ing to the purpose of God as expressed by Samuel when he anointed him king. VII. David’s Sins and Failures. L Refuge among the enemies of Is­ rael (I Sam. 21, SO). This was a dis­ graceful act. Being the chosen and anointed of God, he should have trust­ ed God to defend him against the. fury of Saul. 2 Plurality of wives. He established a harem after the order of the heathen monarchs. 3. Crime as to Bath-sheba and Uriah (H Sam. 11, 12). Ammon’s sin, the re- belllons of Absalom and Sbeba, and. Ab­ salom’s attempt to seize the throne were the Inevitable fruits of his poly­ gamous life. 4. Numbering the people ( □ Sam. 25). ■ -' Religion Religion, like"' morals and physics, has first truths which are Incapable of being derived from anything, more cer­ tain than themselves—which the hu­ man mind, at a particular point of its development, invariably recognizes, and the. Intuition of which is a direct re­ sult of Its highest activities.—James Martineau. Shining. Qnalttiet Many individuals have, like uncut diamonds, shining qualities beneath a rough exterior.—JuvenaL FEW UNABLE TO FIND THRILL IN UNCOVERED PAST What type of-heart could it be that would not beat just a little faster over the news that a Harvard expe­ dition will delve Into the wilderness of Sinai for the secrets of the Moon Goddess? Wiiat type of mind could it be that did not get a thrill out of Richard Halliburton’s experience in the tun­ nel through which Joab leij David’s army into the Jebusite city' of Jeru­ salem 700 years before Christ trod Its streets? Isn’t there a thrill In contemplation of digging Into the Mayan ruins In Mexico and Central America, or In uncovering the stone- written history of Rome? It was In the wilderness of SInaI that the Hebrews, led out of Egypt by Moses, wandered 40 years- work­ ing up the nerve’to enter the Land of Canaan. It was on M t Sinal that Moses obtained tbe tablets bearing the Ten Commandments. Jerusalem, a shrine to Jew and Gentile alike, a pawn In wars that reach back into the dimmest history, holds secrets most normal persons yearn to solve. The Mayans had a civilization on this continent when our ancestors still were dodging the powerful In Europe and dallying with the idea of political and religious freedom. It was In Rome that Paul preached the new gospel, and where martyrs to It were burned in pitch to light the arena for gladiatorial combat* In the Colosseum, which still atanoa. Most of our thrills over expeditions of that type are vicarious. We don’t go, we can’t go; most of us wouldn’t go If we could, but that doesn’t pre­ vent us from believing we would nor from envying the fortunate few wh* do go.—Kansas City Star. - Work Many of us regard work as a nec­ essary evil. We work because we can’t help ourselves. It never oc­ curs to us that our daily toil may be made a blessing instead of a curse. Work is just wl(at you maike it—your best friend or your worst enemy.—GriL Biliousness Sour Stomach Gasand Headache duo to Constipation THREE LONG CHEERS v m AND NUTRITIOUSIT’S DELICIOUS m SHOUT HUZZAH HOORAY, HOORAH \ * / * , M S /NCE you taste Grape-Nuts Flakes, you’ll cheer, tool And it not only has a delicious flavor, but it’s nourishing. One dishful, with miilr or cream, contains more varied nourish­ ment than many a hearty meat Try it—your grocer has it! Product of General Foods. SlSS W M H PH H B m h b Modern; fireproof; all) roo4 *-Wilh ’bath; cool and healthy climite 1Sfer- R A|T E S ;■ S 6 up' .. AMERICAN PLAN . , I ' ” , S 3 AMERICA’S FINEST BEACH HOTEL Dance* Sninf Ride* and Golf in the Cool* Refitetlilng LiBaty of OceanRorett W IN A WEEICS VACATIONWrite * fetter of 150 words or more telling os 'Why Myxde Beach is die Ideal- Spot for a Vaeatloa and die Oceaa Forest lhitel the Best Placebo stay*** Winning letters entitle a eonple to one week?* room and meals here as oar guests daring August. SAM J* LnTLEGREEN JAMES LYNCH fit r / I I I 'I Ii'IMi Good CleanFun THE FEATHERHEADS B7 Ofibomtf 6 Vcicra Kinpipw UtlM PT PonV -think I'LL HANE SOUP TODAY— <30T A NEW SUIT — T OM SPUASH 1 PomY w ant To \ J I hArm-Y Ei/eR JAvIIS -Tn SeWO 1 T>o TriAT—- MtIi 1 " HANS To SeNO THIS SUIT To TriE CLEANERS RkSUT AWAY ■po TriAT— MY WiFE l^V ERY , g o o d AT TAKlNS- SPOTS OUT OF CLOTHES! ir mine IS Too- THAT1S TriE Ts o u b l e- r ' L—-j VNHAT PO You , J LAST W E^i SHE p.E MONEO A t f f l ,SVSi CpOM MY O T H E R ------- T • SUIT VlHEPE A MAW Keeps- HiS m ohbY «s AW1 opeW I I PocKeTeaDKj " S t F e r Simplicity and Chic in Mor FlNNEY OF THE FORCE «, Br WoHra Kmptpn U-Iat TrutK Is Stranger BftRPON ME SAR&E—BUT l A SEE YoU HAVE A BLACK *- e y e -i'w from the Pftesr AND WONPEftBD IF- You WBRE HURT IN TrtE ’ LINE o F DUTY— OH-THAT ee . NOTHIN’- FEBSiT —^ VT p / ( Then T h e re 's no A new s CONCERN IMiS- Y oU ft-ER-SY E ? Xs WHY1. THERE is sCf, Too- TeLL HlMIr FiMNEY1HOW You FELL »owh A coal HOLE AMD CAUEriT A// /> VT IS NOT*/\ m ^ [falNS HOMg frt' BACON- WT VllMMW SpILt TK1r -,B E A IJtyj , MESCAL IKE By S. I- hum tley Brothers U nder tfae Skin S O T I R E A D ] I KIPMJjSIia., I U it IIOOMT aeUEvE IV S oox..V w i t , '. ' *0 IM L A .LLO M / T W E T T H IE V E S IS J E S T A S , U P-B L E . f o B E A S B A O j .AS O R D IM A R .V T O t K S ! /Jer (CoDjrlslii. 1931. by A A Huntley, -Trncle Mnrk Res. U. S. R at Ofllee) StMATTER POP—Ambrose Doesn’t Know When HeyS Down [ AT Ti MES • I ’m A- ViB-H-Y VTunp B.&& f f a l l . V a <£otT iV S o is Y im da T eE p Am* e y e . o n M t? Am' T 2 e st« a iY M E . I vJ-t^AT, 5 0 § 0 0 (4 B y C . M . P A Y N E O om iw [£' \ / i-wvsy (© Thd Bell Syndicate, Inc.} “REG’LAR FELLERS”Nourishing1 Air TH IS IS Pa’ SWBLLPAtRTTl I HAiO PIVE- PUAiTESi OP IC E CEEAiM AUtR-EAOYl GlM M E AHOTH E R SANDWICH*. 2S < 3 B n e\g& <S The Asoclated Newspapers Our Pet Peeve By-M. G. KEITNER I UW .* IllH I III ^ <0fcftyOL'MAN S M ? K es TABLE MANNERS By GLUYAS WILLIAMS HAVING BEEM FH>, Slfe IK MOTHER’S LftP1 WHILE PftRBIfS HftVE SOME- TftIKS To EftTUK RES- TftURANT- . DECIDES HFD UXE Ib PLftV WltH TriE UUJLEa WftRE SulVflb ,WIUIWlt-1 SEIZES TftATzMOMENfIb MftKE A DIVE FORTriE SOUP PLATE. .NO DPiM- ASE EHCEPT ft LlTlLE SPILLED SOUP MOTftER, AFlER SHORT BW SHftRPWRESTlJNS MftRH1REMOVES FORK FROMJUS-SRflSP DURlKS MOMENthR/UUL . IN HIS ACtiVltiESl MOTHER RESUMES EFFORtSYOSEYSOMgSUuiJYoEAT TO HWET HIM IS SlllEK BESINS WRlSSUNO xSEEMS To QUIET POWN.A- ft SPOON To HOLD. ATfER WHICfT MAKES'ANV WAIfS SfRAtESIC MOMENT A SECOND Op, TWO WOWS IDEA OF. MOTHER'S AND MAKES CLEAN SWEEP if OH FLOOR . EAfllVG IMPOSSIBLE OFSILVER WARE TO FLOOR KofftER'DECIDES 5HPS HflD- - ekough To ehtanVwaV(Copyright,-1 ■ W TK« Iun w PATTERN »314 [Connect] Ul d t h !observes 300th of Settle It’s as fresh as the morning ji I And it was designed for til tto I clever women who like to puis, I smart appearance at the nqfeKif I ginning of every new day. Tib j or four dresses made up by ttiip; tern would solve all your house fej I problems. And the expense e [ prove trifling. Moreover, this j tern has been designed so simply- to follow It will seem like a Wj I son In sewing. The yoke andstea all-in-one with a bit of bodice E- ness below, and the decorative pods make this frock very smart Wei! Percale or gingham in gar nBSti small geometric designs wonMlee- fectlve. Add nobby cork or twfa buttons. Pattern 9316 may be ordered on? In sizes 14, 16, IS, 20, 32. Si, 36, S 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3i yards. 36-Inch fabric. SEND FIFTEBJ- CEXTS In co: or stamps (coins preferred) for Ihi pattern. Be sure to rvr,te plain!! your NAME, ADDRESS, STlIf NUMBER and SIZE. Complete, Diagrammed Sew Cto Included. _ , Send your order to Sewini W Pattern Department, 23- WeaE,! eenth street, New York- @ 5B S I fo l l o w e d prescript® Police Sergeant—It’s a case of.’ ceny, Isn't it, sir? Doctor—Er—not exactly, sergt Tou see, I told him to take# thing warm immediately, and ® went out he took mr orerdS Dondon Humorist. Nobody Missed “What has become oi the for®! I man?”“He doesn't exist,” answered®3 tor Sorghum. -The ETnffed S-! mall makes daily disclosure Wi one Is so lowly and obscure as C- be on somebody's sucker list'* Misnnderstandiog The Collector—Those anIIflites": Irons are hand forged. ,j The Chump—Forged? IVdLftj I Whaf astonishingly good I felts they make non- Washington. — Coh Ibling over with enthusd celebration oi its tercel !town in the state is digr history. Recent annlven i In connection with are the Bristol sesquf the two hundred and of the Hopkins Gra ■New Haven. “Netherlanders, not! were first on the Con says the National Geol “They sailed up the brf river, mapped part oj and later established near the present site ■ “But rumors of the : Imlld climate of the !had reached the Plymoj ,tiers from Massachusetj ,from the north, set il On the river, and In id three towns of Wethej and Hartford, nucleus “The fundamental oi jgtbis little group marki of constitutional govc !country. Later, when legates played an impoi !shaping of the feder Itheir state became knq IstituUon State.’ Included Wide "Under the charter Charles H, the Col _ eluded Long Island! ,westward from N arrJ ithe Pacific ocean! Tlj JBey In north central pf {the Western Reserve il present city of Clevel sldered part of Conn/ i the Eighteenth ceil ,Haven colony, founds! pot been consulted w | I procured, and it [to persuade Its peopll he Hartford group.| inade the capital, but I New Haven shared th| :apital. “Geography moldel 'ate. It is a little Ssmallest In the UnisI !smaller units by vide valley of the Srunning north and srj !center of the state, serf {uplands of the easts] iortions. Long after) !central valley was se glands remained a gconsist of a series of I fhigh In the north ail ®ast, paralleling the of rivers and stream| Rocky hillsides an , E m p l o y N e j , “ D rip ” System 4sf' S a tisfacto r on.-sA of bios’ method of blood tr; !!relatively enormo S blood can be given I been developed by !'Middlesex hospital, The success of th E which Is known a k drip” method, was r I doctors In an articl |B ritish medical ma A patient dam I anemia received n_. I healthy blood througl I and recovered. Hitherto It has I to give large quani f one transfusion. E into a patient’s veil I about a pint or a pi j In the “continuous; I put forward, contrlb I collected from a >. donors—as many j used for a single r before use. A glass reservoi I mixed blood hangs !patient’s bed; o~. E through this to kee Blood flows dowr long rubber tube In, tient’s arm veins, at| AMBITION Sir Samuel Hoarej fin ambition to be for foreign affairs - and he realized ! " to e Minister and changes were I Jobs, sir Samuel Simon. B t t M i tlicity and -bic in ]\|0l, PATTER}** Q310 RECORD, MOC KSVILLE. N- C. UlUg O i :» is fresh as the morning Si : was designed for all tta women who like to pot In i appearance at the Tsrj b*. ? of every new (Jay. Htes r dresses made up by this pit-' W d solve all your house trod ms. And the expense a trifling. Moreover, this pit :\s been designed so slmpljihl IfeSBSiIow It will seem like a Srstla sewing. The yoke and stota 8:>ne with a bit o; tmdice fill- elow, and the decorative pocket this frock verv smart indeed! or gingham in gay plaids Ct geometric designs would ke ef- Add nobby cork or wooden 9|s. ;ern 9310 mny he ordered only es 14. IG1 IS, 20, 32, 34, 36, SI d 42. Size 16 requires 311 36-inch fabric, s D FIFTEE.Y CEXTS Jn coii mps (coins preferred) for thii I. Be sure to write plainlv NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE Iek r and size. plete, Diagrammed Sew Chart J81Jjed. Saji id your order to Sewiog Circle |ra Department, 232 West Eight- street, Xctv York. ‘[jfe )LLC\VED PRESCRlPTiOft1I ---lice Sergeant—I fs a case of & ctor—Er—not exactly, sets* , .*1 see. I told him to take «* ^ r warm imraeilinteljt ijn OUt he took my -ercoat Ion Humorist. Connecticut Is Digging Up History of Its Past Observes 300th Anniversary of Settlement. Washington. — Connecticut Is bub­ bling over with enthusiasm during the celebration of its tercentenary. Every town In the state Is digging up Its past history. Recent anniversaries observed In connection with the tercentenary arc the Bristol sesqulcentennlal and the two hundred and seventy-fifth year of the Hopkins Grammar school In JCew Haven. “is'etherlanders, not the English, were first on the Connecticut scene,” says the National Geographic society. “They sailed up the broad Connecticut river, mapped part of the coastline, ana Jater established a trading post □ear the present site of Hartford. “But rumors of the fertile lands and nilld climate of the Connecticut valley Jiad reached the Plymouth colony. Set­ tlers from Massachusetts hurried down from the north, set up a rival post on the river, and in 1635 founded the three towns of Wethersfield, Windsor, and Hartford, nucleus of the colony. "The fundamental orders adopted by this little group marked the beginning of constitutional government In this country. Later, when Connecticut del­ egates played an important part in the shaping of the federal Constitution, their state became known as the ‘Con­ stitution State.’ Included Wide Territory. “Cmier the charter of 1662, granted by Charles II, the Connecticut colony Included Long Island, and stretched westward from Narragansett bay to the l’acific ocean! Tlie Wyoming val­ ley In north central Pennsylvania, and the Western Reserve in Ohio (near the present city of Cle'veland) were con­ sidered part of Connecticut even late In the Eighteenth century. The New Haven colony, founded in 163S, had cot been consulted when this charter was procured, and It took three years to persuade Its people to unite with the Hartford group. Hartford was made the capital, but from 1701 to 1873 Kew Haven shared the honors as joint capital. “Geography molded Connecticut’s fate. It Is a little state (the third smallest In the Union), broken into smaller units by topography. The wide valley of the Connecticut river, running north and south through the center of the state, separates the rough uplands of the eastern and western portions. Long after the coast and central valley was settled these high­ lands remained a wilderness. They consist of a series of hills and ridges, high In the north and low near the coast, paralleling the southward course of rivers and streams. “Rocky hillsides and narrow valleys made large farms impractical In Con­ necticut. Only the Connecticut valley was particularly suited to the rais­ ing of staple crops, such as tobacco. So the state became a land of small. Independent farms and diversified crops. Agriculture In" Connecticut was never easy. Many Important Industries. “That is why the people turned to industry as the best available source ,of wealth. Here again geography cramped them. The state has water power but few minerals. Tbe old Granby copper mines, never very prof­ itable, were turned into a prison dur­ ing the Revolution. Salisbury’s iron mines were more successful. They have been worked for two centuries, furnishing ore for Revolutionary can­ non balls and for the anchor of the Constitution. “Lacking raw materials Connecticut has concentrated on the manufacture of brass and copper products, machin­ ery, firearms, ammunition, typewrit­ ers, and Innumerable small articles; tableware, taeksj-machetes, coffee per­ colators, rubber? boots, needles, pins, hooks and eyes The state has had many inventors of note.. “Bridgeport’s industries lead them all and New Haven is not far behind. Find Turtle. Buried 40 Feet in Earth Los Angeles.—Found in an earth pocket 40 feet underground during excavations for a downtown build­ ing, a 3-inch snapping turtle ap­ parently was none the worse for its experience tAday: The turtle was rolled up In a ball of mud when found and showed no sign of life, but began to crawl healthily after a few hours In the sunlight. Biologists ,said turtles often crawl long distances into crevices, and hibernate long periods. The latter owes quite as much to EU Whitney as to EU Tale. After the inventor perfected the cotton gin he turned to New Haven, Another New Haven man, Charles Goodyear, discov­ ered the process for vulcanizing rub­ ber. “A century ago Connecticut was a sea-going country. Shipbuilding, whal­ ing and China trade brought wealth to coastal villages and river ports. Many of the vessels that carried forty-, nlners around the Horn were built at Mystic. Essex launched the Oliver Cromwell, first ship in the 0. S. navy; and Wethersfield built the Desire, first American vessel to cross the. Atlantic. But times have changed. New London Is now a submarine base, and the fish­ ing Industry confines itself chiefly to the oysterbeds that line Long Island Sound.” Speed Control Device for Autos J. J. Uuebscher of Minneapolis Is shown with his regulating rheostat mounted on the cowling of a car Just Inside the windshield. The position of the dial determines the maximum speed of the car. A white light on the left burns at proper speeds, and a red light at right burns when the speed is excessive. 1 Employ New Method of Blood Transfusion “Drip” System Is Tried W ith Satisfactory Results. Nobody Missed I -Sip forgottenJ Hiat has become cn fr’J Ie doesn't w ist/' -Iif Is so lowly and obj01irP5t"§| in somebody's sudcer >= M isunderstanding ^ 4 0 ie Collector—I Ii^e no™ s are hand forged. „ tie Chump—Forged? 1!(. X i i t astonishingly B'ood C° they make now. 9 I London.—A new and revolutionary method of blood transfusion by-wnich relatively enormous quantities of blood can be given in case of need has been developed by two doctors of the Middlesex hospital, London. The success of the new experiment, which is known as the “continuous drip” method, was revealed by the two doctors In an article in the “Lancet,” British medical magazine. A patient dangerously ill with anemia received nearly ten pints of healthy blood through the new method, and recovered. Hitherto it has been held impossible to give large quantities of blood at one transfusion. The amount Injected into a patient’s veins is usually only about a pint or a pint and a half. In the “continuous drip” method now Put forward, contributions of blood are collected from a number of suitable donors—as many as ten have been “sod for a single case—and are mixed before use. i glass reservoir containing the misciI blood hangs at the head of the patient’s bed; oxygen is bubbled through this to keep it fresh. Blood flows downwards through a long rubber tube into one of the pa­ tient's arm veins, at the rate of about ambition realized m t Sir Samuel Hoare for some time had ambition to be secretary of state r foreign affairs In the British cabl- and he realized this ambition when rime Minister MacDonald, resigned changes were made In the cabinet Jobs, Sir Samuel succeeded Sir John olmon. 40 drop3 a minute—or a pint in four hours. The length of the rubber tubing al­ lows the patient to move about com­ fortably in bed, and the supply of blood In this way has been continued as long as 51% hours without harm or discomfort • The Inventors of the new device have so far performed 17 large “drip transfusions” and they believe that there are many diseases In which a liberal supply of blood from outside the body will make all the difference between life and death. Peon Pays 60 Centavos for Use of Another Name San Salvador.—A new racket has been reported from La Union, Pacific port of El Salvador. An Indian peon inquired at the post office recently for mall for Salome Haltmayer. When asked if he was a Swiss nationality, he replied that his father’s name was Juan Anastacio Baruca and his mother was Sebastina Gaitar. but that he had purchased the name of Haltmayer for 50 centavos. “I bought the name,” he added, “from a Nicaraguan gentleman, who told me that It was a very distin­ guished name in Switzerland and cheap at 50 centavos. There were others more expensive, and I have friends who are now Demetrio Bonaparte, Bal- bino Edison and Jacobo Washington, but they had to pay from 80 centavos to a peso for their names.” Daudet’s Windmill Will Be Preserved by France Arles, France.—Alphonse Daudet’s windmill Is to be saved from ruin and made into a museum* This is the historic windmill which inspired the famous writer to produce his “Lettres de mon Moulin.” -There were four windmills in all, In and aronnd which Daudet wrote his letters. It was also In this vicinity that he wrote the tragedy, “L’Arleslenne.” In 1933 the windmills were classified as historical monuments by the ministry of fine arts, and the only alteration Is to restore them to their original con­ dition. Former Diva Lives by Odd Jobs in California Los Angeles.—Beatrice Leo, diva who once sang a command performance before Queen Victoria of Great Brit ain, is Uvlng In a modest room on South Broadway, on what she ear £r The°once°iioted singer, now seventy- / two, was discovered when she fell and was bruised getting off a street car and was taken to a receiving hospital. “I made my debut here In 1883,” she recalled. “I played Mercedes In The Count of Monte Cristo.' That was down in the old opera house at First and Main streets. “Later I went to London and I guess I made quite a name for myself, because the queen wanted to hear me. “Once I was worth around $200,000, but In 1906 I lost it I’ve been doing odd jobs ever since.” Her real name Is Mrs. Marie Hart HEADS ARCHITECTS Stephen F. Voorhees of New fork, newly elected president (of the Amer­ ican Institute of Architects. He Is supervising architect of Princeton uni­ versity and has been chairman of the construction code authority. Old Serbian Mine Yields Secret of “Magic” Sword Belgrade.—A prospector examining medieval mine workings .In Old Ser­ bia believes he has solved the mystery of the “magic swords which would cut through the armor of the enemy" with which many of the .legendary he­ roes of the Serbian Middle ages were armed. In ah old working from which iron had been extracted he found a piece of metal which is probably the oldest piece of special steel known. He tried In vain to bore a hole in it and finally sent it to Vienna to be examined. Analysis. proved it to be a nickel steel of peculiar hardness. The circumstances tinder which it was found suggest that it Is at ,least 1,000 years old—950 years before nickel steel was rediscovered. Okefinokee Swamp Ne nta Jf*<rrow ' a- •Ulin$ CTJhirftlsDM CKOROtA M-ORIDA DAira by Newman Bumstewl Okefinokee Swamp, Mystery Land of Georgia. Prenared by the National Geographic Society. Washington, D. C.—WNU Service. DOWN in the southeastern cor­ ner of Georgia lies the great Okefinokee swamp, a primeval wilderness rich In treasure for the modem biologist. Mystery and en­ chantment live in its coffee-colored wa­ ters, its moss-hung cypresses and sun­ lit piney woods. The Okefinokee owes a great meas­ ure of Its unique charm to its “prai­ ries”—wide, unspoiled expanses filled In large part with a tropical abund­ ance of aquatic plants and flanked with dense “bays" of stately cypress. On these one may delight his soul amid scenes of unearthly loveliness that have changed virtually not at all since the Seminole warriors poled their dug- outs over them. The Okefinokee prai­ ries are not land, but water! In these morasses are many areas of open water, varying from lakes a quarter of a mile in diameter to “alli­ gator holes” a rod in width. The snowy blossoms of the white waterlily gladden many acres of the deeper water, and the golden, globular flowers of yellow pond-lilies, or “bon­ nets,” glow In a setting of huge green leaves. In the shallows, yellow-eyed grass, its tall stems swaying, forms a sea of pleasant color. Mie small piteherplant Is hardly true to its name on the Okeflnokee prairies, for Its spotted'greenish tubes reach a yard into the afr—a height unheard of elsewhere; the parasol­ like flowers of greenish gold, each on a separate scape, stand a little below the summit of the leaves. Another plant Is the maiden cane, which forms dense, yard-high beds. Among its sheltering stems and leaves the least bittern, the swrimp rice rat, and the Florida water rat build their nests. In late summer, as a boat pushes by a bed of maiden cane, a host of katydids will fly out and astound the newcomer by plunging Into the water and disappearing. These diving katydids belong to a peculiar species first described from the Okefinokee. Resort of Hunters and Trappers. For generations swamp hunters have pushed over these prairie waters, standing up In their slight boats and bending rhythmically with graceful thrusts of their long poles. The skilled boatman is able to make better prog­ ress over the prairies than the bear he chases. Old hunters knew well how to drive a deer out of a prairie head in the direction of a waiting com­ panion. In winter the trapper camps for weeks at a time in these heads, tending his line of traps and taking the pelts of Taccoonj otter, wildcat and opossum. To. pass from the sparkling sunshine of the prairies into the gloom of the adjoining cypress bays is a striking experience. The huge trees, but­ tressed by "knees,” stand In close ranks in a foot or so of water. Their green crowns, 80 feet or more over­ head, shut out all but a few stray beams of sunshine, causing even at midday a sort of twilight Here and there a winding channel or “run” per­ mits the hunter to push his tiny boat between the tree trunks; but In the greater part of the cypress bays there is tall, dense undergrowth that makes even foot travel a ,slow and arduous undertaking. The bear, having the double advantage of bulky strength and a tough hide, is the only large ani­ mal that can readily and rapidly break through such a tangle. Good Fishing There. More than thirty species of fishes In­ habit the Okefinokee. Persons who love simple pan-fishing, with an old- fashioned reed pole, find here their heart’s content At Suwannee lake this sort of angling surpasses that In al­ most any other part of the country. When1 one considers that the lake is barely a quarter of a mile long, with an average width of perhaps 30 yards, a .year’s catch of more than 40,000 fish (recorded In 1925) is astounding. Farther within the swamp, at Billys, Mines, and Buzzard Roost lakes, or on the BIg Water or the Suwannee canal, there is likewise rare fishing. The built of a day’s catch with hook and line Is made up of such basses as the warmouth, the “stiimp-knocker,” and the “sand-flirter,” with a goodly pro­ portion of mudfish and catfish. Those who elect trolHng are more apt to land jackfish and large-mouthed bass. The great state of Texas can boast of 30 species of frogs and toads; the Okefinokee region, with one-two-hun­ dredths the area of Texas, has 20. With varied habitats to suit the re­ quirements of different species; with unlimited breeding places in the cypress ponds, cypress bays, and prairies; with abundant rains In normal years, and with a warm and humid climate, the Okefinokee is a veritable frog paradise. Let copious showers fall during a warm summer’s day and by nightfall the bedlam of amphibian voices aris­ ing from the swamp featers and their tangled margins is beyond description. The field herpetologist’s trained ear picks out of the din the shrill peeping of the oak toad, the droning roar of the southern toad, the plainly uttered “giks” of the cricket frog, the insect­ like chirp of the little chorus frog, the machine-gun bark of the pine-woods tree frog, the hogshead-thumping notes of the Florida tree frog, the deep, hollow roll of the gopher frog, the “clung” of the green frog, the pig-like grunts of the southern bullfrog,'the clattering chorus . of the southern leopard • frog, the hammer strokes of the carpenter frog, and the lamb’s bleating of the narrow-mouthed toad. Alligators and Birds. Men still living can speak of the times when It appeared as If “a feller could walk across Billys lake on 'gator backs.” To this day the Okefinokee remains perhaps the best stronghold of our famous corrugated saurian. Suwannee lake In particular, where the alligators are protected, provides unequaled opportunities for making intimate studies of the habits of wild Individuals. Of the approximately 180 species of birds recorded In the Okefinokee re­ gion, scarcely one-half remain during the summer and breed. While some of these summer residents move south­ ward with the approach of cool weather in the autumn, their places are more than filled by hardier species coming from the northern states and Canada to find a congenial winter home In the swamp. By far the largest mammal of the swamp, and. perhaps the most inter­ esting, Is the Florida bear. From early times It has attracted the swamp hunters—riot so much because of any particular value of its hide and-flesb as by reason of the thrill that comes from matching wits and strength with so formidable an animal. An addi­ tional reason for the pursuit of the bear is its numerous depredations on the hogs that range through the piney woods and the swamp borders. At a hog’s prolonged squealing the residents become instantly alert, for It generally means that a bear has seized the ani­ mal and is making off with it toward the depths of . the swamp. Guns arc hurriedly lifted from pegs on the cabin walls, the dogs are called together with the hunting horn, and the chase is on. Primitive Life of the People.— For generations the sturdy, self- sufficient and gifted people of the Okefinokee have led a rather isolated and primitive existence, some of them on islands within the swamp and others along its borders. They repre­ sent some of the purest Anglo-Saxon stock left In our country, though a few of the families have a slight mixture of French Huguenot and even' Seminole Indian blood. . In ancestry, speech, folksongs, and general Social ways there Is a marked affinity between the residents of the Okefinokee and those of the Ap­ palachian mountains. In each case there has been comparative isolation, tending to preserve the cultural herit­ age. from Britain of several centuries ago. The picturesque regional ver­ nacular contains various elements representing survivals from the Eliza­ bethan age that have dropped out of "general American usage. The old-fasbioned square dance, or “frolic,” still holds sway here as a leading form of social recreation. ,,The fiddle, the handclap, the footbe^t, and the “calling of the set" by the leader all lend their aid to the rhythmic per­ formance. The late fall days—the sea­ son of “hog-killin’ an’ cane-grindin’ ”— see -these social expressions at their height - . DECORATIVE ADVANCE The four wall3 of a room need not be the same color. Soma charming effects can often ba gained by doing three of them alike; tile fourth' In a contrasting tone. This method was 'carried out In the'newly decorated offices of a lead* Ing Chicago business, firm. The de­ signers had one of the rooms pain£> ed a light cocoa brown except for the wall, in which two large win­ dows are placed. This is a IovUy1 sunny, pastle yellow. Venetian blinds repeat this note, no that whether the day is bright or gray this interior Is always cheerful. W hy do you spray? cheap quality spray do Ihe-Job? answer Dcmona FLY-TOX |*A w fbgi-ittot®” [•worth. remembering? Qj LU IAr For. hot, tired, aching, burn- I ing feet, a light application of C nticnra O intm ent, gen­ tly rubbed in, after bathing the feet in a Buda of jrarm water and Cntlcnra Soap> relieves the tired muscles, soothes the skin and gives comfort and rest. 6 I I I PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM'Bemoves Daodroff-StopBHalrFalIiQg Imparts Color and Beautyto Grayand FadedHair_ 60c and 51.00 at Druggists. aHtseox Cheto. Wk3.. Patehosras.N.T. FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use In connection with Parker’sHair Balsam. Makes the hnir soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drug­ gists. Hiscoz Chemical Works, Patchogne, N,Y, | g §I i S l i DO you suffer burning, scanty or too frequent urination; backache, headache, dizziness, swollen feet and ankles? Are you tired, nervous—feel all unstrung and don’t know what it wrong? Then give some thought to your kidneys. Be sure they function proper* ly, for functional kidney disorder per*, mils excess waste to stay Iq the blood, and to poison and upset the whole system. Use DoanV Pills. Doan's are for the kidneys only. They are recommended the world over. You can get the gen* uine, time-tested Doan's at any drag store. DOANS Pl LLS SWEETEN Sour Stomach —by chewing one or more Miinesia Wafers Vou can obtain a foil size 20c package of Milnesia Wafers containing twelvq foil adult doses by furnishing us with the name of your local druggisc if be does noc happen to carry Milnesia Wafers in stock, by enclosing IOc In coin or postage stamps. Address. SELECT PRODUCTS, INC.4402 23rd St* Lone Island Cityt N. Ya My Name ft.. . . . . . . . . ................. - Street Addreis— ____....___........ Totvn & Stat^ — ------------ My Druggist's Name is..... ...............• Street Address. ----------------------..... Town '& State------------------------------------- M IL N E S IA W NU-7 2 8 -3 5 DID YOU EVERSEE AW ORM RUNNING? If your child has Worms or Tapeworm, one single dose of tDEAD SHOT’ Dr. Peery’a Vermifuge will drive them out. Dr.Peery’s'DEflD SHOTVennifuge 60c a bottle a t Hmgglstept hYright'a PM C o, 100 Gold S t, N.X. OBy. CLASSiHEDADS \lter EverythIiMr Failed to Core your )HlotZ3 stomach: trouble and you have Lost til hope, write Jerome Judd, Eent4 Conn. IX)TE FISHING? THE SURF? Xlve where I dollar counts.' Homes, farms, acreage. Write BOX 2«. WEWAHtTCHKA^ FLA. s 11 1*3 BRISBANE T H IS W E E K \ W ar Possible, Four Eanda 10,000 Million Questions Our Large Gold Pile Elnows Too Much at Four Bussian newspapers, speaking 'offi­ cially, accuse Japan of stirring up trouble along .the Russian border, to “bring on grave complications.” I A Protest Corrtes AflfcSfr Stalin’s warning to I Japan that a con­ tinuation of these Incidents "may have s e rio u s conse­ quences In the re­ lations of Russia and Ja p a n , and peace In the Far East” If Russia and Ja­ pan should have a Arthnr Brisbane - serious disagree^ ment, Russia’s equipment In the way of submarines and airplanes, all with­ in 400 miles of Tokyo, would probably enable other countries to stop worry­ ing about Japan's military plans. England does not approve of Mus­ solini’s plans in Abyssinia, and the question arises, Would England close the Suez canal, the short cut for Ital­ ian troops and supplies to Abyssinia? Will Italian airplanes be forbidden to fly over the Suez canal area? The answer as to closing the Suez canal by Britain would probably be no. England would not voluntarily provoke hostilities with Italy. She really wants peace. But, how easily war coul^ come—French against Ger­ man or English against Italian or Jap­ anese against RussianI Germany undertakes to establish a “family tree” for each of Its 66,000,- 000 Inhabitants, which means asking, answering, writing down ten thousand million questions. The sensible answer would be, “I descend from Adam, with heaven knows how many mixtures In my blood on the way up,” but Hitler would not accept that Young couples getting marriage licenses are questioned: “What were your eight great-grand­ parents like? Did they have any Ne­ groid or Jewish blood? "Were they fond of telling the truth? Did they have Imagination, driving power?” Ten thousand million foolish ques­ tions would seem to set a new record. The "greatest” country In the world, supposed to be the most intelligent, owns some tons of gold, called "worth” nine thousand million dollars. We do not use the gold, or even in­ vest part of it In adequate national defense, that would protect it We are afraid some one may come, with better airplanes and submarines than ours, and steal it; so the government will dig a deep hole, far from the coast put In it a huge safe, and hide away the gold lump, that is used only to impress the financial imagination of the world and keep foreigners from knocking down our currency. Dolores Anne Diamond, only four, surprised teachers in a Schenectady kindergarten. She said the games for little children bored her, and she conld recite the alphabet backward. Dolores was moved to the first grade, and could have gone higher. She has the intelligence of a child of , fourteen. Usually it Is better for a child to de­ velop slowly and normally. The in­ fant prodigy Is usually dull later. Per­ haps little Dolores will be an excep­ tion, like Mozart, and, at eighteen, as wise as Hypatia, with a happier end­ ing. • Lloyd George, In spite fit his seven­ ty-two years, returns to active politics. He hates the “arid atmosphere of po­ litical controversy” and returns to ac- ' tive politics only because he believes - that world - conditions are growing worse, and “from the point of view of pence are worse than before 1914." Miss Koutanova, Russian, twenty- one years old, jumped 25,426 feet fron- an airplane without oxygen apparatus - and landed in a. cabbage Held afte turning over four times before he parachute opened. She claims the f< male record. Russia is teaching millions of youn people to use parachutes,, the first stei In curing nervousness in flying. .Here we have only a small handful of excel lent pilots, but the masses of our popu­ lation know as little about aviation as they do about "geometry. In space.” Mr. Werner Kahn, district leader of “Hitler Youth,” says Nad doctrines have become Germany’s real religion, and "the time must come when entry into the Hitler Youth organization will take the place now occupied by Cath­ olic or Protestant confirmation.” Fur­ thermore,- the young gentleman says. “I declare to all enemies of Hitler Youth that the fuehrer Is our faith and national socialism is our religion.” Millions of us go through life getting little sunshine, rarely if ever looking at the stars, our Interests not unlike that of the entomologically interest­ ing tumblebug, that spends Its life in the field, rolling -little halls of manure into a burrow. He doesn’t even realize that there is a sun, or stars, and many men are like him, although they may “own fine country places.” ' & Sliiflr Features Syndicate, in*WNU Serviee. News Review of Current Events the World Over House Democrats Defy President—Lobbying for and Against Utilities Bill to Be Investigated— Senator Glass Bests Eccles. RECORD. MnrkSVtLLE. N. CL B v EDW ARD W. PICKARD * © Western Newspaper Union. Rh ■ EVOLT In congress against air leged dictatorial attempts of the administration reached a climax when the house, by the decisive vote of 25S to 148, rejected the “death sentence” in the utility holding companies bill as passed by the senate and demanded by the President. The rec­ ord vote came on a motion to substitute the house bill placing utility holding com­ panies under regula­ tion of the securities Rep. Brewster Mfl exchange com­ mission for the senate bill which pre­ scribed the dissolution of the holding companies of more than first degree be­ ginning in 1940. The adaption of this motion killed the “death sentence.” After substi­ tuting the house bill for the senate bill, the perfected measure was passed by a vote of 322 to SI. Immediately after this action, the house voted unanimously for an in­ vestigation of alleged lobbying by both the supporters and the fj»es of the utility measure. During the de­ bate on the bill it was frequently charged that the capitol was swarm­ ing with utility company lobbyists, and then came two serious accusations against the other side. Representa­ tive John H. Hoeppel of California, Democrat, asserted an unnamed ad­ ministration lobbyist had offered to get California’s relief allotment in­ creased if Hoeppel would vote for the bill as the President wanted It. This didn’t greatly impress the house, but later Representative Ralph 0. Brew­ ster of Maine, Republican, charged that Thomas G. Corcoran, a young brain truster who is co-author of tne administration bill,' had threatened cessation of construction of the $37,- 600,000 Passamaquoddy dam project in the congressman’s district if Brewster should vote against the “death sentence.” Mr. Brewster said he did not be­ lieve the President was aware that such tactics were being used by his aids or would countenance them, and Rankin of Mississippi and Moran of Maine defended Mr. Roosevelt. But the President’s contact man. Charles West, and Postmaster General Far­ ley’s lobbyist, Emil Hurja, had been so active among the house members that the resentment of the lawmakers was aroused and they gladly directed that the lobbying charges be investi­ gated. WHAT would be the final fate of the utility measure was doubtful. Senator Wheeler of Montana, after" a call at the White House, said be was confident a satisfactory bill would come out of the conference, and if one did not, the measure. would be al­ lowed to die. In either case the war on the holding companies is likely to be made a major issue of the next Presidential campaign, and adminis­ tration leaders are predicting that the Democratic congressmen who dared to vote against the “death sentence” will be defeated at the polls. These ’doomed” men number 166, as against 131 Democrats who stood by the Presi­ dent. Republican leaders were jubilant, professing to see in the episode the beginning of a real uprising against the President and his New Dealers; many neutral observers looked upon it as only a battle between the two lobbies in which the victory went to the utilities lobby. IN THE battle between Senator Car­ ter Glass and Marriner S. Eccles, governor of the federal reserve board, the former has, at this writing', scored the most points. The astute Virginian ex­ tracted from the Ec- cles-Currie b a n k in g bill most of the radi­ cal provisions th a t would have led to gov­ ernment or public own­ ership "of the federal reserve system, and, Indeed, practically re­ wrote the measure. Then his subcommit* tee handed It on to. Sen‘ the senate banking and currency com­ mittee, which promptly gave the bill its approval, without a record vote, and after making only two minor changes. Governor Eccles and • Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau expected to be called before the committee and were prepared to tell why the bill would not suit the administration, but the committee didn’t give them a chance. As passed by the house; the banking bill wonld give autocratic powers over the banking system to a politically dominated federal reserve board; and tbs' party in power would have the au­ thority to force the twelve • reserve banks to lend unlimited amounts to the national treasury. Under the bill as rewritten by Glass, reserve board mem- Jjers are to be appointed for 14-year terms and are to be discharged only for cause; chief officers of the reserve banks are to be chosen by their direc­ tors, subject to reserve board approval, for five-year periods, aiid the reserve banks need not buy additional govern­ ment bonds unless they choose to do so. INVESTIGATION of the administra­ tion of the Virgin islands by a sen­ ate committee was certain to be lively. The very first witness heard, Charles H. Gibson, was threatened with jail by. Secretary of the interior Ickes for removing official documents from the files. Mr. Gibson, who was- govern­ ment attorney for the islands until Ickes ousted him, had testified rather vaguely against the regime of Gov. Paul M. Pearson. Gibson testified that Governor Pear­ son bad exceeded his authority under the law, was unpopular with a large section of the population of the islands, and was not frank In his ad­ ministration. To support his testimony Gibson introduced several letters whicb were the documents to which Ickes alluded. GEN. HUGH JOHNSON assumed his new office of federal works relief administrator for New York city. “Robbie," his ever present sec­ retary, fended off the reporters for a day, but let them In then, and to them the general wailed: “I hate this thing! It isn’t helping anybody, anywhere. When the source of money is cut off we’ll be right back where we started. It’s disheartening to sit here, knowing that when the funds are gone, the jobs will be gone.” Atto r n e y g e n e r a l cum m ings . announced that on July 29 a school would be opened by his depart­ ment in Washington for the purpose of training state, county and city police in law enforcement theory and prac­ tice. A twelve weeks’ course will be given to selected officers, the instruc­ tion being free. TJ EPUBLICAN senators were ad- t ^ vised that former President Her bert Hoover will not be a candidate for the Republican nomination in the Pres­ idential race of 1936. They were advised that Mr. Hoover would make the formal an­ nouncement some time this summer. He is staying out, it was said, because he in­ tends to remain in pri­ vate life and has planned his future ca­ reer, along that line. For his active critL cisms of administra­ tion policies the rea­ son was given that, although he does not “choose to run,” he thought the party needed some sort of direction; now that his candidacy is shelved, it is expected that his political utterances will be clothed In lees authority. The informers, however, assured the senators that Mr. Hoover would get behind the party’s candidate and entei the campaign for him, and that he thinks, with unification growing, the Republican prospects are looking brighter day by day. M Hoover WORLD war veterans from both the Allied and the Central pow­ ers met officially in Paris and debated ways in which future wars may be averted. They denounced as enemies of their own countries those who would seek to foment a new war, and passed a resolution declaring: “The respect for treaties being the basis of international relations, this confi­ dence can be durable only when inter­ national accords-and. the resulting ob­ ligations are mutually and sincerely re­ spected.” The meeting was held under the aus­ pices of Fidae. The American dele­ gates Included S. P. Bailey, Winona, Minn.; Julian W. Thomas, Salt Lake City; Bernhard Ragner, MdKeesport, Pu., and Harold L. Smith, CoatesviUe4 Pa. BURR T. A N Sell, a young attorney whose father, Gen. a T., Ansell, Is suing Senator Huey Long for libel, was enraged when Long intruded on bis party at a Washington hotel and took a swing at the Kingfish.. One . of the senator’s companions seized An- sell’s arm and. the young" man says Long then ran away. Dav id llo y d g e o rg e , whose New Deal program was not well received by the British government! has resumed active participation in politics, "reluctantly,” but with, ex­ pressed determination to.“go on with it” The little Welsh veteran states­ man addressed the national conven­ tion of tlie peace and reconstruction movement and asserted the menace to peace and - the economic confusion throughout the world are growing worse. T APAN’S beautiful inland sea was the scene of a terrible disaster that cost- 104 lives; The steamer Midori Hard, crowded with holiday' passen­ gers, collided-with a ; freighter in the foggy night and sank almost immedi­ ately. Rescue boats8, picked up 91 of. the 166 passengers and 56 of the creiv All the victltos were * ' T-r-nPTARY "OF AGRICULTURE S ES i c i proclaimed the estab- U on AAA adjustment pro-lisbmen which will S d benem payments of amounts not Yet disclosed. Representatives 5mm M rye growing states met In Washington to discuss the program and outline plans for its operation. Farmers from the pr» 1 vheat nroducing states met with AAA offi­ cials and gave their approval to a tentative flexible plan for the payment of benefits to wheat growers. /-!APT. ANTHONY EDEN, England’s Cj journeyman trouble shooter, dec- trifled the British Isles by announcing that Great Britain had offered to give Halle Selassie, emperor of Abyssinia, a generous strip of British Somaiiland to replace territory acquired by Italy, if the Italian government would prom­ ise not to wage war against the domain of Afrioa’s "Conquering Lion ot J Nothing doing, said Premier Musso- lini, who has turned a deaf-ear to all Britain’s proposals of an Italo-Ethi- opian compromise. He was rePorteO as Intending to go right ahead with his plan of a four-years’ war to effect the complete pacification of the Afri­ can empire. He insists that there must be more room in Africa for over- populated Italy to expand. Mussolini has threatened to remem­ ber” the nations which have offered to furnish Abyssinia with arms, and they have withdrawn or modified their of­ fers. The African emperor pleaded: "If we are In the right and if civi­ lized nations are unable to prevent this war, at- least do not deny us the means of defending ourselves.” The British parliament was no bet­ ter pleased with Eden’s "offer” of land than was Italy, and the colonial secre­ tary, son of former Prime Minister MacDonald, had a shard time explain­ ing itThen Italy heard that the British government was considering a proposal to invite other nations to join in an economic blockade of Italy to check her aggression on Ethopia. Rome was astonished, by this report but didn’t seem In the least alarmed. Neither were the Italians frightened when they learned officially that Ethiopia had asked the United States to study means of persuading Italy to respect the Kel­ logg pact outlawing war. The em­ peror himself made the appeal to W. Perry George, charge d’affaires .at Addis Ababa. ANDRB CITROEN, famous fo r years as “the Henry Ford of France” because he built most of that country’s low cost motor cars, is dead. I And probably he was happy to pass ' on, for his vast enterprises bad col­ lapsed and his once huge fortune was gone. THE federal government began a new fiscal year with intentions of Spending more money than in any pre­ vious year of peace. Mr. Roosevelt an­ nounced that be would spend $8,520,- 000,000, of which 54,582,000,000 will go for “recovery and relief.” He expects the treasury to collect $3,991,000,000. No, it doesn’t add up. The deficit for the new fiscal year will be $4,528,000,- 000, it is estimated. The fiscal year just passed came to an end with the public debt at a new peace-time peak of $28,665,000,000, still some shy of the $31,000,000,000 the President estimated a year ago. To finance the new budget, be had count­ ed in part upon Uie $500,000,000 ex­ tension of “nuisance” taxes jnst passed by congress, but not upon the tax-tbe-rich program which the New Dealers hope to jockey through some time in August Estimates have it that this will net another $340,000,000. The expenditure for the past year is only $7,258,000,000 instead of $8,571,- 000,000 forecast at the start of the year. The deficit was $3,472,847,000 instead of the proposed $4,869,000,000. If the expenditures outlined in the 1936 budget reach the estimated total, the public debt on July I next year would stand at $34,239,000,000. During the next year the President expects to spend $4,880,000,000 for re­ lief and for the employment of 3,500,- 000 idle, workers. A general upswing in business would Improve the revenue expected by the treasury. The Presi­ dent counted on $3,711,000,000 coming In during the 1935 fiscal year. Re­ ceipts proved to be $3,785,000,000. THE week's peak in crime was reached when Detroit police found Howard Carter Dickinson, prominent New York attorney and' nephew of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes,- lying dead In a ditch beside a lonely Rouge park road with a bullet through his head, and another through his chest Dickinson, a law associate of Charles Evans Hughes, Jr,. had been in Detroit on business bf the $40,000 - 000 estate of the late William H. Yawkey. Apparently, he had driven to Rouge park while on a drinking party after business hours, ' His com­ panions on the ride, who were William Schweitzer, Detroit underworld char­ acter, and three burlesque-show girls, all ol whom he had picked up at his hotel In the motor city, fled the scene and were traced to Fort Wavne. r„a whefre they were arrested. * After several days of grilling, by no. Me* the four confessed they had plot- ted the murder to rob Dickim™. Swe tzer admitted firing thb Their loot was $134 . Shot8- O e te rm INED that what goes L / must stay up, Fred and A ? ir« endurance fliers, broke fh« 6,1 ime record fo rb e e X * mding after 653% hwijs m I ^ it Meridan, Miss The^ 0,6 air inofficial endurance r e c o r d ? tb® iours, 28 minutes and vn ™ 647n 1930 by Dale Second8 s®t «Brien It S tY o Ut ° D ^ National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart National Press Building Washington, D, C, Washington.—It Is slightly more than three months since President Roosevelt signed the Slow on congressional resoln- o / -L - B -J-W t Io n appropriatingWorks JteIterflve bUUon ,J0llarafpr use by the administration In public works and public relief. To date, ac­ cording to the records, less than half a billion dollars has been allocated for expenditure, on agreed projects and of this sum approximately three hundred million dollars was turned over to the Civilian Conservation corps, a going Institution. The slow motion of the administra­ tion In getting Its public works relief program underway Is giving birth to an Immense amount of criticism. If one Is to believe the undercurrent of discussion in Washington, it is giving more concern to the officials responsi­ ble for spending this vast sum of money in the recovery-reform effort of the New DeaL So many projects have been advanced and rejected in turn, so many new ideas have been brought forward and baliyhooed and so many false motions have been indulged in that Washington observers are rapidly reaching the conclusion that congress ■ was correct when In debate, It was said the administration had no con­ crete plan for utilization of this vast fund. To review the developments since April 8, when the President signed the appropriating resolution, is to say that conditions have been one continual round of confusion. First, it will be recalled the President sought to meet the wishes of congress as expressed In debate by relieving Secretary Ickes, public works administrator, of much of the responsibility'and authority he held. This was accomplished by the new setup that was reported to you heretofore. Now, it seems, the new setup has failed to function and the bulk of the management of expendi­ tures has settled down into the lap of Harry Hopkins, the relief adminis­ trator. Mr. Ickes still has some authority. It apparently is enough to Irk Mr. Hopkins. These two men differ widely In their views. Mr. Hopkins long has been looked upon as a reliever by pro­ fession ; Mt. Ickes has attempted, inso­ far as he has been able, to employ practical methods In administration of his share of the funds. Laying aside the persona] equation which is best exemplified by the Ickes- Hopkins differences It must be said, frankly that next to nothing has been accomplished. President Roosevelt has stated and reiterated that the expendi­ ture program is getting underway sat­ isfactorily, but the discussion among observers seems to show an alarming lack of co-ordination and of indecision. • » • One of the newest projects ad­ vanced, and it has just passed the stage of an executive The Youth order setting up a Program Dew agency, is the so-called N ational Youth administration. This new alpha­ betical unit—the NYA—has received fifty million dollars to spend in helping boys and girls between the ages of six­ teen and twenty-five. It Is supposed to be a means bf preventing Idleness among the young people who are of the age during which, unless they are occupied, Irresponsible tendencies de­ velop. . - In announcing the new program, the President departed from his previously announced Intention of assisting only persons now on' relief. Whether this departure means that he has tossed aside definitely the rule laid down last winter that the dole must go or whether this is to be an isolated ex­ ception to that rule, is not immediately determinable. It remains as a fact that the government’s assistance un­ der the NYA will be available to needy young men who are not on the dole as well as to those who are on relief. Secretary Perkins, of the Labor de­ partment, said the plan had been worked out by her and her associates In the children’s bureau. She figured that 2,500.000 would be eligible for as­ sistance under the plan. Those to‘be helped will be selected by local volun­ teer committees, thus establishing In each community another agency sub­ ject to federal domination and federal guidance. Succinctly,, the scope -of.the NYA as outlined by Mr. Roosevelt Includes: Finding employment In private !in­ dustry for unemployed youths. '' Training youths for industrial, tech­ nical and professional employment. Providing for continued attendance of needy youths. In high schools and colleges. -Providing work relief on projects to meet the needs of youth. Miss-Josephine Roche, an assistant secretary of the treasury, and Aubrey W. Williams, assistant 'to Admlnls^ trator Hopkins, have been given sole responsibility for management Of the latest alphabetical agency. The selec­ tion of Miss Roche was - said by .the ITesldent to have been In recognition of her long service in the social field and her thorough understanding of problems of .the .growing generations. Notwithstanding the sincerity and the desires of the President to Initiatea program that win be helpffi], one hears much doubt expressed that suc­ cess will be attained. In the minds of many students of governmental affairs DAVIE there are thoughts , forth Inquiring whether i t \frtn A MntMl __ 1 *S ftEf for a centrargroup7kelthe^ l government to arrange methods or occupations for ! cijItinn Cft fa* . 1 ® pOpfljj I *»j tion so far flun] further doubted as our OWfl. bility can be worked^m---0* ** to permit of any genuine g0oa from the expenditure of even ^ a sum as fifty million <lo]lar“ a Beyond that, I have hearfln.v how the administration expect, employment for rniemplovei I ' . 6'"1 industry when late figures " larger list of unemployed adote? 1 obtained at this time : 1. . , a fear ago h schools .and colleges, Ot ^ are available to provide the educSirrninv cvvw. , . Hig idea In g, youths tij requirements forming one general program. Those desire to continue their ednraZ talnjy are deserving of help and‘I NYA offers a means to that is too early to forecast what tb quirements will be or what Z ? rules WiU be laid down respectim, pli cants for educational • But even the administration's vigorous critics have omitted t O any barbs at this feature of the Hf Almost simultaneously with ft. President's announcement of the SR he made known iha N o n -F ed era l the way waTfa P ro jec ts tor construction a what he said wastb first group of non-federal projects to der the public works section of IheEu billion dollar fund. He gave his q proval to 63 projects, the total cad which was figured at approskij twenty-one million dollars. Each of the loans made in th&ft cation of funds was based on a get of 45 per cent of the cost of dtp. ticular project by the community wfe the work is to be done. The ftdtti government loans the other no [e cent. In this way the cost to the pe eminent In most Instances is Gpttiii to be held within the. Iimitationif $1,143 per man per year. Some weeks ago the President f; ured out that the cost of no projects which the federal government Pt money should exceed an ammt greater than $1,143 for every man ex- ployed. This was designed to sprai employment. But the rule thus 6 has been inoperative because not I single man has been put to work c- der any of these projects. In the meantime, numerous ant sundry other proposals for expending parts of the federal money have either - been thrown overboard nr have been held in abeyance pending further e* sideration. This is true of a giganSt housing program worked out by Se®, tary Ickes. It was planned there» spend $250,000,000 and when it ra announced a press statement ra forthcoming from the Public administration that hundreds of ^ would be offered jobs within a mo so far had the plans advanced. Also, since April 8, nothing irJ ever has been done toward elimL- of dangerous railroad grade crosj I was told at the Interstate ComR- commission and again at the of public roads that their plans«‘- all ready to proceed with reduction these highway traffic haz eliminate potential death IraPs highways cross railroads. Som- has blocked the effort in thisW®' however, and as far as presen mation goes actual work on crossing elimination will not he for the next several months. • * * While the administration Is * * to develop new projects to anployment and re®* Pet Scheme destitution, <+ Runs Amuck ^ ^ “ 0? n* I refer to the effort to Middle Western farm Itl Matanuska valley of colonization project V amI tl* rgest Circulatioi )avie County Ner In e w s a r o u n d IJ. C. Sanford is spen E- more in Florida on ' I Mrs. Roy Walker sfl Iternoonin Winston ) giug. I J. J. Larew is away i |ip through Florida, leek. I Mr. and Mrs. Sam |ere shopping in Wil iriday. I A. Dinkins and Attol j Yadkinville, were b | |rs here last week. [W . B. Gant1 of H untl (town Thursday sh f tb old friends. Mr. and Mrs. Harley augbter Miss Mary Ki Wednesday In Raleigh I Found—Heifer year Jy home on R 4 OvT frank Safley and get i [jobn L- Foster and di iary, of County Line. F (lie visitors Wednesdi [W. L. Moore, Grovi jd Robert Smith mad |p to Hickory Thurs^ JReid Towell, who fe- classic shades of tin, was in town We [Misses Doris and spent the week en res and friends in Gi| E. C. Lagle aud da ith, and T. J. Sp »nt Wednesday in 1 apping. trs. Melvin Gillespif ill arrive today to sp Ith per parents, Mr. I Call. JUST RECEIVEI |n t, i car lime. 250 I Ik for prices on largfl JCKSVILLEHARf Jr. and Mrs. A. S. I |ince the arrival of ; Ilr home on W ilt xTuesday morning with federal relief mo^Loted ^ families which were P taken to Alaska to fin(i ar0u4 rainbow. According to 0 the Federal Relief a d m m ^ g jit is made to appear the rainbow was, as us““‘’|tffaste tance further on. Cer ’ betause In the Matanuska ra’1® # Ut number of the fanuhc M ^ determined to quit and ^ home communities in tne - ■ ^ Members of con?rcss, . n(i!tious * quainted with Alaskan )s prc- me that the Matanuska val e ^ most fertile spot wably the nental United States.They 60iaJIWUUU ClUXLW . nnX the conviction that a of food can be grow" are that valley. Btit these JiarJsIiiI* no Illusions. They kn0's v*1* that confront those SC , .eta| g"' being planted there by .0iodB>“’In the hope of « ^ Few ofthem .*£ ;ernment. that' area..... very long unless Uncle at lea-j to spend millions in Pr ieDfes ^ some of the modern this day' and age and - I tion a» ditlon means of transp, ,Mt ca** members assure nje» communication. The, ^°roionv 10 f! direct from Matanuska rf Relief administration swas c o * 1 though1 Iopinion, that the Prote tttous- * and executed without - JjcaI P Ing been given to the P lems to be met _=Mrunn«-© WcstetB Nowsrapsr |See Buck Jones in ‘I pw” and 3rd cfaaptel f The Princess Fridq |y. and Nancy Ca bve You Always” bursday. (The heavy rain andl flat visited Mo ksvill flght of last week wasf Nearly 2 % incbfl jirin'g.the night, !wonderfully by tb Pur. [Mrs. S. M. Call (isses Elaine, Anij |arjorie, left Wedne |r Elizabethtown, Pey will spend thre |rs. Call’s parents, F. Rollins. [Mr. and Mrs. C. aughters, Misses Lo| fibby, and Glenn pe week-end at BrevJ hd Mrs. Harry Eouise will spend twfl fountains before ref Cd. J. C. Sell, Pooleemee Journal, 1 |n g out a . special gaper this week, Iournars 2 9 th "pavie Record will cel Birthday next week, [ funds no special edit! “ned. B During the heavy| Monday night ohla ping struck the barn I pear Union Chapel,! The barn, together • bushels of oats; some| nay and straw, was 1 lroyed. _ It is said tl[ Pad no insurance ofi pud’contents; Wade Smithr Of S1I Flt-Wfhe erection^of J feneer. bungalow of |ireet, adjoining the onipleted about tv. Ir. Smith will mJ rom Sheffield to I PattI and occupy his ] s now being occupil ^HoweU and JainiliT 1 cWBiD* [as fifty1M that, I *— - ■ ” • ie n Thi: nent. i"fls Oes.'jned to spmi the rule thus tarBut •n inoperative because rot a Juan has been put to irort tut- of these p.-e.iecrs. Iiie meantime, nuuierous anh other proposals tor expending " the federal money have either iirovvn overboard or have been J abeyance pending further con- ion. This is true of a gigantic I program worked out by Secte- lkes. It was planned there to !$250,000,000 and wheD it was iced a press statement was Iming from the Public VTorts Itratio n that hundreds of men pe offered jobs within a month bind the plans advanced. J since April S, nothing whir­ ls been done toward ellffilB®11 Serous railroad grade cross®?, fold at the Interstate Commerce >n and again at the bureau fie roads that their plans to proceed with reduction o- Jhighway traffic hazards nno Jte potential death traps « Ivs cross railroads. SomeM* eked the effort in this directly Ir. and as far as present InWb goes actual work on » g elimination will not be star next several months. * * * e the administration Is seekJ? flop new projects to aid ployment and relic ichem e destitution, one a I a *. pet schemes app«u> I Am U Ck fo be running amt^ to the effort to transpla^ ^ W estern farm fa™l! ptl; Iiska valley of Ala. • ^ L o n project was cante Ederal relief mono.. ffCre fs which were uproo ^ ^ [o Alaska to find the j r. According to a c ^ - ’ 8 ileral Relief adm.m=1 at> ^ * bade to appear that t e die inbow was, as usuah & + further on. Certain > use s Matanuska vallej pare r of the families a ^dy ined to quit and retmoW im m unities in the • ac- bers of congress who * (ell »d with Alaskan conditi^ ^ t the Matanuska vail he most fertile sp to United States. TPe* v kind nviction that aI“ ast he *s()il »f J can be grown uD^r illey. But these men dstlips dons. They know <M ^ mfront those SetttT ffederaI Sflt' iianted there by the it In the hope of pouse rea. Few of them, the ^ rs assure me, c. Jg mg unless Uncle S a( legsting unless um.** ~ at tea=; id millions In pr“' .eI1TenceS a if the modern con jB ad- y and age and s u p P aDJ means of tra^ pdthat nication. The coiony w Lfrom M atanuska c 1D madministration sh corrCeived i, that the project ght ecuted without any prob- an given to tne y o be m et _ er Ooioa.© Western NewsP “ ' on, D. C. thoughts flittinirtrifT ^.i. -... t iUCl quirmg whetherCX TV twA I ._ . .j s s s p s s b t o \ ... ~ * '-'■‘ft- si-h IE DAVIE RECORD. I ......“» "ueuier it central group Ime ... .... pent to arrange SaM-Fei3eral F or occupations for 'I I^t0rJ I far flung as our ,JL popw*- doubted that suffic"“at It H I I n be worked into anv I fleft I |U of any genuine ioodr -OSrai11 :e expenditure of 'd that, I have heard , ' ^ministration expm ! \ f ake4 IF wuuiimstration expect- k n t for unemployed y when late figures ^ 10 of unemployed UdnTts I * t this time a year a~„ ttai1 -w.aools.and coliefp* ..s Ilableto provide the educatif^T s forming one idea^0^ program. Those yonJ jJ* jo continue their edueari™ [re deserving of helpTndt Pers a means to that eud * parly to forecast what thT , in ts Will be or what . ^Iill be !ald down respectiu”a!f for educational a--Si«Tn. I the administration--' m K critics have omitted throS |bs at this feature of the . simultaneously with th it s announcement of the yyy he made knowu that fe d e ra l the way was cIest Jij'ecfa for eonsiructioo oa I what he said was (he Jbup of non-federal projects ta- I public works section of the Jie Jdollar fund. He gave his aj- ' CS projects, the total cost of ...as figured at approximately iine million dollars. I of the loans made in this A- ©f funds was based on a grant *pr cent of the cost of the p- Jprojeet by the community where J-k is to be done. The federal pent loans the other To pet a this way the cost to (he got- In most Instances is expected !held within the. limitation of Ser man per year. I weeks ago the President Jg- I t that the cost of no project in Ith e federal government put ■ should exceed nn amount than 81.143 for every man el- largest Circulation of Any JDavieCounty Newspaper. [news AROUND TOWN. I. C. Sanford is spending a week | r more in Florida on business. Mrs. Roy Walker spent Friday ltternoon in Winston.Salem shop­ ping. j. ]. Larew is away on a business frip through Florida. He left last seek. Mr. and Mrs. Sam R. Latham sere shopping in Winston Salem Friday. A. Dinkins and Attorney Kelly, If Yadkinville, were business visi- Iois here last week. \V. B. Gant, of Huntersville, was In town Thursday shaking bands Ssitb old friends. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Walker and Jaugbter Miss Mary Kathryn, spent Wednesday In Raleigh. Found-Heifer yearling calf at y borne on R 4 Owner call on IflJrank Safley and get same Jobn L. Foster and daughter Miss Mary, of County Line, were Mocks- Iillevisitors Wednesday. W. L. Moore, Grover Hendricks IndRobertSmilhmade a business Irip to Hickory Thursday. Reid Towell. who hibernates in be classic shades of South Cala- p^Ialn, was in town "Wednesday. Blgf Misses Doris and Catherine Mc Tglllee spent the week end with rela­ tives and friends in Greensboro. E. C. Lagle and daughter Miss and T. J. Spryi of R. 4 . JHpent Wednesday in Winston-Salem |||hopping. Mrs. Melvin Gillespie, of Brevard Hjrill arrive today to spend ten davs Btitb per parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. ' ‘ , Call. JUST RECEIVED—I car ce- fiBent11 car lime, 250 balls bale ties. "AFk for prices on large lots. ^MOCKSVILLE HARDW ARE CO Dr. and Mrs. A. S. Harding an- iSBjioance the arrival of a fine son at j^Mbeir home on Wilkesboro street IaSast Tuesday morning, Tuly 9 th. TOE SAVlii feBcofiB. MaesgrrttEE1». ft JfitV ,?. toot Miss M argaret Bell returned -home *.tTa >t week from a motor trip through 5 . Texas. She accompanied Mr. -and a-'iMrs. H. A. Sanford who are still in j-itbe West. StJ Mr. and Mrs. Grady Call and daughters Misses Margaret and . ‘Frankie, of Snmter, S. C., Arrived ‘ ^iere Wednesday to spend several •idays with relatives and friends.S See Buck Jones in “Men W ithout ILaw11Snd 3rd chapter “ Lost City’’ at Tbe Princess Friday and Satur­ day, and Nancy Carroll in " I’ll |Love You Always’’ Monday and hursday, Tbebeavv rain and electric storm |bat visited Mo ksville on Monday night of last week was a gully wasb- .er. Nearly 2 }{ inches ot rain fell Puring the night. Crops were help pd wonderfully by this big down pour, Mrs. S. M. Call and daughters Misses Elaine, Annie Ruth and !Marjorie, left Wednesday afternoon jo r Elizabethtown, N. C., where ithey will spend three weeks with |Mrs. Call’s parents, Rev.' and Mrs. P- F. Rollins. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Stroud and daughters, Misses Louise and Jessie Libby, and Glenn Craven, spent the week-end at Brevard with. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stroud. Miss Louise will spend two weeks in the utountains before returning home Col. J. C. Sell, editor of The Cooleemee Journal, says he is get­ ting out a special edition of his paper this week, celebrating the Joumars 2 9 th birthday. The Davie Record will celebrate its 36th birthday next week, but for lack of funds no special edition will be is sued. During the heavy electric storm Monday night of>last week, light uing struck the barn of Mack Baker near Union Chapel, setting it on fire. The barn, together with a calf. 75 bushels of oats, some corn and much bay and straw, was completely des- •toyed. It is said that Mr. Baker bad uo insurance on his building and contents. Wade Smith, of Shefheld, has be gun the erectionAdf ..another brick, veReer bunga!ow_ on North Main street, adjoining the new house he completed about two j" weeks ago. , Smith will, move his family torn Sheffield to Mocksville thisJail, and occupy his residence which •s now being occupjed by Rev. W. -Howell and family, and Dr. W- Long and family,;' •if ue Home-coming at Cherry Hill Will beheld onSunday Iuly 28th. Everybody is cordially invited to be present for this annual home-coming day. Misses Margaret Walters, Marga­ ret Blackwood, Mary Waters and Mr. Hanes Yates are attending a state meeting of the Epworth League at Lake Juanaluska this week. The old Giles Howard house on North Main street is being torn down, which will ad<l much to the appearance of that block. The old county ,building near the depot, is also being torn away. The annual revival meeting will begin at Oak Grove next Sunday, with the pastor doing the preach­ ing. On Sunday, J uly 28th a Home Coming will be staged at Oak Grove, R. G. McClamroch will preach that day and many other interesting things will take place. Farmington News. Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Furcbes and baby, of Draper are spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. Wade Furches. G. H. Graham had the misfortune to hurt his foot Saturday night and is un able to resume his duties at the court house this week. Quite a few people enjoyed the “Home Coming” day at the Baptist church Sun­ day. _ Dr. Suiith Hagamao of the Baptist Hospital gave a very interesting and in­spiring address at the morning hour. Mr. L.F. Gains, ot Baptist church, of Lexing­ ton gave the afternoon address “The Ideal Christian ” Miss Annie Chisholm, of ThomasviIIe sang several “Gospel Mess- [es” which were enjoyed by every one. Rev. and Mrs. H. C. Freeman and child­ren, Miss Mae and Paul, and Miss Nell James left Monday for a two weeks stay in Western Carolina. Misses James and Freeman will attend the Epworth League Conference at Lake Junaluska, as dele­ gates from the Farmington League. Farmington opened the second half of the baseball season Saturday by winning from Advance. Walter Horne, of Texas, is spending some time with his cousin L. J. Horne. Among someof the guests Sunday at the Home Coming were: Mr. and Mrs. Rebert Atkinson, Mrs. Willie Atkinson, Mrs. Ada Atkinson, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Teague, Mr. and Mrs. Liike Boger1 of Wins­ ton Salem. Philip Hendrix of Lexington, Mr. and Mrs.T. J. Furches, of Tobaccovitle. Ijames X Roads News. Mrs. Bracy White and son Alien, of Winston-Salem, spent last week with B. F. White. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Brackens and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brackens, of Hanestown visited relatives here last week. Mi83 Rachel-White is spending awhile in Winston Salem with her brother W. C. White. Mr. and Mrs. Worth Collins and son Worth Eugene, of Cbaralotte, spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Chaffin. - Mr. and Mrs. Wade Anderson and fami­ ly of Winston-Salem spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Renegar. Mrs. J. W. White and daughter spent the past week in Clemmons with her par­ ents Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Stewart. The young girls of Ijames Cross Roads Sunday School gave the young boys- an ice cream party Saturday night at tbe home of Mr. and Mrs. Felip Gobble. Sev­ eral interesting games were played. A first and second prize was given to tbe boys in “pining the mule's tail on” John Peoples won first prize and John White second prize. Cake and ice cream was served. Those enjoying the occasion were Mr. and Mrs John Peoples, Mr. apd Mrs. Alonzo Peoples, Mr and Mrs. Lillard Hayes. Misses Freddie Lee Lanier, Audrey White. Catherine Glasscock. Mary Owings; Edna Chaffin; Messrs. John White. J. C. Chaffin. Raleigh Glasscock, James Owings. Ottis and Howard Gobble and Baul White. Mr. and Mrs. LiIIard Hayes, of Rocky Springs, spent tbe week-end with Mrs. Hayes’ father, B. F. White. Letter From Oklahoma. „Mrs-R-M- 1Jatnes and daughter, T I .Miss Inez, and little grandson Bob- Just a line to The Record. While hie Ijamesl spent several days last a lot of the readers ,have or may see the things that I will write a- bout, may of them-will pof, and many will be interested. I will just touch some of the high places and give more details later. We left North Carolina coming through “the Land of the Sky,’’ and travel­ ing through the state of Tennessee. We crossed the Mississippi, “ Fath er of Waters,” at Memphis, and then traveled through Arkansas and week with relatives-in Salisbury. REPORT OP THE CONDITION OF THE : BANK OF DAVIE At Mocksville, North Carolina, to the Commissioner of Banks at the" close of business on the 29th day of June. 1935 ASSETS. Loans and Discounts___________$166,079.89 Other bonds, stocks & securities 128,130.00 Total Loans and Investments '(Items I to 4 )____$294,209.89 Furniture & fixtures Notice To Cotton Farm­ ers. -The Cotton Section of the Washa ington Office has requested that all cotton farmers who have gin tickets Ieftfrom 1934 and who expect to use them for 1935 turn them into the County Agent’s office so that they may be sent in, cancelled and reissued. 1935 Certificates will be reissued pound for pound for the 1934 Certificates and the proceedure will take considerable time. Get these Certificates in at once,, so that the new Certificates may be return­ ed in time for use in 1935. K illth e Weevil For A Small InvestmentYou Can Give Youc Small Grain Complete Protection Against Weevils and Worms. . A sk U sF o r Inform ation and Prices. Let Us Serve You / ' LeGiand’s Pharmacy OnTheSquare Phone 21 Mocksville. N. C. 11II in I III 1111 rrrrrfTr into Oklahoma via Muskogee to'casu‘T r‘vJu!“ KrohangeS97cash Tulsa, where we-arrived tired and I .ltems an4 balances with other worn out. We found loved ones waiting-and that cheered us up. Today we attended church. ' There were 180' in Sabbath school. It is refreshing to meet so many of the same precious hope ' We will re­ member the friends we left, and Mrs. Burton says she hopes to be at the Click reunion in August. I will write laterof the scenery, farm ing, etc., in this section, and also tell of the great floods that visited this section recently. I. P. BURTON. Tulsa, Okla., July 6, 1935. AU persons interested in cleaning ofi Society graveyard are requested to be there Saturday, July 20th. Come early in the morning. 970.00 99,040.26 698.42 Notice Of RevSale! Under and by virture of the pow­ ers vested in me as Administraior with the Will'Annexed.of T. C. Sheets deceased, said will having been pro­ bated and being recorded in tbe Book of Wills in the office of the Clerkof Superior Court in Mocks- ville, N. C„ in Book 3, at Page 246, the undersigned Administrator wili offer for re-sale to the highest bid­ der, for cash, on the premises at the late'residence of T. C. Sheets, de­ ceased, about I mile south of Bixby. Davie County, North Carolina, on Saturday, Julv 27 th, 1935, at2 o’clock m.. the following described' real property, viz: \ FirstTract: Beginning at a red oak in D S. Tuckers line and run­ ning ,North 76 poles to a stone; thence N. 46 poles to a stone; thence N. 77 deg. West 40 poles to a stone; thence South 85 degs. W. 113 poles to a stone; thence S. 26 poles and 12 links to a stone; thence W. 36 poles to a stone; thence South 81 poles to a pine; thence East to the beginning, containing 142 acres, more or less. Second Tract: Bounded on the North and West by H. E. Robertson, on tbe East by John Snider, on the South by JacobCornatzer, beginning at the Public Road, thence W 123 poles to a stone, thence South 57 poles to a black oak bush, thence E 30 degs. N. 135 poles to a stone at the Public Road, tbence North 12 poles to the beginning, containing 13 acres, more or less. - First Tract—Bidding on this tract will start at $2782.50. being the in­ creased bid. Second Tract—The bfdding on this tract will Starfat $165.00. Tois the IOth day of July. 1935 N D. SHEETS, Admr. C. T. A. of T. C. Sheets. Dec’d Jacob Stewart. Attorney. Sample Suits. Just received a big line of dry goods samples, consisting of women’s summer dresses 79c up, underwear hosiery, sox, etc, also men’s summer suits $2 50 up. A' complete line of high grade samples at a price that will delight you. ’ Come and look them over. Flour . .. $3.15 and up Feed . .. - ^ $1.90 Cotton Seed-Meal. ' $T75 Salt $1-10 Salt, 5c package 3c SaItFish _ ... 5£clb Crackers, I Ib 12c Grackers, S Ib Sifi Pink Salmon, 2 caans 25c Herrings. 3'cans ' 25c Coffee, bulk N • ' i IOc Ib I Ib Kenny packages ' 15c Ricelb ; 5c and up Large Laundry Soapi 7 cakes • 25c AU Oil Cloth, yd ; 23c 9x12 Straw Rugs . 25 Straw Hats, $1.00- . $1,50 value, each 50c Felt Hats, each .70c up Ihave the biggest as-ortment of ShoesI have everhad and roy price is right. Come In and look them over. Assorted colors fpr men, wo­ men and children. For mowers. rakes, djsc^and see- tion^hatfejwr^ee^me for prices. I handlefthe: Massey-Harris Iinef Just received a Iarge^-abipnren t of plow casting and my price ifright.v See Our Line Qf Ycturs For ir J t M banks Other Assets______ TOTAL ASSETS !_________$394,918.57 LIABILITIES: Deposits of individuals, partner* —ships or corporations payable on demand or within 30 days $124,119.19 Time deposits of individuals, partnerships or corporations . payable after 30 days or sub* - . ject to more than 30 days no.tice 138,120.68 Public fnrids of States, counties school districts, municipalities or other political subdivisions. 20,842.80 United States Government and postal savings deposits.^______ Deposits of other banks, cash let­ ters of credit, certified officers’ ;and travelers’ checks outstanding Secured by pledge of loans and /or invest­ ments ____________$ 17,051.12 Not secured by pledge of loans and /or in­ investments ______ 266,470.95 Total Deposits_$283,522.07 Interest, taxes and other ex- ■ penses accrued and unpaid___ First preferred stock sold to R.F.C. 250 .shares, par $80.00 sh are •_________$ 70,000.00 Common stock, 1,000 shares, par $50.00 per sh are________ Surplus ____________ Undivided profits, -net. Reserves for eonting’s Retirement fund for 394.90 45.00 1,700.00 26,000.00 10,689.00 3,007.50 preferred stock or capital notes and de­ bentures ___ 109,696.50 Total, including capital account $394,918.57 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF DAVIE, ss. S. M. CALL, Cashier, Z. N. ANDERSON, Director, and R. B. SANFORD, Director of the Bank of Davie, each personally appeared be­ fore me this day,- and being duly sworn, each for himself says that the foregoin? report is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. Sworn to and subscribed before me this the 8th day of July, 1935. W. F. TUTTEROW, Notary Public. My commission expires Aug. 30, 1936. • S. M. CALL, . Cashier. Z. N. ANDERSON, Director. " ■ R. B. SANFORD, Director. Many Thanks. Editor Davie Record:—I an en closing #5 -for Record from July, iy34. to July, 1937 A good paper lots of Dews, and not backward ' in saying what you think. Keep up tbe good work. Mrs, Minnie Hilton. Tombstone. Ariz. - Macedonia Items. Most of the sick people of our com­ munity are somewhat improved at thiswriting. The Ladies Auxiliary met at the home of Mrs. Charlie Crews, Wins­ ton-Salem, N. C.. with 14 members present. Thenextmeeting will be held with Mrs. Walter Lineback. Miss Frances Stbnestreet of Mocks­ ville, is visiting her cousin, Miss Katherine Douthit. The Revival meeting befeins the 2nd Sunday in August. The Sunday School Convention will one is invited to attend, Mrs. Ellen Hilton, and children, of Mocksville, are at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs._Joe Howard, and is on the sick list we are sorry to note. Bob Miller, of Charlotte, spent a few days the past week with his brother, Buck Miller. ..Everyone is Jglad to see the nice showers of rain that hare been falling this week. •Mr. and Mrs. Tillet -Walker, and family motored to Roaring G ip . Sun­ day. beheld the4th Sunday in July, every- B. C. BROCK. Any. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Gaither Wood, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons having claims a- gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before July 16.1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AU persons indebted to said es­tate. are requested to make immediate payment. This July IS. 193S. M. BRANSON, Admr. Gai her Wood, . Dec’d. ATHLETES SAY TM NO ATHLETE, BUT CAMELS ARE MY CIGARETTE TOO. I AGREE. WITH CARL HU0BELL THAT CAMELS ARE MILO. THEY , NEVER IRRITATE MY THROAT CAMELS HAVE FLAVOR, PLUS MILDNESS... A RARE COMBINATION. THEY NEVER GET MY WINO OR RUFFLE MY NERVES S CARL HUBBEUf star pitcher of the New York Giants CAMELS COSTLIER TOBACCOS I DR. P. H. MASON Dentist SANFORD BUILDING Phone 110 Mocksville. N C. B E L K - S T E V E N S Most Value For Your Money. The Year’s Greatesb Yalue Giving Event. Belk Stevens’ July Clearance Sale Brings You Outstanding Savings on Quality Summer Merchandise- Articles That You Will Want and'Need for Another Two Months’ Wear- Fine Piece Goods and Domestics. Every Department Offers Values You Cannot Afford to Miss! Many, Many Items on Sale Not Mentioned in This Ad_ Clearanceh^OO Men’s Shirts Dozens of Shirts in This Lot Worth Up to $1.65 97c Men! Here’s a Shirt Sale that saves you real money. High quality soft and starched collar shirts including hundreds of famous “Ide” make. Hand­ some stripes, neat figures and plain, .color fabrics. Sizes14 to 17. . Men’s Summer Ties . -. 25c - 9^c Men’s Summer Pants . .* 79c $1 98 Sanforized Slacks : . . , $1.69 Men’s Summer Caps—39 values • . 25c A Mighty July Clearance B e i t e r D r e s s e s $16-50 $14.95 $0.95' $J£50 . $9.75 $g.95- ’ DRESSES DRESSES u Z 9 5 : ■ $5.95 $4.95:' DRESSES . Over .500 beautiful summer dresses are offered in this sale—every one of exceptional style and qual­ ity/ Soft filmy chiffons, plain silk crepes in white soft pastels, printed crepes and dark Bh'ades. Sizes I^ J p • ’ Extraordinary Values In The July Clearance Qf Men’s Hot Weather Suits* Values' . <frQ Q C • Up To $1,495 Quality Suits-Mtaflored with an unusual care to style and detail. Fine tropical worsted and linens-. The smartest summer styles—conservative and young men’s models. Another Group O f: . S U M M E R S UITS Formerly, sold Up To $12.20 $7 50 These suits are styled'with the new action backs— sin g le and double-breasted Iqhdels. Pique cords, linens and tropical worsteds. Summer Cotton Frocks $1.98 Dresses $1.47 $2.98 Dresses $2.24 : . /*• } The season’s outstanding cotton fashions—now at a spendid savings. Beautiful quality'voiles, dimi­ ties, batistes, sheers and eyelets. Lovely colors and printed patterns. - Sizes 14 toj20 and 38 to 52. BELK-S T E V E N S CO. : J; • j I! H j I ! S i J f ;a Corner Trade And Filth .Streets Wmstbn-Salendt N. C.I ■I/I 10 ilBfcllllls W I i\ It V vAvi& itstoM), Mbdkgyifcbz. n. A W* ■?•_ “We Miss Yon, Daddy.” The following editorial was printed in the Rockville, Connecticut, Jour­ nal, about a year ago. Thereafter, to the editor’s surprise, it was re­ printed by most of the other papers of the state, and was used by high­ way safety officials, insurance com­ panies, accident prevention organi­ zations, motorists’ publications and by others who are fighting the great war against the toll of automobile deaths. Here it is—and any motor ist will surely tbink twice about tak ing chances after reading it: “Tuesday morning there was a fatal accident" on the Minterburn Hill and Whenlhe medical examiner was going through the pockets of the dead man . . . a telegram was found. Itw as not very long, just the ordinary ten-word length, but it was a message that would make any father happy. It read: Wemissyou daddy When are you coming home? “That was all. It was a message sent by one_.of the children of the man who was killed. He had receiv­ ed the message and was homeward bound. The clothes were minus money but in his pocket-he carried that message. “Those who have little children, and those who were-once little chil­ dren, can think of the great blow to the child when the father did return home—dead. “ ‘Daddy’ will be missed by those children in the long years ahead. No longer will they have his support, his earnings, and, more important, his companionship. “If ever there was a reason for people drr ing more carefully on the road, it is that they might get in an accident and deprive tbeir own child or some other child of their daddy.’ -‘More might be written, but just let us repeat those words: ‘We miss you, Daddy. Whenareyou coming home?’’ Maybe half the world doesn’t know I One of the serious problems of how the other half lives, but they’re the republic is people who take tbem- always trying to find out. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of George P. Feezor, deceased, late of Forsyth County, North Carolina1Jthis is to notity ail persons having c aims against the said estate to present them to the undersigned at 610 Reynolds Build* ing, Winston-Salem, N. C., on or be­ fore the 29th day of May. 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt­ ed to said estate .will please make immediate payment. _ This 29th day of May, 1935. ESTATES ADMINISTRATION. Inc. Admr. of George F. Feezor, Dec d. Executrix’s Notice. Having qualified as executrix of the last will and testament of B. L. Carter, deceased, late of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina.'notice is hereby given all persons-holding claims a* gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or be­ fore May lltb. 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate, are requested to make* immediate payment. This May 11th, 1935,. MRS. ALICE B. CARTER, Exrx. of B. Ls-Garter1 Dec’d. JACOB STEWART. Atty. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of Mary . Jones, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said estate will please call and settle without delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. Gi- F. CORNAZTEK, Admr. of Mary Jones, decs’d. A. T, GRANT, Atty. No Balm In This Gilead. The Treasury deficit for the last fiscal year—the National Treasury— was around $3,500,000,000. That of the year before was ap­ proximately as much. Thereis no balm in this Gilead, even though.the estimate of the de­ ficit for this year was more than the actual —about $5,000,000,000 the of­ ficials thought it would probably be. There is aboat as much comfort in it, indeed, as there would be in the prediction of a doctor that he would be obliged to cut off tbree-fourth of vour arm and then after fuller ex­ periment,, decided that half an arm would do. - The figures of the deficit are be yond comprehension. One must have a strangely unique as well as immense arithemetical mind to play intelligently with figures that run up into millions and then, af ter saving there awhile, keep on traveling into the billions. - Especially, when the figures relate to debts—what a people owe, what the American people must either pay back some day or suffer the igno­ miny of announcing that they don’t owe ill When the halting Time in this sort of management of National affairs is to come is problematical, It will be years upon years before a budget as n otoriously out of balance as that in Washington can be brought back in­ to adjustment. ' And in the meantime, punishment of extreme agony'must be suffered by the taxpayers in meeting interest and principal payments. These must do the paying, the people. The citizens who make the money will feel the load on their back.. as the Federal Government, starting first with the richest, begins to send its steam shovels out to scoop m the - multiplied millions to get rid of the burden.—Charlotte Observer. DR. R. P. ANDERSON D E N T IS T Anderson Building Mocksville, N.C. Office 50 - Phoae - Residence 37 selves too seriously. - NOTICE! HaviDg qualified as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d. no­ tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of"said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of any recovery." AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned and make prompt settlement. - This the 28tb day of June, 1935. BEULAH APPERSON, Admrx. of George Hendrix. Decs’d. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrator’s Notice. Notice is hereby-given that the undersigned has qualified as admin­ istrator of J; A. Hege, deceased. AU persons having claims agaw stthe es­ t a t e of the said deceased, will pre­ sent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June,-1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar •«. f their recovery. All PfTsops indebt­ ed to said estate will P,eaae ®ake immediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935. , . . ; .W T-. S . MYERS, Administrator ' of J A. Hege. deceased. ROBERT S. McNEILL, Attorney. Land posters for sale. 6 6 6 UQU1D-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE DROPS NOTICE! notice is hereby given to all persons hold­ing claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same, properly ven- fiied on or before the 4th day of May, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of re­covery. AU persons indebted to said es­ tate will please call uoon the undersigned to make settlement. This May 4th. 1935. P. R. WOOTEN, Exr. of Tempie C. Baggarly Bv A- T. GRANT. Atty. North Carolina I Io SuperiOr Court Davie County I M. C. Cain. O. L. Harkey. Lattie Harkey, Lula Reavis, Mary Etta Hamilton, Mildred C. Thorn­ ton. Mattie Sprinkle, Mag­ gie Martin, Lena Cranfill. Hattie Barron," vs M. C. Fowler. Gideon Fowler. Clyde Austin, Louise Fowler, Kenneth Fowler, Nellie Olive, Connelly Windsor, Gilmer Windsor, Kate Thomassoh, Moroison " Windsor and Howell Windsor. Notice of Publication. The defendants, Gideon Fowler, Kenneth Fowler, Gilrrer Windsor and Howell Windsor above named, will take notice that an action enti­ tled as above has been commenceo in the Superior Court of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina, asking for a salt for partition of the lands of R. -L Cain located in Davie and Onslow counties, said action being for the partition of said lands by sale there­ of for the purpose of division; and the said defendants will further take notice that they and each of them are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of-the Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, within ten days from the 3rd day of July, 1935, before M. A. Hartman, Clerk of Superior‘Court, and answer or demurr to the complaint or pe­ tition in said action or the plaintiffs will apply to the court.for the relief demanded in -the complaint. ThiB tho 8th day of:June, 1935. M. A. HARTMAN. Clerk of Superior Court Notice To Creditors! Having qualified as Admimstratorof the estate of W. S. Guffy deceased notice is heieby given to all persons holdiog c airns aggSnst the estate of said deceased^ ijre- suitthe same, properly verified, to the undersigned, Cleveland, N<r>h Carolina Route 2, on or before the 9th day of July. 1936 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said eitate will please call and make proper settlement. This the 9th day of July 1935 J. R GUFFY. AdmV , -. of W. S. Guffy;-decsd. By A, T. GRANT, Atty, North Carolina (" . „ . ■ _ ■Davie County \ Superior Court M. C. Cain. 0. L. Harkey, Lattie Harkey, Lula Reayis. Mary Etta Hamilton, Mildred C. Thornton Mattie Snrinkle.: Maggie Mar­ tin, Leona Cranfill, Hattie Barron vs M. C. Fowler, Gideon Fowler, Clyde -Austin, Louise Fowler..Kenneth Fowler, Nellie Olive, Connelly Windsor, Kate. Thamasson, MornsbnWindsorand Howell Windsor.’: ' Notice of Publication. Connelly Windsor; one of the de­ fendants-above named, will take no­ tice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of Davie County,.North Caro­ lina, asking for the sale for partition of the lands of Rv L. Cain, located in Davieand Onslow counties,- North Carolina; said action being for the partition of said lands, by, a -sale thereof for the purpose of division; and the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to ap­ pear at the court house; at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie Countv, Mocksville. NorthCar­ olina, nofdater than ten days- after the 17th day ofduly, 1985£the-same being, the last publication of this no-, tice, before M. A Hartman, Clerk of Superior .Court, Bnd answer or demurr to_the; complaint or petition in this cause, or the plaintiffs -wil I apply to the court for further; relief demanded in the complaint. -This June 19. T 935 - '> M.-A. HARTMAN. = ^ Clerk of Superior Court. State And NOTICE! The Law Require* Me To Garnshiee The Wages Of Persons Who Have Not Paid Their Poll Taxes, And To Levy On Personal Property And Real Estate For- Other Unpaid Taxes. So, Pay Your 1934 County And State--Taxes NOW And Avoid This Additional Cost. A llR ealEstate Will Be Advertised In . August If Tax Is Not Paid On Same. CHARLES C. SMOOT, Sheriff. DAVIE CAFE “On Ther Square” Mocksville, N. C, Next To Ppstdfiice And Just As Reliable Regular Meals . . . . . 35c Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Short Orders, Every Hour. P. K. MANOS, Prop. % Kathleen Narris m l C I SEAViCE- Coptttiqftt* fy JCji&le&if m ' checks MALARIA in 3 day* COLDS first day. TONIC and LAXATIVE Administrator^ •Having qualified aa admi„;,. estate of Miss Jennie B H t0rOfti1B ed. late of Davie county C l notice is hereby given ail ^ i claims against the $ 1 them to the undersigned ' 10 Kt April l 1936. or this S ein bar of their recovery in 1)8" debted to said estate ate 1 make ,immediate pay mem"';,-*,, 1st, 1935. G. H. UtlailM J Miss Jennie R h* , E B. C. BROCK, Atty. 0Wsll-C«J BEST IN radios YOUNG RADIOco mocksville N C ' BEST IN SUpplies Bmuiiiiiiiiitmtati m ill I Iiiiin ii M m i IiiiiiiiiiTiiTTTTTTTiTTmrimrrnriIiiii I mi I In mi I Iiiiiiiiu CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE EMBAI1MEti Telephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church Travel anywhere . . any day on the SOUTHERN for A Fare For Every Purse . . . ! P e n i l e * 2 c Fer Mile * 21c Per Mile ' ‘ ' PEllliIli ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKPTc for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 15 Dan . . . for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 6 Monlhi . . . for Each Mile Traveled. ONE WAY TICKETS , . . . for Each Mile Traveled * 3e ' Per Mile * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Sool Excellent Dining Car Service B_e Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel R, H. GRAHAM, Div. Pass. Agent . . . Charlotte, IM Southern Railway System A Delightful Love Story of Two Sisters R ead th is new story from th e of one o£ -, Amenoa s best-loved woman writers— N orris. She tells a lively and mmri™ • “ , - o£ th e fo rtu n e s _o£ an* in te re stin g fam H * •"THE LUCKY LAWRENCES” will . In M s Raptr . Pg vgt M iss Ou5 Cw illJ S f f j f r Is The Oldest, Largest and Most Widely Read Pape In DAvie County- The Price Is Only $1.00 Per Year. Send A Year’s Subscription To Yo1 Relatives Who Live In Distant Counties Or States. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home Conn1 THE DAVlE RECORD I - Carries A Number Of Features That YouJWill Not Find In An? Other Paper In This County The Record is 'prepared to ^ stationery; on short notice. VOLUMN X X l NEWSOF What Wa* Happen The Day* of Auton H (Davie Record, W. K. Cleme was in town Satui Miss SalIie Haf tives in Winston Miss Annettal friends in Charlotl Miss Luna B rl this week with relj Cleveland Kiu week for Charlott^ he said. Misses Thirza i Horn spent one dl town with Miss IrT Mrs. T. B. Baill dav from a deligh latives and friendsj Mr. and Mrs turned home todaJ relatives at Leesbij Misses Sarah HI Carolyn Miller sp relatives at W alke| Work on the ne pie is progressing J walls will soon be I Percy and. L in| Winston, spent week in town witlj Mrs. W. M. CrJ home from the StI week acd is gettiu W. P. Etchisonf .Ridgeway, S- .C., end in.town with! parents, Mr. and j.Etcbison. - Mrs. M. F„ Pa Ifor Baltimore to Jpf her son, E. H. !^hospital in that ci Three of the gi |the postoffice at iltitne ago, were b !lodged in jail to [ term of court. Miss Hal Morrid ■ is the guest of Mil Mrs. J. 0 . KinJ Misses Lolla, Lou| : returned Friday ; extended stay w it| I holds a position j canal, P. J. ,Rouse carl ■ Statesville hospital s underwent an opel E- H. Woodrif [for Birmingham, I [ goes to accept a [ man for the R. J. ] [Co Co. Miss Ella U’alk -has been the gue: Maynard at a hou her home near Ra Jay night iu this I fives on her way ' The old stables I !ot, and the old hd uew Weant buildij have been torn dd uiuch to the looks! W B. Horn, of| ; crane Saturday feet 4. inches from! j Was 5 feet high. vouches for the ab Mrsi G. L. I PUmped a black sij WelLone day-recet sured 6 feet in Ienl Travis SmithdeJ posjtipa with .the Ut Washington, with home.folks al Dr- M. D, K im f eral days last wee| at Smith Grove. , s O frm e-, •fiatontg Baptist ch| f * % J* August. iklns will assist! 1 Well in the meeting t p.^ r; and Mrs. i s^S apolis, are yi| town; •-V- - . • - -- ' ~ I ' ; ■ - ■ \ . £6 J t J B j U u ^ ^ ' WmsltatoriTlk' of MUs JCnnfe b of Davie county. Nnrih Viec^i is hereby given a\l'pSslCa^ against the said estateT S o the undersigned m,’ 9ttSeS ' f19K6; 01 lh *8 notice will °h of their recovery. a« I be ttoi to said estate, are ^5°"»*. immediate Payment ^ f ltI t, 55. G. H. GRaHavt a Am Miss Jennie B. Hov^ii n®'- BROCK1Atty. Dsc't ... BEST IN RADIOS t| fOUNG RADIO CO M0CKSV1LLE, N. C. ‘ BEST IN SUPPLIES **6STAL RECEIPTS SHOW THE RECORD CiRC fcitA §6N LAfc6fesT IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON’T Life Jug Hiiiiiiiii I Iita a a t i a i 8 a a - 1 [UNERAL HOME EM BAJ.jjgp^l 18 khodist Church any d a y 11 IR N for I ; TRIP COACH TICKETS Iile Traveled. I—Return Limit 15 Davs Iile Traveled. I-R etu rn Limit 6 Months Ilile Traveled. Iile Traveled on payment of proper No surcharge. : home and using the Sonthsn tr Service |;y of Train Travel. Charlotte, N. C. S y s te m >ared to P Notice. ri»‘ I* JERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS M^JNTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN.”' VOLUMN X X X V iI.MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, W EDIiESDAY.-JULY 24, 1935 ________________________________________ '• X- ' ' __- ______•*_____________________ XUMBER r NEWS OF LONG AGO. W hat Was Happening In Davie Before TheDaysof visited rela- Putting A Check On Franklin D. (Davie Record. July 2 0 . 1 9 1 0.) W. K. Clement, of Charlotte, was in town Saturday. Miss Sallie Hanes tives in Winston last Miss Annetta Miller friends in Charlotte last week. Miss Luna Brown is this w eek with relatives in Hickory. Cleveland Kimbrough left last week for Charlotte and other points, he said. Misses Thirza Graves and Esther Horn spent one day last week in town with Miss Ivey Nail. Mrs. T. B. Bailey returned Fri­ day from a delightful visit to re­ latives and friends in Statesville. Mr. and Mrs R. B. Sanford re­ turned home today from a visit to relatives at Leesburg, Va. Misses Saiah Hanes, Willie . and Carolyn Miller spent last week with relatives at Walkertown Work on the new Masonic tem­ ple is progressing rapidly and the walls will soon be up. Percy and. Linville Powell, of Winston, spent several days last week in town with Glenn Hopper. Mrs. W. M. Crotts, was brought home from the Statesville hospital week and is getting along nicely. W. P. Etchison and little son, of Ridgeway, S. C.., spent the week­ end in town with Mr. Etcbison’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. P, Etchison. Mrs. M. E. Pass left Saturday for Baltimore to be at the bedside of her son, E. H. Pass, who is in a hospital in that city. Three of the gang who entered the postoffice at Cornatzer some time ago, were brought here and lodged in jail to await the next term of court. Miss HaI Morrison, of Statesville, is the guest ot Miss Mary Sanford Mrs. J. 0. King and daughters. Misses Lolla, Louise and Ellafayel returned Friday evening from an extended stay with Mt. King, who holds a position on the Ponama canal. P. J. Rouse carried bis wife to a Statesvillehospital Friday, where underwent an operation. E. H. Woodruff left Saturday for Birmingham, Ala., where he goes to accept a position as sales­ man for the R. I. Reynolds Tobac­ co Co. Miss Ella Walker, of R. 1, who has been the guest of Miss Kate Maynard at a house party given at her home near Raleigh, spent Tues- day night in this city with rela­ tives on her way home. The old stabies on the Masonic lot, and the old house next to the new Weant building on Depot street have been torn down, which adds much to the looks of the town. W B. Horn, of Kv 2 , killed crane Saturday that measured feet 4 inches from, tip to tip and was 5yi feet high. J. Arthur Daniel vouches for the above. Mrs G. L. White, of Cana pumped a black snake out of her well one dayreceutly ; which mea­ sured 6 feet in length. Travis Smitbdeal,; who holds positioa with .the Western. Union at Washington, is spending time with home folks at Advance. Dr. M. D. Kimbrough spent sev­ eral days last week, at his. old. borne at Smith Grove. A-, series ofc meetings W illhegin at Eaton's Baptist church the 3 rd Sun­ day in August. ■ Rev. John T. , Cash- No Need for Secrets I Expenditures 0 f Governmen' from the time of Washington tc Wilson, 1789 1913, total of 124 years—$24,521,84 5,000. ■ . Expenditures of Roosevelt ad­ ministration as estimated by the President; actual 1934,' and esti- !935 1936, total of 3 years— $24 206,533.000. If you hadn’t already seen those figures, we believe you will find them rather startling. Our ex­ penditures of government in three years will amount to almost identi­ cally wbat they were in 124 years! The next thing to be done is to tell the President to get back to running the federal government a- gain and let private business alone. If business needs any special regu­ lation, let the individual states at tend to it. For the past several months there has been a most noticeable trend toward centralize tion of all government at Washing­ ton. And you might include cen­ tralization of business as well. Un­ less a half is made, our various state regulatory commissions and a- gencies will become mere figure­ heads and might just as well be a- bolished entirely. Not Only that, but we’ll have federal control over practically every line of business in the country. This is a dangerous route to fol. low. Drastic steps were necessary two or three years ago, but we have passed that crisis and we should change our tactics accordingly.. We don’t wah’t. a dictatorship type of government: it has no place in the plans of the.American people But unless some constructive ac­ tion is taken, we’re heading for dictatorship just as sure as shooting —if we haven’t already reached that stage. The third thing to be done is to get rid of about a million people who are on federal pay-rolls and who have no business being there. They are employed in vaiious de­ partments which aren’t doing a bit of. good. Our opinion is that the. government could be run with equal efficiency if at least one-fourth of the folks on the pay-rolls were told to go back home and try to pro­ duce something. T heattitudethat the government owes everybody a living is becoming altogether too prevalent, The fourth thing to be done is to devise ways and means of paying back all of this money which has been and which is being spent. A g o o d ly portion of it has heeu abso lutely wasted, but that doesn’t m a k e any difference: it’ll have to be paid back—every penny of it. And so, in view- of all these things, we believe that it’s time to put a stop-signal in front of Mr. Roosevelt so that we, who are rid­ ing as passengers, can catch our, breath again. The paCe has" been altogether too dizzy.. Not only that, but the old government-wag­ on is going to need gas directly," and it would be rather embarrass ing to run out while far away from a filling station In other words, instead of cop t i n u i n g our reckless pace, it’s time to stop and gas up.—The State, Leading Democratic Weekly, Ra leigb, N. C. - ," We read that in the jungle there are many tribes w’ women have a secret language /0) their own which they have taught and never will teach to any man.; J W’e see in this two differeuceslib the ATrican tribeswomen and our rwn fair women. We see superio­ rity and inferiority. The African woman are superior In will for the fact that they are able retain their secret; but our fair ones ape far superior in intelli­ gence because they are able to speak heir men’s own language in suchja inannyr as to keep them from under. standing a thing they are -talking about. ‘ Our ladies posses an accomplish ment that has never been - attained by one of their men. They can gather in groups ranging from three to thirty, and while everyone of the group is talking as fast as'.it is possible for the feminine; human larynx to articulate (and that is ex pressing some speed), each one knows exactly what each, one of the others is saying. This is found to be true from the fact that every now and then during such a gab- test one Of the participants may be seen to interrupt -her own lingual eruption to answer something which she caught from another part of the room. One of the noble males who hap- pens to be caught, in -a group of women when the chatter break! The Place For Liquor. Enforcement Detail. Jenkihs will assist Rev. C. S. welt in the meeting. Mt. and Mrs. W. C. Graham, of [ Kannapolis, are visiting, relativesin. Hellward Bound. July 8 — Sunday.WilIiaroston, pictures, Sunday basebad aod legal liquor struck here all at once, local ball club announced a game, for Sunday afternoon which was rained out. the town went wet Sal urday by a huge majority and Sun- tbe local theatre With; day afternoon management flooded the town announcing; a Sunday As liquor stores begin operations in one North -Carolina county and others evidently prepare to follow, the enforcement problem, particu­ larly one aspect of it, pushes to the forefront. Almost simultaneously with the start of sales in Wilson, the attorney general, speaking ’!personally and not officially,” voiced the opinion that a citizen of a county which does not vote wet under the 1935 local li­ quor referedum laws will. violate the Turlington act if he transports whisky from a wet county into a dry What’s to be done about th e. fellow who transports the stuff thus be comes a practical question. TheDaily News, mindful of the ways of North Carolina; particularly its prohibition ways.' the confusion which at present exists and the popu­ lar votes which officials who must shortly stand for re-election have be fore-them, inclines to the idea that nothing much will be done about transportation of the potables. But if any enforcement Order does go out its effectuation will be largely on the highways. And that brings us around to ex­ pression of the- fervent hope that Cap’n Farmer’s highway patrol will not take upon themselves, or be or­ dered to take, this burden of running in Turlington act offenders; North Carolina’s spottiness, to eay nothing Of the oases in sister states to north and to south of us, necessarily means that there will be oodles of them. If they' drive recklessly, imbibe too much before crawling under the steering wheel or in any other- fash­ ion become a menace to highway’ safety, t o t is ^different proposition. But if the patter roller are committed to cprraling Turlington act offenders on the scale t o t they are likely to operate if all the counties which have voted booze set up stores, they will quite, probably, for all the increased personnel, have very little time left. considering their appearance in court as .witnesses, et cetera, for anything else. SuCh a demand upoh their time and services' might—perish th e thOdght—even, interfere seriously with their more fundamental busi ness, of escorting funeral processions -The paramount issues in the oext campaign will be compelled to bear the burden of an unjust tnd iniquitous sales tax? Shall the great states of North Carolina en cage in the sale of liquor to de­ bauch, damn and .destroy the man hood of the state? The settlement of these issues will determine whether or not the state will go forward or backward! Will the Democratic party, while piofessiug to be the party of Jefferson, stn d ■for the sale'of liquor, bv the state, contrary to the teachings and prin­ ciples of the immortal founder of Democracy? If the Democratic :partv is to become the champion of saloons it will forfeit its claim at the party of Jefferson, for that great statesman condemned and ,scatching language, as follows: “Of alt the great calamities intemper­ ance is the greatest. The drunk ard as much as a . maniac requires restrictive measures to save him Jrom the infatuation under* which be is destroying his health, his morals, his family and his useful­ ness to society.” At the close of his eight year term as President,. Jefferson wrote: !’The habit of using ardent spirits by men in, public office has proved more injury to me than any other circumstance that has occured in the internal concerns during my ad­ ministration. And were I to com menchmy administration again the SffittjhestiphT( would ask every -- j Mate for - public be: Is bo addicted to the* use of ardent spirits?” The voters should ask every can didate if he favors. liquor. They should not allow any candidate for governor or any other office to ride into Office on a liquor barrel. If liquor controlled hellholes are permitted by the voters, for revenue the county or state, would be re- responsible for the debauchery, wickedness, crimes and deaths.thirt would result therefrom. The late Sam Jones, a noted evangelist said; Liquor is a mighty good thing in its place is in hell ” LiquorisMhe greatest curse of ancient or modern times and it has wrought more sor­ row, suffering and destruction to the human race than all wars, pes­ tilences and famines. Will the voters allow the state to engage in the immoral saloon business’! God forbad !—James B. Lloyd, in Greens­ boro News . Moore Demmies Of Same QId Type. loose is in just about such a pre­ dicament as a native Chinese WOujd- Iehndidate for ^iiubH c:: office should ,be.on the Scandinavian peninsula so far as understanding the lan­ guage is" concerned. — Statesville Record. Made His Coffin 42 Years Ago. C. A. Duncan, of Batesburg, S. C., 42 years ago made bis own cof­ fin. Itw asahandsom epieceinits dav, made in the ‘'toothpick” style neatly lined, all the woodword be-, ing baudplaned and fitted. Dun­ can is now 84 years old, very much alive and very active. A few days ago he sent the coffin to shop for repairs. Micehad cut the lining and gnawed the woodwork consi* considerably. Duncan has a grand­ son, J. S Dnncan, now 35 years years old, who is also, planning to make his own coffin. Pireffercid Jail To Wife. Buck Terry of Williamston, Mar tiu CO UU tV, literally bad to be chaSed out of jail, Monday. He had been locked up charged withill treatment of his wife and Mayor Hurst agreed to liberate Terry with a suspended sentence on. payment of costs. The prisoner refused to pay the costs, saying he had r a t h ^ ^ y ijfc jail than live with his wife: •. a- j Officers opened bis^ceU door : and told'him to get out, i- It.is hard to understand why, uiany hotos without electric lighffii running water and other convenieni The Democratic.board of commif- sioners of Moore county are not ear­ ring out President Roosevelt’s dic­ tate to “keep the matter of federal expenditures out of politics” ..Her­ bert F. Seawefi, Jr., leader of the Republican party in Moore county and a Carthage attorney charges in a statement given to the Southern Pines Pilot. He condemns the com­ missioners for failure to name “a single independedt or Republican” on the new Moore Co ir.ty Boards Project. Surely Mr. Seawell did not expect the statement that Roosevelt made about keeping politics out of the slush fund that Congress voted him merely a gresture on the Chief Exe­ cutive and Roosevelt did not expect any one to take him seriovsly. A President that will keep such a bide bound partisan as Boss Jim Farley in bis Cabinet and allow Farley: in his Cabinet and allow Farley to defy all the rules of decency, flaunt the civil service in the face and defy Congress by appointing "acting” post masters and allowing them to hold, on for awhile and then making their appintments permanent without the least semblance to the civil service, need not lie expected to keep politics out of the “ projects” fund. Following is Mr. Seawell's letter: “Last week’s issue of The Pilot carried a front page article showing that the County Commissioners had appointed'a board of several men to make recommendation with respect to Federal projects in M°°re county. President -Roosevelt has made it known that he-intends to keep the matter of federal expenditures cut of politics. Bixty per cent of taxes paid in the town of Carthage are paid by Independents and Republi cans. The same radio holds good throughout the county wjtb the ex­ ception of corporation taxes. It Is indeed significant to note that not a single Independent or Republican was appointed to the committee by the commissioners. “Taxation without representation is tyranny and always will be". The men appointed by the commissioners are-all good men, but this isn’t the point. Every person, regardless of politics, will have to repay the money to the federal government in one form or another and therefore is en titled to representation is in the minority. It is a reflection on the Board of Commissioners to put poli­ tics into a matter dealing with the public welfare, if such it is. and er Decially with respect to the spending of taxpayer’s money. It would seem t o t the Commissionerseither doubl­ ed the sincerity of the President or had no respect for his plea for- non­ partisan action with respect to the expenditure of the public funds. “It isn’t a matter of recognizing some political faction or independ ent group of voters, but a matter of recognizing that taxpayers still have some rights regardless of their poli­ tics. A man may never be success­ ful in bis political views but he has civil rights that should not be vir lated. There isbutone w aytodeaI fairly and that is deal fairly. Not to recognize the rights of 2,500 in­ dependent tax payers in Moore coun­ ty with respect to spending their money is a dangerous thing. .If this group should refuse to pay any tax because they had-.no recognition (even minority . recognition). ' the county couldn’t exist one year. “In the words- of a well known Moore' county man.' 'Let’s all honest if we die ;poo.r.’ I ask that the commissioners add at least three more names to the committee, these men to come from some place in the county other than Carthage /’- Borah Is Boomed* -Cleveland, Tuly'g — Daniel Morgau, former ;city-ssanager Cleveland, in an unofficial and un expected move,; put - the; name Good Food of Bygone Days. JJThe machine age in which we are now liviug coupled with numerous other factors is robbing... the rising generation of some of the very best which were enjoyedhy their elders In the past. People in this day and time- de­ pend largely on foods, w all ready to serve by canning and preserving Some of the best foods were placed upon-the tables o fo u r fathers were a good deal of trouble to prepare; and, for that reason, they are slowly and surely becomiogjost from the menus.I- There are numbers of these, good old edibles that could be mentioned all ot which were prepared in -the home-kitchens or back. yards(; in some instances where boiling large quantities of the food lit one Atjme was practiced, but we will mention only, a few which we think will) be pleasantly recalled by some of our readers. - It is very seldom thaffi we Oyen see a quince tree, now and no better preserves were ever made to . our taste than quince preserves although the fruit was good for no other pur- pose. -_ , Goosebetry pie is unsurpassed' to our way of thinking, but it is mighty scarce these days. , ' Water melon rind pickly is too much trouble to make_for the pres­ ent day cooks . to bother with' al­ though it is.. unequal.ed. by things they Calli B ood. A certain kind O f ' peach picxlfealso cotnes in this Same category. Big hotriinv, of lye hominy; was one of the foods which our mothers had prepared ii the back yards; in big boiling pots: It m ay' be bad, now in an inferior quality quality from cans. %: Sauer kraut it still made to some extent in the homes of some sections, but it also is mostly bought in cans and the canned kind is not to be compared to the home made product for goodness. Ginger bread and certain kinds of cookies which used to be cooked in the old time kitchens for the holi­ day season at Chrisimas time have been entirely lost it seems because they require a little extra work and lobor Over a h ot:stove.; We are not at all sorry of our advancing years when we remember wbat we enjoyed that is missed by h e younger people, —Statesville Record. •* 5X- V~i, 9rSWtd town,show. ; Staodjog by. U . ^ Senator William . E r Borah before the “ Republican crusaders” conterencs here -/ as a . Republican presidential candidate qf 1936- T h e R e Q o r d U f ll Liquor Control 4 Tbereisrigbt much being ffiid of liquor control,” aavs Charity and Children. “A number of counties have voted *to give liquor control' of , things. The Younsj Democrats are willing for liquor, to control Nprth Carolina and at Ieffit one candidate ' for Governor has come out for liquor control. There were a1 number of liquor-salestnen in Raleigh last ffieek who were very much interested in jetting liquor control North Caro­ lina Liquoris no novice when it comes to controlling It; has had s lot of experience and;; knowfjust how to do that very thing. ItifCon- trols atnan’s legs and judgment;. It controls a man while driving agcar. It control’s a map’s incoihe andf for­ bids shoes for the children. It ffi. an - adept wben.it comes to politics.-: It has controlled many an election; and put the man of jts choice in office. It knows how to control 'some shefiffs- and police and can make* them stone blind where its inferests are concern­ ed. Liquor does hot object when the simple thiiik they can control it. It is Standintrbv a t this; very !time and winks while people; talk about controlling it fowftknoves full (Well who will control.*-I t is not disturbed . at the most solemn promises oft its °* servants for its knows that none of. them will be kept. It was not at all disturbed when the President o f !the United StatessoIemnIy promised to protect dry States.' In fact that promise brought a chuckle from the controller. Liquor control, .tc®, Uquora cpntiPl8> ; ; . I I I I1 11 „ Ijlj fS; Illi Iiii1; ’> >'.<\ -^ I .JS' I, I iI ' I II tfI'i It , k &4 rf M r illI t'A It fc A TlU j ’i j* ■ J ; tf illt I I if!Sj{fitKfIK I: ^y, THE DAVIE RECORD. C. FRANK STROUD - • Editor. Member Natiooal Farm Grange. TELEPHONE Entered at the Postoffice in Mocks- ville, N. C., as Second-class Mail matter, March 3.1903. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE i I OO % so When the Supreme court gets through with the AAA. our opinion i« that it will look even worse than the NRA did after the said court finished with it. There will be a pretty girl and ugly man contest at the Davie Coun ty Fair this fall The- Record is sponsoring both of these contests, Which should be a big success, as we;have plenty of pretty girls and( lots of ugly men. Men of all ages can enter the contest, and young ladies from 14 to 25 are elegible in the pretty girl contest. The pret­ tiest girl will be awarded $5 , and the second prettiest girl will be awarded $2.50 . The ugliest man will also re ceive $2 50 M. A. Hartman Clerk of the Court, will award the $2.50 to the second prettiest girl, while The Record will award $5 to the prettiest girl and $2.50 to the ugliest man. Get your friends throughout the county interested in these contests. Hon. Clyde R. Hoey1 the Demo cratic candidate, or rather one of the candidates for Governor in 1936 hasn’t told the voters where he stands on the sales tax, or on the liquor question. We know Clyde to be a prohibitionist, but just what he thinks of the sales tax we can’t say. The North Carolina Mer­ chants’ Association say that if it be­ comes necessary they will run a man next year who is opposed to a sales tax, and will fight it to a finish. The name of Dr. Burrus, of High Point, has been mentioned as their candidate. The Doctor was a mem­ ber of the last legislature, and was one of the bitterest opponents of the sales tax. The name of Dr. Ralph McDonald, of Winston-Salem has also been mentioned as a likely candidate for Governor by the foes of the sales tax. Madl Dog Bites Two. A little dog belonging to Guy Collette, of Cana, bit Mr. Collette and also a little colored bov named Smoot, early last week. Mr. Col lette killed the dog and carried it to Raleigh, where it was found to have had a severe case of hydro­ phobia. The dog bit a number of cats and dogs in that section, and 20 dogs and 10 cats have been kill­ ed. A number' of Cana people who were around the mad dog, are taking the Pasteur treatment, to be on the safe side, among them being Guy Collette and little son; J. C. Collette and small daughter; Clyde Boger, and the colored boy, Smoot, who was bitten. Unfavorable Publicity. We don’t exactly know who responsible for it—whether it is the State Department of Health or whether the blame rests with the newspapers and other periodicals of the state (including our own)—but the fact remains that North Caro Iina has received considerable un favorable publicity here and abroad in connection with the infantile paralysis scare. N ow that the number of cases are on the wane, it won’t do any harm to say something about this matter. People living outside of North Carolina have been given the im­ pression that it would be extreme­ ly dangero'us for them to enter within the boundaries of our state. Unquestionably we are losing many thousands of dollars in tourist trade this year because of the publicity which has gone abroad about our health conditions. AU lines of business have suffered to some de­ gree. It is true that a certain amount of publicity has to be given to mat­ ters of this kind, in order that peo­ ple will not take unnecessary chances, but we’ve also got to 'ad­ mit that quite a bit of the publicity in connection with infantile paraly­ sis was entirely unnecessary . and actually harmful.—The State. J S S n . V f f i fefcaO R D . M O C K g T O L X fr 6 - W 4 P Id's d t f i •frtMtitiit Chevrolet Trucks sell at- the world’s lowest prices. Their six- cylinder valve-in-head engines use less gas and oil. And their strong, sturdy construction as­ sures faithful performance, year in and year out, with a minimum of maintenance expense. That is why we say—Itpays 3 ways to buy Chevrolets! See your Chev­ rolet dealer and choose the right Chevrolet Truck fof your de­ livery or haulage needs—today! CHEVROLET M OTOR COMPANY D ETR O IT, M ICHIGAN Compare CAetrolet** low delivered prices tmJ easy G.M.A.C. terms, A General Motor* Value, — Home Chevrolet Co., Inc., Mocksville, N. C. WE ARE 36 YEARS OLD. The Davie Record, with this is sue, begins its 37th year. The pa­ per was founded in 1899 by E. H. Morris, and for the past 36 years has appeared every week. The present editor and owner came here 28 years ago this month and took charge of the paper. We have never come out a day late, with one exception since 1907. We have tried to do everything possible to bnild a bigger aud better town and county during these 28 years. Manychangeshave taken place since we came here. There were no concrete roads, no steel or concrete bridges, no brick school houses, and no automobiles. The town and county have made much progress since The Record made its first appearance. We shall continue to strive to make the world Detter by having passed this way. The many mistakes we make are of the head and not the heart. We ap preciate the loyal support given this paper by the business men and mer­ chants of the town, county, and ad­ joining counties. Without their as sistance we could not publish the paper. To our hundreds of sub­ scribers and to our faithful county correspondents" we also make our best bow. W.e.shall strive to keep The Record going despite New Deals, Huey Longs, Processing Taxes, Sales Taxes and, Legalized Liquor. For more, than 4 2 years Ive have been In the newspaper busi ness and hope to '-be spared many more years. Consistency. ...Two itemB in The Greenville ^ewa on different days last, week attract­ ed attention here. .One was a “ catch 'line” in a display advertisement that - heralded “Grand Opening of Blank’i Saloon.” and the other was headline on page one of Thursday’s: paper that "Liqnor-Storee Are Closed In Interestof Human Life.” Oh, "(may­ be you’ve heard this one before) consistency,'tnou art a jewel.—Ex:. To Cotton Farmers. AU cotton producers i n Davie county who have Certificates (gin tickets) left from 1934, and wish to ( use these Certificates in 1935, should j bring them into the County Agent’s' office on or before Saturday, August - 3. 1935. AU who have not already turned in their 1934 Certificates please do so at once so that they may! be sent to Washington to be cancelled and reissued. Saturday August 3, is, the last day. Birthday Dinner. Farmington News. On July 15th a delightful birthday dinner was set at the home of Mrs. Florence Smoot, Mocksville, Route 4, in honor of her seventy-seventh birth­ day. The table was attractive with many good things to eat. the”center- piece being a beautiful decorated cake. Those enjoying the occasion were: Mrs. Florence Smoot, Mr. And Mrs. J. N. Smoot and children’, Sheriff and Mrs. C. C. Smoot, Miss Marv Ellen Smoot, Mr. and Mrs. June Safriet, John Myers, Mrs John Smoot, Mr. and Mrs. Atlas Smoot, Mr. and Mrs. James Cartner, Smoot Cartner. Mr: and Mrs. Ted Daywalt, Mrs. R. L. Walker, Mrs. Susan Sa­ friet, F. F. Walker, Miss Alice Smoot Junior Cartner. E v e r v one left- wishing Mrs. Smoot many more hap­ py birthdays. Young Democrats Desert Topeka, K as.-The Kansas G- 0 P. opened its arms in welcome to four leadingyoung Democrats who deser­ ted after tongue lashing the national administration and praising th e state’s Republican governor. Alf M. Landon. — The deserters, all members of the state organization of yonng Demo­ crats, gave dissatisfaction With fed­ eral patronage in Kansas and “need­ lessly piled up” debt which “ the young men and young women, even­ tually must pay” as their resons, At the same time friends marked the incident as another :. victory for Landon. democracy’s nemesis i n Kansas, and claimed support for the incipient Landon-for president boom.- i ‘ - Fred Seaton, chairman of the Kansas ' organization’ of yonng - Re­ publicans, quickly grasped the oppor­ tunity to welcome the ; four, who were Clarence E. Williford of Ells­ worth, secretary; Collins C. Caldwell of Dighton, executive committeeman and former president; Jock Charvat of Topeka, publicity chairman and Cene Sullivan of Atchisoju- chairman o f his county’s ;centrat?committeei and a presidential elector'in 1932: The Woman's Missionery Union, of Farmington Baptist Church met last Thursday with Mrs. Jim Groce.Mrs. D. D. Gregory spent several days last week at the bed side of her sister. Mrs. John Riddle who has been quite ill. Mrs. L. M. FurchesspentFriday in Wins­ton-Salem with Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Furcbes. Mr. Furches recently bad an operation on bis nose. Mrs. MelVerine Hendricks Woodlief, of the Mills Home is spending her holidays with her mother, Mrs. M.- J. Hendricks. Mr and. Mrs- A. A. Long and children, of Durham, arrived Sunday to spend some­ time with Mr. Long's father, Mr. C. A. Long. MissNeIlJames returned Sunday from Lake Junealuska where she attended the Epworth League Conference, as a delegate from Farmington League. Farmington ball team dost to Vienna Saturday to a score of 19-12. Miss Leona Graham and Mrs. Melverine H-lWobdIiefwere guests ofDr. and Mrs. Harding in King Friday. LittIeMiss Betty James daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron James, of Mocksville spent last week with her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. J. C. James. . Ourvillage is very proud of the two new homes being built by Miss Margaret Brock and Mr. Ben Smith respectively. There is no improvement in the condi­tion of Mrs. Lizzie Doutbit who is ill-at thb home of her daughter, Mrs. B. C. Tea­gue. Mrs. Mary Howard. . Mrs. Mary. Howard, 98, Davie county’s oldest woman, died at tier home near Bixby Friday night, death resulting from a broken leg, follow­ ed by paralysis. Funeral services were held at Smith Grove Methodist- church Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock conducted by Rev. Hethcox, and the body laid to rest in the church grave-• yard. Surviving is two sons and two daughters, 19 grandchildren, and a- bout 25 great-grandchildren. Mrs.- Howard was Mary Jane Call before marriage. " Put the Jludge J Tte This country may be stope broke but there more mew automobiles on the -highways' of thiS Bection than has ever-been seen'hefore.: ... Where they come from or how; they -are paid foris none of our business, but they are bore just the same, depres­ sion or no’depresslon..—Ex.<< Now Is The Time To Buy Your Needs We have reduced our summer merchandise to sell. W ehave only a few of the many bargains listed in this ad. Come see for your­ self and be convinced. Ladies’ Silk Dresses Your wardrobe is not complete without one of these cool sum­ mer dresses. AU in the newest colors and styles— -. Lester Conley, 'Jake' Mullis and Sana Dysarti three M organtonmen-, werg considerably disturbed in a Marion cafe, Wednesday,- when after they had finished their meal and paid; their check, found that Conley’s hat bad.disappeared from-the rack where: he had hung it. - . : A search was begun for the,cul­ prit. and a stranger who had just' gone out was the onlv possible duel Following the trail, they found that the man was Judge W. F. . Harding, stern Charlotte jurist; who had pick­ ed up Conley’s hat by. mistake^ Ieav- ing his own. The exchange was made .with proper - amenities,. -, and the Morganton men made the ac-.. quaintance of .the judge whom they I j Pad pJaced “du'the spot," .95 Ladies’ House Dresses Beautiful figured prints, ju st’ the thing for this hot weather. Most all sizes— . Men’s Overalls Men’s 220 Denim Overalls. Plenty of pockets. Buy while they are cheap. ’ ; $1.00 Ladies’ Felt Hats Just received a shipment of Ladies Felt Hats in White and Pastel Shades— Silk Hosiery A big. assortment of full fash­ ion silk hose. All shades and good quality— . 59 c Men’s Summer Pants A good assortm ent of Men’s summer Wash Pants, all good styles in- white, stripes -and checks, well made. $1.98 and $2.98 values. Reduced to— $ 1 .49 $0-25 Boys’ Pants A complete line of boys’ sum­ mer pants'. Checks and stripes. Long and Knickers. Real bar­ gains at— Men’s Dress Shirts Men’s full-cut, -fast-color shirts in white and fancy colors. Re­ gular $1.25 value. Special at— Men’s Straw Hats Essman Rain Proof Hats. $3.00 value.- Only a fqw left. While they last— .,: .55 Ladies’ Straw Hats A line-up of summers success­ ful H at fashions. AU shades. $1-00 value. While they last— 50c Men’s White Shoes Men- here are values you can’t afford to miss. White and two tone Shoes, formerly selling at $2.98 and $3.98. While they last— *2.48 Another lot of Men’s Shoes 'th at we have been selling for $2.25 and $2.50 to go at— $1.79 Ladies’ White Shot* All are new styles, straps, ties^ -pumps, oxfords. Gbod values at— $1.69 .99 Children’s Shoes Now js the time to buy Shoes for the children. A complete line to select from— 75c up . Tennis Shoes I lot. of Children’s Tennis Shoes, leather innersole 49c I lot of Men’s Straw Hats, -and 98c values to go at 79c P. L. Pardue Co. ‘•n« Ti. ^ argains For Everybody”The sou*™.* ; Mocksville, N-C- National Topics gKatlonal Press Building Washington.—Back in p united States bee In the Public Debt our go| A fo a n fs anatio w as rge at that time. Itl ,,000,000, but that waj iose days to cause con On the first of July, ry started a new set !presented the beginnj uncial year for the goj the items it had to oks was a public debtl 1.000.000. We of toil a huge debt and wlj red with the ontstand if the federal governml ears ago its magnitude^ When the treasury ear books on June 30 1 ,st of the preceding I overnment it was foil d been expended roud In the same per$ eted through income 1 taxes, including dut: stoms houses, a totl ately 53,800,000,000. the last 12 months [perated with a deficli iyer $3,500,000,000. Id operating costs wer| jle the amount of reve| his deficit together at was created durl onths of the Roosev| on added something to the national d| Ioover while in office ; 1.000.000 to the natiod [eficits in the last twfl ministration. So the, landing phases In the | the federal governn e fiscal year of 193| inly I. There is bred these ,ng can the federal [nue to spend money I ,us increase its publid ng will the American I permit expenditure! nment in excess of ,llects 7 They are related qud n happen without till ems to me that the! Ior taxpayers and votl :e note of the condi| nment’s finances. ,Ir. Roosevelt justil itlays under the nl Uemergeney. He conti • .prosperity returns and tnai, citizens will pay | out complaint and ~ . will be sufficiently la production to whittle I outstanding debt H i iAthls moment an urgJ l-.Amination' of the whq SlfThis is necessary, redit of the United doubt or lose faith! onds, the credit off an be said to be imp! Pf self-respecting pe<f bing to happen. It f !recognized truism Jltates government boj Jts face value, the mcf he rights we exercisl vise become impairq benefit. C areful analysis | finances In the last thal w efFinances A nalyzed c 01Roq ‘erizes as ordinary Te means by that thl regular establishment ind excludes all of iency agencies, of wh iome sixty-odd. ThisI that federal taxes a if Item In governmentT Private business than recovered from deprti rovery has been suffil •otal revenues virtuf ■hose received undei [ministration in the fi| J930. It shows also velt has not reduced! inary running expensl 1Dent as he had plaq came President. I mentioned earliel the public debt now | Ds take another At that time the out! $26,594,000,000. The f charge on that debt! one billion dollars.1 much larger outstanl Dual interest charge! $820,000,000 per yeaiT This seems almosl the answer lies in thl government is payil average_rate of intej all different types c curities outstanding At the present time! Per cent So credit f the treasury for its J In interest rates. I effort was. made to I Dt gradually lower' L did not succeed full! business was demaa , Private business Wli; Uiterest rates. In years private buslnq very little money. « ties and the law of i fc .operated to allow National Topics Interpreted by William Brucfcart I jjallonai Press Building Washington, D. C, m & m RECORD, MOCKSVILLE, N. C. ir Needs Te have only see for your- 1 White Shoes are values you can’t miss. White and two s, formerly selling- at ',I-Jjd $3.98. While they I lot of Men’s Shoes I have been selling for $2.50 to go at— $1.79 White Shoes lew styles, straps, ties, !oxfords. Good values >9 Jdren’s Shoes Ithe time to buy Shoes children. A complete select from— Tennis Shoes of Children’s Tennis !leather innersole 49c Men’s Straw Hats, values to go at 79c Isviltei N-C- i Washington.—Back In 1916 before L United States became Involved (In the World war Public D ebt our government \had M ounts a national debt which w as regarded a s Jirie at that time. It was only $1,- 1000.000, hut that was sufficient In Jlosc days to cause concern. ; 0n the first of July, 1935, the trea­ sury started a new set of books. This ^presented the beginning of a new ' ancial year for the government. One Sf the items It had to enter on those looks was a public debt of about $28,- 0,000.000. We of today think that a huge debt and when It is corn- fared with the outstanding obligations If the federal government a score of tears ago its magnitude seems titanic., > When the treasury closed the fiscal' fear books on June 30 and counted the jost of the preceding 12 months of fovernment It was found that there ad been expended roughly $7,300,000,- In the same period it had col­ lected through income and other forms If taxes, including duties laid at the lustoms houses, a total of approxi­ mately $3,800,000,000. This means that the last 12 months the government Iperated with a deficit of something S3,500,000,000. In other words, i operating costs were virtually dou- |]e the amount of revenue it received. i[his deficit together with the deficit Jiat was created during the earlier juonths of the Koosevelt administra- [ion added something like $8,000,000,- to the national debt. President Eoover while In office added about $4,- 0000,000 tc the national debt through !elicits in the last two years of his fflministration. So there are two out­ standing phases in the financial affairs ff the federal government as it starts Die fiscal year of 1936, which began ITnIy I. There is bred these questions: How can the federal government con- Iinue to spend money like water and bus increase its public debt, and how t will the American people continue permit expenditures by their gov- Irnment In excess of the revenues it Iollectsl They are related questions. Neither ian happen without the other. But it :ems to me that the time has come |or taxpayers and voters generally to he note ot the condition of the gov­ ernment's finances. it. Itoosevelt justifies these heavy htiays under the necessities of an nergency. He contends that when osperity returns and business Is nor- citizens will pay their taxes with- bt complaint and that these taxes till be sufficiently large in their total Iroduction to whittle down the gigantic §ntstanding debt. Hence there is at Sls moment an urgent need for ex­ emption- of the whole tax structure. This Is necessary to maintain the iredit of the United States. If people fioubt or lose faith in government ends, the credit of the government gan be said to be impaired. No nation Pt self-respecting people desires that thing to happen. It has long been a recognized truism that if a United, States government bond was not worth its face value, the money we have and the rights we exercise as citizens like­ wise become impaired in value and benefit. • * • Careful analysis of government finances in the last 12 months shows that federal revenues fin a n ces were sufficient to A n a lyzed c o v e r w h a t Mr. Koosevelt c h a r a C- tenzes as ordinary government costs. He means by that the expenses of the regular establishments of government rand excludes all of the so-called emer­ gency agencies, of which there are now some sixty-odd. This condition reveals that federal taxes are about the only .item In governmental affairs or in Pm ate business that have completely recovered from depression effects. He- covery has been sufficient to make the total revenues virtually the same as those received under the Hoover ad­ ministration in the fiscal year of 1929- it shows also that Mr. Koose- rolt has not reduced the cost of ordi- nary running expenses of the govern- ffleUt as he had planned when he be­ came President. 1 mentioned earlier a.comparison of the public debt now and In 1916. Let us take another date, namely, 1919. At that time the outstanding debt was $20,594,000,000. The annual Interest charge on that debt was just short of one billion dollars. Today with a much larger outstanding debt, the an­ nua! interest charge amounts to only $$20,000,000 per year. This seems almost paradoxical but the answer lies In the interest rate the government is paying. In 1921 the average rate of interest calculated on different types of government se­ curities outstanding was 4.34 per cent. At the present time it is less than 3 Pw cent So credit must be accorded the treasury for its gradual reduction in interest rates. Ten years ago an eUort was made to market securities ut gradually lower interest rates. It id not succeed fully because private usmess was demanding capital and Private business was paying higher rest rateS. In the last five or six .ears private business has called for ery little money. Government securi- ■es and the law of supply and demand ated to allow the treasury to sell Its bonds and notes at much reduced interest On the one hand, therefore, the Roosevelt administration has run up the public debt by about $8,000,000,000 but has succeeded in actually reducing the carrying charge' of this great debt structure by more than $100,000,000 per year." That 13 the situation as of today, .Restoration of business activity and the resultant demand for capital may change the market for treasury bonds almost overnight but the pros­ pects for such business activity are not immediate. • • • One of the interesting things that often occurs in government affairs Is the explosive effect Starts ot a single incident Something or a single remark by. an Important of­ ficial. It Is a Characteristic of chang­ ing conditions and it Is a circumstance which causes Washington observers to be on their toes continuously be­ cause they never can tell when such an Incident will occur. Thus it was the other day that Representative Brewster, Republican, of .Maine, a for­ mer governor of that sthte, arose in his place In the house of representa­ tives and charged that the Rooseveit administration was threatening indi­ vidual members of the house who de­ clined to support the administration view on a particular piece of legisla­ tion. Mr. Brewster named one Thomas- Corcoran as the administration emis­ sary and bearer of the threats. He told of details of the circumstance and in­ formed- the house that the legislation which the administration demanded he should support was the so-called “death sentence” provision in the bill to elimi­ nate utility holding companies. Suf­ fice it to say that Mr. Brewster did not yield. The point of this incident, however, is that immediately there came from many quarters in the house a demand for an investigation of lobbying activi­ ties. There had been many charges theretofore that the public utility cor­ porations were over-running the house with lobbyists in their effort to defeat the “death sentence” section. The real reason back of this sudden outburst, however, lies In dissatisfaction among many members of congress with tactics employed by the Roosevelt administra­ tion. They have taken orders con­ stantly Since March 4, 1933, but ap­ parently they are-no longer going .to obey. So the Investigation of lobbying is to be started by a house committee and it will be broader than just the public utility lobbyist. If the undercurrent of information proves to be correct, administration representatives w ho have frequented <fhe house chambers during consideration of the holding company bill will be placed on the witness stand to tell their story. * • * In the meantime and maybe as a re­ sult of the excitement over the Brew­ ster charge; Senator Look Into Black, an Alabama Lobbying Democrat, sta rte d fireworks in the sen­ ate. He Is prepared to create Investi­ gating machinery in that end of the Capitol to determine what influence the utility lobbyists have exerted. That investigation also wiR go beyond the utility lobbyist phase. It is sched­ uled to dig up dirt on lobbyists for other legislation. Thus far there has been little mention of administration activities around the senate. But, as in the case of the house in­ vestigation, it appears now that the senate investigation has a double pur­ pose. It will be recalled that Senator Black fostered a bill requiring all lobbyists in Washington to register at the Capitol, to show their connection, to show what salaries or other com­ pensation they receive and to make public certain types of correspondence passing between them and the people whom they represent The gossip is that the senator's bill, although it passed the senate without difficulty, will have hard sledding in the house. Senator • Black appears to be proceed­ ing on the theory that the investiga­ tion will create additional atmosphere and public demand for passage of the lobbyist registration measure. Actually, I believe that the Investi­ gation will do no more than ruin repu­ tations of some few people. Such an inquiry will not stop lobbying. It wiU not even curb or reduce lobbying. As long as individuals have property the value of which may be affected one way or the other by federal legislation, just so long will individuals seek to influence their representatives and_sen- ators in congress. It seems to me to be a~ perfectly natural and normal thing, and without defending the slimy type of lobbying and the raw or crook­ ed deals that may come from lojbbying,. the voters have a right to express their views to their representatives. The irony of'the present situation is that undoubtedly there will be no reference-in either investigation to the tremendous activity carried on by the -American Federation .of Labor lobby­ ists or the lobbyists for the American Legion or the lobbyists for certain groups such as the pacifists or the rad­ ical supporters of Russian types of government. Nor is It likely that the correct picture of- administration pres­ sure upon the last two sessions of con­ gress will be disclosed. @ Western IMPROVED' UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY IcHopLLesson 8 Sirr S ? - P- . B - F IT Z W A T E R . D . D „ M em ber o t F a c u lty , M o o dy B ib le _ In s titu te o t C hicasoT . © . W e stern N e n so a p e r U n io n . Lesson for July 28 AMOS LESSON T E X T -A m os 7:7-17. GOLDEN TEXT—But let Judgment run down aa w aters, and righteousness as a mighty Stream --A m os 5:24. TO P IC -A Hero Preacher. JUNIOR TOPICi—When God Needed a Hero. INTERM EDIATE AND SENIOR TOP- I C - Standing tor the Right. ,TO U N G PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP­ IC—God's Plumb Line and Our Social Order. Amoa was a herdsman called o( God to be a prophet. A prophet is one who speaks forth the message of God; He convicts the people of their sins, pleads for them to get right with God. The only effective way to cor­ rect wrong social usage is to bring the people into right relationship with God. ✓ I. The Call of Amos (1.1). He was a herdsman and gatherer of sycamore fruit (7:14). He was . not a prophet by succession, .neither was he trained in the prophetic schools. , II. To Whom Amos Was Sent (1:1). Though he was from Judah, his min- istry was to be primarily to Israel III. Amos' Message. 1. Sins denounced (2:6-8; 6:1-6). A Avaricious greed (2:6-8). (1) Sold the righteous for silver (v. 6). The judge, for a bribe of silver, declared the innocent to be guilty. (2) Sold the poor for a pair of shoes (v. 6). It doubtless referred to the practice of selling into slavery the debtor who could not pay for a pair of shoes which he bad been sold on credit (3) Pants after the dust of the earth (v. 7). So avaricious had these men become that they even grasped after the earth which the downtrodden poor cast upon their head in their mourn­ ing because of their misery. (4) Turned aside the way of the meek (v. 7). These grasping rich men turned aside the meek, that is, those who did not stand Up for their rights. (5) Licentiousness (v. 7). So no­ torious were the immoralities prac­ ticed that they were even guilty of Incestuous prostitution. How ade-. qtmtely this pictures the licentiousness of our present age. b. Reckless security (6:1-3). They closed their eyes to the approaching judgment predicted by the prophet c. Luxury (6:4-6). Their luxury ex­ pressed itself In: (1) Extravagant furniture. They had 1 beds of Ivory, which means, doubtless, wood inlaid with ivory. (2) Laziness (v. 4). Many stretched themselves on their couches, thus liv­ ing lives of indolence. (3) Feasted on delicacies (v. 4). They bought what they desired, re­ gardless of its cost. (4) Adorned their feasts with music (v. 5). They sang idle songs, even in­ venting musical instruments for this purpose. • (5) They drank wine (v. 6). They drank from bowls, indicating excessive drinking. d. They failed to grieve for Joseph. Many are today indulging in luxury, entirely indifferent to the crying needs of others. 2. The remedy proposed (5:4-9). The. prophet called upon them to re­ turn to God. The time to repent is while divine judgment is stayed. In their turning to God they were to re­ nounce: - a. Idolatry (vv. 5, 6). They were to . turn away from the places of idol­ atry—Bethel, Gilgal, and Beer-sheba. b. Seeking to pervert Judgment (v. 7). Turning judgment to wormwood Implies the bitterness of the perver­ sion of judgment to the injured. c. Seeking to dethrone righteous­ ness (vi 7). “Leaving off righteous­ ness” is thought to mean that unright­ eousness was allowed to take its place. IV. Intercedes for the People (7:1-9). The prophet stands here not merely as the proclaimer of judgment, but as the intercessor for the people. V. Opposed by Amaziah the Priest (7:10-17). * I. Message sent to Jeroboam (w. 10, 11). The-1Priest sought to hinder the prophet by informing the king of the judgment which Amos proclaimed. 2. He attempted to silence the prophet (vv. 12, 13). 3. The prophet’s bold reply (w. 14- 17). a. He declared that he had received his commission from God directly (vv. 14, 15). The one who has heard the call of God must be faithful in the declaration of his-message even though opposed by ecclesiastical and political leaders. b. Doom pronounced (vv. 16, 17). He set forth the shame and distress of the Babylonian captivity, which came upon them because of their un­ faithfulness to God. An Overwhelming Thought How could we bear that overwhelm­ ing thought “Thou knowest”—the -thought that there is certainly some­ where, unless also we had the convic­ tion warm at our hearts, “Thou lovest" —the certainty that the deepest cer­ tainty of all is the love of him who or­ ders ,alt—W. Charles. . - : , - Better Thoughts ; A single gentle rain makes the grass many shades greener; so our pros­ pects brighten on the influx of better thoughts. MAKE NO CLAIM PF “SURE” CURES FOR HUMAN ILLS Cau all children be Immunized against infantile paralysis as against diphtheria and smallpox? That Is the question which the-nation’s anx­ ious mothers have been asking of Dr. William H. Park since the di­ rector of New York’s health depart­ ment bureau of laboratories an­ nounced the discovery of a new vac­ cine for the disease. In the Parents’ Magazine, Doctor Park answers with a qualified, “No, not yet.” “To begin with, the process of ob­ taining vaccine is costly and compli­ cated,” explained the doctor. “We can make only from 200 to 300 doses a week In the laboratories of the department of health, and we have not perfected methods of storing It for future use. Of course, If we had more money, we could produce more vaccine. As it is, there is not enough to inoculate every child In the Unit­ ed States. So distribution of the vaccine must necessarily be limited now to those who have actually, been exposed to the disease and to groups of children under five years of age whose reactions can be studied over a course of years.” In addition to cost and complica­ tion, Doctor Park declares that science is hampered In Its efforts towards wholesale immunization by Its own lack of knowledge. “We know that poliomyelitis Is caused by a virus which we believe enters the nervous system, not the blood stream, through the nerves governing our sense of smell v?e think there are ‘carriers’—people who carry this virus from one to another. We believe it is not carried by inse'cts nor 'have we found any Indication of any other source of In­ fection. We know that 80 per cent of the adults are immune.” Five months is the usual duration of an epidemic, and Doctor Park Is hopeful the new vaccine will protect Inoculated children through one siege of the epidemic at least, if not for a lifetime.—Kansas City Star. Bee’s “Sweet Tooth” Though they deal in nectar and honey all their lives, bees do not have as sensitive a “sweet tooth” as human beings, it has been discov­ ered by Prof. Karl von Frisch of Munich. Science Service reported that Pro- sessor Von Frisch had “trained” bees to expect supplies of ordinary cane- sugar solution at a given, place; When thqy became used to visiting it regularly, he cut down the strength of the solution. The lowest concentration the bees' could detect as sweet was about 2 per cent sugar. Human beings get a sweet tasta from sugar solutions only one-fifth that strong.—Literary Digest when you want... good muffins AA-21 PlEASE SEND Mt t t t t SOOK MSOtlSlNG USES OF BAKING SODA ALSO A’SET OF COIOREO BltD CfcJlDS (nuu HM NAMt AW AWU0) ifS f- STAHDk*0 < No need to experim ent when you bake muffins— benefit by the experience of cooking experts who have learned that sour milk with Baking Soda is the leaven­ ing for best results. Tested recipes for a variety of muf­ fins are included in our cook book—send fee cou­ pon for a free copy. When buying Baking Soda, ask for Arm & Hammer or Cow Brand, they are identical in quality and cost—one or fee other is obtainable every- *where for just a few cents, MAIL THE COUPON pours one in G ive Me THAT BALL! QUICK ! LOOK GUT I MADDOG GEEi DIZZY OEANGOSH, YOU SURE KNOCKED JIMINY crickets! OIZZY DEAN GOSH,IT SURE IS WELL, GRAPE-NUTS WILL GIVE IT TO YOU, I’VE PUT GRAPE-NUTS ON MY ALL-STAR TEAM AS AN ENERGY- MAKER AND I RECKON YOU ALL BELONG TO THE DIZ-ZV DEAN WINNERS AND IT SURE TASTES GREAT, DIZZY.!SURE-EVEN OOROTHY HERE!AND WE AIL EAT GRAPE-NUTS — JUST UKE YOU 00 SO-WE CAN HAVE LOTS OF ENERGY I LIKE GRAPE-NUTS E S i — UM I OizzyDean Winnen Membenhip Pin. Solid bronze; with red enam­ eled lettering. Free for I Grape- Nats package-top. In ordetmg, be sore to ask for Prize No; 301* Dizzy DeQnAutographed Portrait* By Baditdcbt sires 8 by 10—with Dizzy's facsimile signature* Free for I GtapeiNats package-top. In ordering, be sure to ask for Frue No* 304. Boys! Girls! Get Valuable Prizes Free! Join the Dizzy Dean W inners... wear the Member­ ship P in ... get Dizzy’s Autographed Portrait! Send top from one 12-oz. yeHow-and-bhie Grape-Nuts package, with your name and address, to Grape-Nuts, Battle Creek, Mich., for membership pin and copy of club manual showing 37 nifty free prizes. And-to have lots of energy, start rat­ ing Grapp-Nuts right away. It has a winning flavor all its own. Economical too, for two tablespoons, with m illr or cream, provide more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal (Offer expires Dec.31,1935-NotgoodinCanada.) Aprodoctot Geserai .Food*. Y ’X fV v^ cb ' ' ' : ^ R E C O R D . TVTOC K SV 1L L E , N . C. m>’H j|lIm is. BRISBANE ■ T H IS W E E K . Big War or Little? LaGuardia’s G-Mea She Took It Seriously Pretty Bluebirds War Is not coming; it is here. It may or may not be a war "setting the world on fire.” Italy had an unpleasant experience in Abys­ sinia In the last century and wishes to repair that It also wishes to keep Japan from gather­ ing in Abyssinia's trade and control­ lin g Abyssinia. Britain' can under­ stand how Italy feels, since Britain found It really fiec-. essary to gather In the Transvaal andArtfcorBrbbane ^ yast areas throughout the world. Italy used to send 500,000 immi­ grants a year to the United States. Now they are shut out They must go somewhere. They would considerably lmprore Abyssinia If they went there. Mayors of others cities will watch Kew York’s Mayor LaGaardIa fighting racketeering and crime in general. Be­ tides training his own police force to shoot straight and “to kill,” Mayor La- Guardia will' get some government “G-men,” if possible, from Washing­ ton, to eome and set the example. If Mayor LaGuardia, who has an honest and energetic police commis­ sioner, cleans up crime in New York, he will deserve a statue next to that of Hercules, who cleaned the Augean EtabIes1 and a bigger statue. Women, before and since Helolse, have taken heart affairs more seriously than men. Margaret Jordan, £n Irish girl, lonely, fell in love with a Mount Vernon, N. T., policeman, because he came from her home town. Be was married, with eight children, and after he had seen the girl for two years he decided that he must reform and see her no more. He told her about this pious resolution as he sSt In his police car, and did not notice that she took bis service revolver from the pocket of the car. He learned what had happened next day when told that the girl had killed herself with his revolver. It was em­ barrassing for a married policeman with eight children. * 'At Fort' George Wright tiny blue­ birds built their nest in the month of a big cannon, and mother bluebird laid four pretty blue eggs. Our kind- hearted heroes at the fort are protect­ ing the nest Sentries do not come too near, cats are discouraged and to the orders of the day Maj. George S. Clark added these kind words, “and keep an eye on those birds.” News Reyiew of Current Events the World Over Lobbying and Virgin Islands Investigations Develop Lively Scraps—House “Rebels” Are Tame Concerning TVA Amendments. B y E D W A R D . W. P I C K A R D © Western Newspaper Union. I In American churches Sunday, Au­ gust 18, will be a day of prayer for peace In Africa and safety for little Ethiopia, which confronts war with powerful Italy. That is the right United States in­ terference in foreign affairs. The prayers will reach their destination, and the Supreme Being to whom they are addressed knows what Is best and has power to arrange matters In Ethio­ pia as he chooses. To pray : “Lord, possessor of on- iilseence and omnipotence, we leave all In your hands,” is right To send a million, young American men, and several thousand million American dollars, to meddle In hot Af­ rica would be wrong. The country will welcome President Boosevelt’s statement that the “four thousand million dollar works relief fond” will actually be-invested in such a way as to increase the nation’s cap­ ital assets. Many times foar thou­ sand million dollars could be spent advantageously, -If It'were really in­ vested in wise, permanent Improve­ ments. A financial letter from London re­ marks, casually, “Credit was plentiful at one-half of . one per cent interest” Americans that cannot borrow any­ thing, on securities once considered good, wonder how the British man­ age. The American government bor­ rows at three and a half per cent, sev­ en times the current English interest rate, money manufactured by itself, and thus adds one hundred per cent to taxes for interest that need not » paid at an. Queer finance, dearly beloved. S t Louis reformers say women should not sit on high stools with their teet on a rail and drink at the bar. And, reformers rejoice to hear, the saloonkeepers say: "Amen." Reformers and saloonkeepers are right The saloon was bad enough before women moved In to make It worse, hitching up their dresses, climb­ ing high stools, readjusting their dresses, or not readjusting them, call­ ing for foolish drinks to show how foolish they could be. The Methodist Federation for Soda] Service, surveying the cotton area, says the AAA, cutting down the cot­ ton crop, has added to the sorrows of the little worker that raises «>t- ton on shares, while enriching the owner of the land. Ton cannot pleasr •verybody. A Else Features Syndicate, In*.WMB Bervlcew ... . FIFTT thousand dollars was appropri­ ated by the bouse for Investigation by the rules committee of lobbying for and against bftls aft'ectlng*titilities Inter­ ests. Representative Rankin of Mississippi declared that Repre­ sentative O’Connor of •New York, chairman of the committee, was unfit to conduct the iBqulry because he was antagonistic to th e administration. O’Connor, rising to- reply, was given an ovation by the house. T. G-Corcoran an(J promised the in­ vestigation would be thorough and Im- . partial. Already the committee had begun its work, the first witness being Repre­ sentative Brewster of Maine, who de­ clared Thomas G. Corcoran, New Deal lawyer, had tried to force him to vote for the “death sentence” provision In the utilities bill by threats o f stop­ ping work on the Passamaquoddy project Corcoran was then put on the stand and denied the main features of Brewster’s story, whereupon the Maine congressman shouted, “You’re a liar." Corcoran explained ,with facility his activities in behalf of the utilities measure. He said he was assigned to help with the original drafting of the bill “through a direct request from the President.’’ Senators Wheeler and Bay- burn, he said, asked him to help bring about passage of the bill. The senate committee on audit and controls reported favorably on a reso­ lution calling for a $50,000 appropria­ tion to investigate lobbying in connec­ tion with all legislation at this session, and the resolution was adopted by the senate. PERHAPS It was the summer heat In Washington; perhaps there was a lot of pressure, from the direction Of the White House. Anyhowr1 the back­ bones of the house Democrats, recent­ ly so stiff against “dictation” by the administration, weakened most notice­ ably when the house took up the re­ drafting of the Tennessee Valley , au­ thority act Nearly all the. recent “rebels” among the Democrats fell Into line and the bill was shorn of every major provision that was objectionable to the President These amendments were approved: To delete a clause saying the TVA must sell power or chemicals at not less than cost after July I, 1937. To let the TVA operate without ab­ solute control by the comptroller gen­ eral over Its expenditures. To delete a section preventing the agency from constructing power lines paralleling existing private ones. To let the authority decide whether private Interests may build dams or appurtenant works on the Tennessee river or tributaries. This victory greatly heartened the administration forces, and they pressed forward to try for another in the conference on the utilities bill. Also In the senate they carried on a deter­ mined fight for the amendments broad­ ening the powers of the AAA. Sena­ tors Borab and Byrd were the chief opponents of the New Dealers In thli latter battle. Q N E of the hottest scraps of the W year developed between Secretary of the Interior Ickes and Senator Tyd- Ings of Maryland over the inquiry, into the administration of Gov. Paul M. Pearson In the Virgin islands. The secretary accused the senator of “white­ washing” a . witness before the Tydings committee; and the senator retorted by advising the secretary to “confine yourself to the duties for which you have been ap­ pointed.” B o th of them were thoroughly angry and .Tyd- Ings In a letter accused Ickes of seek­ ing “cheap publicity.” Federal Judge T. Webber Wilson of the Virgin islands had given testimony that exasperated Ickes and the sec­ retary demanded that the judge be re­ moved from office far “official miscon-. duct” .Then Ickes wrote to Tydings a letter carryIng his charge of “white­ washing” and Baying of the judge’s testimony : “There was no cross-ex­ amination to test his truthfulness, and if any statement ever needed such a test it was-his.” • Judge Wilson had told the commit­ tee that there bad been, “administra­ tive interference” with bis court and that Morris Ernst; counsel for the Civil Liberties union, while a guest of Governor Pearson,: bad threatened to put him “on the spot” In the press unless he- granted a rehearing to a government employee accused of theft Tydlngs accused Secretary Ickes of Vgross deceit upon the American peo­ ple” by stating In an Interior depart­ ment press release that Panl G. Yates, administrative !assistant. of Pearson, had been discharged, when “yon know and I know that Mr.: Yates had re- See’y Ickes signed five days before your press re­ lease was issued.” TO PROVIDE quick employment and end the dole, the entire four-billlon- dollar works-relief fund must be ex­ pended within the next twelve months. Such was the flat statement of Presi­ dent Roosevelt to the state PWA direc­ tors, who were gathered In Washington for a two day. conference. After dis­ cussing the old PWA program, the President said: “You are now- an im­ portant part of an even greater effort- one to be made during the next year which will provide quick employment, so that we can attain, if possible, the goal we have set within this year 1935. Before the year Is ended we will end the dole' we have been paying to em­ ployable persons during the last two yeprs. In other words, we must give useful work to three and one-half mil­ lion people and I believe we are going to do It “In order to do It, of course,. we are faced by a problem of arithmetic which is comparatively simple. We have four billion dollars and three and one-half million people to put to work with it That means we have to av­ erage things up. It means that we have on the average about $1,140 per man year. “That has to include the cost of the material, so that the four billion dol­ lars includes not only the amount we pay the men but also the cost of the material. It is a perfectly simple arithmetical problem—we have to work out an average that will come within the sum of money divided by the num- ber of people we have to put to work. “You know, of course, that we have spent a great deal of money during the last two years, but we find now not only that there are ,additional funds at our disposal but also that the need of permanent work all over the United States is not yet ended. We find that the deeper we go into It the more op­ portunities we have to do constructive work in almost every community in the country.” *V .STANDING atop a cannon,. Benito Mussolini told -15,000 BIaek Shirt volunteers and the world as well that In the matter of Ethiopia “We have de­ cided upon a struggle in which we as a government and a people will not turn back. The decision Is irretrievable.” Unless E m p e ro r Baile Selassie gets right down on his knees to n Duce, the war In bis dominion will begin In Septem- _ ber when the rainy‘ • - George 86a30n ends. No one expects the “king of kings” to submit tamely, so mother nations are advising their nationals In Ethiopia to get out of the country. William Perry George, the American charge d’affaires at Ad­ dis Ababa, was authorized by the State department to advise American citizens to leave, or take whatever other steps he deemed necessary to protect their safety. Mr. George transmitted to the em­ peror the rather curt reply of the American government to his majesty’s appeal for aid In stopping Italy. Sec retary of State Hull, writing by au­ thority of the President, told the em-' peror the United States was “loath to believe” the two countries actually will engage In warfare as they are both signatories of the Kellogg pact The note also pointed' out that the arbitra­ tion proceedings might arrive at a sat­ isfactory decision. The chances that war might be averted by the arbitrators seemed slight Those gentlemen met again at Scheveningen and their session was disrupted by the Italian representa­ tives when a spokesman for Ethiopia set forth the fact that Dalual, scene of the bloody clash last December, is well within the Ethiopian border. Emperor Haile Selassie made an­ other. attempt to get international ac­ tion by calling for a meeting of the League of Nations' council to thresh out the dispute with Italy. At the same time; the emperor appealed to the world for fair play and protested to five European powers against their re­ fusal to permit the shipment of arms and: munitions to Ethiopia; It was said In Geneva the league council prob­ ably would, be-called Into-session with­ in a few weeks. The protest about arms shipments was not likely to do Ethiopia any good. Indeed, it was said Great Britain bad provisionally joined the nations banning such transactions. IKOLA TESLA, famed scientist celebrated his seventy^ninth birth­ day In New York city, by giving out the news of three: astonishing develop­ ments in the sciences. They are: A new method and - apparatus for transmitting mechanical energy over any terrestlal distance. Passage of an: Induction current with a varying flux one way only through a circuit without use of a commutator. Proof, after observation of cosmic rays, .that many of-the propositions of relativity are false. the COMPTROLLER GENERAL M’CAMj doesn’t care where the chips when he starts hewing. He has^ given an opinion that ruins the Pres­ ident’s plan to require bidders on gov­ ernment contracts to bind themselves to abide by any future legislation pro­ viding for minimum wages and maxi- mum hours of labor In employment ot such contracts. A proviso to this ef 'fect was being exacted of bidders. Mr. McCarl holds that the proviso may be viewed as a “request” only 'and a bid could not be rejected h“- cause the person making it refused subscribe to this principle.- The plan was advanced from procurement division of the treasury, which proposed that the government replace the requirement for code com­ pliance on all government bidders, knocked out when the recovery act was'voided by the Supreme court THOUGH the naval treaties of. Washington and London have been abrogated by Japan, this American gov­ ernment still keeps Its eye on the max­ imum permitted for our navy by 194- and Is making a determined effort to reach it much to the delight of the “big navy” men and- to citizens gen­ erally who believe In adequate pre­ paredness. Secretary of the Navy Claude Swan­ son has announced that a ship con­ struction program has been decided upon which calls for the construc­ tion of 12 destroyers and six sub: marines. These are in addition to the 15 destroyers and six submarines for which bids have been advertised and will be opened next month. The airplane building program . Wills for 555 new planes during the current fiscal year. Of these, 282 will be re­ placement planes for those now In service and 273 will be -new craft Two airplane carriers and six cruisers nbw under construction and scheduled for completion In 1937 are to house some of the new planes. FLOODS In several eastern states, following torrential rains, took about three score lives and .did vast property damage. The Finger lakes and Catskill mountain regions In New York suffered most severely. The deaths there numbered forty, and thou­ sands werg“ rendered homeless. Gov. Herbert H. Lehman announced an im­ mediate allocation of $300,000 for use In rehabilitation. "NJ OBODY who knew Bay Long well was surprised to hear that former­ ly famous magazine editor had com­ mitted suicide at bis California home. In late years be had not been very successful In business, his most recent ventures being In the field of scenario writing. He was not one to put up with adversity very long, and It was characteristic of him to take the easy way out, of suicide. ! CRITICS of the President’s program have made up their minds that he is deliberately building up a “crisis” which will provide excuse for a de­ mand for constitutional amendments In the campaign of 1986. Their con­ viction was strengthened by Mr. Roose­ velt’s letter to Congressman Samuel B. Hill, chairman of the Interstate commerce subcommittee^ urging the' passage of the Guffey coal bill regard­ less of doubts as to Its constitution­ ality. ' President Roosevelt followed, the sug­ gestion of Attorney General Cummings that the legislation should be put through congress because “the situa­ tion is so urgent,” and that the ques­ tion of constitutionality should be left up to the courts. The President, admitting that coal mining Is In Itself an Intrastate trans­ action, nevertheless wrote that the final test of the validity of the Guffey bill would depend upon whether pro­ duction conditions directly affect, pro- mote, or obstruct interstate commerce. The Supreme court, In the Schechter NRA' case, quoted a previous opinion that mining, manufacturing, and Qther forms of production were as locai In tlieir character as the production of. crops, and hence beyond the reach oli congress. • THE secretary of the treasury ap­ peared before the house ways and means committee which was trying to formulate the new tax bill wanted by the administration, and declared that, depending on the rates of - taxation adopted, the measure might bring In as much as $1,000,OUO1OOO a year or as little as $118,000,000 annually. As the representative of the administra­ tion, the young secretary declined to advise as to the rates, though the Re­ publican members of the committee tried to pin him down to details. The legislation outlined by the President includes taxation of inheritances and gifts, higher surtaxes on million dollar Incomes and graduated income taxes on corporations.' Senator Charles L. McNary of Ore­ gon, Republican leader, predicted that congress either would recess and £ convene In the fall or would put bfr enactment of the tax bill until Z slon beginning January 3 next. • 0 ° R, I rlSy «st M aWe dlstlnW guished officer In the AmhTT. Maj. Gen. Stuart Heintzelman at the army and navy hospital In n«* » \ ■ Ark. The grandson and gon of**?88 officers. General HeIntzpimJL graduated from West P oIn?? ,SS8 After service In X Phm ™ ^ 1899 China he was sent to France !" server, and when America enfered ^ war be held high staff theHe won the D S. M nnfl -, 8flmSWs . by Prance and I t a ^ t e 3 2 * ™ tlon of the OCC General Heinf was In charge of federal reclim?i«al Mlssourl °°til tast FpT' ruary, when he wan Feb the. Seventh corps wea. co“ m,l,‘a 0 : Let Our Motto Be g o o d h e a l t h BY DR. ItbY D ARNOLDProfessor o£ Bacteriology and Preventive Medicine, University of Illinois, College of Medicine. RABIES Because the so-called dog days are In August many pepple think the dan ger of rabies is greatest In the sum­ mer. But this is not so. The dis­ ease occurs at all seasons of the year; indeed, the cold wlntermontbs seem to increase its viru­ lence. Cases of rabies have d e c r e a s e d most encouragingly since Pasteur, the great Frendi sci­ entist, developed his vaccination treat­ ment against rabies In 1884—a treat­ ment that since has been used through­ out the world, and is known every­ where as the “Pasteur treatment” But there are still too many cases ' of rabies. - In the months of December, January and February of this winter 1,057 persons were reported bitten by dogs in Chicago, alone. Of these, 28 dogs tested for rabies, showed evi­ dences of infection. ' In cities the greatest danger is from stray dogs; in the country districts the danger is from the bites of home dogs that may. have been infected by stray dogs roaming the neighborhood. The infection In rabies is carried In the saliva of the animal or person who has It That was established as early as 1813. It Is a wound infection. One usually gets it through a bite, but if one already has' an open wound and the saliva infected with rabies touches it, one may develop the disease, al­ though not bitten. Bites on the bare skin, therefore, are more dangerous than bites through the clothing for then the cloth may soak up the saliva. Bites on t)ie head and neck are most serious, as the virus travels along the nerves to the brain, and these- parts of the body are' the shortest distance from the brain. I have read stories of children attacked by mad dogs where an older person running to the rescue, and unable to get between the dog and the child, has managed to throw a coat or other heavy cloth over the child’s head, so that the dog’s teeth have sunk into the cloth. Such per­ sons have done the wisest thing pos­ sible In the emergency. Rabies is most common in dogs, al­ though all animals are susceptible. Even birds may get It The mortality rate is practically 100 per cent If the person contracts rabies and the Pas­ teur treatment has not been applied In time. Fortunately the incubation period Is a long one, from two weeks to eight weeks, and sometimes even longer, so there usually Is time for the Pasteur treatment to be effective, if the treat­ ment is not delayed too long. For­ merly there were' only a few cities in: this country where the Pasteur treatment could be given, thns neces­ sitating a long, expensive and anxious trip on the part of an infected person. Now, however, it is not necessary to leave home. Any accredited doctor can administer the treatment When a dog, frothing at the month, is on the loose, snapping at other dogs and at children,. there is usually panic in a community. Mothers ran out snatching their children In; neighbors telephone frantically to each other; If men are at home, they form an emer­ gency committee; the police are called. It Is lucky indeed if someone doesn't nse a gun. Using a gun is decidedly wrong, unless there is no other way of stopping the dog. Every effort should be made to capture the animal alive, for it is tmportant to know whether the dog I is really mad. This is the proper treatment of the dog, according to a bulletin issued by the Illinois department of public health: “The dog should be securely chained or confined In a safe place and provided: with his regular food supply during an observation period of two weeks. Theearly sym ptom sofrabies in a . dog are variable. He may be unusually friendly or may develop a limp In one leg, or his voice may be­ come hoarse and he may appear to have a bone or other foreign object lodged In his throat It is dangerous even to attempt- the examination of sueti an animal, arid be should be ob­ served by a veterinarian. If the dog remains well . and healthy throughout the two . weeks, he may be released and a“y person ..whom he may have bitten need have no fear of rabies resulting from the bite. If, on the other hand, ,Ihe dog.-should manifest; the symptoms of rabies during the observation period, he should be killed so that the head may be detached without mutilation, packed la ice In a double tin-lined container and expressed to the-labora­ tory.” , It .cannot be. shipped parcel ppost States and municipal labora­ tories are equipped to. make this ex­ amination. : 7>'-. A person bitten by ia !dog should go to a physician immediately. He will eleair and dress the ■ wound properly, W the dog is known to be rabid, he will start the anti-rabic treatment at on.?eV Home remedies should never be relied on. <- ][t Is esUmated that there are 40,- 000,000 do g s In this ^oantry; If we embarked on a vigorous campalgn to exterminate the S tra y sl and then would 1^acQlnate ..all pet dogs In infected d& rtcis, we could yirtually stamp out T ab les. ,® /We*tera Newspaper Union. • . NATION BECKftM TO N EW 1 ' In the Civil war Horace Greeley ^ «>! men, -Go West.” *1 who had worn the hi ' 01CJ conflict sought the fr! hope of finding Iire1IhJJJtr ii J going on to fortune i, lllIt l presence which made , . ferent from the S i 1" Fot modern youth tli» ^ a t area Oflandawa^ 6 If a college graduate upon a frontier he ,j B only frontier that is become a social p io * ^ where urgent Probleais taken apart and then * form that shall be koJu? 4 entire nation is „-am„ ^ ments In its vital affairs. ^ These new degree Lu equipped psychological,”11!'1, work that demands attenn '' Ing four formative realized day after daj tfott arrangements good enow,^ past have failed to cot 5 comfort and the security ^ America has boasted. < By slow and painfni „ most able of the joMsp^ ‘ make their way to Theti ByKATHLEE thority. a s the they will apply their Ialejls "; reorganization of the which they will &<. Scientist Claims That NoisesCanBeIDo women make more*.,’ motor cars? ® According to an Am9iaj5H fessor of physics, yes. dence in an action to restajjfcM tory from making an QiJ J amount of noise, he deseriiairejlif ments with a sound metsri^fp had carried out in the district ;: showed that women talking IbjI ' homes made 40 times Boua than the factory, and 50 ptra more noise than passinj cas Apparently women talk Iy in America, for Mperima S this country show “load am tion” as only double the suburban street, and tTOttWit, of a pneumatic drill at Mfeli J tance. But Hie worst noise ot all, me ing to one distinguished seiemia, one we can’t hear. A /eir be J ago he showed Ihe congress oIe - biology bow ultra sound trarfo« ^ burn the fingers of a nan hold^ glass tnbe, although the Uibe L was not heated. He claimed tlfl was possible to lie killed kv > vibrations, which were really SE although they could not be by the naked ear.—London Aisr J e t a iSmor . rotem an Mao!!SS| • LAST LONGER • MADE STRONGER , • GIVE MORE LIGHT SEND for 2 gennin# Coleman Mantles. gasoline pressure lamP them prove th.ttheyai.^'g last longer, give - cost to use. Just th» rijbi “ and weave for longer M Ing service. C o le n u o M a n tle* « «•meed auallty. Ded'”-cSu?iW mend them. The namesarssftsasfcsssj THE COLEMAN LAMP • MOSQUIToe1 inject Pofs0JliiMosqultoesliveonhumaj^ ^ Before she can ora* ' j&Js however, the thin Itby ioiectmgaP0^ , ^ 1 mosquitoes ..IJeiMaiS spread serious * Lriw '',! SICK HEApA<J, Indicate Acid CenJ ChewoneermoreM^ W afers a n d obtain r postage StamPs- * full the _ does - Wafers cola name not or SELECT 4402 22 ------------------ ^ Totvn & State----------— ^ Mf Druggist's Harne it-------" ---------------- Copyrigtit by : WNTJ i The Boston L aw reii fornia a t the begrinJ rush, but the boldin1 have shrunk to a s r Md fam ily home in {wenty-five, is worH works, G ail in the r E dith In the book store. Sam is in schol year-old Ariel is beer P h il i s ' fascinated Ir Ztily Cass, w hose hus her. Toung Van Muri w ealthy fam ily, retuij Gail has visions, throL him, of the turning: I luck. Dick Stebbins, ■ the run of the hous V an for a w eek-end! his uncle and aunt.f coldly. A t a roadhoul a t m idnight. N ext I sbe w as a t the plac! rem orse. A policenl home, announcing thJ killed In an autom olr w as driving- one of bins, w ho has been l. has the case againd Gail suddenly realizj p ic k and not Van. elope; according to . girl. P hll and Lily, m arried and Lily a- dren m ake their hon house. E dith is faU accident fo r which of Lily's children, sponsible. CHAPTER IJ —19 The oil company! trim little station, I paint and fences, od Lawrence place, andl arday afternoons anl the overgrown garde" of the house, choppif shrubs and trees : for light and air. Si| : house that had be forty years; the vines showed on The trees fell wi| the hot January prone across the verbena bushes. Lii into the dining rq downstairs sitting had lain muttering | afternoon. The old I bier than ever In dressing, and yet lt| the great oaks on the garden expose wart beauty, and t<j paths with their roll the tortured I . smooth for a Iawn.| Phil and' Sain ihapplly at the cha !,tumbled ecstatically] oblns, In their ff fires smoked up i^,!; spring air, and thd ‘ upon Lily and Gaf steps of the side eral directions asl H 'vines and the Iopq The heavily way, parted, fell| masses to the grou men got tangled f helped out, with pi “They are happyf ing Phil grow you contented every ble old house, we and within, was paler now than Sh^ der shapeless bod out toward mothej her stubby little - the beys of life foil been ambitious, sq ness way; what the neighbors meaj to ^hiL “They are hap spoil it. Sam w ill| persviile, just a3 always be friend^ I’ll go away, 1*111 too. “But until I go, I happiness. NobodJ suffer, If there’s If Lily had evel did not annoy her f lack o f' culture never thought of | and graces as Passed unnoticed. I movie with Phil, I long, busy day; tl tion in leaving tha for Gall was at lid children adored hq She spent a pasting pictures turning the pages| against her will - Ariel, about tel creature, with riif white sweater, Iq the dog—what wn “Phil, what w a| mongrel we had “Bim?” “Bim.” Pictures taken < place with the rough-headed, lo| twenty, Uttie San bows. Picnic pictures, I quite a little girl eyes glowing undq and In the ging made her. Picturd Papa opening a bs Koihg off bicyclinf ... And Bdith agi again; In her battf apron,-with a big j with her drying b | det3. “I think I could ^ail said some tin < '":■?. '■■'7?•';s“5 -S'^'^iKii .S S iS W S S sS S S -v iS i^ S iS i^ ^ W s^ S P ^ ^ S ^ S ^ S ^ ^ P ^ S S S t RECORD. MOCKSV1l,LE. N. C- TO NEW b the ChH w ir face Greeley WhopeK0li p IS ltl The Lucky Lawrences it 'G° W est-” -ManbVdef ^ l »i 1% I, ."ad worn the ^ « $ diet sought the f ° m tbe Ek!!h'•<«■*.= S., s?' ^ f s OQ to fortune T ^ Z sonce which Oflde , ‘ tnt from the East in csIto Fe never yet been reeoB^8 fo r modern .V0utI1 ,^ 9fed- gat area of Jand avvai>3 «1 t Ieg e SpQduate ae> scWetL In a frontier he nrnJ e ,* thKI Ir frontier that is o p e l ^ i J Some a social Pioneer in ®e " 4 Bere urgent problems “ tbe^ l gen apart and then r» H l Im that shall be wort”/ 1 k J V e nation is waiting jsI P ts in ‘ts vital affairs, jtsI' T Jhese new degree L j lipped psychological^. f S «• | k that demands attemin ““ I four formative v ^ s ^ ^ Il1 day after dav UtatV** Jangements good e a o u ^ N ft have failed to con. "» Iafort and the securiw ?* “* |erica has boasted. *^1 | y slow and painfn, 1st able of the young peo SUe their way to nositin ' | y- A3 the oPPoMMitraV I wiF1 OPPly their talentsT f irgamzation of the „ s H |c h they wni be T unbrb V le Dudley,” to £ e B o!'"3"1'I- Globe. 6 Bost°a S» Sientist Claims That I Noises Can Be „eanh ,t:™ rmake more^ I "according to an American gior of physics, yes. Giving ^ lice in an action to restrain a fac- r Jro“ Qiaking an Ctm yf ioun. oi noise, he described esmrt. guts with a sound meter KliicI1 be Ji carried out in the district Ibea Iwed that women talking In ea Jnes made 40 times tnorettj,- In the factory, and 50 per a ire noise than passing cars Apparently women talk more log). I in America, for experiments b Js country show ''Ioud contersa' Sn'* as only double the noise oi ■ Jiurban street, and two-thirds Ila Ja pneumatic drill at 20 feet dis- | ce. put the worst noise of all, aecorj- to one distinguished scientist Is 1 we can’t hear. A few most" ■ he showed the congress of radio Iiogy how ultra-sound waves eri) Irn the fingers of a man hoIdiiD Iss tube, although the tube ttsd Is not heated. He claimed OatlK-^ Is possible to be killed by tb® »7i| lira tions, which were really sound! B Ihough they could not be percelrei * » I the naked ear.—London Ansnert pgngg. Et A TPMRlBF ,£ man M antlesii ST LONGER ( i l l DE STRONGER V fB MORE LIGHT D for 2 genuine Hieb ^ em an M antles. UsetbemWp ie pressure lamp or ta * « £ , ,rove th at they are made WjP nger, give more h g b t l ^ use. Jnstth e n g S1V S S save for longer and ben«“t , •vice. . k.rtpman Msntlee are alweysfr^■ quality. Bealera aem. The name a28ioet I®**. I mantle protects yo A 0InMWflf Send 10* In stands OfcJ3etyoaTMJ ‘ & " ’£&<!» ©LEMAN LAMP IEHonieOfflM.WlcBiTA.kne-. ^ By KATHLEEN NORRIS C o p y rig h t by Kathleen Norrla WNU Service SYNOPSIS lBfSSil a n d obtain *• ain a foH size 2^g Ott!'!! stage stamps- I bIcOt0I-JSSstf* > I ■me is............... . v 'l The Boston Lawrences came to Cali­ fornia .at the beginning of the gold rush but the holdings of the fam ily haVe shrunk to a small farm , and the oid familv home in Clippersville. Phil, twenty-five, is w orking in the iron works, Gail in the public library and Fdith in the book departm ent of a 5tore Sam is in school, and seventeen- venr-old Ariel is becoming a problem. Phil is fascinated by “th a t terrible*’ IJiv Cass, whose husband, has deserted hVr Young Van Murchison, scion of a wealthy family, returns from Yale, and Gail has visions, through m arriage w ith him, of the turning of the Law rence luck. Dick Stebbins, Phil’s friend, has the run of the house. Gail goes w ith Van for a w eek-end w ith the Chipps, his uncle and aunt. She is received coldly. At a roadhouse Gail sees Ariel, at midnight. Next d a y , Ariel adm its she was at the place, and displays no remorse. A policeman brings Ariel home, announcing th at a child has been killed in an automobile sm ashup. Ariel ■was driving one of the cars. Dick Steb- bins, who has been adm itted to the bar, has'the case against A riel dismissed. Gail suddenly realizes th at she loves Dick and not Van. Stebbins and Ariel elope, according to a note left by the girl. Phil and Lily, now widowed, are married and Lily and her three chil­ dren make their home in the Law rence house. Edith is fatally injured in an accident for w hich little Danny, one of Lily’s children, is innocently re­ sponsible. CHAPTER IX—Continued —19— The oil company began to build a trim little station, all red-and-white paint and fences, on the corner of the Lawrence place, and Phil spent his Sat­ urday afternoons and Sundays clearing the overgrown garden at the other side of the house, chopping down moldy old shrubs and trees starved and cramped tor light and air. Sunshine flooded the house that had been robbed of it for forty years; the rusty marks of the vines showed on the shabby paint The trees fell with long crashes in the hot January sunshine, and lay prone across the pampas grass and verbena bushes. Light streamed oddly into the dining room, and into the downstairs sitting room, where Edith had lain muttering on a chill October afternoon. The old house seemed shab­ bier than ever in this humiliating un­ dressing, and yet it was good to have the great oaks on the western side of the garden exposed In all their stal­ wart beauty, and to obliterate the old paths with their bottle borders, and roll the tortured and raked earth smooth for a lawn. Phil and Sam toiled and sweated happily at the changes; the small boys tumbled ecstatically, Hke1Worm-Aunting robins, In their wake. Great brush fires smoked up into the clear warm spring air, and the ashes sifted softly upon Lily and Gail, who sat on the steps of the side porch and gave gen­ eral directions as to the pruning of vines and the lopping of branches. The heavily massed foliage gave way, parted, fell in great clumsy masses to the ground. Sometimes both men got tangled in it, and had to be helped out, with panting and laughter. ‘‘They are happy,” Gail thought, see­ ing Phil grow younger, simpler, more contented every hour. The disreputa­ ble old house, weather-beaten without and within, was heaven to him. Lily, paler now than she had been, her slen­ der shapeless body already rounding out toward motherhood again, held in her stubby little common WIbser hand the keys of life for Phil. He had never been ambitious, socially or in a busi­ ness way; what other men did, what the neighbors meant, signified nothing to PhiL "They are happy, and I mustn’t spoil it. Sam will marry here In Clip­ persville, just as Phil has, and they’ll always be friends. And when I can I’ll go away, PU find my sort of living, too. “But until I go, I must add to their happiness. Nobody—nobody ought to suffer, if there’s any way out!” it Lily had ever annoyed Gail, she did not annoy her now. Lily’s complete lack of culture was nothing — Gail Dever thought of it. Lily’s little airs and graces as Mrs. Phil Lawrence Passed unnoticed. Lily could go to the iaovie with Phil, at the end of the long, busy day; there was no imposi­ tion in leaving the children with Gail, lor Gail was at home anyway, and the children adored her. She spent a wet March evening Pasting pictures, in her camera book, turning the pages backward, lingering against her will over the little prints! Ariel, about ten, a fairylike little creature, with ringlets. Edith, in her white sweater, laughing and holding the dog—what was liis name? “Phil, what was, the name of that mongrel we had for awhile?” “Bim?" “Bim." Pictures taken out.on the Stanislaus Place with the StebblnseA Dick,, a rough-headed, long-legged fellow of twenty, little Sam all freckles and el­ bows. Picnic pictures, up at the dam. Edith, quite a little girl, laughing, with her eyes glowing under a broad straw hat, and in the gingham Miss Lotty had made her. Pictures with Papa in them: Papa opening a bottle of olives—Papa going off bicycling with Doctor Smith. And Edith again—and again—and again; in her bathing suit; in a kitchen apron, with a big spoon; In her kimono, with her drying hair all over her shoul­ders. ’ _ < “I think I could bear it better, Phil," <>ail said sometimes, “If Edith had had the beauty and sweetness she wanted to—if she hadn’t had to plug to Mul­ ler’s day after day, in her shabby lit­ tle corduroy dress!” “But she was happy, GaiL She was one of the happiest girls I ever knew. If she could just have you—” But this would be too much. Gail must flash from the room, flying, hur­ rying bowed before the storm. On a certain March Sunday Phil asked Gailrathertimidly if she thought it would be a good day to take their luncheon up to the dam. Gail looked up with her perplexed little sniile, bringing her thoughts home, drawing her thick dark brows together for a second. Then her serious face brightened. *’0h, Phil, it’d be a marvelous day for it I” He looked at her as if he had never seen her before, although he gave no sign of finding a change in her. But there was something actually beautiful in Gail's face now, something disci­ plined, spiritualized, something for which Phil this morning found the word “noble.” Somehow he felt a blur over his eyes and a certain dry thick­ ness In his throat, as she began, with all her old readiness and easiness, the familiar preparations. ‘‘Of course you never saw any sandwiches like them, Milesy, because I invented them. When Uncle Sam was only a little boy, he and my sister Ariel . . Stab, stab, stab at her heart Her voice went on. “He and my sister Ariel used to ask for ‘heavenly’ sandwiches, and I used to make them this way—deviled ham, and jelly, and cheese, and anything elSe I had—all together.” Her mild, sweet-tempered look went kindly to the little boy. Her skillful hands went on slicing the big loaf, trimming crusts, pressing the filled halves of the sandwiches together. “See if there are any of those paper napkins on that shelf, Phil.” . She looked up, caught her brother’s gaze. . “What is it, Phil?” “Nothing!” Phil said. If the sight of the shining dam, sur­ rounded by feathery spring greenery, hurt her when she and Phil, Sam, Lily, and the children reached it'at a glow­ ing noontide—if the sight of it hurt her, she gave no sign. Phil noted that her thick dark eyelashes were wet, and her eyes ringed faintly with umber. Busily, efficiently, she set out about the preparing of the luncheon, she and Lily murmuring as they made coffee and toasted little sausages on sharp­ ened sticks. Afterwards the children dug and splashed In the creek, and their elders grouped themselves on the shingle, talking of Clippersville affairs and Clippersville folk. Lily had the peculiar quality, not un­ usual in women of her alert, keen type, of being able to make even the most casual gossip interesting. What she did not herself know about the old families In town, her mother and grandmother did, and Lily had been listening to Ma and Grain all her life. Gail listened fascinated to her sto­ ries. They were never sensationally told, although they dealt with murders, mysteries, feuds, crimes, life, and death. But there was something In the details, in the genera] pictures Lily painted about them, that Gail found inexhaustibly entertaining. “Old Mrs. Peevey,” Lily would re­ count, “always felt that Jim Canna was there the night Belle White was killed—or knew something about it anyway—and she used to go to the courtroom. . . . "Ma had gone over to get a cup of yeast risin’s from Lizzie Gunn . . . “She says ‘Do you s’pose you have a piece of that gray voile in your piece bag, Mis’ Wibser?’ . . . “Ma didn’t have her clothes oft for four nights. She always sets up with the Kogers family when they die. . . . “And old Mrs. Gansey tore her hair —Gram says she just twisted it like it was so much cotton yarn—and she says, ‘It was them boots drug him to his death!’ . . . “They say when Old Man O’Connor was dying he kep’ sorter groping on the bed, and Daisy—she was expecting any minute then—Daisy says, "Do you want your big blackthorn stick, Pa?’ ‘Yes,’ he says, ‘I don’t know where I’m going, Daze, and I’d just as soon’ have my stick in my hand I’ ” ; Just now, when the. waters of her own soul were running, so low, Lily’s stream of conversation had its uses; it soothed Gail, it diverted her from too constant a contemplation of the dark current of her own life. It was all real, all human; Gail was conscious of a little thrill of pleasur­ able anticipation when Lily got into a narrative vein. And of course there was always plenty to talk about in Clippersville. There, was always a fire, an accident, a marriage or divorce to supply inter­ est and to lead the conversation off into countless collateral and connected lines. . . . MToday, there was the astonishing fact of the Wilcox baby to discuss. An eight-pound boy normally bom to la normal and happy mother, and put­ ting on an ounce a day—nobody in Clipparsville could believe it, least of all the happy parents, “He acts,” Gail said, “like a person In a dream.”“Ma and Gram,’’ said Lily, “went over to see the baby because Gram nursed Mrs. Wilcox’s mother for seven years—she was . a paralytic—and she says that Mra Wilcox was crying, and she ast her would she look, at Sterling —what do you know about ,Sterling for a name!—and she says, ‘Shall we call the doctor?’ she says. 'He’s been lying like that for fifteen minutes!’ and Ma says, ‘AU he’s doing is snoring, Louise I’ and honestly,” said Lily, with a pathetic, serious look a t’the others —“honestly I thought my grandmoth­ er would pass quietly out of the pic­ ture, I honestly did!” And when Gail, who laughed so rare­ ly now, would laugh, Lily would'look surprised. But she liked to hear Gail laugh, just the same, and Phil always rewarded his garrulous Uttle wife with a look of gratitude. Today they also had to discuss, as did all Clippersville, the amazing, the sensational bankruptcy of the Murchi­ son Flour mills. Kumor had been play­ ing with this possibility for some time, but Clippersville was as full of rumors as an army, camp, and nobody had tak­ en seriously the idea that the invinci­ ble Murchison fortune might falL But fallen it had, completely, entire-. Iy. The Clippersville mills, the Salinas offices, the New Jersey plant had all passed into other hands, the Chipps’ mansion was for sale, and the Chipps were going to Uve, without a servant, on the Los Gatos ranch and try to make it pay. It was all too bewildering! Why, the mere name Murchison had been one with which to conjure for a generation, and for years everybody had told ev­ erybody else that they had been “coin­ ing” money, that they had “scads,” that they were “made” of it! The Murchisons and the Chipps, with their trips to New York and their fash­ ionable affiliations with San Francisco and Burlingame! This was a tumble for them, sure enough. “They say that Arthpr Murchison could have been sent to jail!” Clippersville said, not without satisfaction. “What d’you suppose will happen to Van, Gall?” “I was thinking. He was working at the New Jersey, plant, the last I heard.” “I thought he was abroad?” “He was—with another boy. Or he was going. Mrs. Chipp told Edith—” A pause. Gail saw Muller’s book de­ partment, and the fashionable, white- gloved Mrs. Chipp pausing to patronize grave little Edith In her corduroy dress. “He’ll have to get to work now I” Phil said, wifh a chuckle. “Every penny he had came from his stepfather,” Gail added, “and if Mr. Murchison really is down and out, Van will have a hard time!” “Prob’ly the best thing that could happen to him!” Lily opined heartless­ ly, They talked of other things, but they always came back to the Murchi­ son failure. The March day. grew very hot at the dam; there was no wind. Lily’s three little boys after lunch crept into the shade near the grown-ups, and laying whining, panting, and fretting, their faces flushed and wet with heat. Dreamily, as if absently, GaiI began, to tell them a story. “Well, once there were three little boys, just the ages of you and Miles and Danny, Wolfe. Their names were Hammy, Jammy, and Sammy—Hammy, Jammy, and Sammy Formaldehyde.” “They were relations of the Immortal family?” asked Phil in the pause, his heart beat quickening. GaiI had fallen to dreaming, with her eyes far away. . “They were—” She roused herself, smiled a littla “They-were Monica’s children.” “Oh, Monica married then?? “Monica married a sewing-machine agent.” 1'Oh?” said Phil. A look of peace came into his klhd, worried eyes. He settled back. “Go ahead!” he said. The hot spring sun beat down upon the sapphire waters of the dam, but where the creek widened and spread at its mouth the shade of the redwoods fell, and there was greenness and coolness. Only the dragonflies were moving in the fragrant March world; there was no cloud in the Italian blue of the sky, no splash of fish In the dam. ,Up on the surrounding ring of the guardian hlUs the lilac was still bloom, ing, in pale blue plumes; the manza- ntta streaked the summits with creamy lines; even the bay trees bore golden tips. A bluejay screamed like a bullei through the air, and was gone. Then silence, and the ripple—ripple—ripple of the water that accentuated the si­ lence once more, and Gail’s slow, rich, hesitating voice beginning the new chronicles of the Formaldehydes. But no Formaldehyde story had ever af­ fected GaII before quite as this one did. This was new. This was creation. The hour marked a change In GalL and she felt it without realizing just what it meant. She knew, vaguely, that everything was different, on this March Sunday—the sky bluer than she had ever known it before, the buttercups more mysteriously golden, every new leaf, every crystal shadow In the dam or flash of diamonds In the creek pen­ etrated with new meaning, with un­ earthly light Phil, In his shabby old clothes, Lily, already a little clumsy and slow In movement,' seemed, to thrill and throb with the cosmic pulse of the whole grea t world, and more than all—more than sky and trees, creek water’ and blossoming spring—GaiI felt herself alive, alive with everything that lived. Gail Lawrence, nearly twenty-seven years old,, tawny-headed, blue-eyed lithe? strong, adequate—feeling, remem­ bering, acting, loving and suffering— was living at last! The miracle of it remained with her as they went home in the late after­ noon; stayed with her illuminating, in­ terpreting, changing all the common­ places of life . into glory. Gail felt dazed with felicity; it must not stop, this penetrating/ poignant sweetness. She knew it would, not stop. She went through ~a week-of floating, of dreaming. TO BE CONTINUED. “It Was Somebodies* Birthday” By JAMES BOSTON €> UcClnre Newspaper Syndicatak WNU Service. JOSEPH WHITING was having a nervous breakdown. It was quite simple, really. -Nerves like guitar strings, a dull “thump-thump” where his heart should be—and then, halluci­ nations! , That had decided the matter. Cold sweats and twanging nerves were one thing—seeing things .that didn’t, and shouldn’t exist, was another. So Joseph Whiting was setting out for a peaceful sojourn, In the wilds of the Canadian Rockies. His doctor had advised sternly that it was “the only thing”—and Joseph Whiting was be­ ginning to feel that “the only thing” wasn’t such a bad thing, after all. He almost felt himself relaxing as he reclined luxuriously in the comfort­ able lobby of one of Toronto’s finest family hotels. The trip from New York seemed really to have rested bim. Languidly he watched the people passing In and out of the revolving front door. He observed with awak­ ening interest the graceful progress of a young girl who swung In gaily with her escort, and watched her until she passed into the sumptuous banquet hall at the other end of the lobby. He noted with a feeling of pleasure and appreciation her tall, graceful figure, her vivacious smile and the delightful quality of her fresh, brunette beauty. He appraised her evening attire ap­ provingly; the striking contrast of red spangled evening dress and red satin slippers against a black velvet eve­ ning wrap. Other immaculately dressed couples entered and strolled into the. banquet room; evidently there was a formal dinner scheduled for the evening. Joseph Whiting turned his head back sleepily toward the revolving door, then started. Another young girl was entering, chatting merrily with her male com­ panion—a young girl, tall, delightfully brunette, and attired In a red span­ gled evening dress, red satin slippers and a black velvet evening wrap. The victim of nerves and hallucina­ tions stared wildly, fixedly, at the beautiful apparition until it disap­ peared into the banquet hall. Grimly trying to keep his nerves under control, Joseph Whiting again turned bis bead toward the revolving door. Two young girls were entering. They were tall, beautifully brunette—and garbed in-red’spangled evening dresses, red satin slippers and black velvet eve­ ning wraps. They were as alike in appearance as two peas, and identical with those other two young girls’ who had just passed into the banquet hall! Joseph Whiting groaned—and col­ lapsed. An elderly gentleman In full eve­ ning dress was brought hurriedly from the banquet room. He asserted bis professional authority by taking the bundle of nerves by the wrist The rest Was routine. “There,” he said finally, as he took off his glasses and surveyed bis rueful patient, “how do you feel now?” Joseph Whiting cast an apprehen­ sive glance toward the revolving door then managed a sickly smile. ' “I guess I’m all right now, doctor,” he mur­ mured, embarrassed. “Thanks for fix­ ing me up—" Suddenly, Joseph Whiting stiffened and jerked erect. He gripped the arms of his chair and turned a wide- eyed stare full on the revolving door. A yonng girl of tall, brunette loveli­ ness was entering with her escort She was attired In a becoming ensemble'of —red spangled evening dress, red satin slippers and a black velvet evening wrap. With a cry, the victim of “thump- thump” sprang to his feet and swooned over a smoking stand. Resignedly the gAod doctor again opened his little black bag. « • *...■* * Some minutes later, Joseph' Whiting ventured to open one eye, then the other. But Vhat he saw caused him to close them with a groan. ' Slowly he opened them again and gazed unbelievingly at the five young girls grouped solicitously, around his chair. He observed, with a sinking feeling, that they were attired in red spangled evening dresses, red satin slippers and black velvet evening wraps. He couldn’t help noticing, too, that they were beautiful, tall and dark —and as maddeningly, unreasoningly alike as five peas! Joseph Whiting felt himself a wreck, and abont to break up. V “You have quite a case of nerves,” commented tbe good doctor. Then, as he observed his patient’s fascinated gaze and-its fair objects,, the doctor paused. ~ “Perhaps you would like to meet the young ladies who helped to bring you to?” he suggested pleasantly. “May I present—Marie,- Annette, Yvonne, Emllie and Cecile Dionne? I am Doctor Dafoe.” . As the five charming “hallucinations” curtsied prettily and smiled at him, their lovely dark eyes soft with con­ cern, Joseph Whiting, nervous wreck, felt something go “thump-thump” in-' side of him. /T m sorry you can’t join us for the party,” eontinUed Doctor Dafoe sym­ pathetically, as lie steered his furious­ ly Vthumplng” patient toward an ele­ vator. ‘Tm sure the girls would be delighted to have you. I suppose you know,” he concluded proudly; ‘!I hat we’re giving them' a grand birthday party tonight—it’s the Quintuplets eighteenth. birthday—!” Has Good Word for Divorce W riter Considers Action Advisable When Marriage Has Proved to Be a “Misdeal” ; Science Service Advanpes Opinion of Interest. By DOROTHY DttNBAR BROMLEY,in the New Y ork Wo rid-Telegram. The divorcee, so says Science Serv­ ice. has more intellectual interests, self-reliance, ambition and tolerance than the happy wife. By the same token—if the scien­ tists know what they’re talking about —the happily married woman is a comparatively immature person, 'al­ though she is sociable and warm hearted and emotionally well-bal­ anced. If you’ve never known anything but happiness In your personal re­ lations, if you’ve never lost anyone you’ve loved, if your children haven’t been a problem, and if you’ve uever heard the wolf scratching at the door, you may still have an alabaster brow without a wrinkle In it. But your character Is likely to have no more distinguishing marks than the trunk of a young sapling that is not yet ringed with growth. It seems to be one of nature's cruel laws that contentment should pre­ clude personality growth. I think of a friend who was unusually happy for the 15 years that her husband lived. He died very suddenly, leaving his af­ fairs In bad order, and the lady of leisure had to train herself overnight to hold a . job. She bad always had a cultivated taste for books. So she progressed from doing secretarial work for writ­ ers to book reviewing and reading for a publishing house. She has nev­ er ceased to regret her husband’s death, and yet shell tell you with a wry face that she's more of a per­ son today than when she was a pas­ sive, sheltered wife. One of the wise things that Sigrid Undset has said Is that there are two kinds of happiness In life—the happiness that another person brings you, and the happiness that you mine for yourself. Her character Ida Eliz­ abeth In her novel of that name ’thought that she had found happi­ ness—after a disappointing marriage —with a strong man who suited her in every particular. , But she could not close her eyes to the fact that he and her two lit­ tle boys clashed temperamentally. In the end her love for her children forced her to turn from the happi­ ness that was ecstasy to a more diffi­ cult search. . I say more power to the woman ,Who accepts her lonely destiny, if she has no honest alternative, and weaves her own pattern. The ultra-rellgl- ous won't admit it, but there’s some- Scientist Claims That Noises Csm Be Deadly Do women make more noise than motor cars? According to an American pro­ fessor of physics, yes. Giving evi­ dence ib an action to restrain a fac­ tory from making an excessive amount of noise, he described experi­ ments with a sound meter which he had carried out in the district These showed that women talking In their, homes made 40 times more noise than the factory, and 50 per cent more noise than passing cars. Apparently women talk more loud­ ly In America, for experiments In this country show “loud conversa­ tion” as only double the noise of a suburban street, and two-thirds that of a pneumatic drill at 20 feet dis­ tance. But the worst noise of all, accord­ ing to one distinguished scientist, is one we can’t hear. A few months ago he showed the congress of radio biology how ultra-sound waves could burn the fingers of a man holding a glass tube, although the tube ltseli was not heated. He claimed that it was possiBle to be killed by these vibrations, which were really sounds, although they could not be perceived by the naked ear.—London Answers. times virtue in divorce. When a man and a woman so ride each oth­ er’s nerves that even the children get jittery, then it’s time they called their marriage a mlsdeaL The unhappy married woman brightens few corners. Science Serv­ ice penetratingly describes her as “inclined to be self-centered, Irrita­ ble, intolerant, neurotic and inde­ cisive.” She commits the unpardon­ able sin of always blaming some one else—usually her husband—for her frustrations and disappointments. She has never waked up to the fact that you must cast bread upon tbe waters before it will come back to you. Maybe the scientists are right, and then maybe they have gotten their curves mixed up. There’s this to be said for the well-adjusted wife, even if she is less self-reliant than the self-supporting divorcee: She sends out happy wave lengths, and ‘hat’a something In these soul-trying time*. B O Y S ! G IR L S ! Kead the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. , Man's Inhumanity Chief menace to man on earth Is still man.—Exchange. puick. Safe Relief ,For Eyes Irritated By Exposure I To Sun. Wind I and Dust — Don’t W alt Too Long He who laughs last—too far last -gets laughed a t BILIOUSNESS KILL ALL FLIES Hseefl anywhere. Daisy H y I guiff* attracts and Ulla flies. I Guaranteed, effective. Neatl I convenient— Cannot spill— I Wfllnot soil or IoJ ure anytliiBR. I lasts Ul season. SOo Mt Ul I dealers. Harold Bomeis, inc., I lfiODeKalbAvewB'klyn^f.Y. I DAI5Y FLY KILLER YWHEN kidneys function badly, and W you suffer backache, dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urina­ tion, getting up at night, swollen feet and ankles,* feel upset and miserable! . . . use Doan's Pills. . Doan's are especially for poorly Woiking kidneys. Millions of boxes are used every year. They are recom- mended by users the country over. .Ask your neighbor! If you have a pimply, blofchyA complexion try ResinolMhelpnalure neal such surfacedefec is. m SPEND YOUR VACATION AT AMERICA'S FINKT BEACH HOTEL Dancel swim, golf, ride horseback fo the musical roar of the sea... ship's lantern's swaying In the salt sea breeze. . . stars above for a roof. .. a moon. This en­chanting setting is not In far off France or Spain... but down In South Carolina* Come live, enioy the carefree life, and the cool refreshing luxury of Ocean Forest. A dining salon of unsurpassed beauty facing the Atlantic. A cuisine of rare excellence. Tea Hour in our new Patio with dancing. Also open evenings. Doherty's Cerebrated Palm Beach Orchestra Beachwear and Gown Shops Indoor Salt Water Swimming Pool Write, Wire, Phone M. B. S312 for Reservations . SAM Jf UTTLEGR££N—-lessees—-JAMES Mk LYNCH f 4’^. y t U f i&i ||ff Ji IJ <j i <5r tM v I*L-JIS hJ> ! I Si! r*sir J 1 lllfi m if 1 Iv I i l|f f fiil' I iP toll; I1 TC;iill 1 « R E C O R D . M O fiK S V IL L E , N- C . Ms Q uaK "BIDS DEFIANCETHE FEATHERHEADS VtfEU--ISTARTeP To TeLU YoU 0 p SOtABTKlKlg I HEAgP WHItF I ViAS ItJ T rie r I -Jw aT 1S ITI BARBeft, r-y YqU G oTjA HAtRCUX/ T O H O T W e a x ijj-VtfHO1S A SfBAtJfiBR?I NOTHltoSO Op IT H ■7/-I --- HOU CAU'T. ?ull •trie' VtooL OVER •we EWes o p A 5AIPHEAPEP MAU I Am NOT A I M/ELL, I HAVE LOOKItJfi STRANfiE H SEBW YoU I VtfAlJT To c r LOOK S CRANfiBR TeLL— • S A Y -1WriATS I-ATTERH !31»IKJTO Yoa 2 NEWS IT ? 1YoU LOOK SfRANfiE- THERE IS I I** B u s in e s s W a n te dBr Ted O'LcaigbltnO Vtrtcni Ktwtftftt VoJwHNNEY OF THE FORCE YlS1 BUT WOBOPV VtfoilLD PARK ENN’/ MORB SO TriEY VtfELL- I TUST DfcOPPEP INTO T H E J SevtfBLER'S THERB 1 b j = = x HAVE MY VltATCri JT-STh/ - THAT -frtRBE ? PIPN1T lT USEP TO BE FIV E ? K oriJ-A T iC K eT FOR PA RK iN frf I REALLY WAS OWLY HERE ABOIiT T e W m in u t e s — -YrIS ! Ol WUR TlST \ CfiOMMA WROlTS A n o te ASKIN' Y ez T BRINfr IT 'ROONP PER T H 'JdDifiB T 1S E E r SR eetiM ss, o f f i c e r // ADMIRINer- MY C A R ? HOW Po iwiNB — _T ai r "PEPO O C EP^TriJOl KNOW APTUSTEP— HE SHOULP BE ABLE Tb VOUCH CoR THE TlMB s a v e s Y ez TfeEE POLLARST H A TZ "ARK/a/g, I HR.- /3,05 ® " r4 .£ 2 3 " r r f l s s ♦ 4» I ™ I-IeaPept. The Big RushMESCAL IKE By S. 1» HUNTLEY DADiSUMMlX J I TDCO VUW NUW BCTTER <s>\T(SOtKJi/0 O ° £ £ r Z & E JEST AMIMUTE,//" w e /: VUWBETTBR. BEAT7f ? V rOkj UKE WlT * TleNERTrHiW CALUKJ WAL WWAX ■ OlMK •OlWKl fT — — C o r& t. K untU yt T ra d * K a rk R e*. V t 8. P at. OfTlo*)CCoorrlsMt 1934 S’MATTER PO P—But Call Him A t The O ld A ddress Tonight By C M. PAYNE y\u T utT RjffTHAT MAW m ap s, M E . H o VVm1 EtfVt IM xx , x •t'He. C o ffu ttV JiT iJ > THa- CATl -Attf I HAO AiBouT IT W m «© "he Bell Syndicate, Inc.) “REG’LAR FELLERS”Bedtime Trouble 0 H * ,I <SVtfAK,T'U SCi=Iiia-TCATt MOW C.OUUP_ YOOE V E -F i. B E Ax M O M M A UOM Ttf=IMVER .’ © The Asociated Newspapers DOwr PetPeeve 0 THE1 WORLD AT ITS WORSTBy M. G. KETTNER By GLUYAS WILLIAMS UM! IT’S PORTY PRY C o p jm g it.' b y T b , B ell Syn 4 ic ite Jbc ) 6 VA (Coprtt&t. w. K tr.>IAMS ’ CH0RF5* TitfF V<)0R WEEK-END 1 > The hot weather brings K(1(j problem every woman ot geaj proportions must cope with-ferj, keep cool and fresh looking Kts wilting days? Well-Lookit; y goes a long way, and pattern 2a, with Its loose, easy cape sleeve, sg treated waistline gives you s nip-1 cool outlook on life. Anil vent \ tering, too, are the graceful folkt the cape that does wonders ioeja) ize proportions. The darts over tt, bust and at the waistline derail contrive to avoid a too-fitted Iwiet the strategical points. Pick i sta- mery printed voile or other te. Pattern 2319 is available la bia 16, 18, 20, 31, 36, 3S, 10, 42,«isi 46. Size 36 takes 3% yards 89 Ini fabric. Illustrated step-by-step ® Ing Instructions included. Send FIFTEEN CESTS (I5c) Ii I coins or stamps (coins preferred I for this pattern. Write plainly naan,! address and style nntnber. BE SEkE I TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Sewing CltcIi j Pattern Department, 243 West Ser-1 enteenth street, New York I CHECKERED CAREEI ■■“You say he’s had a Cbekj- Oflrccr?^ “Yes, he’s been following tit®9 word'puzzles ever since they 03 out In this paper.” Bargain “Do you favor government o® ship?” “Of course,” said Mr. D1 Stax; “if I can dictate tbe Pn5f which the government beys an & hand In financing the deal Diplomacy i( j “It’s best to be agreeable, . Uncle Eben. “De boy dat de teacher a red apple may so quick In his lessons bat ne natural sense.” Q0ile . s - n ^ ^ Il Boss (to office boj) you do with a thousand Pon Office Boy-Lummie, g o * ‘ wasn't expectin’ a Taise--Pf2fi i:;. Weekly. W N U -7 v ^ % C O O t A PAVlE RE( jest Circulation ■vie County News] p y S A R O U N D A-s. Claud Horn spent I Ifriends and relatives I Iarles Walters spenj last, week, with f J Jesville. - ,ss Ruth Booe is the I and Mrs. Frank Ham] jap this week. I C. Foster, of Statesj fwn Thursday mftif Ives and friends Iss Daisy Holthouserj I week with relatives: Jiarlotte and Lancastj B. Bailey is speij Is with his sons, Ihall Bailey, at Folsd Charles Green anl ik e City, S. C , are[ Ir mother, Mrs. M. Iss Lucile Horn willj I for CherryvilIe to j the guest of Miss |. and Mrs. FlakeCaJ kter, Miss Pauline, i Clinton W aid 1 of I the week end at Mj and -Mrs. Floyd little daughter a r| Ial days touring il iina. E. E. H unt f : Bank of Davie |row’s absence. J. Johnson w entj oesday to attend !burial of his ned Son, of W eavervilla , in an autom obilj pmbe county on lgene Haneline, Iil |n d Mrs.-Moody H f to the Stale jtal, at Gastonia, I for several m o| lent-for a broken! ^ftp'and Mrs. LeonaJ “Tgake County, whq mg Mrs. Ballentiu Iind Mrs. W. S. Pa, returned hot ifalker is recovel ke of paralysis, wlj I several weeks ag tie to the epidemic |ysis the annual I duled to be held Ity experiment "fl Jtsville, on A ugul i called off. Manf ilways attend this I ^Record is sorry | isary to cancel it Ess Grace Phelps, Jand Mrs. A. gksville, R. 4 , ha Btion at the Baptisi thomasville. Misi |uate of Meredith! pe Baptist Wometf on Training Schoj f.K y . x. I- J. Cassels and I, both of ValdeseJ ped in marriage TiJ at the Baptist jrch street. Rev. [forming the marrij ! and Mrs. Casse ftely after the ml pey-moon motor tl fton City. Farm For Rent- i in South Calahd I acres, located nej |ool, one mile trot Qy .. Goodcottonl Bhan 8 acre' allotr [tween 30 and 40 aj nty of wood, . ne bottom land. I well water. Ifil fcall on r : W- I[4 . Mocksville, N .l -has. A-. WellmaJ i home iu Salisbur ’‘following an ea l i v in g ishiswidoj |odaughters .Th! I Chestnut [ ttrsday. afternooj |n. was a native of I pn of the late Mr. | fe|im an;buthadlN - ‘ : d e f ia n c e H O t W e a t ; pattern 231a. & "w ^ 4c SG <sw s’- :> \ H e DAVIE RECORD. C 8Tcirculation of Any jvie County Newspaper. Ihot weather brings us to tt, p every woman of geoeflJ I tlons muSt cope with-tartu |ooI and fresh looking oo ^ days! TTell—Looking Cm] long way, and pattern 2319 |s loose, easy cape sleeve, soft Tl waistline gives you a ajgtj Utlook on life. And very fc I too, are the graceful folds d ■ne that does wonders to equal, ^portions. The darts over th« Iirid at the waistline cleverly J-e to avoid a too-fitted loot at lrategical points. Pick a sum. !printed voile or other steer. |ern 2319 is available In sizes ' , 20, 34. 36. SS. 40, 42, 44 and Size 36 takes 354 yards 39 Inet I Illustrated step-by-step sen. fstructions included. FIFTEEN CENTS floe) In I or stamps fcoins preferred) |s pattern. TTriteplainlyname1 Is and style number. BE SDRE Sta te size. Iress orders to Sewing Circle In Department, 243 TVest Sev- |ith street. New Tort M !c h e c k e r e d career Iu say he’s had a|*VP s, be’s been following thecros* puzzles ever since they Can* I tols paper.” Bargraio you favor government off"6'- course,” said Mr. Eustli “if I can dictate the prices1 the government buys and MT I In financing the deal. D iplom acy . |s best to be agreeable, Eben. “De boy dat M t Bacher a red apple may n lick in his lessons but be fai sense.” I Q uite a Surprise Is (to office boy)—TTIiat Bo with a thousand Pou005nf , Bce E o y -Lummie, S0 rS'n-, ft expectin' a raise. :ly. |w s AROUND TOWN. rs. Claud Horn spent last week friends and relatives in Raligh ,JjarIes Walters spent several rS last week with friends at goresville. iss Ruth Booe is the guest of and Mrs. Frank Hanes at Roar- Gap this week. C. Foster, of Statesville, was Iown Thursday mingling with fives and friends iss Daisy Holthouser is spend a week with relatives and friends barlotte and Lancaster. B. Bailey is spending two' ,Jis with his sons, Robert and Irshall Bailey, at Folsom, Pa. rs. Charles Green and children. rake City, S. C , are the guests ier mother, Mrs. M. D. Brown. iss Lucile Horn will leave this fc for Cherryville to spend ten ■s the guest of Miss Vera Black r. and Mrs. Flake Campbell and ghter, Miss Pauline, of this city, Clinton Ward, of Clemmons, Inttheweek end at Myrtle Beach Sc. ;r. and Mrs. Floyd Tutterow little daughter are spending jral days touring in Western rohna. E. E. Hunt is assisting ;be Bank of Davie during Mr. ftterotv’s absence. f, Johnson went to Lenoir idnesday to attend the funeral burial of his nephew, Roy mson, of Weaverville1 who was [led in an automobile wreck in Incombe county on Monday the ;b. [Eugene Haneline, little son of and Mrs. Moody Haneline, was tried to the Stale Orthopaedic lspltal, at Gastonia, where he will iain for several months taking itment- for a broken bone in his le. Ir. and Mrs. Leonard Ballentiue, BWake County, who have been piling Mrs. Ballentine’s parents, ■HI. and Mrs. W. S. Walker, near TBppa, returned home Monday a. Walker is recovering froin a Soke of paralysis which he Suf- Ied several weeks ago. Due to the epidemic of infantile §ralysis the annual Field Day heduled to be held at the Iredell aunty experiment -farm, near |atesville, on August 22nd, has §en called off. Many Davie peo- ; always attend this big event, and |te Record is sorry that it was cessary to cancel it this year. jlliss Grace Phelps, daughter of M |r. and Mrs. A. W. Phelps, of SoeksvTile, R. 4 , has accepted a Igisition at the Baptist- Orphanage, I Tbomasville. Miss Phelps is a Jaduate of Meredith College and ] the Baptist Women’s Missionary gnion Training School, -in Louis-, file, Ky. - I £ J. Cassels and Miss-Elsie Bur- N , both cf Valdese1 N. C , were. B1Uted in marriage Thursday morn- I1K at the Baptist parsonage on Wch street. Rev. E. W. Turner ^rfortning the marriage ceremony. Fr. and Mrs. Cassels left imme-- Stately after the marriage for a !0Uey-Uioon motor trip to ‘Wash- FKton City, Farm For Rent—The Walker fcrm m South Calahaln, containing |75 acres, located near church and cbool, one mile Irom Dayie Aca­ demy. Good cotton and gram farm Juhan 8 acre allotment for cotton Between 30 and 40 acres open land Tlenty of wood, pasturage, etc Jl0me bottom land. . Good house ?nd well water. If interested write Pt call on W. S. WALKER 4- Mocksville, N. C. ' • , ~ Cbas. A. Wellman, 56; died at bis home in Salisbury last Wednes daI following an extended illness, burvivmg is his widow; oneson and I wo daughters. The body was laid |lo rest in Chestnut . Hill cemetery Thursday afternoon. Mr. Well Dan was a native of Davie. county, f c - °f the late Mr. and Mrs. J.-.M- I Wellman, but had lived in Salisbury Ifor many years. EfflB DAVlE SSC6&B. Mdfm W H M , If. 0. JVlv Miss Hazel Baity spent- Thurs-: day in Winston-Salem shopping. Mrs, S. A. Hardmg is spending some time with.relatives at Norfolk,' Va... ’ ' Dr. T. T. Watkins, of Clem mons, was in town Thursday shak­ ing hands with friends. Miss Sarah Johnson, of Moores- ville, was the week-end guest of Miss Helen Faye Holtbouser. Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Tutterow spent a few days last week on a pleasure trip to Roaring Gap./■ Mr. and Mrs. K. L. Cobler and children spent seveiai days last week in town, guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. A Wagoner. Mrs. O. Wr File, of High Point, and Miss Mattie Stroud, of States­ ville, were week end guests-6f Mr-. and Mrs C. F. Stroud. Mrs. Gurney Foster, is taking: treatment at the Baptist Hospital, WinstonSalem -H er friends wish for her a speedy -recovery. A number of MocksviUe attorneys spent Saturday in Newland; county seat of Avery, attending a meeting of the State Bar Association. Walter Etchison, who is in the aviation business at Cleveland, Ohio is spending some time with his father, J. W. Etchisou, at Cana, Mrs. G G. Daniel and daught er Miss Pauline, spent last week in Statesville with Mrs. Daniel’s par­ ents, Mr. and.Mrs. James Fowlei. Mrs.-Russell Bessent underwent an operation for goitre at Davis Hospital, Statesville, last Thurs­ day morning, and is getting along nicely. - , J N. Smoot, o f near -Gounty Line, B F. Foster and son. of aear Kappa, and W. R Hutchens, of Pino section, were Mocksville visit­ ors Thursday. AU persons interested in-cleaning off Chestnut Grove graveyard meet there Friday morning, be raining this Friday meet there a weekTrom-Fiiday. See William PowelL and Ginger Rogers in “ Star of Midnight” , at PrlncessTheatre Friday and Satur­ day and Jack Holt in “Strangers All” Monday and Tuesday. Misses Beatrice Seamon, of Lex Mocksville Picnic Can1 celled. - Mocl(sville Masonic Lodge, in ses­ sion Friday night, determined to can­ cel tlra annual Masonic picnic at Cle­ ment Grove thieyear.uponreeom - mendation of public ■ health officials of Davie and in the Piedmont area.1 The picnic bad been-scheduled to be „ on Thursday, AuguBt 8 Can­ cellation is in co-operation. with health authorities in their effort to curb infantile paralysis-in the state, as well as to aid in keeping Piedmont area as free as possible from infec­tion. . m - . Pd account of infantile paralysis in ad­joining counties the MocfcsviIle- Masonic Picnic will.not be held this year ; We have been sending from $1,500 OO to $2,000.00 dollars each year to Oxford Or-: pbanage. This money is sorely needed by them and OiiJr contribution wiil be sorely missed. We are sure there are many friends in- tered in this Orphanaile and would be glad to contribute directly as they will not be able to do so through the picnic. . If you have this cause iat heart will yon not'mail to the undersigned a liberal check made payable to Oxford Orphahge: and' it will he forwarded promptly J B. JOHNSTONE, Chm. Mocfcsville Matqnic Picnic Com. Mrs, R. L. Snoffer, of Boonville, is ther guest of her unde, Mt. D L. Pardue. -: Mrs. W F. Robinson, is spend ing this week with relatives and friends at Rock Hill, S C. ' . A. Spillman, who lives beyond the growing town of Farmington, was a business visitor here last Friday. - • ■ The large number of our subscri bers who have been renewing- their subscriptions at the Masonic picnic; are urged to mail us their renewals, as there will be no . picnic this year. We thank you in advance.: -Monday was one.of. the rainiest days this section has experienced since eaTly last spring, More than an inch of. rain fell during, fhe day. The rain started: f allin j; about 5 a. m , and continued most of the day. The farmers and gardners were re joicing over the fine showers. Mr. and Mrs. W. L- Call of this city, and daughter, Mrs. Melvin If it should j Gillespie of Brevard went to Ciiiri- mock Sunday morning ,to visit Mr. and Mrs. Call’s daugbte r; Mrs. J. F. Adcock. Mr. Call ret urned home Sunday night, and Mis. ' Call" and daughter are expected home today. Home Coming Day 'will be-ob- served at Oak Grove next Sunday. Rev. R G- McClamroch will preach at 11:00 a- m. Picnic dinner will BIG JULY BARGAIN SALEl ********* I Big reductions in every department. Take this opportunity to buy| the many things you will need for your vacation. Selectyour needs now at prices you can afford to pay. Ourstore| is filled with GREAT VALUES in summer merchandise. Ladies’ Dr esses SUMMER DRESSES Nice assortment. of Sum­ mer Dresses to go at— $2.95 to $9.50 HOUSE DRESSES Adorable “at home” flocks Smart S treet' - 'styles I Misses and Women’s sizes 89c $1.08 $1.98 Men’s Clothing Great Values BUY NOW! Don’t consider that just a slo­ gan . . . it is 'an expression that should be heeded if you would enjoy savings. The sav- mgs'- are not just in our prices, but also in anticipation of higher prices on the way. White Pants, Shirts, Ties, Etc. for the Masonic Picnic needs. All Summer Greatly Reduced . , J T- nr . be held on the grounds at noon. Aington, and Frances' Maulden, of . , . in J L lillp OrofframwiH fSlplp Spencer, are spending thjs week guests of relatives and friends on R- 4- ■ ' Mr. and Mrs. James , Hawkins leftlast week for Boston, as mem­ bers of the North Carolina Press Association, which is meetingpn a boat cruise irom Norfolk to Boston." Rev. J. H. Fulghum arrived home Fndavnightnightfrom Rome, Ga , where he spent nearly two weeks assisting in a revival meeting at the West Rome Baptist church. Mr. Fulghum reports a fine meeting. The Crazy Tobacco Tags who play dailv over Radio Station W PTF, Raleigh, will present a musical program at the Mocksville court house, Tuesday night, July 30th, at 8 o’clock, sponsored by Oak Grove Methodist church, Ad mission 15 and 25 cen ts............. W- H- Horne.'.ol Garwood, Texas is spending some time with relatives and fnendsm and around Farmmg- to n -' Mr. Horne left Farmington 47 years ago, and located in Mar­ shalltown, Iowa. He went from there to Texas 27 years ago, where he has lived since. This is bis first visit to his old home county, since IQOO- H ew illrem ainintbecounty until after the Masonic picnic. Mrs IJov Walker and. son Roy, Jr., went u / Winton Salem- Satur­ day where t h e y will make, their home- Mr. Walker has a position with Taylor- Bros. Grocery Co. and has been living :n the Twln City for some time.- The Record is sorry to lose Mr. and Mrs. Walker and son, but wish ,them well in their new home. ,I The famous Keys Q uadruplets, of Hollis, Okla.. will give a must:, cal program in the Western AvMtie Baptist church, Statesville, Wed nesday night, July 24, 8 0 0 -p m No admission will be charged, but a free will offering will be taken, to, help defray their college expenses They each play Saxophones, give musical readings and sing. These sisters are in college at Baylor Uni versity, Waco1Texas, __ ^ ^ ^ , varied, and: interesting programwill be given in the afternoon. Revival services are being held at Oak Grove this week, with- the,- pastor, M. G. Ervin, doing the ,preaching. AU friends and former residents of the community ,are {invited to all the services, but especially to The Home Coming. : J. B. Brenegar James B. Brenegar. 78, -died at his home near Fork Church Isst- Tuesday night, following an, ex tended illness of heart trouble Funeral services were conducted by T. I. Caudell atN oe Creek Baptist church Thursday morning at 11 o’clock; and the body laid to rest In the church - cemetery. Surv v- ing Mr. Brenegar: is- three daught­ ers, Mrs. P. Sr Young, of this city, Mrs- Albert Holder, Mocksville. R 3 , and Mrs. Glenn Miller, of Jackson Springsi One brother, H. T. Brenegar, of this:city, also sui- vives Mr- Brenegar was a- native of Davie, and spent his entire Iile in the county. To the bereaved ones. The Record extends sympa­ thy. ........ mil nm intm i mill Itl IimmtBfl KillThe Weevil : For A Small Investment You ■ Gan Give-Your Small Grain - Complete Protection Against Weevils and .Worms. Ask Us For - Information , and-Prices. - Let Ui Serve You* LeGt anti’s Pbarmacy - O nT heS quare.' Phone 21 Moekavjlle, N. C. Great Hosiery Values Full-fashionedPure Silk and -Hosiery— 50c to $1.00 CHILDREN’S ANKLETS IOc to 25c SHOES SHOES With summer only half gone and vaca­ tion still ahead of many, here is an op­ portunity to buy the smartest of Summer Shoes at prices you will appreciate. Buy now! C. C “Everything for Everybody Mocksville, N, C. Dsvifk Cnillltv Slinilav ariOfternoOnandnightseasion. Be- vavie L-ouniy ounuay | tween the morning. and afternoon School Convention. The DavieGounty Sunday School Convention will be held -in Maca- donia Moravian Church on Sunday, July 28, 1935. This is the annual County Sunday School Convention and is especially planned for all those interested in the Sunday Schools of all den'ominations. The program as Scheduled for"this year calls for a three-session convention beginning at 9:45 arm., and continuing through sessions there will be a fellowship dinner on the grounds, and everyone is asked to bring a basket lunch. A Big Cucumber. R. V.-Alexander, of Cooleeraee1 knows" how to garden as well as knowing the textile business. He was In town Saturday and left us a cucumber that weighed 3 pounds and 3 ounces, 15 inches long and 11 inches in circumference. If anybody in Davie can beat this, please advise us. Sample Suits. Just received a big line of-dry goods samples, consisting of women’s summer dresses 79c. up, underwear, hosiery, box, etc, also men’s summer suits $2 50 up. A complete line of high grade samples at a price that will delight you. Come and look them over. Flour $3.15 and up Feed $1.90 Cotton Seed Meat r: $1'75 Salt $1 10 Salt. 5c package . . 3c Salt Fish ' 5ic Ib Crackers1IIb -12c Grackers, 3 Ib 3Sc Pink.Salmon, 2 caans 25c Herrihgs,:3 cans 25c Coffee,’bulk , : IOclb IIbKennypackages- - ISc Rice Ib - 5c and up Large Laundry Soap,. 7 cakes . :25c AU Oil Cloth, yd 23c 9x12-Straw Rqgs . $339 25 Straw Hats, $1.00- - $1.50 value, each 50c EeIt Hats, each : - 70c up I havethe biggest assortment-of Shoes I have ever had and my price is right. Come in and look them over.- Assorted colors for men, wo­ men and children. V For mowers, rakes, disc; antL sec tion.harrow.-see m^-Tdr. prices. *1 handlethe^Massey-Harrialine. Just received’a large shipment of plow. casting and my price is right. See Our Line Of Farm Machinery -Yoiirs For Bargains DR. P.H. MASON . . . Dentist SANFORD BUILDING Phone 110 Mocksville, N C. Administrator’s Notice. HaviDg qualified as administrator ot the estate of Gaither Wood, "deceased-late of Davie County. North "Carolina, notice is hereby given all persons having claims a gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before July 16.1936. or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. AU persons indebted to safd es­ tate. are requested~to make immediate payment. Ihfs July 15. 1935.M. BRANSON, Admr.Gaitber Wood, Dec’dr B. C. BRO.CK, Atty- The Record is $1 per year. J. cFrank Hendrix Penn Lance Quality Our Penn Lance, IOO^ Pure Pennsylvania Motor Oii Was Tested Last Week In Mocksville By The Atlantic Refining Company On A Break Down Test Machine For Film Strength. ' In Other Words How Much Pressure Would PENN LANCE Stand Up Under And.Not Score Or Burn Out-A Bearing. - Of all the Oils Tested, including many Nationally known brands ' some selling at twice the price per gallon as Penn Lance, only one brand stood more than Penn Lqnce and the pext best oil failed at - 2000 pounds per square inch less pressure than Penn Lance Motor Oil. Penn Lance Stood A Pressure Equal To. About 20 Times Ai Much As It WouldHave To Stand In Normal Use. When YouBuy - PENN LANCE You B uy Quality *Qil And You Have A Factor Of Safety Of 20 £0 I. Let Us Give You The Facts. Quality- Products At Reasonable Prices. r v - - IiiTrrraTy^w Horn Service Station ' Vulcanizing and Complete Glass Service Mocksville, N. C. * j* mmN 'i _ l | f p f fH E DAVIE RECORD, I Ef ■ ‘ m in- Vi I j I ; Cotton Acreage Is Small Washington, July 8 — Estimat­ ing that 29,166.000 acres of cotton were in cultivation on July 1, the department of agriculture- .said to­ day that with the exception of 1934 this was the smallest July I acre­ age reported since 1905. The current total was said to be an increase of 46 per cent over -July I, 1934, but 28 6 per cent less than the average acreage - for the five year period, 1929 33. Figuring on the basis of the 1930 census there are now approximately 47,000,000 people in the United States 18 years old or over who are able to work. ______ Trading at home is the best way to take care of your own business. Ascertain where self-interest; at; tacks the average man and you have him labelled,; -Notice Of Re-Sale! - Under and by virture of the pow­ ers vested in me as Administrator with the Will Annexed of T. C. Sheets deceased, said will having been pro bated and being recorded in the Bockof Wills in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court in Mocks­ ville, N. C.. in Book 3, at Page 246, the undersigned Administrator will offer for re-sale to-the highest bid­ der, for cash, on the premises, at the late residence of T. C. Sheets, de­ ceased, about I mile south of Bixby. Davie County, North Carolina, on Saturday, Julv 27th. 1835, at 2 o’clock p. m.. the following described real property, viz: PirstTract: Beginning at a red oak in D S. Tuckers line and run­ ning North 76 poles to a stone; thence N. 46 poles to a stone; thence N. 77 deg. West 40 poles to a stone; thence South 85 degs. W. 113 poles to a stone; thence.S. 26 poles and 12 links to £ stone; thence W. 36 poles to a stone;-thence South 81 poles to a pine; thence East to the beginning, containing 142 acres, more or less. Second Tract: Bounded on the North and West by H. E. Robertson, on the East by John Snider, on the South by Jacob Cornatzer, beginning at the Public Road, thence W 123 poles to a stone, thence South 57 poles to a black oak bush, thence E 30 degs. N. 135 poles to a stone at the Public Road, tbence North 12 poles to the beginning, containing 13 acres, more or less.First Tract—Bidding on this tract will start at $2782:50, being the in­ creased bid. Second Tract—The bidding on this tract will start at $165.00. This the IOth day of July, 1935. N, D. SHEETS, Admr. C. T. A. _ of T; C. Sheets, Dec’d. Jacob Stewart, Attorney. Administrator’s; Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of George F. Feezor, deceased, late of Forsyth County, North Carolina, this is to notity all persons having c airns against the said estate to present them to the undersigned at 610 Reynolds Build­ ing, Winston-Salem, N. C.. on or be­ fore the 29th day of May, 1936, or this notice will be'pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt­ ed to said estate, will please make immediate payment. This 29th day of May, 1935. - ESTATES ADMINISTRATION. Inc Admr. of George F. Feezor, Dec’d Intelligent Americans support the public schools; they are not - perfect but they are making progress. ! Executrix's Notice. Having qualified as executrix of the last will and testament of B. L. Carter, deceased, late of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina, notice-is hereby given all persons holding claims a- gainst the said estate, to present them to the undersigned on - or be­ fore May 11th. 1936, or this notice will be plead ih bar of tbeir recovery! All persons indebted to said estate, are requested to make immediate payment. This May Uth, 1935. MRS. ALICE B. CARTER, Exrx. of B. L. Carter, Dec’d. JACOB STEWART. Atty. • IDavie County I Before Tbe Clerk. Mary Dismake Mayberry and Betty Dismuke Allen vs John Dismuke, Samuel Dismuke, Lillian Dismuke. Lizzie Dismuke, and J- Irving Fulton, Executor of the Estate of Adam Dismuke Notice Of Re-Sale. ■ UnderIand bv virtue, of authority, conferred upon the undersigned Commissioner by the terms of a cer­ tain judgment entered by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie Coun­ ty pn the 27th day-pf May, 1935, and pursuant to an order of re-sale' en­ tered on the IOth day of July, 1935. by. the said Clerk of the Superior Cqtirt, the undersigned will offer for re-sale, at the Courthouse door, of Davie County, in the City of Mocks ville, on July 30, 1935; at 12:30 o’clock p. m., the following descri­ bed property, to-wit: “Adjoining the land of Caleb Bow­ den on the North (now Lou .Smith and Alice Spillman); Luckett Etchi- son on the East (now B. W. Allen); Albert Phelps on the South (now John Long) and Mary Ann Beau­ champ on the West (now C. M. Fost­ er) containing 25 acres,- more or less.” The above described property is located in Farmington Township, fronting on the. hard surface road leading from Mocksville to Winston- Salem. Bidding to Btart at $199.10. This July 11. 1935. ARCHIE ELLEDGE, Commissioner. ELLEDGE & WELLS, Attorneys. OR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST" Anderson Building MocksviUe, N. C Office 5tt • Phone - Residence 37 Iiirnimrnrniir -TiTminm iiiiniIMMIiiiiT Notice To Creditors! Havind qualified as Administratoroftbe estate of W. S. Guffy deceased notice is hereby given to all persons bolding claims ■afltdnat the agate*.of said deceased.to pre ''S R the sar^^SpeH y venfieSf^&rHhe ’ undersigned, .-Cleveland, Norrh ,Carolina Route 2, on or before: the 9th day5ofi.-July, 1936 or this notice will be pleaded in-- bar of recovery... AU persons indebted to-said estate will please call and make proper settlement. This the 9th day of Jnly 1935, J. R. GUFFY, Adm’r. .. of W. S. Guffy, decs'd, A. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrator's Notice. Havingqualified as Administrator of Mary-Jones, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of June, 1936, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. AU persons indebted to said - estate will please call and settle without delay. This the 24th day of June, 1935. G.F.CORNAZTEK, Admrr of Mary Jones, decs’d. A. T, GRANT, Atty. NOTICE! - Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d. no­ tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against the estate of said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of any recovery. ;AU persons indebted to said estate please call on the undersigned and make prompt settlement.This the 28th day of June, 1935.BEULAH APPERSON, Admrx. of George Hendrix. Decs'd. By A. T. GRANT, Atty. Administrators Notice IsT hereby .-given tta t the undersigned haa qualified as admin­istrator of J. A.’H ^ e . deceased. AU nersons having claims against the es­ tate of the said deceased; will pre­sent them to the undersigned an or before the 29th day of June. 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in' bar tf their recovery; - All persons indebt­ ed to said estate will; please make immediate settlement. This 29th day of June, 1935. ' . W T.-S. MYERS, Administrator ’ of J A. Hege, deceased. KOBERT S. McNEILL. Attorney. 66 LiQUlb-TABLETS SALVE-NOSE ^ DROPS . checks MALARIA .in 3 days COLDS first Jay. — TONICandLAXATIVE Land posters for sale. rKu SSSfi . M. C. Cain. 0. L. Harkey; Lattie Harkey, Lula Reavis, Mary Ecta Hamilton, Mildred C. Thorn­ ton, Mattie Sprinkle. Mag­ gie Martin, Lena Cranfill, Hattie Barron, ‘ VB - M. C. Fowler. Gideon Fowler,; Gly.de Austin, LouiBe Fowler, Kenneth Fowler, Nellie Olive,. Connelly Windsor, Gilmer Windsor, Kate Thomasson, Morolson Windsor and Howell Windsor. Notice of Publication. The defendants, Gideon Fowler, Kenneth Fowler; Gilmer Windsor and Hewell Windsw above named, will take notice that an action enti­ tled as above has ; been commenced in the Superior Gourt of Davie coun­ ty, North Carolina, asking for a salt for partition of the IandB of R. L Cain located in. Davie and Onslow counties, said action being for the partition of said lands by sale there of for the purpose of division; and the said defendants will further take notice that they and each o f' them are required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, within ten days from the 3rd day of July, 1935, before M. A. Hartman; Clerk of Superior Court, and answer or demurr-to the complaint or pe­ tition in said action or the plaintiffs will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the; complaint. This tho 8th day of June, 1935. M. A. HARTMAN. Clerk of Superior Court. North Carolina ( , „ „Davie County ( In Superior Court M. G. Cam. 0. L. Harkey, Lattie Harkey, Lula Reavis. Mary Etta Hamilton, Mildred C. Thornton Mattie Sprinkle, Maggie Mar­ tin, Leona Cranfill, Hattie ' Barron vs M. C. Fowler. Gideon Fowler, Clyde Austin, Louise Fowler. Kenneth Fowler, Nellie Olive, Connelly Windsur, Kate Thomasson, Morrison Windsor and Hoyvell Windsor. Notice of Publication. Connelly Windsor, one of the de­ fendants above named, will take no­ tice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court of. Davie County, North Caro­ lina, asking for-the saleTor partition of the lands of R. L. Cain, located in Davie and Onslow counties. North Carolina; said action being for the partition of said lands by a sale thereof for the purpose of division; and the Baid defendant will- further take notice that he iB reqmred to ap­ pear at the court house, at the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County, Mocksville. North Car­ olina, not later than ten days after the 17th day of July; 19§5f the same being the last publicatiouof this no­ tice. before M. A ;H artm an, Clerk of Superior CoujJ, and .answer or demurr to the cbmplaint or - petition in this cause, or the - plaintiffsy will apply to the-court-for.further relief demanded in the complaint. - This June 19, 1935 * M. A. HARTMAN./ Clerk of Superior Court. I NO T ICE! The Law Requires Me To Garnshiee The Wages Of Persons Who Have Not Paid Their Poll Taxes, 81 And To Levy On Personal Property And Real Estate For Other Unpaid Twees. So, Pay Your 1934 County And State Taxes -NOW And Avoid This Additional Cost. All Real Estate Will Be Advertised In August If Tax Is , Not Paid On Same. CHARLES C. SMOOT, Sheriff. DAVIE CAFE •’On The Square” Mocksville, N. C. Next To Postoffice And Just As Reliable ' Regular Meals . -. . . .' 35c Ice Cream. Soft Drinks, Short Orders, Every-Homv P. K. M AN O S , Prop. E LUCK % Kathleen Norris C WaCbfHfttq/Ur fy Jtatikc : NOTICE! Having qualified as Executor of the last will and testament of Tempie C. Baggarly notice is hereby' given to all persona bold­ ing claims against the estate of said de­ ceased to present the same, properly veri- fifed on or before the 4th day of May. 1936, Orthianotice Willbe plead in bar of re­covery. All personsindebtedtosaid es­ tate will pldase call uoon the undersigned to make settlement. This May 4th, 1935.P; R. WOOTEN. Exr. of " Tempie C. BaggarIy Bv A. T. GRANT. Atty. voiBie or miss Jennie B Ii ""“tots, ed late of Davie county «5 notice is hereby given l\\ rt^ c3 claims against IbVaaVLp^ nsthem to the undersigned fa! April i, 1936. or this notio. 011 01 “ bar.of ‘»eir recovery. W debted to said estate, are pe^ i I^L ie935nmedir eHpanymew Tk^ M i s s j 'e o m e ^ ^ n n - BROCK, Atty? e^Dsq V O LU M N X X X l BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO mocksville, N c ' BEST IN SUPPlies — — — - - uu4^waaiBl, CAMPBELL - WALKER FUNERAL HOME !aMBULANGE ^ O B lia J Telephone 48 Main Street Next To Methodist Church Travel anywhere on . any day 11i the SOUTHERN for I T lc Per Mile • * 2c Per- Mile * 2Jc Per Mile' * 3c ' Per Mile A Fare For Every Purse . . . ! ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICms . ' . . for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 15 Dan for Each Mile Traveled. ROUND TRIP TICKEH1S-Return Limit 6 Montki .. . for Each Mile Traveled. ' ONE WAY TICKETS . for Each Mile Traveled * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper ' charges for space occupied. No surcharge. Economize by leaving your Automobile at home and using the Sontkei ExceIlentDiningCarService Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel. R, H. GRAHAM, Div. Pass. Agent . . . Charlotte, N.C Southern Railway System n e vie A Delightful Love Stery of Two Sisters Bead this new story 6 0 m the.pen o£ £ Amerxea s best-loved woman TOiters-Kart1I- Norris. She tells ,a UveIy and m o v in g of the fortunes of an interesting £am i£ “ THE LUCKY LAWRENCES" will In this paper. Po not m the Is The Oldest, Largest and Most Widely Read Paper In Davie County. The Price Is Only $1.00 Per Year. - •» Send A Year's Subscription To Your Relatives Who Live In Distant Counties Gr States. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home County THE DAVIE RECORD Carries A Number Of Features That You Will Not Find In Any Other Paper In This County. The Recprd is prepared to print yolir short notice.r wm NEWS OF IJ W hat Wk. Happen TheD av. of Auton H<l(Davie Record1I Mlss Edith Swid friends in Yadkinj The Masonic pifl at Clement Grovel Mrs. G. A. Alll ville, is visiting tc[ Mrs. W. A. Kejj visiting the famil{ Misses Maggie.: are visiting relatid Mr. Harrelson ! Yates’ place as ag Mrs. M. I. Mc3 is visiting relative] the county. Siii Waltz, col wood work on J.J store, is spending! home in Boonvillfi An at home paj Hardison and Mr last Friday eve| tary to Miss Jone Douthit, was an 1 Two young lad of Chapel, were : gro near J. Lee week as they wq the road in a bu escaped; Miss Lewis, ofj been visiting herj Early, returned urday. Some one ha| through the wind Tcbpat church, and quested to piiblis fing to the guilj ■ caught,'they will the full extent o| Rev. E L- Church, returne from Irede’l,; w| holding a meetirj Rev. S. D Swaij Reeds Baptist ch L M. Hege store house at Mrs. F. M Cl and Mrs. R. Lee county, have bej their sick motheT at Fork Church| Mr. and Mrs spent Sunday a | and Mrs. M. A.I Henry Faircld Crouse, Lutherj Miss Clara, J. Mamier-Hege, sister Miss Pearl section, attended at Mocksville Tl The body - ofj who died at CoJ rest in Fork Ch| Wednesday. Re: ducting the funl The Holinessl a big meeting a| this week.. J. B. Whitl Hickoryr who relatives near home last weekl ^Mr. and MrsJ Winston, are s(j with Mr. and' on Rm . Leo Brock, oj leave Tuesday he will enter lege. The new roll| gun operation Mrs. Marvinl Point/ is spend! Mrs.;E. Frost, | R- W. Woo Va.,. is spendid his. family at C | The Winston mqt at the church last wed ■ers and delegatl •* A. C. Cornafl ,.other Advance! spending some Springs in thl health. m m m m m BimstraWs Iring. qualified as adminiBttatot.. M I of Miss Jennie B. HoweRJM Ite of Davie county, Noitli (W 1T I is hereby given ail persons CM Si against the said estate, t0 *»3/ Sto the undersigned on or (?) ll , 1936, or this notice will he I of their recovery. Ail PetsJ l M to said estate, are reques.3 *l I immediate payment. 'IW„, W - G.H. GRAHAM, I Miss Jennie B. HoweU Iwi I I. BROCK. Atty- , * BEST IN RABIOS iOUNG RADIO CO. mocksville.n.c. B EST IN SUPPLIES . any day ? K N for I f PERMILE Jt r ip c o a c h tickets -Iile Traveled. „-Return Limit 15 Dajs Bile Traveled. !-Return Limit 6 Months Iile Traveled. Jile Traveled . payment of proper I No surcharge. iome and using the Southen Service of Train Travel. Charlotte, N. C, System jldest, Most |d Paper 'ounty. Only fiption To Your In Distant They Will sklyNews Home County !ECORD If Features !Find In Any iis County. id to print y0^ ■ ■■ ■ - ■ *- OSTAL ItECEIPfS SHOW THE RECOKD CiStCt/LSTlON THfe LARGEST IN THE COUNTY. THEY DON'T LIE. itteiie "HERE SHALL THE PRESS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN: UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN." VOLUMN X X X V II; NEWS OF LONG AGO. Whst Wa* Happening In Davie Before Tbe Day* of Automobile* and Rolled Hoae. (Davie Record, Aug. 2, 19061 Mlss Edith Swicegood is visiting friends m Yadkin. The Masonic picnic will be held at Clement Grove, Aug. 9th. Mrs. G. A. Allison, of Tkoinar- ville, is visiting relatives here. Mrs W- A. Kerr, of Hickory, is visiting the family of E. L. Griffin Misses Maggie.and Martha Call are visiting relatives at Elkm. Mr. Harrelson has taken J. A. Yates’ place as agent at the depot. Mrs. M. I. McMahan, of Saluda, is visiting relatives and friends in the county. Sid Waltz, contractor for the wood work on J. T. Baity’s new store, is spending a few days at his home in Boonville. An at home party given by Miss Hardison and Mrs. E. H. Morris last Friday evening, complimen­ tary to Miss Jones and Miss Celia Douthit1 was an enjoyable affair. Two young ladies by the name of Chapel, were assaulted by a ne­ gro near J. Lee Kurfees’ store last week as they were driving along the road in a buggy. The negro escaped. Miss Lewis, of Georgia, who has been visiting her aunt-' Mrs. P. S. Early, returned to her home Sat­ urday. ■ - v Some one has been shooting through the windows of the Epis­ copal church, "and-we -have-been re­ quested to publish a note of warn­ ing to the guilty parties that if caught/they will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Rev. E L. Weston, of ’ Fork Church, returned home Saturday from Irede'l, where he -has been holding a meeting. He is helping Rev. S. D Swaim in a meeting at Reeds Baptist church this week. L. M. Hege is building a new store house at Fork Church. Mrs. F. M Carter, of Salisbury, and Mrs. R. Lee Kinder, of Iredell county, have been at the bedside of their sick mothei, Mrs. J. B. Smith at Fork Church. Mr. and Mrs W. H . LeGrand spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Foster at Ephesus. Henry Faircloth and Miss Della Crouse, Luther Crouse and sister. Miss Clara, J. T. Angell and Miss Mamie Hege, Charlie Hege and sister Miss Pearl,-all of the • Fulton section, attended the Eaptist picnic at Mocksville Thursday: The body ,- of Gaston Orrender, who died at Cooleemee/ was laid to rest in Fork Church, graveyard last Wednesday, Rev. Mr. Adams con­ ducting the funeral services. The Holiness people are holding a big meeting at North ' Cooleemee this week. - J. B. Whitley and family, of Hickory, w ho.have been visiting relatives near Jericho,, returned home last week. - - ■ Mr. and Mrs. Milton Wilson, of Winston, are spending a" few days with Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Kurfees. on R. 1. .- Leo Brock; of Farmington, will leave Tuesday for. Raleigh, where he will enter King’s Business -Col lege. --- The new roller mill at Cana be­ gun operation last week. Mrs. Marvin Andrews, of High Foint, is spending some time with Mrs. E. Frost, at Cana. R W. Woodward, of Roanoke, Va., is spending some time, with his..family a t-Caua.- The Winston DiStnct Conference met at the Advance • Methodist church la$t week. About 65 preach­ ers and delegates were present. A. C. Cornatzer, T. J. -Elhs :■ and other Advance- citizens- -have - been spending some tim e/fat: -Moore’s Springs in the interest of their health. MOCKSVILLE, NORTH CARqLINA1 WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1935 NUMBER 2 Pleads Business Be Given A Chance. (From Concord ■ Tribune (Demo cratic ) The Herald-Tribune is. one of New York City’s staunch Republi­ can newspapers, but just the same we can/give serious thought to its re cent critical statistical analysis of the results of tbi administration’s effort to reduce unemployment, fig­ ures which indicate that in the last xSmonthsthenumber ol unemploy­ ed,'instead of haying decreased, .has actually increased. For this reason The Herald-Trib une believes that the nation was luckier than many may have be­ lieved in the overthrow of the NRA by the laud’s highest court, ‘ It was in November, 1933, when the New Deal measures were just beginning to take effect, the paper points out, that Mr. Roosevelt an­ nounced his plan for reducing un­ employment by four millions. Since that date more than five billion dol­ lars have been speiit by the federal government for relief work and more than nine billions (including th? former slim) -for * ‘relief and re­ construction.” However, at - the end of October 1933, unemployment as estimated by the: National in ­ dustrial Conference Board- was. 9,- 645.000. while the latest figures, for the end of-May, 1 9 3 5 , from the same sources; place unemployment at 9,-j 711.000. The figures mean,' comments. Th?. Herald Tribune that the effprtUo reduce ^unemployment by- four -mil­ lion has been a complete failure. "Furthermore, the expenditure of billions of dollars, much of which was intended to speed up employ­ ment, has - failed completely to achieve that promised objective. True, it has-Helped keep these un­ employed in food and shelter. Tha however, is a pallative,-not a rem edy; However desirable on humane grounds', if haruot speeded up re­ covery.” . In searching for an answer to this situation, th e New York paper cites comments of Dean Donham of the Harvard Business School to the ef­ fect that the NRA prolonged the de­ pression; The H erald-T ribune thinks it is the combination of “ re strictive experiments called the New Deal” that has "prolonged the de­ pression.” since "business men throughout the country have been handicapped'and repressed by in­ cessant governmental interference and by the ever-present fear of new oppressive measures dictated by pbl itical expediency.” And that, it feels, is why business recovery, has been slow and why unemployment has hot-decreased. - Even if we accept these figures and these arguments as efforts of a Diased opponent of the New Deal to M ite out" a " c a s e ” against the ^obseveTt administration Vhf thought occurs that the record but serves to emphasize- the principle that we shall have td look to busi- ne.s initiative and the force of in­ dividual enterprise to really brmg about a restoration of more, nearly normal.economic conditions. ^ And we should not overan:: Other fact,'as The GreenviUe News suggests. "Even granting that all-pf the New Deal policies did slow down somewhat the u n d e rly in g movement to recovery they were beneficial -In ^ b io m n g thishock of neresgy readjustments which, without such measures, would have worked great; hardship uponmtUionsof cttmensin vle w of the unusual severity of th? d But haven’t we reached the point haveL-fjih' Steatu 1 shouldn’t-the g p v e ^ ^ ^ ^ W ic tiv h ;a n d ^ re p m ssix e g ^ ||; treatment we are getting* strike, but we^ve-Rot^no, r i ^ |j |o blow up: the company.’s'propS^^*^ :e.lgtions? What’s The Matter? . A correspondent-of a city news­ paper unburdens his dmind: as foj lows: W hat’s the matter? To me, a man who wears overalls six days a week, it looks like too many- peoj pie have quit work because they can’t get big wages. Too many people riding around in automo­ biles -with nowhere to go.- Tbo much politics. Too-manv budgets out of balance. Too much mon­ keying with private business up >at Washington. Too much? rtotoiis spending of-: money from: county/ state and federal government', -Too. .-piany fool laws. - Taxes -too - high--: Government dabbling;./w ith - ioo many too many things .they have no business, Too much talks/aj bout*changing the constitutiony tfae backbone of this greaf^ation.; Under our form of- govirnmehi^ founded on our const it Ut ion, any body .that has the backbone: to; face; the music can go to/ the top, biitf$ t the government keeps on dabbling] with little business; hampering some and catering to - big : busiijeSsv Ignoring the Sherman law - as jour present congress (of rubber stamp) has been doing, the young man h|.s got a hard row tohoe.'/--. Another thing, you can'frTunia government one sided. Capital cagl.t have all the say neither. can::;ldb^r5, (From The Yellow‘Jacket.) Apparently and without a doubt we've gone quite a few paced ahead of the "horse and biiggy stage,” so lamentable to President .Roosevelt. It seems that Roosevelt’s royal' pre­ decessor and paternal founder of the Democratic party was not so horse- shy as Roosevelt, if we wish to keep history straight and recall. For we ,know: that when Thomas Jefferson, patron saint of Democracyj went to Washington to be inaugurat­ ed PresidentLbe rode- into town on bis horse, tossed the reins across the gatepost and walked over to the capKj tol to be'Sworn in. A. peep-eye-view of. the present ‘'Legislative Appropriations” -bill to take care of some of the '’convenien­ ces of the Senators alone (see Con­ gressional Record of May BI, if yon doubt) reveals (among other similar, things) that it now requires 3 female attendants at $1.500 00 per year Each j to maintain the tidiness of the wo men’s toilet rooms of the Senate (there is but one woman in the Senate; remember): and another 3 Iadiesat a similar salary ' to take care of the self-same Senate. That’s a j lot of money for what it’s spent.; in fact the total paid these ladies’ maidB toeafer to a sihg’le 'sister Senator’s callers and company, far exceeds what Thomas Jefferson received aSPresidentofthe U. S. A. in bis time. But that’s not a drop in the bucket compared with the additional-outlays for the convenience, comfort, et cetera of our serene Senators. An armv of flunkies, clerks, door­ keepers,-assistant dpor keepers and ! assistants to the assistant door-keep­ ers called for $254,868.00 appropria­ tion in ONE SINGLE ITEM—and there are as many more of like na­ ture as Heinz has pickles, you under- stand. ., ^ - Evidently- Jeffersonian simplicity has not kept pace with Jeffersonian. Democracy, 1935.Washington model, Senate and White Hofise style/ No Thank You. London— The British .Cabinet,; Stanley. Baldwin/ presiding-rejected: the snggestwmof DavufiLlo^&Geor-. ge that the Empire follow-the lead; of PresidentRposevelfrin socialiekis:. Iation and appropriate amilhon and aquarterdollara fo ra landancicoal and public works project,/ . The National Guard Associatiomof the U m ^ -States has set as its goal ih;IS37jaA trehgthp^ Local Legislation Affect­ ing pavie. Continuing a practice inaugurat ed in 1933 The Institute/of Govern ment’presents herewith, for the con­ venience of local officials. and the press, a summary of local laws af­ fecting Davie County, its cries/ towns, subdivisions and citizens Of course, many general laws also affect the .County, but space does not permit them to be summarized here.- A summary of these general State wide laws will be found in the : May -. June issue of Popular Government? The Institute’s ma gazine: In this summary for the [.Cpunty, only local laws, and gen- eral laws’from, which the County !specifically excepted, are men' fioned. No attempt is made to cpver bills which were introduced biitincyer became law. V Chapter 327, Public Laws, re- Oealsithe .absentee ballot;.laws in Dayie-county in primaries and elec- tipnsi pf local and county officials; ttiembers of the House of Repre- 'sentatiyes and on local and county propositions except for State and iFedetaj employees. Public School teachers and persons .in the naval and militaryjservice. Those voting absentee-are required to use Certi 5cate ,‘AJ’iiand the Chapter pro vides the; manner in which such ballots shall be used. The Chap­ ter provides That no < absentee bal- lots shall be Issued after sundown 'on’lastiFriday before primary or > VTanUmen1 day/of primary or election ; and fqr poll books to show those voting ab­ sentee ballots. : The Chapter also provides that there shall - be no officials markers, but a member of the voter’s immediate family, or a registrar or judge when requested, may aid voter. Election hours are fixed at from 7:00 a. m., to 5:40 p. th., Eastern Standard Time. Chapter 123. Publjc-Local Laws, increases the annual salary of the deputy sheriff from $800 to $1200, but requires the deputy to own and operate his own car , Chapter 280. Public-Local Laws, after reciting tbat C- V. Miller Suf fered a cracked skull while attempt­ ing to prevent the escape of pri­ soners. - ■ -V Chapter 105, .,Public Laws, changes the dale of'a civil term of Superior.Court from 4 th Mondavi in May, to the i 2_th Monday after 1st Monday in March. . / Chapter 445, Public Local Laws, exempts certain described property of Thomas W. Rich in Mqcksvllle, from County and town taxes so long'as same is used for a public park and playground. The Chap­ ter makes it a misdemeanor, punish­ able by fine of $5 to $50. or 30 days, to trespass upon or willfully injure said property, and authorizes the keeper to arrest persons who vio: late this or otlmr.State laws while on the park property. Chapter. 295, Public Laws, ap­ points the following Justices of the Peareior six years terms, by towh- shis:- CaIahaIn r-R. S. Powell, Geo. Tutterow and W. M. Seaford; Clarksville—Ra'ph Ratlege, Robeit Smoot, J. F. Essex; Moeksville— Walter Call, Armitte Sheek. T. I. CaudelI; Farmington—Ze.b. Cooke-, Sam David Smith. Wilt - Alien-- and Charlie Ward; Shady Grove-W .; T. Foster. J. H. Shutt and Char­ lie Vogler; Fulton- Nailor Foster,• Alex Tucker - and M. A. .Foster;' Jerusalem—H. D. Deadmon, Char­ lie Lefler and J C iJell ^ t;. —Chapter/ 296/ PU^ic/'Laws/ ap­ points J . B. Johnstone;; I. P. - Gra­ ham and Geoi Evans members of tHS County: Board - of 'Education; ait for two years. 5A sidefrom the laws mentioneda- bove, Davie County was excepted lfrom tiie provisions of threvjgenet- No Extra Session. It is impossible to vision from this angle any-good, sound reason for an extra- Ieglslabve session.- Ever since the legislativure -adjourned there has been a- clamor, formerly vociferous that an extra session be called- "to get us out of this liquor mess -” In the-main the extra ses sion insisters are those who favor what they call “ liquor control.” They would Bave all the counties In the State given the privilege ,of the 17 counties that were given the authority to vote on 'the establish of liquor stores. It is impossible to understand the insistence in view of S tuation. - Nobody can say whether t ie legislators would pass an act of that sort if they were reassembled Nobody knows whether -the Su preme court will declare the present act unconstitutional. • Governor Ehringhaus is deter mined not to call an extra session, which everybody should know would be-an unnecessary extra ex­ pense. The Supreme court will be siying by Christmas whether the ciunties.that have voted for and have set up liquor stores are witbiD the constitution . and" the law. If they are not the counties will return to'their former status. An extra legislative session wouldn’ t repeal the local law under the circumstan­ ces. . If it is the purpose to extend the- local bptlqu arrangemenf to. all the counties common sence suggests that it .be left alone until the Su preme court has passed on it. So zealous are the extra sessionists that latterly they have a u p ^ rt^ demand for legislation On the "liquor mess’.’ with what they say is the need' for laws to conform to the national pen- act—old age and unemployment pensions That will. wait. There There is no immediate urgency in any case. Unless something new develops there is no real need for an extra session and Governor Ehring- haus should have public support in refusing to call it. It is com.mon sense to allow these matters to stand until the regular session- The people know what the" liquorsituation isand they will have next spring the opportunity to name legislative candidates that will re­ flect their view. By that' time pub­ lic opinion would be more consider ed/ public sentiment better defined. There is no purpose to charge that there is a concealed purpose in the extra session urge but it is declared with all emphasis that; there is no real need for it, that it would be a waste of money that we haven’t got to spare. If the people of the State wish the. opportunity ■ to vote on liquor control the legislature of 1937 will give them that privilege They could not be denied. They .will know by that time what they prefer and will.be in be in better condition to secure it through representatives who will represent them.—States­ ville Daily. ' al laws. (1). Chapter 64, Public Laws, which authorizes .cities to contract with aUy; private or public hospital for medicalc are and ho8- pitalization of afflicted poor, pro vided the yearly-payment does -not exceed $10,000. However,- Davie was not excepted from the provi-: sion of Chapter 65 . Public Laws, a companion law. which authorizes counties to enter- into such con­ tracts. (.2) Chapter 17,2, P./L-* which authorizes' .County Commis­ sioners to purchase. machinery ; to be used in -the prevention of soil erosion and to rent or- resell such eqlfipment to farm ers.^^). Cbap : ter- 379, Public Laws, which - start­ ed out-to prescribe a uniform sche­ dule/of fees to bedharged by Clerks of the Court, .and ended by pre­ scribing a uniform fee schedule for less-than half the State; due - to county exceptions* 'v ^ Is That The Doctor’s Office. Concord Observer. " If a man thmketh he is sick, bo \a be, evident];. Evensincethatdoctor told me to get off a - bigh-horse be- c use -of my unsatisfactory blood - pressure, I have been ailing all over. I hurt frequently in places tbat I didn’t even know could.hurt. ' I thought I was improving- till I picked up an almanac and read a few verses in it the other day. It began to ask questions, such as: “Do yoU fee] a fullness after eatiUg?” (I do). "Do you sweat suddenly after meals in hot weathei?” (Why, that’s me all over). “Do you.suffer sudden paius i n . yonr stummict while galloppingpn a horse?” Well, I don’t gallop ori .no horse, but I ride in a Ford, and those pains he is talking about are simply terrible, “Do yoii feel dizzy: after IookjDg straight up at the stay ac- . taurus?” Folks, when I Ieati back and look at the star,' I become so dizzy I have to eit down.' ’’Do you imagine that you;/are troubled with skipping of the heart?" There ain’t no hour ip the day or night but what my heart skipii at least 5 beats out of 30, and I;am Bure I have caught it jumping- and ,Slip­ ping (at the same time) as many as 6 beats out .of J5; but, of coarse, this only takes place after I try to beat a train to the crossing or j get past a red light. ' '- :- And tbat almanac went to ask such questions as: “Do you tire easily? Doyou count sheep while trying to sleep? Do y ou crave ham and eggs. while on a diet of oat meat and toast? Do .vpu' jump if somebody shoots .a gunj^ehtoa/you? ^ p e si the tsilkihg-: of your wife'irritate von? (Now. I am willing to answer that last ques-:? tion. but I prefer that my answer be kept strictly’cohfidential: It do).' I am guilty of beiDg afflicted with all this guy suggests. I wish he wouldn’t ask such personal questions. I think I shall take up a treatment of my own pretty soon. I’ll try will power fir3t. If that fails. I will take a swing at fruit and vegetables, with an occasional soda cracker. If I don’t improve after these experi­ ments. I might quit working but 14 hours per day, aiidj/take a vacer tion of 2 or 3 wboledays next year. You may rest assured that I intend to improve my condition, even if I have to spend a day or so at a health resort ip August. Yours nervously. ' Gee McGee. S/' I SangrFarewelI Song And After preaching the; gospel. Jfar more than 30 years and directig sing­ ing schools in the mountains of North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia, Rev./ Zeb Gribb, died / Monday/: of beart-trouble after singing a fare­ well song to his congregation at Roan Mountain, Tenn. - ‘ - He was a Holiness preacher/ a native of Cleveland county and ior many years was known as a traveling evangelist. He was not/amenable to any'church or conference.but preach-; ed and taught whereever he went. He told his congregation/ that he felt the end was near and after/sing­ ing the farewell /song went to bis room and died; shortly after; I He was 58 years old and hiB body -was brought to Cleveland county for: in­ terment. -. I a - I• I "111 $ Inescapable. If you earn $2,000 a year, some­ thing over $500 of it finds its way into the tax pot. Everyone is famil­ iar with the fact that over one-third of the cost of each mile an automrr bile is driven because ofheavy taxe J Every item of the grocery bij! i» burdened with tax?s When ment is purchased- ‘bidden- taxes-eonsume a- bout balf the cost. Movies, restau­ rant meals, rent, everything nsed, everything bought, adds to taxes. It is the consumer who pays. The bulk of the taxes Tall on the middle in­ come group, It is the duty of thiB - group to see tbat conditions change. - —Public Service Magazine. r m'Wk S* .ft fr :I1 igwU T l r.. . ir. {i i ! f: MT**Jf *-V, J. .. £ - » 1» >>r« I' Ii - L-J I •%> " ike twvte newim. ttftfleswtte, tt. t. AtitiRf am Notice Of Sale! Under end by virtue of the powers contained in a certnm mortgage exe- cuted bv C. S. Massev and wifr, Leona Massey1IoS M CaII1Trustee, bearing date of October 14,1933 »nn duly recorded in Bonk 33, page 263, Register’s office for Davm Lruntyl North Ca olina. And default hav* ing been made in the note secured thereby, the undersigned S. M.Call, Trustee, will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for CBBh at the Court h iUBe door in MonkBViIIe, Davie County, N. C , bn the 12th dav of August, 1939. the following lot or parcel of land lying and being in Shadv Grove Township. Davie Countv1 N O.. and more ful y described as follows to wit: A tract adjoining the lands of G. M Barne vena tie. etal: Beginningat a stone. Northeast corner; thence W with . Boyles’ line 43,42 chs to t stone, Fotts’ corner; thence S. with . Potts’ line 16 OO chs. to a stone. Putts’ corner, thence E. with Potts line 20.22} rhs to a stono or gun tree; thence S. 18 OO chs. in—line ti a atonp; thence E. with Chaplin’F, et el. line 19.42 chs to a stont; S. 2.50 chs. to a stone m W. T M'- era’ line: thence S. 22 links to a atom G. M. Bameycastle’s corner; thenr N. 15 ’ E. with Barneycastle'a Iim 33 17 chs. to the beginning cor.tait ing 105J acres more or less. Se deed from J. C. Smith, et al, to J C. Wassey. et al, Bonk Ne. 25. pay 105 Register’s office of Davie Cour ty, N.'C. Terms of Sale: CASH. Theabnvelands are sold subjpc to a First Mortgage executed bv C, S. Massev and wife LennB1 Massey to S M. Call, Trustee fnr Bank o. Davie, bearing date of October 14 ,1933 This, the llthday of July. 1939. SrM . CALL, Trustee. “He Advertised” ,Pf J Today’s Forgotten Man Quit Advertising Yesterday. THEY-CANT TAKE YOUR AD OME \\\»* Vniw* M't" IT IS ON i. A I BILLBOARD BRITISH KING SIGNS “ROYALBQ0&” ATN Y- FAIR * t. I < -! N —.------- I],"*, I I P ® - T l i x ~ I -V I ' S S fiS I ’ ' ’ rat-VfT.A .•!■•■tfr. i .VysivSlI!■“I J, ,.til S i i L The More Folks You Tell The More Goods You Sell AwefrfiSfeHefiE ONE STEP WON’T 1 GET YOU THERE Arid One AD Won’t Bring Success—You Must,. Keep On . Advertising oR/r>> I CARRY 4 ANTI. "WORRY fINSURANCE- Regular Ad In This' Newspaper I IS THERE G O L D ^ |I N Y O U R fp X -M I* ^ E L L A R ? " I Yes, and in Your Attic Too! Turn Those Things • You Don’t Want Into Money With a Want Ad ~sb<rHRo£: ■•■■■■■ v~ ■ - a '; -,, ■' V . V ■ , NEW YORK (Special)—rThe K ingof England :ispictured .as he m- At the King’s. nght\stands Grover Whalen, president ,of the Faircor- , scribes -the royal autograph;’ *Ge6rge'VT in the guest, book reserved poration and official host to their majesties during their visit to the expa- for the names of Visiting rjilers in Reryipn Hall at the New York World’s sition. Standmg at the Queen’s left are Mrs. Grover Whalen and G overnor- Fair. His'Queen,’who a moment later sighed the guest book; -lElizabeth R,” Herbert Lehmail. Mayor LaGuardia is seen at the extreme right of the, is pictured seated beside him. ; V'VT .' 'Y ;. V.’ - .. picture.- . 1If ■ f ,-Y -.’■ .'.T^V I'LL BUY THAT SHOT- G-UH NOW-1 SOLD SOME STUFF FFtOM TUB ATTIC WITH A WANTAD Sell “White, Elephant*” , Buy What You Want l The Lostis Found By 'Qur Want Ads When you Ioie V advertise They Don’t Stay Lost Long North Carolina I ,n The superior Coiin: DavieCountv i The Erwin Cotton Mills Company - ‘ ■ ^ va ."*•;■ ■’ '* i' C-Joleernee Ice & Laundry. Company. Notice of Execution Sale By virtue of an execution directed, to the undersigned from the Super- ior.Court of Durham County in' the above entitled action. I will, on Mon­ day, the 1,4th day ,of August, 1939 at 12 o’clock noon, at the courthouse door of Davie County, sell to' the hjgh“st bidder for cash .to satisfy said execution, all .the, right. , title and interest'which the Cooleemee lee & Laundry Company, the defen­ dant. has in. the following described, real estate; to-wit: . . - 5 ■ ■' Adjoining the land of Cobleemee Ice &.Laundry Company, G.'W. HeI- Iard and others and beginning at G.’ W. HellardLcorner on the west side of Wall Street in N. Cooleemee, andl' running,.Northward with the said street thirty-arid one-half (30}) feet, to an iron pipe, corner of the C iolee- mee Ice and Laundry Company lot; thence westward one hundred and. fifty (150). feet to an iron' stake' thence northward one hundred and' twenty eight '(1281 feet, thence west­ ward one,hundred and three (103) feet, thence south twenty (20) feet to an iron stake; thence; westward: fifty (BO) feet to. Hellard’s corner: thence southward two hundred . and twenty'Bix and one-balf (226£)- feet to Brbadway Ave.,'qne^hundred and fifty (150)Lfeet; thence northward one hundred (100) feet' to 'Sn 'iron stake,. G. W.'. Heliard's corner to the ,. West side of wagon scales;/ thence i eastward with the said.Hellard's line j one hundred and fif ty (150) Teet -to the beginning, containing abuiit one half of an acre, more or less. This 14th day of July, 19391 . '• - . L. S. BOWDEN. . Sheriff of Davie Ciinntv. The .Foibr Gave Mail Had -,N 6 Newspaper , To Advertise In. But You Have;!! ; RADIOS B ATTERIES-S U PPHES We Charge,Btitt^rieh Right Depot St. .■ >; - iNear Squarei3 E X f e t R M . - - ' X A $ APS ARE NEWS Printed In Big Type MR. MERCHANT 1^ V the; EYES of ,THE ' COMMUNITY WOULD: ' BE ON YOLR ADp IF IT HAD BEEN iboHRoo IN THIS ISSUE1' CAMPBELL FUNERAL HOME ,Funeral..D irectors.:--J ; AMBULANCE SERVICE Plione 161 . » • . North Main Street MOCKSVILLE !; ' Vjj4-m :• WHEAT FlELO^ 4 (EGtJE AR BEOOD iHOUNDS /TAfter Customers Our ,Want Ads Notice To Creditors. % m w MONEY Tj&R } Vour oli£ . Your , Di a carded Furniture, Piano,Radioi BicycI Tools, Ice'Box,canbe6oId^Tri^'’;- , A WANT AD IN-*- ^ THISc N EW SPA PER ^^ p I a i p38;'a fiai r>811 he Wrtateof-ssid? deceasi* ed, toVpresentiii^fl^me^'.to the^iindereifiiir' ^d.^'properly yprifiqd; on or before tbe 3rd. ;. ;day of JurieV1.9/tO^r jIbi9y;riot](^v-VjU^ be 3 -plead iri barvofs tbetr.' recoypry; Mil' irsp- ; Vona lndebtert ti'fla^d estate of tbe sald E; ' -L. ShleIdp,'y^U:p]ea6e.cQtr aftop the un* ' " ’ ^eraigned'rind^akB'rproropt'seUleraentJ. This the-Sfff day^WJuneV lSSS.'; ^ - JV . ¥ :l^ . Pr-WI^JAlfHENRYeo WARD.tfL? -•'•J ‘ \r:Ex^»tor:'of,B;.-LJShields;DecVJ^3' ^ E y G ian tjSLiGrant1Atttirneya ' | J m m m m Walker’s Funeral Home A M B U L A Ni C E- Phone 48 V MpcksVillej N. C: ,S^‘?S?SV-SS8 OUR READERS Are NdTri A MmmSm .. TRAINED SEALS J T r’BUT.THEy RESPONDf j A :*r^v » 1 v '! 'I .W hat |8 probably, the costliest' ■ "JThe w heatVw m -p la te d .IatoVIaBt .^ralh::w as|l4 tt?® ,* |^ !;ffi land .ever-iu«d for growing wheat .s’eptembef vun'dwXthevryM .tffizer. appliedia tV se e d ^ h ifl. V,land .evetjitjd for growing wheat Is the ouO-ihlrd acre “wheat flelcl of the Cootlhental Baking Company; ,at the Nevv York World’s Fair The fio'.ii.: In the heart of, the F air grounds; Is located.Significant-' Iy at the. Intersection of the TAvenueof.Plo'neeral'and,“Agriculture Row;" not far from the famed tbemo symbols,' the xTrylon and i ’erlspbere. .September,&eNewYbrk«ta«,CblI^lf.:A^ 'Wiaie^ireaiderit^f Cto^oritjonM president qf>-tlio.bafilngVtoinpaiyl: preiridedMatlw ’ Approved .'^aln^grp^lng ^IetibdB- tljiser. appljed ’^aeeiilif^m er ao.d. v '•;( was- IoniOrhsajwecontlj ‘ with. A rc^ii ( :■ T- ' V—" Vr tlL .v'V jX' ‘--. .v r" '-^BgALERS TN <X V t?' ^ j were f o 11 o w e d throughout Tho j the couc^ t e 'f e v ; -ed' In; mldBiimmer^iB, creating t i l , X Ac', lM* CJ- HOME D rl»-»gS $) S -r I/ v A ‘ ' 'fiwekem e 'Lttjthe'!,, I rIOTmer.' kt- Be^dei'" AGQdPTHlNG For-A RAlNV DAY - m STTimNEWiRAm # i NO COMMONLY LSLD Al) MKIMLM KXCKJ’T a IIOMK NKW SI’ VLEH ES RATED AS A COMMl NITY ASSET. :i ONCE ’ NEWSPAPER"; I DOES DC i I JE HVajjfF RECORD, MOC KSVILLE, N. C. ■-M m *af '-g^ 4£ '<rJ - I iXf n Th® Lucky Lawrences A A vAW T ❖ By Kathleen Norris Oopyriglit by Kathleen Norris aWlYU 'Service Sy n o p s is m ill be plead in bar of tbeii ersons indebted to said a - ted to m ake immediate Ju ly IS. 1935. M. BRANSON. Admr. Gaither Wood. DecU IT. ! t rs for sale. ter: D tf Life I M c C o r m id -B x r tH [ H o .9 T n e tm « * Bbmm m :ering Iws Ung D isk Harrow I ^iTi ordw*ary Itick-Deering «sef I. T h e crin»Ped *pr sh o ck absorber i f g re a te s t strain* o f sp a c in g spools ad . T h is provides S acinfi spools *® I a k a l e a f t e r a f e ^ !store stop in ! means years ou w ith whatever o r h o rse-d rav r Sne Of it* and Repaif8* lrhis Line. ins Co. Mocksville- N. Cl D e n tist |n g Mocks»iIle> N- C- The Boston Lawrences came to Call- ,Jlfornla at the beginning of the sold Ip-ush, but the holdings of the fam ily M ave shrunk to a small farm , and the ibid family home in Clippersville. The gfamily consists of Phil, the oldest, Gail, ^dith, Sam, who is In school, and sev- fcnteen-year-old Ariel, som ething of a problem . Phil is fascinated by **that gterrible" LiJy Cass. Young Van M urch- Klson, scion of a w ealthy fam ily, re- Ttiirns from Tale, and Gail has visions, through m arriage w ith him, of the !turning of the Lawrence luck. Dick SjBtebbIns, Phil's friend, has the run of Jp h e house. Gail goes w ith 'V an for a ^w eek-end w ith the Chipps, his uncle ^Bnd aunt. She Is received coldly. A t a Roadhouse Gail sees Ariel, a t midnight. Next day Ariel adm its she w as a t the place, and displays no rem orse. Dick Stebbins proves him self a true friend gbf the Lawrences, and Gall realizes th at r$he loves him and not Van. Stebbins and Ariel elope, according to a note Seft by the girl. Phil and Lily are m ar­ ried and Lily and her three children nake their home in the Lawrence jiouse. Edith is fatally injured In an accident for which little Danny, one ’of Lily’s children, is Innocently re­ sponsible. A fter Edith's death Gail passes through a period of heartbreak- grief. A lways a g reat reader, she begins to w rite and her first story is |iccepted by the editor of a leading ’ magazine. The colossal M urchison for­ tune is swept away, and Van faces the prorld almost penniless* CHAPTER IX—Continued —20— “rs tliis you with me, Edith?" her !Otil would ask as she stamped and penciled books and slips, smiled and nswered at the library desk. “Are yon jielping me at last?” ADd then, a week after the picnic, ame a Sunday of deluge, when Phil nd Lily went to a movie and Gail took he three little boys for a wet walk, the older two came back contentedly, !enough to blocks and crayons, but Iit- Tle Danny was almost too tired for |uncheon, and quite too tired to play, nd at three o'clock Gail sponged his !ieky little face and put him down on' bed, with her old woolly dog, for SinaP-“Riff-raff,” she said to him affection- sly, straightening her big room, put- ghg another log of wood—wood from famous old Lawrence pine that id come down only a few weeks ago— nto tlie little stove. H “U'iff-waff," Danny as affectionately eturned. P Oaii closed bureau drawers, straight- ned books on the shelves. She car­ ried a finished, fat, satin-bound micro­ scopic blue blanket into Lily’s room, !stood looking thoughtfully at Lily’s up- *|per bureau drawer that was already j|filling with bands and knitted jackets Qfor Philip, junior. In the hall, she called down to the ^sitting room. “Wolfe! Everything all !right?” “I’m down here,” Sam called back. [ “I’m building these kids a cattle bam !” fiail went back into her room. Little E KiiI-Itaff was asleep, looking like a f' tousle-lieaded angel. The room was warm and orderly and still, rain tapped, f tapped, tapped tirelessly on the tin of the kitchen roof. Clippersville was butied in wet tree tops, in the silent !' Suiiday afternoon; here and there blue j smoke struggled up above the oaks and [ elms and pear branches. On Gail’s desk lay a heap of paper— larjie sheets—and her own green foun­ tain pen. She sat down, dreamy eyes flxtd on space, the pen’s smooth butt pressed against her cheek. "I don’t know why I shouldn't write ; stories,” she mused, half aloud. “I’ve read enough! "fide, wouldn’t it be funny If I were really to be a writer some flay? “‘To the dear memory of my sister, Edith Partington Lawrence.’” The pen touched the paper; began to move. Ranny slept deeply, luxuriously, In tht center of the big bed, the old woolly dog tightly clasped to his shab­ by little underwaist Bain streamed steiidily down the high -windows, and drummed on the tin roof; the high feathery new tops of the trees below moved gently in the constant onslaught of the warm drops. Wood fell in tiie store, and flamgd up and was quiet again. After awhiie Gail threw a covered sheet aside, numbered a second, cov­ ered that. She pushed back her hair; her face was pale, her eyes shining. Tho scratching of the pen recom­ menced. The clock struck, struck again. Danny slept on, and the rain continued: to fall. „ But at six, when Llly was home and the boys having supper In the kitchen, a hot, golden sunset suddenly broke over the world. Gail walked up past the old stables, and saw the light shin­ ing red on the trunks of the oaks and. on the village and on the woodpile and straining itself through the screen of the young grape leaves. Everything sparkled and glittered, scents heavy, we(i and delicious crowded the air; the broken tumbler, that had been on the Pmnp ever since Gail coaid remember aIiyulIVj at all, was a diamond tonight, and the tiny yellow balls of chickens, cheeping and tumbling after their offi­ cious mother across the wet grass, were almost more of Beauty than the human heart could bear. She reflected that she would do her full share of the dinner work and of the dishwashing afterward. Then she would -take a bath, and get Into pa­ jamas and wrapper, and arrange shoes and dress for the library day tomor­ row, and carry her week’s laundry-*- for this was Sunday night—out to the big basket in the upper, bad; hall. And she lighted her desk lamp, and drew those five scribbled pages toward her, and in a silence and solitude of her own room read them once again— and found them good. The loss of Ariel, the deeper blow of Dick’s loss, Phil’s marriage had been earthqnake, the unbearable last bur­ den after the burdened years. And be­ yond that had been the consuming flame of Edith’s going, the unthink­ able thing, the death of something that was herself, that was her own life. The earthquake and the fire. And now into Gail’s heart comfort came creeping back, new interest, new hope -the still small voice of the Lord. Thus began the new life, In the un­ changed setting of the old. Gail did not know whether what she dreamed and what she wrote was good or was not good, nor did she care. It had to come, and the coming was a sort of ecstatic bearing—a giving of life. In April she had'the letter: a dozen typewritten lines: - ‘‘Dear Miss Lawrence: “The readers report that, delightful as this story is, it is ‘not quite in our tone.’ The feeling of the Atlantic is that, when a tale is as intimately triie to life as this is of yours, the tone is surely a tone for the Atlantic to adopt “It gives us much pleasure to accept so admirable a story. “Very truly yours, “The Editor.”- The dull old grimy kitchen/swooped and soared about her. She had been hulling strawberries, putting every I «1 Don't Know Why I Shouldn’t Write Stories.” twelfth one into Danny’s expectant mouth, open at her knee. The letter from the Atlantic had strawberry juice on it; no matter. It shook like a tacking sail as she read it “Phil! Look here a minute.” •“My—Gawd!” said Phil, upon read­ ing it “Bead it, Sam!” “When’joo write a story!” Sam said, incredulous. “Oh, Phil, you don’t suppose—you don’t suppose. Tm—I’m goin£ to write!” “Well, for heaven’s sakes,” Lily said patiently, “the way you carried on, I thought some one was dead4” Gail sat at the table, her elbows rest-" ing on the worn oilcloth, pressing the crushed letter against her face. She felt as if her body had taken wings and was about to lift itself up into the air. “Phil Lawrence,” she whispered pres­ ently, taking her hands down, regard­ ing him seriously, “I’ve sold a story!” He looked at her kindly from the old rocker. Lily tired easily now, and had established her shapeless person wearily on his knee. Phil’s eyeglassed eyes looked over Lily’s head. * ’Bout time something good came to you, Gall,” Phil said simply. His sister- felt the words to be an accolade. “Oh, I can’t believe it—it isn’t me!” Gail whispered. “It’s—it’s the Lawrence luck, coming)back!’1 She got >up and carried the glass dish of strawberries into the dining room. She lifted, the cover of the pall, and poured the 'lightly tumbling hulls down Into it Then with a damp old rag she wiped the oilcloth, afterward at the sink rubbing her finger tips with -a withered half lemon. And all the time the juice-stained letter , blazed In the breast pocket of her old midship­ man's blouse like a burning JeweL ' CHAPTER X So came Clippersville to be proud of another Lucky Lawrence. A thousand pleasant little episodes, as the summer wore 'along, told* Gail'that she was fa­ mous and that her old friends and neighbors were glad. '.v The Challenge ran her picture with a flattering article. Patrons of the old library, coming and going in the hot afternoons, smiled at her over the broad desk top. 44Tlckled to death to hear we Iiare an authoress!” the women whispered, nodding and smiling. GaU would flush brightly, joyfully, in return. She saw them all differently now,' these busy, strained young mothers, with their Ra­ bies in rompers and sun-bonnets; these shapeless big middle-aged women with their corsets showing under their dingy voiles. They were her marionettes now; they moved to the strings in her fingers. Walking home, in the burning bright sunset, she looked at the hills-that ringed sleepy Clippersville, those gauzy, transparent hills that were the color of the sky all summer long. She looked at the great oaks and the lo­ custs that lined the Calle, and the magnolias and peppers on the lawns. She looked at the stout women In cot­ tage gardens; women with hair wetly, snioothly dressed.; women watering marigolds and wallflowers In the after­ noon shadows. They were all beautiful to her. If Lily telephoned her, and she had to stop in the market, she saw the market or the.-fruit store or the five- and-ten with new eyes. Their wilted wares, their wearied salesfolk, their anxious bargainers were newly dra­ matic.. When some shabby woman from Thomas Street hill, with, a fat, .drool­ ing baby on her arm, and another stum­ bling and whining at her knee, priced the pork chops, priced the chopped beef, looked worriedly from one to the other, Gail felt her heart go out on a rush of love and sympathy for all poverty- all motherhood. She did not know why. She had letters from persons, far­ away unknown persons, praising her story when it was published. Gail an. swered them simply, unable to believe the words that flowed from her foun­ tain pen. She could presently write: “If you liked ‘Simply Impossible,’ I hope you will like ‘Post Ofiice Closed Tomorrow.’ It is coming out very soon in some magazine.” The great Barnes Butherford, ill, idling in a palace on the Maine coast, wrote her. He, sixty-five, the dean of the greatest profession of all, could find time to write-to a little Clip’pers- ville girl, and tell her he thought “Simply Impossible” was a good story! Even more touching were the lit­ erary folk of Clippersville. It had so many! Wistful, discarded men and women, living in shabby little gas- lighted cottages smothered in dusty vines, suddenly appeared on all sides, and proudly claimed kinship with the .writer. Gail accepted their condescen­ sions graciously; she knew that she was not of their ilk. Miss Libby Gatty had sold a story to the Black Cat twenty-five years ago; a story that one of 'the judges had thought deserved first prize, Miss Lou Bennett had known Edward Townsend, who wrote the Chimmie Fadden stories, when she had been in New Xork with her uncle in 1897, and had met Archi­ bald Clavering Gunter. “Oh, my uncle -knew everybody!” said Miss Lou, tossing her withered head, growing splotchy In the face at the mere'exciting memory. “He knew Frank Munsey; he knew everybody !” Tottering old Kane Eissette had’had quite a literary experience as one. of the publicity agents of a big railroad in the days before he drank so hard. He lived with a widowed sister now, and Min Rissette Biggs kept him In order. He delighted In remembering all the literary lights who had come into the office of the railroad magazine and paid their written, and sometimes rhymed, tributes to California. Then there were the poets, most of them women. They tremblingly brought out for GailriS Inspection their hoarded clippings, discolored strips of newspa­ per or magazine pages. Mrs. Jadwin, who ran a boarding house down by the flour mills, had once won a twenty-five- dollar prize for a poem called “Cloud Voices.” _ . “Oh, my dear!’ said Hatty Schenck, who wrote women’s club news for the newspapers all over the state,, and na­ ture poems beginning “Hail!” and whose pen name was “Lillian Lynne.” “Oh, my dear, is there any moment in the world like the one when you know you’re getting it you’re in the mood? For, you know, I can’t always write/' Hatty rushed ona “Sometimes . . There were times when she just felt dull and blank, as if she’d never writ­ ten a line. And then, suddenly, per­ haps when she was In the kitchen with Mamma . . . s' “Oh, I know!” Gail would sympa­ thize, with dancing eyes. And all the time, deep within her, she knew that she and Hatty were not alike. She knew that she could' lean down to Hatty, bnt that Hatty could never reach up to her. It made her humble, and sometimes, when it came to her with a fresh pang of realization that only Edith could have shared all this truly, that only Edith would havu appreciated it—indeed, that she owed much of it to the poem-loving, book- loving, truth-loving little sister—she felt a deeper sorrow even than the younger sorrow had been. ' Lily sat sewing or idling, on the side porch in the afternoon, and the three little boys worked In the wide yard. Sam and Phil had carried their work as far as trimming off the dry IIinbs of oaks and peppers; the shorn trees sent ■rich lacy shadows across the new sheen of the pass. “LUy,_what’s for dinner?" Gail would ask OUt5Of a dream. “The cream puffs* and corn and the* peaches, and there’s a lot of cold rice. I thought maybe poached eggs.” ; “It’s too hot for meat” Silence again. V . ' “Thinking up another story, Gail?" > “Well, there’s one • kind' of teasing me.” , I“l ean kinder tell by your eyes when you’re thinking of ybur sister." Lilr said once. . • “Edith?” ’ ' : ‘‘Well, I was thinking of-Ariel, then.” “Ariel . . Gaii always spoke the name on a long sigh. “She couldn’t wait,” she would muse aloud sorrow­ fully. “Doesn’t it se^m funny, Lily, for a person to go away—just as If Bhe had died—and- never to write—never to send any word?" “ TO BB CONTINUED.. The Right Girl By MARGARETTA 3RUCKER © McClure Newspaper Syndicate. WNUService. “ W /"HEN the time comes ^I1Il pick v tile right girl,” Don Farrell had said. “You’ll see.” * Don had come to Gatesvllle on a government engineering job. He was a tall lpose limbed fellow with deep- set gray eyes, and, an Infectious smile. He had made the quoted remark on his first day In Gatesvllie. Bob Haines had just told him he’d better watch out for his heart for we had the pret­ tiest crop of girls south of the Mason and Dison line. Don had just grinned—picked up his grip and asked: “Which way to the best boarding house?” “Mrs. Ann Nelson’s over on Myrtle street,” Bob had replied. Then he’d winked at the fellows standing about the soda bar in the drug store. “Whar you bet you’ll start picking that girl before you’re 24 hours older?” “I’m pretty hard to suit,” Don had wiled back over his shoulder. “Wait ’til he meets the Nelson twins,” Bob had said then. “Wonder which one he’ll fall for?” Don hadn’t been In Gatesvilie two days when he had them both down to the drug store and it didn’t take half an eye to see that he was falling fast . . but which one? that wa? the puzzler. Carrie Lou and Emmy Lou were their names and when their own moth­ er couldn’t tell them apart how was a long-legged Yankee going'to come to any decision? He had the whole town wondering. There’s no romance can get under way with three principals. Somebody’s got to drop out One of the twins had to be disqualified. Evidently the strain began to tell for gossip had It that the girls were snapping at each other. Two weeks after Don’s first appearance he turned up at the drug store one evening with one twin . . . but which one? _ Bets began to run high around the soda bar. From betting on Don the whole community started betting on the twins. They’d flirted before, with fellows from Georgia to the Mississippi basin and never had had a heart flutter. Now this gangling Yankee engineer had sunk them both. Then one afternoon a man from the T. V. I. drifted into, town and said something about Don’s wife. Say . . . that burst the town wide open. It was about four o’clock In the aftemooD when the twins came Into the drug store. Both were in white—just their belts different one blue and one red. The preacher’s wife was in the store, buying catnip for that big Maltese that always sits In her front window. She marches right over to the girls. “There was a man In here a minute ago who said that young Mr. Ferrell has a wife,” she says. The preacher’s wife Is all right but she feels it her duty to look after the morals of th-1 young. If Don hadn’t followed right at her heels it wouldn’t have been so dra­ matic. As it was it knocked all thp home talent shows In Gatesville right into a cocked hat Don burst through the screen. His eyes were almo3r black. He came right over to when' the girls were sitting. The preacher’s wife backed off but the fellows around the soda bar stuck and stared and figured that all that money they’d bet on the twins was as good as gone. One of the twins was beating a reg­ ular tattoo on the floor with her slipper and the other was fiddling with a soda straw and breaking it into little pieces I guess they felt pretty queer. “What have you heard?” Don de­ manded. He didn’t sit down. He_£tood leaning across the table and his glance included both the twins. His long brown fingers gripped the edge of the table. “That you were married,” said one. She said it quiet-like, but there was a lot behind her tone. Some folks don’t show their emotion by being noisy. The other twin did. She said: “Yes.. . . that you were married.” Her voice was thin and sharp. “Is it true?” she demanded. “Yes, it’s true." The one with the blue belt who had spoken first opened her lips, closed them and sank back into her chair. The soda straw was torn to chaff and lay scattered about the chocolate soda which she hadn’t tasted. The twin In the red belt burst into a regular tor­ rent of abuse. She told Don what she thought of him . . . what she thought of all Yankees . . .: well . . . It was almost as if she’d stripped off her clothes and stood-there naked. Most of the fellows slunk out of the store ashamed for her. Being the soda jerker I had to stick. Finally the twin In the blue belt be gan to cry. Dan stepped right around the table and-took her . in his arms. He kissed her. _ . “You . . .” the twin In the red bell started screaming and clawing him with her 'soft little bands. Don didu’i seem , to mind. He was grinning and showing his white teeth and saying.- “I always said that when the timi- came Pd pick the right girl . . . now I know IVe i made ..no mistake. Carrir Lou and I were married last Fri day. . . .’’ I didn’t, hear the rest,fo- his head was bent and he was Sayin? it into Carrie Lou’s soft dark halrT . I turned around and pretended to be busy polishing some soda glasses. I heard the screen- door bang behind the twin in the red belt After this she wouldn’t need to dress different fc-i everyone In town to know her. SheV always'be the twin that Doa Farrei> didn’t pick. e £/xpianation Origin of Giant Myths A recent dispatch from India re­ porting that natives have found bones of a giant’s skeleton no less than 31 feet high has torn up till records of this particular myth. Not even the Imaginative Doctor Ma- zurier, who fabricated In 1613 the circumstantial tale of a brick tomb not only containing his giant, but provided with equally gigantic swords and other weapons, and even labeled with the name and titles which the giant had borne* dared to make his Imagined relic more than 26 feet tail. The famous Giant ef Lucerne, wlio involved scopes of Swiss and German scientists In acri­ monious controversies from 1877 un- til after 1600, was credited with only 19 feet England’s Giant of Thome­ way, In Cumberland, said to have been found In armor which has con­ veniently disappeared, measured but 14 feet, by contemporary accounts, No doubt the hew 3i-foot marvel of Calcutta belongs with these oth­ ers among the long list of confusions between hnman bones and those of fossil animals, mostly elephants. A few thousand years ago several types of elephants, such as the mam­ moths and mastodons, were much more numerous and widespread than any kind of elephant is today!’ Be­ ing comparatively recent In geologic history, their bones lie close to the ground and frequently are found by diggers or plowed up by farmers, something which is not true of bones of still larger animals of earlier ages, such as the gigantic dinosaurs. Some elephants’ leg bones look su­ perficially not unlike human bones. It is small wonder that they and hu­ man giants have been confused, al­ though even in 1620 the famous William Harvey remarked of the supposed Giant of Gloucester that his bones evidently belonged in real­ ity to “some exceedingly great beast such as an elephant” There is less excuse for Doctor Mazurier’s manu­ facture out of whole doth of the brick tomb, weapons and inscrip­ tions which he said he found with the 26-foot previous holder of the giant record. To students of folklore these mis­ conceptions abont elephant bones supply one possible explanation of the virtually worldwide belief that giants once existed, but not the only one. 'Another suggestion is the recollection by primitive people of other human beings able to walk on suits, as fen dwellers still do In eastern'England or dune dwellers in southwestern France. Thus prob- WISE IS HE WHO PICKS HIS STEPS ON LIFE’S PATH ably originated the tale of the fast- moving seven-league boots. Still on* other possible origin of giant myths is garbled tales of men standing oa towers or platforms, like the mov« able siege towers used In ancient warfare. And perhaps some giant myths date from days when relative­ ly short races, such as the Celts, were In conflict with relatively tall ones, like the Danes or Saxons. But not even folklore ■ has recorded giants 31 feet high.—New York H er­ ald Tribune. Big Australian Estata What Is the world’s biggest ev, tate? The question is prompted by the news that the ZamoisM estate In Poland has been reduced by half, the family having hanatd roughly over 50 per cent of the lands to the nation. Before this was done, the estate was 250,000 acre& in extent, Even now, it is bigger than any es­ tate In Britain. But the largest es­ tate in the world is not In Europe at alL You have to go to Australia If you want to see i t There you will find the holding of Sir Sidney Kidman, famous as the Australian cattle king. It Is over 39,000 square miles In extent larger than Ireland, Austria, Hungary, or Portugali—Lon­ don Answers. Week’s Supply of Postum Fre« Bead the offer made by the Postum 'Company in another part of this pa* per. Theywill send a full week’s sup­ ply of health giving Postum frer to anyone who writes for it—Adv. Safety Provision A course in cooking should be given to everyone at college. You never know when you may have to be well informed about it do you spray?.FOR RESULTS / Will a cheap qualify spray do th e iob?...lTWiu. hot ^W hat'sthe answer^ ^befuse substitutes^ Dmani ,FLY-TOXi From his place at the side of the road the Philosopher sees the world go by. One man, with strained face and clenched hands/dashes on, with­ out regard to the rights of others on the road, trying vainly to over­ take the happiness that will always elude him. Another, plodding wearily, stooped with the burden of bis possessions, looks neither to the right nor the left; seeks only for firm ground un­ der his feet. He is unable to see that the way is pleasant; that the sky is blue overhead, and that from the side of the road friendly bands are outstretched toward him. His Journey Ia a lonely one. The Philosopher, In his resting place, sighs that so many persons, In their blind search for the Holy Grsil of happiness, In their frantic struggle for the great joy that they foolishly Imagine Is to be found In the great things, fail to grasp the happiness that is to be found aU along the way. ' Some, heedless and cateless, dance and sing along the road, and the flowers they pick from the roadside fade and die. In their friendships Is little of friendliness. When night comes they- have no place to lay their heads and no one to comfort them.And finally the wise man passes: He neither hurries nor loiters, but in leisurely fashion makes sure pas­ sage; finding time for* work, play, and true friendships among those who line the highway, x, He finds warmth In the sun and coolness In the rain; the flowers and the songs of birds assuage -his thirst for beau­ ty. His hardships, being shared by others, become less burdensome, his joys greater because others may find part In them, and the. Holy GraU. of happiness is always, at his hand. The old Philosopher sighs with re­ gret that It is late, and that he may not join this wise man In his jour- uey.—Detroit News. : Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood W O UR kidneys are constantly filter* I ing waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in (heir work—do not act as nature in* tended—fail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging back* ache, diiziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, swollen limbs; feel nervous, m ise ra b le - all upset. D on’t d elay! U se Doan’s Pill*. Doan’s are especially for poorly func­ tioning kidneys. They are recom­ mended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist QUICK RElIEF from Heartburn —by chewing one or more Milnesia Wafers You can obtain a foil size 20c package of Miinesia Wafers containing twelve full adult doses by furnishing us with the name of your local druggist if ha does not happen to carry Milnesia Wafers in stock, by enclosing IOc In coin o r postage stamps. Addres* SELECT PRODUCTS, INC, .4402 23rd S t, Lons UIand City, N. Y. M t N am t b ._________ . . . . . . Street Addrtis.______. . . . —. — Toien & S ta te— ______________________ _ M y D n tititftrN a a t f t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S tr e e tA M n ts ,.... I— ......... Totm & State-----------------------. . . . . . — SO R E EY ES Z-CsStX i relieves and cures eore and IsflaisedeTes InSItolS hours. Belps tbe weak ejed| cures Jrttbopt pajp. * -------------'-*• or l«atorlor8A iTEB’8»Oiily irj, P.O.Box i£l. Attach Qb Besiforyo i No need to worry- > - — ^ about skin Irntatioiis •wlien jo v l use for M fy toilfct,pmposes the same pure, soodi- in„ seap that you use for baby’s tender dan. Containing die delicate Cnticnia medication, C atien raS oap protectasensi- A-Ina and helps to keep them In a dear condition. P r ic e 2 5 c . S o td a t a ttd iv g g h t* . Ajfr fc I . m . /- it If RECORD, MnrKSVlLLE. N. C. BRISBANE T H IS W E E K Not Constitutional... Flies and Black Magic Kilkenny Cats, Again ' Pickings for Lawyers In Boston, the Federal Circuit Court ot Appeals decides, two to one, that the “New Deal” process tax on cot­ ton is unconstitu­ tional. The judges decide that “the power of congress to regulate inter­ state commerce does not authorize it to tax products either of agricul­ ture or Industry merely because their production may indirectly af­ fect interstate com­ merce.” This most impor­ tant decision, If pot upset Jby the high­ er courts, will hpset, decidedly, the plans of the administration In regard to financing bigger incomes for farm­ ers. Universal Service says Abyssinia will not take Mussolini, bis airplanes and armored tanks “lying down.” Abyssinian sorcerers, dealers In black magic, will work against Italy,' What Is more dangerous than magic, Abys­ sinian fighting chiefs will use the poi­ sonous tsetse fly against Italian sol­ diers. These flies, feeding on decayed animal matter caught in the teeth of sleeping crocodiles, get the tsetse germs from the blood of the crocodiles and plant them in the blood of human beings and cattle. Slow death by “sleeping sickness,” leaving the body almost a skeleton, follows the tsetse bite. I A rthur Brisbane Two cats hung over a line must Sght The Kilkenny story proves it. Mussolini has committed himself to war, and once a dictator speaks posi­ tively It Is unsafe, politically, for him to back down, especially when other nations Interfere, as France and Eng­ land have interfered. To retreat might cost Mussolini his prestige. Difficult also is the position of Haile Selassie, emperor of Ethiopia. His hold Is not firm. . Important. chiefs, heading various Abyssinian tribes, would like his job. If he should avoid war by yielding part of his territory to Mussolini, as advised by England, re­ sulting complications might include as­ sassination, common In tropical coun­ tries. The United States Chamber of Com­ merce objects to the income and in­ heritance tax program, calls It confisca­ tion. The question Involved seems simple: Does the property of the United States, result of thrift and intelligence, belong to the people that created It, or Is it' only held In trust by them for public use by those that for the time being exercise powers of government? Owners of stock In Paramount-Pub- Jix Moving Picture company, once sell­ ing on the-market at $100,000,000 and more, now woyth about nothing, IearA that In some windup proceedings law­ yers ask for $3,600,000. That seems a good deal, but you must remember that one New York lawyer—he will not object to being mentioned—the skill­ ful Louts Levy, once got more than $1,000,000 for settling a sad misun­ derstanding between a prosperous gen­ tleman and a certain "little lady.” Figures do not lie, but they surprise you. For instance, In the year 1801 the government of the United States had 126 employees. Today it has 700,- 000 employees, an Increase of 5,000 per cent. The number of congressmen has risen since 1801 from 128 to 531, a little more than 400 per cent, while United States population hais increased 2,500 per cent ' The increase In population Is due to mothers, the increase In government extravagance Is due to politicians. Austria seems not quite certain that she has had enough of the Hapsburg royal family, that has ruled and mis­ ruled an intelligent people for so long. The state council cancels a decree that banished Hapsburgs and took their property. Young Archduke Otto, pre­ tender to the throne, may now return to Austria. He and his mother will find themselves rich, the confiscated Imperial properties returned. Young'Otto, a handsome boy, with 1 somewhat peevishly conceited expres­ sion, may occupy the throne. Self-gov­ ernment is hot easily learned. Austria, Italy, Germany, have discovered that, not to mention the U. S. A. Anti-Semitic riots In Berlin included the usual cowardice that Accompanies display of religious hatred, no matter •by what race or religion. The “proud Aryans” bullied, beat and-kicked. Jew­ ish men and women indiscriminately. Washington reports a “whispering campaign”, concerning President Roose­ velt's health. It will be a very small whisper If the whisperers stick to facts. The President’s friends will be glad to know that his health Is excellent, has never been better since his Presidential work began. A constitution able to withstand and conquer such an attack of illness as the President has with­ stood need not worry about a few po­ litical annoyances. ©. KIds Features Syndicate. Inc.WNU Service. News Review of Current Events the World Over New Deal Badly Hurt by Ruling That AAA Processing Taxes Are Unconstitutional—Democratic Senators Score Schall of Minnesota. B y EDWARD W. PICKARD ©Western Newspaper Union. Davis TWO to one against the New Deal was the week’s score In Federal court decisions. The . administration suffered severely. The Circuit Court ' of Appeals In Cincin- !. nati first held uncon­ stitutional the con­ demnation of land by the PWA for slum clearance. Theu the Circuit Court of- Ap­ peals in Boston dealt the AAA a terrific blow by declaring un­ constitutional the processing and flour taxes. The one favor­ able decision was by the Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans and was that the sale of cheap electric power by the Tennessee Valley authority was consti­ tutional. Harold Ickes, who is PWA adminis­ trator, said the “slum clearance work would be carried on, though necessarily In modified form. But Chester Davis, AAA administrator, openly admitted that “the end of the processing taxes would mean the end of the Agricultural Adjustment administration In all its important aspects.” He would not con­ fess that he believed for a minute the Supreme court would confirm the rul­ ing of the,. court at Boston. He as­ serted he had expected that decision to be adverse, saying: “That section around Boston is a hotbed of resistance to the processing taxes. Why, it’s right up there among all those cotton manufacturers.” This was most ex­ traordinary comment from a high gov­ ernment official, but the Appeals court in Boston has not yet cited Davis for contempt Most well informed and unbiased persons have never believed the proc­ essing taxes would stand up under court test The Guffey coal bill has some similar features, so that -those who debate it should read these para­ graphs In the Boston decision: The power of congress to regulate interstate commerce does not authorize It to do so by taxing products either of agriculture or industry before they enter interstate commerce, or other: wise to control their production mere-. Iy because their production may in­ directly affect interstate commerce. “The issue is not, as the government contended, whether congress can ap­ propriate funds for any purpose deemed by congress in furtherance of the ‘general welfare,’ but whether con­ gress has any power to control or reg­ ulate matters leftito the state and lay a special tax for that purpose.” ' Several hundred suits to enjoin col­ lection of - the processing taxes have been filed In Federal courts by proces- It they pay the taxes and the act is held unconstitutional by the Su­ preme court, they will not be able to recover,' under a provision of the pend­ ing amendments prohibiting recovery suits against the government. DROPPING all their rebellious In­ dignation, the Democrats of the house did everything the administra­ tion wished In considering the social security bill as altered by the senate. The conferees had settled ail dif­ ferences after two weeks of hard work, but one of the amendments they ac­ cepted was that permitting private pension systems tofunctlon under the measure. The majority members of the house were informed that Presi­ dent Roosevelt was opposed to this, so they refused to accept it. The senate would, not permit the elimination of the amendment, so back to conference went the’bill. THOMAS D. SCHALL, the blind senator from Minnesota, has been one of the sharpest tongued critics of the administration In the senate. Re­ cently . be described President Roosevelt as a “megalomaniac,” and, though the word w as subsequently eliminated from the Record, the Democrat­ ic senators were- de­ cidedly miffed. So a little later Senators Robinson, Black ,'and Bone found opportu­ nity to tell Schall - - what they think of • * r Sehall him and to demand, that he: conform to the rules of “decency.” The argument started when Schall had read by a clerk an editorial from a Texas editor, aDd an address of his own—all critical of the administration- 'Robinson- protested. He asserted !.’when.; .one .,whose, moral . obliquities, are so great as are those of the senator from Minnesota, it becomes necessary for 6ome one to object”', He added Scball “cannot shield; himself behind an unfortunate affliction.” - The Schall speech said President Roosevelt was imitating Mussolini, and that Ben Coben, an administration aid and bill drafter, had “assumed the leg­ islative functions usurped by the Ex­ ecutive.” • * Robinson called Schall the “misrep- resentative from Minnesota” and - ex- pressedthe opinion the senator had “employed” some one to write his speeches * "It Is small business and only could be done by a man of small mentality,” said the Arkansas senator. Replying, Schall said, “If the people knew what was behind this govern­ ment they would not stand for it a minute.” SENDING floods of telegrams to senators or representatives for or against pending legislation will not be so effective in the future, as a result of the disclosures before the senate lobby investigators. , They heard evi­ dence to'the effect that large numbers of telegrams against the utilities bill were sent from Warren, Pa., by an employee of the Associated Gas and Electric system, that the messages were signed with names taken from a city directory and that the originals were destroyed at Warrem The senate committee, evidently- planning a nation-wide Inquiry, asked the Western Union Telegraph com­ pany to prohibit the destruction of any messages transmitted during the last year, and officials of the company promised to co-operate. Secretary Hull TWENTY ■ months of apparently fu­ tile moves to revitalize the com­ mercial relations between the United States and Russia, and then suddenly Washington announces that the two nations had concluded a one- year trade agreement under which the Sovi­ et Republics agreed to increase their Ameri­ can imports by 150 per cent In return for purchase of $30,000,- 000 worth of American goods Russia is to be granted wide tariff concessions by th e United States. Russia will buy railroad equipment, machinery for making new automobile models and other’ products of, heavy Industry. In addition ,the Soviets will buy cotton. The railroad equipment is needed badly for modernization of a weak transportation system.^ In return Russia expects to sell sausage-: casings, certain grades of iron ore, manganese, furs and'dairy prod­ ucts in large quantities to the United States. The pact, concluded by the exchange of notes between Ambassador Bullitt in Moscow and Maxim Litvinov, com­ missar for foreign affairs, provides for no further loans to Russia and makes no mention of the more than $700,000,- 000 in debts contracted by former Rus­ sian governments. It is in line -,with Secretary Hull’s policy of trade agree­ ments. For these two reasons espe­ cially It is attacked by many Repub­ licans and not a few Democrats In con­ gress. Senator Pat McCarren of Ne­ vada was one of the ;angriest- of these gentlemen: He declared Secretary Huli was a “prize diplomatic dupe” and an­ nounced that he would demand an im­ mediate modification of the reciprocal tariff act to rescind powers under which Hull Is negotiating such treaties. Key Pittman, chairman of the senate foreign relations committee, also is earnestly opposed to Hull’s trade pro­ gram. SENATOR J. HAMILTON LEWIS of Illinois, a member of the for­ eign relations committee, long has urged that Great Britain be persuaded to cede to the United States her Island pos­ sessions in the Carib­ bean sea in payment of her war debt The other day he was moved to bring the subject up again and delivered an interest­ ing speech in the sen'- ate. T h is tim e he based his proposal up­ on the “peace offer” of England to cede a por­ tion of her territory'in Somaliland to Ethiopia, which In turn would cede certain territory to Italy with a view of averting the impending war-betweeh those countries. . The senator also suggested that Eng­ land surrender all rights she claims to privileges of constructing a Nicaraguan canal, recalling, “as a 'precedent; that England compelled France to yleld"all claim s'to territory adjacent to .the Suez canal. c - The British islands In the West In­ dies, the senator said, are both useful as defense and necessary as protection for the United States. They “could be seized in time of war between nations fighting :among- themselves to possess the Caribbean and Southern- ’ seas They, could be used as the backyard of the United States from which' sup­ plies could be stored to be used in as­ sault on America.” “ -. i Senator Lewis CHARLES TAUSSIG, who had'served the administration for two years without official -title or position, has been appointed chairman of the advis­ ory committee of the Rational Youth administration. In announcing' the Cre­ ation of tUb. NYAr the President' allo­ cated to it $50,000,000 of work-relieffunds. :v EMPEBOR HAILE ' SELASSIE ap­ peared before the Ethiopian par­ liament and made an impassioned ap­ peal to his countrymen to fight Italy to the death, declaring he had pre­ pared himself to die in the contest if need be. "Ethiopia knows how to fight to preserve its independence and its sov­ ereignty," he said. “Soldiers! Follow the example of your warrior ancestors. Soldiers! Traders! Peasants! Young and old, men and women:. Unite to face the invader! Your sovereign will be among you and will not hesitate to give his blood, for the independence of his coun­ try." Though the League of Nations coun­ cil was scheduled to meet for consid­ eration of the Italo-Ethlopian quarrel between July 25 and August 2, there were indications that the European nations were about ready to abandon Ethiopia to its fate and that If “The Lion of Judah” doesn’t give in com­ pletely, Mussolini will be permitted to have his way with him. That probably will mean a long guerrilla warfare the details of which will not be pleasant reading. Newspapers of northern Italy inti­ mated that Premier Mussolini might abandon his projected w ar with Ethiopia if he could find a way of backing out without losing face. But the Roman public was quite sure the duce’s aggressive policy would be un­ impaired. This opinion was strength­ ened by the sending of more troops to EaSt Africa. Secretary of State Hull entered the picture again with a rather mild state­ ment expressing America’s abhorrence of war and confidence In the Kellogg pact. The Italians didn’t like this at all. SENATOR HUEY LONG has the po­ litical fate of his chief opponent, Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley of New Orleans, in the palm of his hand. But he is forcing the peo­ ple of the city to put the mayor out A ma­ jority of Walmsley’s followers, tired of the conflict, formally de­ serted him when the commission council adopted a resolution endorsing recent state­ ments of two commis­ sioners calling for the city to make peace with Long. The may­ or, standing almost alone, declined to yield. He told the council he “would not deal with men who have been called ‘crooks and thieves’ by every member of the com­ mission council.” In a caucus preceding the council session, 13 of Walmsley’s 17 ward leaders voted for his resignation “for the good of the city.” The mayor told them he was “going to stick from h—I to breakfast.” T. Semmea Walmsley WHEN Chinese rivers overflow they do the thing in a big way. The Han, which joins the Yangtse near Hankow, broke through the dikes and rushed through the densely popu­ lated land, drowning about 10,000 men, women and children. I JNOFFICIALLY and informally, the general opinion seems to be that the Wagnei labor disputes act; is un­ constitutional and will be so declared by. the United States: Supreme court when that tribunal is called on for a decision. William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, urges labor leaders to'pay no attention to claims that the law is invalid. “Leading legal authorities of the na­ tion are of the opinion that the act is Constitutional in- every respect,” he wrote, but . added In a letter that he expects ,a court test and that the American Federation of Labor will get “the best legal talent” Even if the Wagner law is knocked out by the Supreme court the admin­ istration believes it has a plan that will avert at least 90 per cent of the usual number of strikes, walk-outs, lock-outs and other disorders. It is being launched in ’Toledo, Ohio; and- has been called the “Toledo plan” be­ cause it was conceived by Assistant Secretary of Labor. Edward F. McGra- dy when be was trying to settle a dispute in that Ohio city. It.has no sectional characteristics; carries no federal compulsion, and rests solely upon the willingness of Workei1S and employers In every-.city that adopts the plan, to abandon the harsh economic weapons of old and. substitute peaceful discussion for violence. 1 - Here- again;- Green throws a -monkey- wrench into the machinery. He says the A. F. of L. will not eo-operate; In promoting the McGrady plan because it provides that the mediation panels would include on 'the labor side r'epre4 sentatives of company' unions and: of independent and rival onions. Under Green’s leadership the pulley of the A. F, of L. evidently is all for the fed­ eration, or notiling for anyone. W /IT H the approval of the house *» labor committee a new bill !in­ tended to replace the NRA wad brought forward In congress, but its chances of passage at this session were sm'affi It would create a federal commission to license industries sending goods* or commodities into interstate commerce. To obtain a federal license, an Indus-* try would be compelled to: ■ Work employees not more than 80 hours a week,.provide wages adequat'e- for fa decent and comfortable - stand­ ard of hying," accept collective bar­ gaining, outlaw dealidgs with parties to “yellow dog” contracts and ban workers under sixteen years of a», and convict is forced labor 1- IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL UNDAYl . CHOOL L esso n Institute of Chicago.©. Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for August 4 JOSlAH . LESSON TEXT—n Kings 22:1-6, 21- 23GOLDEN T E X T -T hou shalt worship the Lord thy God, ana him .only shalt thou serve.—M atthew 4.10. PRIMARY TOPIC—W hen a K ing Read the Bible. __JUNIOR TO PIC -W heD a K ing Used tbINTERM EDlATE AND SENIOR TOP­ IC—Things That Keep God Out. YOUNG PEO PLE AND ADULT TOP­ IC—W hat Our Religion Owes to Re- formers. . I. Josiahl- a Godly Young King (n Kings 22:1, 2). “He did that which was right In the siglit of the Lord, and turned not aside to the right hand or to the left.” About one hundred years elapsed between the reformation under Hezeklah and that of Josiah. Sometime during this pe­ riod the Book of God’s Law had been lost Two wicked kings had reigned in this interval. It was incumbent upon the king to have the Law of God at his command and faithfully to read it A country’s .highest.- well-being can only be attained wben it has godly rulers, and rulers and people not only read the Bible, but o r d e r thelr lives and con­ duct according to Its teachings. Not until rulers and people return to God and conform their lives to the stand­ ard of his'Word can we hope for return of permanent prosperity. II. The Book of the Law Found (II Kings 22:3-10). 1. The occasion (w . 3-8). It was while restoring the temple during Jo- siah’s administration that the Law was found. In clearing oat the dark cor­ ners to make repairs and to find a place to store the subscriptions made by the people, many lost things were found. 2. The Book read before the king (vv. 9. 10). Upon making a report of the work to the king, Shaphan in­ formed him of the finding of the Book of the Law of the Lord, and he read the Book before the king. III. The Effect of the Reading of the Law Upon thd King (I] EJngs 22:11- 20). 1. He rent his clothes (v. 11). As the Law was read before bim be was led to realize the awful extent of the nation’s departure ' from God. The rending of the royal robes Indicated the king’s penitence and sorrow. 2. The king sent a deputation to make, inquiry^ of the Lord (vv. 12-20). He included himself in the guilt before God (v. 13). His sense of sin was so keen that be sent to inquire of the Lord as to whether there was any means of diverting the divine judgments. 8. The message of Huldab the prophetess (vv. 15-20). a. ConBrhiation of what the. Law said (vv. 15-17). She said that all the curses written In the Law must fall, for the sins had been so flagrant that God’s wrath could not be restrained. It was not too late upon repenting, to obtain mercy from God, but outward consequences of sin must he realized. b. Acceptance of Josiah’s repent­ ance (w. 18-20). Because of his ten­ derness-, of .heart and deep, penitence the Lord said he was to be gathered to his grave in peace and should thus es­ cape all the evil brought on Jerusalem and its people. What Huldah said was true, even though Josiab died Ib battle (II Chron. 35:22-25). IV. The Reformation Instituted by Josiah (II Kings 23:1-25). 1. The king read the Law (vv. I, 2). He gathered together the inhabitants of Jerusalem, including the priests. Levites. and elders and read unto them the Law. What a happy scene it would be if the President of the United States would call the representatives of the people together to bear God’s law read. 2. The king made a covenant before the Lord (v. 3).' In this; covenant he pledged himself: • a. To walk before the Lord. This meant that he would get personally right with God. b. To keep God’s commandments, bis testimonies and his statutes. , This obedience was to be a heart obedience. e. To perform the words of covenant which were written in this Boob. The king not only entered into this sincere­ ly but caused all who were present to “stand to” it -3. The king took away the abomina­ tions (vv.., 4.20).,,.He:.not..only broke down the places of idolatrous, worship, but slew the priests ntbft -officiated at the altar. " 1 4. The Passover kept (vv. 21-23). So fully aDd heartily did they enter Into this-reformation that thisPassover was unlike any that bad been held'since ihe days of the judges. • ~ -' 5. Workers of the occult driven out (w. 24, 25). AU the days of the king they departed not from, following after the Lord. ’ ‘ • . ■ Payment The universe pays every man In his own coin; if you smile, it smiles upon you in return; It you sing, you WiUtbe Invited into-gay company; if you think, you WiU be entertained by thinkers; and if you love the world and earnestly seek ior the good that is therein, It will pour into your, lap the, treasures of the earth.—Elmer B. Murphey. Reputation How many people live on the repu­ tation of the- reputation they inlght have made.—O. W. Holmes. Joys and Duties of Holiday Time CSiild Needs Adjustment to Home Dtiring Period of Vacation. Now that vacation days are here children feel a marvelous freedom from restraint, and from tasks, a Is a period of readjustment, just u much as is the beginning of s^,0(>. In the fall. It Is well for parents to appreciate this, for by so doins they will spare themselves and their offspring some difficult moments. Many young children will be Itt- dined to rely upon mother to & rect their time by suggesting games, or little helpful tasks made attractive through the Idea of relieving her ot Work.. The rest will strain at H9 leash of any restraint, believing that as school was their expected and pe­ culiar . occupation, that vacatfe ‘ means aU play and no work. The? will be Irked by requests to do miMr jobs, quite within their ability, or to run errands, however few, or, Ptr. haps, even to have pleasant Sagpe3. tions about recreational diversions. It requires careful thought on the part of a mother to prevent the da. dren from leaning on her too much, In the' first Instance, and from be coming a bit too aloof, In the second It is weR for the mother to have It definitely understood that she expects to be told when any one of the chil­ dren goes out, and where the place is. Many adults believe It is a wise precaution to leave such word at home, since sometimes it is desir­ able or necessary to get In touch with them, and some one In the house should know their whereabouts. It is wen, also, to expect children to be home promptly for me,Us- whlch then should be served prompt­ ly. If the children find themselves unexpectedly Invited to meals with their friends, then the telephone should be used to Inform the home of their plans—and In younger chil­ dren permission should be asked for and granted, if possible, or refused If necessary. Mothers’ plans may have to be adjusted to suit such changes, or perhaps children have forgotten other engagements and can then be reminded of them. Children can learn, in tender years, that the home is a circle made of different units, and while each unit has the right to individual freedom of wide latitude there remains the -ties of the-Yaihily, which should he respected. There must be co-oper­ ation, and vacation days can foster this, however old or young the mem­ bers. © BeU Syndicate.—WNU Service, Odd Airplane Cargoeo A French air liner which arrived a t Croydon from Paris recently had on board a swan, an African wild .cat a fighting cockerel and a pair of monkeys. It Is not often that such a mixed cargo of live stock is carried by air, but increasing use Is being made of the airplane to transport animals rapidly from place to place. Not long ago an Imperial Airways liner brought a Uon to this country from the continent He yvas provid­ ed with a special cage. Sea lions caught in the Bay of Bis­ cay and consigned to the Zoo aqua­ rium have been brought from Paris to London by air. They were car­ ried In two ventilated metal contain­ ers filled with sea water. Alligators have been flown to tills country. Tropical fish, which would suffer on a-long voyage, are now fre­ quently brought here by air. The first horse to fly was a race­ horse. It had to make the journey In ft great hurry from Le Bourget to Amsterdam. Had it gone by train it would have been too late to run i“ an Important race.—London Tit-Bits BILIOUSNESS. PA R K E R ’S H A IR BALSAMBemorea Dandrnff-Stopa Hafr *«“2 Inqiarts Color ao& tion of W orm s or TUpewonii in w system: The c h e a p e s t,sMes, quickest, medicine for ndd^ jL 3 J3 dren or adults of these parasite Dr-Peerys-DEADSHOTVermi^ G National Topics Inte by" MaHnnat Press Building Washington.—Politics varnI Z eek to week or from I &<«■ wee tration to Mistakes tration. T I , mnch the , Are Costly actlon t0 .,,vers and much the sami queue® when a politician J 9 unnd nlay. Those who S S K , w » * V - TUOW one bears an abundanc cu ssio n In Washington as to Mr. Roosevelt has made a I mistake that may cost him de1 00. •Tt will be recalled now In ati)r William E. Borab of ll acted a pledge from candidate Hoover that if Mr. Hoover wl ed he would immediately call ! aession of congress to deal I agricultural tariff Mr. Hod tied out his promise and in I brought about his eventual He asked congress for a spec namely, revision of the tariff I ,ericultural. imports so tbat ,■ agriculture could live. But as congress does so many t fused to stay In bounds. Ifl of hand so badly that vil Hawley-Smoot tariff bill finl enacted into law it turned <* a boomerang of the worst overwhelmed Mr. Hoover ad those who attempted to Justij Now to bring the parallel^ Mr. Roosevelt has asked cou a three point tax program, other one of those specific t sooner had his special messal at the Capitol than house aj members began going arou Jowlt could be expanded, i her had his own ideas and Ier began insisting and con insist on having those ide In the Roosevelt tax bill, tax program will result, a gj observers believe, a flarebacf President and his aspiratio election next year. The efforts to expand the j /nd a good many of them to be successful—represent I beginning. The thing is UkJ hall and snowballs-have a wj Jing too large to manage, they roll down upon the boy ' ed to make them. When the! first tossed his tax message ] was presumed to be the las the session, he explained tha pose of the new taxes was to balance the budget and at] time to lay a foundation fo bution of wealth. After the : In which the administration i at the Capitol tried to rush bill, examination disclosed | schedules be had propos plished neither a balanced „ the objective of redistribute The potential yield of the i on the greater incomes fail, way to produce a wealth redn Nor did the proposed tax L tances and gifts yield a grl because in none of the ins there large sources of reven When the President offer! bill he suggested InformaIlJ probable yield would be an 000.000 annually. Congresi amination of the schedules! a conviction among leaders : itol that the yield would excess of $JO0,000,000 annua along came Secretary Morge expressed various and sur ebont taxation but made I mendations whatsoever. Thl ®g to the trained political! here, was another mistake, f door wide open and natui was forthcoming a perfect] e (ax ideas born among I members-after the BresidenJ Was delivered. • • While it Is too early yet tte Iinal form of the tax It appearJncomed to basis' of e Hit Hard cumstanc new bill a greattte Incomes of a gres reds of thousands of pe I!? " r e tte* of 2 s e t th e tuU fOfC iho cSe ta3I rates next Mai toinJ»rSt lnstalIment of «°mes of 1935 is aue. consc„rf y haDg tbe Possl Ofeequeaces ' of the Prt ^ o g e- People/never a S 803 to W ta^ s n' Cb ^0bdltl0ns what * Peroua a1*® dlstastefP1 11 eereeA Iaya So’ the„. In their discus confer their now 500 A IWrithtVHRbottle^ r J d rIL? * " .c,ti'I Co* 100 Colo Soosevelt n m T *6nte•tor if S t have mu Se T J 0 * P« throurtSneDt 10 SeeMl Coursf h jlPeal t0 those wfe8 fen freelI 0flO Pnblin e n d t h a t I llaS avaJioh7°rkS'rellef 1 lnaJ fc u M eJ V pendWay. ^ to advantag. lndlCatiA 8t conSfess ha !SPSS! Duties |iday Tini6 Adjustment to Ving Period ication. tlon days are here marvelous freedom’ ind from tasks. I* adjustment, just as beginning of school is well for parents is, for by so doing piemselves and their ifficult moments, ihlldren will be ln. pon mother to fiu ? suggesting garner asfcs made attractive i of relieving her of will strain at the raint, believing that eir expected and pe- on, that vacation and no work. They Jrequests to do minor their ability, or to Jwever few, or, per. ave pleasant sugge3. Rational diversions, jreful thought on the 1 to prevent the chil- Ing on her too much, [Stance, and from bcs I aloof, in the second. Jie mother to have It Ijtood that she expeeta any one of the chll- Jind where the place believe It is a wise |eave such word at netimes it is dest-- ■ to get In touch with one in the house feir whereabouts. |o, to expect children Tomptly for meals— Jild be served prompt- dren find themselves Ivlted to meals with I then the telephone to inform the home (-and in younger chll- should be asked for possible, or refused HI Mothers’ plans may 3. Hj Ijusted to suit such rhaps children have Sg! engagements and can JM ed of them. learn, in tender years, Is a circle made of and while each unit :o Individual freedom ,. _xf# ie there remains the 7 *1 li'-y, which should be re must be co-oper- ition days can foster ’', ‘lid or young the mem- Icate.—WNU Service. !•plane Cargoes Ir liner which arrived Jun Paris recently had van, an African wild cockerel and a pair !en that such a mixed tock is carried by air, use Is being made of I to transport animals place to place. an Imperial Airways I a lion to this country lnent. He was provid- lcial cage. |ight in the Bay of Bis- gned to the Zoo aqua- fcn brought from Paris air. They were car- Dtilated metal contain- sea water, ive been flown to this iical fish, which would g voyage, are now fre- it here by air. rse to fly was a race- to make the journey jjry from Le Bourget to Iad it gone by train it ben too late to run In face.—London Tit-Bits. . PA R K ER 'S H A IR BALSAM[no^es DandrofF-S tops 3 *1*I Imparts Color ano uutT*to GrayondFadeaHatf 60c &nd41.00 at Drasgis ^s- „ - cor Cbem.TT LAMPOO - Ideal for ttfftirker*3Hair Balsam iy. 60 cents by mail or at drag, nical Works, Patchogne^*1* ■4 and Restlessness s frequently an a s o r T a p e w o tr o i n * s cheapest, safest; fcdicine for ridding cW fits of these parasites rs 5EAD SHOT Vermifuge National Topics Interpreted by W illiam Bruckart ,Ilona! Press Building W ashlngrton1 D, C RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. . ..„„ton-politics varies little to week or from adminis- fto® tration to adminis- M istakes tration. There is r cf/v mlich the same re' Are Losiiy action t0 smart ma- ^ »<1 m 'ch the Same ,C°“ Se' when a politician makes a Iucn1' ,, Djav. Those who make the J i f f 0 the P e n a ltie s ^ jnst BOff KMsVeVr'has made a political one hears an abundance of dis- iissioB In Washington as to whether Sir.[stake that may cost him dearly later » «111 be recalled how In 1928 Sen- William E- Borilh of ldaho ex‘a pledce from candidate Herbert nnf if Mr. Hoover were elect- “Te TOiiid immediately caU a special lion Of congress to deal with the EwltOTl tariff. Mr. Hoover car- % out his promise and in so doing rariit aliont his eventual downfall. Beaded congress for a specific thing, Lelr revision of the tariff affecting Lricuitural imports so that American Iiricolture could live. But congress, « ew®nss does so many times, re-‘ insed to stay in bounds. It got out rf had so badly that when the Hawlet-sraoot tariff bill finally was jetted into la"’ it turned out to be j boomerang of the worst kind. It cvcwhelmed Mr. Hoover and all of Uj0se rto attempted to justify it. Iitw to briDg the parallel to date, Mr Koosevelt has asked congress for i three point tax program. It is an- [tber one of those specific things. No J00ner had his special message landed it the Capitol than house and senate iembers began going around to see {pitcould be expanded. Each mem- tn tad Iiis own ideas and each mem- In ban insisting and continues to fDSitfm having those ideas included In tit Roosevelt tax bill. From this lax projram will result, a gopd many observers believe, a flareback on the President and his aspirations for re- election next year. The efforts to expand the tax bill— /nd a good many of them are going to be successful—represent only the beginoing. The thing is like a snow- tall and snowballs have a way of get- /Ing too large to manage. Sometimes they roll down upon the boy who start­ ed to make them. When the President first tossed his tax message into what ras presumed to be the last stage of the session, he eip/ained that the pur­ est oi the new taxes was ultimately Io balance the budget and at the same time to Is? a foundation for redistri- butinn of Health. After the first flurry In which the administration spokesmen at tie Capitol tried to rush through a till, examination disclosed that the EcMuIes he had proposed accom­ plished neither a balanced budget nor the DblecSve of redistributed wealth. The potential yield of the income tax on the greater Incomes failed in any wiy to produce a wealth redistribution. Kor did the proposed tax on Inheri­ tances and gifts yield a great return because in none of the instances are Here large sources of revenue to tap. When the President offered his tax Wl he suggested informally that the probable yield would be about $341,- annually. Congressional ex- •minntion of the schedules developed a conviction among leaders at the Cap- Ilol that the yield would not be in escess of 5100,000,000 annually. Then, ilong came Secretary Morgenthau who ^pressed various and sundry Ideas about taxation but made no recom­ mendations whatsoever. That, accord- ? to the trained political observers was another mistake. It left the Mr lt^e open and naturally there •>s forthcoming a perfect deluge of to ideas born among individual eobers after the President’s message »as delivered. * • » fcifV* ls t0° earIy yet to predict •nal form of the tax legislation, . it appears on the B basis of present clr- e H it H a r d cumstances that the . “ew bill will tax co,mes ot a ^reat many Irnn- Ieavio0 thc",san<ls persons at a Thei Infte than they now are paying, of Ho set t^le fnI* force and effect JKe rates next March 15 w Iases peoPle never like to tomic ™Ju.pay 13X68 now- with t anch Z l 0as what they are*toons ^tasteful than In Etrtets ^ rs- So, the political WashiriRt0 ^ discussion K o .4 ™ ,, 7 «">tend that Jor if Z , " lU have much to ai opp,JSit en Republicans and New the C e rl^ ve the abiUty t0T^TesavaiJawe toWerred V, . columns, I h tlle Presiiiv-.t ,-P0SSl.b!e strategy ■election This by i when in­ tax pay i eeo- aronnd pros- ob- nnd Mr. answer Deal utilize them, have of $5,000^000 which Bottle «t Wcon 100 Goia ^“jS. CW- the P ,J l cne Possible stral throUgh o at ln seekinS re-ti, Cotirse a^peal to the masses. . those whn 11 freelJ charged ^ Duwr0ntend that the r - ’ has SvaiiaKT0plls^-relief fund . ■nay i,e .. 'e t0 8Pend as he tray. 13 to advantage In a toS i 0tSaI fco^ reSS has given beyoOd the D determination m MsesJi ^ residentlS tax p, ^ lb^ new ^ agalnst 111081 ; Phases of a political he fit political every to go proposal all of char acter referred to earlier have become much more significant. * * • Although little blood has yet been shed, there has been a major casualty is ii n - already in the clashKellogg Pact between E thiopia to 'Be Buried aQd Italy. It appears that the Pact of Paris, otherwise known as the Kellogg pact and the Treaty for the Renuncia­ tion of War, is about ready to be buried in an Elast African grave. With an eye toward the dispute be­ tween Ethiopia ana Italy, Secretary Hull of our State department has pro­ claimed anew America’s belief In the sanctity of the-treaty arranged during the term of office of Secretary Frank B. Kellogg and Foreign Minister Bri- and, of France. He has said very defi­ nitely that the United States looks to both Italy and Ethiopia to live up to their obligations under that treaty be­ cause each nation is a signatory there­ to. But, while Mr. Hull’s pronounce­ ment must be regarded as a most com­ mendable thing and his attitude must be accepted as properly representative of American conscience, the fact that tlie United States expects the two na1 tions to live up to their obligations does not insure that result. Indeed, there is every reason to believe that the Kellogg pact is about to become, if., it has not already become, just an­ other scrap of paper. In frequent conversations, one hears the question asked: Why is the Unit­ ed States taking such Interest in the controversy between Italy and Ethi­ opia? Those nations are thousands of miles away. They represent little that has a direct contact with our eco­ nomic or political life as, they stand today. Why, then, should the Ameri­ can government interest itself in that controversy except on a basis of the American people’s natural love for peace? The answer is simple One can go back through history and discover where every important war had its be­ ginning over issues of no more con­ cern to other nations directly than the Issues between Ethiopia and Italy. One must become a -b;t disturbed in examining the political structure ob­ taining throughout the world today. It is in the nature of a keg of powder. Japan and Kussia are at bayonet points because Russia feels Japan is expanding in the Far East and is seek­ ing eventually to take over a portion of the territory so long under control of the Russian Bear. Besides there is a Chinese question In the Far Elast with the Japanese encroachment upon Chinese affairs. This condition has left a bad taste in the mouths of many statesmen and It will be influential if and when there is a realignment re­ sulting from the crisis In Africa. * * * President Roosevelt has taken some notice of the plaint of members 'of house and senate Revises who have been feel- tlMust'1 List inS the effects of Washington’s,intense heat. He has partially redefined the list of “must” legislation that he wants passed before congress adjourns. Head­ ing this list, of course, is the tax legis­ lation and it is more than intimated that he will not agree to an adjourn­ ment until a new tax law has been passed and signed. Mr. Roosevelt also Is Inclined to-ln- sist that congress enact the bill which will deny corporations or citizens the right to sue the federal government on account of losses allegedly sus­ tained through the government’s gold policy. This legislation, from the ad­ ministration’s standpoint, is Impera­ tive because unless courts are denied jurisdiction • In such. suits it is an u n ­ doubted fact that there will be many of them filed before congress recon­ venes next January. Thus, if the ad­ ministration desires to avoid serious court battles In the face of the Su­ preme court’s decision in the famous gold cases, it must prevent the filing of those suits. Once they are filed, an. act of congress cannot prevent the rendering of a final decision and the adjudication of damages if any are' found.Another measure which the Presi­ dent wants enacted is the banking act of 1935. It has undergone consider­ able revision at the hands of the sen­ ate sub-committee, presided ov-er by Senator Glass of Virginia, but the lat­ est word from the White House is that the administration will not insist upon the radical provisions originally written into the bfll by Governor Ec- cles, of the Federal Reserve board. The Ecclea plan, it will be recalled, was regarded by many as certain to result in placing control of the ba““" ing structure In a politically minded Federal Reserve board. The Glass ^re­ vision is considered to have eliminated that danger.' A „The President has encountered a serious !obstacle; In the banking > however,' that is related te P0Jiti^al questions. As the bill now stands, banks would be permitted to under­ write issues of corporate securities, that is, to act as agent for the sale of those securities. Mr. Roosevelt te seeking to find some way by which tneunderw riting bank can ^ prevented from investing Its jw n funds to securities, a danger h e regards a* SraTe‘ Cf WeEtern Newspaper Caion.' / Let Our Motto'Be GOOD HEALTH ?Y DR. LLOYD ARNOLD I ! PVVfVVVVVWVMVfV SCARLET FEVER The past winter has been an epi­ demic year for scarlet fever. In Illi­ nois scarlet fever and other forms of streptococcus infec­ tions, notably red sore throat, have been more widely prevalent than'' at any previous time since reliable rec­ ords have been . kept Scarlet fevei\ in all degrees of in­ ten sity , has been widespread among children, while adults who have become immune to scarlet \fever through having had the disease In childhood have developed the sore throat. We do not have at this time a prac­ tical public health method of prevent­ ing scarlet fever as we have of pre­ venting smallpox and diphtheria. The chained or bead-like cocci of the so- called streptococci faniily are still man’s most dreaded bacterial enemy. They cause scarlet fever, erysipelas, child-bed fever, septic sore throat and blood poisoning. Scarlet fever is mild­ er than it was a decade ago; but it Is still- a serious disease. We use two general principles to control contagion. One is preventing the distribution of the causative agent of disease. We do this by a variety of' means, such as filtration and chlorina­ tion of drinking water, proper disposal of'sewage, the pasteurization of milk, the inspection and control of foods and food handlers. The whole big field of what we now call sanitary science has been built up around this desire of man to protect himself and his family against the dis­ eases conveyed through water, milk and other foods. We have made wonderful progress In the control of diseases spread through these channels, such as chol­ era, diarrhea, typhoid fever, etc. These diseases may, very frankly, be termed filth diseases, since they are caused by germs which are in the excreta of the sick person. The well person be­ comes sick by swallowing the germs." The dysentery outbreak that recently occurred In Chicago belongs to -this group. Regardless of where, how and why one of these diseases occurs, from oar standpoint it is a filthy "contami­ nation of food. Now as to the second method of con­ trolling contagion. This is by vacci­ nation, which makes people immutie to the causative agent One should look at this general problem of dis­ ease from two standpoints, one, the host, and the other, the invader. Tou and I are the hosts, the germs are the invaders. AU germs want to live, the same as you and I. Germs grow rapidly. We have some ways of preventing scarlet fever. These ways are not so good nor so efficient as we should like. It is possible to vaccinate against scar­ let fever by Injecting doses of vaccine. Five separate injections have been rec­ ommended as the best method. Before being vaccinated, however, one should have a skin teSt done to see If vacci­ nation is necessary. . After the course of five injections, another skin test should be made to make sure that the vaccine has been effective and immu­ nity established. This requires seven punctures in all. The length of time a person Is Immune to scarlet fever is still in question. This method has proved successful In preventing scar­ let fever In boarding schools and with other groups Of children under con­ trolled conditions. Vaccination against scarlet fever, if must be admitted, is not so successful as is vaccination against diphtheria. Anyone recently recovered from an attack of scarlet fever has disease-pre­ venting substances in his or her body. Blood from such a recovered person can be injected into a child during the early stages of scarlet fever arid the tfisease will run a short mild course. Sometimes the use of this convalescent serum, as the blood from a recently recovered case is called, will ca<ise a prompt disappearance 'of : the fever, skin rash and sore throat Scarlet fever antiserum, like diph­ theria antisemm, is available for treat­ ing cases ' of scarletxfever. But like the preventive" vaccination methods, .the scarlet fever'antiserum does not work so'well as the diphtheria antiserum. Scarlet ftiver, likfe most- of the con­ tagious diseases of childhood, begins as a sore threat ’ The diagnosis Is usually made upon the type of skin rash appearing a few o'Ays after the onset of the sore throat and fever. The disease is contagious'from the be­ ginning of the sore throat stage, even before scarlet fever Is established In the diagnosis. The contagion is spread by droplets from the throat, and not In the peeling skin, as many laymen believe.- One should try to guard children against contracting the ‘disease, partic­ ularly young' children. Ninety out of ea<:h hundred deaths from scarlet fe­ ver occur in chiIdVen between two and ten years of age. While scarlet fever Is not: a major cause of death now, re­ covered cases may have permanent and Irreparable kidney damage. Scarlet : fever lingered longer this spring than it has been In the habit of doing. This leads public health au­ thorities to believe that the . disease may have an early flare-up in the com­ ing winter.1: © Western Newspaper Union. SMALL NEED YET , TO WORRY ABOUT ICE. RECESSION It- appears that our refrigerating fM, *S l5reaWng down. The matter of the receding polar ice cap has for a long time engaged the.attention of scientists. TOthin recent times the recession of the cap has been of such proportions that evidence ef It has been observed within the span of only a few decades. For instance, the Russian Arctic expert, N. G. Datsky, In re-examin- ing areas surveyed 40 years before, found that in Siberia, where his predecessor, Professor Shrenk, found eternal frost at the depth of two meters, there was now no frost at any depth, not. even In the marshes. In other localities, where Professor Shrenk found only shrubless tundra, Mr. Datsky saw new growths of timber I Only recently, Prof. R. T. Belknap of the University of MicTiigan came upon a pyramid of rocks and a note originally placed at the foot of the Cornell glacier by the late Professor Tarr. The note was dated 1896. In the time Intervening, the glacier had moved back three-quarters of a mile from the marker. R. F. Griggs of the University of Washington tells us that In the Alaskan tundra country the forest line is advancing at the rate of a mile a century. Trees are now grow­ ing on land which had been barren for 100,000 years. If this keeps on, you say, Hudson bay will eventually become a sub­ tropical body of.water. Well, what of it? It has been several times be­ fore, and, If geological evidence is anything to draw conclusions from, It will be again. According to W. J. Humphries of the United States weather bureau, if all the Ice of the polar caps melted, the ocean levels would be raised 151 feet! And that’s something else to try out on the Elide rule.—Earl CUiapin in Forum and Century. Hare Worth Catching The richest hare in the world is running wild somewhere near Biele­ feld, In the Rhineland. Round its neclc Is a handkerchief containing aboiit $400 In notes. Meantime a peasant woman is weeping out her heart for trying >«to strangle a hare In a trap with an Improvised belt concealing her worldly possessions and succeeding only In setting the animal free. IT’S A FAVORITE ■y SWEET AS HONEY IT1C TLJC U /'M lIEX/ HERE’S A TIP ON A PIP HOW THEY CRAVE FOR IT O n C E you taste Grape-Nuts Flakes, you’ll cheer tool These cri;;p, golden flakes have a de­ licious flavor—and they’re nourishing. One dishful, with milk or a-pam, contains more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. Try it —your grocer has it! Product of General Foods. CARL, VOUR DISPLAY OP tempo? eoiw w cep m I CAM1T USG SOU IWTriE TOURNAMENT/ W R B ALWAVS 8LOWm UP! AW -TgLL WM TO * 60 STRlNS RlS m R AC KET-H E1S fk LOUSV COACH ANW AV 1 HELLO, CARU I HEAR VOO1R6 ■GOING Ib PLAV IN THE IMTER-SWg J e m s TdURtmstrri W at1I1M WOT! TME COACH KICKEP ME OUT' 3 0 1 LOSE IVW EMPERfoO EASlLV I I NEVER DlO UkE TriIS DOCTOR! HE'S 100 SMART...* HE'LL MAKE TROUBLE FO!? MEVET' as eve mo voo c a r l, vou HAVE COPFEe-WERVK. TriAT'S'WHAT CAUSES VOUR HEADACHES AND tHDISESHOW -A N O BAO TfeMPER ? I HAP MV I'D TSKE ALL 1HE DocroiKjWTrtE^ WORLP AMD DROWM 'Em ! SHUCKS, DOCTOR.. COFFEE OOESN'f HURTME I ¥ ■ . trIftV ADW COTCt/fCOFfEe AND SWITCH 10 postum. you'll see we DIFFERENCE1 W ELL-ALl Rig h t, 1 DOCToR- IF VOO CURSES! THAT BCASl-BP m oico KMOWS THAT POSTUM. AlWfWS ORlVES ME Oltr l I? Il1 NOrfACHAN.ee! H CARL IS PLAVIN& SlMCE CARL SWlfCtteDf I A MARVELOUS GAME I i j TO ftiSTOM HE1S M . . . SUTACew'TVOt^ Wm tso 6Jxjp S L a fra id he’l l b lo w o p ? J .1 M ftr w to s t* . J fl UfySSTS HIM! j “Why was coffee harm' Ing m e, Doctor? I' thought only children should never drink it!” '*Oh, no! Many adults, too, find that caffein In coffee can upset digestion, or nerves, or prevent sound sleep!” you believe coffee disagrees with you. .. try Pos- Irum for 30 days. Postum contans no caffein. It's timply whole wheat and bran, Toasted and slightly irvwetened. It’s easy to make. . . and costs less than lialfa cent a cup. it’s delicious• and znay prove a real help. A product of General Foods. FREE! Lat vs send you your first week’s sup­ ply of Postum free! Simply m ail the coupon. G e n e r a l Foopst Battle Creek, Mick. . w . h. u. * 3 * »sSeod zse, without obHffatian, a week's aopply of Postum. ------------------------ {Street ' i ~ .. . . City— .— Stete- :!! F ill in com pletely—p rin t jzaaia and address This offer expires Deeesaber 31.1935 ' ___ ►’-.-./I*' W t0 (Sr:.-? RECORD, Mnr KSVIkLE, N. C._ THE FEATHERHEADS 6/ O aibom e9 M at Kmppn Otte About Face I SE E vTbU1RE PIiTftMT? A NEW PACE ON THS MATTER ON— 3ilST. GLOSS OVER „ THAT ONE— BUT CAN'T YotJ QtVfE NATURE A CHANCE UKfe THE WOMEN USEO T o OO ? OH/-IEAH ? WELL, t WAnT To T elu you t h a t wom en used co sm e tic s in The. ~T M lPPLE A S E S / , v /es-l Know/ t h e y PQ WHAT k /CyjomaR'S MAKEUP SfefMS To -ft Kg A LOT o f Time— Otl THE HNNEY OF THE FORCE By Ted O1LeueMlDO WoUta Kcwtptptr Unte Class—i Finney, -do *<bu k n o w A MR. sm oothie CW ELM _ ■ , STREET ? Know w h o h e B E, s o r —PonT KNOW HIM —- WELL, SO R Y WHAT PO YoU Th in k o f him ? W EUvSO R -O I TTNK HE BE A SlNTLEMAN J YoU PON1T ASSOCIATE WITH HIM? POM1T (CMOW HlM VERYr IMTIMATeLY Z \UiAT^AD mvwn I — ANP So YOU -. THINK HES a L - GfeUTLfeMAM f 7 /— Y ou.,CANTWIN— MootoJJiFffi \ CINNE/ “— A©ntlemah NlVER HUBKTfsottswyft FEELiNSr UNlNTENlioW- alVj - MESCAL IKE By S. I- HUNTLEY Out for the Big Money WELUjOF . I AU* TMIKIGS VJM AwT T U '. ? Hir1S ACCOUSJT OF MLH-EV 1 BATES A--LOSlNJ' A NIfCKSL. UMOER TH' SIDEWALK. UIE SOT STARTED A.-LOOKIM' AM'- T' ANJ' SO VUH TEAR-UP ALLTH1If -FOR A . - SIDEWALKS INJ • M NJICKEL.1 TOWNJ OJJjTO HECK WITH SI ICKEL _ A FELLER TOtD US ZEB BOGSS N-W-., A DIMS SOMMEI--- VROUSJD HERE LAST T NMEEK.' 1J- I1Iih t. !M d . by S. L . H u n tle y; Trade Hetr. V , 3. P at. Office) S’MATTER POP— Ambrose Backs Up His Statement By C M. PAYNE 'T O O A R ■PaIST CRAZ-/; W inic+h v ? “REG’LAR FELLERS” LPlM TJiM A Cb I Hi! NIOW t4 e TBOUTSLE STA*T5 fF i '> y c i ISome 1 IM-ZEia E L lic iW I IS t f i M 3> A - TttAT WAT, , NAlNrr I* V JE L I.- A tl- NfAVISt SO- A L im -E T S l T . (© The Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Deferred Geography 31 Dfl H A V E A N lV OF 'TO VME-^sRip O ft'TH t R lV E -V eA R . F L f t K ? © The AsocIated ^ewspapferfl i -THeeiuE £ Trying to Be Quiet By GLUYAS WILLIAMS IS P1AVW6 BCCrtIiS OME ViflH BUD BEHIS DEFEND­ ING VARD AGAINST CfiEvZ OF IMAGINARY Bltf BlDOD- THIRSTY WRATES MOTrtCR CAUS FOR £W®- CAUS Iff TOP VOICE TB NESS SAKE NOT Yo SHOIlf BUD, STATIONED AS IOOk- SO MUCH1TriEY1U BOTH. OUT IN SMALL TREE1TO ER TrfE NEIGHBORS- SfOP SHOUTING SO BUD SHRIEKS H f COUlDNf ,HEAR BECAUSE OF TriE ■■■ pirates’cannon fire. -REPEATS ORDER. LOUDER BUD VEUS WHVT ,euvAs.W/UIAW5 SHOUfS HE DOESN'T RRLWifS ARGUMENfBOfH MOTHER CAUS WEARILY: KNOW WHYl TriEV MUSTN'T SHOlrtiHO ATOHCE1AsTt) NEUERMtNDl SO ON - TriBTS ALL. NEIGHBORS HOW PIRATES CAN BE PlAYirtS PIRATES 'OR SOMEfHfNS RlUSHr WnJtOUf VfeUBfS (C o pyrielil. : L y T h a EeU B yadicaM . In c.) OurPet Peere ByMzG-KBTTNER OH MAN/ I MDSHaWtfl A TPM COM'OVEFS. I ANP HAVfeEifigS* IWfIH MfeP <cwrtnr.:ff>A£L ANP VUHAT A MiAiTOWia MAKEWR PINNER y ^ r 1 NOTHANK YOU. IM l NCT REApy TO DIE JUST /ETft aSP Pt™ B U S IN E S S G IR L S W I L L L IK E THijjI p a tt e u x 5230 The smart business girl has ha| own rules for chic—tailored nine simplicity. And here’s the frock I that obeys the dictates of fashki | and utility. There’s a world of yooUt-1 ful charm in that simple collar m| flattering curved yoke that cuts tan I a bodice with the very new "teal and back” fulness. Tbe paneled s., breaks Into pleats just In time hi give you lots of walking freed®! Wear the sleeve puffed or flared—let I your “type” be your guide Beeanaj every smart business girl will chocss I this pattern and run up several Ia | the evenings, the frock pictured lua I been kept especially simple. Cliooa I a cheery , flower print silk on a dark I ground—or a washable pastel Pattern 2230 is available In 1 14,16,18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38,40 and 41 I Size 16 takes 3% yards 39-incb fab­ ric..,, Illustrated step-by-step serin* [ Instructions included. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (Ihe) In I coins or stamps (coins preferred I for Hiis pattern. Write plainly nasa j address and style number. BE I TO STATE SIZE. Address orders to Sewing OrdiJ Pattern Department, 243 West Sea ] enteenth street, New York. FUR, MEANING DISTANT Teacher—Tommy, can you s[4 fur? Tommy—Yes’m, f-u-r, fur. Teacher—Correct Now can JB | tell me what fur is? Tommy—Yes’m. Fur Is an anfel | long ways off. W ithout Leava Alice—What do you mean by I Ing me without permission? Al—Forgive me. I just coulM| help myself. _ Alice—But you did help yours® | Just mow. Only Objection “Why do you disapprove of ®| movies?” “I don’t disapprove of them,” ■J1'I swered Senator Sorghum. “My I objection to them is that politM1^ | are led by indiscriminate pub imagine they’re movie stars.” WNU-T j ^ ade a business tr ip to L exj jtfidav- Miss Elva C artner spent MooresviHe- ConntyagentRobertSm iJ spent one‘day last week in j 0B business. Robert Safriet. of near I Church, was in town on bi Thursday. Miss Marv Frances O1BriI Detroit. Micb.. is the guest aunt. Mrs. James McGuire. Mrs. D. L- Pardue andl Frank Honeycutt spent T hl afternoon at Granite Quarryl Miss Jane Crow returned! Yhursday from a week’s visij latives and friends at Monro Mr. andM rs.J U. Tur IVlnston-Salem, spent last ' town with their parents, ReJ Mfs-E. W. Turner. Miss Louise Stroud rd home Sunday from Brevardj she spent two weeks w ith ” Mrs. Harry .Stroud. Mrs. R. B. Sanford an Marshall, and Misses Hayde ford, Annie Ruth and Call, Atley Hartman amj Waters are spending a week i James. Paul Mason, Jr., of, Winsl lens, spent last week in towj friends. Dr. Mason will mq family from th e" Twin Mocksville shortly. They copy the John H. Clemend on North Main street. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Wind children, of Atlanta, Ga., Mr. and Mrs. J. S. .Daniel er relatives in Davie 'd u r past wee k Mrs. Windsp sister of Mr. Daniel. Mr is connected with the Si Railway in their Atlanta ofi Thomas Nance, of Co and Miss Ruth Lagle, Augusta, were united, in last Wednesday at W alnuj Rev. S. H. Reid perform! marriage ceiemony. .T he! wishes for this young coup] and happy married life. Leo Allen, of Cana, R. il a blue crane a tew days a| measured 7 teet 7 inches fro tip. Cranes seem to be pie. Davie. Mail carrier J. A .| was exhibiting a white cranj whileago that was killed] route. Attorney E. H. Morris ener as well as a lawyer, exhibiting two tomatoes day that weighed 2 pound] #ances. Thetom atoes gre same vine, and are of anew* They looked delicious, but| “ot allowed to sample then Alittle son and daughte] t-leo Ammon, BiU ieandJ. ], p out 7 a“d IO years, who aj resbyterian Orphanage atl bPongs, underwent operatj appendicitis at Davis Statesville, last Tuesday. Im iegirI and boy wiU llllIy recovers). Since the Masonic picnic held this year, the editoij 2 a special appeal to all st ^ u a l l y pay ^ J t-SUbk that occasion, to mail oj I b»<n rfnewaH us our credl sto ^ m Aeed of cash. 1 l W nce^ fh istim ew illL Appreciated. - 0 some time iast . . ~Jellied tbemselvj t Pow ptthzof groarie «i,'A ..1Sarettes, notions, 1 °.was Use^v to , is no clue a kV,-^bZguiltycparM JESS GIRLS |/IL L L IK g THjj PATTERN 2230 Ks, s p \- x 7d§ business girl has h| for chic—tailored fem. Iicity. And here's the fro4 s the dictates of fashlol % There’s a' world of you® in that simple collar ao|| curved yoke that cuts ln| with the very new “bosol J fulness. The paneled sH Bto pleats just In time I lots of walking freedol Jsleeve puffed or flared—l| V' be your guida Becausl Irt business girl will ehoosj Irn and run up several _ pgs, the frock pictured hi. I especially simple. Clioosl Iflower print silk on a darf I r a washable pastel. I 2230 is available In size! 120, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and i jikes 3% yards 39-inch falj rated step-by-step seirii bs Included. IlFTEEN CENTS (15c) stamps (coins preferred! attern. Write plainly Damf ad style number. BE SUltB Fe s iz e . orders to Sewing Cirett bepartment, 243 West Se| ■street, New York. MEANING DISTANT ft-—Tommy, can you I—Yes’m, f-u-r, fur. -Correct. Now can yo| I’hat fur is? I—Yes’m. Fur is an awfuj off. Without Leave Iwiiat do you mean by Fithout permission? jrgive me. I just Ceuldnjj elf. 3ut you did help yoursel Only Objection Jdo you disapprove of ttjj disapprove of them,” enator 'Sorghum. ‘‘My onI to them is that poiiticiaog Indiscriminate publicity Ihey're movie stars.” jUpjUVIE RECORD. Circulation of Any P . County Wewtpaper t o w n I spent OV B C. Brock spent Frin jriisb u rv on legal business, u A Hartman and son Alton, X a business trip to Lexington Fridav- Elva Cartner spent several J 5 last week with friends in jlooresville- County agent Robert Smhhwick one day last week m Raleigh on business. Robert Safriet. of near Society Church, was in town on business Thursday. H i s s Marv Frances O'Brien, of Detroit. Micb., is the guest of her ejjt, Mrs. James McGuire, jlrs D. L. Pardue and Mrs. tost Honeycutt spent Thursday ,(,emoonat Granite Quarry, jliss Jane Crow returned home Thursday from a week’s visit to re Iatives and friends at Monroe. Kr. and Mrs. J U. Turner, of itoston Salem. spent last week in ’ town with tbeir parents, Rev. and jjts. E. W. Turner. SIiss Louise Stroud returned ItOBieSnnday from Brevard, where j shespent two weeks with Mr. and [,Mrs. Harry .Stroud. Uts. R. B. Sanford and son Marshall, and Misses Hayden San- fotd, Annie Ruth and Elaine Call, Atley Hattman and Bob Walersarespending a week at Lake James. Paul Mason, Jr., of Winston Sa- Ietc1 spent last week in town with friends. Dr. Mason will move bis family from the Twm City to llocksville shortly. They will oc- cnpy the John H. Clement house on North Main street. Mt. and Mrs. II. C. Windsor and children, oi Atlanta, Ga., visited Mr, and Mrs. J. S. Daniel and. oth­ er re/alrVes in Davie during the past wee k Mrs. Windsor is a sister of JIr. Daniel. Mr Windsor is connected with the Southern Railway in their Atlanta office. Thomas Nance, of Cornatzer, and Miss Ruth Lagle, of near Augusta, were united in marriage last Wednesday at Walnut Cove, Rev. S. H. Reid performing the marriage ceiemony. The Record wishes for this young couple a long and happy married life. Leo Allen, of Cana, R. i, killed a blue crane a tew days ago that measured 7 feet 7 inches from tip to lip. Cranes seem to be plentiful in Davie. Mail carrier J. A. Daniel wasexhihiting a white crane a short while ago that was killed on his route. Attorney E. H. Morris is a gard taar as well as a lawyer. He was I Sbibiting two tomatoes WTedues I 1I 'bat weighed 2 pounds and 4 I wtmces. The tomatoes grew on the ®wevine. and are of a new variety. tI looked delicious, but we were 101 jWowed to sample them! AAttIe son and daughter of Mrs t'oAmmon, Billie and J. G.. aged I I °Ut 7 and 10 years, who are in the I jteS vter,an Orphanage at Barium Pnogs, underwent operations for j peodlcItis at Davis Hospital. j J^lle, last Tuesday. Ailhope fun * *6 boy will soon be - lttllHecovered. b«uf Lhe Masonlc picnic will not Wa !Syear’ the editor is mak '1 I Special aPPeal to all subscribers I'on IhTally ?ay tbelr subscriptions Itheir * OCCaslon> t0 mail or send in hadi»taneWals’ as our creditors are v m need of cash. Your as |# e c ^ J ,S timewillbe^ereatly ' slJo fT o tbieves brolce ia t0 the Iow05I,:,,' ’ Davis, in Jerusalem WightanTuT time last Tuesday IiiJt ftR ped themselves to a CiT0ttllof Srocerles. tpbac auto WaTttes' notloaS1 etc; Ah Ns. JJsed to haul away the I’ "IeRtity nt ,Ire Is P0 clUe as to the F-T This ;! euiIty party or par- lljVis. a blR loss to Mr. D A V I E R E C O R D . M O C K S V I L L E , i f . C f. j O l ^Si. *935 G. F. Booe,/of Yadkinvillel R. 2, was in town Saturday on busi­ ness. - Mrs. E. W. Crowe antj daughter Miss Jane are spending some time at Roaring Gap. . Miss Hanes Clement, of Duke University, Durham, was the week­ end guest of her mother Mrs Frank Clement. - - Mr. and Mrs. 0. C. Austin, of Statesville, spent awhile Sunday in town guests of Misses Lillia and Cora Austin. P. J. Johnson and Harley Walker spent a day or two last week at Lake Junaluska attending a meet­ ing of Methodist stewarts. Hay Bale Ties.200 Bundles Priced Right. Mocksville Hardware Co. Miss Leona' Graham and Mrs. Melverine Hendricks Woodlief, of Farmington, spent Thursday in Kannapolis, guests of Mrs. T. M. Mauney. Mrs. Geo. Ballinger, of Dallas, Texas., and Miss John Smooti- Ieft today for Washington D. Cl, and Atlantic City, where they will spend several days. " - " The American Legion boys will meet the Mocksville baseball ieam on the local diamond Wednesday Afternoon, July 31st. at 4 :3 0. If you want to see some fun, come out. Mr. and Mrs; James Hickman and little son, of Detroit, Mich., are spending some time dp town with Mrs. Hickman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs S F. Binkley. At The Princess Theatre Friday and Saturday a good western picture with Tim McCoyin “Riding Wild” and 5th chapter “Lost ,City.” Monday and Tuesday Jean Arthur and Victor Garv in "Party Wire Miss Jane McGuire, whohojdsa responsible position with the FERA with headquarters for this district at Statesville, is spending her vaca tion here with her mother, Mrs James McGuire. Rev. William Howard underwent an appendicitis operation at Long’s Hospital, Statesville Monday His mauy friends hope for him a speedv recovery He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Howard of aear M.ocks- ville. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Owings1 Miss Mary Owings and Mrs. Charlie Brown returned Saturday from a delightful triD to Carolina Beach and other places of interest 111 East­ ern Carolina. Tbev also visited Rev and Mrs. 'B F. Rollins at Elizabethtown. Mr. and Mrs. S. 0. Rich and son, Marshall, of Wake Forest, were Mocksville visitors last week. Mr. and Mrs. • Rich were residents of this city for many years and have hundreds of friends here who are always glad to have them visit the old home town. One car load heavy 28 Ga Gal vanized Roofing. Mocksville Hardware Co. • Mrs. E, W. Crow carried 14 members of her Sunday school class on a picnic to the Hanes farm on the Yadkin River Thursday after­ noon. The young ladies enjoyed swimming, games and other out­ door sports, after which a bounteous picnic supper was served. All re­ port a delighiful outing on banks of the Yadkin. Genuine Neatsfoot Oii.- Pints 25c, quarts 4 5 c, Yz gallons 85 c, gallon $i'6<3\ . ; - ■Mocksviile Hardware Coj A message was received here Tuesday by relatives announcing th e d e a th o f Mrs. W -W /Swearing­ en, of Miami, Fia , who died while spending the summer in Arizona, Mrs. Swearingen Js a sister-in-law of Mrs. W. F. Stone street, of this city; Mrs. Wjll Douthit,' of Advance,.. R 1. aad Mrs. Cbas Smith, of Clemmons The funeral and burial took place at Miami last week. Miss Spillman Honored On Birthday. Miss Annie Frances. Spillman was hostess to more than forty guests on Saturday night, July 20th, honoring her sister Della Lee, on her thir­ teenth birthday anniversary. Miss Spillman greeted the guests and invited them out on the spacious lawn-where games were enjoyed a- round .a large bonfire, after which a weiner roast.was enjoyed by all. The honeree was the recipient of many lovely gifts. Those enjoying the weiner. roaBt were: Misses DelIa Lee Spillman the honoree, Edith and Ella Grey. Smith, Virginia and Aud­ rey Howell, Virginia Sparks. Esther Wood, Malinda Poindexter, Kate and Polly Mae Saip, Louise Montgomery, MozeIl Bowles, Evelyn Miller, Virgi­ nia Dare Blewbaker, Frances Seats, Martha Reece AIIeni Ethel Gough, Anice Dou Foster. Jay Lakey, Helen James, and Frances Spillman . and Margaret Miller; Messers Clinton Groce, Cecil and Charlie Leagans, Paul Walker, Burke Furches. Clyde Shore, Edwia Johnson, Kenneth and Wilson Sparks, Wilson Bowiesi Wil­ burn Spillman, Franklin Seats, Bu­ ford. Richardson, David and Marson Howell, Eugene Cornatzer, Bob Ru- pard, Burr Brock, Jr., Bob Poindexr ter, Wade Gough. Nelson Dinkins, Mr. and Mrs. W. M, Taylor. Of Interest To Farmers. Several communities o f Davie county have shown interest in a Ru­ ral Electrification project. Funds have been supplemented for the sur­ vey of communities in which no sur­ vey has previously been made. It will be necessary to have a prelimi­ nary survby-made, and this prelimi­ nary report must be in by August 15, 1935. Such report forms are available at the County Agent’s of. fice for communities where no sur­ vey has been previously "made. t h e Some unknown person entered the home of.Mrs. Mollie 1°«% *°™ time Thursday night or Frid ymorning and went upstairs and sto $ i0 and: an Elgin, watch belong H ?o Mr. and . Mrs. W.lham Lea^.who o fc c u p y the s e c o n d f i o o n t r a n c e 'w a s - m a d e t h r o u g h a r on the first floor. An effort ww also ihade to enter the home 0 , James b^ S er w?s Kill The W eevil For A Small Investment You Can.Give Your Small Grain Complete Protection Against WtJeviIs and Worms. : Ask Us For Information and Prices. Let Us Serve You ■’ LeGi and’s Pharm acy On The Square Phone21: Mocksville.N C, S a m p le S u its. Just received a big line of ;dry goods samples, consisting of women’B summer dresses 79c,up, underwear, hosiery, sox, etc, also men’s summer suits $2:50 up. A complete line of high grade samples at a price that will delight you. Come and . look them over. Flour . $3.15 and up Feed . $1.90 Cotton. Seed Meal ..'-'--..--J $1'75 Salt ■ xy J $L10 Salt, 5c package r 3c Salt Fish J - 5icjb Crackers, I Ib 12c Grackers1Slb 35c Pink Salmon, 2 caans 25c Herrings, 3 cans 25c Coffeei bulk V ^ IOcIt I-Ib Kenny packages ISc Rice lb 5c and up Large Laundry Soapi ? cakes 25c AU Oil Cloth, yd . 23c 9x12 Straw Rugs $3 39 25 Straw Hats, $1.00- , $1.50 value, each 50c Felt Hats, each 70eup - Ihavethe biggest assortment of Shoes I have ever had and my price is rightr Come in .and look - them oyer. Assorted colors for men; wo? men aad children.' JX / . > r . For mowers, rakes, disc .and sec­ tion harrow. Sefe me for prices. I handle’Jhe MaMeyHhrris line. Just received'a’large -shipment of - plow . See Our. LineJOf Fafin Machinery - N o t i c e T o T a x p a y e r s ! Under TKe Law Every Taxpayer Of DavieCounty Who Pays His 1935 Tax On Or Before A u g u s t I , 1 9 3 5 ° Will Be Allowed A 2 1-2 O O The Tax Rate for This Year is 75c Instead of 76 Cents. AU Payments On 1935 Taxes At The Present Time Must Be Paid Me And NotThe Sheriff. C O U N T Y ACCOUNI ANT. FACTS ABOUT W • Come in and learn how thousands of women have brought their cook­ ing up-to-date with" the Hotpoint Autoinatic Electric Range. See how easy it is to own one of these marvelously, modern ranges which bring automatic cookery, new convenience, bright cleanliness, healthful foods,-m ore free time from kitchen-work." Ilie money you put into old-fashioned cookery will, no doubt, pay for operating a beau­ tiful new Hotpoint Electric Range. ^You are paying for modern cook­ ery, even though you are using_an old-fashioned stove — you may as well enjoy the benefits of an Electric Range; Let us show you how: easy it is to have one in your home. cTH E!iTRl;U IBF W Never before a fullstzettable.top electric range of quality at-a price/so IowM odern table top design, fu ll Y M fa c i^ d m k n d in p SPECIAL PRICES I E L ECTR rc RANGE AND TERMS rjgbteuea -K- A -■ S- .#v:' - - •- -fefe '. '* '■ ';,v.., i^'C" : S -:- fS i M ffi Mooift ■jXi'SX'* « ■ m ; m i ■■■•.'* :■ ■■■ ■: m .. ;vv;iv- . .. .. TELLS HOW BANKS AIDED PROGRESS Economist Describes the Ways = Banking Institutions Have Contributed to Develop* ment of United States OMAHA,' Nebr.—Privately owned banking, despite Its faults, has served America well, William A. Irwin, Pro- lessor of Economics, Washburn Col­ lege,: Topeka, Kansas, declared In a re­ cent address here on "Banking In * Changing World.” "Under the leadership ot individual* banking has. helped to bring this coun­ try to a foremost place in economic de­ velopment among Jie nations of the woriti,” he SaidTsiThe small community has been developed by the individual bank. The frontiers-of America have been pushed forward, by the help and counsel ot the individual banker. The shocks ot wars , and depressions In 'a century and a half have been withstood THth the assistance of the individual Baiiker. - . . . _ Change MayJIe Necessary "It. may be that we have reached a tide In the affairs of America when new methods are needed. It may be that we have come to a point where the IndIi vidual should be submerged for 'the greatest good of the greatest number.’ - “ It may even be that complete cen­ tralization of the banking system has become an economic necessity In our complicated social life. But the banker ought to be satisfied that these things are so before he should give up his fight for the system we have known. We came to greatnesfe under that kind ot banking; we should not give It up with­ out unmistakable proof of the absolute necessity of such a change.” The American Pattern Professor IrwIn said that the pro­ posal which has been advanced for co­ ordinating banking operations In the national interest.under “a ‘Supreme Court’ Jor banking is. typically Ameri­ can and ought to have the most seri­ ous consideration of those elements which are clamoring for political con­ trol, which is' typically un-American.” It Is not wise; be said, to oppose changes as such, but that bankers should "see to.it that change, if and when-It does coae, shall preserve all that Is good Jn the past and stick as closely-as pos­ sible to the American pattern of things.”: Banking .is properly a' conservative profession,'he pointed ont, and’ should cling to ,practices and principles ot biuiklng that are, and always have been fundamentally sound. . "it Is to its credit that so large a group of its members' never faltered, even In boom times, In their allegiance to -thosq sound principles,’' he declared. “We probably owe" our salvation from chaos to tflat fact” NothingUnusual. (From TheYelIow Jacket-): . - On Monday, June 17. CoriKreasman Doughton complained jn the Congres­ sional Record that'“on page 9695 of the Record of Jiine 14,1935, in roll- call No. 95,. the gentleman from North Carolina, Mr. Bulwinkle,. is recorded as: among ttfose voting •yea’. As a matter of fact, he was not here and did not vote,” -.7; AU of Which is easily believed since information was to the effect that Congressman Balwinkle ■ was ■ in a Washington Gity hospital, and out of human touch with the congressional session. /. ■ -I— vfe BiU The Yellow Jacket hastens to reassure Congressman Doughton that there is no reason to repine. Even the record of a Congressman being in a hospital and still being counted as voting in his seat in Con­ gress need not occasion undue alarm. For by the way the North Carolina Democrats depend lately almost wholly on absentee votes to win their' elections, and toe fact that the" re­ cent rotten Legislature of North Ca- lina, despite the unanimous protest? of every newspaper in !the state and most of the better-class Democrats, utterly refused to smash tbe abomi­ nable absentee ballot laws in the state and thus continued them in full force and effect, it would seem . that that is the sort of voting they prefer. Well, if a voter, dead and in his grave for a decade or so, can be voted in the Democratic primaries and elections in Korth Carolina why shouldn’t a supposedly living Con­ gressman be permitted to vote, he being merely in a hospital and ap­ parently not yet dead? . No Order On Their BANKS AND COLLEGE i LAUNCH NEW SCHOOL Aims to Offer Studies in Advanced I Banking Subjects to Bank L Executives—Public Duties I . of Banks Stressed • NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. — The Graduate School ot Banking, an un­ precedented educational project, oper­ ated under the Joint auspices of the American Institute of B.anking Section . of the American Bankers Association and Rutgeiv University, with 220 en­ rolled students from 35 states and the District of Columbia, Inaugurated here In June Its first resident session. The states represented and the num­ ber of registrants from each were as follows: Alabama, 2; Arkansas, 2; Cali­ fornia, 2;- Connecticut, 9; Delaware, .3; District of Columbia, 6; Florida, 2: Georgia, 3; Idaho, I; Illinois, 8; In­ diana, 2; Iowa I; Kansas, I; Kentucky, 2; Louisiana, 3; Maryland,.!; Massa­ chusetts,. 9; Michigan, 5; Minnesota, I; Missouri. 6; Nebraska, I; New Jer- ,sefTSl; New York, 50; North Carolina, 8; North DakotalI; Ohio, 7; Oklahoma, I; Oregon, 2; Pennsylvania, 32; Rhode Island, I; Texas, 6; Virginia, 6; Wash­ ington, I ; : West Virginia, I; Wiscon- win, ii Wyoming, I. The annual resident sessions of the graduate school will be supplemented between periods by continued exten- ; sion. work the: Btudents a t their homes. The purpose of the school is - . described as being to offer In a three year course a comprehensive approach to an advanced: study ot the: various administrative problems in banking and trusts institutions The teaching ~ procedure Is a combination of the case system and . the lecture discussion method. --- . .. . The Curriculum The curriculum embraces basking . administrative problems and policies, bank investment problems, legal and managerial aspects: of trust business, legal phases ot.;bank administration and economic: problems in .the field of money and credit. The public relations - iuad responsibilities of banks and meth­ ods for meeting these- obligations are ^emphasized in the courses.- w .It la p l'a-njhed^to s e t ^jiiip ilar schools (n'.coocenition with other; unl: - ‘ - , _ versitles lh.varlouB parts ot the coun­ try: The school will add 200 registrants - each yeaT for two jrears untU <00 are : ;: . / enrolled. /U-- :•/ '■ . The tr u s te e s .o f the.Educational Foundatlonr of tha Amerlcan Bankers Association have set aside funds from ^ the foundation to grant,100-loan achol- v - arships Ofr ?160* each to qualifl&i- Ii^ When the snpposed corpse rose up on her bed and declared: . “I want some cantaloupe’’ mourners an d sympathizers who .bad gathered at the home of a negro in, Southmoht, Davidson county, the past week, lost little time in leaving the place. The negro’s wife has been a sufferer from a malignant disease. When she re­ cently sank into a coma, examina­ tion by her family indicated she was dead and relatives wer£: summoned to the home.' Arrangements had been made foran undertake^ when the woman returned to the home. Arrangements had.been madefor an undertaker when the woman return­ ed to consciousness.and declared her hunger for the melon. Ih:-: 1 1 1 1 Hussia and Japan are making faces at each other more—probably in the. interest of peace in the Far East! - NOTICE! Having qualified aB Administratrix' of the estate of George Hendrix decs’d. no­ tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims ogaiost tbe estate of said deceased to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned on or-before the 28 th day of June. 1936. or this notice will be plead­ed in bar of any recovery.. - -- AU persons indebted to said .estate please call on the undersigned and, make prompt settlement. ' ' -* .This the 28th day of June. 1935. BEULAH APPERSON, Admrxv of George Hendrix,-Decs'd. B yA iT -G R A N T l-A ttyi Administrators Notice is hereby ' given tihat the undersigned hSa qualified as admm- iatratorof, J.A.Hege.deceased.All persons having claims, against the es­ tate of the said deceased, will; pre­ sent them to the undersigned on or beforejhe 29th day of June, 1936, or this notice will.be.pleaded in bar t f their recovery.. AU persons indebt­ed to said estate will- please make immediate settlement. This - 29th day of June, 1935. .W. T. S. MYERS, Administrator of J ‘ A. Hege, deceased, r - KOBBRT SrMcNEILL. Attorney. The department of agriculture re­ ceives^ thousands of . letters a year asking about means of eradicating Land posters for sale. About the Only thing petmenantly certain in connection with- the mat­ ter is that when the $4,800,000,000 of new money to be spent on relief has been spent, the country will be i 14,800,000,000 more in debt. - Temporarily, of course, a few million stomachs.will |be filled three times a day and material comforts will go to many millions more of the needy and indigent and distressed. ' But General Hugh Johnson came near draining the cocoanut of its milk when he said, taking up the re­ lief duties of New York City, that he bated'the whole business “because it isn’t helping anybody anywhere.’’ That’s not ail he ’said, either, or the more far-carryjng. “When the sourde of-tnoney is cut off, we will be rigtit back where we started,” he snapped in as an adden­dum. . .. And that's ^rhat may be general­ly feared. . :: Relief money only' puts a bit of ointment on tbe sore: the germ stays on, eating its cancerous wav toward the arteries of life.—Charlotte .Ob­server. _____‘ - An old timer tells us .that one of the things the new generation will have to learn is how to pick up a thin dime off a wet bar.—Ex. Things That Seldom Worry Us: The suffering of the rich men called upon .to pay taxes; ; DR. R. P. ANDERSON DENTIST Anderson Building - / t , >: UocksviUet N. C. - _ , Office 50 - Phone • , Residence 37 rtiiim im iiiniiiinnm m nnym nnn ...... N O T I C E ! The Law Requires Me To Garnshiee The W ages O f ' Persons W ho H iave Not Paid Their Poll Taxes, . And To Levy On Personal Property Arid Real Estate For O ther Unpaid Taxes. So, Pay Your 1934 Coatity A nd State Taxes ' NOW And Avoid This Additional Cost. AU Real Estate Will Be Advertised August If Tax Is Not Paid 0 CHARLES C. SMOOT, Same. Administrator’s Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of Mary Jones, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claimii against the estate of.said de­ ceased to present the; -same to .the undersigned on or. ^before the 24th day o£ June, 1936. or this notice wil! be plead : in' bar of recovery AU per8oii8 indebted to said estate will please call and.settle without delay. This the 24th day of. June, 1935. V G; F. CORNAZTEK, Admr. of Mary Jones, decs’d. A. T. GRANT, Atty. WKot your adversary speaks well ofyou look him over very c]03ei and hestiate before saying *' 1yes. ’ 6 6 6 UQUID-TABIfTS SALVE-NOSE DROPS checks malaria io 3 day* COLDSfirst day. TONIC and LAXAllYt ‘ I V - HiUiiiaaii^ .,Zr BEST IN RADIOS YOUNG RADIO CO. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. BEST IN SUPPLIES .......... !AMBULANCE' CAM PBELL § \^ L K E ItF U N E R A L H O M E :r ' embalmers Telephone 48 -- Main Street Next To Methodist Chdrch tmwuumainmimiiiiianiitmiiimiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiKamiminmmaKmaaaaaai DAVIE CAFE ‘‘On The Square” . : ■ Mocksville, N. C, Next To Postoffice And Just As Reliable -- Regular Meals ‘’ . 35c Ice Cream, Soft Drinks,,Short Orders, Every Hour. . P.-: K. M A N O S, P ro p . % Kathleen Norris I t i Notice To Creditors! ^ HaviDtf qualified aa Admlnistratorotthe estate of W. S. Gnffy deceased notice is hereby given to all persons bolding claims aKainst the estati sentthe-same. undersigned, Cleveland, Ncrth Carolina Route-2, on or be&re tbe 9tb day of July, 1936 or this notice wlll be'p1eadedsin_ bar: of recovery. - iAll persons.indebted to .-said­ estate will please call*andyjfiake -proper settlement ^Tbis the 9th day or JToIy 1935 C J. R. GUFFY1' Addi’r.' C A D e l i g h t f u l L o v e S t o r y - o £ T i g p S i s t e r s J ie S d this -new story from the peiu of one of ,Americans best-loyed womanwriters—Kathleen * ^ Norris. SRe tells, a lively-and moving story ~ ~ ofvthe iorluw esr’of u n in terestin g faznilv e- l^ v e l anjrwhere ^ . any day on the SOUTHERN for I ■ A. Fare For Every Purse 2 permile lie . ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COACH TICKETS . Per Mile . . . foi; Each Uile Traveled. :* 2c ROUND TRIP TICKETS— Return Limit 15 Davs Fer Mile . . : / . for Each Mile Traveled. * 2 Jc ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 6 Months. PerMile ^ .. . for Each Mile Traveled. , * 3c ONE WAY TICKETS Per Mile: . . . for Each Mile Traveled . * Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment of proper charges for space occupied. No surcharge. f Economize by leaving yiur Automobile at home and using the Southern ■' Excellent Dining Car Service Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel. R. H^GRAHAM, Div. Pass. Agent . . Charlotte, N. C. Southern Railway System Il I s l ^ e O l d e s t , er I n D a v i e C o u n t y . The Price Is Only $ 1 .0 0 P e r , Y e a r . Siend A Year’s Subscription To Your Relatives Who Live In Distant Counties Or St!at§s. They Will Appreciate A Weekly News Letter From Their Old Home County TMe DAVIE RECORD XarriesA NumberOf Features ThM You Will Not FindJn Any Qtlier Paper In This County. *■ i L.S' « JHe Record is pirepared to; print '' VOLUMN XXXVII. NEWSOF LONj What Wa* Happening In The Day* of Automobile J Hole. (Davie Record, July J. A. Daniel spent ^ •Winston on business. Harry Little, of Hicl Sunday In town. E. C. Lagle made a to Winston Saturday. Mrs J. T. Parnell is with fevet at her ho; bury street. ^ jliss Mary Heitma; day last week in Winst Luther Leary, of spent last week In tow and Mrs. C. S. Cashwi The editor spent sevi week with relatives a t! . Miss Aneta Miller ret sdav from a with frien' lotte. Mrs. J. B. Johnsto Knox, spent Thursday shopping- Miss Daisy Hamptoi to Elkin last week to s days with relatives. Work has been delsj Masonic temple, on ao irig to wait for brick, I be pushed from now oi Misses Josie Prather, Hal Morrison, of Stai Agnes Speight, of house guests of Miss last week. Prof. J. D. Hodges Stroud left Monday :fo: . ..,attend ..the State mee Farmer’s Union as del' eral other members ar log, among them the Record. Wanted—Some youi cate in Mocksville. C dies outnumber the bo . N. T. Foster, of thi: 111 with tever. T. P. Foster, the farmer on R. 4 , made of wheat ou 4 acres year. Misses Helen Patten cord, May Dorsett1 of Eva Poindextor and Horn, of Winston, are! house party at Mrs. RJ son’s this week The 32nd annual Mi comes off this year on An excursion will I Winston as usual. Mr. Charlie Allen a Kdrfees, both of were united in mar city Wednesday by Cashwell1 and left ‘ for a bridal drip to Rij other points. The big Farmers’ pi| at Center last Thursd ander, of Charlotte, Ibe N. C. Farmers’ u l ®d a splendid -addres&f 0Us pinner was enjoyei crowd present. Will Haper1 of Ka' |nE sp high he can’t s] just drives across tbe I Seen gating green appj Set ripe nntil Januar Miss'Annie Moore ed herself at the hom erIilIrs. Cornelia Moi mOiy1 Wednesday m, MrsvGeorge Livengi ^V-afternoon- at Jberj m>les south of AdvanW- TzJlJobJci 0f SraWed license to p Wethodist Dlstric iiife ^ n^ ? 's ,,-ar..;M. ViUee- KyghtIf Eleamreiaf' who have:. Oi>e , ..v