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12-DecemberIf; FAGG EIGHT tH E DATIG RBCORD, HOGKSVtLLG N, C. NOVOMBBR 28. («6l U K - - Bj M ADD M cO U RDY W ELCH p A T n WAS T R Y IN G lo forget it * w«8 Christmas. Last Christm as there had been Jim m y and a ring on her finger. Then there was a fir l nam ed Ann and everything was over. Patti had packed up and come to this pari of the city to live. So there were no holly wreaths or Christmas trees in P atti's Pie "an d Bake Shop just off one of the bustling avenues. There w as only P atti with her brown curls and m tllow brown eyes and the long rows of pics and cakes in the •how-cases.People came from ail over to buy P atti’s cakes and pics and drink her eoffee. There was the little old lady who sold mngazines on the comer, who came in every day. She was the first to come in on Christmas Day, and she was lug' ftng a big wreath of holly and mistletoe. "H ang it in the window, dearie,” she said. P atti looked at the wreath and a sick pain caught a t her heart.Then there was the telephone operator who worked in a branch exchange, and later the little boy who always stopped by from school. He had such sad blue eyes it m ade Patti's heart ache. P atti always gave him a huge slice of pie m t t i nKkmcQ iiKe ^ a d ana got a personal ad in the late edition of one of the big dallies. I t read: "M r. Thom as Baker, please call a t P atti's Pie & Cake Shop a t once." p A T T I W A IT E D and w aited. The * little shop .wo#! brightly II and the C hristm as tree was a tiful sight to see. B ut no one cam o. Everything' had been sold» so P a tti wos putting out the lights when a tall young m an w ant you to come in. He sr.:d, " I m ay be the Thom as Baker you’re looking for. O f course I don’t know ." • P a tti Just felt It in her bones that he w as the rifiht one. She said, “ Do you have a w ife by the nam e of M argaret and a little boy named T om m y?” ‘"Yes, yes, 1 do.*' Then you'i Baker. They home.** "A re you sure M argaret wants m e too?" The. young m an’s eyes \v«ire suddenly full of hope. I P a tti nodded. *'I'm very sure," I and the young m an thanked her, turned to go and alm ost collided w ith another tall young m an who had just come in. H e w as looking at PatU w ith his whole heart in his eyes. "T he m inute I saw that per* sonal, I was sure it .was you. No one ever spelled Patty w ith an " i" as you do." TJicn he reached for her hands. "P atti..w on’t you forgive m e for thinking 1 could ever love another girl? W on’t you let m e put this ring where it belongs?"P atti was choked up with happi* ness as he slipped the ring on her finger. "F inding you is like » Christm as miracl<»." he whispered as he took her in his arm s. Aftermatii Alim ony is like paying off the in­stallm ents on the car after the wreck. e d u c a t io n : B T T H E FOOT lix ii W hen he saw the wreath iiis . eyes brighieq,ed. "G ee, that's _ ^ 4 r e « y .’*^ and he ate it w ith relish, but the sad bewilderment of his eyes never seemed to go away. When he saw the wreath, his eyes brightened. "Gee, th a t’s pretty. Y ou goin’ to have a Christ­ m as tree too. M is' P atti?”P atti started to sny no, but choked. Instead she nsked, "D on't you have a Christmas tree, Tom* m y ?" He shook his head. Patti said, her voice still choky, "Then w e'll have «ne here. You can help me trim it.” In no tim e at all tlie tree was up and they were trim m ing it. In tpite of her stern efforts, Patti was conscious of a slow excitement. T om m y asked if she believed in that Kris Kringle stuff, and she had to stop to think before answer­ ing. At last she said, "Y es, Tommy. 1—I think I do. Ktjs KrinEle‘‘“may be just a s>’mbol. but he's really alive in the hearts and sniriLs of hundreds of people all over the world." T om m y’s blue eyes grew bright, "Then do you think if I told him I only wanted m y daddy back, and nothing else, he would bring him back to us? M y m om m y told him to go, but she didn't m ean it. Now she's sick, but if Daddy would come back, we’d both be happy and she'd be well.” An idea was slowly dawning in P atti’s m ind. "W e ’ll sec what we «Hn do. T om m v.” sba j>ron)t<5Cd. Drunk-o-M«ters Tetline Truth About Tipsy Driven M achines are replacing police­ m en in ''telling it to the judge" in a grow ing lisi of cities and stales and are achieving a record percent­ age of convictions in cases involv­ing drunken driving. The International City Managers’ association reports lhat at least 180 cities in 31 state:? now use chemical tests to determ ine intoxication of drivers Involved in traffic acci­dents. Twenty>seven stale police or highw ay patrol agencies use the chem ical te.st also, although only 12 states actually have laws defin* ing drunkenness in terms of the alcoholic content of the blcod as measured by c):<7mical tests. Definitions in each of tl^e dozen states employ-the same lim its: If there 'is- .05- per cent or less by weight of alcohol in the subject’s blood, it shall l>e presumed he is not under the influence of alcohol. If the am ount of alcohol ranges be­tween .05 and .15 per cent, he may or m ay not be under the Influence, depending upon other evidence. If the am ount Is .15 or more. It can be presumed the subject is under I ^ e influence of alcohol. Poll Prbvtt Motl PmbIo ' Want Extra Hour of Slooy If you hate to got up in th« m orning, don't worry—you’ve got lots of company. T hat extra hour or so of sleep In the m orning is worth anywhete from |M to $32 a year to m ost peo­ ple. This is reported by Minne* apolis-Honeywell researchers after m aking a surve}» of living habits of homeowners in towns and villages ranging from 2,500 to 10.000 in pop- - ulation. The com pany retained two re­search organizations to find out. am ong other things, w hat feature i of their electric clock thermostats i its users liked best. The fact that they didn’t have lo get up early to start the fum ac' got the big nod— even over hi- other features as annual fuel v, ings up to 10 per cent, rangii; from $14 to $32. When Thomas Edison was a young m an, it occurred to him that he was handicapped by the lack of, a form al education. A person of great determination, Edison decided to teach himself, by reading the books in the library.One day, a few weeks after he had undertaken this ambitious tosk, the librarian noticed him at a cor­ ner table."W ell, T om ," she asked, "how m uch have you read?""O h, about 15 feet," he said. He had started at one end of the library and was reading every book on the shelf, regardless of the con- •— •«‘i______________________ P R IC E O F P EA CE ♦'What I cmH understond/' re­ m arked a plain elUsen, **ls If this eongressman Is as unpopu* lar and obnoxious to everyone as the newspapers elalm , how can he get so m any cofteessions front the Roose?" "T hai's easy»" spoke up an­other. "Suppose you’re In busi­ ness, and have a lot of Important things lo do, and a m an comes in and sits down beside you and be­gins to file a saw. Wouldn't you give M m anythfaig he w anted?" Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. W e C an Supply lio u t Needs IN G O O D C O A L , S A N D and B R IC K Call or Phone U s A t A ny Tim e P H O N E 194 Formerly Davie Brick & C oal C o SILER Funeral Home , And Flower Shop Phone 113 S. Main St Mocksville. N. C Ambulance S^:rvice T HE OLD CODG ER I seriously doubt that Benton, Ihe town from whence came I, is blessed with any greater number of characters than any other town its size. Still, it certainly has had its share of unusual personalities. F or instance, there was the old storekeeper I rem ember. After being a holdout for m any years, this old gent finally bought him ­ self (me of those new-fangled con- trapti<ms they cam e to call the automobile. Ho learned to drive it. b ut he never accustomed himself to traffic rules. H e was more or less a free-style driver and so his conduct in traffic was at best un­ orthodox.One day, the story goes, he drove down to M em phis and was cruising down to a crowded strcst going in the wrong direction. So w hat did he do but stop and start turning around right in the m id­ dle of the street while traffic piled up for several blocks In all direc­ tions. W ithin a few seconds the area was crawling with cops. "D on't you know you can’t turn around In the middle of the steeet?" bawled a burly bull. "W ell, now,” the old gent drawled in a voice that twanged like a loose guitar string, " I be­lieve I can m ake it!" Another tim e he had driven to St. Louis and there he created quite a disturbance in that nar- row-mlnded city by trying to drive on the wrong side of the street. Once again the cops appeared as if by magic."W haVs the m atter with you?" screamed a red-faced policeman. "Y o u drunk?" "N o ," noed the unruffled driver, " I ain’t drunk yet—just got here!’; FAZtM M ACBZITER 7 N e w M o w e r s , R a k e s , D r i l l s , D i s c a n d S e c t i o n H a r r o w * , M a n u r e S p r e a d e r s , S e l f - P r o p e l l e d C o r n P i c k e r s . W e H a v e S o m e G o o d U s e d F a r m M a c h i n e r y B i g L i n e O f N e w P a r t s I n S t o c k D o n ’ t P u r c h a s e Y o u r F a r m M a r c h i n e r y U n t i l Y < * u ' L o o k O v e r O u r S t o c k HENDRIX & W ARD N E A R C O R N A T Z E R M a s s e y H a r r i s F a r m I m p l e m e n t s J.. F R A N K H E N D R IX . M IS S C O L B E N FO S T E R O W E N W A R D Walker Funeral Home A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E D A Y O R N IG H T Piione.48 Mocksville, N O Boger & Howard P U R E .S E R V IC E Tires Batteries A n d Accessories Kurfees Paints C o m er N . M ain & G aither Sts P hone 80 Notice to Creditors HHVinx qitnlified as Arlnt>nl->/rator nf (hr e«iAte (if Mnniie P. Kliiii. deeee«'<d> tinUc** i- «|v*n to all pKr«»nt bold •ntf cltimp a-AinB( 8>i<t estate (n |irrn<>nt thf sanie. properly v* to thu oil or before tbp I3(b dnv of O-tn- t**T. 1952, or tbls ntttlce **'111 fe plenri *n b«f of lb»-Jr f#^nverv. All pi*rst.nii indr-bt- I'd ins'iid ♦•niatr will |ika»e caU upon th«» tindtfrsfKnrd nt Aitvancp. Roofo 2. N. C. and make |.romi>i SHtilemeiit.Tbl« )3th day ol October. m\W J. ELLIS. Admr.01 Mamie P. Elib. decs’ri.Bv A.T GRANT. Altornpy. Notice to Creditors Hiivlnit qux|>6«^i Adinini«rMi«r n( thf estate of Ge-rtfr G. Preblcs. dfceaned. notice is hereby kivcm d> all pers<«ii» bold me clnltns AtfainM ibe Rotpte »f itaid d<* CRAflfcl, tti i/reNeni tbt* himow lu Milder sirined. pron- riy on nr before tli» 3Hib day of Oct»iii*r, l9-')2 or thin' noiicr will be plead in U>ir »f tn<‘ir recovery. All Pfr«on> inrl*^'»e'l thi* sni<l estai**. wtil cnil HVO'i llie iiiidt'rKiiined a( Cno- leftntRr, N C . and tna>i» pr’iniU «a>iI«- Mi'Ul Tbin ibe Sntb d4y «! Oitluber. I9SI LONNIIS M. PEFTBLES Admr. nl Genrup E. P«>vhl«‘s. ai-cti'd Uncle Sam Says Ol uouroe you know your ABC's t>«t do you know yovr D's and .E'sT Under present world conditions, D standtav for defense , and B standfoc for Series B Defense Bonds are Inseparable. By buy< Ing Defense Bonds regularly you help build the nation's economic strengtb (iiat backs up eur defense effort. At the aame time you are..helplnr yearself. Every Series B Bond you'own'aoto- 'matlcally goes on earning Interest every jrear for 20 years from date of purebase Instead of 10 years as before. This moans that the bend you bought for SU.7S'«an return yen not Jiut m bvt'aa mueh as $33.33. A t3t.6« brad' pays f6<i.66. And so on.a. I traaiurr a«Mrlm*il N(>w is «h«. time to ■ «uk >cribe for The' Rifcird. ' ATTENTION FARM ERS! P O U L T R Y L O A D I N G • W e W ill Buy Y o ur Poultry Every T h u M a y M orning From S A t M*t To 11 A * M * In Front Uf E. P. Foiten Colton Gin HIGHEST Ma r k et prices paid W IL L P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S S A U S B U R Y P O U L T R Y C O . • ____________ 5allsbnfy..N. C The Davie Record Has Been Published Since 1890 52 Years Other* have come and (one-your county newspaper keeps goiiig. Sometimes it has seemed hard to make "buckle and tongue” meet but soon the sun shines and again we march on. Our faithful suhscnbm,'- most bf whoin pay promptly, giye.,us courage and abiding faith in bur fellow man. ^ . If your neighbor is not taking The. Record tell him to subscribe. The ' price is only $l;iSb per year "in the State, and $2.00 in other states. W h e n Y o u C o m e T o T o w n M a k e O u r O f f i c e Y o u r H e a d q u a r t e r s . ' W e A r e A i w a v s G l a d T o S e e Y o u . LET US DO YOUR »0B PRINTING We can save you money on your E N V E L O P E S , L E T T E R H E A D S , S T A T E M E N T S , I P O S T E R S , B I L L H E A D S , p a c k e t h e a d s , E t c . P a t r o n i z e y o u i j h o m e n e w s p a p e r a n d t h e r e b y ' h e l p b u i l d u p i y o u r h o m e t o w n a n d c o u n t y . T H E D A V IE RECO RD . The Record hai jthe la rg e s t u fh ite citC ttla H o n of a n ^ M tm e p a p e rs ♦I FOR RENT ♦ S P ^ C E ^ j N T H I S R A R E R ; A rra n g e t b 'S i i K ' NEIGHBORS-tPWIS-TO n T > b u R D A V IE -C O U N T Y ’S O I,D X:ST N E W S P A P E K -T H B P A P E R T;BCE P E O P I.E H E A D -HCHE SHALL THE THE PEOPLEfS RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNA WED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY CAIN.- V O L D M N L I I.M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W E D N E S D A Y D E C E M B E R s. i q ^ i.N U M B E R I!) NEWS OF LONG AGO. What Wm Happraing In Da. *ie Befora Parking M rtm And Abbreviated Skirta. (Davie Record, D f t j , 1930.) Uoekstrille seed coUoa 4c. S ntar i« selling at s cents per ponnd end coffee 19c. a ponad H In Nell Hollbotiwr apent the week>end III Charlotte witb (riendt. Bruce Braxton,' a student at N . C. Seale ColleKe, «pent tbe weelr. end In town m th friends^ - -M r.-and-M r».-Ciln;ard-LeGrand. o f M atthew s, apept .T hanksKlvInr lo tow b w ith borne folks. Mrs. E. C. Cboate and children spent ThankagivInK wltb relatives at S puta. Miss Elizabeth Crouse, ot A d. vance, was th e r e a t of M hs Amy Hoore a few days Ian week. Mrs. A. F. Duckett, of Ralejgb. spent last week In town with her mother. Mrs. W . K . Clement. Mr. Slid M n . J. B, Price, of Kannapolis, s ^ n t Sunday In town the (oestr of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W srd. Mrs. I,eonard Ballentlne, of Car. denas, apent _ Tbankaglvlnic with her parents. Mr. snd Mrs. W . S. W alker, on Route I. H iss Kathryn Price, of Kannap. : olla, spent iwveral days, last week ill town, tbe eoest of Hiss Theo- lene W ard. • Mrs, G . G. panlel and daughter. Hiss Pauline, spent several davs last week in Stslesvllle with Mrs. banlel’.a parents. Fells H atdluK .. a student at . W ake Forest Coltece, spent the ' TbanksKlvIng holidays here wllb - bia parents. Dr. and Mrs. Asburv HsrdlnR. HIsses.Gllma Baliv and Sarah Chaffin,: students .t H . C. C. W .. Greeusboro, spent tbe week.end In . town wltb tteir parents. T bom aaW . Ricb left Wednes- day altemobn for Miami Beach, Flau, where be will spend tbe win. ter ebjoylnR the warm sunshine, M r. and Mrs. A ,-A . Holleman , and cblldren, of Plum Branch, S. . C., apent a few davs tbla. and last week liHth relsiives and fi lends In Ibis city. ^ " Miss Eva Call, who is teaching tnasic in the Brevard schools, spent • the “nianksRlvIng holidays In town -with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ;W .L .C a ll. ’ . Ravm ond W taitakei, w ho was : drow ned accidentally near Ralelgb, : laat Friday, was brouicbt here and . the tmdv laid to rest S uM ay after- ' noon.lii,Sm ith Grove cemetery. T. I: Caudell conducted the funeral nrvices, . lobn P. LeOrand has purchased . tbe.Allison & Clement stock ol . goods and look charge Saturday. : Mr LeGrand will operate Ibl. ' atora uader the old :Grm' name as heretotore, and will continue his a im store as heretofore. Tbe first snow of the season fell : here Isst Tuesday morning but ' melted as It fell. Snow also fell ! ' W ednndav mornlnR for a fe«' ' mlontes. ^Tbursdily morning ther moineters In Mocksville registered IS degrMS below freezing— which' ; waa the raidest morning Ibis' fs ll.. Rev. M. G . Erviri, the new' pas torof tne Fsrmlngton Melbodlsi d rc u ll, waa in town one day last . Week. Mr. Ervin la. w ill'.pleaM d w ltb bis new bonie'and his woik ■>in Dsvie cpunty, \. T . K McDaniel, ol Edmonuon. ^ Maryland, apent taro davs the -psfi week wltb'bome folks near Cornat- zer. Mr. McDaniel la a railway .mall cW k running iietween Wash. ' Ington a n j Hamlet. He baa many Mends in and around Mocksville ■^ srbo'are always gisd to welcome .. bitaj back to” .the good/ old - home '.‘ cDUiity. ..-, ' Youth And Truth Rav. W alnr E. l!i«ih«if. Taylora<illle.N. 0 I saw a y outh go forth one day W h o m et the T ru th along the ways Said T ru th to y o u th , "C o m e go w ith m e, 1 I ’ll m ake y ou noble as can he; I ’ll lead you far from every wrong A nd build yon up and make you . strong For God and H is eternal cause, And keep you true to nature’s lawa.” S a ii youth to Truth, L’I ’ll go. wltb you And trust your strength to take me through This world of sin,-wllb ev’ry test. Because I want to do my best To live for God and all that’s right. And be a burning, shining light. So when my race on earth is run I ’ll bear the Master say, ‘W ell done.’ •’ I aa'w the youth begin to climb A nd rise lo life to things suUlme H is aims were blgb, his purpose good; tie used his time as each one should; He formed no habit had nor vile,' Though others ssid, “ He’s out of style;” He pioved himself a noble youth As on and on be followed Truth H e lived ff life upright and clean, A nd abunned tbe low ’ and vile and mean; He didn’t steal, be didn’t lie. Nor serve tbe dAril on the aiy; His face waa bright, his eyes were clear. As on he journeyed, year by year Along tbe road lhat leads to God Where blessed, saintly men bave trod. In after years I saw this youtb, ■Whose strength snd leader was the Trutb, Come up to grand and hoary age. Like aome blest patriarch or sage And looking back across the past He said,. - I’m nesting home at last;” Then soon be went to meet bis Lord . A nd to receive bis rich reward. Altbougb he didn't Kscb a throne A nd caniie a monument of stone To be erected to his home T o long perpetuate bia fame, Hia sons and daughters call him great A nd strive bis llie to , emulate. W hile hundreds live for God today Because' he led them In this way. A young w oman on a suburban train looked up from her book and gasped'in surprise. Perched on She m ouldeis of the m an opposite were a pair of plgeonsl The m an sat calm ly reading his newspaper, ap­ parently oblivious of the birds.The girl restrahied her curiosity until the train reached her station Ihen^ she could restrain herself no longer.“W hat in the world a r e those pigeons dohig on your shoulder?” she asked. The m an looked up, shrugged his shoulders and replied: “Darned If I know. They got on w ith m e at the station." . Belter call at Ibit office now and «et your land p ^ ten before the supply is eZ' hausted. Printed on bea», card board. 50c. per dozen. STOM ACH GAS Taxes the H E A R T A n aM umulatlon of gas In the s to m a l forma presBorOa CrowdB tbe heart and results In bloaUnff, " g i^ ay*' catches, palpitation and short* nesB ot breath. This: condlUonm ay vfrequenUy he mistaken for heart vtrouble.CBRTA.Vn, _ «vlcUms" « l 070C I IN is t dew modlolne is taken before meals. 00 it works irlth.your:food~helps you digest food taster , and better. Gae pains gbi Bloat vanishes! Con* tains Herbs and V itam in B*1 with Iron to enrich the blood- and make nerves stronger. Vealc. miserable people soon feel dltferent all over. So.don’t go on snttorlhg. Get OER* TA^vm>-W ilkins Drug Store. M OST VNVSUALI Bottoms Vpl A flashy character barged Into a Detroit saloon, demanded a double jigger of scotch, downed It In one gulp, plunked a $5 bill on the coun­ter, and walked out without another word. The bartender" folded the liver carefully, pocketed It, and re­ marked to the bar-f ■.................. ir«flics. "C an youbeat a phony like that? Laps up a double scotch, leaves a five dollar tip, and beats it without paying!*' Definitions * "W hat is a debtor, pa?” "A m an who owes money." ” And w hat is a creditor?" “ The m an who thinks he*s go­ing to get it." Frank Approach b i a Chicago restaurant one wom­an was overheard isaying to an­ o th e r:'“W hy don't you go to him in a perfectly straightforward way and lie about the whole thing?'' W HAT X E SOW . . a From Detroit comes a story ot the day when a big m inister's con­ vention and a powwow of automo­ bile salesmen were held simul­ taneously in the same hotel. The salesmen were topping off a bi| dinner w ith “spiked watermelon’ for dessert, but tbe bard-pressei waiters served.lt to the minister: by m istake. The m aitre d’hotel was franUe when he heard' of the mix- up. “That watermelon is soaked In alcohol," he moaned. “ G el it away from those ministers before they run m e out of town^" ' The waiters returned to say It was too late: the ministers were busy chewing away a t the prized w atermelon. “ W hat did they say?*’ asked the harrassed m aitre d'hotcl. “How did they like it?" “ D on't know ," was the reply, **but they put all the seeds in tbeir pockets." Bad Hearbig Dialogue overheard In the office of « small-town eye, ear and throat •peclalist:.-•♦What do I owe you lor curing m y deafness, young m an?" “Ten dollars."••What's that? Twenty dollars?**1 aald $30, m a’am ." . Right Crowd ‘Brothers," said the colored preacher, "The subject of m ah ser­ mon today is liars. How m any in dis congregation hove read the 69th chapter of M atthew ?" Nearly every hand went up.You is' de people ah wants to preach" to ;"- th e ■ reverend- -said; 'Dere is no such chapter." First of All Romeo was the first quizmaster. Remember his declaration that hi> had a lady in the balcony? THANKS. T EAC H ER Sir Oswald Motley, leader of the British Union of Fascists, had marched at tlic he.'ul ^of a great procession to A*vorl Hall in Lon­don. where a lar^e crowd awaited him . Witlj dram atic effect be mount­ ed the rostrum under Ihe glare of spotlights and raised, his arm in the Fasciist salute. The effect was ruined by a voice from the gallery callin'*. “ Yes, Oswald, you m ay leave tin- room l" And W ith Glasses The girl who Is a vision in the moonlight m ay be a sight in the sunlight. V nnaUerbig PortraU At the height of his trust bust­ing campaign, Theorore Roosevelt had his portrait painted by an art­ist friend. When he saw the fin­ ished work, he shuddered. A ll his un> flattering features had been exag­ gerated.“ Do I refilly took like that lo you?" he said.The artist nodded. “H m m m ," muttered T. R . “Now I know why I have so m any ene­ m ies." Unde Sam Says R E M E M B E R S W H EN Our County And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite. M anaeer A re you employed as a maid? Cook? Gardner? LAundiress? Chu> ffeur? O r baby sitter in a private home? If you are, the work you are doine nnay be covered by the n e ^ social security insurance pro* ccam. M any o f you already know this. M any o f you already have had waces reported for you as a domestic worker. If you are cm ployed as a household ■ worker in a private hom e o n at least 24 days this quarter, that Is October, No« vember and December, and are paid'at least $50 in cash wages, your earnings w ill be credited to your social security account. I f you worked on at least 24 days for one household during Ju ­ ly. August, September doing do­ mestic work in a private hom e and you ^ working for the same people this quarter, you only have to be paid $50 or more in cash wages during this quarter by that employer for those earnings td count toward your social security benefits. If you did not work 24 days last quarter, you m ust work on at least 24 days this quarter for the same employer, as well as be­ ing paid $50 in cash wages. Remem ber, you m ust be a gular** domestic worker for your earnings to' count under social se­ curity. Y ou are a “regular” do- mestic worker if you are paid at least $50 in cash wages in a quar. ter and if you worked at least 24 days for the same employes dur­ ing this quarter or during the pre­ vious quarter. A n easy way to remember this ts to think o f it as the '*24-50 test**. 24 days this quar­ ter or last quarter and $50 in cash wages this quarter, all from the same houtehold employer, gives you credit in your social security account. A representative, o f this office w ill be in Mocksville again on Dec. 12th. at. the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m .. and o n the same date in Cooleemee, at the old Band H all, over Led­ ford's Store, at 11 a. m. Quartermaster Corps W hen the Ihiited States began sending its troops into Korea, the A rm y’s Quartemaster Corps, which had reduced its . personnel and facilities to a pattern commensu’- rate with the requirements of the post>W orld, W ar II arm y, was ready for the task. The entire or­ganization was so constituted that it could readily expand to meet any eventuality. Proof of the Quarter­ m aster Corps* ability is in^ts World S e e n A lo n g f M a i n S t r e e t By The Street Rambler. 000000 M rs. John D urham on her way to gift shop— Miss Carolyn Fere- bee waiting on bus— Girls in bad hum or because they have been put on retired list until after the holiday8-*Leslic Daniel carrying turkey across M ain street— Miss Frankie Junker eating candy bar — Miss Nancy Cheshire looking at Christmas display w indow at. Leslie's Men's Shop—P h il Jo h n ­ son getting late start to work— Congressman Charlie Deanekeep* ~ ing company with M ayor D urham and Boyce C ain—Reuben Berrier pasting Santa Claus pictures in display xVindows at the Firestone store ^O ld citizen looking at re­ volving Christmas tree, playing 'Jingle Bells” - Rev. A. I. Cox in tonsorat parlor getting hair cut— I. Sm ith buying heavy winter garments on chilly m o rn in g - R . Randall getting before Christ- nrias hair cut - W om an leaving lo­ cal cafe smoking big cigar—Miss Floiencc Mackie trying to get into bank on W ednesday afternoon— Harley Sofley paying for Christ­ mas seals-M rs. J. W . H ill busy decorating dining tables—Y oung matron from Cooleemee remark­ ing lhat m ost people talked too m uch—Spencer Hanes conversing with legal light— Bill Sofley sitting in drug store (holding small baby on his lap— Phil. Godbey buying dieatre ticket—Miss Deon Low ­ ery and small nephew doing some after Tlianksgiving shopping—C . F. Meroney, Jr.,. loading heating stove into auto trunk- H fteen * clerks and one customer busy in local store— Miss Ossie AlHsc^h m ailing thousauds of Christmas seals— M r. and Mrs. R alph W alt­ ers m otoring dow n M ain street— Arm y recruiting officer talking w ith high school boys in front of court house— Ed Sanford getting ready to make a run o f locust beer— Members o f Gossip C lub wanting to know w hat had hap­ pened to the town's Christmas lights w hich once decorated the square during the holiday season — Miss H ilda M arkham walking up M ain street looking at bank deposit book W ill M arkland try­ ing to locate Hubert Lashm it— Lee Craven buying cocanut pie— Mrs. W ayne Merrell and -Mrs. Vera Dwiggins doing some before Christmas m o rn in g shopping in Cash Store. , inalon In 1945 w ith 54 30,744 other of- During the quail season Bruce Cooper m et an old farm er hunting with an ancient pointer. Twice the dog pointed. Twfee his m aster kick­ ed a t the m atted growth, wheeled sharply and fired tato the empty air. When 0 » p e r saw no birds rise, he asked the farm er for an explanation.. "Shucks,** grinned the did m anr knew there w am 't no birds in that grass. Spot's nose a in't w hat it used to be. But him and m e have seen some wonderful days together. He’s stiU doing his best-and U*d be mighty little of m e to call him a liar." This being November, let'etalk tnrkey. And turkey in Ihtn eaiie ineiinB wbat*e good ror.yoo and all of O. 8. allkei In abort. II means greater Individual and oatleaa} eeonrtty. By pitrebasliig Do* ~ ~ •egularly through the Pay­roll Savlngs Plan where you . work, or tbe:Bond-A-Montb Plan where yea bank, you ean ayslemalloally build up flnaaelal leenrtty for youradf and your family. At the same time you oan be. atrengthenlng America’s seeu^ against aggression and eemtohilo dla- iMers ALMOST CONVINCED Jeb, accused of stealing cblek- ens. was taken before the Judge. His lauy* made such a stirring plea that Jeb was aequitted. OuC sme the courtroom his friend turned to him arid said. “ Jeb, did you or didn't you steal those ehlekens?" “Well.** replied Jeb. •«to teU the trulh I thought 1 did. but after hearing that there law­ yer, l*m dum ed if I know whether I did or not." applause, Garry-. : Unappreciative“How was the applaui m ore?" . “ Teddible. It sounded like a'eater- pUlar in sneakers stom ping across, a persiiui rug." W ar I I record. The Corps reached in 1945 general officers. 3 llcers. and 467,286 enlisted person­ nel. Between December 7, 1941, and August 1, 1945. the Quartermaster purchases totaled more than 20. bit' Uon dollars not including petroleum, oil and lubricants. On August 14, 1945—V J Day— the Corps w as in the process of buying, storing, and issuing * approximately 41,000,000 pounds of foodstuffs per day. or at the rate of 15 billion .pounds a year. FORB?ia;< Ono sum m er morning, v * ▼ acation, Norwegian drsn>>i! H enrik Ibsen called at thv h'jroc • a fellow artist and asked to $oc Uu U tter's wife.“ A button has come oil my cutu.' Ib s to explained to. her. “ and m ust sew* it*-on again Would yoi pleaso titread this needle for ntc? M y eyes are not strong." H e banded her a needle and spool of thread. She completed the task in’ a moment, and Ibsen thanked her and departed.. Several weeks later, the two m et again. "H ow i s . your sewing coming along?** she asked. •'Have you been threading the needle yourself since I last saw. you?" . “ Oh no,", replied Ibsen. made sure then that the thread would be long enough to last m e a ll sum* m e r." . North Carolina Davie CnuiUv III The Sup eilor C«urt C. S. D u n n et al ■. - vs .’ - '■ The unknow n heirs o f Jo h n p u n n , deceased, W osh D u n n , deceased, Mitchell D u nn, deceased, and Se- n i D u n n W illiam s, deceased. 'lofice, 'Serving; Sum- moDS by Publicatioa The defendants, the said u n ­ know n heirs of John D u n n , de-, ceased; W osh U unn, deceased;', M itchell D unn, deceased, and Se- ' nl D unn W lJIiam s, decewed, w ill take notice that an action entitled ; as above has been comm enced in V the Superior'court o f Davie Coun- *' tv. N orth Carolina; to sell seven- i teen acres of land, being the land i o f M ollie D u nn Sm ith, deceased, in Farmington Tow nship, for the , .S purpose o f sale and petition a-i ',' m ong tlie heirs; and the said de-1 fendants will further take notice s that t h ^ are required to appear J at the office o f the Clerk o f the ■ Superior C ourt o f said county in the couirc house in Mocksville,-.?'' N orth Carolina, w ithin ten davs i- after the 4th day o f January, 1952;K and answer or dem ur to the com-; :; plaint in said action, or the plain-* tiff w ill applv to ihe court for ,, the;; relief ilemanded in said com plaintvj This 19th day o f N ovem ber, 1951;* S. Hv C H A F F IN C S C Davie C ounty. Ni'vG. B , C . Brock, AttornCT, THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N, C. PreHdcttt Truman at he appeared at be left on a five-week vacation - lifter., proposing a ."foolproof’^Jif... arnsameut plan to the SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS of Main Street and the World Reds Reject Prddent Truman's 'Foolprool' Disarmament Program DISARMAMENT— No one who heard President Truman's ''fool­ pro of disarmament plan and his blunt statement that *'if wc can't get security and peace one way, we must get it the other way”, really ex- pected the Russians to accept it. The Soviet's immediate "no", ther«> fore, had no element of surprise. W hat, tiien, it m ight w ell be asked, does the U .S . expect to gain by continually seeking disarm am ent when everyone knows the Soviet has no intention of participating? There are several reasons, but two stand o u t In the first place, there is alw ays an outside chance jthat the Russians m ight change :their ,m inas and some method of disarm am ent worked out. But m ore im m ediate Is the "propo- !ganda" benefits the U. S. realizes Iby putting forth a definite plan, .while the Russians have nothing to offer but their continued talk of jWantlng peace. By turning the Iplan down Russia has become 'branded in the eyes of the world. The President’s speech w a s ibroadcast to the world, and es. pecialiy to those nations behind _ th e iron curlaln_by..the_V oice o f- ulm erica. The m ain points of the •plan: in v e n to ^ of arm ies and arm am ent all over the w orld, in- eluding eventual disclosure of inform ation about atom ic weapons—the num ber of which is presently lop secret in both A m erica and Russia, '^stem'^*^” would develop into a perm anent international inspection 2. The negotiation of. specific arrangements for reducing arm ed strength and determ ining the size and composition of forces w hich each .n ation should have. U ltim ately atom ic weapons woidd be prohibited. reductions in effect "as soon as that can be <4one w ith full knowledge and fairness to all,” KOREA PEACE—Reports from Korea indicate U. N . and Com- m unist negotiators are in alm ost complete agreement on a buffer zone, B ut the question of when to tim e the cease fire still separates the two on final agreement. The Communists w ant the cease-fire line indicated and effective im m ediately. The U.N .. however, insists that it become effective only aft­er other , m atters are settled—such as exchange of prisoners—and an arm istice is ready for signing. The Allies contend that a cease-fire now would prevent an arm istice ever being reached because it would h alt tte shootmg and thus relievo the Reds of any necessity of necotlatinff the other questions. / b e It would seem that the chasm of distrust that exists between the .Commurnsts and Allies is more likely to delay an arm istice than the establishment of a cease fire line. The Allies continue to charee the Com m unists with stalling. CHURCHILL—P rim e M inister Winston Churchill was again in the news. In a London speech he expressed the opinion that neither Russia or the United States really wanted to fight and pointed out “ It m ust not be forgotten that . . . we took peculiar rislts In providing the principal atom ic bose for the U. S. in Eastern England . . . We have every need and every right to seek and reccive the fullest consideraUon from A m er­icans for our point of view .” A short tim e later it was announced that Churchill w ill visit W ash­ington for talks with President Truman. Some observers believe that the London speech w as an indication of Churchill s mood and determ ination to have a greater say in the batUe against Com m unism . He m ay even succeed In getting the President to agree to a meeting w ith Prem ier Stalin which T rum an has not w anted. Churchill wUl also discuss the possibilities of a U .S . loan to relieve B ritain's critical economic situation. DEFENSE-— There is a slight possibility the home town taxpayer m ay get some relief from high taxes next year. The possibility w as brought about by an announcement by Defense departm ent officials of a cut in the next m ilitary budget as m uch as $11,500,000,000 below this year's. Officials said the leveling off in arm am ent outlays earlier than ex« pected is due to two reasons. One is that because of long "lead tim e s" in the production of aircraft, tanks, am m unition and other "hardware** for the arm ed forces, funds already authorized cover m uch of the sched- uled expansion. The other is a growing awareness am ong m ilitary m en th at unless m ilitary demands are regulated and spaced, a "breaking p oint" in the civilian economy m ight result in the loss of public sup­port for the long-term preparedness program. Since the start of the Korean conflict the Defense departm ent has been given total spending authority totaling approxim ately $110,000,000,* 000. RUSSIA—M ost people In the hom e towns of the U nited States have no idea of real size of the Soviet Union. Last week Soviet popiilatlon figures were released that w ill startle the average Am erican. The Russians report a total population of 207,000,000 and an annual rate of increase of per cent. In 1040, the Soviet population, includ- ing inhabitants of areas annexed during 1939 and 1040, was roughly 103.000.000 persons. The gain to 207,000,000 a t present, despite the losses of W orld W ar II. im plies an average annual population grow th over the eleven years since 1040 of about 1.300,000. t If these figures arc accurate, then the Soviet U nion has roughly50.000.000 more people than the United States. LEGION— The A m erican Legion w ill ask coftgress next year for an Increase of at least 10 per cent in compensation rates for disabled vet­erans and the widows and orphans of veterans, Donald R . W ilson, new national com m ander, has announced. . r Wilson said that the Legion recognized the fact th at the national economy was undergoing severe strain and "w e are aw are of an un­ alterable obligation not to m ake any undue demands upon that'econo­ m y ". B ut there still exists, he said, inequalities th at m ust be le v ie d . He pointed to the recently 10 per cent pay increase congress voted to - m ost C ivil Service employees and said veterans' compensations should be increased likewise. B ig Three Meeting of State Dean Aeheson (left) greet* British fior-. 7ny EJcn (rigfn) as French Foreign Minister Rob- approvingly. The big three conference took place prior to the opening of tf>e ilxtb regular tetslojt of the United No- SCHOOL EmOLLMBNT • NF.A Reports Scliool Enrollment Is Up idary-school 26.567,374 as of N ational Educa-' nnounced in its The new 600,000 over . the as- re s e a rc h director, of 1951-52 one of ion, teach* ors! salaries, supply of elementary* school teachers, and financial sup­ port, "a s enrollments continue to icreasc ste a d i^ and the purchas- iwer of the dollar continues to inc.'.' D r. Hubbord said the school prob­lem was further com plicated by "man-power conditions, the re­straints upon construction through lack of steel. ' SHOPPER'S! CORKER By DOkOTHY BARCLAY LITTLE PIQ TO MARKET »PHAT little pig of yesterspring is ^ getting to be a big pig now, and you'll be seeing h im a t your fa­vorite m eat m arket in greater plenty before the end of the year. G ive the little pig about six months to grow fat and sassy, and you'll soon be feasting on pork and ham throughout the w inter and the com ­ing spring.The U. S. D epart­m ent of Agriculture, estim ating a typi­ cal, average week in m eat production, figures that of 309 m illion pounds of m eat p ro d u c e d pork accounts* f o r 163 m illion pounds. For several m onths, pork production has been larger than a year ago, and as f o ^ the pigs themselves, they grow fast, you can alm ost watch 'em day by day. - So- the llttle -pig is- b o n ir and the big pig goes to m arket. R ig h t now, your best buy a t your m arket is in the smoked ham s, butts and loins, w hich lend ■ themselves to so m any uses and so little waste. H ave a baked ham for your Sunday com pany— and w hatever's 1 e f t— w ell, do whatever your creative instinct dictates. There's m inced ham for sand­wiches for that school lunch box. There arc ham croquettes for your luncheon. There are h am cornettes for supper, m ade with diced ham and either canned or cooked corn. A nd there's that solution to the busy day and the half-filled refrigerator, the casserole dish, Throw in just a couple of cups of left-over ham , combine w ith noodles or spaghetti, mushroom s or cab­ bage, or whatever is left over in your refrigerator, crying to be used to advantage, and you have not only a tasty dish to set before that king of your household, but something that w ill practically cook itself, w hile freeing you to catch up on your other work. H am is never wasted. MEAT PROSPECTS Good news for the Am erican meat-eater. According to the U. S. D epartm ent of Agriculture, m eat production in the com ing year w ill likely be large enough for you to eat 144 pounds, the equivalent of three extra m eals per person over the year. And no one w ill rejoice m ore over that news than that hard-workingT worry-beset butcher of yours. M ost of the m eat increase over the year w ill be felt in the veal and beef departm ents, where you have felt the tightest pinch for som e tim e now. And the reason you're going to have m ore beef Is because you' have had less. Because the farm ers sent fewer cattle to m arket in the late sum m er m onths, there's been a longer feeding tim e. And you w ill have a m ore plentiful feeding as a result. F or these- well-fed beeves w ill be of high qualify and well- fattened, when your butcher gets them in for you. W hile there w ill be some increase in the luxury cuts that come from grain-fed c a ttle ,. -the largest in­crease w ill be in the low er and m edium grade so easy on your pocket-book, and so delicious when properly cooked. After all, w hat is m ore appetizing than a sim m ering pot-roast, well-browned and juicy. _ _ Iter Pilofs See - Movies in the Afternoons W IT H T H E F IR S T M A R IN E A inC H A P T W IN G IN JA P A N - F o r hard-flying First M arine A ircraft W ing night ilghter-bomber pilots in Korea, there is little recreation. They sleep most of the day, and prowl the black skies all night prey-' ing upon Com m unist truck convoys and troop concentrations. This sad state brought about an innovation In the daytim e m ilitary routine of this com m and. M atinee performances of current movies are shown in the afternoons for the ben-' efit of those pilots and their ground crews w h o spend the nights at honest toil. ^ Holland, Mich., Starts Setting 200,000 Tulips H O LLA N D , M ich. - The c l^ of H olland is already planning next year's tulip festival. The city park departm ent has started the planting of some 200,000 additional tulip bulbs for the observance. Supt. Dick Sm allenberg said one new line IS blocks long w as being added to ex­ isting tulips lines of previous -years. The annual festival draw s thousands of visitors to the city. ‘ f Crime in America By ESTES KEFAUVER Unifed States Senator , Twelve of a Series Detroit: Wliere Underworld And Business World Merge A n alarm ing aspect In the pattern of crim e In Am erica is that certain manufacturers have deUberately - alUed themselves w ith racketeers as a means of controlling labor relationships. In Detroit, the Senate C rim e C om m ittee turned u p four in ­ stances in w hich large industrial concerns aw arded lucrative coii- tracts to gangsters or m en w ho h ad underw orld connections. OVpical was the lin k between Santo (S am ) Perrone and the Detroit-M ichigan Stove Co. The bespectacled, balding Perrone once served a six-year sentence for violaU hg the prohibition laws, and both he and his brother, C aspar, had been arrested for ques­ tioning on m urder charges, though later released. Ironically, San­to had a license to carry ------- volver a t the tim e we questioned him . It was promptly revoked by Detroit authorities. Perrone barely can read and write English. He -went to work more than 40 years ago as a core- m aker for the stove works, per­haps the largest non-union plant in the area. Perrone insisted he never . even, had discussed -labor problems, with John A. Fry, company presi­dent, and M r. F ry testified ho nev­ er had heard of any labor diiTicuUy or any physical violence at the plant. Around 1934, however, there was a serious strike when a union m ade a strenuous effort to organize the stove works. Twelve years later. Pry told a grand jury investigating labor rackets that during the dis­ pute " I talked w ith some ofxthe fellows in the plant, including the Perrones. and I wanted to know whether or not wc could get some help to come in, and they said they thought they could. "There was some fights outside the gate on the part of the pick­ ets attacking the m en when they came in to lunch. I think after the first day we had 75 or 80 police­m en around the plant." Shortly ’ after this violent strike. Santo Perrone, the coremaker. was given a contract to purchase and haul aw ay the scrap from the stove works. Thus, the illiterate m anual laborer acquired an in­come which in recent years has netted him between $40,000 and $65,000 a year. H e lives in a luxuri­ ous mansion, drives a costly car, and has been able to lend large sums of money. The company also took care of Santo’s brother, Caspar, changing Its coremaklng department to a subcontractorship. Using company m aterials and the same company- owned equipment with which he had worked as an employe, Caspar became the contractor who supplied the factory with sand cores. Later, Santo and Caspar were sent to the peniteltiary for illegal­ ly m anufacturing whisky. The com ­pany kept Santo’s scrap contract in effect for him when' he was In prison. Also, while the Perrones were Imprisoned, the United Auto Workers, CIO, which pi'evlously had been kept out of Detroit-Michlgan Stove, was able to organize one of the plants. A UAW organizer said, though, that when M r. Perrone got out of jail, "the organization dis­appeared." • An Im m igration and N aturaliza­ tion Service Inspector told us that! while investigating aliens Illegally in the United States,' he learned that 20 such violators were working at the Detroit-Michigan Stove Co. C as­ par was questioned by the com m it­ tee about a speed boat which he owns and operates on the G reat lakes between M ichigan and Can­ada, but he denied that he ever smuggled in any aliens. The Perrone-Stove Works story fits neatly with that of a larger plant, Briggs M anufacturing Co., makers of auto bodies. President Fry of the Stove Works and P r^i- dent Dean Robinson of Briggs are close frieiids. For approximately 20 years, Briggs had contracted with an estab­lished firm, Woodmere Scrap Iron, for rem oval of ferrous scrap from the Briggs plant. I n 1945, Sant.o Perrone's son-in-law.' Carl Renda, 2B, suddenly applied for the. con­ tract. , " , The contract was taken a\vay from Woodmere and awarded to Renda, despite the Uacts that he had no knowledge of' the business, hO'equipm ent and not even a tele­phone or olfiqe where ho could be called.- Then, Perrone's son-in-law..turned around and made a subcontract, with Woodmere, the old contractor, whereby Woodmere kept right on doing the work. B ut Woodmere paid Renda $2.50 a ton more than he had paid Briggs fok th e scrap, giv­ ing him an income which has reached $101,000 /'a year. As our report commented: "the Inference is Inescapable that .what\Renda was being paid for was the service ('m uscle') of his fathicr4n-law, Per­rone." Six prom inent oHlcial^ of the Briggs union were badly beaten by •unknown persons in the year that followed granting of the Renda con­tract. - Before going to -Detroit, the com­mittee explored in the Now York- New Jersey area the tie-up between the Ford M otor Co. and the notoii- ous gangster, Joseph Dota, alias Joe Adonis. Adonis is a principal stockholder of the Automotive Con­ veying Co. of N ew Jersey, which transports automobiles away from the Ford plant at Edgewater, N. J. ^ * * * Because of this, the committee looked into possible relationships between Ford’s plants in the De­troit area and other racketeers. Wo found that the principal haul­ away operator was the E& L Trans­port Co., in w hich one Anthony D ’Anna, ex-convict and form er sugar supplier to bootleggers, was a 50 per cent stockholder. D'Anna drew a $27,000 salary from E& L but apparently he did nothing to earn it. Before acquiring his E& L stock, D'Anna, through negotiations with H arry Bennett, labor boss for the late Henry Ford, Sr., had obtained a 50 per cent share of a profitable Ford agency in Wyandotte, M ich. Bennett, now retlrod, had, as the committee noted, "em ployed vir­ tually a private arm y recruited from ex-convicts and crim inals to engage in' battles against labor and In othe/ anti-social activities." Subpoenaed from his CalUornla ranch to testify, he was a hostile and difficult witness. W hen . we asked him about the gang factions in Detroit, ho snapped: "D o :you w ant m e to get m y head blown o ff?" . Bennett adm itted that, although ho was a key m an in one of the largest plants in the world, he kept no files, records or m em oranda of.> aiiy kind. " In fairness to Ford," ''our re­ port observed that the com pany "Is taking vigorous steps to disas­ sociate itself from these raoketeer- held contracts/' It now is attem pt­ ing to term inate by some legal means its deals w ith Adonis. • Also in Detroit, the committee cleared up the mystery of how Cleveland gam blers acquired ‘ an im portant block of stock in a vital industry, the Detroit Steel Corp.* M ax J . Zivian, president of Detroit Steel, told us that in. 1944 Detroit Steel nierged with Reliance Steel Corp. of Cleveland. j Zlvlan undertook to purchase'the Reliance president's stock for i ap­proxim ately $580,000. He said; he was in Cleveland when gambler- businessman M orris Dalitz, whom he had known slightly, bum ped In­ to m e in, the street.’' Zivian said he told him that he was attem pting to close a big deal but was short $100,000. Dalitz, without even look­ ing a t a . balance sheet, arrangedbank loan for the necessary money. So the Cleveland syndicate acquired 10,000 shares of Detroit Steel stock. ^ Zlvlan subsequently b e c a m e friendly w ith the Cleveland gam ­ bler and once took a trip 'on D al­itz’ yacht. Next week: Philadelphia: Police tacUos in (he City of Brotherly Love, , . • Condensed from Uie book. “CrlmB In Amcrica." by Bstet K«tauvor. Cpr. lOSl. Pub. by -Doobleday, Inc. DIst« General Features • Corp.—W N U .. Sports Stars Like B iking . Sports stars liave long known the leg-strengthening . benefits of bi­cycling, Prom inent athletes pictured riding bikes recently Include Sugar R ay Robinson, middlew eight boxing cham p; D ick K azm aier, P ^ c e to n ’s grid w izard; RoV Cam panella, Brooklyn’s fam ed catcher; Luke. Easter, Cleveland’s slugging first basem an; and Stewart Igleliari). A m erica's high-goal. polo player, who thinks nothing of two-wheeling ten mlles-ta day. INTERNAL REVENUE PROBE House Committee Carries On Investigation W ASH IN GT ON -H ouse' Investiga- tors are looking into charges of al­ leged unethical practices in the De-: trolt Internal Revenue office an^ into the handling of tax-fraud cases origiriating in North Carolina. Scan­ dals have h it other offices. *Tips relayed to tHe House .ways-, and-means chairm an o^ investiga­tion committee Senator Moody caused a special agent to be sent to Detroit: /' ■ ' Adrien Dewind,' subcommittee counsel, announced'that the Senior, Internal Revenue agent a t C harley to n 'h sd been under,questioning in Washington."! ^. Moody said: that .m aterials for . the.- Investigations .w as gathered by .his. com m ittee during investigations of gray < m arkets • in ; c ritica l. m aterials some weeks ago; C L A S S IF IE D DEPARTMEllT- A irros. TRUCKS & ACCESS. I TOOK iHlcrnnUirnal Itnlidotcr. S< scrim H08_ 1107 Iwurs.' “motor tebulM. —Five dump U^ucka; 1 Sj^^., Ornnxebarc. S.C. iPhone SIS BUSINESS Jk INVEST. OPPOR. • HELP W ANTED- MEN >nii-^eumeymen -“ “irlcnc* oqulp.mem. S1.0I Pftr hour. VAh "Id nE L P WANTEn-WOMEN**".... creek Snnitnrlum craduflto nurse. Non- INST RPCIION serviee. tlojue ;_____ ____«l»nia PI<lg.rWBmi<Ht(on, no down poymcnl MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL A NE\y SensaUonnl Booklet. foe Youn» ^ r r lc d Women ond Youns brides on how to Plnn Vour Pom «y Without BJrth c trot. Send 23 ce - ^ r . O. Pe« 30H SEEDS. PLANTS. ETC. '“ z a M g & SERVICES OFFERED OUARANTCED Wnlch repalrlnc.r.g.i ■a'gi T O R E N T O R L E A S E '. Good locoUon. invesUnenj retumeS iM 380, Pftlrhope, Atnbams U. s. SAVINGS BONDS Are Now urs. DEFENSE BONDS free witb year parcbase •(50c each 3 for $1. Order Today parcbase fl^p^eclaJ^ljuretiase inftke* S^ooS WritUii -Janey lor every member Dl«k Riobardfl. Dept. ^*18 St.,NewTerkCN.Y; •. SPEEDVlONG-lilSTMGnlieflii R H E U M in S M M M E S - n U MD o n ’t ‘dose* yourseU. Rub tbe'sehine part well witb Musterole. Ita cre U medicatteo speeds ( r ^ blood to the painlul areal I amasiitK relief. If pala b fan buy Extra StrosK Musterole. musterole Get Well Q U ICKER $v/th the Seasatkml A^C 'Factor I* the New Intensified i - FOLEY’S t t ^ ’?' A M A Z IN O IT QUICKilt ACTINO, • IN C R IO IBIY MORI EFFECTIVI WNUl l T" Safer Cough Relief When new drug$.or. old.fell to.stop your c o u ^ or chest cold doa*t delay. Cr«omul»on contains only $afe»‘help- fill, proven ingredients a M Qo;.nar- ■ cotlcs to disturb nature's process. It fioes right to the seat of the trouble to naUire soothe and heal raw».ten- I membnmes. o r d n ig ^ dn*, iaflamed bronchial iGuaranteed to please y o u_____refundsnioney; CreomulsiQobosi the test of m & y millioos of users.£9 S S !!y !% i£!! THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCICSVrLLE. N. C. NATIONAL AQUARIUM 1,500 Species of Marine Life Maintained by National Aquarium WNU W ashington Bureau The Notional A quarium in Wash­ ington, although housed in the De­partm ent of Commerce building, has been operated by the Fish ond W ld lifc Servlcc under the Depart­ m ent of Interior since 1940. In that year, the scrvlco was crcatcd by the consolidation of the Bureau of Fisheries of Commerce and the Bureau of Biological Survey of tlie Departm ent of Agriculture. The original aquarium , estab­ lished in 1688 by Uie form er U.S. Fish Commission, occupied an old pre-Civil W ar building in another p art of, the city. W hen, the present Commerce building was built in 1032, th e 'fish were moved to the new and larger aquarium under the m ain lobby, but operation contin­ ues by the Fish and W lldllte Serv­ ice. By IN E Z G E R H A R D Para-r\ OROTUY L A M O U R .^ m ount's “ Road” girl, w h o landed in a circus when Cecil B. DeM ille picked her to play the worldly wise “ iron jaw girl” in “The Greatest Show on Earth” , w ill alw ays be associated w ith the sarong that she m ade fam ous. Yet she has worn it in only 12 of her m any film s. B ut it m ade her fa­ mous a year and a half after she broke into film s, following three years as vocalist w ith Herbie Kay's band and a short carcer as a radio singer. She probably has more DO R O T H Y LA M O U R friends am ong the studio “Uttte people” than any other star; she says they're the ones who have m ade it possible for her to get ahead. Gene Tierney, one of Hollywood's best dressed women, says she al­w ays gets caught In slacks and sweater on Beverly Drive, in Bev­ erly H ills, w here she docs most of her shopping. Ju s t as sure as she dashes out in a hurry to m ake some purchases, “ There I am in m y slacks, ond I m eet somebody lilce Jo an Craw ford looking like a movie queen.” glishJean Sim m ons, the little Bi actress upder contract to who. wiU have the starring role in “ Pilate's W ife", has had a spec- tacular career. Her “O phelia" m Olivier's “H am let” m ade her fa­ m ous, and she ranks fourth Ir F am e's poll of hitem ational film fa^ vorites. She is currently before the cam eras in "A ndrades and the Lion” . The present aquarium occupics floor space of about 14,000 square fetet, and has SO tanks which hold about 30,000 gallons'of , water. The w ater Is changed on an average of three tim es a day. Since the aquar­ium is situated below the sewer level, the w ater is drained Into underground reservoirs, w hich m ust, in turn be pumped out, an expensive operation. The heavily chlorinated city w ater supply, which the aquarium uses, is a constant problem becaijse chlorine would m ean overnight death to the fish. A ll the water used m ust therefore pass through car­ bon filters. Temperature control m ust also be w atched'carefully. The hot Washington summers re­quire complete refrigeration of the tanks of northern fishes, and the w arm w ater of the tropics m ust be duplicated in those tanks which have fish accustomed to that cli­ m ate. The aquarium now houses 1500 in d iv id u al, klnda„of. fish _ of _which the rarest is a collection of albino catfish — the only such collection now in this country. Another groat attraction to the 250,000 visitors each year Is Siamese Sue, a tiny turtle .w ith one body but two heads. Sue is a perfect example of turtle frustration. Each brain controls the set of legs on its side so that indecision as to whether she's going to move or stay still Is a m ajor factor in Sue's life. E ach head m ust be fed simultane­ ously or tlie other one w ill try to grab the food. Sue has grown from ie size of a quarter to about the size of a silver dollar in the two rears that she's been a t the aquar- u m . A two-headed turtle usually lives only a few months. Tito N AT ION AL Aquarium seeks priinarily to m aintain an attractive display of the principal fresh-water gam e fishes w hich are propagated and distributed throughout interior w aters of the country, John C. Pearson, director of the aquaiium , says. Reactions ot aquarium specta­ tors are watched as carel the behavior of the fishes them ­ selves. I t has been noticed that w om en like the fancy Oriental gold* fish, the black Chtaese Moors and the multlKsolored Shubunkins. M en seem to prefer the rainbow and brook trout w hile Siamese Sue re­ m ains the favorite of m ost chil­dren. Tlie m ost generally liked a t­traction, however, is the' shallow pool fiUed w ith turtles of aU vari­ eties. Future im provements to t h aquarium caU for better llghtbig effects in the display tanks. They are all electrically lif t e d now with the surrounding area kept justb it darker so as to better show off the displays. M ore naturalistic backgrotmds for the exhibits' is another aim . R e al moss grows in the tanks, but m ost of the green­ ery used is bamboo because it re­tains its color under water for a longer period than m ost other types of greens. Aquarium officials also hope for a more complete dis­play of native food. and gam e fish so w ell appreciated by m any m il­lions of Am erican fishermen. The attendants are occasionally offered bribes by thoughtful vis­ itors who w ant to take a fancy goldfish hom e to the children, “ gem collector” once offered . for a pearl-bearing oyster from HawaU. As M r. Pearson says, a good motto for any aquarium m an­agem ent is: “ If it fits into a pocket, keep it locked up.” _____ JOAN STUART TRAHSFERS ACROSS 3. Surges 24.CenIcd 1. As aforesaid 4.BlevaUon 25.Smail6. Talk (golf)drums 10.aim blng 8. Bone 27. Validate 11. P artin (anat) 28. Organ of0. Intersected seeinga play •7. Throng 30.Land- 12. Shun 8. Toward mcasurcs 13. Puzzle the 33. Roman,X4. Twining Ice money plant 9.Guli-iike 31. Famous 16. Tie bird Shake­ 16. Fish 12. Demon-spearian character17. Dirties atrate10. Novel 13. Chum 30. Pack away21. Indefinite lS.Paddle-llke 37. Dialect al-Ucle 22. Prepare for publication 18. Tree used in BuddlUot 20. Pale*sacred26.AspUt 23. Lair writings ao.AfflrmaUve vote (var.) 3L Pen point 32. More uncommon 30. Sign of inflnlUve 36. Floods 30. Glacial, ridges•— 41.WaU............ tapestry 42. Leaves out l43. Patron saint ot Norway '44. Anoint (obs.)45. Like wire [46. Endured DOWN* fl. Compasses [2. Fomier Russian czar ran J iliH H 4 iEl-/HH rtllDVmUH i\I\ 0130 dfJHLSn Zi-nira'.BiJiEUHiii N.S1 38. Armadillo 40. Fodder vat 42. Canadian, province .(abbr.)44. Roman pound Waterlilies in Soft Greens, Pink Sleepy Horse Loved by Children 1” z r r —i s ——r 1 io-i ii” a 1WIi r i 17^1 1 1 i f 1 ? r r m S '24 zT IT a W IT M M M m m m w m m m m 3«57 w 59 ? r 1 « 5T I 1(T 1 w _1 T HE FICTION CORNER BRIGHT SUNSET tir A T E R L IL lE S in soft pinks and greens measure 8 inclios, need only ™ to be ironed oH onto your m aterials. Simple, easy to use— they m ake gift-making Inexpensive!' rvO T T IE , the Sleepy Horse , is beloved by children when used on " pajam as, quills, towels, ploy suits. N o em broidery needed: colors are red and black; motifs measure 3 and 4 inches. By Frances Rider N.Y. A BOVK the brow of grim E l Huer­ fano a pale pink cloud was ting out her rose-edged ruffles. Dcsbah lifted her dark eyes from the blanket she w as wcavlnB. For a m o m e n t the brown hands were still, then they took up the wool again and the de­ sign continued to grow. She m ust w ork while there was still light upon the m ile high mesa about her, for inside the hogan it was difficult to blend the grays and browns of the sheep's fleece. A breeze sOrred her hair and again her glance sought the cloud. A hi Just as she had expected, the w hid from the north had brought another cloud and although at first the pretty pink cloud slipped behind E l Huerfano and pretended to hide, soon the two would touch and merge. Dcsbah had watched them often."For quilted ctoudt are matmg, highAbove the plaim in the summer she a ^T v a zza------• Y azza the Long was a silversm ith. Like m any M avajo m en he fashioned sturdy enduring jewelry from coin silver and engraved it w ith sim ple lines signifying good fortune ond long life. Desbah looked down proudly a t her wrist.Yazza was different from the others. It was he who had m ade the bracelet she wore. H e had deco­rated it with tiie thunderblrd. A square turquoise w as set on either side and beside them flowering cacti, symbolizing courlshlp. I; m eant that Yazza and she would like to m arry and build a squat GRASSROOTS Officials Should Be legally aid Morallv Honest By W right A. Patterson r M A Y B E w ithin the letter of the law . but it is not within the spirit ot the law for those holding government positions or having government Influence to use their influence on behalf o( people or corporations seeking government loans from R.F.C . ■ It is very possible that the m an holding the position of head of the Dem ocratic party could not be con­victed for Indicating to officials of the R .P .C . that he m ig ht have a hand in keeping them on the Job, or nam ing someone for the Job of director of R.P.C. V?hat he did w m undoubtedly legal, but it represent­ed a lack of m orality the people ex- .pect from those holding positions of public trust. • D ad the sanie thing happened during the admlnlstraUon • of Theodore Roosevelt,. Boyle would have continued on the job ho held for Just the few mln- ates It took the President to Are him . B ut wc have degenerated m orally staoe the days of Meo-- dore Boosevcit and a™ « » P f , aow w hat w as done, during the ' days of H arding. B ut the llard- ine crew w as*not wise enoogn S V o la t e only H e spirit of the , tow. Ih e y violated the totter of ’ the law . and were eaoght in the tolls ot JusUoe.' .A braham . Lincoki said ^ th e rfr miblic cannot live half free, and half slave.” Today he would aay, as othera are saying, “ (he nation can- act live h alf legally honest, but half m orally dishonest,” and m oral dishonesty should not be counte-for this year than for last. B ut the senators w ill pay their own tips, if Tberf can be no place In American <tblle life for either those wfto exert influence through holding places at r, or for those wfjo demonstrate they are susceptible to inf In- whether that Influence be paid for in the form of deepfreeze units, _■ coats, free hotel bills, free vaca- _____ or as attorney fees. All suchrewards are but bribes, and both the bribetaker, and-the bribe-glver should be sutnmarily discharged from any form of government serviee. ■ Our public o0lclals must be both legally and morally honest, whether they be cabinet oQleers or clerks. To the m en folks of the nation it seems hardly fair that they should have to pay the present exorbitant charges o f the'barbers and a t the sam e tim e m ust collectively pay for the “prettying up“ of the'm em bers of the U nited States senate. But the recent action of the senate forces them to do just that. The senators wiU get their hair cuts, their shampoos, their shaves,, and all the other items the barbers can suggest as something needed at public expense. The Uckets w ill be handed to the tax payers.. Bach h air cut w ill 6e tiie sam e |1 charge whether the senator be a baldy, or one havhig a luxuriant crop. The tax paying public w ill pay the $1, plus the charges for all the extras. The cost to the people for the tonsorial needs of the sen­ ators w ill be more than $1300 more any. A t about the tim e of the starting of the Korean w ar, living costs were going up faster than a t any tim e since then. A t that tim e, con-. Sress gave the President control ieglslatlon which, he then said h( . did not w ant, did not need and would not use. Now the President is condemning congress for not glvlnj him the control legislation he did not want, and did not use, and now living costs are leveling oil at about the point they reached a t the start of the Korean w ai. Congress feels the President Is toconsistent . - f ■ Instead of rai^n g the postage rates, which the people m ust pay, congress m ight w ell cut out better than three billions of cost for the propaganda services (hat are of no benefit to any one unless It be the heads of departments w ho wish to justify their existence. It does not present factual Uiformatlon regard ing the operations of government. Because It is propaganda, hot fact­ ual, reputable publications w ill not use It; The some 80,000 people em­ ployed in its production and dis­tribution, cosUng m ore than three billions a year, is an entirely unv w arranted expense. Saving that three billion would represent a real economy that would m ean fa r m ore than the addhiig of a few hundred m illions hi an increase in postage rates. ' Flow er Holder Y ou can m ake a handy flower holder by sticking a potato full of holes w ith an ice pick for the stem s. Then cut a sliver off the I bottom to m ake it steady. W iring Load If your electric light blinks when you plug in your Iron or other elec- I trical equipm ent the w iring is 1 overloaded. When this happens it's a good idea to see w hat can be done to relieve the load if you I w ant to prevent a fire.• • ' • Salad Rule A time-honored and approved ^ e for choice of dressings is to use French dressing for dinner salads w hich accompany a m eal, and m ayonnaise or cooked dress- more substan­ tia l ing toward her was a tall black against Uie flam hig sky. round hogan ot their own. H only _______„ they had the money for a license. j„ga some of the The winter had been long and j t i ^ salads, cold; and the> sum m er rains scanty. H er father's sheep had died off. The few left were weak because they hadn't enough gam m a grass. Dcsbah looked at them now, grazing at a distance am ong t h e sun-baked stones.Am ong them several children played a gam e w ith pebbles. The blanket w as nearly finished but she could not try to sell I t She would have to trade it for overalls and calico and flour. The few re> m aining sheep needed salt. 7 L Huerfano's far lonely peak was afire with the sunset as Dcsbah rose and went to the dpor. Y azza had gone to the m ission that after­ noon and soon he would pass on his w ay back: W hen Desbah w as twelve she had spent a few weeks at the mission school. Only orphans could stay longer. There w as too lltUe m oney. Rem em bering the services she had attended there she moved | her lips in unaccustomed prayer. When she lifted her head she saw I a tali figure black against the flam ­ ing s l^ . It was Y azza. Com ing to­w ard her, he held out his hands showing her m any bills and m uch silver. Desbah had never seen that | m uch mondy all at once. **0h, Yazza! Tell m e.”Yazza spoke witli no excite­ m ent in his voice. “ A t the m is­sion w as a letter. Tlio lady read it to m e. A store in California . wants all m y rings, all m y pins, all m y bracelets, m e n 1 m ake more wc w ill get more m oney.”Beneath tlic beaded band his eyes sparkled w ith the glory of the i ...................................... See how scorrs helps build you up! If yan t«»l run -•>4 MliU hanir on- ' ' » you don’t iret 'I natural A «D r w u xwmwi o«» inrwi bcsfn to 8«t yonr BtKs todar At yonr druK atore. MORE than fust o tonic—* ii'^powerfo/noorishmentf s c o t t m e m u l s io n The best you can buy. Plain or todiz^ yet costs only 2^ a week for the average family SEATS FOR'QUO VADIS’ NOWON SALE! sunset and his oSvn ] “ Yazza, Yazza, it is good. Now I we can get the license.” “ Not yet, m y patient one. M y parents have debts. I m ust help them .”* “ B ut you said there would be more money when you m ake more bracelets and pins.” < ' **Yes, m y patient one, but first—’ Yazza drew from his pocket a jewel­ like piece of petrified stone. “ Why do you think I polished and polished this ttoy stone?” Shyly .Desbah looked into Y azza's I eyes. “5'or our w a d in g rhig?” “ For our wedding ring. Tonight I I . w ill burn the candle low w hile I m ake the ring for you.”“ Then tomorrow you w ill m ake the things to sell?”“ Tomorrow, m y patient one, l.| w ill m ake the things to sell.” Shadows slipped along the sides of E l Huerfano and filled the ar^ ] royo. F rom behhul the tall lonely peak slipped into view one d o u d I w ith just a tinge of phik ruffles at one edge. Reserved s e a ls a re n o w o n so/e fo r MGM's b ig g e s t moHon pMuro Q U O V A D B S LOEW’S GRAND THEATRE, ATUNTA, GA. StAKTING TUBS., NOV. 20th RESERVED SEATS ON SALE FOR ALL EVENING PERFORMANCES (8:30) AU SEATS - $ I.S O fee. Tax ALL AFTiERNOONS-CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS fro m ' 10 AM . to 4 .1 5 PM. WEEKDAYS 90c SUNDAYS 90c CHItDHEN SOe Inc. rox tB D m t SUTS n HMi n t n BoxomoE LOEVrS GRAND THEATRE. ATUUITA. CA. at ncli br Ike . .......... ...................... IMw CKNkw'MoMT Oii«r poyvbU h ThMlM. ( ■-'i [ i . PAGE FOUR tttte DAVIE RECOkp. M0CK8V1LLE. II. C . DtiCEMBER 6, l » l II 'J -■ p .v T H E D A V I E R E C u R D . Three Trade Days Home From Korea C F R A N K S T R O U D , E D IT O R . Botered atthePostofHce tnMneka* vUU. N. G.. as SecAn<1*c>lnRF Mall <natt«r: H arrh 3 .190S, SU B SC RIPT IO N RATES: OHt YEAH. IN N. CAROLINA t 1.SIIMX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA 7Sft.ONE YEAR. OUTStDE 8TAT^ . J2.00SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE • $l.fO Davie C ounty Trade Pavs w ill M ajor and tlw , A ndrew Yates be observed by local merchants arrived here YAst week from Ko* on Tliursdav, Friday and Saturday \m y tzTt n J or more. Mfljor Yates was ino fth ., xveek. T he Rccotd Japan for some,time.before beine not inform ed o f thU event u n til , transferred to .Korea. M ajor Yates " ' ’ 'le ft M onday fby O klahom a, where he w ill spend '15 weeks before so- suit is that we are n o t ca rvine Texasjjivherc he will be_____ . j j Stationed for jhrec years. M niorany trade day advertising. Com e yutes is a soti o f Mrs. C .N . Chris- to tow n on tliese three big da\s dan. o f this city Mrs. Yates will and take advantafie o f the m any I spend some time w ith relatives in bargains offered by our merch* Eastern Carolina before joinging oil o f our advertising space for this issue was sold, and the rc* D o vour Christmas shopping now and av,.id the last m lnuts rush. Patronize the merchants w ho appreciate your business en ough to ask for it through vour hom e tow n paper. It i s rumored that Gcner.il D w ight Eisenhower will resign his position and return to this coun try in Februatv and enter the race for president on the Republican ticket. Stranger thini^s have hap< pened. Prasident T rum an is supposed to be taking a vacation in Key W est, Fin., but from present re* ports he is kept busy firing in­ competents w hom he appointed to various oilices during his hectic reign. Seems that there are a lot o f grafters holding jobs under the present ndm inistnition. Reminds us o f "Teapot D om e" days. Can^t Be Elected Senator Harry F. Dvrd, of Vir^ ginia, says he regards President Trum an weaker todav than onv other possible Democratic nom i' nee for the presidency in 1952, and he vioes not think Truman can be re elected. Byrd said, however, it is his per* sonal belief that Truman "is go­ ing to run if he thinks he can w in," and he added, "I've been doing all 1 can to help him make up his m ind. I do not think he can be elected if nom inated.’ M r. Trum an has said he has de­ cided whether he will run again but is not ready to make his de* cision public— Davidson Record. Clontz Awarded Purple Heart Private First Class lames C- Clonts, Infantrv. U S Armv, was a- warded the Purple Hea.t f o r m*ounds received in -jction .nsainsr the enemv neat Kveho • donji. N orth Korea on 27 October 1951. The presentation was made at the J43rd Ge.ieral Hospital in Jaoan on 5 November 1951 by the hos­ pital’s Com m anding Officer, C ol­ onel W . S. Puph. Pri\*ate First Class C lonti’s mother, Mrs. E. H . C lont;, resides at 715 Cherrv Street. Mocksville. N o n h C arolina._________ E. Wn yfooten Ernest Wesley W ooten. 7’ . died at 4:20 a. m., last Tuesday ac the hom e of a daughter, Mrs. B. R. Steelman o f Mocksville, Route 1. He had been in declining health for three years. B om in Iredell C ountv a son of Thomas and N(artha A rline W oot­ en, J»fr. W ooten mo\'ed to Mocks- viile 15 years ago and was a re­ tired farmer at the time of his death. He was married to A- m anda Jane Hanes, w ho died in 193S. Sur>n%ing are two daughters, Mrs. R . 5 . Steelman and Ntiss vadie W ooten of the home; one stepsJaughter, Mrs. Nfanha A nd ­ erson o f Mocksville, Route 1; two stepsons, M . W . Reavis of Mocks- vtlle. Route 1 ;*nd E. D Reavis of Ham ptonville; three sisters, Sirs. Mile* H aitis o f Yadkinville. N(rs. Fraukie Swain of Harmony, Route 2 and M rs. Haves Gam er, o f Newi Castle, ln d 4 five brothers, lonas and A m os W ooten o f Wltwton-' Salem» lames and Clarence W oot en of Nfocksville Route 4; two grandchildren and several neices and neoheu*s. Funeral services were held at Sandy Springs Baptist C hurch at 3 p. m ., W ednesday bv Rev. Ja««. P. Davis and Re%*. W ade H ut­ chens. B u riil was in the church ccflaete^r« ants. Trade at hom e when pos­ sible Tliat is one way to help , your tow n and county prosper. PM A Election Set For Dec. 13. U R . Towell, Chairm an o f the Davie C ounty P M A Committee, announced the P M A formercom mittee election w hich will be held in the fifteen comm unities in the county on Dec. 13. -N om inations sha I begin-at 8:30 a. m., and votm g shall begin Im ' msdiately after the completion of nom inations. The polls will close at 6:00 p. m . A t each o f th.se com m u.iitv elections farmers w ill vote for three farmers to serve as a com* m unity comm ittee during 1952 and a delegate to a County Con vention where a C ounty C om m it' tee w ill be elected. M r. Towell urges farmers in the county to stop their work on D e­ cember I3th long enough to help elect this farm committee. The best qualified persons should be elected to fill these important offices. Eligible voters are owners, oper^ ators, tenants, or sharecroppers on a farm that is participating this vear in any program administered bv the C ounty and Com m .initv P M A Committees. Davie Superior C ourt for civil cases only, opened at 10 o’clock M onday m orning w ith Judge A l­ lan Gw yn, o f Reidsville p.esidinc;- There is a very sm all docket and it is thought the court can finish its business in two days. D o Y o u R e a d T h e R e c o r d ? her husband in Texas. W ork on the new store and service station o f ]v*fF Tutterow, in the forks o f the Statesville and Yadkinville Highway i n W est Mocksville, is progressing rapidly. Notice of Re-Sale Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Davie Cout)ty made In the Special Pro ceediog entitled: Deot (E. D.) Ijames, Hxeeutor oi J. S. Parker, deceased,-vs-Milton-Perkerret-al.T •be undersigned Commissioner will on ibe 15th day of Oeeemher, 1951, at twelve o’clock, m , al the court hcu*ie door in Mockiiville. Davie County North Carolina, ofTer for re­ sale !0 the highest t>idder lor cash that certain tract of land lying and heitig in Calahain Townshio. Da vie Couotv, N C., adjoining the lands of S. H . Chaffin and others and bounded as follows, to wit: Beginning ai an iron stake. run> S. S5 degs. H. to a sione; thence South 37 Bast 6 00 chs to an iron Slake in road; thence S. 84 East 28 00 chs to an iron .Uake; tbeiiCe N. 16 Bast chs. to a stooe an« swtfetBuro; thence North W . 16.63 chs. to an iron stake; ibeace North 86 West 33.05 chs. to a Atone at root of hycamore tree; thence South 41 West 6..S0 chs. to nn iron stakf; thence South 23 W 3 00 chs. to a stone; thence South 30 East 90 Hnk.s to an iron .-takt-: thence South to West 2 00 chs to an iron stake; thence South 4.rS cbs. to the heginuing, cootalnioc eighty (80) acres, more or less. The h'dding will jtart at the price o. $S,o8o 00. Terms of Sale: $500.00 cash aod the balance on thirty days time, with bond and approved security, or ait cash at the option of tbt,por. chaser, ut>on confirmation of the .•iaie. This 38th day of Novrm ber, 1951. A. T. G R A N T . Commissioner. F O R P U R E C R Y S T A L I C E C O A L F O R G R A T E S , ST O V ES, F U R N A C E A N D ST O K ERS It W ill Pav Y ou To Call O r Phone Us. W e Make Prom pt Delivery M o c k s v i l l e I c e & F u e l C o . 'P h one 116 Mocksville, N . C. Telephone 300 Southern Bank Bide. Mocksville, N .C D R . R A M E Y F. K EM P, C H 1R O PR .A C T O R X-RA Y LABOR.-\TORY Hours: 9:30;1200 2:JO-5i30 Closed Saturday’ JO M onday, W ednesday and Friday Evenings— 6 J0 ,to SJO Just Arrived T H E NEW 9HP Diston Chain Saw •*I ^ Come In And See It At Rankin - Sanford Implement Co. P h o n e 9 6 • M o c k s i l l e , N . C . CHRISTMAS S P E C I A L S S h C A.NDV . 2Sclb . . . ZSc lb 29c lb 40c lb Peanut • - • 40c H oliday M ix Orange Slice ‘ . Fine Chocolate Drops Toasted Cocanut . . S H E P U R j r A N P Y ^ ® ^ _______ tHB DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, N C. DSCBMBER 6 1951 PAGE FIVE B o y s ’ A n d G i r l s S o c k s - - 2 9 c t o 3 9 c . . N y l o n H o s e . 5 1 G u a g e - - - - 9 7 c F a n c y P i l l o w C a s e s S e t s B o x e d - - - $ 1 . 9 8 F a n c y T o w e l S e t B o x - - - • $ 1 . 9 8 M e n ’ s W o o l L i n e d J a c l c e t s , Z i p p e r • - $ 4 . 9 5 ' B o y ’ s C o w B o y F l a n n e l S h i r t ? - - - $ 1 . 9 8 M e n ’ s P l a i d F l a n n e l S h i r t s - - - $ 2 6 i9 8 0 S q u a r e D r e f s P r i n t s - - ■ ; ' 4 9 c S h o e s a n d R u b b e r F o o t W e a r F o r T h e E n t i r e F a m i l y S h o p H e r e F o r Y o u r C o m p l e t e C h r i s t m a s ' ^ e e d s Mocksville Cash Store “ T H E F R I E N D L Y S T O R E ” G E O R G E R . H E N D R IK S , Manager For The Convenience Of Our Custom ers Our Store W ill Rem ain | O pen Until 8 O ’c l o c k From Now Until SH RZSTM ^S Hendricks & Merrell Furniture Co. P h o n e 3 4 2 , S a l i f t b u r ^ S t r « e l > THE^iDAVlE RECORD. .ow ned by the Ed Feoplea estate* OM;^! I. Th. Ciunl, w o l.lq u o r , wm«, B e « r A U » unknow n oiiKin, about noon last ~ ......r - . V " .......—^ I W ednesday. A colorcd w om anNEWS AROUND TOWN, 'and four children were in the ------ I house when it caught, but thev Bryant Sells m ade - a business m ade their escape. The contents trip to Charlotte W ednesday.^ o f the house were all destroyed. Miiis Sarah Gaither spent Thurs­ day in W inston-Salem shopping. Miss Betty M ock, o f Advance, . was In tow n shopping W ednes­ day. Jo h n F. Sm ith, o f W inston-Sa­ lem , was a Mocksville visitor Fri­ day . Miss Ju sie Libby Stroud spent theweeksend in Statesville, the guest o f her aunt, Miss Mattie Stioud. / ■Capt. aiid Mrs. Joe Greenhaigh, o f O rlm d o , Fla., spent several days last week, guests o f M r. and r M M r j6<rFerii*ee; a f Cana; z “ Frank W alker, well knowri mer­ chant o n W ilkesboro street, w ho hsn b e jn quite ill, is m uch better, his friends w ill be glad to learn. O . L. Harkey, o f Clarksville Tow nship, was in tow n Tuesday on business. M r. Harkey is re- c o v ^ n g from an attack o f pneu­ m onia. .T h e m any friendslofRoyB row n w ho has been a patient at Davis Hospital, Statesville, for the past m onth, w ill be glad to leam that he is improving. The friends of M rs. Charles F. D o m m , of,N orth Mocksville; will be glad to leam that she is able to be o u t again after being eonfin ed to her hom e by illness. O n e o f the large water oaks on the square has ■ been decorated w ith multi-colored Christm as hoi iday lights, and presents a very • Chtistm asy appearance. Dennis Siiverdis, w ho spent some tim e at R ow an M em orial H ospital taking treatment, was able to'return hom e W ednesday, ' his friends w ill be glad to leam . Ray 0>m atzer and Lawience Irvin, Pontiac dealers in this city. ; spent T hunday in Charlotte look- ' ing over the new 1952 Pontiac \ cats w hich were o n exhibit there. '■ T he m any ttiends o f Roy Brown ' w ho has' b een' seriously ill at Davis Hospital, Statesville, w ill be glad to know that he is m uch : b e ^ and hopes to be able to te- turn hom e soon. T he cfow d o f Christmas shoj- pets arouiid tow n Saturday wss \ law er than usual, and local stores ' report sales feurly good. There are only three m ore Saturdays to ’ d o vour Christmas shopping. I l» C Shell, of Jbnas Ridge, father of our tow nsm an, Carl E. , SheU, w ho has been a patient at . , Baptist H ospiu l, Winston-Salem, for the past five vueeks, is im prov; ' ing, we ate glad to note»^ D avid Cam pbell, aged citizen, w ho makes his hom e in Calahain T ow nship w ith his daughter, Mrs. A . D . K oonti, w ho has been crit­ ically ill, is reported better. M i. I . Cam pbell is in h k 95th year. : Attractive new m etal awnings j have been erected in front o f the | Davie Furniture Co.. and the Uni- 5 ■.ted Variety Store o n N orth M ain | ' street, w hich adds m uch to t h e ! • appearance o f these business es- j tj>lishm tots. I \lev. R . G ., VlcClamroch, o f j C hina Grove, w as: in towm one j day last week, • had Just spent two Weeks in Ro- ! w an M em orial Hospitat, where | he had been taking treatment. He iis m i« * im proved. | . T he new. W allace S-I0;25c store o p e n ^ % r business Saturday in the H orn building 0 n N orth '..M aiiiS tre et.. M r.W allace iso je *. : i'-ating two'stores in this d w now . ^ • ' arid carries a big line o f 5-10-25c article .- W h e n y o u co nw to to w n ' take a-Idolc tKiiiugh'this newStbre, Cleary-Bttlla Miss Patricia Ann^BuIIa» daugh* ter o f Rev. aitd Mrs, W illiam Bul­ la, o f Favetteville, became the bride o f Maxie Darnell Cleary, of Mocksville, Route 1, son o f Mrs, W . A . Cleary and the late M r. Cleary, on Ihursday, N ov. 22, at Liberty Pilgrim Holiness Church, near Sheffields The father p f the bride perfor* med the ceremony, assiisted by Rev: Charles Apple, o f G old H ill. Mrs. Clyde Parker, pianist, and Miss Carolyn Sm ith, soloist, pre­ sented a proRram o f wedding music.- ^ T . I. Caudell and daughters, Mesdames W illiam and Sam Ho* ward, 'spent Tuesday afternoon In Salisbury shopping.M The bride was given in marriage bv her brother David Bulla. Mrs. B ill Bulla, of Statesville, was her slster*ln*law's only at* tendant. N orm an Cleary, o f Greensboro, was his brother’s best m an. U sh­ ers were Rev. Clyde Parker and D on Bulla, o f Fayetteville, broth> er o f the bride. Imm ediately following the cere* m onv the couple left for a wed* ding- trip to Tennessee. U pon their return they w ill be at hom e w ith the groom’s m other, Mocks< ville, Route 1. Election This liifeek The annual election o f a Soil Conservation supervisor in • Davie County will be held the week of Dec. 3*8. The term o f office is three years. A ll qualified voters are urged to vote for one of the following men: Kenneth Hoots or Robert Lee Seaford. The bal* lot boxes will he placed In the P.M .A . office and the office the Clerk o f the Court. F O R S A L B - O n e young .lersey m ilch cow. W IL E Y ELLlS, Davie Abator, Route 4* F O R R E N T — Store house and garage at Davie Academy. W rite or call on J. A . JO N E S. Pdone 1020.R, N orth W ilkesboro. W A N T E D — To buy corn, any kind, in ear, shucked or shelled. Top prices paid.. M O C K S V IL L E F L O U R M ILLS 7b Become Mssionary Miss Ethel Trivette, daughter'. f v n n i V I o f M r. and M rs. Fred B. Trivette.' AN 1 Al/d T A Y . o f Winston-Salem, w ill leave in JanuaW for San Jose, Costa R ico ,' A P A R T M E N T S F O R REN T , to begm a program o f missionary See Mrs. R . L. Walkerf work w ith the Latin America Mis* sion. Inc. Miss Trivette is a graduate o f Reynolds • H igh School class o f 1945. She attended Mars H ill College for tw o years and received degree In religious education'from the Piedm ont Bible Institution In W inston'Salem in the spring of 1951. She has been a very active member o f ^alem Baptist Church. Miss Trivette is a former resi* dent o f Mocksville and has many friends here w ho w ill be interest* ed in her missionary activities. H 'o b H Y o u ? Some people bet their lives when.they. try .to., .beat-red., lights, drive too fast, foil to dim lights at nite or pass o n curves and hills. W o uld you take a chance and try to do these things? Accidents d on’t always happen to the other fellow, that may have been the way yesterdays accident victim felt a few days ago. D o n’t take chances o n the high­ way. J. R . W A T E R S, Highway Safety Rep. Salisbury Area A few land poitera left> W A N T E D — Poplar. Maple, Birch, Sycamore, Pine and O ak logs. See us about how to cut. Elkin Furniture Co. Elkin, N . C. D R .G .G .C U T R E L L Announces H is Office Is O pen For T he Practice O f Chiropodist-Foot Specialist 1181 2 North Main Si. Wanblnuon Bulldlnd SaltRburr. N.C. Office H ours 9:00 to 5:00 Telephone 1615 Wednesday A fternoon By A ppointm ent Princess Theatre T H U R S D A Y S . F R ID A Y lan e t Leigh & Paul Douglas In “A N G E L S IN T H E O U T FIE L D ” w ith D onna Corcoran A dded News & Cartoon. S A T U R D A Y T im H olt In "R ID E R F R O M T U C S O N " A dded Serial &. Cartoon M O N D A Y & T U E S D A Y "R H U B A R B T H E M IL L IO N A IR E T O M C A T " w ith Ray M illand & )an Sterling A dded News & Comedv W E D N E S D A Y "T H E L A W A N D T H E L A D Y ” w ith Greer Garson, Michael W ildlnE, M arjorleM ain Added Cartoon A Good Supply On Hand B U Y NOW W e Clean A ll Kinds Seed; C a l l A n d S e e U s A t A n y T i m e McClamrock Seed Co. P h o n e 3 0 7 M o c k s v i l l e , N . G . DO YO U R C h r i s t m a s SHOPPING NOW W e Have Ample Stocks | Of Toilet Goods, Candies, Stationery, Cigars, Cigarettes And Many Other Usefel Gifts For Christmas Wilkms Dirug Go. A N N O U N C E M E N T W e Have Opened Our New 5 -1 0 - 2 5 Cent Store In The Horn Building Next Door To AlIis6n*Johnson Co., On North Main Street W i t h T > o S t o r e s I n T h i s C i t y W e W i l l B e A l S i e T o S e r v e T h e P e o p l e O f Mocksville And Davie County Better Than Ever Before. In Our Stores You W ill Find Everything Usually Carried By 5-10-25 Cent Stores Come In And Look OVer Our Big Stock Of Christmas Goods A Cordial Welcome Is Extended The Public To Visit Our New Store. P H O N E 21 M O C K S V IL L E , N . C Wallace, Inc. 5-10-25c Stores Two Big Stores To Serve You ■r|-: I * • ■ If" I? |i TtlTS nAVIB RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. ■ Asbestos Uses Are Multiplying H ow to increase asbestos 1m« ports and domcsUc osbc!;los pro« ducUon to Itccp pncc with indus­tria l dem and bothers ,U . S. de­ fense oiricinls.It’s no sm all problem. The strange m ck composed of coiri- prcssed Ubcrs th at m en spin into y arn and weave into fireproof and acld-rosistant textiles Is Indispen­sable in the 20th ccntury. It is a com m odity keyed to this age of coal, petroleum , and the split atom — an age of siiper*hot fire.Through the century’s first five decades, industrial, m ilitary, and defense needs have so pyram ided asbestos uses that to list them re­ quires a sm all book. World pro­duction of the fiber has quadrupled since 1020, and now approaches t h e million-lons-a-ycar m ark. Asbestos is bound by no fixed chem ical form ula. It is any of m any m inerals, usually of high silica contcnt, found in various parts of the earth. Heat, pressure, and cons of tim e have conjbined to creatc a fiber, which, at its best, can be spun and woven almost like silk, wool, or cotton. Rom ans used asbestos for fu­ neral shrouds 2.000 years ago. It was they v;ho nam ed, or perhaps m isnam ed it asbestos, a Greek w ord m eaning “ inextinguishable."To moderns it seems strange that a word of this m oaning should describe a fireproof m aterial— until it is explained that the Rom ans first applied it to lam p ■ wicks m ade of the woven rock fiber. As long as the lam ps had oil their wicks were asbestos (inex­ tinguishable), holding the llam o without being even slowly burned oway. w i i i w DUE TO symptomatic EAT ANYTHING WITH ^ FALSE TEETH ! It voM have (rouble n-hh plaict lhatslip,r<Klc,cauic lorcBUins— irr Urimms l>|(is(i-Uncr. One application a sour plate. tl«linc-» aud tcfiis lotist platt» in a H-iy no powder or paice can do Even on old rubber plaics you seiiioodresuki' six months to n rear or lonRcr. vou can tA l ANVTHIN01 Siinpli- lay S..fi sirlp ot i'lam liner on troublesome upper nr lower. Bm oad it mold* perlccdr. l^'O 'svfr.tajieless odorless, harmless lu you and your plalcs Removublc aa direaed. Mono- bach if not complcicly satiificd. /ItA yom (iTuss’tti Save i»2.G0 On This Home M ixed Coush Syrup £asliy Mixed. Needs N« Cooking. Couch mcdicincs usually conlaia a hreo 4)uantity or pluln 6>tu]i—a cood incrcilicnt, Imt one which you can cnslly make nt home. Mix '2 cups of i;r.inuh(cd sucnr with 1 cup o( w-atcr. No cuoltine! Or you can use corn eyrupor liquid l>oncy. Insioad of sucnrsyrup. : Then c<^l from yonr druncist ounccs ol Plnp.1. pour it inlo a pinl UoUh. aiul fill ^up Vk-ith your syrup. This civcs you a. lull 'pini of »-omI?rful mcdiclne tot coukIis due to colds. It makes a real aavinr. Ijocnusc it «iVGS i'ou about four times as much lor ycur money. Kcvcr spoils, anil chihlren lovt it. I This l3 aclually n eurpriwndy cff«tivo, ■^luick.nctlng couth modieino. Swiltly, you Iwl it taking hold. It loosens phlcrin, soothes 1rritnto<l nibuibranes. makes brrnthini' easy. » Pincx is a cpeclal compound ol proven InKrcdicnls, in conccntrated lorm, u most Tcliablc. sootUinit ajjcnl for thro.it anti Iwon- chlol irritations. Money refunded if it doesn't please you in every w-ay. FOR EXTRA COIiVEIIIENCE GET NEW IIEADY'MIXEO, REAOY-TO-USE PINEX! It's Wonderful the Way Chewing-Gum Laxative Acts CftiefI/ to REMOVE WASTE - m GOOD FOOD • Here’s the secret mllllona of folks hnvo discovered about Pcn(-A-^uNT, the ned> crn ehowlns-gum lasatlvo. Yes. bere Is «h y rctM-A-Mmr'8 action Is bo vroador* fully aitTerentl Doctors Gfty that mnny other laxnUves ■tart tbelr ■•lIushmB” ftcUon too soon . . . right In tlie stuiiiach where food is being digested. Largo doses of such Inxatlves upset ctleestlOD. Hush nwny nourlsliSns food you need for hcnltb and caeresr. you feel weak, worn out.B ut geotSo rcEN-A-MiNT, taken fto rec- onunenderl. works chlelly In the lower bowel where ic removea only waste, tu t good foodi You avoid that typical wcnlt, tired, worn-out feeling. Use kix.n-a-mint and feel your "poppy/'^enorgoUc self l Get rEBW-A-MIMTl 'No inctcoM la prtco—stUi iSf, or only 10^. P S I N - A - M I N ?FAMOUS CH6WINC-CW^ tftXATIVi Housework f a s y W M Nagging B acU e n cauaei m stress O O A I’S PILLS Home-Baked Rolls,. Coffee Cakes Add Special Menu Interest n o w LONG IS IT slnoo you’ve m ade hot rolls or coftcc cakc? It’s a great satisfaction to m ake good ones, and there are m any easy ways to do it.Hot ro ll m ix Insures satisfac­ tory results for those who do not have tho tim e to m ix th e ir own dough. I t m a y even give them courage to try a yeast dough from the very beginning, when they real­ ize the pleasures ot working with yeast-made products.• • • '' H E R E A R E R E C IP E S for both Gxperienccd and novice cooks. Try them on days when the m enu needs* an extra nice food or for a speciol occasion when you w ant to stim u­ late compliments on your cooking. Almomi Yeast Buns (Makes 12 3-Inch rolls)H cup roasted, blanchcd almonds • cup seedless raisins U cup diccd> preserved citron 1 packagc iiot roll m ix U cup granulated sugar teaspoon cinnamon teaspoon nutmeg 1 egg Few drops almond extract Candied clierries Halved, blanchcd almonds Chop almonds. Rinse and drain raisins. Add Citron, roll m ix, sugar, spice and almonds, and m ix well. Add liquid to yeast as directed on package', scanting liquid by 2 table­ spoons. Beat egg yolk lightly and m ix inlo yeast mixture with flavor­ ing. Stir into dry m ixture, blend­ing thoroughly. Shape into 12 round buns and place on greased baking sheet. Allow to stand In w arm place until doubled in bulk, about 1 to Vh hours. Brush tops w ith egg white beaten until foamy. Top each with a cherry half and several almond halves. Bake in moderately hot oven (375*F.) about 25 minutes. Raisin Orange Rolls (Makes 15 rolls) 1 cup seedless raisinsVj cup unstrained orange juice Vi cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoons butter1 teaspoon grated orange rind 1 package liot roll m ix Rinse raisins and drain thorough­ ly. Combine orange juice and suigar and boil 10 m inutes or until thick­ ened. Remove from heat and stir in butter, rind and raisins. Cool. Prepare hot roll m ix as directed on package. Turn dough out onto floured board and roll into rec­ tangle about 12-18 inches. Spread raisin-orange m ixture over dough. Roll lengthwise as for jelly, roll. Cut into 1 inch slices with scissors. Place out side down in greased pan (about 7x15 inches). Cover and let rise in w arm place until doubled in bulk about 1 hour and 15 m in­ utes. Bake in moderately hot oven (375‘P .) 30 to 40 minutes. Serve hot.• « « *Fruit-Nut Bread 2 packages compressed or fast granular yeast cup ivarm water ^ cup mUk M cup sugar1 teaspoon salt2 tablespoons soft shotening Vi cup chopped nuts3 cups sifted flour Add yeast to w orm w ater and let stand. Scald m ilk and pour into a large bowl with sugar and salt. Blend together and cool to luke Almonds, raisins, citron and spices added to a packaged roll m ix w ill give you these Almond Yeast Buns w ith a very superior flavor. Thcy»re easy (o prepare for special oecasions and w ill provide m any com pli­ m ents on your culinary skill. An outstanding treat a t any breakfast, luncheon, dinner or afternoon tea arc Raisin Orange Rolls. Thcy*ll be plum p and fluffy with raisins, and fra­ grant and flavorful because of tlic sugar, orange Juice and butler m ixture w rapped In them before baking. LY N N C nA M B ERS* M EN U Stuffed Breast of Veal C om Pudding Fried Tomatoes Green B ean Salad •Pruit-Nut Bread N ut Cookies Beverage •Recipe Given w arm . Stir yeast m ixture w ell and pour into bowl. A d d shortening, chopped nuts, fruits and flour; m i x to blend well. Scrape down batter from sides of bowl. Cover and let rise in w arm place 30 to 45 m inutes or until doubled. Stir down. Spoon into four No. 2 greased tin cans filling % full, or nto one bread pan, 5x0x3 inchcs. Cover and let rise until dough is w ithin 1 inch of top of cans. Bake 30 to 40 m inutes in quick, m oderate oven (375*F.). Rem ove from cans or pan and cool on racks. Brush tops with confectioners' sugar frost­ ing (1 cup confectioners’ sugar mix- with 2 to 3 tablespoons w arm m ilk) allow ing icing to dribble down the sides.• • « Pennsylvania Dutch Coffee Cake 1 package oompresscr o r fast granular yeast % cop w arm yeast V4 cup m ilk V^ cup sugar U cup soft shortening 1 teaspoon salt 1 egg, unbeaten ^ cup seedless raisins Vi cup finely chopped citron 3'/i to 394 cups flour, sifted Add yeast to w arm w ater and let stand. Scald m ilk and pour into bowl w ith sugar, soft shortening and salt; blend together and cool to lukew arm . Stir yeast m ixture well and pour into bowl w ith m ilk mixture. Add egg, seedless raisins, chopped citron and enough of the flour to m ake a soft dough. Turn out onto lightly floured board and knead until smooth. Place in ;rcased bowl, turning once. Cover )owl with dam p cloth and let rise in w arm place to 2 hours or im til impression rem ains when fin­ ger is pressed deep into side of dough, P u n c h dow n dough. Place in lightly g re a s e d o b ­ long pan, 9x13x2 inches or in two B-inch sq u a re pans. P a t dough evenly into pans. Let rise in w arm place about 30 m inutes, covered. W hile cakes are rising, m ix togeth­ er 1 cup brown sugar packed in cup, 1 teaspoon cinnam on. M easure out Vk cups thick sour cream . After coffee cake has risen, m ake little dents in the top w ith fingers. Pour sour cream on top and spread even­ ly. Sprinkle w ith the sugar-einna- mon m ixture. Bake 35 to 45 m inutes in quick-moderate oven (375“P .). C innam on Rolls 1 package hot roll m ix 0 tablespoons m elted butter Vi cup brown sugar , 2 teaspoons cinnam on K cup chopped w alnuts M ake dough according to direc­ tions on package. On well-floured board p at dough into rectangle about 12x18 inches. Brush w ith butter, sprinkle with brown sugar, cinna­m on and chopped nuts. R o ll as for jelly roll, cut in 12 slices. P u t slices cut side down, on greeted baking sheet about 1-inch a p a rt L et rise in w arm place im W double Jn bulk. Bake in m oderate oven (360*P.) 20 minutes. Glaze rolls if desired. T H E .BYoDR;HKENN£TH;J. FOREMAN S C n iF lU n £t Ueuieronomy 80-34. DEVOTIONAL tttSADJNO: Doulomi' emy 30:1I.S0. Hero's Farewell Lesson for December 9, 1951 Dr. Foroinon LYN N SAYS: You Should Know These Facts W hen Baking WIUi Yeast M ilk has to be scalded in m aking bread, rolls and coffee cake with yeast so that the action of the en­ zymes in m ilk w ill not interfere w ith the activity of yeaat.If you’re going to refrigerate dough for roUs, place in a de;p bowl. Cover first w ith waxed paper and then a *damp cloth. Doughs m ade w ith m ilk should not be kept lor m ore than three days. Eggs are not alw ays beaten sep­ arately before adding to yeast bat­ters because the final beating after m ixing, 100 strokes, blends x it-per­fectly into the batter. W hen you’re beating yeast dough, beat “from the shoulder.” This not only exercises the dough m ore easi­ly, but it’s also less tiring. A good w ay to handle dough which is rising is to place in a dosed cup­ board alongside a bowl of w arm water. This gives the d e^red high tem perature and also keeps tke dough aw ay from a draft. A m oving picturo compony once conccivcd the idoa of recording and putting on tho screen all over the country, w hat two opposing can­didates were saying various p r o b- lems. It w a s en­ joyable, or m adden­ ing, a c c 0 r ding to your political views, to observe ■ the con­ trast. B oth m en read w hat they had to say, but their reading w as. entire­ly different. One m on kept his eyes on his little desk, never m ade a gesture, never looked a t the audience. It was not inspiring—just a . middle- aged m an reading to him self. Can^ didate B on tiie other hand never let his script come between h im and his listeners; he kept his eye on them and unless one observed him carefully one would not notice that he was reading. (He won in a w alk, too.) Now tho w ay to “get the true flavor of Deuteronomy, especially Uie chapters selected for this week, is to listen to some ono read it who can read like Candidate B. For Deuteronomy is not a desk-book; it is mostly out-of-doors oratory. It was not m eant for the eye first, but for tile ear.• • • A fter the G reat M an, W hat? n great hero, Moses, was taking leave of his people. In spite of all the grum bling and the rebel­ lions, it is no exaggeration to say that for those people he stood in tho place of God. Ho not only tow­ ered above his own generation, but he cast a light far into the centuries, so that to this day we are indebted to the inspired greatness of Moses, tho m an of God. ^ Y et the greatest of m en m ust (lie. W licn It cam e tim e for him to say farew ell it is hard to im ­ agine the sinking of heart that ail his people felt. Before them lay the unknown; their whole course of life was about to changc, In w ays they could not foresee; w ith Moses gone, how could they face the future? W as he to leave after him (as some "great” m en have done) only a vacuum ?* • * A Cliallcnge TN the closing days of his life, ^ Moses focussed his people's eyes on two tilings. F irst was the Law . Life is not lived by im pulse and inspiration only. Life, to have power and m eaning,-m ust be a patterned life, d e a r and definite lines, a sense of directiqiL So Moses left behind him — not fffll details, these were for others to work out»th e m ain lines of civic and social, as w ell as in­ dividual life, in the Law w hich God had m ade clear to him as the true “design for living.” But Moses docs not sim ply pound it into people’s cars: You shall, you m ust, tliesc arc the orders! He sets it out as a d e ar choicc. lie shows the people the .. aUernativcs: Life and Good on the one hand. Death and E vil on the oUier. M ake up your m ind, he says: Choose. The Law of God docs not force you. It is not an arbitrary thing. The reason for the L aw is never "just because.” The reason for the Law is th at it is the w ay to live. Y ou don't have to keep it, Moses says in ef­ fect; but if you choose to rcject it, the end of ^ e other road is Death. This is true for individuals, it is true for nations. It is a terrific m istake to think of God as ordering us about for his own am usem ent, < to tie us down. He gives us ordei lor our own sakes.• • * A Song An o t h e r legacy Moses leaves behind Is a Song. W e do not usually think of Moseis as a poet, but Dout. 32 is ascribed to him . H e knew people m ig ht forget the Law , but a Song they would not forget. " I care not who writes a nation’s law s,” said a philosopher, “ if only I can write its songs.” AVliat Moses gave his people WAS no mere tuneful trash, but# a grand hym n of faith. W hat. Moses m ost of all wonts his peo­ple to do; Is not to rem em ber h im but to rem em ber God. So after all tlie law is on the books, and all the speeches have been made, at tlie last be gives his people a Song, to rem em ber Is it not so alw ays? W hat are the parts of the Bible that m ean most to all generations? Alv/ays the sing­ ing words of P salm and prophet and gospel, the rhythm of P aul’s chapter on Love, the m ajestic choruses of the Revelation. Thoujgh great m en pass, though the m ind forget the Law , the heart w ill not forget the Song. <CopyrUht 1051 by th» Dlvlaten . OlirlttUn EdDe»tlOD, NaUonnl Counol et «lta OharebcB of Ohrlit in tb* Vnlted. SiM«t «f AmerleA. Beleated by WNU*. Pt*tDr«a.) ■ - i/ < •* J I ', ’ I?'' ' 1'^'! li ■ .’i- 1 h r \ PAGE EIGHT THE DAVIE ElEOORD. UOCKSVtLLR N. G. DEOGMBGR 6. \m By W illard Olvan Pcrsing r IE RE A SSU R IN G W EIGHT of the nickels and dimes in his pocket took the bite out of the raw Saturday afternoon. Surveying the street from the eminence of three dollars for the first tim e in hla eleven years, Jim m y Sands thought It was a pretty nice world after all. After enjoying this sense of pros* perlty for a few seconds, ho remcm* iM rtd that he’d have to hurry if he wanted to hide the Christmas present before his mother woke up tro m 'h e r nap. A frown came over his face as he glanced around to locate his pup. M ike wasn't any­ where In'sight. He started to whistle, but his attention was caught by little Sam m y F arr, big‘cyed with excite* m ent and fright, running toward him . “Hey, JjmmyJ** called Sammy. *They took M ike!”- Jim m y ’s heart sank. He knew -- „ . ,who 'they’ monnl, hul he had to J ta m y open the envelope and look moke sure. "W ho look h im ?" inside, "M ike’s Hcenscl" Jm im y •T h . dogcotcher. M ike Irled to “ P “ “ tu n away, but they caught him „ Y o T had better w all tin when she could C B 'rtjr^th i'ti^ on^ proudly to church instead of hiding the old one's shabbiness by tuck> Ing it under her arm . I t Just wouldn't be right to spend that money for M ike’s license. ' "Com e on, Sam m y, if you*ll keep It a secret, I’ll let you go w ith m e to buy M om 's present." M aybe he could leave the purse w ith the landlady until after his m other had gone to work. Jim m y w as glad that she w ouldn't have to clean up those offices on Christmas E ve and Christm as night... Jim m y 's mother smiled a t him over the potatoes she was peeling for their supper. "Dldn':t you come up the front w ay?" "Y es,” Jim m y closed the door and walked over *o stare out the one window In their room."Y o u didn't leave M ike out in front?" •«No—" The tears that he had been holding back poured out. "The dogcatcher took him aw ay." Jim m y sank into a choir by the table and buried his head in his arm s. Sm iling to * herself, Jim m y 's mother placed a comforting hand on his shoulder and said, " I think it w ill be all right w ith Santa if you get your present tonight instead of tomorrow night." She. took an envelope out of the shabby purse that lay on the table. "M erry Christmas, Jim m y .” Something In... her^ voice m ade Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. W c C an Supply Tiout Needs IN G O O D C O A L , S A N D and B R IC K C all or P h oncU s A t A ny Tim e P H O N E 194 , . Formerly Davie Brick £i.Coal Co to- morrow, Jim m y. It’s late, and it's down at the corncr." WHO KNOWS? "W hat did you come to college for anyw ay?" asked the dlsgus'ted professor. "Y o u are not study­ ing,” "W ell/* said t h e student. "M other says It's to fit m e for the presidency; Uncle Jlm » to sow m y wild oats; sister Helen, (o gel a chnm for her to m arry; and Dad. to bankrupt t h e fam ily ." A boy of eleven couldn't cry hi front of a seven*ycar>old, so Jim m y blinked away the tears. , Proof Enough I A mlddlC'West draftee claim ed ex* emptlon on the grounds of poor eyesight and brought his wife as evidence. / fore.when that old dogcatcher camc around."" I shouldn't have loft him down here by him self, but I didn’t want to wake M om up." Jim m y sat down on the step and buried his face In his hands. Sure, he thought, they’ll keep M ike five days before they get rid of him , but a license udll cost two dollars and a half. | Then'he straightened up; he had three dollars in his poc’.x*t, tlircc dtdlars all his own, that l)e had earned by Tunning errands, selling Junk, and saving the few pennies that his motlier had given him for ^ candy. t If he bought a license for Mike, he w ouldn't be able to buy the new purse for his molbcr. but he could buy a nice handkershief or some­ thing with the f would have left. A boy of eleven couldn’t cry In front'of a seven-year-old so Jim m y blinked away the tears that came when he thought of furzy. playful M ike being tossed into a pen full of big snarling dogs. " I wonder if they’ll feed him good?” A SEN SE O F SH AM E kept re­ turning when Jim m y thought of his mother’s shabby old purse. She'd had it as long as he could rem em ber, and he had seen her atop several times to admire the shiny black one wiUi the gold- colorcd clasp that was in Hoff- berg's window. He had been look* Ing forward to C!t’'.'.?lmns ir.nrnjixp Uncl»* Sam Saysi SILER Funeral Home * AND Flower Shop Phone 113 S. Main St Mockiville, N. C . Ambulance Service IN SU P E M O R .% :O U R T N orth Carolina— Davie Councy N O T IC E * R E - S A L E O F L A N D In the Matter o£ A . L Bowles* Guardian of Cornelia Bowles* non cpmpos. Under and by virtue o£ an order made in the above entitled cause by S. H . Chaflin, Clerk of Superior Court, and approved by his HflJior, J. A . Rousseau, Judge of the 17th Judicial IHstrict, the undersigned Commissioner w ill offer for rc*sale at p u b lic a u c tio n a t the c o u rt h o u se d o o r o f D a v ie C o u n v cv in M ocksvillc* N .'C .» o n Satur^ day* th e 8 th dav o f D ecem ber, 1951. at twelve oVIock, m .. the following dcscrlbcd lands located in Mocksviile Township on the road leading from Highway No. 64 to the County Home road, and more particu­ larly descnbed as follows: 1st Tract— ^Bounded on the North by the lands of N . B. Dyson, on the East by E. C . Koontz, and on the South by J. C Bowles heirs, and on the VC^est by Center public road? Beginning at a stake Northwest corner on West side of public road and runs S. S7 degs. E. 19.90 chs. w ith J, C . Bowles heirs’ line to a stone, said Bowles heirs' cor­ ner; thence N . 3 degs. E. 12.10 chs. CO a stone N . B. Dyson's* corner; thence S. 88 dcgs. E. 2 r08 chains w ith said Dyson line to*a stone, E. C . Koonts's corncr; thence S. 10 degs. 10 chs. w ith Koontz's line to a stone Koontz's corner; thence S. 2.' degs. W . 6AS chs. | to a stake, Koontz's corner; thence S .' )0 degs. W . S chs. to a stone, J. C Bowles heirs* corner; thence N . 89 degs. W . 20 chs. to a stone corncr of Pool lot, J- C . Bowles heirs’ corner;; thence N . 5 degs. E. 4.9 S chs. to a stone and Poplar, J. C Bowles licirs' corncr; thence N . S9 degs. W . 10.90 chs. to a stake on East side of public road; thence N . 4 degs. W . 4.90 chs.. to the beginning corner, and contain­ ing $6 Acres as surveyed by A . L. Bowles September <ith, \$SX. | 2nd Tract-—Bounded on the East by Center Church Public Road, on tlie N orth by Virginia Bowles, on West by Bill Green, and on the South by J. C Bowles heirs' land; Beginning, at in iron stake, Northeast corner in V ir­ ginia Bowles' line and runs N . 87 degs. S chs. w ith said Virginia Bowles’ line to an Iron stake; thence S.’ 42 degs. f.7f chs. to an iron stake, Virginia Bowles’ corner; thence S. 6 degs. W . S.16 chs. to an iron stake, said Vir­ ginia Bowles* corner; thence S. 74 degs. i W . 10.10 chs. to a stone. Bill Green's’ . Having qualified an AdmM-iraiflr nf corner; thence S. 4*degs. W . 4.60 chs.. "f Mamie P. t» K to a stone, J. C . Bowles heirs’ comcrt I noHci* U hfri.hv aivnn nil p^tantt hold . thence S. 89 degs. E. 11.90 chs. w ith ‘n** a alnM ■••Irt ewnift to I I said J. C . Bowles heirs' corner; thence ^ IN . 3 degs. E. ( chs. to a stone, Bowles heirs' corner; thence S. 89 degs. E. 6.30 chs. w ith said Bowles heirs' line to A TTEN TIO N FA R M ER S! P O U L T R Y L O A D U ^ G W e W ill Buy Y our Poultry Every Thursday M orning From , 8 A* To 11 A* M* In Front Of E. P. Foiter* Cdtloii Gin ' HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID W IL L P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S S A L I S B U R Y P O U L T f l Y C O . Sullibnn'. n; o ' ; , • Wnlker Funeral Horae A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E D A Y O R N IG H T Phone 48 Moclnville. N C Boger & Howard P U R E S E R V IC E T ir 8 B atteries A n d Accessories K u rfec ^ P aints C o rn e r N * M a in & G a ith e r Sts P h o n e 80 Notice to Creditors ih>* Bame. properly v«‘rlA«>d. tn the iinQfr iritfneri on or before the I3ih duv of 0*to- t>^r. 1952. ur thin notice « ill h« plKiirt In bat of ih«*lrr*-enverv. All p>‘ra«hiRhidRht a stone’ on W e t side of public road: jed lo.iiid .M at« will pi™™ rail npoo ihe th c „ « N 4 d=p. y . 8 ch., said I public road to a point m curve; thence xhja jjih day a/ Ociober. 1951 W J. ELLI.S. Admr. Miinila'P. eiHn. decnU By A. T. GRANT. Atiorney. . The harv^t aeaaen'a about over, bat how about sowing a new crop, one that wlU reap some ^ r a dollars (n raaaona to eome? Just plant part of yoor earn­ ings regularly In I). 8^ OefenKe flon ^s. and wateh those earnlnira «rrow! Tills yon ean readily do through Uie Payroll Savinea Plan where you work, or th»- Bood-A-Month Plan where you bank The longer you hold Uiese bondt. thi> deeper they take root and the more in­terest they bear. In 24 years they will retarn yon 17 per eent more than yonr orlfflnai Investment, u. s Tr«aiwrr o«wirta>M< N . 10 degs. chs. w ith said pub-! lie road to the beginning corner, and (Containing IS and 35/100 Acres ns^ I surveyed by A . L. Bowles, September j ---------------------------- The bidding on the 1st tract a- Notice to Creditors bbve described w ill start at the- _price o f $2,740.50 ahd the biddinc HhvIoh qu..l Unrt h. Adrnioi'rai..r oi on the 2nd tract w ill start at the »' <=« '«'’ E, P-eW... rt.c™««,l. price o f $1,260.00. r'‘“!’ *" Terms of S ik ! One Hondrcd Dol- '■>« ,.f « ,d d- hrs osfc ami th« b^hncc on M rtv <o Ih . ...iH,-, days time w kh bond and approved W- curity, or all cash at the option of the purchaser. This 23rd dav o f N ov.. 1951. A. T. GRANT. Commissioner Your neighbor read* Th» Record. ailih day of OctAhrr. I9.i2 or thi« notice j will bft plertd in h^r »r inHr recuvery. AH ' p<>r8nnM indebted tn th«* snli* wiH plftfld^ eall upon the ond*'rnii]ned ri C'tn. N C. and mnii* nettle* Thia the 3«th rt-iv pJ ORt"h#r. I9.*»1 LONNIE M. PEEBLES, 4dmr. of Genrfle E. Peehlfs, drea’d M A C B I I T E ^ N e w M o w e r s , R a k e s , D r i l l s , D i s c a n d S e c t i o n H a r r o w s , M a n u r e S p r e a d e r s , S e l f - P r o p e l l e d C o r n P i c k e r s . W e H a v e S o m e G o o d U s e d F a r m M a c h i n e r y B i g L i n e O f N e w , P a r t s I n S t o c k D o n ’ t P u r c h a s e Y o u r F a r m M a r c h i n e r y U n t i l Y o u , L o o k O v e r O u r S t o c k , HENDRIX & WARD N E A R C O R N A T Z E R M a s s e y H a r r i s F a r m I m p l e m e n t s ' J. F R A N K H tN D R IX M IS S C O L E E N FO S T E R O W E N W A R D The Davie Record ^en fublished. Since 1899 52 Years Othert have come and gone-yoiir county newipaper keeps going, .'-'ometimes it has seemed hard to make'"buckle and tongiie" meet but ' : soon the sun shines and again we . march on. Our faithful, nubscriber^. most of whom pay promptly, give us courage and abiding faith in our fellow man. l. If your neighbor is nut taking' The Record tell him to subscribe. The price is only $1.50 per year ~in the ' ^ State, and $2.00 in other states. W h e n Y o u C o n i e T o T o w n M a k e O u r O f f i c e Y o u r H e a d q u a r t e r s . W e A r e A l w a y s G l a d T o S e e Y o u . f - Sale of Real Estate . Under and by virtue of authority -enn* talned In al>eed of Truat exeeotf^d'In Wade McDaniel nnd wtf» Bmile McDani«>l, and deliveml to B. t^ Brock, Truitea.wh>r> Deed of Truat la recorded in the office Reitlatar nf Dreda for Davie County. Nori i (laroltna, <n Deed of TruAt Bonk 39. piin 231 default having beenmade In the o<tv menta of the note aecured by said Di^ei< of Truat, and at the request of the.hotilM of Mid note.,theunderstgned Trualee will ofTer lor aale'and xall to the hlghMt liiri d»rforcaah at 12 n'ctnck noon.. Dec. 22. I9S1. at the court houae.door In Davl«> County. North Conillna. the following de> •••rllipd real Mtaie, to Mtit: ^ TheaebetngUtaNoa. 124.1IB, 120 >nd 122. ao ahown o<- the map or plat of ib** aub>dlvl»ion of the landa of Penny Brath em. Inc.. surveyed and platted by U.' A Widenhouse. Engineer. which*aald map nr plat la duly recorded in -Booli 23. pag** o94 .Regiater*abfficeof PaTle County N C. to which reference la hereby made f<> H more particular deacMptlon. THU prop­erly will be aold fubject .to exlailng «>n< pumherancei and taxes. < This the 14th day*of Nnvembar. I9S1. B. a-BROCK. Truatee. Mock-vllle. N. G. Now is the time , to B scribe for The Rec->rd.; I L E T U S D O I YOUR ^OB PRINTING J * We.can save you mont^y- on your E N V E L O i ? E S . L E T T E R H E A D S , S T A T E M E N T S , P O S T E R ^ B I L L H E A D - , P A C K E T H E A D S , E t c . P a t r o n i z e y o i i r h o m e n e w s p a p e r a n d t h e r e b y h e l p b u i l d u p y b u r h o m e t o w n a n d c o u n t y . T H E D A V IE RECG)]^C). The Record has the: circulation ot any Davie~ ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPACE THIS PAPER ,, V^ijl A^anae To,Suit GOOD '|i(EIGHBbRS--MICES TO Fir VOUR BUSINESS ......— 1 j T h e D a v ie R e c o r d D A V IE CO tTN TT’S O L D E S T N E W S P A P E R -T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P I.E R E A D -H n E SHALL THE PP^SS. THE PEOPLE’S.MGHTS MAINTAINi UNAWED BV INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY CAIN.’* V O LH M N U I .M O C K S V IL L B . N O R T H C A R O L IN A , W H D N B SD A Y , DECEM B ER n loqr.N U M B E R 20 NEWS OF LONG AGO. Materialistic What Wm Happenins In Da- vw Bafon'Parkini M^art And Abbreviated Skirtt. (Divic Record, Dec. to, 1930.)* I. T. Bally nude • btulness trip 10 Slatesvllle Tbnridav. J: T, Sofiev, o( near Woodleaf, wan In town last week on hutlnefs. Mr. and Mrs. Oenrge Fry of near H all's Perrr, were In town SalBrday. sbopplnK. _____S i *” J* * ' classes shades of CalahaVn, was In town Friday on buslnen. W . C. Dennvi an aged Confeder ste Valeran of tills cUy, Is verv ill at U s borne on North Main sireel. Peter W . Hairston bas been ap- polmed'sapsrrlsor of Oavie taxes i fw .t^ 'n e x t two^veara. io v Call, who baa held a posl. tion In Lonlsvhle, K y.. for the past vear nr'tw o, returned home last week. The creek* In Da»le wer» hl»b. er SatiiM ay than they have been since last Winter. A coM d eal'of hottom land; was covered.^ Mrs. Marvin: W aten and daagh- Aqe ter Miss Ivle Nell, and Mrs. V . E Swalm s | ^ t Thurspz> In W inston. Si ■ “ ■ Mr. and Mrs. ClarencaS. Grant and llttia dsnghter,' Rachel, of Denton,' spent the week.end wlih M r. Grsnt's mother, near Jericho.. Mesdames R , B. Sanford, E. C Morris'snd E. H . Morris, were a. m oag those from MocfcsTllle who were shopping In Winston Salem Thursday. The friend, of W . R. Clement who has been very 111 with heart trouble for rhe past several weeks -will be'aorrv to learn that his con­ dition remains serious. D. J.-Lybrook who has been sul fering severely with a carbuncle underwent an operation last wetk at a Wlnaton-Salem boepllal, and Is getting alcne nicely, A number of .rtavie farmers car ried tobacco to Winston-Salem laFi wseek. H urt of the tobacco Is brini! Ing low prices. One Davie farmer iwld he only received $rs tor his entire load. The average may hp reduced In this county, next year. H r. and Mrs- Wade Eaton havr moved from the jail to one of the Sanford cottaees adjoln'ne W llkef. hoio street. Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis, who occnpM this house.' bavr nnved to Parmlncton lownshlc. Sheriff McSwaln bas moved bis fsmllv from Cpoleemee.to this, city and are occupying the jail. Mr. and Mrs. W . T. Slarrette. of Cbarloite, spent Sunday with re­ latives and friends here. Mrs. H . C, Lane, of Virginia I. spending some time here with- her ■ father, /. N . Ijames. W ork has been started on the new annex to the First Baptist church on North Main street. Thr neW additon will be two storlec, and will contain four class rooms which sre badly needed to house the Increased attendance. Obas. B.' Mooney Is doing the work. ' P.' B . Davis, aged 7S. died at b n home near Augusta T b n r^ay , fol- lo^rUg a long Illness. Fuderal and burial services were conducted , ;. .;V » :3o o'dock Friday «fiernoon . by Rev. A. G . Loltin, hia pastor, and the" body laid to m t in Concord Methodist churcb cemetery. Sur , viving are the wife, one son and three daugt Among the few.in North Caro: llua w h o have been honored' with an In^tattou to the W hite Bdiise functions;nabering iu .the wUtei socl^ season in the ballon's capl- tSl are Mr'! and Mrs. W . E. Ken 'nefl, of Parmingiao, who have .re­ ceived a personal invitation from • 'President and: Mrs.^, Hi)0ver. .'W ith cirds enclosed, , askldg, them to‘ be ' present at the reception on -Decem. bar 4th;: Rav. Waliw E. Isenhonr. TavlwBvllle.N. a That we are living In a material­ istic age of the nation and of . the world, such as we have never rea. Used before In life perhaps; would be hard to deny. The vast multi­ tudes of people are Interested In money, land, housu, farms, bu.si. ness, etc.. Is veiy evident. Only the m inority* the few- are Interest­ ed In their souls and the souls of their fellbw m n The following Is a form letter that 1 atn sending to some of our newspapers o( the State which t hope will be read before It Is thrown Into the waste basket; •/If I were to write every news, inper In the atate of North Caro llna In regard to advertising, with the assurance that I wanted a full nage ad In the paper, and would pay for It al their regular rate of advertHng, I would get an Im­ mediate' reply from every papel, wouMn't n If I didn’t It would be an exception. 'As I write the newspaper of the State asking for a very little bit of apace for the purpose of helping save the people morally and spiritually, and likewlsi! help­ ing save the nation from destruc­ tion, scarcely an editor, or a news- paper man, replies. Is It a fact that we are living In such a mater lallsllc age until about all .we are inlereaied In is monev? If so. God pity us. Isn’t It lime to wake up 10 the fact that money ci.n*i save us? 'I am writing many of.the news, papers of North Carolina asking for a small amount of space from time to time that I mav win sonix to God and help pilgrims on their journey heavenward. I ’m suggest Ing- that m y articles and poems be published under t h e heading. Life's Better W av." The Jour. nal-Fatriot of. North Wllkesboro, N , C.. has been using m y produc tions under this beading for sever, ral years All. I ask anv publica­ tion Is that my name he placed on the mailing list ih « I mav get the paper. Isn't Ibis reasonable? "I'm m.aking some enclosures, and I f you ean use them I shall ap­ preciate the space. If not, please retnm'same. 'We ate living In very perilous limes, and If our nation doesn't wake up and sewk God it looks like we are facting some Im- mediale crisis It is Communism thal will tnke our freedom from us, or is it atomic destruction? Money Monev can't save us from either. Only God can.. Shall I hear from von?" I am aware of the fact that news, paper men are very largely respon­ sible for the trend of Ihe nation In which we live. I f every editor ol our newspapers had -taken a verv definite stand against liquor our prohibition laws would not have been repealed. In all probablliiy. It the publishers of our newspapers would alt stand against rx>rrn|it po­ litics, against Communism, against evils of various kinds- that are wrecking us morally, splrliually, and even finaniHally, I believe this nation would not be In the condi­ tion il Is today. Am I wrong? Perhaps no aet -of men help mould a country’s draiiny as much as minlsieni of the Gospel, but nex to them comes the editors and pub- llshere ol our newspapers In my opinion. This plac« ■ a tiemeiirt. ons responslbilitv upon ministers, editors and publishers., It is easy to become inaterlallsilc to the ex. le t that money captivates the h e a^ and mind, soul and aplrit .'ol bolh classea, along - with the -mil. lions that follow .other avocations aod'punuits in life.. -Being a minister of the G os^I feel that I have the right of sound, ing a not of warning to my 'fellow- mlnisters lest many of them be cap. tivated by materialism and fall as soul.wlnner.s. It Is true we have to live as well as everybody else, and we need and must have money with which to meet our expenses, and live among our fellowmen, but we have no God-given right to give ourselves to money-making more than soul-winning. Neither do editors and publishers have a God. given right to publish that which degrades and demorallies our fel­ lowmen, or helps lead them wrong and to destruction, for the money Il brings Into their nockets. or Into their bank accounts. The print log press helps save or destroy men and nations. If our newspaper a. long w ith our religious publics Ilona, -would helo give the public something that Is uplifting and en nobling, and that would mean the salvation of prwlous souls, how wonderfnl It would he.' Men let’s think of our responsibility. A line way to remember your friends a n d relatives t h i s Christmas is (o send t h e m T h e Davie Record. A weekly letter f r o m the old hom e county at a lOst o f only $1.50 per year in this State. O utside State, $2. Send in your gift subscrip­ tions t o d a y Notice to Creditors Having qualiflad aa AdmloUtrator of tha eaute of George E. Peeblea. deceaaed. ttotlee la hereby Hlveo to all pMaoiw hold Inftclalme aKalnat the eatete of aald daceaaad, to praaent the aama'to'tha under * on or before the30th day of October. 19S2. or thla notice win be plead In bar of their recovery. All peraona Indebted to the aald estate, will pleaae call upon the undeialilned at Coo- leemee. N. 0. and make prompt aeteli^ meut. Thla the 30th day e( October. 1951 LONNIE M. PEEBLES. Admr. of George t , Peeblea, decs’d. Notice to Creditors Having <lil.lia«i as Admlalurstot o( the estaie of Mamie P: EUls, decennl. notice I. hereby liven to all pemrn. Wd- ih| claims a.-alntt laid Mtate to pteiiint the ume. properlr veriBed. to the under. sinned eo or bebre tlie 13th dev «l Octn lier,l*S2, or tills OMlee will lie plead in bar of thelc recovery. Ail peisi.nB ladebt. ed to said estate will please call upon the andelsUned.at Advance. Route 2. N. a. and make crompl wttlemenl._This I3tb dey 0/ Oclobet. 1951.W. J. ELLIS. Admr. ol Mamie P. Ellis. duM’d.By A. T. GRANT. Attoroer. Sale of Real Estate Under and by virtue of authority con talned In a Tiaed of Truat executed by Wade McDaniel and wifa Stale McDaniel, and delivered to a tX Brock* Truitee.which Deed of Truat U recorded In the office of Regliter. of Deeda forDavla County. North Carolina. «n Deed of Tmat Book 89. page 23l.>default having been made In the pay ' * ‘ hr «aM Deedmenu of the a-----of Trust, and at the of aald note. of the hbtdef_________________J Trualee will offer lor aale and aell to. the hltfhett bid­der forcaab at 12 o‘doch noon. Dea 22. 1951. at tha court house door In Davie CoantT. North Cdrollna. the following der “ ? I S i t l a T u » K V n 8.l2.a .d122. oa'ahown on the nap or plat of the anhMllvlaion of the landa of Penny Broth* efs;’Iac.; aurvayed and idattad by a A. WManhouae. Englnw. which aald map nr dat la duly lecoided In Book 23. page 594.’Reglater*a office of Pavla County. N a. to which reference la hereby made for a more particular daacrlptlonv Tbia prop* any will be aold aubject to esiating m- cea and taxes.Tbia the Utb day of November. 1981 . a a brock. Tmatee. MockavUla. N. a Bj M aud MeCurdjr Welch TEAM K N EW that Hawkeye, the I atore detective, was keeping his eyes on Jlm m y» an4 she .couldn’t help feeling worried. Je an and Jim m y were engaged, n ie y were going to be m arried as soon as Jim m y got a raise. They both worlMd In the Mammoth_Storc and were saving' everything they could to buy furniture for their future home. Hawkeye was exactly like the de­ tectives m ade famous by the movies. H ard, gim let eyes, black cigars, derby tilted on hi.A head. It was hia boast that nobody ever ;ot by with stealing in tliis store, [t was this boast that had given him the nicknamc of Hawkeye. ' B ut why, oh, why should he sus­pect Jim m y of doing anything wrong? It was true his salary was sm all, but he would be promoted sooij, Jean was sure of thal. Jean had had a wistful hope that they m ight have a Christmas wed* ding, but Jim m y's raise hadn’t come through. In the meantime, they were carefully budgeting'their combined salaries and had bought expensive piece of electrical equipment for their home. That had been a thrill. W hen they were married .Tiw.—-- was determined that Jean shouldn’t Old Hawkeye had seen her band Jim m y a long flat pack* age one day. work. Jim m y him self had been brought up in a wonderful home, w ith m any advantages, but it had all been lost. Jean had come up the hard w ay. She'd been orphaned and had gone to work at fifteen. But they were getting along fine now and hod wonderful hopes of soon really belonging to each other. Jim m y ’s salary as head of the notion department in the base­ m ent wasn’t large, but Jean knew he'd got a better one soon. Business was brisk and steady shtce it was now the week before Christm as Day. Jean qnd Jim m y walked home together when the store closed, as they usually did. almost too tired for a movie, or a walk along the river. They didn’t allow themselves m any pleasures and sometimes were so tired, they just said goodnight at the door of Jean's rooming house. Jim m y lived a num ber of blocks further down the street. B ut they'd always have a little tim e together when the store closed. Once every week Jean would s ^ , "D id you bring your bundle?” And Jim m y would say he sim ply couldn’t. B ut Jean would laugh at h im teasingly. "Honestly, Jim m y, I w ant to do It for you.” and a t last he{d give in. ¥EAN H ADN ’T the slightest Idea I that old Hawkeye had seen her hand Jim m y a long, flat package one day when he'd been working late in the stock-room. She'd done this before shice it was the most convenient way. And Hawkeye was ‘ IS around. He’d even Oar County And ,See" Along Main Street Social Security By W . K . W hite. Manaccr. :cMa- ;oocb By The Street Rnmbler. OODOpO Mrs. R , J. Randall carrying steel enRt.'ivings o f Andrew Taclcson (o O nce in a w hile someone asks the bank— Mrs. H arm on M c V us, "D o vou pay benefits under social security to the families of people w ho have worked long e- noush under social security to qualify or do you just pay to the worker himself?” Over a year ago chc social se­ curity law was amended and one of the im portant changes that was made provided that the'w ife'of "a worker under social security w ho had worked lonR enough w ould be entitled to receive m onthly checks for herself even If she was under age 65, If her hushand had rcachcd ace 65, had retired and if she had a child o f his in her care. Thus, you see, a family benefit is made possible for the young wife if she has a child o f her retired, fully insured husband in her carc. A n d under the law, in the case of her hupband's death, she w ould receive m onthly checks. T h e child, too, w ould be entitled m onthly checks. So you see, in both cases, retirement at age 65, or death at anv age, o f the insu c ed worker, the wife and child get benefits. A nother part o f the new law provides that the, depen dent husband o f the insured w o­ m an worker, when both are age 65. and she is retired, is erititled to benefits; or if the wife was In- su .ed at die tim e o f her death, whatever her age, her dependent widower m ight be entitled to pay ments at age 65. These are some o f the family benefits now being paid under the^sodal security law. A representative o f this office w ill be in Mocksviile again on Dec. 12th, at the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and on the same date in COoleemee, at die old Band H all, over Led< ford’s Store, at U a. m . Better ciktl at this office now and get your land pos> ters before the supply is ex hauftted. Printed on heav card board. 50c. per dozen. han purchasing Christmas goo — Miss Faith D eadm on' m ailing handsfull o f letters— Miss Blanche Brown doing some w indow shop« ping—‘Georce Hendricks busy de­ corating Chrisimas w indow —>Mrs. Sheek Bowden, Jr,. getting ready to begin her Christmas shopping — ^Nancy Cheshire and Jane R ob­ in sbti ^r'rying books 'to' liblrarv— '' Y oung school girl buying pack of cigarettes and coca-cola*^Kermic Sm ith cleaning off sidewalk in front o f m en’s shop * Mrs. Baxter Y oung pausing for refreshments— Mrs. Tom m ie Shore looking at attractive Christmas windows— Elaine Howard and Cleo Carter, o f Advance, trying to finish their Christmas shopping— Sam BInk ley taking afternoon stroll around the square— M r. and Mrs. C . A . Blackwelder and little daughter looking for Santa Claus in dime store—J. C. W ilson hurrying dow n M ain street—M ayor John Dur- h.im, Clarence G rant and J. K . Sheek getting afternoon hair cuts — Mrs. Ernie Foster and sister do­ ing some pre'holiday chopping— D r. W . M . Long transporting big bag o f several thousand dimes up M ain street—M iss Florence Mack- ie'hurrying into banking h o u s^- Miss M ai^aret A nn Cartner look* ing at young ladv fall on N orth M ain street—Haines Yates eount* ing new half dollars— Miss Cor­ nelia Hendricks m odeling green sweatees Mrs. K enneth Dwiggins and Mrs. Jim m ie N ichols calking about coming events Lloyd Far­ thing entertaining young ladles in drug store * Miss Alice Hayes wait­ ing on way to go hom e— Roy Col­ lette trying on coats - Miss Claire W all doing some last m inute hol­ iday shopping. overheard Jean and Jim m y talking one day. Jean was saying, “ You m ust bring the things to m e. It's helping us to get ahead. And no> body w ill ever know.” Jim m y had said, "B ut. honey, it's not right.” Je an had laughed. " I only do It because I love you. You know that.” , . ,Jim rh y 's . voice was husky with love. "Y ou're so sweet, Je a n .' 1 believe you’d do anything for me.''- A nd all the tim e Hawkeye was keeping his g im le t eyes on Jim m y . But Je an knew he hadn’t done anything wrong. .' And then the next tim e Je an handed Jim m y the long flattish package (Jim m y .was working late that night again), they both felt a heavy hand on thehr shoulders. Hawkeye said, "Y o u two kids come w ith m e.”H e took them to Itfo. Purvis, the. store owner. "IV s . a ^ e a n . case,;- boss.** ftawKeye opcncu ir.c age. "H a, shirts. Just what 1 thought. She steals them for him .”M r. Purvis said tiredly, "They're not new. They’re freshly laun­ dered.”Jim m y's face was crimson, but Jean said proudly, "W e're engaged, M r. Purvis, and Jim m y has to have 50 m any clean shirts, ft's so dusty In the basement, so launder them for him .” W ell, It was a clean case at that, and w hat was more Jlm m yreceived his promotion right then and there, and M r. Purvis gave them three days off, so they had a Christmas weddbig after all. JUncle Sam Says Nnrili CnrollnH D«vi« CiMinty I l<i Tne Superior Court C. S. D u n n et al vs The unknow n heirs o f John D unn, deceased, W osh D u n n , deceased, Mitchell D unn, deceased, and Se- n i D u nn W illiam s, deceased. Notic«>, Serving Sum­ mons by Publication The defendants, the said u n­ know n heirs of John D u n n , de­ ceased; W osh U unn, deceased; M itchell D unn, deceased, and Se­ nt D u n n W illiam s, deceased, will take notice thac an action entitled as above has been comm enced in the Superior court o f Davie C oun­ ty, N orth Carolina, to sell seven­teen acres o f land, being the land o f M ollie D u n n Sm ith, deceased, Farmington Tow nship, for the purpose o f sale and petition a- m ong die heirs; and the said de­ fendants will further take notice that they arc required to appear at the office o f the Clerk o f the Superior Court o f said coutity in the courc house in Mocksviile. N orth Carolina, w ithin ten days after the 4th dav o f lanuary, 1952, and answer or dem ur to the com­ plaint in said action, or the plain- riff will apply to *he court for the relief demanded in said com plaint. This 19th day o f November, 1951. S. H . C H A F F IN , C S. C. Davie County, N . C. B. C . Brock, Attorney. W«*r« ffuUhis iut« Ihi- Iru^l. when the blrdu mlemte. the turry iini*■ m ats hibernate and a ll nature is pr«- I p arlnR for n 'w ln t ry .idcge * W h lch -re * miQdti am w hy sh o u ld n 't we. (oi».-pre- l»are fw the future?.'!: Tbi- lo n^ -ra nfe future, the w intry, y e a r* of <iur llvei. H ow better to dn this than b y In ve sU u g part o{ oui.'tuirnlnsft in V . 8. D efense B o n d s t E ve ryo n e nhould b uy - bonds, either uiider .he P a y ro ll S a v in g s P te s w here he w erhs. o r the llond«A.M onth. PIan, wh«*rr be . Coal & Sand Co. W e C an Supply Vour Needs IN G O O D C O A L . S A N D and B RICK i C all o t P horicU s A t A nyT im e ; P H O N E 194... Porm etlv Davie Brick & C ^al Co THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. ‘J'arying Track Gauge Plagues Railroading The tedious business of trans* shipping over railroad lines of varying track gauge is virtually unknown in Am erica north of the R io G rnnde. It novcrtholoss con. tinucs to com plicate rail trans* porlation at m any placcs on six contincnis. Pointing up this fact, is an old idea being tried anew on the Py> rences-wallcd frontier be tw e e n France and Spain. There, a new*typc railroad^car axle adjustable to variations in track vWdtIt has recenlJy come Into use. Successful In its first tests, this French invention m akes pos> sible the transfer of cars from French tracks of standard gauge (4 feet, inches) to the broad> gauge Spanish tracks (5 feet, 6 inches), and vice versa. Expensive and time-consuming unloading and reloading ore elim inated. Standard gauge has earned the right to be so called, since it Is now all but universal In the U nited States and Canada, G reat B ritain, Franco, Germ any, and Italy. It is found on every continent except ralM ess Antarctica. It prevails in Soviet^satellite countries of eas- tero Europe, where freight mbv* ing tow ard Moscow m ust be trans* shipped on Russian rails of llve> foot gauge. The odd w idth of the standard gauge cam e about, records show, because European rail wagons of . the 17th century iiad wheels set ‘ five feet apart and rolled on flanged tracks. Transfer of the flange from rail to wheel produced the track gauge of 4 feet, 8% inches. Railroads of today employ a score of difTcrent gauges ranging from less than two feet up to 5 ^ feet as in Spain. Gauges of 3 to 3% feet prevail in m any moun­tainous regions w here lighter tra in s for steeper-than-avcrage grades arc- desirable. Beware Coughs Fram Common Colds That HANe OH Creomulsion relieves promptly became it socs right to the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel £crm ladea phlegm aod aid nature to soothe and bcal raw, tender, innamcd bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded- Creomulsion bas stood the test of milltons of users. C E S E O M yrS iO Nn llm t couchi, Chott CoMi, AcuN Brenchltli JQjOF tie test Costs only 2^ a week for the average family! vsn\ I wv r , ^ ^ ^ I L ■■ ■■ ■■ . g a i N E W easy way to ICILB. R m s Simply put Blaek Leaf® Warfarin Ral Killer Uait in protected pluccs where rats and mice can consume it regularly. They like it and literally vat llicmselves 10 denlli. Bccnuse other rodents arc . not u*amed, entire colonies arc easily destroyed. Ulaek Leaf Warfarin Rai ICIIier Bait is the nmazlne new rodcn- - dcide- W AitFARIN -maeUinc-mixed with apccbl bait material that nevci beeomes rancid. It's ready to use. Get it today and (sct rid of rats and mice the easy way. DIreetlotu on packasc. RUB QH XOHIID'S CHEST COLD cm ches^ throat. Quick AcHaq Rub M ake Steam ed P udding for H olidays N ow{$99 K9Sip9t B9IQW) OoUdfty Favorites ST EA M ED P tID D IN G S and fruit cakes are age-old m enu traditions that belong to C hristm as and New y e a r feasts. As a ll of the m ore ex- oerienced home-makers know, these are both things w hic h may be done, in fact, should be done before the holl- “■ Like m ost culi­ nary heirlooms from other centu­ ries, old-fashioned puddings and cakes would not please modern tastes. M any of them would be con­ sidered too heavy, lum py and sog­ gy-M odem cakes and puddings are neither too heavy nor over-rich, and they combine all of the best and none of the bad features of the tra­ ditional concoctions.M ake them now, before you get too involved in shopping, m aking gifts and other decorations^ Give them an opportunity to mellow.« • • H E R E ’S A P U D D IN G th a t's plum p w ith goodness of fruits and nuts, fragrant w ith flavors and yet light enough to serve after ham , roast beef or turkey, whatever the choice for the holidays. Steamed Datc-Niit Pudding (Serves 8) cup butter or substitute 1!4 cups dates, chopped fine % cups chopped nuts 3*4 clips soft bread crumbs 3 teaspoons baking powder Vi teaspoon salt Vi cup mUk 3 eggs % cup sugar % cup apple juice Cream butter; add dates and nuts and m ix well. Com bine bread crum bs, baking powder and salt and stir in m ilk. Add to date-nut m ixture. Beat eggs, add sugar and beat until light. Add to batter. F inally, stir in % cup of the apple juice. Turn into one-quart pudding m old which has been w ell greased or oiled. Pour rem aining apple juice over the pudding. Cover and steam for 2 to 3 hours.• * * H E R E ’S AN U N USUA L fruit cake which is rich and delicious. It w ill keep w ell for several m onths, pro­ vided you have enough left to keep after the festivities. R ich F ruit Cake (M akes 1 Cake)1 pound dales % cup candled cherries 1 sliee candled green pineapple 1 slice red candled pineapple 2 slices white candied pineapple 14 cup candied orange peel M cup candied lem on peel Vi cup candled citron 1 cup choppcd pecans 1 can m oist coconut '1 can sweetened condensed m ilk Cut dates and cherries into thirds. Out rem aining fruits about the same size. M ix a ll in­ gredients togeth­er t h o r o u g h > ly and press into a sm all, greased loaf pan lined w ith g r e a s e d brown paper or an 6 • inch tube p an greased and lined w ith greased brown paper. LY N N C H A M B E R’S M EN U Onion Soup Spaghetti with M eat Sauce Cheese Tossed Green Salad Olives Crusty Rolls or Bread B aked C aram el Custard Cookies Beverage Bake in a Slow (300T.) oven for 2 hours. Turn out on cake cooler. Decorate w ith lidanched almonds, candied cherries and leaves from green candied pineapple, it de­ sired. Cover w ith waxed paper and store in refrigerator. • « • M iniature F ru it Cakea (Serves W Z cups brown sugar 2 cups hot w ater ^ cup shortening1 cup raisins 2 cups sifted flour1 teaspoon baking soda Vi teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon % teaspoon cloves H teaspoon nutm eg 1 cup choppcd candlcd cherries 1 cup chopped dates 44 cup chopped nutm cats 1 cup oats, uncooked (quick or old-fashioned) Combine brown sugar, hot water, shortening and raisins in saucepan and bring to a boil; cook 5 minutes. Cool. Sift together flour, soda, salt and spices Into a bowl. Add chopped fruit, nutm eats and rolled oats. Add brown sugar m ix tu re , m ixing thoroughly. F ill greased custard cups, % full. Bake in a slow (325’F .) oven about 1 hour. Cool for 10 m in­ utes before rem oving from custard cups. Serve w arm or cold w ith hard sauce.• • « IF XQV DON ’T like to m ake your cake sev­ eral weeks ahead of tim e , here’s one that can - be m ade during the last week before festivities. T h e cake has a rich, luscious texture a n d a flavorful com bination o f citrus and nuts. Santa’s Prize Cake (M akes 1 Cake) 1 cup butter 1 eup sugar 2 tablespoons ' grated orange peel 2 teaspoons grated lemon peel 2 eggs, slightly beaten 2H cups sifted 4lour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baiting soda teaspoon salt 1 cup sour m ilk 1 cup chopped w alnuts Cream together butter and sugar, beating until light and fluffy. Add orange and lem on peel, then blend slightly b e ate n c«gs; beat thoroughly. Sift together dry in­ gredients a n d m i x into slightly cream ed m ixture alternately w ith m ilk. (To sour m ilk, add I table* spoon lem on jiuce to 1 cup sweet m ilk and allow to stand.) Fold in w alnuts. P our into greased ring m old pan and bake in a moderate (350*F.) oven for 50 to 60 minutes, or tm tll cake springs back when lightly pressed. L Y N N SAYSt Try These Short-Cuts O n Your Busy Days W ant some colored sugart -Add some food coloring to granulated sugar, and rub w ith fingertips to spread color. Sprinkle this on plain cookies before baking.Need to speed m easuring tech­ nique? Keep a set of graduated m easuring cups or spoons, which­ ever are tised m ost often, in the' canisters or cans containing your dry ingredients. SCRIPTURE: Joihua l-ll. DEVOTIONAL READING: Dcutcron. omy aa:t>-13. Living in Victory Lesson for Decem ber 16, J951 Dr. Foreman . I" Like some soup for. supper? Use a bouillon cube plus juices from catmed vegetables and heat. Add leftover tom ato juice and leftover vegetables, If desired w hile heating for variety.Need som e m elted chocolate? W rap the squares of chocolate in a square of altm iim m i foil, and fit over the top of your open teakettle so it doesn't sUp. H eat &e w ater in the‘ kettle and chocolate w ill m elt, th m pour off chocolate and tiirow aw ay the foil. There's nothing to r lE story of the conquest Canaan is of course a story of historical events. B y itself, 'how­ ever, it Is'not so "edifying" as it once was. Joshua 1repeatedly com m it­ ted, or attem pted to com m it, w h a t is now know n as “ genocide," or t h e to ta l deliberate slaughter of an en* tire nation.So it is better, a ll. around, to take the story of the con-_ quest of Canoan hot in its bare historical form but to follow the example of earlier gen­ erations of Christians and take it as a kind of parable, a parable of the victorious life.« • • Victory Has M any Wounds B Y the victorious life is m eant the " life that rises above its tempta­ tions, living for God against all op­position, the strong life, not over­ thrown by selfishness and sin but overcoming evil w ith good. First of all, as. a fam ous w ar correspondent said, "Victory has m any wounds.^’ Joshua and his arm ies won; but they had casualties. No victory Is ever w on willtout a fight; or to put it another w ay, no victory with­out a fight Is w orth m uch. 'Yet wo forget this In our personal struggles against sin. We are tomptcd to think, I could be a better person if I did not have so m any temptations. I cotdd be a better person In more sympatltetic surroundings. I could be a better Christian If I had had better upbringing." If . . . If . . . M dybc you are right, more likely you are wrong. Is an oak a better tree if it is raised in a hot-house? Is a racc'horsc faster if he never has a hard race? W e pray for strength and God sends us difficul­ ties. That is God's w ay of answer­ing our prayer.• » « Life-Long Cam paign another way Josliua’s wars are type of the w ar of our best against our worst. H e never did quite conquer Palestine. In Judges I the repeated plirase strikes the eye,—“ did not drive out . . . " In the very center of Palestine, for example, w hat we now know as the city of Jerusalem rem ained a hostile slrong-polnt for centuries a fte r Joshua. The whole story of the Israel­ ites after Joshua shows how Im ­ perfect the conquest was' at first, and archaeology Has un­ derscored the record of the Bible. Y et it is true to say that there was a real conquest of , Canaan. Tlie country was won, though there was a vast deal of mopping>up to be done. This is again a parable. The vlctorlotis lifo 'is not tlic sam e as the sin­ less life.The m ajority of Christians believe there was one sinless life, but only one. We hove a right to call a m an good (as the Bible does) without m eaning that he is perfect. Some people are needlessly discouraged at this p oint If we expect the victori­ous life to be so completely, victori­ ous that not a single ,thige of evil rem ains in it anywhere, we shall not only be expecting ourselves to be better than the saints, but we shall be living in disillusionment.• • • D-Day and V-Day ■THERE is another, brighter side to ^ this. It is true, no present con­ quest of evil is com plete;.but final and complete victory is assured. For the “ Captain of our salvation'.' is Christ, and we Christians believe he has. actually conquered evil, once* and for all. As D r. Cullm an puts It, D-Day and V«Day are not the sam e. The battle of the beach- heads cam e long before tlie sur­ render. Christ has put the pow­ ers of darkness to flight. The Cross and the Resurrection aro the Christian's D-Day. There w ill be m uch Hghtlng, ' m any casualties, perhaps m any back­sets, before V ^ a y , but it w ill come. * ..The only assurance Joshua haa th at his cause would finally w in was his confidence in God. So the real guarantee,- and the only guarantee, w hich a Christian has of u ltim a te . and total victory is that he fights in the nam e and in the strength of Jesus. As M artin Luther's hym n has . ■ V ••‘Did tP9 i» our own streagibeottfid9,Ow striving would b$ hshtg*‘ “ Christus V ictor," Christ t h e Conqueror, is an ancient nam e for our Lord. B ut his victories are not Old finished stories; they still; go oa—In us. / . SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Versatile, Smart for Juniors Balloon's Lift Comes v From Volume of Gas The lifting power of a balloon, depends on tho volume of gas con-| tained In the balloon. The forces; that raise it arc the sam e as those' that keep a ship floating in w ate r.' That Is, tho lift is equal to the difference in w eight between th e . gas that is. in the bag ond the air which the bag displaces. ■ ! A thousand cubic feet of a ir at seb-level pressure w eighs 61 pounds, w hile the sam e volum e of hydrogen a t s im ila r pressure weighs only 6 pounds.. Thus, 1000 ' cu. ft. of this gas w ill lift a totol of * 81 mm us 6, or 75 poutids, in which,, 'of course, the balloon Itself m ust , be included. Since 1000. cu. ft. of helium weighs 11 pounds, this would lift only 70 pounds. The balloon stops rising when it reaches a level, where the atmos­ phere is so thin that the displaced oir weighs the sam e as the en­ closed gas. Th e m ost versatile frock you own—tho well tailored shirt­waist that takes handsomely to a variety of fabrics and looks so right for alm ost every occasion.' Choice of sleeves and a wide size range. The FoU and Winter FASHION Is illled witlt Idoos for smort winter sew­ing: sUt patterns orlntcd Insldo the booh. EnclosB 30c in coin <or each pat. tern. Add 5c lot 1st Class MaU If desired.Pattern No........................... Size........ Namei iPleose Prlntl street Address or P. O. Bex No. State ~ciiy ? A R O U N D ilT H E H O U SE Sandwlcb FiU inc A hearty sandwich fllling can be m ade from a com bination lofchopped cooked m eat, green pep- pers, sweet picklcs, horseradish, and prepared m ustard. Vltamln-CCook fresh peppers quickly in ,as little water as possible so that thpy w ill not lose their vitamin-C con­ tent. Brighten Ebony To brighten ebony, apply oliyc oil witli a piece of flannel and polish with charnois. Olivo o n Olive oil has m any uses in t|ie hom e in addition to its age-old rQle of adding flavor to cooked, broiled w d fried foods—and, of course, to salads. Here are a few: Brdss w ill keep bright longer and nebd polishing less often if it is rubbed w ith olive oil after polishiiig, SpriniUe the oil lightly on a piece of w arm flannel and rub w ell iHto the brass.« • * H olding Screws D o you have trouble w ith screws which have come loose in wood knobs such as arc on chests? Use tw ine soaked in shellac and w rap it around the screws w hile w e t After setting screws in place in the knobs, allow to dry for a full day. Then tlie knobs w ill hold fast. HEAD STUFFY DUE TO COLDS. T A K E ^ forfasi .syinptomatic RELIEF666 saytbousands about good tastlne scon's EMULSION ir odds hans on, or 3. - catch Uicmorun.ro«ybe. WUrnt^ Bood* 'tastiDK ScoU's Emulsion 1 See how c^mpUy ft helps f>reak up • eotd sntf lielps build you Up. so jron fe^ your own self eimin 1 Scott's Is i HIG H ENBnOY POOg' TONtC-rlch In watumi A&O , VltAmtns And cnergy-bulldinc ' natural oil. Bconomlctii..Ouy . today Rt your dnis store. MORE than just o tontc- ff’^powerft;/ n^'shm enfl vnm FAST s-orop achom op PEHETRD NOSE DROPS H E A D C O U » CTUFFINESS DON’T CRY dW S K !,'," onfoCausa Slclclsh CondlUons—Find Tho Reason— If Your Liver Is Loxjr.N « t TIBS* Like TfaeiD.'Tt*.. tKKfRIHrtAHDOaimmm\x riiMiuHt civir cir ininrBiHTS roi ttst IF Peter Ruin chai^ your voonsstbr Wmi CIlriDR^COtDS t h e B a v ie r e c o r d .’ MdCKsvit.LE. n ;‘c; 6et Well Q y iC B lE R 0(1* to .«■//)& :tb9 Scmafhna^A-C Pacior.in /be New bT af' AMAZIMGLY QUiatlR'ACTtNO lUCREDIBLV MOtll EFFECTIVe SAYS “GOODBYE^^ TO CONSTIPATiON “I have hod sircot eiibccM «1tii AU^DiUN. After years of conatlpa* tlon, 1 am now regular. Thnnks to my ouoM of ali^*BKAN every d a y l" 'Victor Sanda. 163 D u n d e e A venue,Paterson, N. J. One of'many unsolicited l^teri from users.I f tro u b le d w ith conslipaUoo due to lack of dietary bulk, do this:.cat an ounce (obout H cup) of tasty Kellogg’s aix*dran (or breakfast ’ ” ’ ' ‘ * - ..woterl i _____________lOtfaya, .return empty carton to Kellogg’s, Battle Creek, M ich. oouotB youb UONBT BACKi EAT ANYTHING WITlI ' FALSE TEETHI,U reu b m croabJe whh fiUu*.. ihil slip. rodt.eauM lore MBS— ims Plisil-Uner. Oac appllcMloit v............................... Joe sppll ncmir lo your niste. Uelinei and M fltsjom ptaics in a vw no powder or pstte csU iW. Even oo old rubber pl«ie* ro« « « Kooi re»ul^« « six nonihi (o ■ yearor lonser. YOU CAH AHVTHiNai Sinply lay sjft «<***•*'?• Unei on itonblrtoine upper or lowe#. Di(« end ii molds perfectly. C«ir M mr. usteless. odoileti, bamiless to you and your plates» Removable ss^dtwied^ UeySiowrDowii Restless Niglv^^S When Mdney timettoa dotn d o ^/m 4 i^'t Une you down—due to suek cemrnoa caUM* Wm inaay Umw Ooatfa_^* , Doah's P iiU - Be^Known For d istm s of C h e s s C o l d i Brings relief 2 w ays a t oncel. M odern m others know you can't beat Vicks VapoRub for miseries of colds. The m om ent you rub It on throat, chest and back VapoRub starts right to w ork 2 ways at once. . , And it keeps up this special penetrtttinff ~ stimulutins ac** tlon for hours. I t eases muscu?: lar soreness and tightness and brings w arm ing, com forting’'' relief even while you sleep. IFTHERE'S MUCH COUCHING OR STUITINESS... . . . get deep-action boiling water as dl- if in seconds W ith rected in package.Every single breath relieves upper bron­chial congestion and, coughing spasms! relief in seconds W ith V apoRub In s te a m ^ 2 heaping spoonfuls o f Vicks VapoRub In vaporizer or bowl of ■ Say VMary C brisciW *: 'inr* The choice tobacco is.'‘ by^ giving Prince A lbm 'to dally treated to'itisure. a ^ your pipe-sffiok^ friends sad toague bite! those who like to.roU tlwir ow n The big ooe«pound tin is. col* . cigarette W ith Prince A lb e ^ orfullygift«pacM ,teadytogii^’v^ . ^*lTie blte*s out and the pleasure's with a built-ii) gUt card on iop!; T H E N A T IO N A L JOY SM O K E PAGE FOUR tHE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. W. C.. DECEMtlER 12. 19B1 THE DAVIE RECORD, Cases Tried C . F R A N K S T R O U D . E D IT O R . TELEPHONE Bnter«d attbePostofRce In Mocks* tllle. N. C.. aa Second*nlMP Hall mitter. March 8 .190S. SU B SC RIPT IO N RA T ES: OMK YEAR. IN N. OAROLINA I I.BflMONTHS IN N. CAROLINA .75c. ONF. YEAff. OUTSinfSSTATl’ . »2.00SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE • $1.00 *•§ MY KOPie WHICH ARE CALLED BY MY NAME, SHAU HUMBLE THEMSaVES. AND riAY, AND SEEK MY FAa AND TURN AWAY fMM THEIR WICKD WAYS; THBI Wia I HEAR FROM HEAVEN, AND WIU FORGIVE THEIR SINS, AND WILL HEAL THEIR IAND.**~. 2 OnON. 7i14. W h a t this country needs is not a good 6vc cent cigar but more ■tatesmen and fewer politicians. Lot» o f (dies cuss The. Rccord, but m ost o f them who are too tinht to subscribe for tiiis "rag of .. fr<edom /lgo out.and borrow.ihelr neiRhbor’s copy. Senator LoJfic says that if Gen* cral Eisenhower Is nom inated for president he will carry every State in the U n io n . W e wonder if that includes South Carolina? If vou haven’t done vour CiirUt- mas shopping, better get busy. There arc only 11 days left. Read the ads in The Record and trade w ith the hom e cown merchants. W e are w ondering what has be­ come of W es M cKnight and Ed Sanford and that run o f locust beer they were to make. Better get busy, boys, Christmas is just around the corner. T he follow ing cases were dis* posed o f at the December term of 11 Davie Superior court last week. Judge A llair G w vn, o f Reidsville, presided. Divorces were granted to the follow ing couples: Rucell Carson vs Louie Carson; Leona Nichola vs H ow ard Nichols; O ra B. Boger V8 W alter Boger; Earl H am m er vs Louise A dam s H am m er. The father to have custody o f three m in p r children. C . C . Lingerfelt vs W iley Sm ith and wife. M oney dem and. Plain* tiff awarded $414.62. E. C Morris, trading as. Davie Real Estate &. Insurance Co., vs L. M . Scott, defendant. M oney dem and. Plaintiff entitled to $250. lo h n G . Benson vs Frank Bar* bee, R . D . Lowder, trading as Lowder Construction Co., Non- suit. Dismissed at the cost of plaintiff. Davie M otors v s Raym ond H utchens and Roby Hutchens. plaintiff awarded '$255. .... C . G . Clodfetler vsAddieHend- rix. M oney dem and. Plaintiff a* warded $385. Joe Ferebee vs M cLean Truck­ ing Co., m onev dem and. Jury withdrawn. M istrial ordered. Linda G . H olton, et al vs J. R alph H olton and wife Grace H olton. Rem anded ro Clerk of Superior Court, and he is directed to m ake such orders, and decrees to w hich the parties maybe law­ fully entitled. O L. Lippard and Ernest L. Carson trading as M odem Electric | Co.. vs Davie C ounty Board of' N orth Carolina Republicans arc m aking arrangements to stage $100 a plate dinner in February. The editor of The Record is m uch o f a Republican o f which there Is no mucher, bur he won^t be there. Rem inds us too m uch o f Harry T rum an and M r. Lamarr Caudle, o f w hom you have read. W e have a nun* ber of subscrib­ ers w ho have let their subscrip­ tions expire. If you are among this num ber we would appreciate tt very m uch if vou would mail or bring in your renewal b.^fore Christmas. W e havf tnisted vou for quite a whi^e, and did It with a smile, now plea«e return the com plim ent and trust us for a while. Thanks in advance. PMA Election L. R . Towell. chairman o f the Davie C ounty P M A Committcei today issued a final call to all far­ mers of the county w ho are eli* gible to vile in the PM A farmer* comm ittee elections to go to their voting places on Ihursdav, Dec. 13th, between the hours o f 8:30 a. m . and 6:00 p. m., and vote for the m en o f their choice. Eligible voters are any owners, operators, tenants or share'rop- pers on a farm that is participate ing this vear in any program ad ministered bv the county and com* m u n ity P M A committee. Education. Com prom ise. Defend- ants to pay costs. The court adjourned ac noon Thursday. Swift hooper Swift Hooper, 47. son o f the late M r. and Mrs. Swift Hooper, w ho were residents o f this city for a num ber o f years, and later mov* ed lo Winston-Salem, died at W estern Carolina Hospital. Black M ountain, on M onday o f last week, whe.e he had been a patL ent since May. Funeral and burial services took place in W inston Sa em W ednes­ day. Surviving are three brothers Charlie Hooper, Winston-Salem; Robert Hooper, Salisbury, and G lenn Hooper, o f D urham . M r. Hooper had m any friends and a num ber o f relatives in Davie C ounty w ho were saddened by news of his death. H e was son o f Swift Hooper, w ho was a Southern Railway engineer, and pulled the famous N o. 97, the U . S. _fastjMt_m a j . l . jrain.._betw cch Spencer and M onroe, Va. His m other was the late Mrs. Swift Hooper, w ho was Miss Blanche Coley, o f Davie, before marriage. Fifteen-year-old Nancy Mason of Route 5, Statesville, N . C., is one o f two J95I winners o f .the new 4-H Better Groom ing Aw'ard, it was announced at the 4-H C luh Congress now taking place In C hi­ cago. Sponsored for the first time this year by the Toni Home Permanent Com pany, the awa d consists o f a $300 scholarship and an educational trip to cheChicago meeting. Telephone 300 Southern Bank Bldg. Mocksville, N .C . D R . R A M E Y F. K EM P. C H IR O P R A C T O R X -RA Y L A B O R A T O R Y Hours; 9:30-12:30 2:30-5:30 Closed Saturday 2:J0 M onday. W ednesday and Friday Evenings—6:30 to 8:30 Christmas U%hts T he four water oaks, one in each o f the sm all paiks on the square, have been adorned with* multi-colored, lights, and present a very attractive appearance. The lights were turned on Vionday evening o f last week and w ill do m uch to brighten the Christmas spirit. I f you haven’t been in tow n since the lights were turned on, bring the fam ily some even. Ing after supper and take a look. JohnF, Garwood John F. Garw ood, 81, retired ^rm er, died at the hom e o f his son, John Frank Garw ood, on Route 3. at 2 o'clock W ednesday m orning, death resulting from a heart attack. Surviving are one son, loe Gar* wood, Mocksville, Route 4; one bro.her, James Garw ood, Willces-. boro; three great*grandchildren : and four grandchildren. 11 Funeral services were held at Bethel M ethodist C hurcl^ T hursJ' » day afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, with i Rev. W illiam A nderson, .Rev. E. W . T uroeraod R e v .C .G . Jenkins j officiating, and the body laid to rest in the church cemetery. M r. Garw ood was b o m in D avie, County and spent his entire life here. He h a d m any fie nd s throughout this com m unity w ho were saddened by neW’s o f his death. M A K E THE GIFT SHOP Your Gift Headquarters W e Have G ifu Foi- AU ■ Occasions A t P r i c e s E v e r y o n e C a n A f f o r d G I F T W R A P P I N G S F R E E J The Gift Shop ' Mrs. Christine W . Daoid Vo^ler Promoted W ith 7th Inft. Dlv. in Korea— i W illiam F. Vogler, Jr., son o f M r. an d Mrs. Frank Vogler, o f A d vance, N . C., was recently prom o­ ted to corporal w hile serving with | the 7th Infantry Division in rug­ ged m ountain terrain north o f the < 38th parallel. | Recognized as ihe most traveled division in the Far East, the 7th fought its wav from Pusan <o the M anchurian Border earlier In the war. Corporal Vogler, an am m unit­ io n bearer, entered the Arm y in January, 1951. and departed the U nite d States in May, 1951. He wears the Korean Service Ribbon 'w ith cue campaign star, and the C om bat Infantry Badge. C orporal Vogler attended A d ­ vance H ig h School. Solicitor J. A llie Haves, o f N , W ilkesboro, was a Mocksville vis­ itor one dav last week. S EE US FO R Christmas Suggestions I We Feature Hollingsworth And Whitman Candies Old Spice Sets F o r L a d i e s A n d M e n I Shaeffer Pen and Pencil Sets Max Factor And Evening In Paris Toilet Sets Dresser Sets Eastman Cameras y R o n s o n C i g a r e t t e & C i g a r L i g h t e r s Personalized Stationery Hall Drug Co. Phone l4l ■ Mocksville, N. G. ,5 This CHRISTMAS Be Practi^F® Give Something For The H O M E S o m e t h i n g T h a ' t I s N e e d e d A n d W i l l B e A p p r e c i a t e A n d ' E n j o y e d T h e Y e a r A r o u n d The Davie Furniture Company Has A Complete Line O f Home l^umishings Suitable For Christmas Giving Come In Make Your Selection. W E’RE OPEN EACH EVEMNG UNTIL 9:00 W H O H A S T H E B EST D ECO R A TED HOM E IN D A V IE CO U N TY ? VOTE FOR THE HOME OF YOUR CHOICE T H E D A V IE FU R N ITU R E CO. - . W ill Give $25 In Trade To The Honie r Receiving The Most Votes By 6 P. M. SA TU R D A Y, D ECEM BER 22. Everyone is eligible—'just drop a letter or postel card in the mdil to the Davie Furniture C om pa .y, Mocksville, giving the nam e and address o f the hotne you wish . to nom inate as being the best decorated for Christmas. Also sign your name and address. A n indivii:ual is permitted to vote only one. time. The hom e receiving the. m ost votes by 6 p. m .i December 22, w ill be declared the w inner and posted in the . . J w indow o f the store. $25 will help m ake someone's Christmas merrier - S end; Y our : Vote In Today! The Davie Furniture Co. Phone 72 ••ON THE SQUARE" Mocktville, N; G. TBB OAVlii ^CORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. DSCGUBER 12. 1961 PAGE FIVE Lan^ford-Daniel ' .OMeit Paper In The Cpiinljr I Invllationa have been received ■No Liquor. Wine, Beer *>• "_______________________ follow s:. M r. and M n . A im and T. Daniel. NEWS AROUND TOWt;. George! Row land spent Wed- neaday in Greensboro on business. ■ Miss Laura S h u t, o f Advance, ' spent Thursdav in tow n shopping. Mrs. Fred Si Stvecs, o f Yadkin Valley, was in tow n Saturday on business. ,'j Philip Stroudi well-known mil- . *: ler o f C ounty'Line, was in tow n '.Thursday o n business. litele M iss G ail Poplin spent the week-end w ith her grandmoth- er, M rs J. B. Livingstone, near ■■ S m ith Grove. 2 W alter Felker, o f Concord, was « iln tow n one dav last week on his Wiyay hom e fto m his farm in Cala- • ' hain tow nship. M r. and. M rs. Robert Sm ith and : ^ " M ts. J . L. K im ble spent Sunday X," in Greensboro, guests o f M r. and ..: M rs. A lto n Sm ith. M rs. Sam Garter is very ill at her hom e o n Route 3, following ' » stroke o f paralysis which she .. suffered Ias.t W ednesday. ■ ' ' G . K.' Jones, o f Route 1, carried ':;„2J0,pourid8.of;.tobacco- to W&s- . ton-Saiem a few days ago w hich _ brought h im $70 per 100 pounds. : M r. and M r s .N .B . McBride, o f ' South H ill, Va., spent the week­ end in tow ni guests o f Mrs. Mc- ^ Bride’s m other, M rs. T .N .C haiH n. M rs. Chas. F. D o m m , w ho has been ill for the past m onth, is i , m uch better and is able to be ou' again, her friends w ill be glad to leam . r«|uest the honour o f your presence at the marriage o f their daughter A n n Marie to The Reverened Thomas Anderson Langford Thursday evening, the twenty- seventh o f December ; nineteen hundred and fifty one at eiglit o’clock D ilw orth M ethodist Church Charlotte, N orth Carolina. Talbert'Howard Charles Talbert, son of the late M r. and M rs;G annon Talbert, o f Advance, and Miss Helen Os­ borne H ow ard, daughter, o f M r. and M rs. L. K . Howard, also of A d x ^ce , were united in marriage at the hom e o f the bride's par* ents at eight o'clock Saturday eve­ ning, Dec. 1st. Rev. W . E. Fitz­ gerald officiated at the double ring ceremony. M r. and M n . Talbert will make their hom e at Advance. The Record joins their friends in wishing for them a long and happy m arried life. Elam-Carter Invitations have been received by friends in this city reading as follows! M r. and Mrs, Hasten W . Carter request the honor o f your presence at the marriage o f their daughter Elva Grace i to j M r. Clarence Benjam in Etam, Jr.,' on Sunday the twentv*third o f December nineteen hundred and fif^ one at four o’clock in the afternoon First Baptist Church Mocksville, N orth Carolina : _'i; t The M ochsville postoffice w ill 1 be open all day Saturday, Dec. IS. i f and Saturdav, Dec. 22. D o your . ^\' Christmas m ailing early and thus avoid the rush. M r. and M rs. Paul W . Stroud : and. daughter, and P. W . Stroud, ■ o f 'Lexington, , spent Wednesday w ith M r. and M rs. P. J. Roberts, neat C ounty Line. D r. and M rs. R . R . Cardenas . and tw o children, o f Sto A ntonio, ( Texas,'arrived, here last week to spend the holidays w ith Mrs.Car- denas’ patents, M r. and M rs.. S. . ; M iC all. I- Miss Kopelia H u n t returned to i her hom e in N ew . Y ork City lasi week after spending a week in -• tow n the gutst o f her sister. Mrs. ' • C N . Christian and her brother, ; fi. E . H u n t. Bob Sofley, son o f M r. and Mrs. Harley Sofley, of this oty, w ho is . stationed at M ill Valley, Calif., " has recently ' beOT promoted to t h e r ^ ' o f Sergeant. Congratu- -- lations,B ob.* - Staff Sergeant and M rs. Edward Chaffin and little daughter, who have been In Germ any for three • y e w , arrived here Saturdav to ■ ■ % spend tfie holidays w ith his m oth -er, M rs,T . N . Chaffin. M rs: H enry Taylors, w ho has i beeii'Cashier, at A lliso n jo h n w n ; ; C o.,;fqf the past dtree years, has accroted a position w ith the Cen- tral T e l^h o n e C o., and entered upoii^CT n w duties last week. ^ ^ M S ^ and M rs. B ill N all, w ho U have been spending some ttme in : to w n w ith relatives, left W ednes ' ^ f & ^ M a d is o n , W is.. where Sgt. >i| w ill be . stationed. N all iqi^4'h^m e in N ovember from ie;yeaw service overseas. • Mtos' M a ry B liab e th Sm ith, of Route.4i w ho recently completed a beaiitir cefurse at the Salisbury School o f . Beauty Culture; spent M onday in Raleigh where shetookhisr.exam inadon at the State BoaT4'‘<^ Cosm edc ArT Examiners. , Re^;;A lvis e Cheshire, pastor bring the message at * e Christ­ mas Love-Feast and Candle ser­ vice at the M acedonia M oravian C h u « * . Sunday p ^ b e r 16 at W . A . Sain and Bobbie Burton, both o f Route 3, are patie.its *at Row an Memorial Hospital, where they are taking treatment. There were quite a num ber o f C h r is ta s shoppers In tow n Sat' urday and trade was brisk during the afternoon in most stores. WANT ADS PAY. H^. H. Graves W illiam Henry Graves,. 92, re­ tired contractor and carpenter, died at 3:30 p. m . Wednesday at the hom e o f a son Harley Graves, on Salisbury street. M r. Graves had been in declin­ ing health for several years and seriously ill for two weeks. H e was b o m in Davie County Jan. 3. 1859, son of George and A m anda Feezor Graves. H e has resided here for more than half *a century. Surviving are one son, Harley Graves, o f Mocksville; one grand­ son, and one brother Geo.Oraves o f Mocksville. Rouce 4> Funeral services were held at 330 p . m . Thursdav at Siler Funer­ al H om e, w ith Rev, J. P. Davis of-> fidating.and the b ^ y laid to rest in Rose cemetery. Pallbearers were Roy Feezor, G . O ., Ray, R alph, H ugh and Kerr Graves.* M r. Graves spent a long and useful life in Davie C ounty and his death has brought sadnera to a host o f friends.________ }^rs, Paul Bowles Mrs. Paul Bowles, 33. died Fri- day at her hom e o n Route 3, fol­ lowing a long illness.' Surviving are the husband, two sons, three daughters, her mother, one brother, one sister, two half- sisters' and three half'brodiers. Funeral services were held at Bethwi M ethodist C hurch Sunday afternoon w ith Rev. W illiam A n­ derson officiating, and the body laid to rest In the church cemetery. Isaac Shores LOST- Pair o f brown-rimmed lasses. Finder please return to B EA L S M IT H , JR . W A N T E D — Housekeeper to look after two small children. See R A N S O M Y O R K , )r. A t Western A uto Store F O R SALE—O n e organ, two bureaus, one bed and springs and som eother articles, all to r o cheap. See, H E N R Y D A V IS , Fork, N . C . F O R RE N T —S-room-house on Avon Street, $25.00 per m onth. Call or write R . M . H A R D E E , Gastonia, N . C. F O R LEASE—The City Cafe on Depot street. W rite or Call C IT Y CAFE, Mocksville, N .C . LO ST — Bottom part o f blond Maple Dresser. Reward. Return to JA K E B A K ER’S STORE, O ak Grove Moclcsville, R . 2, F O R REN T — Store house and garage at Davie Academy. W rite or call on J. A . JO N E S. Pdone 1020-R, N orth W ilkesboro. W A N T E D —To buy com , any kind, in ear, shucked or shelled. ^ o S ^ ^ L L E F L O U R M IL L S F O R SALE — One4-room and one 3-room house, located on Bingham street. A bargain to ouick buyer. Call o n or phone.J .E . H O L L O W A Y , 1225 Bingham St. Mocksville, N . C. W A N T E D — Position as sales­ m an. Have had experience in ha^W are, sporring goods, cloth ing, etc. A m employed now but w ould like to make change, about Jan. 1st. For full inform ation call or write T H E D A V IE R E C O R D Mocksville, N . C. _____S h o rn . 91, died at noon Friday at the hom e o f his son, Richard Shores^ of M ocksville, R. 3, following an extended illness. Surviving are his wife, three sons, Richard Shores, Charlie and R . W . Shores, and one daughter* Mrs. Charles Salris, one half-bro- ther and a num ber o f grand'child- ren and great-grandchildrra. Funeral services were held at 11 a. m .. M onday at Deep Creek Baptist C hurch w ith the pastor. Rev. M r. Jessup officiating, and the body laid to rest ii^ the church cemetery. Pino G ran g e rs A dem onstration o f screen plan­ ting (planting to. hide ugly spots or bnildings), w ill be held at the hom e o f E. B. Mackelove, near the P ino Grange H all, o n the af­ ternoon o f Thursday, Dec. 13, at 2 o ’dock. The public is invited to attend. This meeting is spon­ sored primarily by P ino Grange, btit the Pino-Fatrnihgton and Ca. na H om e Dem onstration Clubs and the C ounty A u n t ’s offiM ate coopenring. Native cedars and other com m on shrubs are to be used. T he dem onsttatipn w ill be D R .C G .C U T R E L L Announces H is Office Is O pen For The Practice O f C hlro pod iat- F oo t S p e cialist 1)81 2 Notlh Hsin St. Wa.hl<»toa BniMlne Snllsbiiry, R O . Office H ours 9!00 to StOO Telephone 1615 W ednesday Afternoon- By A ppointm ent D O L L S 50c to $10.75 "B onnie Braids” $6.50 Christmas Lights S e t $1.25 to $6 G one with the W in d L A M PS $4-95 T R IC Y C L E S $6,65 to $20 32-Piece ' D IN N E R SET- •; $8.95 W A G O N S $5.75 to $10.50 G un &. Holster Sets $2.95 U p W heel Toys 35c U p Christmas Candies . . 20c lb - - - 25c lb Cocoanut tL Bon Bons . - ODC ID Christmas - I f Mixtures - £0C 10 Pure Cugar Stick Candy / J i J 11 2 P ound Boxes - OUC ID N u b ’ - 35c to 46c per. lb 1 9 P i e c e R o y a l R u b y Refreshment Set $1.95 Includes Six Juice Glasses, Six W ater Glasses Six Ice Tea Glasses • Percolator Sets;, . Percolator, Creamer, Sugar, tkC Tray and Cord For O nly - - E l e c t r i c P o p - U p T o a s t e r s M i x M a s t e r s E l e c t r i c S a n d w i c h G r i l l s . E l e c t r i c I r o n s M a k e Y o u r S e l e c t i o n s N o w U s e O u r L a y - A w a y P l a n ! MARTIN BROS Complete Shbpping Center U nder O n e Roof Locatcd ..t Depot Mocksville, N . C . .',,1 VISIT WALLACE 5 -1 0 - 2 5 Cent Stores I FO R T H E EN TIR E FA M ILY On At Old And New Stores^ Princess Theatre T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y M ontgom ery C lift &. Elizabeth Tavlor In ■ “ A P L A C E IN T H E S U N ’?, ' Shelly W inters^ , A d d e d ^ Ie w s ^ ^ ^ M ^ chatge o f M ^,Peebles and h i.. come,- . iS L I^ to r.. S A T U R D A Y Charles Starrett &. Sunny Vickers In “R ID IN ’ T H E O U T L A W T R A IL ” w ith Smiley Burnette, Pee W ee K ing A nd H is G olden W est Cowboys A dded Serial & Cartoons M O N D A Y &. T U E S D A Y James M ason In “ T H E D E SER T F O X ” w ith Jessica T andy.^ A dded News & Cartoon. W E D N E S D A Y Jeff C handler &. Evelyn Keys In “S M U G G L E R S IS L A N D ” A dded Com edv, Cartoon .& Football Thrills- ; , P r e t t y E H o h s F o r T h e L U i G i r l s F r o m S ^ c ’T o $ 5 . 0 0 D o ll Beds, Tea Sets A n d Piano A t The: Right Price F o r T h e B o y s T r i c y c l e s $ 6 9 8 - $ 8 . 9 8 .i Also Black Boards A nd Foot Balls A T T H E R IG H T P R IC E S p e c i a l Q u a l i t y D i x i e B e l l L i n e L a d i e s P a n t i e s S p e c i a l 5 9 c See O u r Ladies Lace Trim Slips., L a d i e s N y l o n H o s i e r y 51 Guage .Good Quality 9 7 c D A R K S E A M H O S E 54 Guage ^Ist Q ualitv $ 1 . 2 9 P e r P a i r C h r i s t m a s C a r d s ; i 5 For 5c 2 For 5c 5c Arid .iOc B E A U T IF U L B O X ; V ' C h r i s t m a s C a r d s 2 9 c a n d 5 9 c P e r B o x Beautiful Assortment T a b l e L a m p s Pric. From $2.13 To $6.05 C hina Novelries From 10c To 9Sc T o T h e P e o p l e O f M o c k s v i l l e A n d D a v i e C o u n t y W e H a v e A l w a y s A p p r e c i a t e d Y o u r B u s i n e s s A C a r o l i n a O r g a n i z a t i o ! n iiaississis^is&isiSBai^^ Wallace, Inc. 5-lQ-25c Stores Two Big Stores To Serve You THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C. SC AN N IN G THE WEEK'S NEW S of Main Street and the World U.S. Charges Commies 'Murdered' 5,500 American Prisoners ol W ar ATROCITIES— A w ave ot anger rolled across the United Stales w ith the grim announcement by Eighth A rm y officers th at the Reds have killed about 5,600 Am ericans and 2D0 other U .N , prisoners of w ar. Civil* -ian and senate reaction w as im m ediate and brought dem ands the Korean truce negotiations be broken off and use of atom ic weapons against the Communists. Representative Craw ford of M ichigan sum m ed up the average civil* ,ian's point of view by stating: “Let's get an answer from the Commu* jnists or let’s q uit negotiating and get tough and push the fight to a conclusion.” The atrocity report said the Chinese had killed 2,513 A m erican pris* oners, 10 BriUsh, 40 Turkish, 5 Belgian and 75 others of "unknow n .n ation ally ” . The rem ainder of the victim s were slain by N orth Koreans .before or after the Chinese entered the w ar. I t w as also estim ated th at the Chinese have Itilled a t least 2,790 non-Korean prisoners and the North Koreans about 3,000. The worse atrocity was blam ed on the Chinese who killed 1,250 Am ericans near the Y alu river boundary of M anchuria between Septem­ber 16 and 18, 1950. The Eighth Arm y spokesman who released the atrocity story gave no reason for m aking it public a t this particular tim e. One result, how­ ever, is expected to be the cementing of public opinion for a quick peace or an all-out fight using, U necessary, atom ic weapons. Im m ediately after the story was released there were reports of in­ vestigations Into whether or not the death figures were correct. Latest reports Indicated they m ight be revised upward. PEACE TALKS— There was, however, every indication that a cease: fire m ight be in prospect for the Korean battle front and possibly an armistice by Christm as. Allied and C om m unist negotiators were reported nearing agreem ent on the latest U.N . proposal.The Allied p lan consisted ot four points: <1) HosUUUes to continue im til an arm istice Is signed: (2) the present battle line to be a provisional cease-fire line; (3) this line to become final if a full arm istice is reached w ithin 30 days; and (4) if the arm istice Is not reached w ithin 30 days, negotiations w ill start over by drawing a new cease-fire line based on whatever the battle line m ay be a t that tim e.The idea behind the Allies plan to gain a cease-fire now, but at the same tim e keeping the pressure on the Reds so the final arm istice agreement could be negotiated. Distrust between the Allies and Com m unists rem ains thb biggest hurdle in any peace settiemcnt. POLITICS— As a general rule politicians have alw ays been reluc­ tant of putting down in black and white definite opinions on domestic and foreign policies, especially be­fore an im portant election. Sen. Robert A. Taft, a t the m om ent leading contender for the G O P nom ination for president, is a n ex­ ception to the rule. The senator recently wrote a book setting forth his views con­ cerning U. S. foreign policy which he entitled, **A Foreign Policy for Americans'\ Before next year's cam paign is over it could be that Senator T aft wUl w ish he had never had the inspiration or time for his literary effort.The senator, c h a r g in g that President T rum an put "a ll Icinds of political and policy considerations'* ahead of his interest in liberty and peace, has started a cyclone in political circles th at w ill grow as the election gets nearer. Toft also says in his book, " If the present trend continues. It seems to me obvious that the President w ill become a complete dictator in the entire field of foreign policy and thereby acquire power to force upon congress all kinds of domestic policies w hich m ust necessarily follow.” * In rebuttal, the Dem ocrats are charging that T aft is still an isola­tionist and the sam e m an who said in 1940: "W ar Is even worse than a G erm an victory." AGAIN 'N O— For tlie second tim e in as m any weeks President Tru­m a n had occasion to say "n o " to a proposal that he m eet w ith P rem ier Stalin, Prim e M inister Churchill and P rem ier Pleven for a big four con­ference. The suggestion was made by President Vincent Aurlol of France. The President contended the U nited Nations is the forum in which the leaders of the world should work for peace. H e added, however, he would be w illing to confer with Stalin If the Soviet leader cam e to W ash­ington. On several occasions the President has given the sam e answer to such a proposition, expressing the opinion that agreements w ith the Russians are not worth the paper on which they are w ritten. . MEAT SUPPLY— The sm all town housewife wilV' resum e h er role as the dictator of prices of steaks, chops and roasts in the neighborhood butcher shop In tiie next few months. That is the opinion of prom inent cattle producers and farm ers in the m idw est corn belt where cattle and swine are finished for m arket. . Stockmen base their reasoning on m ounting livestock production in the natiot^ w ith federally inspected beef plants turning out beef a t a higher rate than In any November In four years. Housewife resistance to high prices is credited w ith already rolling back pork prices from 1 to 12 cents a pound below ,ceiling levels. Gross farm income is reported higher this year than last because of the large num bers of anim als marketed a t higher prices, but net profits are reduced because of higher operating costs. Also of concern to cattle producers is rising im ports of foreign m eat, some of which has not yet been placed on the m arket. This country's im ports of poric and beef this year are breaking all form er records. Pork im ports are up 60 per cent over last year. AUTO TOLL— The N ational Safety Council, w hich has geared lla statistical service to a weekly basis, reported last week the death figure from automobile accidents has reached 995,600. The m illionth death w ill occur during the third week of December, the NSC predicts. •"This tragic event would m ake a mockery of a ll.th a t Christm as stands for," Ned H . Dearborn, council president said. "1 appeal to every­one to drive and w alk w ith extreme caution during the next few weeks. The m illionth traffic death cap be delayed if everyone does his p a r t’* N EW TAXES— W hile vacationing in Florida, President T rum an is reported to be w orking on another request to congress for increased taxes. The report slates he w ill definitely ask for m ore money when the law ­m akers come back to work in January. Only the am ount of the increase is yet to be determ ined. The report im m ediately drew the fire of Republicans and Dem ocrats alike. Several stated they w ill not vote for any m ore taxes. And Senator George of Georgia, chairm an of the powerful finance com m ittee which handles tax measures in the senate, has already stated he w ill not vote for an increase "sh ort of all-out w ar or a w ar crisis." The law m akers are w ell aw are of the fact that 1952 is an election year and that a tax Increase is alw ays an unpopular measure. UNITED NATIONS— T alk continued in the United N ations last week on disarm am ent w ith the W estern powers outlining details of their of one that has been rejected by the W est a num ber of times. N ot even the m ost optim istic m em ber of the U nited N ations believed th at anything other‘than talk would come from the proposed plans. The riv a l disarm am ent plans are attracting a great deal of space Jn news­ papers in all parts of the world, but the general public seems to view them as propaganda. IS STAUN ABOUT TO DIB? j Rumors Say Premier's Heart Weaf(ened Is P rem ier Stalin of Russia about to die? T hat question w as being asked by wcurld leaders around the globe last week as rum ors began circulating i n B erlin that Stalin's health has deteriorated greatly in tiie past xnontii or so.. T he Prem ier, who w ill be 72 next m onth, is believed m aking his usual v i^te r visit to a B lack Sea resort to escape Moscow's cold weather. H e w as absent from tiie tribunal atop Lenin’s tomb when the Soviet arm ed forces paraded through Red Square in Moscow November 7, the 34th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. The rum or persists that he w as not there because o f the heart condition, from w hich he bac suffered for years. SHOPPER'S CORKER By DOROTHY BARCLAY LiaUID SUNSHINE I P w inter comes, can colds and ^ flu and dreary, dark days bo far behind? Then comes the clam or for citrus fruits, nature’s own well- tim ed w ay of supplying the sun­ shine we m iss so m uch In the w in­ter months. From now,* throughout the w inter, it’s hello, Florida, Cali­fornia, Texas and Arizona, as the parade of c itru s fruits m arches into your favorite m ar­ket. The early a n d midseason orop of oranges and grape­fruit from Florida has been seeping in to your store since early fall, Flori­ da, of course, Is the chief grape­fru it producer, and in recent years has led California in the produc­tion of oranges, too. Texas norm al­ ly, is second only to Florida in grapefruit, but don’t look for too much- Texas fruit this year—that great state Is still feeling last w in­ ter’s big freeze. Arizona, like Tex­as, is not the great hope this year, anticipating lu st a m edium fa ir harvest. FRESH OR FROZEN So now’s the tim e, ladies, while ou're w aiting for the new southern larvest, to study the com parative you’re w aiting for the new southern harvest, to study the com parative prices of canned and frozen citrus juices with the fresh fruits, and decide w hich is your best buy. Here’s how they m easure up: A No. 2 can of orange juice provides S half-cup servings, w hile a No. 3 can affords 12 ounces. A pound of fresh oranges gives you just two or three half-cups of sections and juice. But when you come to the frozen concentratc—you know the one to which you add anywhere from 3 to 5 cans of water— the ounce capacity is exactiy equal to the halt-cup. Figure it out yourself, lady, and buy the am ount and the form for which you w ill have the m ost use. I f you decide that you get more for your money in the frozen or canned juice, here’s news for you —os a m atter of history, the con­sumption of these processed forms is hitting a 2-year record, a figure 30 per cent larger in one sample m onth than the sam e m onth a year ago. And when you consider that the prices are also a t the low­est level,in 2 years,.too, and that you save valuable tim e . from squeezing, you realize that you're pretty well-oflf to get 6 ounces, or six half-cups of juice from tiie frozen concentrate, for only a little over 21 cents. Grime in America By ESTES KEFAUVER (/n/fe</ i^fofej Senofor Thirteen of a Series Philadelpliia; Police Tactics In tlie City of Brotiieriy Love one of the nation’s largest, most efficiently rackets flourishes— operating through “a In P hiladelphia, organized num bers racjcets nourisnes-H^perating through "a litico-gam bler-police tie-up < th a t m akes it impossible for any in ­ truder to edge his w ay in from the outside.” . A paraly zing attitude of apathy seems to h an g lik e an ether m ist over the police departm ent. One ju d g e ' w ho agitated-rfinally w ith some success— for stiffer action against the num bers racket­ eers, to ld the Senate C rim e Com m ittee fran kly th at the -‘'big try** ju s t d id n ’t seem to ge t caught. Evidence indicated th at Philadel]num bers operators into various geograi Its ow n "num b e rs bank.’’ Public Safety D irector Sam uel H. Rosen­ berg told us he' understood that was the w ay the racketeers oper­ated. We questioned Rosenberg: Q : Are you aw are that It is com­m on knowledge, in connection with gam bling operation, that payments are m ade to police officers? Rosenberg: • I have never been able to prove that. W e have asked for proof, and have never been ableto obtain i t l ........................................ One of hts w orst hondlcaps In adm inistering tiie police depart­ ment, the safety director stated, was the Philadelphia system of civil service regulations, "originally in- icndcd to be on the m erit basis, but which have put us in an abso* lute strailjacket.’^ I \^s pleased, some months after HEALTH IN GURUS There’s a connection between the dem and of hunger and the supply to satisfy that hunger, especially in the citrus fruits. For oranges and grapefruit and lemons and limes, abound in V itam in C, ascorbic acid, so necessary especially in the win- tertim e. A large share of tiie rec­ om mended dally am ount of this essential vitam in, is supplied just when we need it most, to build up resistance, to the ills of winter. B ut rem em ber, ladies, that this im portant vitam in is destroyed by exposure to air. Once the can is opened, store it hi a covered con­ tainer in the refrigerator, just as you would store the frozen diluted or freshly squeezed juice. Machinery Threatens Existence of Old Dobbin P IB R R B , S. D.—F a rm mechani­ zation has threatened the existence of ^ d dobbin in South Dakota, a 1951 state assessment survey re­veals. The new survey figures show that state’s farn^ers have m ore tractors and combines than horses. There'" are about 98,600 In South Dakota now , a decrease of 21,000 In one year. >There axe 85,000 tractors, a n in­ crease of 3,000^ in one year, and 20,800 combines, an hicrease of 2,000. Kentucky Gets $1 Billion Worth of New Industries FB A N K FO B T , Ky. — Governor Law rence W etherby reported. re­ cently com m itm ents of capital in K e ntu cl^ industrial plants, m any of them located in the state’s sm all towns, now exceeds $1,000,000,000. The governor said, ‘*Thls new wealth equals nearly half the total assessed value of property in Ken­ tucky less than 15 years ago." Ken­tucky, business w as u p IS per cent the first half of 'lOSi; our Philadelphia hearings, to hear that a long-desired city charter re­ form had been voted - by the cit­ izens. Ti)e victory was achieved despite the opposition of Mayor Bernard Samuels' adm inistration, and, am ong other things, w ill set up machinery to take civil service out of politics. The principal racket character wo questioned was H arry Strom- berg, alias N ig Rosen, a stocky, swarthy, balding m an with intense­ ly dark eyes and an annoying habit of repeating alm ost every question before giving an answer. • ■ • At Die ag’e of nine, (he Russian- born Slrom berg was sent to a pro­tectory as a juvenile delinquent. He has been arrested numerous times since, served time for at­ tempted burglary, and adm itted to us he had been a bootlegger and, more recently, a numbers operator and book-maker. I t w as evident from his grudging testimony that he had been the rackets king-pin In the city of Brotherly Love. Now, Stronberg argued, he .was engaged in the dross m anufacturing busi­ ness in N ew Y ork city. He Insisted he had no connection with the rack­ets. The nemesis of Stromberg In Philadelphia was the assistant su­perintendent of police in charge of detectives, white-haired G eo rg e Richardson, who heaped viliflcation upon him . Richardson asserted that Strom* berg had run his p art of the Phila­ delphia num bers racket by remote control from N ew York, after leav­ ing Philadelphia around. 1914 and still had a hand In Philadelphia raciccts. E ig ht months earlier, Rich­ ardson had w ritten the director of the Greater M iam i C rim e Com m is­ sion: "R osen has connections with the underworld throughout the en­ tire nation. So fa r as the local mob is concerned, he is their undisputed leader w d is com m only know n as 'The M ahoff.’ Among his follow­ers bis word is law ." Since testifying before us, Chief Richardson has* been suspended from duty on a charge that he had forced the "confesston" of a m an who had been sent to the peniten­tiary for hom icide. After 12 years in prison, the victim was found to be innocent and released. is orgainized by the ical territories, each w ith Judge Joseph Sloane of the com­m on 0 e a s .c o u rt told us that m any of his colleagues on the bench were content m erely to Impose sm all lines and no ja il sentences on per­ sons pleading guilty of gam bling offenses. In five years prior to 1950, we learned, out of-thousands of gam bling arrests, only two defend­ ants actually had gone, to jail.However, as our report sum m ed up*. "There has been a change in atti­tude on the p art of judges since the com m ittee held its hearings in P hiladelphia. M ore and more ja il sentences are beginning to be imposed and it is a fact reported by m unicipal authorities, that the numbers gam e is no longer as easy to-carry on-in Philadelphia . . The com m ittee took note of a 16* cal "cause oelebre,’’ w hich we re­ garded as "indicative of the tie-up of gam blers, pollUclans and po­lice.’’ M ichael M cDonald, a P hila­ delphia policem an, had arrested a num bers w riter nam ed Jack Rog­ ers. W hile Rogers w as being' booked, M cDonald said,-, one M ika ' THE CHARMNG DECEIVER ' Detective Disguises T o Catch Crook Caserta, "w ho had been nam ed by Rogers as his backer," cam e into the station house. M cDonald ‘ said that Caserta of­fered him $200 If he only would m odify the charge against Rogers to disorderly conduct. "M cD onald testified: " I refused the offer. As he turned away he said: 'I wiU fram e you good.' W hen he said' I grabbed hold of h im and placed him under arrest." * * * A t that point, M cDonald con­ tinued, Police Captain Vincent El- well appeared and "w anted to know who locked up *Mike.’ He addressed him as ‘M ike.’ ’’ T hat night, M cDonald' said, he was called In to Captain Elw ell’s olTice and was ordered to alter his report on Caserta. M cDonald claim ed he refused and that Cah- taln Elw ell then told him , "Stick around, I w ant to talk to you." In about 10 minutes. Captain Elw ell w alked to the door and asked* "W ho Is hollering out there?" A sergeant jjro m ptly stepped in and dutifully announced: "A m an is com plaining about bemg short some money out here." Thereupon, ..on Captain Elw ell’s orders, the numbers writer, Rog­ ers, was brought in and complained he was short about $123. M cDonald was accused of turning in less money than he had taken from Rogers a t the station house when he brought him in, and Captain E l­ well im m ediately suspended him . "M cD onald gave a picture of the operations of the politlco-gambler- pollce trium virate,’’ the report con* linued. H e nam ed a policeman who. he said, was known as the "collector” • for Captain Elw ell— he would come into the station house with his pockets "bulging," M cDonald testifled— and a w ard boss who frequently conferred with C aptain Elw ell at the station house. M cDonald estimated that protec­ tion money paid to police .alone, exclusive of "paym ent to the high- er-ups," totaled at least $152,000 a month. The committee inquired, too, hito the underworld penetration of a Philadelphia steel fabricating con­ cern, which we concluded had been accomplished through "politlcal-in* fluence." A num bers racketeer nam ed Louis Crusco had bought his way into the Strunk Steel Co. by virtue, the committee inferred, "o f his close association with the son of Philadelphia's m ayor.’’. Crusco was an old friend and rielgiibor of Richard Russell Sam uel Sr., son of M ayor Sam uel. The numbers m an bought his interest in the com­ pany under extraordinary circum-. stances: he carried the purchase price, $34,000, in cash in a satchel to a stockholders’ m eeting. Richard ^ m u e l, Jr., 19-ycar-old grandson of the m ayor, accompanied Crusco and, according to the.testim ony of one stockholder who was selling out, '-‘apparently was th e ' mouth­piece for M r. Crusco." "U ntil Crusco com e along," our f®Port to the Senate sum m ed up, the com pany had never been able to get any business from the city of Philadelphia but, while Crusco was negotiating his stock purchase ’ in the com pany, it received a con­ t a c t from the PhUadelphia Transit Co., a local public utility, on which there were no competitive bids. The ■president of the com pany testified that this deal had been suggested to him by the m ayor’s grandson, who, Oolncldentally, was placed on toe C9m pany’s payroll as part of the Crusco stock deal." Next Week: N evada: A Case Against Legalized G am bling, s. Kitchen Handies Are Easy to Make fp H E S E am using cutting boards * and coasters are a necessity in. any kitchen. The tails m ake good handles when used for serv­ ing. Also note there is a hohs In each for hanging in some handy place. The coasters are big enough to double as hot dish m ats. Everything is complete on pattern 217, price' 25c. WORkBtlOP^PATTBUN SBftVICB • _________nedloftf lllHi^New Jforit C LA SSIFIED . D E P A R T M E N T BPSIWES8 & INVEST. OPPOR. DOWLINQ i — from th« book, "C rlm «-Io ’ America." by Bstes Kefauver. Cpr. iflsi. Onto A Steeple! And then there's the Herb Shrin.er story about-the m an who painted the church steeple from the bottom up. H e had to w ait for the.paint to dry before he could come down! Production U . S. bitum inous m ines produced 512 m illion tons of coal in 1950; C LE V E LA N D —Ah' ex-convict, at­ tem pting to extort $5,000 from the parents of a 10*year-'old girl- vfho has been m issing since August, jvas nabbed by. a detective who posed as a w om an to trap hhn. F rank D a v is ,-40, adm itted to .po­ lice th a t,h e phoned and wrote to M r. and M rs. Robert Potts, telling them -their m issing daughter, Bev­erly, would die unless they paid the money. ' * ■ • • Then Potts’ hiform&d police andD avis w as captured wheh Detective Bernard Conley, masquerading as M rs. Potts, handed h im ' a paper•sack, supposedly ---------- ...» $5,000.Davis, who has served tim e for automobUe theft, was turned bver to the F B I and Postal- authorities for prosecutlwi. CLOTHING, FURS, jSTO. " .. only $4.03. Send check or-money order to irvlnr W«rt»a Co., J*.0. B<r* * BICO. Mlawl 2t). Wofldn. ; . ______FARMS A BANCHEb POK SALE S3S nere Pnm). Now^modern 00 cow dairy barn, Milk Bnc on U.S. HlBhway 41. Land. Bam . Cow»,. equip- - .............-............. • • to .ae l. .Ycnr dele,any. Lee Ivey'iratlnB." inYld’'"Wntere.“'Nalloai..llroKcr, C«r* FOIt SALE non Aotes enUle nanch. Ad* dIUonol acreage available. Beautiful Ivey, nroker. CorJcle, Co.HELP WANTEU—MEN SALESATAN To KepreHcnt Uve^wlre Dc- AQENCV. 1200 Crawford. Ileustoii. Tc«. RADIO SERVICEMAN ‘S SHEPHERD RADIO-TV STARKE, Fla. MACIHNERY & SUPlf^LlE^ NO. 07. AND MATCHER. Endless belts. One'set: of Jones and OrthiT; and O heads. Been in use nnproxlmatoly 6 weeks. Will tnko loss than list. -Reasoa for selllns.havo bougbl laracr planer. Can be seen in openitlon at Matthews Lumber Co., 1 mile west, of Greensboro, lllXb roint nlrporl lllfh tv ^ 4Sf, 0 miles weal of OreonHboro. N. C. Telcpliono SMI, Guilford Collceci Mail Rt. 1. Guilford, MISCELLANEOUS Camphor Liniment is mighty “Saotbin” for aehos. strains, sprnlns. Snllstactlon guar. SI pp. Grover janicB. Murray -II. Ky. SENATOR Vest’s Immortal Eulogv a.. only 25c. SUo 4x0*v Makes viondoriul *''^«mark.iiMc Lnwlnatlon Works. Ashelipto, N.C. . profit, T a k ? '% choneSs’^.......s films. Send for F R E E mailer “-'“""“k ja T p .ira i.T o ''? ..} ! Sl-ECTACLES. Rending Classes by maQ BEAL ESTATE - llpPSES WANTED TO RENT OB LEASE » T f “n M r r . ‘r 'r ;? a i‘; 3 .T - - - Buy U;S; Defense Bonds! NoOtiierRiibMsFastKii)e H B sr li'sW io n d ertu lf^ ^ ii^ Cbewing-Oum toxoctra Actg But KflBtle >Wn-a.mimt. taiccio M re«- THE.DAVIE RECORD. MOCFCSVILLE. N. C. INFANT CARE GoyernmentV Baby Book Is Best Seller; 28,000,000 Distributed IVNU Washington Bureau M illions of people all over the w orld have paid approximately $5,600,000 for the government's baby hook and best seller, ‘In fa n t Care,'* w hich has now reached a distrlbu- .• I tion of 28,000,000 copies. V arying philosophies on the care of children from the tim e they are born Ull they celebrate their first b ir t h d ^ can be traced the liine ediUons of this booklet, the .& s t of w hich appeared, in 1014. ■‘y In that year, for instance, babies d i^ * t get a chance a t even a table- v o o n of strahied fruit juice until 'Ibey were 7 or 8 months old, but th e lOBl baby is usually getthig 2 ' B y IN E Z G E R H A R D > ‘ T\ON M A CLA U O H LIN who has the v V lead- in N BC's "Counterspy" siiid stars as “D r. J im B rant" in ;.«The Road of L ife ", is -probably I'the only m a n in show bustoess who - got his start in the role of a horse. 'H e had staked every thbig on m a ld sg a success of acting, he'd 'got a sm all p art on a network ’show—and It w as cut during le- •rhearsal. Don was assigned to help the sound effects m an, and wound ,^up by portraying a neighing horse. ; DO N M ACLAV GH LIN { a day by the tim e he Is twb s old. The 1014 baby could not ounces m o n th s__________________, have solid foods a t a ll during his first year, other than soft egg, crisp toast, or zwieback. The 1051 edi­tion of Infant Care, however, says: “Your doctor w ill decide when your baby needs solid foods in addi­tion to millc. Some start glvlpg these extra foods when a .b a b y is only a few weeks old, others w ait until babies are 3 or 4 m onths old." T hum b sucUng was sharply criti- cixed in e a r ^ editions of Infant Care. The first edition even recom­ mended ptenhig the sleeve of the baby*s jacket down over the fingers ot the offending hand for several days and nights to stop thumb suck- ,ing. This atUtude has been greatly m odified over the years, and .the accepted idea .now is that thum b sucking is one of the first pleas­ures that a baby gets. M any moth­ ers now say that It seems to result in a very satisfied child. Cod liver oil was added to the baby's diet ■ in the -1926 edlUon, and was identified as contabiing Vita- m b i D in the 1929. Frozen foods are approved in the present edition. . Infant Care is sometimes called the “m other’s bible'*. It has been translated a into 8 languages. The lovem m ent printing office sells the juU etin a t 20 cents per copy, and has become accustomed to * m any r^u e s ts for shnply “the book^‘ • • • IN FA N T C A R E has undergone m ajo r changes shice it w as first published. D uring its lifetim e, ad­vances in medicine, science, and in w hat we know about the em otion^ development of dilldren have alter­ ed m uch ot the philosophy w hldi the book carries. In complUng informaUon for the current edition, bureau specialists talked to doctors, nurses, social workers, p ^d iiatris ts , nutritionists, and parent educators on w hat the book should cover. They asked par- m m m P0221E 45.P00I . 9.P0St46.Make'lnto 12. Beneath'l.ChH^tmas song 6. Deeds10. A macaw11. Male red deer.12. Like a braggartIS. Scope . H.Printer'a measure . 15. Ever (poet) IT.WIldox;<Aaia>.t8.Measur«t.-(Cliln.)10. Pickle and ^ preserve,% aameat' 21.Beglnnlag 23. Place •2 i.D a m in « stream 26^ Post on _ shipboard for cables 28. Edge of ft 4. A flavoring 26. Violent •5. One windstorm ' thickness 27. Woody6. BxctamaUon perennials 7. A female 20. Father.figure column (Arch.) 8. Care for medically (slang)30.Lemon-Ilke fruit31. Last king of Troy N-83 32.'Roam33. Lift30. Any fruit drink 41. Man's name.42. Dry. a s ^ n e 80. Expressed juice of 81. Capital o f- Transvaal 34. Persona] pronoun 88. Flowed86. Caress llghUy 87. Presiding Elder (abbr.) 8ft. Peruvian 40. Showy flowers 43. Matured44. painful spots Wa 1 z r r 5 %r 7 8 r 10 II w e 14 6 11 la n io »« :_____ Z4 m zs Z6 ti 28 %JO i i 44 3S %u k ' il Is ^9 i fe"44 % 5T k 4^ F I R S T A I D to th e AILING HOUSE Storing Fiirnllure In Unfinished Attic QU ESTION : 1 am planning to store some furniture In an unfin­ ished attic, and I a m worried about the intense heat in the sum­ m er and the extreme cold in the w inter tim e. Is there any way 1 can protect tl)e finish from w arp­ ing or otherwise being damaned? AN SW ER: I believe you would ^ n d it a n excellent idea to place a thick blanket or batt-type in* sulatlon in your rouf between rafters. The vapor-barrler should face the attic space. This would keep the attic cooler in sum m er and w arm er In w inter. If the attic is kept In this w ay a t a more normal lem peraiure, and if the upholstery is well protected from moths, also if the space is dry— which is m ost important<—the furniture should be a ll right. Dry­ ness is m ost essential. Dust cov- _ e r^ ^ o u ld 1» placed_ over the pieces. I f ^ o u r attic can meet these conditions it should be .safe to use It for the storage. But if it is a t a ll dam p, you had better store it somewhere else, but not In your basement, which would be still worse. Daytime Junior Frock Is Cleverly Designed THE FICTION CORNER NARROW ESCAPE By Richard Hill Wilkinson H is first year’s work netted him just $22.50. However, once he made/| his dent in radio the impression becam e permanent. B om and edu­ cated in Ohio, he's daUed "The m an w ith the typical Am erican voice." "M r. and M rs. N orth", now . in their 8th year on CBS Radio,^ w ith Alice Frost and Joe Curtin starring, have a comedy mys- • tery sketch set for Dec. 11. • involving the m urder of a safc- craekcr, they call It “ Each : D aw n I D ia l"! /B e s s Myerson, form e r M iss • A m erica, has been doing fine on her own Uttle television show. Now Walt- F arm er, producer of “Strike It' R ic h " has plans. W ants to star her in ^''f^he B ig Payoff", a fashion quiz show, m w hich “the woman in a person's life "—mother, school­ teacher, wife, sweetheart, sister— can win- all sorts of clothes, the big payoC being a m ink coat. Rock Hudson, young Univeisal- Intem ational actor who has been singled out for the sam e type ot build-up' that sent Tony C^irtls soarhig to stardom, gets his big­ gest break opposite Yvonne De Carlo in “Scarlet Angel.” ents, living in bo& ti\e city and the Country, w hat th .... wanted the book to The first draft of the revised booklet was subm itted for review & about 70:persons outside the bureau, including 37 doctors, 0 psycholo­ gists, 7 nurses, 3 nutritionists, 1 anthropologist. 6 social workers, 8 parents, and 2 parent-education workers. F a n m ail throughout the years of Infant Care's publication has beeii tremendous. F rom places as distant as Nigeria have come requests fok* it, and copies have even turned up in sm all Chinese villages. The present edition ot Infant C^are, like thow before It, is an at-' tem pt to bring together the most w idely accepted m odem Ideas on the care of children. One unchang­ ing philosophy throughout all its editions has.been th at babies need a m axim um of tender, loving care to grow Into healthy, happy, chil­ dren. I Paper Suggests Montana Be United With Alaska LEW ISTOW N , Mont. — A sraaU town newspaper has come up with a solution for the problem ot state­ hood for Alaska. The Lewistown D aily News sug­ gests that M ontana and Alaska be combined into a new state of “ Mon- tanaska.^.' The paper said the com- bbiation wo\)ld offset Canada's posed union of Albetta and British' Colum bia into the Tiew province of British Calberta. L a u r a knew her first feeling ot fear when Ju d took the whip ^ o m its socket and flicked it across Ute backs ot the plodding 'horses. S h e h a d been w a tc h in g the clouds pile out ot the northwest with am azing speed for the past 15 m inutes. B ut this was A p ril, and there w as no w ind a t all. Also, the day w as m ild, almost sultry. It w as hard to im agine a blizzard even In Nebraska. Beauty and Prince broke into a lum bering trot. The rhythm of the crunching wheels of the heavy fa rm w agon Increased in tempo. Beneath them , a t the foot of the long slope, L aura could see the buildings ot their farm . The cloud bank cam e tow ard them w ith astonishing speed, hanging an Impenetrable gray curtain fro m sky to earth as it swept across the prairie. Ju d stood up and lashed out w ith the whip. Little Lnoy -liegan to cry, and a m om ent later Ju d , junior, Reined In w ith lusty bawls. Laura huddled, one under each a rm and said: “ Sh! Sh, now!** B u t wheii she lifted her anxious eyes, she felt, again the terror. The farm buUdings'were.not more than a quarter o f a m ile aw ay. Now they could hear the roar of the w ind. It drowned out the crunch of wheels; it plucked Ju d ’s cries from his lips and sent them , screamhig back over his shoulder. The blizzard struck them like , a blast from , the Arctic. • . Laura drew the heavy bear rugs about the children, and bound her own scarf about her face. She could GRASSROOTS Increase in Third-Class Mail Rate Is Desirable By Wright A. Patterson E v e r y t im e the maU carrier deUvers m aU a t m y door It consisU largely' ot third d a ss m att, circulars, soUoltations-of one kind and another. Things 1 did not ask ' lo r, do not w ant, and dp not read, though they are m ade to appear as letters through the use of clal one flap is f o ld ^ in 50 as to m ake it ap­ pear ^ a le d . An increase In third class m a ll obonld be considered, raising it to the price of sec­ ond class o r letter m all. This . cqi^d ;be done without imposing any added cost to the people, ether than those who use It tor sales or other soUcitaUons. A n y increase on letter m a il af­ fects all of the people and .con* sfitnfes an added government btti^ett for a ll to pay. Any In­crease on second class m ail, newspapers a n d periodicals, w ould .m ean an increase in, the snhscriptloa prices on the news­papers and periodicals, w hich . the pubCc, the sobscHters, would pay. An increase on third class m aQ would . aecomplish one of . two things, or possibly both. ;|t' w o ^d inA ease the postal itvenues by a ll o r more/ than the present anim al defi­ cit, if any, o r : it ,w ould re­duce the M no iu t of m all, and the cost of postal operations. . I t could do som e of both, a nd it w ould not cost , the iMople of the • nation generally a penny. . TOe only ones to be affected w ^ d be those ushig the postal facilities as a m eans of prom oting sales for their products or services, those, whose business is that of preparing direct m a il advertising copy, and the printers who produce the circu­ lars that are used In such adver­tising campaigns. A ll of . them to­ gether represent but a lim ited few. not enough to cause any fear of reprisals on the part of those who m ig ht vote for the elim ination of the third olas^, or for the repeal ot any increase in second class con­ gress m ay have madie in an effort to balance the postal ejqienditures and receipts.1/ . tb* postoQiet departmant bat an aeUuA annual defieii, a fact that bos not: bten- proven, the practical and stmlble way to fwttdy that ceaditiou it by an increase in third dots tttfdl. NempapM «nd pertodi> cats tbouid eoUtetiP^ urge thatm ethod. ^ Should you be one of the 83 m il­ lion. holders of life insurance pol­icies, o r one of the 60 mUlions who have savings accounts in the banks and buildhig and loap organiza­ tions, or one ot the .QO.mlUlon^owh; ers of government bonds, err one of the 100 m illloo social se cu rl^ card holders, ’or one 38 niil- lion workers, escpected to 'd ra w in ­dustrial insurance, orrone.with aiqr investm ent'firom w hich. it '‘is ex­ pected to derive i!evM ue to s ^ p o r t you during .decllninig yeiars, ,ybu have a very d e flate interest in inflation* T he d d la rs you would r e c e ^ today from an)r one ot these sources would pay for less than one h all the things you need than-w ould have one-half oit the dollars as late as even 10 ;o. T hat is inflation, andously effects each one of us. W hat , can .we, as individuals, do about It? W e can dem and action on the p art of our representative in congress and our tw o United State's senators and dem and action in such tenns that Qiey w ill not fa il to understand the full m eaning of that dem and. Tell them you w ant less new money iiSsiied', the govern­ m e n t debt reduced, a ll paym ents in any form to all m inority groups stopped, a ll government expendi­ tures, unless they can be shown as essential, reduced by a t least a m illion.A sufficient num ber of dem ands w ill get. such results, along w ith a decrease in taxes, and getting those results w ill, stop taiflation. T hat is your p art in the fight agataist the inflation monster. The Republican nom inee for the presidency m ay be le ft to w rite his ow n plattonjn, but w hat about, nom­ inees, for the house ot representa­tives and the senate. A re they to be entirely on their ow n in .campaigns? A t t o r ^ G eneral M cG rath has headed a crusade fo r honesty and integrity in sports and athletics. W lqr -not a*cnisade fat honesty and integrity In governm ent. I t is-need- le d there'miolre tiiiaii in sports.and lathleticf. Snow whipped hito their faces. The tem perature dropped below freezing. no longer hear the crying ot the youngsters, nor tlie dopphig of the horses' hoofs, nor Jud 's shouts. There was no point In looking up. She tried it once. I t w as like 1 ‘ _ suspended in a great vacuum w ith m oving, scream ing walls. E ven & e outlines o t the horses were blotted out.The progress ot the team slowed. Jud was no longer using the whip. H e sat hum ped forward, barely visible behind a veil of snow. A f t e r a w hile Laura had the feel­ ing th at the team was swinging in a great arc. A new terror seized her. The road was straight. There was not a curve for miles.£^e scream ed a t Ju d , tugged a t his sheepsldn c o a t H e bent down and she tried to m ake him under­ stand. H e shook b is . head and pointed down. She bent forward, could barety m ake out the right front w heel. It w as running even w ith . the whlppletrec, had not turned a t all. She settled down once m ore, hug- ghig the children dose. Cold crept in under the blankets. Snow p IlM up in her la p and on her shoulders* l^ e world had gone m ad.Agahx she had that feeling of swinging around. She fought it un­til the horror of it threatened her sanity. Then she poked her head from beneath the blankets. Ju d w as crouched forward, tense, pulling on the nigh rein. She beat against his shoulder.''W e've missed the house! l*m turning b a c k i" She could barely catch the words. A cold chill, a hideous fear congealed' the blood of her veins. M issed the house I It would be hours—possibly days be^ fore the storm ended. They had no provisions aboard the wagon. Ilie y would freeze.She clutched th e ohUdren against her. They never A o uld have started out. They w ouldn't have if if bad been a m onth ~ later.The storm attacked w ith a new an uncom batable vidence. It and screamed and laughed in . 3 trium ph a t their helpless- T im e once m ore stood s ^ . ' Laura w as roused by someone rubbhig snow against her cheeks. She sat up, trying to cry out, re- m em berhig. the children, **They*re aU righ t." Ju d said. '*1 ^ v e the horses their heads. They took us home. W ouldn't have m ade it oth­erw ise." . Stiff-legg/d. carrying a child hi either arm , she w ent , through the i^e d a nd into the kitchen. The heat beat agahist her face.' She set the children on the table and w ent to the stove. The kettie w as stiU steam ing. In another five m inutes they w ould have ca u g h t Afrectionate Name "Does your wife ever pay you any com plim ents?" asked t h e curious bachdor. "O nly in the w inter," was the nonchalant answer. “In the w inter? H ow do you m ean?" *‘W hen the fire gets low, she says, ‘Alexander, the grale’ l" W rong Place A widow visited a spiritualist m edium who soomhad her In con­ tact with her late husband. It was a tense mom ent."D ear John, are you happy there?”"Very happy," replied the de­ parted one. “H appier than you were here with m e ?""Y es, m uch happier now.'***John, dear, w hat's Heaven like?”" I'm not in Heaven, dear!'* ^ Shc'U Try A pessimist is a w oman driver Who's sure she can't park her car in a tight place. An optim ist is a m an who thinks she w on't try. They L e a m F ast Two litUe girls were playing. One pretended that she wanted to rent the other's playhouse.“H ave you any parents?" the playhouse owner asked. “ Yes, two,” was the reply. *'I'm sorry.*' the sm all landlady said, “ but I never rent to children w ith parents. They’re so noisy and destructive." Loony Labor A lunatic w as nailing shingles on a w all. H e was a very ener­getic and w orkm anlike m aniac, w earing overalls w ith two large pockets. As he extracted the nails from one pocket he looked at them , ham m ering some lb and throw ing the rest aw ay.“ Say, Wellington,*' said another inm ate who sauntered'by, “.why are you throw ing h alf the nails away?'*“Heads on the w rong end,'* the cu rt answer.“ Y ou dope,” said the other, “ w hat do you think the other pocket is for? Save those wrong ones for the oppoiMte wall.*' T dcvislon Truth T devislon actresses don*t m ind paying a lot for th d r lownsut gowns when they feel they have som ething to show for their money! 0*18 LVERE is a cleverly styled junior ^ frock that's perfect for day­ tim e or date-tlme. Slim bodice buttons to the edge of the scalloped hip yoke, skirt is full and young-looking. SEWINO C m C LB PA'TTERM D E IJt. M l W««t Adana St., Chle»c* «, Ul.Enclose 30c In coin lor each pat­tern. Add »c lor l» l CUaa M aU U dealred. -■ PaW em No, .................. S l «....... “pHSTTNam e %Pl«aa« Su e ei Addreaa «r P. O. Box MO. “ StaleCity Keep Posfed on Values By Reading the Ads ATYOUROROCart WHEH WAS GREAT CHICAGO flRE? Cheok yo u r 1992 St. Joseph Calendar and W caUier C h a rt. Facts E D E E salorol A t any drUR counter r l \ E E r A R E Y O U A H E A V Y > S M O K E R ? amgeMSANO-flt* asflatllvt dgantte vrilk L E S S T H A N |% NICOTINE . .'v;. PAGE EIGHT tHB BA VIE itfeCORn. MOCKSVIIXE N. C. DEGEIIBSR 12, l « l D m e n tin g th e G re a t N m l 9 5 2 " J P o a a ^ U e c w i t h 8 p e e t a c i i l a ] * N e w T H E P O W K H Y O U W A N T W U E N Y O U W A IV T iT W M tBU E Y O U WMiVT fT A TTEN TIO N FA R M ER S! P O U L T R Y L O A D I N G W e W ill Buy Y our Poultry Every Thursday M orning From 8 A. M.p To II A* M.-' In Front Of E. P. Potter* Colton Gin HIGHEST Ma r k et pr ic es paid W IL L P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H E N S S A U S B U R V P O U L T R Y C Q . SoliNbnrr. N. C . 0 K N O IK K ! ® NEW HVnn.t-MATICt KKW KCOX4IMV AXtJKt * * * / llcaQilfiil N>w.Silv«r Streak - *Cholr«> nf Hr ■ jix r 1)ph«ilM(«»r3r i«i ll»rnMMU*e whli n<Hl> 4’«»l<»r I r'Amitlnfo Xcw O lo r Rn*4*niblc«i, Ia»ld «a«d On Non*(jlar«> filiiNM All .1 f.'liol4*<v n t« or II l‘> liiMlor KnOln«»N < nr wIili ll>-dra-Ma«l<> Brlv«« Twin-lluvi. llulli.ln Vi^iiillaiintf.SyMiem I fJnmmHM'rf llcrord fiir TrAubtv-Vre*; U f« I * O n h i $ a l 4 > t e x t r t C o t l . j Here ia your Invitation to ceet drive ’ the automotive enKincerinft triumph of the year~the urent 1952 Pontiac with Dual-Rattfie performance! No description can filve you a com* plete understandlniiof the'spectacular performance built Into this new Pontine. Only your own hands at tlie wheel, your own foot on the accel­erator can tell this ^reat story—for there has never before been driving like thist Just set tlie new Dua/-Range Ifydm* Matic in the Traffic llanije and fee! Pontiac's hlfthocompression en](itie whlsliyou out in front with the most eajtcr 8ur(ic of poM'er you ever felt* Then flick Into Kcottomy Raii{(e mm-A relax—a ride so smooth, so effortless you almost forget you have an englrrv. Tliac kind of power and cconomy U built into Pontiac to stay} It's a ftreat story, n jjrc^r car, and » great value—como In and scel D o lln r fo r ]>olIar yaa c a n V b e M a P o m t t iia e I R V I N & C O R N A T Z E R P O N T I A C Wilkeaboro Street MoclivUle, N. C. flotice of Re-Sale Under and by virtue of an order of the Stipcrior Court of Davie CouDtT made lo th« Special Pro. ceeditjg cdtliled: Dent (E. D.) Ijames. Hxectitor ot J, S. Parker, deces"cd, vs Milton Parker, et a!., the andersiened Comniissiuner tvill on the 15th day of December, 1Q51, •I twelve o’clock, tn., at the coiui bouse door in Mockfiville, Davit- Conntf. North Carolina, oifer for re. •ate to the hiehest bidder Inr cash, rhat certain tract of land lylne and helnj In CaUbaln Township. Da vie Coutitv, N . Cm adjoinlnc the lands of S. H . Chaffin atid oihers and hoandcd br follows, to wii: Beglnnini; at an iron stake, run.« S. 85 de((S. H. to a stone; thence South »7 £ssi 6 00 chs tn an iron stake In road;tbence S 84 East 28 00 chs to an iron stake; ihence N. t6 Bast 6.52 cbs. to a sionc and flweetgniD; thence North 15J4 W . 16.63 cbs. to atj Iron stake; thence NATth 86 West 33.05 chs. to a ^toiie at root of srcamore tree; thence South 41 West 6.50 chs to an Iron stake; thence South 23 W. 3.00 chs. to a stone; thence South 20 BaKt 90 links to an iron -take: thence South' lo West 2 00 chs to au Iron stake; thence South 4.18 chfl..»oihe IvelnnJne, contalnloe* clcbty (80) acres, more or less. | The bidding will 4 an at ih<- priee o, $8,080 00. I Terms of Sale: $501* 00 oash and the bslanre on thlrtv days time, wltb bond and approved «ecu»ity. or all caiih at the option of the pur­ chaser, upon conGrmation of the sale. This 28th dav of Novem her. !9SI» A. T. G R A N T . Commissioner. F O R P U K E C R Y S T A L I C E C O A L F O R G RA T ES. ST O V ES. F U R N A C E A N D S T O K E R S It W ifi Pay Y ou To Call O r Phone Us. W e M ake Prom pt Delivery M o c k s v i l l e I c e & F u e l C o . Phone 116 Mocksville, N . C . Lespedeza Seed A Good Supply On Hand B U Y NOW We Clean AU Kinds Seed C a l l A n d S e e U s A t A n y T i m e McClamrock Seed Co. Phone 307 M ocksville, N .C R E A D T H E A D $ X Io a g W t h the Nev«n» THEY WOULD READ YOUR AD , TOO, IF IT APPEARED HERE^ SILER Funeral Home AND Flower Shop Phone 113 S. Main St MoclctviHe, N. C A m b u l a n c e S e r v ic e Walker Funrral Home A M B U L A N C E S E R V IC E D A Y O R N IG H T Pr.one 48 Mocksville, N C Boger & Howard P U R E S E R V IC E ' T ir s Batteries A nd Accessories ' Kurfees Ph u iu' Corner N . M ain & Gaither Sts PKqne 80 , The Davie Record Has Been Published Since 1899 52 Years Other, have come and gone-your county newspaper keeps going. Sometime* it hat seemed bard to make “buckle and tongue” meet but soon the sun shines and again we march on. Our faithful subtcribers, most of whom pay promptly, give us courage and abiding faith in our fellow man. If your neighbor it not taking The Record tell him to subscribe. The price is only $1.50 per year "in the State, and $2.00 in other states. W h e n Y o u C o m e T o T o w n M a k e O u r O f f i c e Y o u r H e a d q u a r t e r s . W e A r e A l w a y s G l a d T o S e e Y o u . D A V I E O O U N T T ’S O L iD X S S T N E W S P A P E R - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P I - E R E A D 9HAU THE PPVSS. THE PEOPLPS MGHTS MAINTAIN, UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AlW UNBRIBED BY GAtN." VOUJMN ill. NEWS OF LONG AGO. The Christ of Beth- f \ M Q C K S y il^L H ^N O R T H C A R Q M N A , W E D N B S D A Y , D E C E M B E R 19. tg^i. i L E T u s DO I YOUR iOB PRINTING We can save you' money on your E N V E L O P E S , L E T T E R H E A D S , I S T A T E M E N T S , P O S T E R S , B I L L H E A D S , P A C K E T H E A D S , E t c . P a t r o n i z e y o u r h o m e n e w s p a p e r a n d t h e r e b y h e l p b u i l d u p y o u r h o m e t o w n a n d c o u n t y . TH E D A V IE RECO RD . The Record has the largest white circulation ot any Davie paper. ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPAlCE IN THIS PAPER Will Arrange To Suit GOOD NEIGHBORS~P«ICES TO Hf, VOUR BUSINESS Whail W u Happming InDa- vie'i|ahm *Parkiii( Meier* A b h ^ a t ^ Skir^ ;; (bivle Record. Defc »a. 1926) G. G. Daolel end daUKtater Hiss Panllne, spent s day or; two wk in the TVto-Clly.Vlrclnls and Carolina __. spendips .tlie holidays with felatiTes' in Ptailadelpbla. Armoitd Daolet, '< stiidM t at the University o f ^ u t b Cafollna, Co ■ liiinbiii. Is; spending the boiidavs "here wfib lili pnreiStaT ~■ Miss Audrey Breneusr, who is'In i.'school at WashinKion Cjly arrived home Friday to spend the halldays .with her parents. ■ Mr. and'Mn. C. F. Cleinent and C P. ]r.,' Olenn Clement and Uiss A(nes Trost. ol Lancaster. Pa„ are ' Kuests of CoL and Mra. W. K . Clement. Mrs. L B. Feerar attended the aisrrlaEe of her brother |oe Ktng. at Asheville Wedoe^ay and spent several days In the Hountain City vlsttlnR relatives, retnrninic home Saturday.PanrK. Hoore and sister. Hiss Mary Ella who are students at A«- bury eollec., Wilmore,; Ky.. are spendlUK'the‘ holidays here with tiieir patents. ' The ancestral Foard home on the bsnta of the Sonth River In. Jeru- ...sttem townablp, was destroyed by .Sre about .noon Sunday ;The fire origlDated on the serond Boor. A •part of the honsehold goods were sav^. This old home was ahoni . one hundred years old and was oc- ■ ^ ':^pW by Misses Mary and Laura . Fmrd: -A famiiiar. old landmai k . ' l»ss been destroyed. ' <0«vle Record.'Dec. 17, '1930) ' Ur. and Un; Rowe Dayls spent ;• Thursdayvln Winston-Saiem shop. ping-;:W; H..Hobson, of Salisbury,waa ; a l^ n e ^ yisltor^ere one day la~t week.' •Mr. and Mrs.-R. P. Msrtln and llttlenn spent Thursday lit; Win. ' ’ atbu^alem.. VMiss Helen Sl\wnrt has ««*pted s posMon as teacher in the ^usdx . --hlEh school;\ - Mi4.»iiP. UGnind «nd Miss Osale Alliwu spent'^ Thiirsday in Winston-Salem shoppini;. i - - Mi G. AlilsonJaod Wj R Allen. ’■!, of Wliipiiigtonrspent the wee^ in' ioin'wlth.relatives and frfends. Uiss'Lbrena Wade, ihb -teaches . in’.the' Rockwell .whool,’ was’ the Wek.cnd' ji^est: of' Mim Annie ■ Rarl fatnin; of' Rbuti 4;' ; Mr. and 'Mrs. Msrvin Waters ■su'd dslnciit^W^^^ Stiiday'srtth'tfeW’daughter; Miss Bliiiab«tii,;it.Ghapel Hill. %w;’!Ci;>8orliikie and Joe Essie, ; wiio^ilire In the. classic shades of .. rdsrijtW^^^ lower Ysakiu. vis- ': toWn la^ week; ; ;(i;' MW aiid Mr^ Walter SWrtto sod I 'fsttliyiwve ' tnbytt from' Nortll .' :?MMkmme to^^^^ Dr. tayior house ^"'OT^otth Main street.; .A :' Mr, «d Mri p . . Tutterow', who bavW^m living. |n. Al^instbu ■ Salem for, seversl'; years,, Me preparing to. motfe to viile, ;.They wlil oicupy,the;rP.te». byterian mans« oo .South Main St: The Board of Dlreetors , of the ■ cint. p«ijrai>le Jiiil'H : 'The ; Directors iilso p a ^ ' a r^i^tionE a bonus eonal to bn'e mootb » each of the eip^yees of 'OIW!l*hh- including the janitor. lehem las’ E d n a : Clicks ' accom paoied tjer' frie id Miss-Noriiia, Furches e r e tn n id from ' A r i^ n a , w here they,.«^i>t »m 'e w m Vs^ ^ recM tiarrl'vti in tlie U olied States n ursing lo .tb e 'H s w a iia n 'Is la n d a .' R » . Waltw E.b«ilHMr. Tarlofivnle.N. C.I A t this wonderful season, of the! year our thoughts go back across- the long centuries lo the time o f our Lord's birth in- Bethlehem of Judea.. W e think of how He came to earth as a little babe', and of Ihe wonderful song of the angels out in Ihe Geld where the shepherds were keeping their flocks Per, h«ps^no.Mng.liss..eyer_b^^soswee_l_ io melody, so'uplifting; so Ib r lll: ins. and so full of meaning as thst. sons of praise and pronouncement of peace and good will 'towsril men. THese words. ••Glory to God In the highest, t.nd on earib peace, good will toward melii?' never seem stale, never lose their meaning, and nw- erseem out of date. Hallelujah! N o doubt multltndea of people cross the centuries htive bad the peace of 6 od in their' hearts and good will toward each other, and toward all people, hut when our Lord returns again and rules and reigns on earth, after putting Satan and all the demon forces of evil, sin and wickedness .down, then there will he nothing but peace and good will among all mankind. Today, our world Is loim uch con. fusion, much strife, haired and trouble. W «r prevails and blood shed is in great evidence. Homes are broken up, hearu ara aching, lives are w rM k ^ and souls are dy> log wttboart God. and the salvation of the wonderful Saviour. People are carousing and reveling in world. Ilness. sin and wickednen, ’eireo in sjrite of the .fact, that our I.ord gave H is life on Calvary to save all men. It will not always fe ao.; 0 « r bles sed Christ will, in 'd u e titne, be K ing of Kings and Lord o f tords over the entire earth and through the entire univerw. . How nunder ful to ioye H im , follow. H im end to be H is childreni Some glorious day we shall sm H im In all B is glory and dwell with H im forever and; ever Praise H is holy name. Iti-the precious, sacred, bolv'name bf.the Christ of Bethlehem of Jud.ea and of heaven we g r « t our lo y ^ ones, friends.'.brothers and : siMers In the Lord, and our ’readers again. We wish lor eacb and every one blessed and most wonderful Christ­ inas season. Let me take this op. portunity of thanking' all of for your kindness, love, prayers, good will and best wishes, and for everything-you have-done for me In a'nisterial wav. Aiso I wish to thank you for your good letters and oSeriogs. /^They have helped us write and' preach the: truth and thus reach '‘many tUbusaii^ of peo. ole. It IS indeed vM yencouragiiig to have", a good wort 'from our rea­ ders up and down the land, along with au.oSeriog to help meet bur expense. W e praise the Lord for ali of tbi . May the Christ of Beth Iehert,te very near-snd dear vbur.'iiBaifts-] and souls To love) honor, worship.-, and' adore H im right ; j)Ut,; ot‘ 'bur /hearts makes iChrtstnias teat >and sweet. As you yiesent gilts;to your, ..loved onesi f^ends'aiid'oiMghbow^^ the pm r 'and o ^ y ,’'.'above a il. things else; present ■ yourself fiilly , nnto the Loid and see'liow He will bileM you,';en^ch,ynur sbnl,; aiia brjng joyj peaM,.happiiiMS to ybiir llle. Merry, Merry ciirislmas and bappy New Y e fe to : yon< and to everybody, jsjl^^l|!% re wish 'aod humble 'praire'r^l^jl^h as passible N U M B E R SI Oar County Atid Social Sbcarity Bv W . k . W hite. Manager. Social Security is n o Pot ol G old, b u t the benc6ts paid under the law provide a basis for fiim re security when the worker retira. I f you continue to w ork for one and a half years or m ore afte January, 19S1, you w ill qualify for new benefit form ula. T hen you w ill receive at retirement a m uch higher benefit. I f you have an average m onthly wage or self-em­ ploym ent incom e of $200 from January. 1951, to age 65, your be­ nefit payment w ill be $65 a m onth upon retirement. Y o ur aged wife can qualify for half o f your bene­ fit payment or $32.50 at oge feS, in addition to your ow n ntonthiv annuity from social security. M any people used to grumble over the fact that they could only earn $14.99 a m onth in a coveted job and get their checks at the same time. Even this has been increas­ ed. N o w you are allowed to earn $50 a mond> in a job covered by the social security law. and re-’ ceive your check from social se­ curity at the same time. Over75, you can earn any am ount o n any job. This too is quite a change over the old rule. ‘W e’re never too old to learn ” is often spoken nowadays, also approp-iate are the words. “Nev­ er T oo O ld T o Earn,” w hen our health permits us to.help out in the D efensi effort. W ell, if you. are one o f thoseitersons w ho has reached age 75 years, even 75, and are sdll w orking,'you can receive your social security benefit check each m onth— continue w orking at your regular' job-rahd earn as m uch as you please. I nrould like to. repeat that, statement once m o ^ I f :you are 75 years o f age or older, and still working, you can. draw your social security ben­ efits each m onth and still work at your tegular jo b .; B ut remember, a daitii m ust be filed in order to receive the benefits. They are n o t automatic. Benefits don't static until a claim is filed. A representative o f this ofiSce w ill be in Mocksville again on bee. 26th, at' the court house, sccoiid floorV at -12:30 p. m.,: and o n the sanie' date ,iii C ooleem e^ at the old B in d I h ll, over Led ford’s Storb at I I a. tti. B i S t * . ? c « i r ’a t"lW s :;;^^ n o w i a n d | « r t > b ^ teri befoiw (jhe eikppljr is ei- b a ^ . 1 ^ c a H 'b o a i^ ; 'S O c / 'p e r d m e n . w anting something. He knew Christmas was only two weeks off, [but he just itched to buy a gondola i C9t (or his electric train. One day he ditched his little sister, CJjar* lene, and hurried down town. He spent his entire monthly allowance , ^ . , ^ _ ^ o n d oil his savings for a blue ron*. A dola ■ car: "Hn'rlay 'hoped bis mother ‘ MAN WAvouldn't be angry bccause he had Scne all afternoon. He hoped., ‘Contrary to his expectations, Mrs.. ' ivis was jovial, teasing him , and en, to his immense relief, keep* Ig Charlene away from his pack< . Charlene was five and a pest H arley, because he was nine grown up. Helping mother . . the dishes that night was al- ist fun. Harley thought, she was friendly and nice. Then it hap* led. “Harley,* his m other said ten­derly, ‘‘Don’t tell m e w hat you l^u g h t unless you w ant to, but w hat did you get for Charlene?*’ Harley was stunned. H e wi'-'hed she wouldn’t sm ile at him —couldn’t she see he was trying to think? “Nothing, mom,*' he stammered, “1 bought a gondola car.” “ Oh,” she wiped a plate s:owly, “I thought you hod been Christmas shdbping.’* THE FIRST 1 CHRISTMAS \ Luke 2:8-14 { 8. A nd there was in the | same country shepherds • abiding in the lield, keep* j ■ing watch over their flocks j ttight. I d io the .inucl o ( ] £ upon them j o! tlie Lord ! ^ ’em,~ and ; id. shall be to all people. 11. For unto you is born this dav in the city o f Da« vid a Saviour, w hich is Christ the Lord. 12. A n d this shall be a sign unto you. Y ou shall find the babe wrapped m swaddlins clothes lying in a manger. I 13. A n d suddenly there j; was w ith dieanfsela m ulti' | tude o f the heavenly host ■ I . praising G od and saying S 14. Glory to G od in § the highest and o n earth, peace and good w ill to­ ward m en. Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. / ^ e n y C S o s f t n ^ ttQrs ana jia ne y s'c ie c u - iv tium . H e opened the box and put the on the track. It looked Harley was stunned. SHe' wished ^ e wouldn’t sm ile at b lm . ' « I guess I spent all m y money? I guess I sort of forgot about Christ­m as presents,” Harley hung his head.“Yes, I guess you did,” she an­swered and th a t,was all she said about it, but h e 'fe lt terrible. Ho didn’t even tmwrap his new car. Gee, he’d-really-.pulled a dum b tridc this tim e, H arley thought m iserably. He’d always bought . t h ^ presents, but he’d completely forgotten it. Well, l\e’d have to earn some money; even his piggy bank w as empty. H e earned a quarter the next m orning shoveling snow, but he had to take care of Charlene m ost of the tim e. H B t r i e d to get a job the' next day, w ith no luck, andiw ben he found a dim e in the snow Charlene grabbed it, yelling “F in d e r keep* ers . . He was 'so furious, he felt like choking her. Instead he m ade her a big snow house on the sidewalk, right in everybody’s way. but people didn’t seem to m ind. Then the apartm ent lady w ith her little girls stopped to ad- im iie it. * *How old are you, H arley?’ * ^ e asked. \ .“Nine,” he said proudly. “I wonder,”; she sm iled, “I won^ der if you cdiild^take care ot m y litUe girls thljfa'ftefnoon? Harley started/to teH ,Je r gosh no, but she interrupted ^saying .sh^d*;pay him . 29c an hoifr;SHarloy w u i'^isurprised he leanedYagalnst the : ^ w house, knocking p art of it down. “Why sure. I ’d be glad to,” he said. ; . Harley worked hard that after­ noon, doing everything three little girls could think o f'a n d he could build. Once hi a w hile the lady would wave to him from the apart­ m ent wtadow, but he was usually too busy to look up. She paid him a whole dollar and asked if he would take care of the children again ^ e next day. Harley, tired as he waa, m anaged to say "Y e s." H is mother teased him about being , a; baby sitter, and w as he going • to , charge her for taking care ot ■ Charlene? Harley didn’t m ind; aft>( er a ll he had a cash capital of $1.26. ■ ..A lthough it rained the following day.'H arley, earned another dollar 'taking care of the little girls in the apartm ent That afternoon, w ith his m other's Then m other banded hhn another package. “I bought you a gon­ dola car a lon^f tim e ago,” she ex­plained, “B ut of course I had to return it. I think you’ve earned this, though.”Harley grinned wt his m other as he perfed the paper off. H e knew w hat she m eant. “A tank carl' he shouted. “ G«e, m om , Just what I need.” ' awmp AOtfu*We should exchange problems. Everyone imows how to solve tiie other fellow's. Captain-H< H abtt hew,._______ _____. _____, sergeant. what’s the Idea of putting all the big men in the front rank?Sergeant—I guess It’s just habit, sir: I used to n m a fruit stand. Sm art Shopper W oman to toy-department clerk: “ It must interest an elght>year-old boy and yet tte sbnple enough for his father to play w ith.” C a su a l^ St. Peter: “How did you get here?"New arrival: “ F lu.” U n c l e S a m S a y s lease doltor. The d.lU ts yra save li>- day are buildliw power for lii. nsUoa. N . oaesan cso»pe 0 .. I , . i Ita t delense U ever)rll.a)r's J .!, wtolher. 11 be In ■mlfwia. In a defense pU nI or. In pni- — defense d.llsra. Yon slMUId risn - - ■ » PUn4Ien0i blessing, he w ent ChrisUnas Shop- viains defense d.llsra. Ycnsli.ul< plug. He felt proud to pay .-for the up today lor the ray n U B ai^ss presents w ith money he had: s'j^'ere yon w o * or tto Bond^-J earned. He had Ihe packages titt- wrapped and put them mider t h e V V j i i S i r S L ^ tree w ithout ;U llin* his m other.*I™ '™ [4 I. C. Gollcttc getting Christmas — h a ii^ t^ Ladv tryinR to moke ap- m ,p o in m cn t'to r ^ir- d o ar beauty jjs h o p — Beal SmJWfcarrying empty , oil can up M ain street— SlioppcH holding family reunion in dime store— Frank Fowler carrying two brooms dow n M ain street— Guv Stroud resting between two park­ ing meters— W . F.^Robinson and Kim brough Sheek talking things over Gossip C lub holdins last meeting o f the year in front of grocery store * Clarence Elam and Jake Meroney • exchanging greet­ ings—Three Brownies shopping in ® ft shop - Lonnie Gaither and children out looking for old Santa Claus—Stranger trying to get the com bination on parking m etci— Rev and Mrs. A . J. Cox' and lit­ tle son doing some holiday shop­ ping Fassett Cozart .and daugh­ ter walking around the square— Brice Garrett ram bling around in auto store - Mrs. W . Ei^.K ennen putting cash in parking meter just before policeman arrives on scene ofaction—Mrs. Velm a Snow and Miss M innie Tharpe looking at necklaces in jewelry store w indow —Turner G rant discussing foot­ ball aiid the weather—Mrs. Ted Junker carrying bunch o f dollar bills out of bank— M « . J. H . Bid* son and Mrs. W . B. LeGrand do­ ing afternoon grocery shopping— M r. Mid Mrs. G . K . Husser and m other getting ready for Christ­ mas— M rs. E. M . Deadm on doing some holiday shopping in dim e i!. shop—M iss Bettie Lou M artin / parting w ith steel engravings o f : George W ashington— Big dog on wav across square carrying large' soup bone in . his m outh—Miss Blanche Lagle st^ocking up on 2- cent stamps— Mrsi^ Hilary A rnold and'M iss M abel Chafiin getting late start on their Christmas shop­ ping—M rs. A dam Leonard, of Advance, looking at toys in Fire stone store— Tames H enry Jones m odeling gloves in men's shop— Mrs. Oscar Keller and daughter getting ready for Santa Claus to make his annual visit— Rev. and Mrs. E. W . Turner greeting old friends on M ain street—B ill C ol­ lette trying to shake d o w n : park­ ing meter - Barbers taking life easy on Saturday afternoon - M iss Mar­ garet A n n Cartner and Mrs. Fiank Poindexter eating candy in dim e store Misses To Cooley and Lela M oore shopping around in dim e shop " Mrs. Harley Soiley and Mrs. Prentice Cam pbell having before Christmas chat in front of post- ofHce— ^Lovelorn youtK sitting in . drug store looking sad and lonely and softly hum m ing. *‘^ t us say goodbye like we said helloi in a friendly sort o f way”—The Street Ram bler wishes for all the fifty or more folks w ho r ^ d this colum n weekly, a y c ^ Merry C hnstm i^ ; and a joyous and- happy journey . through all o f the 366 days o f the . com ing year. M ay G od bless and^ keep you, .and m ay peace* saw " prevail throu^ o u t the w orld. .. I f your subscription" to The cord has. expired vve w ould aoprer* ; elate it Vw*ry m uch if \ou would^ call or send us your renewal dur.^ ing the holidays.. O u t office - ^U be open m ost o f the - tlm ^ ^ I I I - r ? l • .''"-I '»3 , I THE DAVIG RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C. — ..V- S ijg t t s # f O ltite liw a s loPAVC HDUV WR5AWS «yMflOUI€ tSOOp POPIMR v S w w l^W f& t AH9 A WMM WEICME. BUT lU BAMP^ Of MM«weL< lileM lO 6mL<M>lt?rftf ------- _. jl ^ctTLSRs ©RouftilT trte iwerto .. . . ;a HIKAlAdS'; m AURAaeS A»tO KlMOt)ES$, 'TOAMSSiCAi MOWFV«e,'nlEyPlCTUIieOeAHlAA$ TAW.-nilH, AHt> KlOlM A BE’AUIlfULVJHITe ......................Mottse. ~.<IFT*€WH(3 AT CtUn«TAtA« eeuM wum *me*n*RGE vnse mu -wsMRUffjeSII^ V/SKA LUTUre 6R0U6HT ntlE FH»T CH9ICrr«>A« *IRC6 IM900R9 eoMC AOO VEARS A60. /.d'FTtOAU-rHEW ORlP, lUTrtER !>tCOI?AlEP rtlS TBHE WnH 6LiTt6ftiHtS CAMOICS^- «VM0OtS C F -Trie ^TAR OP emil'PHeM ’»! vtWClEMT t&SEMP S * C fS ^ t RA>4« U) CCieettA-t(OM, AV inisr AGAlhl OH CHRtSIMAS MCWrt ICJw^slpa^ <ards fin i apfearedln Amerhihtl875.4..i}iliiMlltiq hetvfnm / Vi'elorlan ^tiqlbwd. 6hice-lhen-theiV sparkliiiQ destom .Am l dieerlul-' I verges, htvg bccqme -t^^e g g n of Chricttnftg tn homeg everyttiheye.> |l Entire Family Helps With Preparations For the Holiday W hy not m ake this a real Christ­ m as by having the onlirc fam ily help in preparing for the great holi­ day? Follow Ihe suggestions below and you m ay be am azed at the fam ­ ily solidarity shown around the Y uletlde'feast table.F irst of all, getting the tree. This is an assignment that Should fall to the younger m em bers of the fam ily. Going to the woods is the Am erican tradition, and there is a special thrill in bringing in a tree oif one’s choice. City dwellers, how­ever, have to buy their tree, so be sure to let the youngsters be able to say, “ We chose the tree.” Decorating the home is a project that w ill offer jobs and fun for all. Arrange a nativity scene, decorate the doorways and windows, and, 1£ there ore' any sick members of flhe fam ily, decorate a sm all tree for the bedside. But, work together. Then, have a party, complete w ith games, dancing, caroling, re­ freshm ents and the exchanging of presents. The exchange of gifts should bo well planned, so that no m em ber of the fam ily is slighted. D raw ing names from a hat is an old custom in m any larfee families. Strive also to add some extra enter* tainm ent. If a m em ber of the clan ,can sing well, or dance, a solo per* torm ance should be a highlight, f F inally, after the party is well under way, call everything to a halt and give each m em ber of the fam ily a pencil and piece of paper, asking them to w rite In 25 or less words, “W hat Christm as M eans to M e ," Y ou m ay be surprised at the answers turned in by some. Faith and sincerity m ay be found where you least expect it. O ld toys, adorned with a fresh coating of paint m ight m ake a w onderful gift^for the very young. Y ou con m ake on attractive apron gift th at would be appreciated by a young housekeeper from a feed or liour sack. Just how old Is Santa Claus? That is a question that parents are called upon to answer often and it is one that Is extremely hard to an* swer. Like cvorything else related to Christm as tradition, there ia a wide difference of opinion. The idea of Santa goes back to Europe, hundreds of years ago. Santa cam e to life from legends that followed the great St. Nicholas, Bishop of M yra. H e adopted dif­ ferent forms as suited to the dif­ ferent countries, but was mostly pictured as a thin, austere m an with a long white beard. The age of Santa, as Am erican children know him , can be alm ost definitely ascertained. The plum p, sm iling and jolly fellow Is 88 years old this Christmas.Thomas Nast, an Am erican car­ toonist, drew the now fam iliar form of Santa in 1863 to illustrate a book of Christm as poems by J , M . Greg­ ory. For the first tim e In his im- known life span, Santa appeared to have a full stomach under his red suit and a jolly sm ile on his face. It m ight well be said that his Am eri­can life began in that year. Early Puritans Frowned On Christmas Festivities- The early Puritans looked with disfavor upon the celebration of Christm as, preferring instead their own adopted celebration of Thanks­giving. It was thus that in the year 1659 the general court of Massachusetts made a decree that would have startling effect in A m erica today. It read: "Anybody who is found observing, by abstinence from labor, feasting or any other w ay such day as Christm as D ay for each and every offense shall be fined five shillings.'' A C H I L D IS B O R N Sing forth the honor of his name THE OLD AND THE NElf' Visitor Finds Two Worlds in Jerusalem P alestinian merchants still cre­ ate a scene rem iniscent of the three wise m en as they carry their w are^ along the desert sands bor­dering the blue M editerranean near ancient Tel Aviv. Their camels, ladea w ith wares, rem ind one of the gifts the M agi brought to the scene of the N ativity. Today, the visitor finds two Je ru 8 «l«n s. One is the m odem city w ith street cars, hotels and auto­m obiles; the other the old walled city w ith narrow streets passing through m any graceful archways and m ounting from one level to another by well • worn steps. Donkeys and camels are the only m eans of' transportation, and the section is little R a n g e d since the tim e Christ lived there. Life is m uch the sam e. ^ Kitchcn Gifts W H EN YOU S IM P L Y c the ordeal of shopping crowds anymore, w hy not' Christm as sliopping right own kitchen? T hou guts t o ' nt m ost anyone on your list can be m ade rig h t in the w arm a n d cozy k it c h e n . C h ild re n w ill adore confec­ tions that are tasty gind color­ful. Neighbors and relatives w ill love your jellies; and any bachelor w ill appreciate a box of cookies to nibble over his favorite book on a Icmg w inter evening. Containers for a ll these can be cheerful and full of Christmas s p irit Cover a cereal box of the cylindrical shape w ith gay w rap­ ping paper and line with foil or waxed paper. This is excellent for cookies if you don’t w ant to put them in tins. Jelly glasses can be tuckcd in sm all baskets, or even m u illn tins and the whole wrapped in colorful cellophane, then tied w ith gay rib­ bons. Confections can be wrapped Individually and then placed in clear iJastIc containers w hidi can be used for freezer or refrigerator use later.» • • Here are several jellies which can be m ade & om canned juices if your own canning shelves do not provide enough for gifts. Finic Apple Jelly (Makes 5 6-ounce glasses) 3V6 cups sugar 2 cups canoed apple Juice R ed coloring H botUe liquid fru it pectin Add sugar to juice in saucepan and m ix well. For a pink colo^, add a few drops of red coloring. Place over high heat and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. A t once stir in fru it pectin. Bring to a full, rolling boil and boil hard 1 m inute, stirring constantly. Rem ove from heat, skim and pour quickly into glasses. Cover jelly a t once w ith % inch hot paraf­ fin.• * * CSrape-Grapofroit Jelly (Makes 9 6-ounce glasses) m cups grapefruit juice 1)4 cups bottled grape juice 3 H cups sugar 1 box powdered fruit pectin Squeeze and strain juice from 2 medium-sized grapefruit. Measure Vk cups juice into a large sauce- ’ pan. Add grape juice a n d m ix well. H eat juice over high heat. A d d powdered fru it pectin and stir until m ix ­ture comes to a hard boil. Stir in „ a fuU, rolling boil h ard 1 mtoute, stirring constantly. Rem ove from heat, skim and pour quickly into glasses. P araffin a t once. sugar. Bring- to and boU Plneeot Ja m (M akes 10' 6-ounee glasses) 1 pound dried apricots 2 N o. ZH cans broken plne*^ apple slices Sugar W ash apricots and cut in soak overnight in syrup LY N N SAYS; Use ttiese S b o r^ u ts D uring Busy Dolidays C ut square biscuits from baldng powder dough using the ice cube divider from a refrigerator tray. It’s quicker than using a round cut* ter.W hen you don't have tim e to m ake white or cheese sauce for vegetables like broccoli, cauliflow­ er or brussels sprouts, sim ply m elt som e processed cheese in the top of the double boUer and pour over the vegetable. from pineapple. Dice pineapple and combinc with apricots; measure and add cup sugar for each cup of fruit and jurcc. Cook over low heat until thick and transparent. Seal in hot, sterile glasses. Christmas Star Cookies (Makes V/i dozen 3-ineh cookies) cup m ixed, candled fruit Vi cup seedless raisins Z tablespoons sugar ■ 1 tablespoon w ater ' 1 tablespoon orange juice 1/4 cup slkortenlng 14 cup brown sugar 194 cup sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder teaspoon salt - a cup w ater M teaspoon vanilla 1 cup corn flakes D )op fru it and raisins Into fine pieces; m ix with sugar, water and orange juice. Cook until a soft paste is formed. Blend together • shortening and sugar. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together and add alter­nately w ith w ater and vanilla to first m ixture, then stir in finely crush e d corn f l a k e s . C hiu thoroughly. R o ll dough thin on lightly floured b o a rd . Cut w ith star cutter. P u t sm all am ount of- filling in center of each star. Cover w ith another star cookie with center cut out w ith a sm aller star cutter. Bake on a greased baking sheet in a moder- ately hot (425'P.) oven for 8-10 minutes.« • • Deluxe Candled Orange Peel 6 naval oranges W ater Z cups brown sugar1 cup ^ t e r .2 tablespoons corn syrup ■ Sugar decorations Cut the peel from oranges, then cut the peel w ith sm all cutters into star, tree or bell shapes,. If you have no sm all cutters m ake a pasteboard pattern and cut around it. Place these designs as w ell as any left­ over strips into saucepan and cover w ith cold water. B ring to a boil and boil 5 minutes. D rain and repeat this 3 tim es to prevent bitterness. D rain water and then add brown sugar, 1 cup w ater and corn syrup. Boil gently, stirring constantly, un- tU syrup is thick and alm ost ab­ sorbed by the peel. D rain and roll peel in sugar or decorations. P ing Popcorn Balls 1 cup sugar •H cup water 1 teaspoon vinegar Z tables]. ispooiis light com syrup Vi teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon red food coloring 6 cups popped com Combine, sugar, w ater, vinegar, com syrup and salt. Cook to a very hard b all stage (205*F.). Add butter and coloring. P our over popped corn. Shape balls. W hen m uffins bake before the rest of the m eal is read y,. loosen them from the pans and tip them in the pans slightly and keep in a w arm oven until the m e al is ready. A smcUI ja r of softened butter or substitute kept on a kifchen table is a big time-saver for isuch things as buttering bread or toast and m ix­ ing w ith cooked vegetables. As soon as you rem ove food'from cooking utensils, put w ater in them . They w ill soak w hile you eat, and w ill be easy to wash quickly. Mother-Daughter Style Is Pretty as a Picture PRE T T Y as a picture and fun to w ear — adorable m other and daughter styles that are so nicely fitted, carefully detailed. P atisrn No. W70.to a Mw-FJte p crl^ Enclose ATc In coin far «ach pst. tern. Add 6e for lit aoss Mali 11 desired. i Pattern Mo....................... Size..... Name (Please Print) suect Address or P. o . Box No. StateCity Cicariog Table In clearing the table a big tray or a tea wagon—or your movable kitchen table on wheels brought at least to the kitchen door—w ill prove a great help in m akin g one trip do the work of several.. • • • Remove B luing > I f you get too m uch bluing in a garm ent on washday, you can re­m ove m ost of it by soaking the article in a* gallon. of water w hich two or three spoonfuls vinegar have been added. Clothesline Slack H om em aking specialists sug- . gest adding a short piece of link chain to one end of a clothes line. Then the slack can easily be taken up by hooking a link further back on the chain. m ing I _ W hen food spills over on the surface units of your electric range, let it char. W hen the unit is cooj, remove the particles with a brush. If needed, enclosed units m ay, be washed off. < . r.KA-.y*, \ 'r ; ■'. •Vi > • T'-T V;-*. • - THE DAVIE'RECORP.'^OCKSVILLE, N. C. ^sa y many old folks about eood lasilnt scon's EMULSION Th'outanda of fiikppr folks know tiilil Good* tuUne Bcotfs Bnwhloa tielpi you ward off eolds-tiilps sroo set ««» restcF'Atrd helps you. keep selns stronir when your diet i»os« more natural iSftD Vltamtnst BeotCs Is a n iQ lI ENERGY POOD TONIO- rteh In notHralAao Vltamtna , and enemr-bulUInc nataral oU. 'Irj) iti See how well yoo , feel E a^ to tako end. dlsest. ISeenomteal. Dtgr tedar at yonv drug storel - fAORE Ihm fust a t«nU—If*s powerM nw rf^enfl SCOTT'S EMULSION ■. iV/GiV' tNencr'if Toivic I H E A D C O L D N A S A L ESTION WiEM WAS JOHNSTOWN HOOD? . Cheek your 1952 S t Joscith Colendiir and W cnlhcr C h n rt. Fo ci. e p E E , ealorcl A t any d ru s countvr m C B ' AtVUAVS WW>se61T6B/ i z E m n a « i u nit raiNti roi ust It'S Wonderful the Way Chewing-Gum Laxative Acts Chiefly to REMOVE WASTE - M GOOD FOOD • noro’s tlie secret m llBoss ot t< «refl. w om *out feollM. Use and feel yotur •■popry. energeUo soUl Qet rcEH-A-MURl No Incteaso in price— stul as#. fiO# or only M #. - • ,\ THE BEST YOU CAN BUY ------------------------->—yet costs only a week tor the average fam ily! > \ BMn or iodized If FfeiER R jn C lu bs W iro NEURAL6 II V O R B B U ® * ' ' ™ of iie n th o l. th a n f i « ^ ■ «b sC«1»« . D .ta ao« to W E O * * ” ® "* .Q,, for C h M rt"* VIRGIL ________________iiB y J L e B K I e ii SUNNYSIDE ■ ■'>V'* ■ “■ ■ i ’ b» Clelk s. Hooi ‘ • ^ ' RIMIN' TIME By POSEN V O R ’i^l'general w ear the year ^ ardund, nothing tops the good looking tailored. suitHlress. This <me hra a <^bice of deeves and corhes.in a wide size range. SE’t . a Enclose 30c In eoln for.eoeh pat*. tem .'lAdd 9e for 1st a a s s M ail U deslrSd. « Patt^ni No. ......... Slxe...... I N a m . (Please Prinu---T S t ^ t Address or P. O. Box M*.~ V. City Stale ( G a n ’t F o e i n i m • Billed as the circus' “H um an O strldi” because he could swal- lo^.'-glass, razor blades» bolts and watches, the. great m an became suddenly ill, com plaining of pains in :fhe* stomach. .*'1 swaUowed a cow;*** he w alled, *'and it's giving m o/a' terrib|^e stom ach ache.*'/ • i)o d p rs e]camined h im but could find'htfthing wrong, so the medicos decided upon a b it of trick sur- geiy;ffThcgr took the sufferer to the ■ operating room, gave him a little .etherr led a cow into the room, tti^ - ’Woke him up. '*You're' well la ^ in ,’' declared t h e doctors. j**Here*s the c q w we took out of your Stomach.” '- .I The,.Juiman ostrich le t go with an agonizing scream . "Y o u're a ;bunch of fakers.*’ he said. "T hat’s 'a brown cow. The. one I swallowed w as purplel” Business , as Usual ( C lieni: Could you direct m e io the president of the company? ' Olfice m anager:: Yes sir. Follow jthe car tracks to the end of town, liu m south-off the first paved road 'and drive straight ahead. W hen ,7ou come to the golf course, ask. jThey’re a llo u t there. RELIEPATUST Por Your COUGH CreomulsimiielicmpromptlybecMise it roes liEht to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and eiQfei gerai.laden phleem and aid nature to soothe and * l raw, tender, inflamed bronchial «^bn»nes. Guaranteed to please ~ - or money refoaded. Creomubkni. stood the test of miUioos of nseis.s s s s H S fls e s Titanic Tragedy Took 1600 Lives Although icebergs occur through* out the year the ^ e a te s t concen*! tratldn usually reaches tbo s1}ip* >• ping lanes from M arch through June. The season occasionally ex- . , tends from. February, throtigh Au«.. - jgust. • • . .Greatest danger zone few steam> * ships is around latitude 42 degrees ;45 m inutes north and longitude'4 7 ' degrees 52 m inutes west, the ap­ proxim ate locale of the Titanic dis-j' aster of J9J2, when the. ship : ram m ed an iceberg's invisible* underwater shelf. The toll of lives ' ' in this north Atlantic disaster was l;600. • Since the TitafiJc tragedy the United States coast guard’s inter-’ national Ice patrol, its mainte-r . - nance* shared by a dozen couhi ' ■ tries,' locates icebergs and w arns. • ships in or approaching the danger, . zone. R ad ar and loran are am ong the tools used by the patrol.' ■The U.S. hydrographic office • - also Issues *'pilot charts” of ^ e . region, laying down safe c ou rse for ships. N o ships have been lost by-Iceberg collision hi the regular shipping lanes since the patrol' w as inaugurated. © E T J O D y ! HUSBilND HAPPY-HIS CONSTIPATION GONE •'M y husband ia a different m an eince he started to eat ALtrBItAN a year ago. For years he’d tako a haMb laxativeevt^ morning and again at night. Now ALL*BRAN alono keeps him regular.” Mrs. A.M .Enm ey.C obb Island. M d. One of many ttosolicUcd let’ ters/romALL-BRAN users. This may be your onswer to constiratioi lack of dietajbr bulk. Eat a (about i4 cup) of ALI/.BRAN dai' water. Ifnotsai send empty carton to .Battle Creek. Micb. Get YOUR MONEY BACKI GOT A COLD forfas^ 6 6 6 'REiitr EAT ANYTHING WITH FALSE TEETH I If you bsve trouble with platee .). tlist tUp. tocle, cause sore sn m s^ ' ... ....jm sPiastKLioer. OneappiiesdoB nskes plates &unuglywilbMitptmitrorpmiU, because Drimms PlauMJoMiiaideaspenaa. oeaily to yanr plue. Relioes and tefiu lo os*' ' ' plates in a way DO powder ot pule can do.. ■ Svenoooldmbbecplatesyousetsoodresulta sixnonthstoavesrorlooger.vow cANKAT - ANVTHIHftl SIttply lay Sjf( Strip ofPlasd*.'* XJner oo oooblesome upper or lower. and Ic molds perftctly. B M r»tac, cbikIcm, ' odotlets. batmleu to you and y o u plates. Removable as dlreaed. M ooer back tfook completely satisfied. A ik ycardmgsfftt - B RIM M S PLASTI-LINER KIDNEYSMUSTREMOVEEXGESSWASTE I^nav I D o A rs~ P iu s m PAGE POUS . THE DAVIE RECORD. NO PAPER M XT C . P R A N K S T R O U D . E D IT O R .WEEK TCLEVHOME ' It has always been the custom J ....................—,— ' of The Record to take a week off C hristm a,. O u r rid e rs need m>itter. March 8.1908. {a rcsca# well as the editor. For ____________________=? fifty-one weeks in the year wehus* SU B SC RIPT IO N RATES: Wfi YEAR. IN N. GAR0I.IN4 SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA o n e YEAR. 0UTStnE^5TAT^ . SiX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATE t t.Sfl . 78c. $2.fln $1.00 tie around and get out a paper re­ gardless of weather conditions, news 8carcitv« or paper shortage. The u s k is a pleasure, b ut it be­ comes wearlngt and we need a few days in w hich to recuperatc. i W e trust that all our readers w ill enjoy a happy Christmas and U p to this good hour we have}wilt be ready to begin the New one pum pkin for Christmas but^Year w ith a determination to be' are m inus one turkey and one .'better m en and women, and to do ‘ lug of locust beer. W e are still'm ore good in the year fast ap-, w llljproaching than th;y have ever: D o your Christmas shopping late*~better late than never. living In hopes that Santa visit us before Christmas. Motor Vehicles ‘Only' ~i~few~more "days' until Christmas, warned J. R . Waters, resentative of the k^otor Vehicles to* Safety field Rraresentative of the Departm ent of M o t day. So take It easy, he cautions w hen vou drive and walk, and help Davie County to have an ac­cident free holiday season. Dec* ember is- always a m onth o f haste/’ W aters said. "Haste to gee Christ­ m as shopping out of the way, haste to get bome» or to social af­ fairs and at no other time of the year is haste so deadly.” In N . C., traffic deaths are edging closer and closer to 2000.W e m ust be extra cautious be^ tween now and Christmas to a- vold this tra^c mark.*' Waters concluded. The First Snow The. first snow of the winter fell here for about an hour Friday m om inc, b ut m elted as it fell, ilie snow was followed by sleet, which soon turned into rain. Saturday was a cold, windy and partly cloudy dav. The mercury droi^Tcd to 9 degrees above zero Sunday m orning, which was the coldest m om ing this fa!l. The mercury dropped to 10 degrees a- bove aero M onday m orning. Offices to Close A ll county officeif in the court house, w ith the exception of the SherifTs office, will be closed on M onday, Tuesday and Wednes­ day cif next week, Dec. 24-25-26. Towell Elected The Production and M arketing A dm inlstracion'county committee for Davie County in the coming 5*ear w ill be L. R. Towell, Chair­m a n ,H .G . A llen, Vice-Chairman, and O .'E . Driver, rejiular member, Ic was announced here todav. A ll three o f these men were re- clccted at the county P M A con­ vention which was held Friday, Dec. 14, at 10 a. m . Del gates to the countv convention were elect­ ed Thursday, Dec. 13, In Davie County's 15 P M A communities. T he convention also elected E- D . liames w d Clyde Boger as first proaching done before. W e wish to extend our sincere thanks to the friends of The Re­ cord w ho have stood bv us so faithfully-during- the-m orc-than 44 years that we have been labor* ing in Mocksville for the upbuild* Ing o f the town and county. W e have made m any mistakes, but they were o f the head and n o t o f the heart. W e shall strive to d o ’ better as long as the Lord lets uS sojourn o n this good earth. To our advertisers, our subscrib- j ers, our correi^pondents and all, who have said a kind word to orj for us, we again extend thanks. The Record w ill m ake its next ap­ pearance on January 2, 1952 the Lord willing. New Masonic Officers J. C . Jones, superintendent o f the Davie R.E.A., was recently elected Master of the Mocksville Masonic Lodee. O ther ofiicen elected were: G . R . M adison, Senior W arden, ’ Gray Hendricks Junior W arden; Joe Patner Treasurer; Spurgeon* Anderson Secretar*. G . R . M adi-' son was elected a trustee to serve diree years. R . B. Sanford. Jr., was elected for a one year term. The third mem ber o f the boanl is A t­ las Smoot. Joe Patner s u ^ e d s R . B. San­ ford w ho resigned' as Treasurer. M r. Sanford lUled this position for! 35 years w ith honor to him self and the Masonic Lodge* Mrs, Emma Brown Mrs. Em m a Glasscock Brown. 93. one of three Davie County sisters w ho Uved to be nearly aj hundred years bid, died at her.' hom e Wednesday in Calahain Township. Her only surviving sistei, Mrs.- Cornelia Glasscock of the home, ^ Sis 97. Another siswr^ Miss M artha Jane Glasscock died Feb. 25th at the age o f 99. . { Mrs. Brown lived her entire lifeand second alternate committee^. the event any one or m e nrst three should become unable to An*serve at any time during the year, j Person Glasscock. W ith the aid of com m unity p| She was tnarried NTov. 29, 1883,' M A committeemen elecied by far- James H . Brow n, a Davie mers in the various communities. ® . . A pril, the county P M A committee w ill 1941. Mrs. Brown hud been a | administer the Agricultural Con« wem ber of the Center. M ethodist; servation Program, marketing quo* Church since early childhood. j tas and price support operations Surviving In addition to the sis- in the county during the coming ter are two sons, S. C . Brow n p f year. Also they will help admin- Mocksville, Route 2, and U H .: iscer crop production goals and Brown o f the home; one dffiti>h-' ndter defense jusignments as they ter. Miss Sophia Brown o f the - arise. home; one gran<kon$ and a num- A ll three members of tho coun* be*” o f nieces and nephews, ty. P M A committeemen are m em ' Funeral s«»rvices were held at* b erso fthe County Agricultural 2:30 p-m , Thursday at the U nion M obilization Committee, L. R . Chapel Methodist C hurch. Rev. Towelf being chairman of that W illiam Anderson an d Rev. H . group. The committeemen ate D . Te&sup officiated. Burial was all faimers).and their «crv)cfs are In the church cemetery, available to all farmers in Davie -----^------- '=™"’ Card Of Thanks W e wish to thank o u r friends and-neighbors for the m anv acts o f kindness shown us during ihe illness and after the death o f our wife and mother.Pauf Boger And Children. Mrs. Gaither O M rs. M aude H olm an Gaither, 81* died at che Mocksville nurst ^ hom e at 2:45 p. m . Sundav. . Her husband, Spurgeon Gaither died 25 venrs iigo. .'.Surviving .ire u n j router son; three brot'iers. two sist-rs, 12 nieeei and 20 nephews. a F o n e M services were held at U n io n C hapel M ethodist Church (C 2 p. Tuesday, w ith Rev. W illia n i Anderson and Rev. J. H . G ioce e & ia tin g . Burial was in the ehiirch twmetery. . ■-V.'/i. ' " Card of Thanks W e wish to thank o u r frieiide and neighbors for the m anv acts o f kindness shown during the ill­ ness and death o f our father. M a y . (^dbless\ you all. , I Mrs. Issac Shore & F m ilv . tB E DA VIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE, B. C , l», 1961 i I Die GreatNew 1 9 5 2 The only way to fully apprM late Pontlae*a vonderful new DuaURange performance is to try It for yourself. There has never before been anything quite ' like th is com M nacion ot Pontiae*t Hlgh- com presdon engine, the new G M Dual- Range llydr»>M at}e* and Pontiac** performance, economy axle. You can select, w ith a flick of your finger, exactly the power you w ant, when you w ant it, where you w ant It^ln s ta n tly , autom aticallyl ' W hen you com bine this basic entf neering atlvance w ith Pontlae*a beauty. econodQF and durability you can see w l^ d^dtar for dollar you can't beat a Pontiac. Come on In and drive itl eOptiandteiSairMCut moUrAm worn ro ir cMfv mmAT A Peuitjus t YOU WANT • WmBM YOV WAKT tT • WMJBMB YOV WAKT MW B Oi UTaw D— Marje—WMte ® N ew B ebnoinr Axle I R V I N & C O R N A T Z E R P O N T I A G / W iilc e t b o r o S tre e t M o e liiv m e , N . C . C O U N T Y E X H I B I T To the Chairman of the Board of County Coimninioners'of Davie County: ANNUAL REPORT OF ELOISE C. STEPHENS, Hnancial Agent of Davie County ; RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS From Deb. 1, 19S0 Through Nov. 30, 1951 L. S. Driver, Tax Lister Mrs. Maurine W ard, Tax Uster . Mrs. Otis Oinupp, Tax Lister Mrs. J. S. Green. Tax Lister Faye E. Naylor, Salary — .... S. H. Chaffin. S a la ry_____ Florence Mackie, Salary ............... Carolyn Craven. Salary ___________ F. E. Pecbies. Salary ________J..:- Leo F. W illiam s. Salary t____ Margaret It' Carter, Salary R. P. Martin, Salary 1-------... J. M . Groce, Salary C R. Carter, Salary ....t.....------ Nancy TuUcro%v, Salary ------- C R. Vogler, Salary :___________ Dewey Sain, Salary ' D E C E M B E R I9S0 D ISBU RSEM EN T S / R, Paul Foster.', summons' for jury.« Gray St Creccli, Inc. supplies... ■ -Federal Reserve Bk. of Richmond, W ith. tax.... ..A . T. Grant, Co. Atty._________------------- •, J. El "Kelly, Postmaster.------:---.....— ...m... ..j. E. Kelly. Postage --------------------- R. P. Martin. Salary --------------------- IrJ. M . Groce, Salary ..................-------------- >'C R. Carter, Salary ,vC R. Vogler, Salary, postage ....^J^s-incy Tutlcro«‘, S a la ry ............ S. B. Cook, Salary ---------- - Lula Foster, Salary . Davie County Lll>rary ---------------- X-Kathlyn Reavls, Salary, dog Vac............... •;Eloisc C. Stephens, Salary, postage ---H/ Qiaffin, Salary, postage --------- '^.Fayc E. Naylor, Sahry, postage ----- V-Alex Tucker,' Salary ........................— ...... ^■^pavie Rccord, supplies, Co. exhibit ......... Ransom Cook, Salary ....--------— •V-F. E. Pecbies, Salary ---------...----- ri.Florcncc Mackie. Salary ------------- ' Carolyn Craven,' Salary i Leo F. Williams, S a la ry-------------- ' v: :Southcastern Equipment Co., supplies .... i^l^ Central Telephone Co. ---------- .-'.Gene Bcauclianip, mtness fee — .........— r^Alton Beauchamp, witness fee ........----- ■-•%'Paul Coniatzer, witness fee —-------- .':>:_Junfor Johnson, witness *fee -------...... -V-‘W illie Barney, witness fee......................... ‘-‘7f I-ouie Beal, witness fee -----------— i *^:Elam M fg. Co., jauitor supplies ....----- Observer Printing House, supplies----- Monroe Calculating Machine Co. ------ '*;iHospitai Saving Association, Insurance • V- Dewey Sain, Salary --------------------- .:^^'Hartman -Electric Service, wiring Co. Home.... “‘ Margaret Roberts, Salary National Used Car Market, Tax supplies .. L. R. Dulm, hauling trash The Mocksville Enterprise, printing ............. V;V W , H. Dillard, plum bing---------------- Sanford Mando Co. plumbing ........----- Davie Feed &' Seed C ^. feed Co. Home '-^' -United Variety Store, supplies Co. Home ^*'^ W jW..{HoweM. breeding fee Co. Home ... V^'thc-Pure Oil Co.. fuel Co. Home ................ Heffner. *& Bolick. food Co. Home ......— Davie Furniture Co. S. W . Brown & Son, food Co. Home ..... J. P. Green M illing C a. feed Co. Home . J. J. Allen, Christmas goods. Co. Home i Green's Store, food C a Home .................L State Comm, for the Blind Mocksville Cash Store, clothing W elf. Dept . Amy Jane Talbert, Salary & trave l-----— Ossie C. AJIison, Salary & travel Janie N. Cozart, Salary . I Davie Co. Welfare Dept, postage .... /. G. Crawford, Welfare Board ........ C H . M cM ahan,. Welfare Board ___ J. M . Groce. Welfare Board__________ Frank Clement, .Gen. Asst. -------- Sylvester Neeley,' Gen, A sst.---.»..J Mrs. Ester Johnson, Gen. Asst. ......... Mrs. L. R. Powell, Boarding Home . Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding Home . Mrs. Albert W hite, Boarding Home . , Davie Dry .Goods-Co. ------ W ilkins Drug, medicine — ..... The Western N. C Sanatorium ......... . Brewers Nursing Home — N. B. Dyson, fertilizer Co. H ^ e Edwin EnrJe, office supplies ----- Davie-Yadkin Health Dept. -.Coiijniercial Printing Co., office supplies Greene, Salary . Br^nddiicP/'Hodgcs, State Literary Note . Cooleemee;Drug Co., medidne ..i—---- J. C Barnliardt, .hauling . Rowan-Printing Co., office supplies . G ty of Mocksville, water W . J. Wilson, Service Officer, Salary . i^Duke Power Co.'' > Harding & Horn, rent H; P. 'pffice W ilkins Drug Co., medicine Ramona H. H ill, work tax office Shoaf Coal & Sand Co.. fuel ___ D. F.'W inters, jail T-iendricks 8t Merrell, .mattress jail C C. Sanford Sons Co^ supplies___ Davie Co. Old Age Assist. Fund ...........__ Davie Co. Aid Dep. Chlldn. Fund ________ Central Teleplione Co. Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co.. fuel . 19.00 4.801 147.51 250.00 105XX) 1100 29.16 28.36 28.92 194.65 iiaeo100.00 24.00 155.40 161.70 175.20 210.35 112.90 235.78 ' 306i0 150.00 143.59 108.00 22.55 115.60 5.66 53.90 4.60 4.60 5X0 5.50 4.60 4.43 rm93JSO 11.00 29.10 ’ 195.00 119.70 112.90 11.25 5.00 14.25 8.00 $as 27.60 16.21 - 5.00 M i7 15.34 .TO 17J5 . 54AJ 21.30 39.00 97i4 27.21 242J6 209.68 117.00 IZJOO 5.001 5.00 5.00 ISjOO 15.00 15.00 34.50eom 42XM 5.472J0Q 15iO 40.85 67.00 31iO soaoo 34.49 25.00. 1,016.00 8.00 4.00 25.40 11.95 125.00 68.51 15.00 : 3.40 86.25 . 825 86.90 30X0 SiX) 942.62 348.25 6.501 16.50 Dr. G. V. Green, Salary -------- Kathlpn Reavis, Salary ........... Central Telephone C a ----- Hartman Electric Service, repair Elam M fg. C a, janitors supply Tlie Mocksville Enterprise, Adv. Bank of D&vie James H. Anderson Co., supplies .... Duke Power C a .............................. City of Mocksville, water ____..... Home & Farm Supply Co. ----- Observer Printing House,., scrolls . Central Telephone Co. ................... Cooleemee Drug Co., medicine ... The Western N. C Sanatorium ., . The Pure Oil C a, fu e l____________ Mocksville Casli Store —__________ Call & Booe ............................................. S,399J4| JA N U A R Y 19S1 D ISBU RSEM EN T S , Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond . Horn Oil Co. . Mrs. Ken Stanley __________ Bank of Davie, bond, int. & cost ...... J. E. Kelly, post cards .......................... S. Br Cook. Salary . Davie County Library ----- Elolse C. Stephens, Salary . Sam Talbert, Tax Lister ..... Odeli'W illiam s, Tax Lister . T .'A . Vanaant. Tax Lister .. 150.51 ---....* 1.55 -------- ZOO ..........24,«5.00' 20J» ,.-.5..-.. 122.00, ............ 155:40 ------ 17420 100.00 . . .---- 100:001 ............. 100.00 T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M o c k s v ille , N . C Lester F . M arlin _____________ N. C Baptist Hospital, Hospital Service . Forsyth Co. Hospital, Hospital Service .. Woodrow J. W ilson, Salary _____________ Davie*Yadkin Health Dept. . Greeiu Store, food C a Home ___________ S. W . Brown & Son, food Co. Home ..... J. P. Green M illing Co., feed Co. Home . C J. A n ^ ll, re p a ir________...................... Biackweldet 8l Sm o ot____________:._______ (T 'C r Stjnford Sons Co___________________ Davie F|cd & Seed Co. __________________ Mitchell Printing Co.. office supplies Shoaf Coal & Sand Co., fuel ...._____ W . J. W ilson. Salary Hospital Saving Association. Ins. ........ Frank Clement, Gen. Assist. ------- Sylvester Neeley, Gen. Assist................. Mrs. Ester Johnson, Gen. Assist. ..... Mrs. L. R. Powell, Boarding Home . Mrs. Riciiard Allen, Boarding Home . Mrs. Albert W hite, Boarding Home ... Mocksville Nursing Home , Amy Jane Talbert. Salary & travel . C H. M cMahan, W elfare Board ___ J, M. Groce. Welfare Board _______ J. G. Crawford, Welfare Board ____ Davie Co. Welfare Dept, postage ... Janie N. Cozart, Salary IOOjOO llOOO llOOO 13m •11^90 210.35 107.65 22.55 139.64 a2sx»| 10Z20 .29.16 ' 2SM 25.98 n0.60| 194.65 167.00 25.001 171.40 UOO .5.95 15.50 61J3, 4325 125.00 40.80 14.00 18.45 91.89 8.05 1.95 7 7 il 65.50 525 30.50 71.67 13.66 5.03 29.10 15.00, ■15.00! 15.00 30.00 - “"4 2 W ^ 'Sain Talbert, Fann Census .... Mrs. J. S. Green, Farm Census . Mrs. Otis Canupp, Farm Census . Odell Williams, Farm Census ' Lonnie Driver, Farm Census The Pure Oil Co., fuel Edwin Earte, office supplies .................. S. H . C offin, seed Co. Home .......___ Dr. Fred G. Pegg, Co. Health Dept. Davie County Old Age Assist. Fund .... Davie Freezer Locker, Co. Home ____ Davie C a Aid lo Dep. Chldn. Fund ... Hall Drug Co., medicine _______________ S. B. Cook, fuel ______ Tiie Michie Company, office supplies City of Mocksville, water ..................... Alex Tucker, Salary ...... Ransom) Cook, Salary .. D. F. \yinters _________ Mrs. L. ,R. Powell, Boarding Home ... The Western N. C. Sanatorium _____ Hall Drug C a, medicine M A RC H » S I DISBU RSEM EN T S [,M. C. Fed. Reserve Bank of Richmond ........... Davie Co. A. T. P. D. Fund .... Bank of Davie, Bond, int. & cost Dewey Sain, Salary ................................................ R. P. Martin, Salary .............. J. M. Groce, Salary . C R. Carter, Salary . Ossie C. Allison, Salary & travel . The Davie Record, Adv. ___________ Cooleemee Journal, A d v ._________ Davie*Yadkin Health Dept. .......... Davie Shoe Shop . Harley W alker M utual Burial Assn., Ins. . S. W , Brown & Son. food Co. Home ____ Heffner & Bolick, food Co. H o m e_________ J. P. Green M illing Co.. feed Co. Home ..... United Variety Store, Co, Home ............. Greens Store, food C a Hotpe ..............__ Edwards & Broughton, supplies ___________ State Comm, for the B lin d___________!____ Zep Mfg; Co., janitor supplies ___________ Hall Drug Co., medicine ___________________ Edwin Earle, office supplies ........................ W ilkins Drug Co., rhcdicine ....___________ Sanford M ando Co., plumbing ___________ D. F.' W inters, food for prisoners ___....... Kifig Photo Supply Co. Davie C a Old Age Assist. Fund ..... Davie . C a Aid to Dep. Chldn. Fund . C ^C.: Saiiford Sons Co_______________ Davie . Dry Goods Co. Clarence D. James, repair _______ Heffner & Bolick, food Co. Home W . R. Cook, Salary Alex Tucker, & la r y . State Comm, for the Blind _________ Harding & Horn; rent H. P. office . Commercial Printing Co. ______......... Edwards & Broughton Co. ................. 15.00 267.48 5.00 5M 5.00 13.00 117.00 19322 46.00 37.50soam .85 4/tO 1520 17.1572M 321 46.03 14.05 92.54 24i» 4J» i320 11.55 4.13 133.99 2.83 936.88 344.75 3.44 1.98Z7S 25.00 180J0 262.98 103.79 15.00 6.001 1527 Mrs. J, M. Groce. Farm Census T. A. Vanaant. Farm Census ... Eloise C. Stephens, Salary ....... C R. Vogler, Salary ___________ Nancy Tutterow. Salary ............... Margaret R. Carter, Salary ____ S. B. Cook. Salary ................ Faye Naylor, Salary . S. .H. Qiaffin, Salary ____________________ Bank of Davie. Lock box rent _________ Commercial Printing Co.. office supplies . Davie County Library .....................i......... F. E. Peebles. Salary ---------------- Leo F. Williams. Salary ............................. Florence C. Mackie, Salary ______________ Doris B. Frye, Salary FE B R U A R Y MSI D ISBU RSEM EN T S Carylon Craven, Salary _________________________ N. C Rural Rehabilitation Corp. Lit. note ___ Fed. Reserve Bank of Richmond, W . T .______' Davie County Schools _________________________ E. L. Williams, Co. Home -............................... Bank of Davie, Interest ................__.................... S. B. Cook, Salary ..........._____________________ [.Central Telephone Co. Starette Type\vriter Co., repair ___________ Heffner & Bolick, food C a Home ......________ N. C Hospital Saving Assn. Insurance ..........Nancy Tutterow; S a l ^ ___ C R. Vogler. '^ Id fy C -R.' Carter.' SaiatV' ......i____________...._______ J. .M. Groce, ^ ia r y ... _______ _ R. P. M artin,.Salary . Faye E. Naylor, '^ la ry S. H. Chaffin, Salary Kathlyn. Rcavis, Salary Margaret R. Carter, Salary F. E. PeeblM.; Salary __________________________ Leo F. W iliiaiM , Salary ______________________ Doris B. Frye, Salary _________________________ Florence MackieV .Salary ..............................____ Duke Power C o.'. Commercial Printing Co., supplies . Curtis 1000. Inc., supplies _________ Central Telephone Co. ___________ I^ r ic County Library _________ Eloise C . Stephens, Salary ______ Dewey Sain, Salary Am y Jane TalW t,-'Salary &. travel . Ossie C. Allisoh.-Salary & travel ... Janie N. ,Gozar.t; Salary Davie County ; Welfare Dept, postage , J. M . Groce, Welfare Board __________ /. G. Crawford, Welfare Board .......... C H . M cMahan. Welfare Board Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding ^ m e ..... Mrs. L. R. Rowell, Boarding Home .......... Mrs. Albert W hite, BM rding Home ---- Frank Qement, Gen. A ssist.-----.........L Sylvester Neeley, Gen. Assist....................Mocksville Boarding ^ Hom e......................... E G. Hendricks ____________....... Mocksville Hospital .......:------------- 32,373.381 il2 7 . 1624» 15341 lo m o o dooo39QJ00 122.00 57.40 17.50 1 8 ^ 29.10 110.60 194.65 25.98 25M 29.16 112.901 210J5 , 165.45 10220 13824 125.00 1127 107.65 • *82J6| 3J0! I7J4 11,00' • J5S.40 17420 167.00 241,63 201.39 .117.00 1^001 5.001 5.06 5.00 604)0 30.00 42.00 15.00 • 15.0053.50 • - 5.0034i)0 ZOO 84.00 5000 125.001 500.00 Edwardd & Broughton, office supplies Dr. G. Y* Greene, Salary & calls _____ Elam Mfg. Co., Janitor supplies ___....... E. C. Morris. Insurance Co. Bldgs. ..... ' 38.10 J5.65 74.93 3.70, 9.00 3.79 4.60 42J3 11.50 48.00i 41.50 941.501 2.II 352.00 4.50 2.00 11.50 11.03 21928 ISOM 100.00 8.15 15iO 1.90 3951 68.00 18.00 38727 1721921 Faye E Naylor, Salary S. B, Cook, S a la r y__.... Davie C a Old Age Assisi. Fund ........ Davie C a Aid to P. T. D. F u n d ________ Davie C a Aid to the Dep. Chldn. Fund Central Telephone Co. _______............. S. H. Chaffin, Salary; ______................... Bank of Davie, Juror' Fees ______________ Dr. G. V. Greene, Salary _______________ Dewey Sain, Salary ......._______.........r..... Davie County Library Eloise C Stephens, Salary ........... Greens Store, food Co. Home .— N. C Comm, for the Blind _____ David C. W alton, Gen. Assist....... Mocksville Nursing Home ________ Davie C a W elfare Dept. ____...... J. M . Groce, WelUrc Board _____ C H. McMahan, Welfare Board . J. G. Crawford, Welfare Board . Janie N. Cozart Salary ................ Ossie C Allison^ Salary ................. Amy Jane Talbert, Sabry Mrs. L. B. Sheets, Boarding Home .. Mrs. L. R. Powell, Boarding Home . Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding Home . Mrs. Albert W hite, Boarding Home . R. 0 . Kiger, 'C C. Sanford Sons Co. ........ Clarence Davis ....................... Mocksville Cash Store _____ W ilkins Drug Co., medicine Mocksville Hospital The Western N. C. Sanatorium , N. C Baptist Hospital —----- Rowan Memorial Hospital State Assn. of Co. Commrs. Dues . Kathlyn Rcavis, Salary .Mrs, J. K. Sheek. Pension Board . Robert S. McNeill, Pension Board . K. M. Clement, Pension Board ..... Lillie Leak, Court Stenographer ... Harding & Horn, office rent ....... Observer Printing House The Geo. D. Barnard C a. office supplies;...... Hospital Saving Association ............................... Edwards & Brough'ton. office supplies — ^--- Monroe Cilcuiating Machine Co. W . W . Howell, Breeding fee Co. Home . Dr. G. V. Greene, Salary —--- State Comm, for the Blind ---------- C. F. Wagner, repair J. P. Green M illing C a, feed Co. Home . N. B. Dyson, fertilizer Co. Home _______ Pure Oil Co.. fuel Co. Home ___________ S. W . Brown & Son, food Co. Home .... Heffner St Bolick. food Co. Home ...— Carl Green, food Co. Home ................... The Davie Record, Adv. ------------- W . R. Cook, Salary ___________________ G. A. Tucker, Salary ------------ L. K. Howard, Tax Summons ......----- Wade Groce, Tax Summons . Record Rebuilding Service, binding books . Am y Jane Talbert. Salary ..........:--- Ossie C Allison, Salary ..........................Janie N. Cozart, Salary Davie Co. Welfare Depl. Postage .... J. G. Crawford. Welfare Board ....... C H. McMahan. Welfare Board ..... /. M. Groce, Welfare Board ------ Davie Dry Goods Co., Gen. Assist Daniel Furniture & Elec, Co. ........... Ellis Oksh Store . Rowan Memorial Hospital --------... Mrs. L, R. Powell. Boarding Home . Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding Home Mrs. Albert W hite. Boarding Home .. Mrs. L. B. Sheets, Boarding Home .... Mocksville Nursing Home ....................... Central Telephone Co. Aluminum Awning Products Co., Co. House .... E. C Morrte, Ins. Co. Agt. Office -------- Davie-Yadkin Health Dept..................— ..— .... R. O. Kiger --------------------------- Edwin Eirie, office supplies The Mocksville Enterprise, A d v .----- Clarence B. James, repair Courthouse . Wilkins Drug Co., medicine ................... W . J. Wilson, Salary -------------- Sanford Mando Co. ---1.......................... City of Mocksville, water _____________ D. F. W inters, fees . Yaidkin Valley Telephone Corp. Co. H o m e--- Duke Power Co. ------........................................ 153.521 4.501 4,707.50 I69M 29.16 31:72 3224 7425 50.20 73.40 52.60 4920] 69J00 10520 64.00 17520 194.65 110.60 10220122.00 112.90 21025 120 134.64 155.40 141.99 12720 107.70 22.59 I54X) 16020 4.00] 4.00 4.00 7620 30.00 44.18 4.191 29.10 120 3.66 5.00 25.00' 98.79 5.00 80.58 59.92 33.57 20.75 34.55 49.43 12.00] 198J00 266.78 26.00 2.00 IOOjOO 253.18 19621117.00 14.00 5.00 5.00 520 15.92 2420 25.00 56.70 30.00 60M 42.00 25.00 25.00 75201 95.00 20.00 500.00 20.00 2126 28.00 17M 1.75 125.00 20 8.57 120.40 20.00 58.95 Carolina Business Machines Co. — ....----... The Mocksville Enterprise, office supplies — Hendricks & Merrell Furniture C o .------- Mocksville Hardware Co. . Kathlyn Reavis, Salary ____ Davie-Yadkin Health Dept. Hartman Electric Service .... R. P. Martin, Salary Nancy Tutterow, Salary ....... C R. Vogler, Salary C. R. Qirter, Salary J. M. Groce, Salary N. C Hospital Saving Assn. M . C. Runyan, Jr. The Cooleemee Journal Observer Printing House .................... Dewitt Supply Co.. janitor supplies . Doris B. Frye. Salary ................ Leo F, Williams, Salary __ F, E. Peebles, Salary ........ Florence Mackie, Salary ... Harding & Horn; rent .......—.......... Mocksville Ice & Fuel C a . Shoaf Coal & Sand Co., fuel ______ City of Mocksville ------------— Edwin Earte Margaret R. Carter, Salary Hall Drug Co. --- B. C Ellis, fees ..... Jason Sheek, fees — John Waters, fees — R. Paul Foster, fees F. A. Mitchell, fees ------- Maxalene Holman, fees ....... W . F. Stonestreet, lees ....... Dorothy Funderbuck. fees ... J. F. Everhardt fees ........... A. F. Garwood, fees ------ Claude McNeill, fees ,W orth Hendricks, fees — ... Raymond Gregory, fees ....... Roger Funderburk, fees --- Lucille IQng, fees A P R IL l$ 5 l‘DISBU RSEM EN T S Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond —............ Davie Co. Old Age Assist, Fund — Davie Co. Aid to Dep. Clildn. Fund —----- Bank of Davie, bond, Int. & c o s t----........ Bank Davie, bond, int. & cost —..... Davie C a A. T, P. D. F u n d----------....— 10^79429 . 15327 .. 93125 374ib . 1,640.00 Heffner & Bolick, food C a Home ............ J. P. Green M illing Co., feed Co. iiom e . S. W . Brown & Son. food Co. Home —W . N. Smith Esso Service, fuel ....----- Lester P. Martin, M. D. ----.......----- Home & Farm Supply ............................... Davie Feed St Seed Co. ________________ Davie Freezor Locker ---------------- Duke Power C a Fred Head, fees ...... S. A. Orreii, fees .. Grant Wagoner, fees L. D. Driver, fees .. Norris Fry, fees ..... Grady Flowers, fees ............ Bill Leach, fees --- Clifford Reavis, fees Robert I-ee Trivette, fees D. F. W inters, fees ----- W , R. Cook, Salary ----- Alex Tucker, Salary ..— W . J. W ilson, Salary --- M A Y 19S1 DISBU RSEM EN T S W .. W . Howell, breeding fee Co. Home ....... Charla Bell Jones Bailey, Gen. Assist.......... N. B. Dyspn, fertilizer Co. Home —......... Siler Funeral Home, pauper funeral ------- Federal Reserve Bank o l Richmond ------ Davie Co. A. T. P. D. Fund ------------ Davie C a Aid to Dep. Chldn. Fund ------- J. E. Kelly, envelopes tax office —..... D. F. W inters, jail fees ................................... C. R. Carter, Salary ................... ...........:.......... J. M . Groce, Salary ------. . .----------... R. P. Martin, Salary ..................................— Duke Power Co. . ifonroe O iculating Machine Co. --- Helen C. Sloop, Court Stenographer S, B. Cook, Salary ............................— Davie County Library ------------ L e a F. W illiam s, Salary ------------ Edwin Earle — .....---------........... F. E. Peebles. Salary ------------- Florence C Mackie, Salary ................. Doris B. Frye, Salary .......................... Margaret R . CarWr. Salary .........---- Kathlyn Reavis, Salary -------...— . a A. Tucker, Salary ------------- W . R. Cook. Salary. ............................ D. F . W inters, jail fees ------------ •W. J. W ilson, SaUiry5.38220 Eloise C. Stephens, Salary 4.501 Nancy Tutterow, Salary ..... 112.90 122.65 923.003.00 318.50 60.15 21125 612.70 33.00 167.00 155.40 17420 68.77 105.79 1520 25.00 1320 5.00 520 520 11720 202.59 309.82 3924 34.12 60.00 42.00 520 J227 10.00 2626 5.50 2620 2920 210.00 187.91 21.50 5425 18.10 2.15 158.70 500.00 220 29.26 110.60 194.65 25.98 2524 33.00 7.95 1620 . 77.47 2625 22.59 12520 144.09 107.15 15.00 36.20 68.449.50 4.00 38.04 7077 17.9519.12 820 ,75 34.75 1827 6620 10220 3.75 2.75 1.50 14.45 7.75 13.00 3.40 3.91 125 220 220 4.60, 1.00 1.00 120 1.00 420 1.90 120 125. . 1.00 1.00 1.00 120 120 54.90 15825 300.73 12520 15270.65 5.00 37.00- 91.TO 125.00 15327 720 320 3528 • 250.00 26.96 26.68 ^ 29.16 ' 54.01 LOO 86.72 12226)S5,40 126.75 125 140.79 107.70 22.59 10220 158.70 270J8 163.10 ' 21620 • J25.00 . 17520 • 110.60. V T H E D A V I E r e c o r d ; M o c k 8 v ille , N-; C C. R. Voglcr. Salary ..........-....-...... Davie Real Estate, Loan & Ins. Co. Faye E. Naytor, Salary ....................... S. H. Chaffin, Salary .......................... City of MocksvUle The Mocksville enterprise .......... State Comm, for the Blind ....... Dr. G. V, Greenci Salary ............ Rowan Memorial HosiiUal .......... The Western N.' C. Sanatortuni Mrs. Richard Allen .. Mrs. L. R. Powell Mrs. Albert VVhUe .... Mocksvtllc Nursing Home ........... Mrs. L. B. Sheets ..................-...... David C. W alton C. H. M cM ahan J. M , Grocc .... Davie Co. Welfare Dept............... Janie N. Cozari Osslc C. Allison Amy Jane Talbert ........................ Central Telephone Co.................... C. J. Angcll Appliance Co........... Dewitt "Supply Co Davie Feed & Seed Co. .............. Mocksville Imp. Co........................ J. P. Green M ilhng Co Heffner & Bohck United Variety Store ................- S. W . Brown & Son ...................... Greens Store Dewey Sain .... Home & Farm Supply Co.......... Hospital Saving Association ....... Davie County Schools -................ The Pure Oil Co.....................-...... Mocksville Hospital C. C. Sanford Sons C a ........................ Wilkins Drug Co....................................... Elam Mfg. Co............................................. Harding & Horn Davie-Yadkin Health Dept................... Davie Co. Old Age Assist................... Davie C a Aid to Dep. Chldn. Fund Ohservcr Printing House ..................... Charla Jones Bailey ............................... Mrs. Ella Beamon Qawson ................ 195.65 103.25 112.90 210.35 9.50 1845 104.00 25.00 9^32 15.00 60.00 30.00 3000 25XX) • 30.00 15.00 - 5.00 5.00 12.00 117.00 203i6 270.0B 6ai5225.00 80.05 4.60 .55 106.02 30.11 15^4 16.40 48.95 169.98 S.65 33JOO . 10.000.00 17.26 13.00 5.62 .85 30.50 15.00 . 500.00 . 945.75 . 382.50 6.42 37.00 62.00 Farmers Hardware & Supply Co. .... Federal Reserve Oank of Richmond . Bank of Davie ......................................... JU N E leSl D ISBU R SEM EN T S J. E. Kelly, cards tax office ............................... Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond ................ Davie Co. A. T. P. D. Fund ............................ S. H. Chaffin . Faye E. Naylor ............... Nora J. Sheets ................. Davie Co. School Fund A. T. Grant ...................... E. G. Twias ...................... E. G. Twiss ...................... E. G. Twiss ...................... Eloisc C. Stephens 17,436i)0 50.00 I53J7 9.00 205J5 112.90 5.63 . 15,381.00 . 250.00 250.00 JU L Y 1951 D ISB U R SEM EN T Dax'ie Co. Old Age Assisi. Fund .................... Davie Co. Aid to Dcp. Gildu. Fund ............... D. F. Wintcr.s Retroactive Salary ................ Record Rclniilding Scrvicc ................................ Aluminum Awning Products Co. .................... Shoaf Coal & Sand Co., fuel ......................... Davie Real ILslaic, Loan & Ins. Co.................. Davie Co. A. T. P. D. Fund .............................. W . R. Cook. Retroactive Salary ...................... Bank of Davie, Bond, Int. & cost ................ ). AI. Groce, Salary & hack pay .................. H. P. M arlin, Salary & hack pay .................. C. K. Caricr, Salary & hack i»ay .................. Margaret R. Carter, Salary & Irack pay ....... S. B. Cook, Salary & hack pay ...................... S. H. Cimfiin, Salary & back pay .................. I'ayc !£. Naylor. Salary & back pay ............. Nancy Tuitero\v, Salary & hack pay ........... C. R. Vogler, Salary & hack pay .................. Hospital Saving Association .. Kathlyn H . Heavis, Salary back pay ....... Davie RMA Elcc. iMemh. Corp......................... The Mgcksvillc_ Rnlerprise ............................... Mocks\*illtt Hardware Co..................................... Davie Shoe Shop Town of Mocksvillc Heffner Bolick J. IK Green Miiiitig Co. ..................................... Zep Mfg. Co. ...... S. W . Brown & Son .......................................... Copy Craft, Inc. Bank of Davie Slate Comm, for ihe Blind ................«........... Mocksvillc Hospital Greens Store ..... F. E. Peebles, Salar> ■Florence Mackine, Silar> Leo F. Williams, Salary Doris B. Frye, &ilar> Hariman Electric Service ................................. Ossie C. Allison C. C. Sanford Sons Co. ..................................... Mocksville Cash Store ....................................... F.dwin Earle ....... BrowiVSmoot Typewriter Co. ......................... C. F. Wagner .... Joice Motor. Lines Commercial Printing Co...................................... Observer Printing House ................................. D. F. Winters, jatl fees and salary .............. Duke Power Co. Dewey Sain, Salary & hardware ..................... Dr. G. V. Greene . Gm’crnmenlal Guide Margaret R. Carter ...................................... C. R. Carter, Salary ...................................... J. M . Groce, Sahrv R. P. M arlin, Salary Duke Po\ver Co S. B. Cook .... W.. H. Hoots Owings Si Graves ......................................... G» G. Daniel ..................................... ............ fc: R. Voglcr ..................................................... Nancy Tutteron* Davie Co. Library F. E. Peebles Starettc Type\vri1er Service ....................... Edwin Earle ... Doris B. Frye Leo. F. Williams ............................................ Florence C. Mackie ........................................ Kathlyn Reavis ............................................... Monroe Calculating Machine Co............... Governmental Guide ...................................... Tnst. of Gov. . J. E. Kelly, envelopes .................................. Dr. G. V . Greene ............................................ Dewey Sain ... Mocksvillc H.trdware Co. ...........-.............. E. C. Koontz J. P. Green Milhng Co. ............................... S. W . Brwvn f Son Heffner & BoUck Grocery .......................... Greens Store ............. W . N. Smith Esso Scrvice .............. ........... Shutl & Bowden Home & Auto Supply United Variety Store Home & Farm Supply Co......................... Tommy Hendrix ....... Mrs. L. R. Po^vcll .. Mrs. Richard Allen ... Mrs. Albert W hite .. Mrs. L. B. Sheets ......................................... David C. W alton ......................................... Mrs. L. B. Sheets Mocksville Nursing Home ............ Davie Co. Welfare Dept. -..... C H . McM ahan .........«.............. J. M . Groce .. Janie N. Cozart ............-............... Ossie C. Allison Amy Jane Talbert Blackwelder & Smoot ................... Mocksville Hoi.pitnl Davie Record Harding & Horn —..................... Cenlr.il ToJepJ7o»c Co. -................ Veteran Cabinet Shop ................... W . R . Cook .. G.’A. Tucker Hospital Saving Associalion ..... Stale Comm, for the I3lmd ....... T he Western N. C. Sanatornmi , Tower Clock Service Co.................. City of Mocksvillc ...........-.......... The Cooleemee Journal ............... W . J. Wilson D. F. W inters ................................... Clarencc B. James Hartman Electric Scrvice ............ Davie-Yadkin Health Dept. ..... Underwood Corporation ................ E. C Tatum ...................................... 250.00 250.00 175.20 3.00 102.20 25.98 25.84 29.16 47.11 122.00 .95 1.30 153.00 194.65 110.60 155.40 145.04 7.31 3a63 22.59 125.00 107.50 161.20 16.00 3.00 38.55 210.00 25.00 191.83 1.65 3.63 88.60 28.05 13.85 49.09 23.66. 1.35 9.45 .75 48.00 35.00 60.00 30.00 30.00 15.00 1.03 25M 12.00 5.00 5.00 117JK) 192.56 266XX) 12.89 15.00 30.80 15.00 62J0 35.00 151.30 216,78 38.00 111^2 15.50 85.00 1237 10.50 125.00 229.00 45.82 12.75 500.00 125.00 5.00 2S.32 153.37 161.05 22,407.23 Davie Co. Library .............................................. W . J. W ilson, Salary ..................................... Batik of Datio ..................................................... Da>ne Frecjsor Locker ....................-..... Harding & Horn ..................................... Davie Co. Old Age Assist. Fund ........ Davie Co. Aid lo Dc|). Chldn. Fund . Amy Jane Talberl, Salary ................. Janie N. Cozart, Salary Davie Co. Welfare Dept................. C H. M cM ahan. Welfare Board J. M. Grocc, Welfare Board E. C. Tatum, Welfare Board ................... Mrs. L. R. Po^vell, Begirding Home ........ Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding Home .... Mrs. Albert White, Boarding Home ........ Mrs. L. B. Sheets, Boarding Home ....... Jasper Dniin, Boanling Home Mocksville Nursing Home ........ David C Walton. Gen. Assist. Allison Johnson Co. ..................................... Mocksville Hospital ...... W ilkins Drug Co............ N. C. Baptist Hospital . American Public Welfare Association __ The Western N. C. Sanalorium ................ Dawe Real Esatc Loan & Ins. Co............... Starette Typewriter Sen ice The Davie Record .......... Ccniral 'I'clephone Co, . DaviC'Y.'idkin Heallh Depl Commercial Printing Co W . R. Cook, Salary ..... G. Alex Tucker, Salary & back pay ........ Dewey Stiin, liack pay .. Eloise C. Stephens, Salary & back pay . W . H . Dillard ................. Horn Oil Co. ..........................-....................... .. 963.25 358,25 ■ 2uaoo ^ 211.00 190.00 725.00 217.10 9.U0 . 200.00 . 10.517.94 . . 100.54 45.16 102.18 305.90 . 227.00 629.10 315.90 . 308.60 393.00 38.00 315.20 3.62 217.6611.35 2.00 12.19 18.64 64,13 24.25 20.70 14.25 4.70 216.32 8.00 32.95 151.20 119.95 Tirt.0032.50 13a20 207.16 6:50 2.40 99.85 22.30 3.00 2.16 70.51 37.06 241.20 . . 47.47 .. 258,56 25.00 155.40 166.65 6.36 2.65 15.00 .. 932.25 .. 35650 276.03 129.10 14.00 <5.00 5.00 5.00 3aoo 64.63 30.00 30.00 36.00 . 25,00 15.00 20.00 44.50 laTo .. 56,00 20.00 17.07 5.00 17.75 5.00 72£0 500.00 54.35 .. 203.70 .. 493.08 .. 40.00 .. 454.20 5iW 2,23 Home & Farm Supply Co. .............................— Edwin Earle ...., R. J. Smith ..... - Commercial Printing Co...................................... Davie-Yadkin Health Dept................................... S. H. Chafftn, S-ihry Faye E Naylor. Salary .......-............................. Shoaf Ice & Coal Co Mitchell Printing Co...................;....................... Nancy Tutterow, Salary .................................... R. P. Marlin, bahry s J. M. Groccj Salary C R. Carlcr, Silary C. R. Voglcr. b th ry Kathlyn H. Reavis. Salary .................................. Amy Jane Talbert. Salary ...............-.................. Ossie C. Allison. Salary ...................................... Janie N. Co«ait S ilirv Davie Co. Welfare Dept....................................... C. H. M cM ahni J. M. Grucc ... Mrs. L. R. Powell Mrs. Richard Allen Mrs. Albert W hite ................................................ Mrs. L^ B. Sheets .................................................. Jasper Dulin ........................................................... Moeks\’illc Nursing Home .................................. David C. W alton ................................................... J. J. Allen....... - - Davie Dry Goods Co............................................. O air Grove ■Scrvlce“ Statlon Mocksvillc Cash Store .......................-.............. Western N. C. Sanatornmi ................................ Rowan Memorial Hospital ................................ N. C. Baptist Hospital ...................................... Coo])cr U. Cass Co W . R. Cook .. W . J. Wilson Davie Real Estate Loan & Ins. Co.................. W ilkins Drug Co. ................................................. Carolina fjlue Printers Photostat Prints --- Harlnian Electric Service, rep nr Harding & Horn, rent ........ City of Mock.sville, water . The Davie Record, Adv. ... D. F. Winlers, Salary Si jail fees .................. Lillie Leak, Court Stenographer ...................... The Mocksvillc Enterprise . G. A. Tucker, Salar>* & mileage . .75 4.75 2.50 66.14 500.00 295.10 153,50 • 1,20 86.37 151.20 29.16 26.20 26.40 234.00 189.95 268.75 218,70 129.10 « 12.00 5.00 5.00 30.00 67.42 30.00 32,09 45.00 25.00 15.00 15.00 6.00 ” 10.00 73.48 20.50 69,93 65.00 saoo 2M.90 152.95 • 25.07 1.50 12.00 44.65 15.00 422J0 84.70 23J0 325.20 W . J. Wilson, Salary’.... The Davie Record, Printing ..................... W . H . Dillard, repair Co. House ..................«... D. F. Winters, Food for Prisoners & Salary .... Harliitrtu Elec. Service, Repair Co. House .~... Sanford Mando Co., Repair Co. House ........... John M. Strong, officc supplies .................. Oak Grove Service Station .................................. Edwin Earle, office supplies .............................. Bank of Davie, Juror tickets.............................. Kale Bitting Reynolds M, Hospital . —........... Dr. G. V. Greene, Salary ..................................... OCTO BER— 1951 Davie Co, Old Age Assist. Fund .......... Davie Co. Aid to Dcp. Chldn. . Fed, KeKcr\'c Bank of Richntond, W . H . tax.... Davie Co. A, T. P. D. Fund ........................ Hank of Davie, -Int. on bond .............................. fiaiik of Davie. Int. on Bond ....................i...... Nancy TnUerow, Salary .....;.......— ................... Kathlyn Re:\vis, Salary ..................................... Faye E. Naylor, Salary ..............................—..... Fred W hite, Salary ....................................—...... S. B. Cook. Salary ..............-.......................... D. F. Winlers, Salary & jail cost ....—............ Davie-Yadkin Health Depl..................................... Florence Mackie, Salary _ ..7 F. E. Peebles, Sahiry ... - L w r. Williams, Salary Doris n. Frye, Salary ... S. H . Chaffin. Salary ... J. C. Warren, witness fee L. M. Freeman, wiiuess fee ........... C R. Voglcr, Salary .......................—............... C. R. Carter, Salary .... ............... R. P. M arlin, Salary ...... ............... J. M. Grocc, Salary .... ................ W . R. Cook, Salary ........................................... Eloise C. Stephens, Salary .................................. Davie Co. Library .................................................... Dr. G. V. Greene, Salary ...................................... Central Telephone Co....................................-......... Duke Po>vcr Co. . 12261.49 SE P T E M B ER— 1951 Federal Reserve Hank of Richmoiui , Davie Co. Aid to Dep. Chldn. ......................... Davie Co. Old Age Assist....... ......................... C. C. Bailey, hay, Co. Home ................................. Davie Co. A. T, P. D - Faye E. Naylor, Salary ........-............................... Mocks\nlle National Guard U nil ....................... Bank of Davie, Interest Bonds ......................... Hospital Saving Assocnlion R. P. Martin, Salary J, M. Grocc, Salary C, R. Carter, Salary Eloise C. Stephens. S ih ry Duke Power Co......... S. B. Cook, Salary ..........-................-............... S. H. Chaffin, Salary ..............'.............................. Siarrclte Typewriter Service .......................... The Micliie Company C, R. Voglcr, Salary ............................................. Nancy Tutterow, Sahry Davie Co. Library .... F. E. Peebles, Salar> Leo F. Williams, Salary . Doris B. Frye, Salary . - Florence Mackie, Salary .... Kathlyn H.‘ Reavis, Salary ..................-.......... T. A. Vanzant, Land Sa'les .................................... J. P. Green M illing Co., feed Co. H o m e......... S. W . Brown & Son, Food Co. H o m e............. Greens Groccry, Food Co. Home 22,945.05 AUGUST 19S1 D ISBU RSEM EN T S Fed. Reserve Bank of Richmond, W ith. Tax .... Bank of Davie, Bond, Ini. St Cost ................... Davie Co. A. T. P. D. Margaret R. Carter, Sahry F. E. Peebles, Salary Florence' Mackie, Salar> Leo F. Williams, Salary Doris B. Frye, Salary .. Dr. G. V. Greene ..................................................... Davie Co. Library -------------......------ Eloise. C. ’Stephens, Salary S. B. Cook, Salary ....... Hospital Saving Assn. Greens Store .................. Mocksville Hard^vare C a .. United Variety Store . ;. P. Green M illing C a S. W . Brown & Son ... Duke Po%ver Co. — ..... Dewey Sain, Salary ....... James H. Anderson Co. --- W . N. Smith Esso Scrvice Heffner & Bolick State Comm, for the Blind E. C. Morris, Ins____________ Blackwelder & Smoot ......... Horn O il Co. Monroe Calcutating Machine Co. Jllain M fg. Co-----------.....— . Mitchell Printing ~Co.Burroughs Adding Machine ' Central Tel<»hoiie Co.H all Drug Co. .... 531.50 5,390.00 9.88 I43i0 150.05 121.15 14a90 32.80 25.00 155.40 230.20 144.20 36.90 45.02 ZOO ' 9.14 47.82 29.55 4823 -177.75 25.65 6.00 18.88 95.22 2a80 3.98 ^8.52 3.66 • 18.00 38.05 \6M63.90 1.40 Heffner Si Bolick, Food, Co. Home ...... W . N. Smilh Esso Scrvice, Fuel Co. Home . Rankin-Sanford Implement Co., Co. Home ... Brown-Rogcrs-Dixon Co., Paint Co. Home ... Black^velder-Smoot, clothing Co. Home ........ Leslie's Mens Shop, clothing Co. Home ...... C. C. Sanford Sons Co., clothing Co. Home . Dewey Sain, Salary ........... State Comm, for the Blind * ”Commerclal Printing C a, office supplies ...... G. A. Tucker, Salary......... W . R. Cook, Salary -...:....................................... John Waters, Witness fee C. L. Beck, Witness f e e ............................. • L. K. Howard, Witness fee Maxalene Holman, Witnesb fee , . - Vestal Myers, Witness fee R. Paul Foster, Witness fee W . T. Myers, Witness fee E dw n Earle, Office Supplies Mocksville Hardware Co. Shutt & Bowden ................. Davie,Yadkin Health Dept Central Telcpljone Co. ..... Oak Grove Scrvice Station Mr. .G. B. McDaniel Mrs. L. R. Powell, Boarding Home-........ Mrs. Richard'Allen, Boarding Home -...... M r8..Albcrl W hite, Boarding Home ............ Mrs. I,. B. Sheets. Boarding Home ............ Jasper Dulin, Boarding H om e'....................... C. C. Sanford Sons Co Mocksvillc Gish Store ------...................... H all Drug Co.............-.....................................- Wilkins Drug C a .. Wilkes County Welfare Dept. —-----.... Ro\van Memorial Hospital ............................ Davis/Hospital ...........................................— Mocksvillc Hospital ............................................ Mocksvillc Nursing Home -----------..... David W alion, Gen. Assist -- , C. H. M cMahan, Welfare Board ................. J. M. Groce, Welfare Board ...................— is.'C. Tatum, Welfare-Board ............ Davie Co. Welfare Dept................................... Stiic N. Cozart, Salary ------------sie C. Allison, Salary . . . Amy Jane Talbert, Salary ......................-___ Davie Feed & Seed Co. .........................u...... Harding St Horn, rent ------------------Cily o f Mocksville, water ..........—............The Mocksville-Enterprise, officc supphes . ISJJO ■ 9 i0 296.15 7.65 25XX) 7.50 10.00 > 9 0 735,70 122.75 25.00 Dewey Sain, Salary...........'................................... Commercial Printing Co., officc supplies ......... Sanford Mondo Co................................................... C, C. Sanford Sons Co................................ W . N. Smith Esso Service . “ . Harley Walker Mutual Burial Assn................... Rankin Sanford Imp. Co. ................................. Davie Furniture Co......... Mocksville Implement Co. ............................ Home & Farm Supply ............................................. Hendricks & Merrell Furniture Co......... ......... Mocksvillc Hardware Co Heffner & Bolide, food Co, Home ................... The Pure Oil Co., fuel Co. Home ................... N, B. Dyson, fertilizer Co, Home ................... James Williams & Co. ......................................... Harding & Horn, rent ......................................... ■Qty of Mocksville .................................................. J. P. Green Milling C a . . . Curtis 1000, Inc. _______ _ John C, Bowles, repair jail ................................. S. W . Brwvn & Son, food C a Home __......... G. A, Tucker, Salary .... . ....... Mocksvillc H ospital'....... ....... Greens Store, food Co. Home ....________:___; W . J. \’\nison. Salary ................ Rodwell Elec. Co, _______________________ HdspUal Saving Assn.. Insurance ............ Edwards & Broughton ........................................... Augusta Dry Goods Co, Metro Products Co., janitor supplies . Goltra Inc. 2^15.90 293.00 916.00 40,00 ■ 9,87 153.50 600.00 605.00 29.10 29.16 2620 26.40 231.20 60.68 143.00 294.10 ■1.00 6,00 234.00 151.20 155.60 151.65 140.70 32.80 129.50 187.95 5.00 ^ *51.33 2L40 41.74 28.69 17.69 5.15 19022 4SS 18.75 4.95 184.25 98.52 18.91 306J3 220.70 32.09 725 2.50 1.90 .50 24.00 1.78' 3.75 1.25 1.60 , 538.50 7(5.60 10,0d 10.00 41.16 60.00 . 30.00 30A) 45.00 11.16 6.77 18.75 2,00 16.50 46.62 105.00 29.00 . 25.00 15.00 5.00 '5.00 SjOO 12.00 129.10 2^.48 299.23 19.80 15.0011.50 . . ___________135.69 Leo F. Williams 9,61125 793.50 . 297.50 226.00 9,87 92.50 255.00 15120 192.20 153.50 3125 121.55 314.80 5oaoo - n a 7 2 “- 157.40 140.85 32.80 294.10 L95 2,80 234.00 26.40 29.16 26.20 196.10 23020 155.60 '25,00 ' 75,80 59.14 177.00 126.94 9.$3 13.43 17.93 320 1.55 5.53 18.94 2200 1.90 25.24 20; ^ . 129.22 - 2.50 15.00 12.07 56.98 17.41 7,00 14.35 Stale Comm, for Blind ..................................... Davie C a Aid to Dcp. Chldn, . . CaroUiia Blue Printers ............ Davie Lumber Co., repair Co. Home .............. Edwin Earie, office supplies .......;........ E. C. Tatum, Welfare Board C. H. McMahan, Welfare Board Davie Co. Welfare Board, postage ................Janie N. Cozart, Salary ........... Ossie C. Allison, Salary ......... _ Amy Jane Talbert, Salary .... . . . Kate Bitting . Memorial Hospital .....________ Mrs. L. R, Po^vell, Boarding Home ................. Mrs. Richard Allen, Boarding Home ........... Mrs. Albert White, Boarding Home ........... Mrs^ L. B. Sheets, Boarding Home ............. Jasper Dulin, Boarding Home ........................ David Walton, Gen. Assist.............................;.... Mocksville Nursing Home ................................. G. B. McDaniel . . . . R w a n Memorial Hospitsil .................................■Jt M . Livingood ................................................■..... Harold Seats .............................................. W ilkins Drug Co. ................................................. Odus Chaffin .......I...;................................ The Western N. C, Sanatorium ........................ Miller-Evans:..... .... Starettc -Typewriter Co. ..........................:............ Davie Co. Old. Age Assist ............................... Boger & Hoard ............_______________________ Pine Hall Brick & Pipe Co_______________:____ Clyde Roberts, Witness fee Brown-Rogers^ Co., paint Co. Home ....... &00 47.40 166.65 3i0 3UB 5.79 45.03 13,65 3.55 107.77 282.25 •12.00 68.59 120i0 SJOO ■5,00 12,00129.10 236.91 269.31 15425 30.00 37.11 •30.00 ■ 30.00. ASM . 15.00 25,00- 2aoo 17.50^ 25.00 . 6.oq2m 36.00 36,50 4,86 5.05 627.00 4.05 20.00 225 ■•'146.41 9,017.85 N O V EM B E R—1951 Clarence B. James, Painting Co. Home Bldgs...: 724,35 Fed. Reserve Bk. of Richmond, W . H. Tsuc , 220,20 Davie . Co. A. T. P. D........................................... 9.88 Hospital Saving Assn.......................................... 35.30 . C. R. Cartcr,..Salary _____________________:....... 26.40 J. M . Groce,' Salary ................................:_______ 2620 R, P. Martin,' Salary ...............................^..... 2916 Fred W hitp, S a la r y ............................................ 50^ S.: B. Cook, Salary . „ ioo,M Davie Library . _ .... 155,40 Eloise C. Stephens, Sahry J _ ^ .8 0 Nancy Tutterow . . . . ..._ 150.10 C, R. Voglcr ............................ ^ ' 231.00 S.^H , Cfiaffin . . 296.90 % Naylor . . . ,15240Elam M fg. Co. ..................................................... 36OO ■ ---------—---- ,1,8.60 ----------------147M ........................................... ■ .140.60: T H E D A V I E R E C O R D , M o c k s v ille . K C . '■ Florence Mackie Ctens B. Frye’ . . Odus Chaffin .. Observer Printing House ................ W liitc Officc Supply Co................... Davie*Yadkin Health Dept.............. Monroe Calculating Machine Co. Duke Power. Co. ........ Greens Store ________ J. P. Green M illing Co United Variety Store Davie Freezor Locker JIe/f«cr & Bolick ...... The Pure Oil Co. — Augusta Dry Goods Co State Comtn. for the Blind ......... Dr. G. V. Greene S. W . Brown & Son ..................... Dewey Sain ..... ^A m y Jane Talbert ......................... Ossie C Allison .. . . Janie N; Cozart ______.................. Davie Ca-.Welfare Depl................. C. H . McM ahan E. C Tatum .. J. M . Grocc . Mrs. L. R. Powell Mocksvillc Nursing Home .......... Mrs. Richard Allen --------— Jasper Dulin ..................................... ---^Mrs.—Li—Bi-Sheels- 11820 32.00 90.00 51.72 3.50 500.00 4.66 7025 38.64 29.69 4.42 33.60 3824 38.44 138.18 109.77 25.00 29.80 177.00 304.34 221.44 12720 12.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 42.92 25.00 35.00 45M ___^35.00. Gregory, Thomas S.......J.... Griffith, Betty Lou ........... Griffith, Daniel W'cbb ...... Hairston, Parshall Heirs Hanes, Loula . Kate Bitting- Memorial Hospital Davie Co. Schools .......................... A. T. Grant 14.00 . 20,000.00 Hodgson, John Henry .. Jones, Donald H.......... Leonard, Maggie Lee ... McCullough, M ay . McD.inicl, S. G. Mason, Annie Crcason ... Mack. Ola ............. Peebles, Robert H. Rose, W illiam Charles .. Safrit, Lois Mac . Shore, Norman D. ' Stewart, Mr.s. Ida S........ Tutterow, Mollic CIco Williams, Billie .............. 2524 8.73 8.73 63.93 31.77 115.66 25.66 157.18 12,11 526.99 277.93 874J19 78.69 62.10 15025 52226 2928 880.83 71.80 Stewart, Lee _________ Stewart, Mrs. Ida S. Teague, Clcdian Tutterow, Mollic Oeo Thompson, Joe Heirs Tuckcr, Lorcne Walker, Leslie Green, el al Williams, Billie ............ TOTAL NAM E Hendrix vs. Armstrong Davie Co. vs. Reavis .... Tom Wiscmon ............. Ernest Morgan .............. Ricc vs. Bailey ..... Hamlin vs. Carter ... Bartdoinels Giordano . I^harr vs. Hodges . TOTAL U N ITED STATES BONDS DESCRIPT ION M ATU RITY VALU E Betty Lou Griffith: Unir«rSrmcT-Savinp-B6mlS=Se-rifer-E----- $ 6,635.96 COST Bank of Davie vs. Bailey ..... Horn Johnson Co. vs. Bailey Wini/rcd Neal Commonwealth Hat Co. vs. Driver ..10-171-505 George Henry Mitchell ..........:......Cnsh Bond Jasper Fowler .......................................11-4-16W Marvin B ry ant_____________________Cash Bond Edgar Brim --------------------H-36-1748 Hugh Qayton Gregory Estate .— Oish Bond .E ddic_tl_C ollins_—____________Cash Bond 250,00 Central Telephone Go. — David .W alton ......— Minnie W ilson Taylor ;... Davie Shoe Shop ..... . Edwin Earle ----.... Mocksvillc Cash Store .... M r. G. B. McDaniel Mocksvillc Hardware Co. .W . H. Dillard ......... The Davie Record .. . Home & Farm Supply .... E. G. Twiss .......— Edwin Earle ---...... G. A. Tucker . Kathlyn Reavis W . R. Cook Davie Real Estate, Loan Co. City .of . Mocksville _________..... Harding & Horn ........................ Commercial Printing Co. ---- Harold Seats W ilkins Drug Co. ------- Hartman Electric Scrvice C. C Sanford Sons Co. ... D. F. W in te rs ................. Mocksville Hospital .....___ H all Drug Co----------- G. A. Tucker Brown^Smoot Typewriter Co........ Tlie Western N. C Sanatorium . 6120 15.00 11.00 5.65 4.10 34.42 10.00 125 .32.00 SM 225 300.00 36.75 46220 .19ai0 227.50 402.50 18.12 I5 i» 23.47 30.00 1.00 1925 4.00 34220 2M 18.57 25.00 1.40 15XX) 27,742.43 County Acconotant Summary RE C EIP T S F O R D E C E M B E R I9S0 T HROU G H N O V E M B E R 30, 1951 Taxes... Fees Clerk Superior Courts, Fees Register of Deeds Interest, Penalty & Cost .... Schedule B. Licence .............. Income Co. Home -------- Sundry Income --------- Pro Rata Administration W ithholding T a x '------- Hospitalization--------- Dividends................... Taxes Prior Years ...$162,973.01 3,914.57 ... 2,795.75 ... l.liaS9 670.75 ... 2,921.42 .... 19,223.15 .... 5228XX) .... 2,538.92 400.70 .... 1,200.00 .... 5,439.51 Plus Balance Nov. 30, 1950 208,52427 132J4S.83 Less Total Disbursements ...... Bank Balance,Nov. 30, .1951.. 34087020 . -206,079.47 . 134,790.73 N O R T H C ARO LIN A , D A V IE COUNTY. I. S. H . Oiaffin, Clerk, of the Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, beg to submit the following report of savings accounts, trusts and fees payable as of November 30, 1951. SA VIN G S ACCOUNTS Anderson, John M . .....—- ------- • Bahnsbn,^Hal ....^....1 .....- ;..— ~— ■— ; Booii Qyde ----- Burton, ^cirs ..► D- 15-619-663 E $ 500.00 D- 15-619-664 E 500XK) C-121-4ftV705 K 100.00 C-12M03-706 E 100.00 C-12Mai-707 K 100.00 L-148-711-680 E 50.00 D.iniel Webb Griffith: United Stales Savings Bonds—Series E D- 15-619-665 E $ 500,00 D- 14-532-879 E 5oaoo C-121-403-708 E loaoo C-121-403-709 E 100.00 C-121-403-710 E 100.00 L-I48-71I-68I E 50.00 Mollic CIco Tutlcrow: Untied Stales Savings Bond—Scries E M- 12-8m-031 E $ <1,000,00 M- 12-8W-032 E i.ooaoo D- 15-619-669 E 50020 D- 15-619-670 E 500.00 D- 15-619-671 E 50020 D- 15-619-672 E 500.00 D- 15-623-017 E 5oaoo C-I28-67I-204 E 100.00 C.128-671.20S E 10020C-128-671-206 E*10020 C-128-671-207 E 100.00 United States Savings Bonds-r-Scries F M- 1-318-479 F $ 1200.00 M- 1-318-480 F 120020 M- 1-318-481 F 1,000.00 W illiam Charles Rose; United States Savings Bonds—Series G A- 2-898-422 G .$ 500.00 C- 5-246-922 G 100.00 C- 5-246-923 G 10020 C- 5-246-924 G 10020 Letitia Rodwell: United States Savings Bonds—Series E M- 21-439-026 E $ 1,000,00 M- 21-439^27 E “ •1.000,00 TOTAL - TRUST ACCOUNTS Andcr.<ton, John M................. Boger, Ma Clary ................... Bahnson, H.1I ....... Booe, Clyde Burton, Heirs Boger, Evelyn Bessent Family Graves ....... Campbell, Clifford Heirs .... Campbell, Chflon- Heirs ....... Carter, Ollie G......................... Cirter, Troy, Jr....................... Carter, Lewis C ................... Carter, Donnie Everctle ..... Carter. Brenda Kay .— -„....._........ Cash, Sallic -------------- Carson, Rucell -------............;...... Crotts, Girol j;ahe — Couch. George Edgar .. ~ Coucfi. Jackic Donald . Deal, Pauline- :.......—------ Daniel, Douglas ----- Foust, Jane -----— :— Gaither, Mrs. Ellen'H eirr ....................... Gregory, Thomas. S. ... Griffith, Betty Lou ___: Griffith, Daniel W ebb . Hairston, Parshall Heirs .... Hanes, Loula ---------- Hodgson, John Henry .______;...______ Jones, Donald H. ........._____................... Tones. Blanche' __:______...... -Raplieal Hairston Guy W alson . • C i^nbell. Clifford Heirs Cish. S a llir — . ---- Crotts, Carol Jane .................. ..— '.Forest,' Jane .....................-.-y.---- Gaither, Mrs. Ellen Heirs---- 15828’ ,.. 26526 315.76 287.62 150.06 ... SI6.18 ... 89523 ... i04J>7 .... ■ 20.07 Rowan Mem. Hos. vs. Cornatzcr ....10-192-566 Mary Sclzcr .......................................Cash Bond Curry Cheek ..... Cecil Jo Bank of Davie vs. Wagner . Clyilc C. Lovette ................ Ray Ransom Fountain ---- Oliic Sam SmitJi ..................... Waverly Camp ........................ Oval Odell Lash ..................... Bclvin Powell ........................ Buck Pool 1.012.50 U. S. of A. vs. Fundcrburkc .......12-274-2233 Hainmcr vs. Lagle ..............................10-*I99«S88 St. Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co....11-194-2031 W illiam Harold Knox .................-Cash Bond James Boyd Leathcrman ...............Cash Bond William J. Suttlcs ------------Cash Bond Giarlie Fletcher Ward, Jr. , Davie Lumber Co. vs. Graham ---13-48-237! TOTAL 3,675.00 2220.00 $ 1,500.00 $10,220.00 Lackey,' Etta ......------ Leonard, M ag^e Lee .... Lysingeri Gladys Carter Lewis, Bobby Ray ...i..;. L^vis, James Eugene ,— McCullough, Carol Ann McCullough, M ary ----- M cCullough,. Peggy ^McDaniel, S. G. ......— Mason^ Annie Creason .. Mitchell Heirs __________ Mack, Ola Moore, W . 'L. est. ....: Peebles,: Robert H . — Rose, W illiam Charles Rodweli 'Letitia ........... Riddle, Bctly Jean ....... Safrit,. Lois Mae- — ..— Shore, Norman D. ........ Siewart, Susie-Ohvia .... .$ 15828 5.74 26526 315.76 . 287.62 20.00 389.94 150.06 32.32 522 522 522 522 522 516.18 25.00 .. 89523 13jOS 13.05 .y 525 .. .1,724.06 .. 104.07 20,07 2524 .. 1,02123 .. 1,02123 63.93 31.77 ... 115.66 ... 25.66 ,. 25.00 13.72 ... 157.18 522 ... . 54.74 .. ^54.74 ... '58.30 ...'• 12,11 5820 ... .. 526.99 ... . 277.93 .. .•••4.92 ... 874.09 .. 22326 .... 78.69 ... 862. ....$ 1 ^ .0 0 .. 1,724.06 150.25 .... 52226 ... 76.76 77.73 2928 31.64 6266.70 19.02 30.00 6.56 71J0 $21,665.91 JU D G M EN T S PAYABLE DOCKET AM OU N T ...Advanced Cost $ ..^Advanced Cost ........jVdvanced Cost .............Advanced Cost ........................10-168-408 ........................10-162-476 .....................Cash Bond Advanced Cost .........12-132-1937 ...10-142-419 ...Probatioji 6,00 H.00 2a42 6.00 30.00 5320 m o o 15.00 2.00 S2M3 75.00 18.74lOOJOO 150.00 300.00 161.00 SOM 150.00 Cooper, Robert ....---- Qcnient, Hayden ........ Dickson, Ben ................. Dillard, R. H................... Daniels. Duke ............... Dinkins, N. H................. Dcadmaii. M. C. ............................13-55-2383 Drnughn, Thurmon .........................9-265-1125 Dyson, R. G....................................12-238-2166 Dnlin, Walter Nathaniel ...........10-260-1609 Ealon, H. R ......................................13-46-2367 Ellis, B. C. ........ ...Oish Bond ...Cash Bond ...Cash Bond ...Cash Bond ......10-177-523 ...Cash Bond ,..11-163-1971 ...11-184-2015 ...11-182-2011 ...Cash Bond 350X)0 50.00 88.15 50.00 75X10 15a00 33.75 300.00 100.00 6aoo 100.00 38.00 136XK) 48.00 666.02 62.50 2aoo 100.00 SOMlOOM 100.00 36329 Eagle, Margaret ..............................9-265-H25 Eaton, Buck ........................— 10-99-1344 Edwards, R. W . ............................10-172-I4W Edwards, Ila M..............................10-275-1639 Embry, H. S. ....................................9 - 1 94 ^ Ellis, Lydia ...................................12-260-2205 Evans, J. L.......................................12-178-2041 Evans, Nick ......................................9-278-1150 Ev.ms. Robert ..................................13-28-2334 Evans, R. C........................................13-55-2383 Fr>'inoycr, H. R....................................Various Fcspcrman, Clyde ..........................10-47-1260 aggarfT'Lr'F.................“ .:r:~nnnlO- Foster, Eula ............... Foster, James ............. Fosier, E. L. ............... Foster, R. L.................. Fritis, w . G. r........... Furchcs, Robert ......... Gnint, A. T. ------ Greene, L. E. ............. Gaither, W ilborn ....... Gales. W . S.................. Gaither, Amos L. ...... Gr.nnt. Delia —......... Griffith, J. S. .............. Gregory. M. H. ........ Gregory, Ivey ............ Gregory. J. P............... Gri/fuh, J. W . .......... $4,34120 FEE S PA Y A B LE November 30, 1951 DOCKET Allen, H. C .......J...... Alexander, James .... Allen, Garland' ........ Anderson, Christin. ... Anlhoiiy, W . M........ Anderson, C S......... Allen, Vadcn ............ Allen, Robert .......... Allen. J. J.................. Appcrson, G. R........ Allen, E. V. .............. Ashe, Lucille ............ Austin, Cecil ............ ....9-170-958 $ ...........9-255-U06 ...........9-255-‘ll05 ...........9-280-1155 ...............Various ...........13-28-2334 ....13-28-2334 ...11-173-1993 .....13-55-2383 .....9-278-1150 ..10-289-1666 ...10-275-1639Ayers, W . E....................................10-275-1639 Badgctt, Tommy J..............................Various Brock, B. C ....i...".............................Various Banks. Ray ....................-.............12-115-1897 Beck, T. C. .....................................9-190-988 ______„.....9-238-1075 ...................10-21-1226 AM OUNT '2 i0 .50 ^ -SO 1.00 1.50 1028 4.00 120 tM .75 4X10 ,1.00 1.00 220 291iX) 57.50 .4.00 2.50 Gooch. Clyde E..............................12-262-2208 Graham. David ................................H-97-1864 Gough, Jack ......................................13-42-2361 Greene, Dr. G. V...........................13-55-2383 l-lolman. Maxaline S. Matlhcws ....Various Hicks, Claude ....................................-Various Harding. John .....................................Various Hairc, W . C.........................................9-170.958 Bailey, C. M ............. Barker, Pinkie ....... Benson, J. G............ Beard, Lucy ............ Bamhardt, J. H . ... Barncrcastle, C H. Baily, E. F. . Basinger, R. C......... Bank of Davie ...... Boger, J. W . Boger, Mrs. M. _...10-51-1265 .....lO-H-1213 .11-146-1941 13-28-2334 13-42-2361 11-55-2383 11-61-2397 _ 9-*133-900 9-133-900 Bo\vles, Qarehcc R..........................9-201-1006 Bowers, Charles Hubert ...............10-69-1300 Brock, Julius 10-289-1666 Boger, Albert 13-28-2334 Brewer, A. /. 13-45-2365 Blackwelder. ( A 13-55-2383 Burnette, W . R 12-289-2261 Bunch. J. A. 11-196-2023 Burnette, W . R 13-59-2393 Cook, W . R ........................................13-55-2383 Canter, Bill ......................................10-46-1259 Carlcr, Eddie ..................................10-50-1264 Chambers, Forrest W ......................,10-4-1197 Charles, Qarencc' —----------10-106-1362 Canupp, Hoot ................ Oimpbeli, R. L ................ Chunn, Lessic ................ Chunn, Hubert ................................10-58-1276 Call, S. M, 13-28-2334 Call, W illiam A 13-41-2360 Crews, Harry 9-257-1109 Clement, M . V 12-210-2111 Cranfieldi. Buster . .9-265-1125 Cope, W . B , Jr . „ ..9-268-1130 Cranor, H . A - 12-228-2148 Conrad. W illiam D. .....------...12-24-1-2171 Coblci A. F. .....................................10-68-1298 Corrcll, John Lewis .... Collins, Johnnie ........... ..10-181-1480 ...10-271-1630 ....10-58-1276 Cloer, Edd Junior Conrad, M. W .......... .................10-107-1363 ................12-^1-2206 ...............;.10-260-1609 ---------U-8-1698 ..11-134-1923 .....13-41-2359 ....10-97-1347 ...10-172-1469 ......11-6-1696 ....13-42-2361 ...11-51-1778 .1495---- ....10-65-1291 ....10-86-1330 ..i»-271.1136 ....13-28-2334 ...Various ___.Various .......Various ...9-202-1006 ...9-228-1057 ...10-198-1512 ...12-159-1997 ......9-188-984 ...12-209-2108 .....10-47-1260 ...10-131-1411 .10-215-1538 Hancock, Ralph ... Harding. Nell ...... Harding, John ...... Harp. C F. .......... Hendrix. Asbcrry Hairston, Albert Head, Andrew T. , Hairston, Clara .... Hill. R. L. ----- ...9-251-1098 ................9-228-1057 ................12-222-2135 .....10-95-1344 _.10-174-1471 ...10.226-.1555 ..10-164-1459 ...12-262-2208 HHyden, Ho%^*ard R. Hill, R. L ..................... Hauser, Reid ............ Hendricks, George R. Heffner, Orren —....... Hohnan, Charlie Mack Hoyle, M. H................... Howell, Louie ................. Ho»*cll, Turner ------- ...11-184-2015 .....13-55-2383 .....13-55-2383 ___.9-166-953 .....9-251-1098 1.00 1.75 Z70 2.50 20 3.00 4.00 ,50 ^00 35.00 IM 20 20 120 20 1.50 120 1.60 6i)0 1.00 4X10 4.00 4.50 4.80 — 320-.- 1.50 3.00 1.00 4.00 1.00 420 SM 42130 1.50 9.15 4.75 .25 20 220 420 1.00 10.00 IM 20 20 10:00 9AS 2220 2:00 120 20 1.00 1.00 2jOO 1.50 120 20 1.50 20 1.00. .50 1.00 4.00 4.00 120 20 120 120 1.50 Howard, Hol>ert ..............................9-255-1106 .50 1.50 Hockaday, C. L. ...------.............10-57-1275 20 120 Howell, I-onnie .—.............10-176-1473 1.00 120 H6w.ird, Delma ..................................11-7.-1697 .50 .•120 Howard, Key .................................11-24-1725 1.00 1.00 Hoots, W . H ........................_______.9-271-1136 20 220 Hoover, Ray C.- ..........---...........11-149-1946 1.00 420 Howard, Samuel M.........................13-55-2383 4.00 2.00 Hudson, James W . ........................9-202-1007 1.50 25 9-276-1145 1.50 .25 Hunter, J. Clyde -............________11-16-1710 1.50 1.00 Huffman, J. H. .......... ....11-149-1946 220 1.00 James, B. F. ...................................5-131-984 .50 1.00 Jcilkins. R . D. ..............12-116-1898 1.75 4.00 Jackson, J, H. ..9-159-943 420 2.00 9 1?0-958 •.50 4.00 James, Bessie ...9-l?0-958 .50 1.00 James, Margie ... 9-1W-958 20 • .50 James, Clarence ................________13-24-2326 3.00 1.0c Janies. Mrs. Melton — ........:.....U.142-1936 20 220 Jackson, J. H. ..................11-173-1993 320 3.0c Jones, W illie ....................................9-150-929 2.30 1.5C1 Johnson, W . P. ...................______9-226-1054 ' ^2.50 1.0(1 Johnson, E. P ...................................9-226-1054 20 1.0() Jordan, Charlie ________________10-181-1480 . .1.50 12(» Jones, C. N. ......................11-106-1880 2.00 1.0() Johnson, W . C____________________.9-271-1136 120 ’ 3.9t1 Johnston, Knox ________________13-28-2334 120 3.913 Jones, W . S_____________________11-194-2031 120 1,01J Johnstone, Knox -------________13-55-2383 ' 420 6.013 Junker, T. L ...........________13-28-2334. 420 1.51) Kcrlcy, Jack ---------________.9-238-1075 1.50 .515 King, Howard -------_______.9-266-1126 1.50 ■ .S0 Kimbcr, Hobcrt _________________10-56-1273 M.50 .3D King, R.................................______...1I-J44-1938 20 5.00 Kisler, C. T. __________---- 11-170-1989 1.50 8.12 Leaggans, F. R. ---...------11-200-2040 320 .50 Langston, Joe H........------.9-266-1126 120 120 Lewis, Carl Junior .............— ,10-1854484 ■ 2b 120 Lee, D. S. .......................------10-271-1630 .2 0 1210 Lapish, W ill ......________...-----10-275-1639 .120 2i0 U c , J. A. ----------....----11-135-1924 4.50 V \ THE DAVIE RECORD, Modaville; N. C. U ird , A. M ..................... Lancaster, C M. ......... Lonnic, Seed Co............ Lowery, Dr. J. R........... Logan, E. M ................... Long. Dr. W . M . ....... Moeksvillc Enterprise Mitchcll, F. A. ............ Mickle, W . A ................. Mangum, J. P. ...n-149.1946 ...11-168>198S ...„;9-226-10S4 it.28.2334 ......Various ...13-60-2396 Matthe%vs. R. F. ............ Miller, Ethel Louise ...... Miller, Mrs. Moses ........ Miller, Lewis Miller, C. V. Mock, Charles L........... Moore, Wade Moody, Ralph ................. Moore, Jack . Moxley, A. F. ................ Morris. E. C Myers, Savannah ........... Munday, Robert -........... Myers, Annie Myers, Jetra Myers, Ernest ....-.......... McNcely, M arilyn ......... McBride, Nnomi McClamrock, Lester ..... - McConeyhead, W illiam McDaniel, Clarcnce McLcan. F. D........... McDaniel, Seth Norrjs McDaniel. Colene .... McClamrock, D. K, Norris. H. A............. Naylor. Byninn ........ Neely. Bill ... Nunn, R. O. Ovcrcash, P. G................ Oakley, James ......-....... Oakley, Alma Pierce, Dorothy Faye Payne, Charlio Pcnninger, J. F................ Payne, Charlie Pitman, J. H. Parris, Isaac Poole, Clyde C. ............. Powers, W . E Powers. J. E. Pmvers, C. A. Pruitt. T. B. Poplin, Henry Prim, L. H. Putman, Wayne ............. RatJcdge, Dewey Ridenhour, Charles ....... Ridenhour, J. E............... Ray, A. C. .. Rivers, L. C. ................... Rickard. W . K................ Reavis, Kathlyn ......... Rominger, H. R............... Robertson, Dewey ......... Rohertson, H. A.............. Rominger, T. R............... Rummage, Baxter ......... Rumple, J. C. ................. Russell, C. . ........Various .......9-137-905 ...12-162-2003 ...12-200-2091 .....10-54-1271 10.54-1271 ......II-7-1697 13-28.2334 ...10-102-1355 ...10-253-1593 11-97.1864 11-149-1946 13-42-2361 13-55.2383 IO-n-1213 10-68-1298 10-96-1349 10-98-1349 ...10-167-1463 12-163-2003 10-53-1265 ______IOr.H-1213. 10-86-1330 10-73-1307 10-160-1454 il-6-1696 13-28-2334 12-143-1961 10-55-1272 10-96-1^ 12-292-1672 9-226-1054 10-58-1276 10-58-1276 10-25-1230 10-55-1272 I0-53-127O 10-56-1273 10-264-1617 11-168-1985 9-26MI18. 10-50-I2W 10-50-1264 10-50-1264 ...10-6-17 il S-2R-^34 11 165-1976 10-253-1593 10-198-1S12 10-226.1555 10-220-1547 11-19-1717 ..........11.62-1799 ...........M-89.1851 ...13-14-2308 ...9-203-1010 ...9-255.1106 ...10-42-1252 Sheek, Jason .................... Sidden. Erium Seamon, Charles ............ Scott. Edward .................. Seuford, W illiam A.......... Shaver. Forrest Vernon Seats, C. F. . Sbeek. H. G. Shccping, A. T Seaford, Harold .............. Seaford. Ashley .............. Shelton, John H............... Sigmon. R. P. Shult, George Smith, R. G. Snider, H . B. " Smith, David Smoot. W alter, Jr.............. Speer, Barney Speer, Eirn ... Speer, Bonnie Smith, Sljerrill ................. Smoot, Conrad ................ Sniediari. S. 0.................... SaHey, Bettie Smith, R. G. Snnih, E. L........................ Smoot, j. N. Saflcy, Harley C............... Smith, J. R ......................... Storey, J. C Stanley, France.s ............... Stanley. Harold Stewsirt, B. W Steele, fferheu Swiccgood, Hubert ......... Tucker, G. A...................... Talum, L. E. Talbert, J. C. Tatum, L. E................. Tatum, Bernard ........... Tatum, I-ucy Tise. A. G............................ Tomlin, George .............. Trivette. Luther .............. Townsend, Alma Lee Tomlin, Charlie .............. . Turner, N. E. ................... Turner, Mrs. Ruth ........ Turner, Lelia _________ Tutterow, Jeff ....!...... ............10.57-1275 ..............9-191-990 ..........11-160-1965 ..........U-207-2050 ..........11-133-1922 9-238-107S 9-265-1125 10-55-1272 10-80-1320 10-99-1351 12-236-2163 9-271-1136 U-28.2334 13-28-2334 - 13-28-2334 13-40-2357 ..Various 13-55-2383 12-159-1997 11-159-1143 9-265-1125 10-55-1272 10-188-1491 10-188-1491 10-188-1491 11-7-1697 11-74-1824 11-144-1398 _ 11-143-1397 ..9-95-792 ...........11-196-2033 ............13-46-2367 ............13-55-2383 ............10-198-585 l2’72-mi 10-28-1233 10-28-1233 10-253-1593 11-97-1864 ........-...10-58-1276 ...Various 9-125-882 12-95-1840 .9-160-945 10-95-1344 10-95-1344 10-280-1648 ...9-132-897 ...12-170-2020 ....10-65-1291 ™.13-28-2334 Vanzant, T. A.................. Van Eaton, Magdelene V an Eaton, Jake ........... Van Eaton. Mrs. Jake Waters, John N. ....... . Williams. Claude ........... W illard. Fletchcr ..... W hite. James L............. ...13-60-2396 ...9-299-1187 ...9-299-1187 ...9-299-1187 .......Various ...12-85-1814 ___9.137-905 ..10-117-1382 PAYM EN TS .12-22.1592 Poster, W illiam ...............«...2S.00 Morris, Lorcne Dureham .........-11.38-17SZ 37^)6 Lnird, Charlie Knymonit'.............ll-202-2(M3 '4000 Moultrie, KtitlinnicI ...................-11-181-2009 ■ 10.00 Whiit:, W illie ............................. 1M83-2012 .5.00 McMahnn, Nelson .....................60.00 TOTAL % 461.21 O LD P A R T IA L F A Y M E N T S - C IV IL DOCKET ------.9-265-1125 _______.9-278-1150 ..............10-95-1344 -..........12-144-1963 \ THE PAVIE BECORD. ilOCKSYiLLi. ti. p. DSCEMBEH 19. l«it tAGE FIVE THE DAVIE Schools Qose For Candlelight Servicfe OU mI Papw in Tke.Counljr No U qi»r, Wine. Bm t Adi NEWS AROUND TOWN. Holidays All Davte Cbuntv •choot will M in W UIb! MUIer spent Mvetal diy> last week w ith id a tiv n at M t U lla . cloMChris A O in d le llR h t Service w ill be held at the P in t M ethodiit Church next Sunday evening, Dec. Z3rd, at 8 o’clock. A n intereiting musi- Dec. 19th, for the cal protlram w ill be ilidaya. w ill teaume work Dec. 3l'at^ day holiday. The ich b o b public b Riven o n M onday, to be present. ii b e present. T he a cord ial in v ita tio n M rs. Flossie Foster, o f Route 3, has accepted a position as cashier ' w ithAlilson-Iohnson Co. Bob W aters, o f LaCross, Va., was the recent guest o f his par. ents, M r. and M rs M arvin Waters. M iss Sarah Foster, a m em ber o f (he Laurihbunt school faculty, has 'aciived hom e for the Christmas holidays. M ack K im brough, w ho travels for Sanford Bios., in the South' west, has arrived here to spend the holidays wirf> bis fiimily. Misses Lettie Foster; a student at W .C .U .N .C ., and Jane Click, w udent at Greensboro College, w ill artive hom e this week for the holidays. _________ : M r. and M rs. W . T . Yancey, o f O xford, spent jast week in tow n, guests' o f M r. a n d M rs. J. K . Sheek and M iss X in d a Gray Clement. M r. and M rs. Jack Rodw ell, o f Holyoke, Mass., spent last week in tow n giiests o f his m other, Mrs. |. W . Rodw ell and other relatives m d friends. Mocksville Builders Supply is m e tin g m 18x30 foot house on Finest Lane for Rev. Clay Madi- m . o f Concord, a brother o f Graham M adison o f this dtv. C laude H orn, Jr., a student at N . C State College, and Archie Jones and Jack LeGrand, students at M a isH iU College have arrived hom e for the holidays. Christmas PlayLhnstmasPageant\ AChrlstmaspIay "AWlseMan* * . T U a n ...lit I... ...A A Christmas pageant w ill be '5 S ,^ '5 % H Y R ;« lS > .b v 're 5 S : 2 3 r d r i7 f3 0 o - a U . The p u b fc r f J I . S T V i S b l l c l 's ' giyen’^S I. ?l>e public is given a Sunday evening. Dec. .J ? j!30o-docfc. The public iscordi.llyjnvited ^ prefent. ? ^ W t a l r i o S “ “ » m e * o « S n d The m any friends o f Roy Brow n see this play. w ho has been undergoing treat* m m e n tfo r the past six weeks at Cllllulul Davis Hospital, Statesville, w ill be glad to learn that he was able to return hom e Saturday. WANT ADS PAY. lO S T - W h ite , black and tan fox ho und, last seen near Center. Z. N . A N D E R S O N , Route 1. F O R SALE— ZOO bales meadow hay. I. A . IJA M ES. Mocksville, ^ u t e 1. A Cbristmas Cannita entitled Song o f Bethlehem” w ill be given at the Mocksville Baptist church, Sunday evening, Dec. 23rd at 6:30 o’clock. The public is cordially invited. __________________ A Christmas program w ill be given atR edland PentacostalHoli' ness chuich, Sunday evening, Dec. 23rd, at 730 o’clock. The public is cordially invited. F O R R E N T —S-room house on A von Street, $25X0 per m onth. C all or write R . M . H A R D E E , Gastonia, N . C. F O R R E N T — Store house and garage at Davie Academy. W rite or call on J. A . JO N E S . Pdone I020-R, N orth W ilkesboro. W A N T E D — To buy com , any kind , in ear. shucked or shelled. T op prices paid. M O C K S V IL L E F L O U R M IL L S W E E K - E N D SPECIALS.— La­ dies and Misses all-wool coats and suits, values $29.95, special H 9B . M en's patt-wool robes, values to $l&SO, now $5:98; $&98 all-wool A w ard sweaters, all colors, $6.98. O n e lot dresses, jodphurs, little boys’ suits. $1.0a D A V IE D R Y G O O D S C O , Between Postoffice and Bank. W A N T E D — Position as sales- Have had experience in I . C Sanford, w ho spent two weeks caking treatment at p u k e Hospital, D urham , arrived hom e . M r. and Mrs. George W . Row ­ land and children w i l l sprad Christmas w ith relatives at W are S h ^ s , S. C . where a reunion o f the Row land family w ill be held. M r. and M rs. D . R . Stioud, Jr.. o f Philadelphia, w ill spend the O iriftm as holidays in tow n i^ th d ie ir p a m ts , M c. and M rs. fe y C)Niiatzer and M r. and M is. D .R , Sl^oiuL ■■ M rs. Russell B enenb a m em ­b e r.o f die N orth - W ilkM tero school funilty, w ill anive here tliis week to spend the Christmas holidays w ith h e r parents, M r. a n d M rs. L . M . Graves. D r. M arshall Sanford, o f Wash- , i n ^ D . C., and M r. and M rs. I H im sford Sams, Tr., and children, o f Decatur, G a , ,w ill arriws* here j tiim oitow to spend the holidays w ith their father; R . B. Sanford, j ■ M issM arie lohnson, w ho Is a,- V m em ber o f the Morehead S w e I CoUege,' at Morehead, Ky., w ill'* arrive here Friday to spend the holidays w ith her parents, M r. and M rs. P. J. Johnson. j A concrete sidewalk h w b « n b uilt fio m in front o f Rankin- Sanford Im plem ent Co., to the Salisbury street intersection, w hich w ill enable : pedestrians to (nvel this block In bad weather w ithout getting in the m ud. ) M r. and M rs. Frank W olff, o f N ew Kensingtoii. Pa., were re­ cent guests o f Mrs. W o lffs par-, e n ts,M r.a n d Mrs. P. J. Johnson.' T he y were oh their way to spm d th e holidays w ith relatives o f M r. W oW , In Florida. M r. and Mn._^ T. M . H e n d ^ o f this city, and M r. and M w ; T . C. Boger and little son. oT Char- . lotte, will la've tom orrow for a • ten days'■ .motor trip through Florida. Their w ill go as far south as the Florida Keys and re<um up the W est « » s t U Bill Soflcv ' h n completed his course o f elght m ontM at W ns- U>n-Salem.Batlxr C ^ l < ^ “ d 1» now associated v ri* his fether, Harley , Soflev, w ho ando p ^ e S 'tB e j^ flfh r .barber shop. • A a v e ‘I**.shayes thelri.riot^. , hardware, sporting goods, cloth­ ing, etc. A m e m p lo ^ now but w ould like to m ake change about Jan. 1st. For full Inform ation call or write T H E D A V IE R E C O R D Mocksville. N . C. D R . C G . C U T R E L L A nnounces H is Office Is O pen For T he Practice O f ChiropodUt-Fool Specialwt iiai 2N onli Main Si. WaahiMton B uM lnl Ssllibunr. N.C. Office H ours 9:00 to 5:00 Telephone 1615 W ednesday A fternoon By A ppointm ent Princess Theatre T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y Strange Power From A nother Planet Menaces The Earth “T H E D A Y T H E liA R T H S T O O D STILL” W ith H ugh Marlowe & Patricia Neal A dded News & Cartoon S A T U R D A Y Gene Autry & Lynne Roberts In “B L A Z IN G S U N ” W ith Pat Buttram , A lan Hale, Jr. A dded Serial & Cartoons M O N D A Y O N L Y Jon H all & Lisa Fcrraday In "C H IN A C O R S A IR ” W id i Pat Buttram . A lan H ale, Jr. A dded Serial & Cartoon . C H R I S T M A S , D A Y A N D W E D N E S D A Y In O rder T o Give O u r EmDloyees Christmas D a r The Theatre W ill O pM i' A t &30 Christmas N ight, Regular M ati­ nee W ill C ontinue W ednesday A t 3:00. •XnTLEEGYPT" w ith M ark Stevens & Rhonda Fleming In Technicolor A dded News & Cartoon T H U R S D A Y & F R ID A Y James Stewart & Mariene D i ^ c h In •N O H IG H W A Y IN T H E S K Y ’ S A T U R D A Y R oy Rogers &. Penny Edwards In “N O R T H O F T H E G R E A T D IV ID E " [Special Christmas Salej A ll F un iiture G oing A t Special Bargain Price In O rder To Rcduce O u r Stock BeiFore First O f Year. e ftc m w $ im o ] $169.50\ $m,5o\ $79,50\ mso\ . $7.tS\ 14 Piece Poster Bed R o o m Suite jPor O nly - • (4 Piece (Broyhill) M ahogany Poster Bed j Room Suite For O n ly ' (8 Piece M ohogany D in in g R oom Suite i O nly . - . - - 5 Piece Breakfint R oom Suite 'Form ica T o p ' - ' - iSofa Beds in Tapestery and Plastic Covers iStartintt A t ’ - ! H igh Grade jL e holium Rugs 9x12 - - W id e Vfiriety O f Plastic Rockers, E nd Tables; U m p s. Baby Beds, Play Pens, Stirings. Mattresses, B ook Cases, A utom atic Toasters, Irons. W ard Robes, Childrens-Rockers, Clothes Hampers, Etc. I Free W ith Each Breakfast R oo m Suite O ne 9x12 Lenolium Rug Free W ith Each Bed R oo m Suite O ne 8 Piece Vanity Set [ Free W ith Each Sofe Bed and C hair O n e Beautiful End Table j Sheffield Furniture Co.| ' ' J. T. S M T H , O w ner ' Shdfield, N . C. I ‘y ■'^1 Let us have faith in the future,cpurageinour '' efforts,,. In thespiritof the blessed day n 't mishyou a completely happy Christmas Martin Brothers Phone 99 Near Southern R ailw ay D epot See Santa At Our Store Santa W ill Make His Headquarters At Oiir Store On D ECEM BER 22ND AND 24TH B ring T he K ids In To See Santa And A ll The Toys He W ill Have Displayed Throughout The Store W e wai Be O pen U n til 9 P. M. Until Christm as B. F. GOODRICH STORE G . A ubrey M errell L. S. Bow den ^ * ’*y Sheetii Owners Salisbury St ; M ocksville, N . C . i . . I . .. ^ ) "f: i i ; t'f ■ 1 VA.i« i y«fevPAyj]E^^^g^^^^ MOCKSVILI/E. N. C. SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS . of Main Street and the World K orean Peace by C hristinas P o rab le ; U.S. Casualties Now Total 100/176 KOREA— Poace in Korea by Christmas is the one gift the people o l America's h o u « totvns desire more than any other. Although there Is no assurance that such a peace w ill be forthcoming, the possibility does exist. ■.The hope that the world w ill have peace by Christm as was bolstered by reports from Korea that the Com m unists and Allies were nearing agreement on a ccase>fire line across th at war-torn country. The negoti­ ators were so close to agreement it m ay be the Une w ill have been estab­ lished by the tim e this appears in print.Agreement on the cease-fire line, however, does not m ean peace by Christmas. A itor ratification of the line, it becomes th e ' flnal buffer zone across Korea provided the two sides agree w ithin 30 days on all rem aining armisUce issues. If no 30-day agreement is reached on supervising the truce, exchange of prisoners and recommendations to the governments on troop withdrawals, the buffer line w ill be revised when a full armlsUce finally is signed.Considering past experiences In negotiations with the Communists, the 30*day talking period would seem very short. Their delaying tactics have consumed months thus far and it Is unlikely they w ill change them. THE DEAD— M eanwhile, th is Umited Asian conflict, called a police action by m any, has turned into the fourth costliest w ar in this nation's history. . ’nie....cqsualty..Jist ,now ..totals..100,176, .the. Defense departm ent re{»rts. _ , ^ The actual battle figure is higher than the JANUARY 2 *3 1 latest released figures, because officialm enis of this kind are generally two or three weeks behind com bat action. in comparison, the total battle losses for the entire w ar in the south­ west Pacific was 113,991. Of this total, 84,200 were killed or wounded. DISARMAMENT— The most im portant question discussed a t the U . N. m eeting in P aris thus far has been disarm am ent on a world-wide scale. Both the west and the east have offered their plans.General disarm am ent would give the people In the home towns of this country and elsewhere in the world a now sense of securlfy. The outlook, however, is gloomy. The Russians insist that prohibition of atom ic bombs ought to pre­ cede any disarm am ent move, followed by a big five disarm am ent con­ ference, and an im m ediate one-third cut of all conventional arm ed forces and weapons.The western idea is for an orderly, stage-by-stage process, starting w ith a census of existing arm am ents, Including atom ic and arm ed forces: real inspection and verification of any arm s cuts; and ultim ate prohibition of atom ic weapons.The poasibUity of a compromise between the two views is unlikely. As a result, the world can expect the general assembly to become m ired in debate and world tension to continue a t the present level. THE COLD WAR— On the CoW W ar front there w as one im portant development during ttie past week. President T rum an ordered with­drawal of all Am erican tariff concessions to the Soviet U nion and Poland. In addition, the President imposed a complete ban on the im ­ portation of luxury furs from the two Com m unist countries. Some weeks ago Russia halted all shipments of manganese to the U. S. and since that tim e the fur trade has been an im portant source of dollar revenue for the Com m unist bloc. The President's action does not completely halt im ports from the Soviet Union and Poland, but it does m ean the two countries w ill have to pay higher tariff rates. Sim ilar action had previously been taken against Com m unist regimes in Czechoslovakia, B ulgaria, Hungary, Rom ania and China. ler of AlliedEUROPE— Gen. Dw ight Eisenhower, supremeforces in Europe, told North Atlantic Treaty nations last week that **baby" A-bombs and other new weapons eventually m a y cut Europe's m ilitary requirements, but in the m eantim e everjrthing possible m ust be done to build western defenses. The general said he wanted as m any divisions as fast as they could be supplied—belween 30 and 40 in 1952 and between 60 and 70 by 1954. He warned the Atlantic Treaty nations ‘‘there is no posslbill^, if w ar comes, of any of us, our children, or our children's children, liv­ ing a life of decency again.” FARM TREND— The latest Bureau of tlie Census report reveals there has been a decided trend toward fe w ^ but bigger and better equipped farm s between 1940 and 1950. In 1950 there were 5,384,000 farm s in the United States compared to 6,097,000 in 1940. During the decade, however, the average size farm unit grew /xom 174 acres to 21Q.5 acres. Despite the decrease in the num ber of farm s the total acreage rem ained approximately the sam e In. 1950 as in 1945.Other statistics in the report included: (1) About 870,000 fewer per­ sons were working on U. S. farm s in 1950 than in 1940; (2) Less than one-tliird as m any horses and mules were on farm s in 19S0 as in 1920; (3) In 1959 tljere were 59,704,000 cattle and calves more than ttiree months old on farm s as compared to 00,674,736 in A pril, 1940; (4) The num ber of chickens on farm s was 2,500,000, or 0.7 per cent more than in 1940. GAMBLING—The new federal tax on gam bling m ay reach into hundreds of home towns as a result of a new ruling by Revenue Com­missioner John B . Dunlap. The commissioner has ruled th at the $50 license fee on gam bling applies to thousands of stores w hich have punch boards on their premises. Each clerk in such establishments as tobacco shops, gas stations and other retail stores-where the owners accept money from a customer for a punch board chance m ust purchase a license, he ruled. iVbet happens to the millioHs big corporatio$ts take in each year has often baffled the man on Aiah S/reef. Here is how General Moton, one of the bisgeft in the nation, spent its sales doUar: 26 3/4 cents to employees, , 49 IM cents to suppliers, 15 1/4 cents for taxes, 1 3/4 cents for depreciation, 1/2 cent for reconvertipth 4 3/4 cents to shareholders, and 1 3/4 $o maintain the business, NATIONAL DEBT U.S. Debt- Nearing $275 Billion Limit ' B arring unexpected chang-^s trend,the present economic trend, the U n itM States debt is expected to push past the present legal lim it of ‘ 1275,000,000,000 during the next year. ; As a result, Secretary of the Treas- liry &)yder is expected to ask con­ gress to raise the national diebt /•celling. Vv.'Vii' ,."'A t th e '« n a o l November the na- < ^ n a l debt w as estimated a t $259,- •••:. ;A ' . . ' 000,000,000, an increase of $4 blUion since A pril and the highest in 4% years.B y June, 1952, the debt is ex- ' to am ount to $262,500,000,000.present spending and tax receipt forecasts are correct tiie debt w ill pass the $65 billion m ark during the following six months.. This would necessitate lifting the legal debt ceiling. S H O t t t l t ’S C O R N H By DOROTHY BARCLAY VEGETABLE PROBLEM O T U C K for ideas for fresh vegc- tables to s serve • that hungry fam ily of yours? W ant to give them that special treat, as a vari­ ant from those far-sighted canned and frozen products you either processed yourself or bought at your favorite m arket, and put aw ay ftfr a rainy day? Save 'em , lady, for you’ll find s o m e excellent buys In fresh vege­tables. Ju s t look around, and take counsel w ith your grocer. Y ou’ll find onions, to taste up any m eal. Y ou'll find celery, so deli­cious In soups, or stews, or cooked alongside your Saturday night pot roast Y ou'll find carrots galore, for cream ing, for sticks, for that savory *'sweep-the-kltchen" stew. You’ll find turnips and rutabagas for'w hatever purpose you use ’em. You’ll find Brussels sprouts and cauliflower, and beets and snap beans, and some peas. You’ll even find sweet potatoes and their cou­ sin, w inter squash. So don't be downhearted— you can have your vegetables. Those carrots w ill keep, too, if you store them properly. F or that hardy root can be left in the ground' and survive several hard frosts w ithout harm ing, and then dug and moved into a cave or storage room . For the best results, authorities tell us, remove the tops to w ithin an inch of the fruit, and choose for storage only those carrots that are free of blemish and disease, and in good condition. E a t the others im ­mediately. M oist sand is recom­ mended as the best preservative for storing carrots, as it prevents ^rln k a g e . So there you arc, for plentiful supply for now and then. Sweet potatoes, on the other hand, need dry, tepid storage. D on't leave them anywhere dam p or cold, and don't bruise the skins. Y our own home-grown ones can be left ex­posed to w ind and sun long enough to dry, before you bring them in ­side. B ut whether grown or bought at your store, treat 'em gently, for the skin Is of a baby-like delicacy. Sort the dried potatoes and store them in slatted crates th at allow free circulation of air. The best storage place for- sweets is your furnace room, which norm ally m aintains the ideal tem perature of about 55 degrees. SOLVE WITH SaUASH Top solution of your fresh vege­ table problem is w inter squash, a favorite with the average Am erican appetite. It’s plentiful and economi­ cal, and lends itself to everything from a m ain course, an accompany­ ing vegetable, or a pie for desert.You’ll find all varieties a t you. grocer's, from the Acorn, ideal forthe sm all fam ily in a rush, to the larger H ubbard, B uttercup/ and Butternut, and the generous M ar­blehead, for the large fam ily din­ ner or company. Squash aboimds in vitam in A , that essential builder of growth and good eyesight. Bake it, or mash it, or glaze it; to suit your fam ily's preference, and you’ll get cheers from the .well-fed, a t. very UtUe cost. Inflax of Atomic Plant Workers Crowds Town . L IV E R M O R E , C a lit—Llvcrm oro boasted a 51.3 per cent population increase in 1950 over the 1940 cen­sus, but village officials, report a steady influx until now the popula­ tion num bers about 5,000. The 1940 census was 2,885 and the 1950 count 4,384.Cham ber of Commerce' oificials report the recent popiilation growth is due to an influx of workers at* the California Research and De­ velopm ent'C om pany’s atomic-en- ergy plant and because of the re­ activation of P arks A ir Force base which w ill employ a permanent stall of 4,000.Two other com m unities in the area have shewn great population increases In recent years. Pleasan­ton’s count Increased 75.6 per cent and Hayw ard showed a population rise of 111.9 per cent. Arkadelphia Livestock Market Sets New Record A H K A EL PH IA . Ark.—The Clark county livestock m arket, located at Arkadelphia, recently auctioned $104,000 in livestock in one day’s sale, the first such record In the history of the m arket. The m arket is the sale center for C lu k and sur­rounding counties. A total of 870 cattle, 75 hogs, and 35 m ules and horses changed hands during the* day; One bi^er. purchased $39,623.00 worth of cattlie. - - - C r i m e in A m e r i c a By ESTES KEFAUVER VnHed Staies Senator Fourtoen of a Series Nevada: A Case Against Legalized Gambling B oth m orally and financially, legalized gam bling in N evada is • flop. T hat w as our conclusion after the Senate C rim e Com m ittee visited the only state w hich law fu lly perm its a ll gam bling. W e had w anted to see w hether, in the committee's opinion, it w ould deter organized crim e If gam ing were' legalized nationally. W e decided, Itistead, th a t "N evada speaks eloquently in the nega­tive." It is true th at revenue fro m state and local taxes on gam bling is w elcom e in N evada. However, w hat the state receives is only a p itifu l fraction o f the m illions of dollars th at the gamblers them * selves d rain fro m the pubUe— n o t a ll o£ w ho m are out-of-state tourists, either. ----------------- - - Furtherm ore, Las Vegas, Reno and other gam bling centers have become headquarters for some of the nation's- worst mobsters. A* sam ple w as the late Bugsy Siegel, form erly a director of New York’s M urder, Inc. H e became the gam ­ bling boss in Las Vegas until he w as m urdered in his mistress' hom e in California In 1947. Another Is Lester (Benny) • Bin- ion (currently alive), who in 1936 w as run out of D allas, where he bossed a mlUion-dolIar-a-year pol­icy racket. Binion still has a hand in running the Texas racket by re­m ote control from Las Vegas, ac­ cording to Dallas police. In fact, he carried on a lurid feud w ith Harold Noble, the D al­las gam bler who had been shot at so often (nine a t the tim e) that he was known in the underworld as “The C at,'’ But after Noble's wife was blown up in a dynamite ex­ plosion, Binion quicUy sent an emissary to D allas to assure Noble that he was not behind the trouble. Binion and the Nevado m ob were, unhappy over the b a d . publicity which was indirectly hurting busi­ ness in the Nevada casinos. • « * Studying w liat happens when a state or com m unity is “Sicgelized’' or “ Binionized,” m y own opposi­ tion to legalized gam bling has be­ come Arm. The casino type of op­ eration is more often crookcd than not— and legalizlng.it w ill not make it less so. The fascination of gam ­bling to m any people is so strong that it would be complete folly to m ake the facilities more available. Em ployes of a jn a g n e s iu m plant near Las Vegas v ^re paid extreme­ly high wages and should have been prosperous. Yet, when the plant had to t>e moved several hundred miles, m any of the employes simply did not have the money to move their fa m i’les to the new locations; their earnings had gone into the convenient slot machines and gam ­ bling dens. There is more than an abundance of evidence that when gam bling Is m inim ized, legitim ate business flourishes. Sen. Lester C. Hunt, a m em ber of the committee, told us of his experiences as gov­ ernor of W yom ing. When gam bling was outlaw ed in his state, business increased tremendously and sales tax revenue to the state im m edi­ately-soared. N evada’s gam bling laws have been subject to periodic alterations. The latest look effect in 1940. I t re­quired that persons engaging in gam bling operations m ust be li­censed -by the state, county, and city. Such license power is vested in the Nevada state tax com m is­ sion. Ironically, the tax commission, m em ber appointed to “ represent business” is W illiam J . Moore, him^ self engaged in a gam bling opera­ tion as part owner of the Last Frontier Hotel. The lanky, draw l­ing Commissioner Moore addressed everyone as “ fellow'’— even the dignified Sen. Charles W. Tobey of New Ham pshire. As part of the same “ reform '*. in N evada’s gam bling laws, there is supposed to be an “ im partial'’ ,distribution to all licensed book­m akers of the race news w ire serv-- ice, the life blood of gam bling. The tax commission is authorized to fix rates for this service and, in gen­ eral. supervise its operation. The sam e M r. Moore told us he recent­ ly m ade a deal for wire service for his own,hotel at a rate which In the expressed opinion of the com m it­tee, “ gives him a. considerable fi­ nancial advantage over his com­petitors.” The driving force behind the “ re­ form s” was the frightening fact that the out*of-state hoodlums and killers w ho invaded Nevada had be­come so greedy and violent that an outbreak of gang w arfare was feared.. By “ licensing” them , the state hoped to stabilize the Industiy. Yet the tax commission promptly granted licenses to the sam e hood­ lum s. This, as the dual.roled M r.:M oore explained, was a sort of “ grand- daddy clause" to protect the peo­ ple who were In the business when the law was passed. When Counsel A NATIONAL SYMBTOM Rudolph H ailey asked how the commission possibly could have li­censed a certain gam bler who had a flagrant record for* illegal opera­ tions In other states, Moore replied: “How was he going to learn the business?” • • • V We also were captlvaled by the unique role of Clifford. Aaron Jones, attorney • at- la w .'lie ute iia nt'g ov- ernor .of the state and a partner in the' Pioneer Club, the Golden Nugget, and the Thunderbird Ho­ tel, all gam bling operations. Lieu­ tenant Governor Jones’ ■2'^ per cent Interest in the Pioneer Club, w hich .he purchased-for $5,000, has yieldied him* approximately $14,000 a year, and his 1 per cent Interest in the Golden Nugget, for which he' paid $23,310 pays about $12,000. The move which placed'the tax commission in the business of li­ censing gam blers, as a m atter of fact, w as precipitated by Robert E . Jones, district attorney of the coimty in w hich Las Vegas Is lo­ cated and a law partner—though no relation—to Lieutenant Gover­ nor Jones. He wrote the tox com­m ission that the gangsters were getting too quarrelsome since Sie­gel’s assassination and that w ar­ fare m ight break out at any tim e. Siege], an associate of Lucky- L u­ ciano, Frank Costello, Joe Adonis and other rulers of the Eastern m ob, moved Into Las Vegas around 1942, and established the plushy Flam ingo Hotel. W orking with Moe Sedway, ex-convlct and long-time racketeer, he was the indisputable czar of the Nevada w ire service. Actually, he was believed to have muscled In as a silent partner* of every bookmaker to whom he sold the w ire service and he would re* fuse service to any bookie who would net stand still for the muscle.” , He was shot to death in the home he was leaving for Virginia’ H ill in Beverly H ills,'C alif. There are two theories for his assasslna-' tion: (1) He attempted to carry his “ muscle” tactics too far, and/or (2) His last East coast and Chi< cago mob backers were displeased w ltii the w ay he had m anaged their Western interests.• • • The FIschettI brothers of theChicago - Capone syndicate, t h e Prank Costello-Frank Erickson in* torests in New York, and certain m embers of the Detroit, m ob had invested heavily in Bugsy’s Flam* Ingo. which reputedly, cost between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000. They were said to be displeased with Bugsy’s m anagem ent of the expensive prop, erty. Virginia H ill is said to have known that the killing was to hap­ pen and she was out of the United States at the tim e. In New York later, she furiously disclaim ed such knowledge. Anyway, after Siegel’s m urder, the Flam ingo’s operation was tak­ en over by M orris Rosen and Moe Sedway. They attempted to carry on Bugsy’s race wire monopoly, but weren’t tough enough. Soon the Stearns brothers, opera­tors of the Santa Anita Club, next door, began, tapping the Frontier C lub's race wir&. It was then -that the district attorney began fearing that shooting would break out, and the licensing arrangement, which has led to dubious peace am ong the gamblers in Nevada, was set up. Next week: O allfom ia: Where Lobbyists G row B ig and Mobsters Thrive. Features Corp.—WN , . Donating Blood Any person in .good health.-be­tween toe ages of 21 and 59 "m ay donate blood, vitally , needed by .the A rm y as result of the Korean con­ flict. ; ■ ; To Save A Life Blood plasm a, a4minl8tered. to wounded soldiers on the battlefield,' needs only to be m ixed w ith'sterile, water prior to Injection into hum an veins.- • . • Doctor Cites Scandals as M ordlf ln^^^^ college sports, gunbling,* m unicipal and governmental cor:ruptlon- “ should . ^ re ly - .b e .sullicient.^ to arouse, the.Artierlcan people/'i;.. . The doctor' pointed out th a t the finger'of accusation had been. 'polnt- ed a t thousands of innocents In loy- -aliy probes, perhaps those.ihVdly<gd in. sports scandals, but. those fouhd guilty; >“d'es&vtf i ho .'^onsi,deration or sym pathy.” N E W Y O R K — CoUegiato^ sports scandals and other corruption are “ a challenge to Am ericans In .gen­ eral and especially to educational Institutions," according to Dr. Oliv­ er C. Carm ichael, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad^, vancem ent of Teaching.: In his..46th annual, report on the statb of ’A m erlcan m orals, D r. ^Car­m ichael said the recent expose of C L A S S I F IE D D E P A R T M E N T ABT08, TRUCKS A ACCESS. NEW 1951 STUDEBAKER 2-Ton Heavy-Duty Tractor f6!S{?D"Jg f f l X . « . V W S i WM. CATLIN & SOMS Studebnker D caltt ,301 Park Si. . '. Jacksonville, Florida' ' _________MISCELLANEOUS AINT A Cnr«l "OldCamphor Liniment la ____lor achct. fllrolns. sp rain ^ Satisfactl Buar. pp. Orotftf JaweB. Hfurror 41.» lEc prlcca paid by dealara tot nil typec OIMDELS. 33rd tt OnOAUAVAT, NEW Y O nK I. NEW YOKK AMentlon premium men. Installment men. route salesmen, peddlers: lowest; whoU- Bale prices on dry sooda, spronds, blank- B Midway Drive, Colunibua. O^orfla.. Rach. Six I WANTED—(0 aell or tr n i. cm homo, etorc and eas modern cobin: on 10 n c ^ |. on chain of al* lokw:-frontoB on busy highway. Cabin and < ment always rcntc^ «-rooms Buy U.S. Defense Bonds! ^Recmm«M By Many lenTng H u n r N c n i t tto rdleve distress of kiddies*:: CliUd's Mild Mustcrolo Is m adefw ]^elally lor kiddles to promptly relieve *• .brtaglng ftmazlng ToUdl *; WsMlil M U ST Er o lE PANSIES STEELE'S JUMBO ’ . THE LARGEST FLOW ERINGv PANSIES IN TIIE WORLD HlOO rianls, Poalace PrevMd00 Plants, SS.OO Poaiare Prepaid JIM'S PANSY GARDENS f Box 42, Ploin City/Ohio , ; NAHE ......... ADDllESS .... CITV ................. SAFE, EFFECTtVE 2'WAYRiUEF FR0M.C010*S Miuuer,:. QufekAcffm OUT OF PRINT BOOKSr Ml Subjects— Sebaongold Book Go,, : 10004 XeUh mtg., .ciBelanatl Z, , THE DAVIB RECORD, MOCKSVILLE. N. C ' COyNTRY HAMS ' • "ThI COUNTRY HAM STORE 'n a ip rtw i Pbon m i . K.Bla.kr FRBAK SQUEAKS v Dog Tops 195Vs List Of Unusual, Wacky Accidents CBOSSWflBn m m D o you eve.r have the feeling that ; things In this, good old U.S.A. may Just pusslbly be a little wocky? W ell, take It from the National Safety Council~you*re rlghli Th« Council has just completed its a,^nual roundup of odd accl- < donts, and dazedly reports some mlehiy> queer goings-on In the field of xroak squealcs. A dog Avho’s a hot rod driver . . a fish tliat caught a fisherman . . . an airplane that crashed a red traf- flp light . . . a horse and wagon th at collided w ith a sailboat . . . a garden rake that shot Ihe raker . — these and m any other dizzy do­ ings indicate that things have been s u b tly screwy In 1951. 'nie pooch who pined to drive a hot rod was riding in a truck with By IN E Z G ER H A RD •TONY M A RT IN 'S cinging career * really began when, at the age of 18, he was caught by a faculty m em ber, a t Saint M ary's College, M oraga, Calif., playing jazz on &e ehapel organ. The teacher sug­ gested th at he concentrate on m usic. H e did, and m et w ith noth­ ing b u t disappointment until 1036 c h ^ g e d his luck. That year he m ade several m usicals for 20th Century-Fox and landed the sing­ ing spot on CBS Radio’s "Bprns and Allen Show.” He Is currently IO N S M ARTIN starred w ith Jo Stafford on CBS’s ‘‘Carnation Contented Hour” ; his latest picture is R K O ’s **Two Tickets to Broadway.” And he’s h a d two terrific engagements at London’s fam ous P alladium . D fiz^e O arcel w ill find herself In livete xiompany in her new assign­m e n t; tJniversal-Intematlonal h a s signed her for ihe feminine lead . opposite Abbott and Costello, as an A laskan daiice h all entertainer in “ The Sourdoughs,” People die in nnusual and am azing ways in ‘'Across the W ide M issouri’'; trappers, hunt­ ers and Indians orowd (he screen, there’s never a dull m om ent. C lark G atle heads a fine cast; Adotpho M eujou gives a superb performance — but then, so does everyone else, from John Hodiak to Frankie D arro. This is a fine Western, w ith no cute blondes to clutter u p the story. D inah i^d re is plugging a new song, “ Y ou G otta Show Me,” which has been recorded by Bing Crosby. his master, W illiam C. Hollis of Denver. As M r. HoUls drove through Topeka, Kan., at a prudent poce the dog stirred im patiently, reached over and planted a heavy paw on the accelerator. The truck leaped forward, went out of control, col­ lided w ith a passenger car. Four persons were injured. The dog hasn't driven since. Police in M iam i, F Ia „ are used to seeing all kinds of traffic on busy U. S. Highw ay 1 during the tourist season. B ut even they were startled .when-Robert-Simmons,-of-Dayton,- Ohlo, landed his airplane on the _hway one August afternoon, rolled through a red traffic light and nudged a truck before he stopped. Sim m ons had been forced dow n by carburetor trouble. Nobody was hurt. No traffic ticket. In Chicago a sailboat got on the wrong tack and collided w ith a horse and wagon driven by R an­ dolph Jolmson, a non-nautlcal pilot who found him self a little a t sea when confronted by a boat travel­ing along a busy street on a trail­ er. .Damage to the boat was $500. The land forces suffered no casual­ties. M any a tired end perspiring gardener has moaned ‘T m sho tl" as he finished his raking. B ut Lin­ coln Stewart, of Columbus, Ohio, really m eant It. H e was raking trash in a dum p when the rake struck and discharged a bullet In Ate trash. Stewart was shot In the ankle.And a ll of us who have greeted new day by groaning, " I feel like I've been run over by a steam roller,” can get a first-hand report on the feeling from eight-year-old Stanley Willoughl:^, of Portland, Ore., who actually tmderwent the experience. Fascinated by a three- ton roller, Stanley grabbed on to a pipe a t Its back and w alked along as it rolled. Suddenly the roller backed up. It knodced Stanley down, passed over his legs and hip, and im b ^ d e d him neatly into the hot, soft asplialt. He w as injured only slightly. TO SKEPTICS who believe chiv­alry Is dead, here is a note of comfort: Cab D river Jam es Deeds, of Des Moines, la ., gave up his s e a t. for a lady— and did it the hard way. Helping a fa ir passenger tmload a big sack of groceries from his cab, Deeds backed Into a passing car, felt a draft, looked up in tim e to see the seat of his pants disappearing down the street on the door handle of the offending auto. And in Boston, M rs. Catherine M eenan was injured in an auto-- mobile accident as ^ e sat in her second Hoor apartm ent In the street below, a car had struck atdestrlan, knocked off his shoe, tried it 25 feet through the open window of M rs. M eenan’s living room. It h it her on the head. In­flicting scalp wounds. Yes, it looks like good old 1961 was a little goofy in spots. B ut, as the saying goes, aren't we a lll ACROSS 1. Wild sheep (India) 4. Steers 0. Festive 11. BrlUshls. (Mcdltcrr.) 12. Peruvian Indians14. Ancient10. Make a search for knowledgeId. Open (poet) 11. Antlered 17, Plural ■ - 2; A handle 17. Narrow3. Poker stake4. Hawaiian Islands (abbr.) C. Proof6. Cover the inside of7. Twin crystals 8. Bondsman 10. Cartingvehicle (India) animal ' pronoun 13. Varying 18. Ever (poet.) weight 10.Noncom- missioned omcers (Mil.) 23. Elevated train (abbr.) 24.BeclesiasU- cal vestment29.Road(abbr.)27. Device to keep one aDoat26. Fetish (W .Afr.)3L Right (abbr.)32. Ham — 33. Surplice------(Eecl.)35. confronts37. Per. to the ear ' ' 38. Persia's39. Offering for acceptance41. Cut 42. Devoured DOIVN 1. A surgeon's knife partofbody below ribs20. Long, slender llsh21. Preeloua slohes22. Thrice (mus.V 29. ReUllate2<. Garment27. Strong, winged sea bird 28. Empty 29. Tuber (So. Am.)30. Contests lAST WEEK'S ANSWER ■HDBKIV UMQP-i n il ..-MUM MUilli riisi4iu*j '[?jh rv jiJK a i j N ii[ii» rJrn M i 34. River. (Afr.)35. Plnaceous tree 36. Melody40. Exclamation m 1—r i r —r r I I r 8r i 1 iT /IS iT 1 i iS" iT 1 i r p i r R "w z r iT w m m m m i ~1 —w .—— i I T %i w & I w 16 i w w I w I I 5T M «■ I THE FICTION CORNER AVALAKCHE By Richard HH) Wilkinson *pH E landslide occurred on M arch ^ 8. It was the evening before that Lorelei and Stan quarreled. The real cause of the quarrel was Inez Thay­ er, Deke W hitm an's stepdaughter. Deke w a s t h e m ine superintend- 3 Minute Fiction en^ and Inez had come to spend a couple of weeks w as dlsaj w ith him . place. She had afways thought of Arizona as a land of desert. W arm . Rom antic. Nobody had told her that there were mountains in Arizona and th at up In those m ountains the tem perature in M arch got well down below the freezing point. She probably wouldn’t have rem ained , a week If it hadn’t been for Stan Seymour. Stan w as a young engineer. Inez took one look at h im and decided to stay. A w om an in love sees m any things that others let pass by unnoticed. Lorelei, who was the daughter of Jim T ristram , Itoe m ine foreman, had been in love w ith Stan since the day he arrived sbc m on& s before, and he w ith her. Their love was un­ spoken, but it lay between them like tangible thing.Loreloi was glad now that'neither had put into words ^ e , ^ g that both had felt, for now tfiere need be no explaining or embarrassments. Some day, she knew, the hurt that grew inside of her as she. watched Stan yield to the polished charm of Inez Thayer would fade and vanish. So 'on the evening of M arch 7 Lorelei and Stah quarreled. And each knew that Inez was the cause of the quarrel, though both pretend­ ed it w as over the m atter of holding Ihe annual spring dance in Redstone this year instead of a t the m ine .. GRASSROOTS b D uP ont R eally a M onopoly o r Ju st Too Large! , By W right A. Potterson P O R SB V S R A L Y E A R S an effort * hra been m ade to secure legisla- ; tion th at would provide for a na­tional science foundation through w hich the top notch scientists could work a t fundam ental scientific dis­coveries. L ast year the long de­ sired legislation w as passed. As the bill was introduced, it pro­ vided an appropriation o| 14 m illion dollars from* which to provide com­ pensation for the scientists, labora­tories in which they could work, and m aterials w ith w hld i to. work. B ut In one of those rare economy spurts, the house appropriations com m ittee, Clarence Cannon, Dem ., M l^ u r i, chairm an^cut that 14 m il­lion down to 1 ^,0 0 0 , a sum entitely too m eagre w ith w hich to start such ' a foundatlM), and nothing has hap­ pened because' of that legislation, y In the D uPont hotel in W ilm ing­ ton, Del. there is a display whidow • in w hich are shown, hundreds of those things w hich the scientific re­ search of the D uPont laboratories, and tiie top notch, scientists whose tim e and a b lli^ are a t its disposal, have m ade possible. That company spends something like 20 m illion dollars a year on scientific re-, search.I F ro m their unhampered research, ttiere has come the commodities that are shown In tiiat dfepliysWhi- ddw in' W ibnington, a window be­ fore w hich I have stood m any tim esto wonder a t the. ® .«f this one com pany in providing . hundreds of different things lo r. the • convenience and pleasure of the peo- ‘ pie ct the world. . They m ake use^of wastes that have-been deemed valueless; tiiey provide new industries that give em ployment to m lU lonsofw orkers; they increase Am erican sales to the extent of m illions, even billions, of dollars each year. ,And because of that increased business, the gov­ ernm ent collects a considerable portion of the nations' taxes. W hen' the government wanted an A-bomb, it'perfected Its own or- ganlzaUqn, and spent billions of dollars on the project. Now the* gov­ ernm ent wants an H-bomb, it turns to the. D uPont com pany and its corps of scientists, w orking in Du­Pont laboratories w ith D uPont equipment and m aterials, to prot duce that more terrible, m ore de-’ structive Im plem ent of w arfare through w hich to insure our success against the Red hordes of com ­ m unism . Whether or not those D u­Pont scientists w ill be able to con­ struct such a bom b and the m eth­ods of e}Q)Iodlng it, only tim e w ill tell, but if it can be done they w ill d o it; N ow the attorney general says the DuP<mt Company is too big for the good o f.th e . nation, and has brought suit to -break it up into sm all pieces so it would not be able to do for thelgoverom ent the things a congress refused to do for us.' D uPont is a concern tiiat has pro- vkled the m unitions needed h i prac­tically every w ar .iii w hich w e have engaged; a com pany th at through its scientific research has provided m illions jobs for A m erican work­ers; that has turned the wastes of m ine, field and forests Into com­modities of value; a com pany that has added billions to Am erica's sales, from w hich the government collects a large portion of the na­ tion’s taxes; a com pany that can d o ‘for the government, if it can be don e .'w h at the government Is not prepared to do for itself. I t m ight be w ell for the attorney general to study, as I have, that display in the whidow of the Du­P ont hotel in W ilm ington. From it he would probably get a new idea of the value of this too-blg,company, and w hat it, and others like it, m ean to Am erica. D uPont is but one of a num ber of concerns that m aintain exten- sive research departments into which they pour vast sums. From these laboratories come increased production. Increased jobs, that 240-bllllon-dollars annual business from w hich the President insistent­ ly dem ands a federal government tax return of 70 . billion dollars. It takes a too-blg concern to stand the drahi the government places upon biisiness. Breaking them into sm idl pieces would be but killing the goose th at lays the golden eggs. ' If Wheeler McMiUen, editor of the F a rm Jo urn al and the Path­finder, could be. chairm an of the agricultural committee of either the senate or the house, he would find a practical solution of the -vexing, fa rm problem . beoom t running aocialism. <*Help m e !’’ she cried. And tu n e d desperate eyes toward Inez. f T w as w arm that night of M arch * 7. U nnatural^ w arm . The heavy snows atop the m ountahi range against the base of which the m ine buildings nesUed began to m elt, and on the m orning of M ard i 8 Qiey be­gan to m o v e ,. slippm g down the m ountain, loosening tons of earth and ice and rock. Lorelei was coming up from the rural delivery postoffice box w ith the m ail. She heard the ominous roar and stopped. A m om ent before she had seen Stan and Inez enter the tiny engineer’s field office, anrl w ithout thinking she started runnbig tow ard it, shouting a t the top of b*v luz^s. M en appeared from other build- higs and took up the cry, and before long a great crowd was racbig down the valley road out of th^ path qf the onrushhig avalanche. . B ut Stan and Inez didn't appear in the doorway- of the enguieer'^ office and Lorelei kept on running, scream ing. Above the office was a sharp outcropping of rock. W hen th« avalanche h it this it divided, and ’stones and earth were catapulted into space over the building. Lorelei had pushed open the door when this happened. She glimpsed Inez In Stan's arm s. Then a f t " ' tim ber crashed toward them she screamed. Stan pushed aw ay from him , and almost d e a r himself, but it- grazed shoulder and knocked him flat. F or a m om ent Lorelei stood trans­ fixed. Ilie n she leaped forward and began prying a t the tim ber. “Help m e t” she cried. And she turned desperate'eyes toward Inez. A t the door, Inez turned. IIoii’ face was white. “Don’t be a fool!” she shrieked. **Save your­ self!” Then the roar and crash became louder, drowning out hor words. The first avalanche had started a second. Inez flung open the door and rushed outside. Stan pulled Lorelei down beside h im and yelled into her ear; “ <3o on! You've still got a chance. Y ou can't save met*' But she only stared a t h im In honpr. Then She began picking up timbers and propping them in a sort of lean- to against the one undam aged w all, sheltering them. Rescue crews cam e In and were am azed to find the two alive. They pried Stan loose and carried h im aw ay on a stretcher. One of his legs w as broken.W hen he cam e out of the ether, Lorelei was beside his bed. She sm iled and said, “She's safe. She got clear.-and escaped with'dut .a bruise.” ♦ H e looked a t her and sakl noth­ ing. Then he took her hand and d ^ w her dow n close to h hn . *'It*8 m ore Im portant that you’re safe~.*' i hip , ■ T rftvellen Bobolinks m igrate from Canada ti fa r south as Paraguay. BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN Christ Is the Answer Lesson for Decc r 23, 1951 Dr. Foreman D irty M onday?On an A tlantic C ity ntght-cluh m ar’quee:' **Good, Cleon Enter* talnm ent—Every N ig h t Except Monday.” ____________- 17V B R Y 0N E Is acquainted w ith " Jesus the boby. The Christm as festival m okes that certain. W e know that the lot of babies in all Ourlstian lands today is better be­cause of Jesus the child. H is coming hallowed childhood and motherhood for all tim e. But Jesus did not stay a baby.He was born not chiefly In order to be cuddled in a m other's arm s. He w as born to be a King; he w as born to-grow,-to- teach,— to com m and, to save. Where is the festival that presents him K ing of Kings and Lord of Lords? There are such, but they never had the popularity of Christmas.• • • Bethlehem W as ' a B eginning TN hm um erable pictures and stat- ^ ues the mother of Christ looms large, tiie baby sm all. In the Bible it is the other w ay around. The In­ terest of the Bible is not centered at Bethlehem, im portant as that placc w as In the history of the world. The songs which only Luke has saved for us all point far beyond (he manger-child. Bethlehem m arked the great m om ent, to be sure, the m ira ­ cle of m iracles when God be- * came m an. B ut that was tlie be­ ginning, only the beginning. Two of the Gospels fa ll to m en­ tion the first Christmas a t aU. The two that do m ention Jesus’ childhood leave It after a few short paragraplis. If anything is certah) about w hat Ihe w riters of the New Testament thought, it is certain that when they thought of Jesus Christ, they sel­dom, if ever thought of h un as a baby. The little Jesus Is a helpless child, depending on the care of his mother. H e is sweet and appealing, and every one loves him . . . B ut he only lies there perpetually sm iling. We like babies, but we have our grown-up affairs to attend to. W e think babies are “ cute” , but we take no orders from , we do not try to be like them . W e cuddle them* and talk baby-tallc to them , but when we get ready to talk sense. . when we are In any kind of trouble, ! when w e need some one to tell us ^ w hat to do. we never talk to babies.• • « The P ow er of God C O , if Christ Is to m ean to us all w hat he ^ o u ld , it is tim e we*got into the Bible’s w ay of looking at him . H e Is called the “fulfillm ent of prophecy''. W hat does th at m ean? The great prophets looked for­ w ard to a coming king, a “ Mes­ siah” ; h e m ust begin life as a child, because he would be a hum an be­ ing, not an angeL ' H our thinking stops w ith the babe in the m anger, we shall never realize the tremendous truth about Jesus. Consider the words that Isaiah used (Isa. 9:6, 7): ^'Wonder- ful. Counsellor, Ihe M ighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.” These are grown-up words, m ore than grown-up. They point to' something super-human, something coming into this* world, as the Bible puts it, “from above” . The Christ of the Prophets is a person who w ill "ru le the na­ tions” . The Christ of the apos­ tles Is likewise no child. He is the m a n sent from heaven; he Is the “power of God and the wisdom of God” ( I Cor. 1:24). He Is K ing of Kings and Lord of Lords. A baby lets us do as we please; but not the Lord of Lords. H e chal­ lenges the world—from a throne, not a cradle. W hat he thinks, we desperately m ust know. W hat his w ill is, we m ust le a m or perish. If the w orld Is going to pieces today It is because we think no m ore of Jesus than of any other picturesque infant. ■« • « The C hrist W ho Com m ands F Is said often, as a kind of slogan, that “ Christ is the answer” . If this m eans anything true, and it does. It m eans that the w ays of the w orld are right w ays only when they are the ways of Jesus. Think­ ing, planning, acting—personal and social llvhig botii—it Is either as Jesus w ould have it or It is headed for a crash. This is not to say that the eom m ands of Christ are arbi­ trary, "jina* because . . .” Faith In h im Is the gatew ay io Hfe» fonow ing h !m Is life. A sentim ental glow aa we pass the m an;(er a t Bethlehem Is not w hat C hristiania means. I t m eans spring as P aul did: Lord, w hat w ilt thou have me to do? A Christ who can be patronized or pitied Is no answ er: the only answer Is the Christ « ^ o com m ands. It's so easy to relieve coughs and stuffiness of colds in a h u rry th is home-prot>ed way... w ith 2 spoonfuls of Vicks VapoRub in a vapor­izer or in a bowl of boiling water asdlrected In package. Ju s t breathe in the steam I Every single breath carries VapoRub's soothing m edi­cations deep into throat and la rg e b ro n c h ial tubes. It m eaicates Irrita te d m e m ­branes, helps restore norm al breathing. For coughs or upper-bronchial congesUon- there’s no th ing like using Vicks VapoRub in steavu For continued relief al­ways rub It on throat, chest' andback. V Va p o Ru b LOOK YOUR BEST FEEL YOUR BEST YOU’LL LIKE THEM TOO Grandm a’s Sayings Y O r X L A IX U S W N D the folks that leam to be pathQnders 'atead o' fault-Onders, are the ones that' seem tho happiest and spread the moat good.W piM l&i. 1. IL Cicter. Bualac. CiUf.» O L D F A S U IO N B D f N o t th is I keep up with modom* tlu I ... do niy cookin’ with "Ta-bl«.Orado" Nu-Moid, the completely modem morearlne. Nu-Kbld is mod­em in lexture...spreads on smooth! It's modom In taate... full of swco^ ohumcd-lresh flavor!orAINTT IT FON N Y how everybody wants to live a lonsr time, but no­body wants to grow old?tS pidd Un. A. !•. Andcm. Uelflo. 0L«o r BPEAKIN' O F STYUg, all I can say Is Mias Nu-Mald really seU the style In modern yellow narsorlnss. Pure, aweet Nu-Mald Is dollolous tastin’, smooth spreadln'. If you set a modern table, set It with Nu- 2fold..>l( you keep a modern kitch­en. cook with Nu-MaidI win be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each ao- cepted saying or idea... $10 if accep­ted entry Is accompanied hy larga picture of llrllas Nu-libild from the package. Address "Grandma” 109'^ Sast Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2 ALW AYS LOOK ' F O B 8WEET» wholesome Miss Nu-Uald on the packogs when you buy margarine.Nu-Uald Is your assurance of the finest modern margarine in the p e s t modem package. CM Well tU iC K E R ■ s.’S j f a r ‘ '*'4 * iH ^if^f:-^ •’';''r/; vv-vrSji'. V "..'‘:iyTj I S cS S B P T S tHB DAViB REC»iib, MOCKsVttXG N, C. DECEHBBR 19, \«1 «|/i;ik«r Fun«rai Home A M B U t ^ C E S E R V IC E D A Y O R N IG H T Phone 48 M o elctvaie , N . C P U R E S E R V IC E Tir^s Batteries A n d Accessories Kurfees Paints Corner N . M ain & G aither Sts Phone 80 \ S h o a f^ C o d l!^ Sand Co. W e C an Supply Y our Needs I N G O O D C O A L , S A N D m d B R IC K C all or Phone Ug A t A ny T im e P H O N E 194 ;. : Fotmeclv Davie Brick & C oaI Co Notice to Creditors Havlntf <iuiiliflei) ah Admlni^trolnr nf the ea«a*e of G«nrge C. Peeblm. dccesMd, DOtiCA i» liereby nivp> f i all peraonH bnid IM claims flSalnM the e<i9tfl,<if Mid dr> tM(t. tn |.r<‘M>nl Ihi* iMini« ti» I ha imd»r n«d. pmp riy verlflMl. nn or h*tforA tiit* . h day »f Oi**«h«*r. 1932 «f thin will h« pledd III hrtr nf thfir mtiiverv. All --- ucmonx Indebted-tn thi> rami -fMiiK will North raroUmi D»vl« Ciimlv SILER Funeral Home AND Flower Shop Phone 113 S. Main Si Mocknille. N. C Ambulance Service •••fliticp. N. U . and ii>iili*f t»r*inpt ni'tilf I Thi* th<* avih d>iv e* Ociiihifr. I9iit LONNIR M. PEEBUft. Arlinr of In The Stiporiiir Ctturl C . s. D u n n et al 'vs Genrtte B. Peablrn. di*ch’d. unknow n heirs o f John D u nn, — " -------L'^.-y deceased, W osh D unri, deceased, .M itchell Dunn« deceased, and Se<I* . M itchell u u n n , aeceasea, ana dO'Notice to LreduOrS , WmiainB, deceased. Ha.teg q.i.nBri a. Adn.tol,,r.>o. M N o t k ^ ^ S e rV ID g S uO l- le estate «f Mamie P. EHIk. dpceaaed. ' • i moDS by PuDlication the estate «f Mamie P. EHIk. dpceaaed. notice I* hereby given to all pereoo* hold- a elnat asld entnt«-to i>ree«ni verified, to' thet^under* the 13th dny of Oc(i> » r. 1952. or ihia notice will he plAnd in The defendants, the said un* . - - . ... • . ^ ^ know n heirs o f John D u nn, de*W osh U unn, deceased; sndgned Bt Advonc-, R..oie 2. N. c.. M itchell D u nn. deceased, and Se- n:nkepioniptiietiirmfnt. n i D u n n W illiam s, deceased, will This 13th diiy o/Oclobe^ m i.>1 ucioiiRr» inni. W. J. ELLIa. Adn r. ni Mamie P. eillr. dH.cR'd. By A.T GRANT, Attorney. Sale of Real Estate Undrr nt d h> virinr nf authority con talned In a I'cril of. Trust ex«e(!Ui«d hv Wade McDanirl and w{f« eMie MrDnnlfl. and delivered lo B.*C. Brnrli,Truetpr which Deed or THlAt is la r d e d lathe niRenlster of Deede^for Davie Counts. North Caroll08.(nDeednfTrustB<iok.39. pa«e 231. default havln« been made in the pa^ menta of. the note 1^'din'd by oxid Df*d of Tru9i» and at ih** r«-qi}eM of t^e hotdrr or aald note. Ihenndmianed take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior court o f Davie Coun* tv, N orth Carolina, to sell seven­ teen acres o f land, being the land o fM o llie D u n n Sm ith, deceased, in Farmington Township, for the purpose o f sale and petition a« m ong tlie heirs; and the said de* fendants w ill further take notice that they are reauired to appear at the omce o f the Clerk or the Superior C ourt o f said county hi the courc house in Mocksville, N orth Carolina, w ithin ten days ____________«nrf ,.II ..rih . b t t t hi!!' <*“Y '“"“ TV- '552.der rorcaah at 12 o'clock nn«n. Dec. 22. a n d answ er o r d e m u r lo th e c o m ­p la in t in said action , o r th e p la in ­ tiff w ill appiv to 4l>e c o u rt fo r th e 1951. al the cnurt hniin^ door In Dnvie r. North CowWtiw, the fnllciwrint rtp- I rral Mtaie, in witi i^ fiS i N I IB. 120 «ad' 122; •» shown ni^thc map oritlHt of ih> jflob^lviaioh of the Inndx ot Penny Broth * plaited hv C A. : .t "h . t h is W * day o f November, 1951. S. H . C H A F F IN , C S. C. Wldeohoose. £nfllner^. which «ald map or plat Is duly recorded in B»ofc 2.1. pM«e; S94 Reslntcr’s office ofCnuiuv N.;"- C. to which reference is hereby made f. r a more particular dnicrlption. Th|« prop. I eity will be Mild auhji«i (n «‘xietins Hn.= cumbenncee and t{ix»M. t Thi* the 14th day of November. lOSI i B. C. BROCK. Tmsiee. MockKvllte. K. C. Davie County, N . C. B, C Brock, Attom ev. READ THE AD$ A lony W ith th e I W F O R P U R E C R Y S T A L IC E C O A L F O R G R A T E S , S T O V ES, F U R N A C E A N D S T O liX R S It will Pay Y ou T o Call O r Phone U s. : W e M ake Prom pt Delivery M ocksviile Ic^ & Fuel Co. ' Phone 116 ' Moclt«vllIe, N . C . A Good Supply On Hand B U Y NOW W e Clean A ll Kinds Seed C d l A n d See U s A t A ny Tim e McClamrock Seed Co. P h o n e3 0 7 M ocksviile, N .C . T H E V ’ W b U t D R E A D Y O U R A D , : ; ; ? i O O , IF I X A P P E A R E D H E IIE , A TTEN TIO N FA RM ERS! P O U L T R Y L b iiL p iN G W e w ill Buy Y o u r Poultry Every Thuraday M orning From ■ ’ S To 11 ^Aa M*' In Front Of E. P..'Fo*len Cotton Gh ' HIGHEST MaIUCET PRICES PAID W II X P A Y M A R K E T P R IC E F O R G O O D H E A V Y H EN S S A U S B U R Y P O U L T R Y C O . .' - . ' Salitbnry,' N,' C*-'' f " i a i J Davie Rec6r€ j Has Been Publisb^d Smce^^S^ Other* have come and.' gone,-your > county newspaper \keepi goiiig. ifome’^me* it ha« leiemie'd' hard/to. V make“ buckle'and tongue" meet but' : (oon the lun thine* ,and again' we inarch on. Our faithful aubiioiber*, moat oif whom pay promptlT, give u* . courage and ahidfaig faith in. our fellow man. ■ ' ' V >If your neighbor ia not laking.;Th'e' Record tell him io subacribe. The. price it oijy. $1.50 per year 'in the State, and $2.00 in other atatea. W hen You Com e T o Tow n M ake O u r Office Your Hewlquarters. W e A re A lw ays ( jla d l^ ■" ' See: Youio': - L E T U S DO I We can save you money I on your I E N V E L O P E S . L E T T E R H E A D S . I S T A T E iy iE N T S , P O S T E R S , B IU I H E A b s ; P A C K E T H E A D S , Etc. Patronue your home new$p4per and thereby help build up your home town'and county. '____________. T H E D A V IE RECO RD . iiiMnninmiimBimikiMimttmiuiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiuiniiiBiBimBinniiiiK The Record has the largest white, circulation of any Davie pap^. , ,♦ FOR RENT > S P A C E I N 'T H I S P A P E R W i l l A r r a n t T o S u it GOOD> NEIGHBORS-^P«l^ TO FIT,VOUR BUSINESS