PAGE TWO
Iowa Farm Women Take
*1 *? .1 J_ _ C
,10 1116 r I6IU5 ui lieu vco?
DES MOINES. IOWA. -Iowa farn:
women have taken to the fields tc
help their husbands through the har
vest jam-?just as their great grand
mothers did in the pioneer days.
W^arinp1 m?A.-oiie
many sturdy formers wives ar.<
daughters have discarded their pot'
and pans l'or the tractors and bind
ers when farm hands could not "b<
hired.
One Des Moines farmer said h<
kne v of a woman who has been working
in the fields all season.
A fanner's daughter near White
Oak has been operating a bindei
while ner father shocked grain.
4 Women at Clarion have been running
binders and shocking cats. One
woman was injured when she was
caught m a binder. Reports from
Clarion said some women prefer the
outdoor work to the heat of their
kitchens.
The labor shortage is stiff acute,
but the small grain harvest is being
completed in must counties. Farmers
complain that telicf workers refuse
to accept temporary harvest iobs at
wages from SI to S3 a day.
Relief officials in more than twenty
counties have cat off relief from
able-bodied men in order to make
harvest jobs more attractive.
LIEUTENANT JOHN T FULLER
DIES AT MTN. CITY HOME
Lieutenant John T. Fuller, 74, died
at his home near Mountain City, on
July 21st, according to a story carried
in last week's Johnson County
News.
Lieut. Fallot when a young man
enlisted in the United States Army
and served in Puerto Rieo, later enlisted
for service in the Philippines,
where he received several citations
for bravery. He was active in politics.
having served for four years
as Trustee of Johnson County and
was a member of the State Legislature
during the administration of
Go\ornor Ben Iloopcr. At the lime
of his death. Lieutenant Fuller was
a member of the Johnson County
Court.
As an active and successful farmer,
Lieutenant Fulku organized the
Johnson County Fair Association and
was its president, tor twenty-five
years. He was well known to many
Watauga people.
Surviving are the widow, who prior
to marriage was Miss Sadie Wills,
one son. Seimer Fuller of Mountain
City, and one daughter, Mrs. \V. L.
Cook of Erwin.
y,i;j". ;
V
j NEW SWIM SUIT |
; Beaches of Atlantic Crowded |
11 with Colorful Costumes.
KEVV YORK.?If your preference j
! for st.vk* in bathiny suits is influ- i
ehced by the model wearing it, then
your purchase may be a r.ovel printed
"dressmaker model" of trunks
and halter, as worn by Miss Lola
Solomon at an Atlantic shore resort.
; V.\ ANGELISTI CSEKVICE TO
BEGIN AT HENSOXS CHAPEf.
| Rev. VV. C. Dutton, pastor-evyngelist
of the Monroe Circuit of Method!
ist churches, will assist the pastor
1 and congregation of Henson's Chapel
Church of the Watauga Circuit in
! evangelistic services beginning Sundae
evening, August 4th, at 8 o'clock
Tne services will continue twice
jilaiiv until August 14th.
Rev. Mr. lr.itto.1 is one of the
; younger pastors in the Western N.
C. Conference, but he has established
an unusual record in evangelistic |
'work. His successes in revival work)
have been due to spiritual fervor and
great earnestness rather than to any 1
novel psychologic methods.
The public is most cordially invited !
to attend these services.
XT. S Cox of Beaufort County will
caponize ITfi young cockercis this
season as a demonstration in this
phase of poultry production.
\r% i
i Sm0 il
trge shipments of this new
our 01
t Is Aiwa
Cheaj
his Gasoline is manufactur
ent oil dealers in Watauga County
ible service. We also carry a com]
the same time considerably lower
DRIVE IN, TRY A
DGES
te
' I 1111 ijHiMMlMyj
/AT AUG A DEMOCRAT?EVERBEKKY
DIES IN CAPITAL
John D. Berry, welt known in fraternal
and lay religious circles all
over the State, meu suddenly at ins |
home hpri? last Thnrsttav xj? i -
--?- iic 11U.U j
been on the streets talking with his'
friends two or three hours before he j
died at 52 years of age. For manyyears
Mr. Berry had been State sec-'
C/T goo c
need.
And tl
Chesterfic
one agair
much of
another.
We ta
the right
tobacco iauu
and
It is th,
that nil
and m
<?> 1935, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
IriCr i
gasoline from the Louisia
wn specifications, it is the
ys At Les
icr Than
ed under specifications fo:
and since the quality of our prodi
>lete line of HGCGLINE MGTOi
in price. At the same time we w
rANK OF HOCQ, AND 1
1 TIP
> 1 iri
i THURSDAY?BOONE, N. C.
retary of the Grand Lodge of Od
Fellows, and was active in other fia
ternal orders. He was also a Stat
luficial of the liarsca-Philaihoa o:
gdhisation and had recently attende
the national convention with the IS
C. delegation. He had been engage
in the life insurance business re
v.'-,"'
Oi;
|?
tgarette, too %
f balance
lat's why the tobacco.' in
:ld are carefully balan :ed
ist the other . . . not too
one ? not too little of
ke the right amounts of
kinds of four types of
? Bright, Burlcy, Mar}'nr>
J,* L
l uiKiSn.
is balancing of tobaccos
tkes Chesterfields milder
akes than taste better.
Cheste
Cliesterf
a an u
m W m
I B 1
na refineries, where this
best gasoline we could hi
ist One C
Other Bi
r a REGUT AR Gasoline;
ict is uniformly high and the pri<
i OIL, and guarantee satisfacto
ill continue to handle QUAKER
BE CONVINCED OF IT
E CC
a tu mm
a! POULTRY QUESTION
* I ?????
c | When should pullets be moved from
-; '.::v ruiige Kpnjrer To the lavinsr
1 house?
r. Answer: Puuets should never be
rt | moved until the majority are ready
- to come into production- Even then,
if layers are still in the house, the
rficld ... the cigarette that's 1
ield.. . the cigarette that TAS.
Phil
I 1
SUPER MOTOR FUEL i?
ave refined.
!ent Per C
rands
; it is NOT a third grade pr<
:e consistently lower, we feel that
ry lubrication to the last drop. Lik
STATE, PENNZOIL, KENDALL, 1
C ci rorniAni'rui
oui CilViUKl 1 I !
)MPA
North Care
AUGUST 1, 1935
! pullets should not be moved until the
house has been thoroughly cleaned
: and disinfected. The shelters can be
j moved from range to range and lie
pullets should be kept on these ranges
as long as possible especially if the
i pasture about the laying house- is
I poor.
* *, '
/
MILDER
TESBE1TER
LS'
> made according to [
ration I
xluct.
we are rendering the moe
HOCO GASOLINE, the
PENNSEAL, ESSOLUBE.
NY
)lina I