NEW S^MIT^E^^ Much Tiaiting In oilniM^tf^ :^r^Dwpiag Past Wedt; Other iS?i er News \; SUMMIT, April S.—We bare ^'^',e®rae new neighbors in our q^m- ttunit]!, Mrs. Zors Holaam^j^nd eon. Turner. ^ Miss Bell Blankenship spent Stiaday night with Miss Bra Ktght. Mr. and Mrs. Heg Blankenship spent Sunday night with his fath er, R. L. Blankenship. Misses Ennis and Annie Bell Pleenor spent Sunday evening with Miss Ada Beshears. ' Miss Ruby Blankenship spent i evening Sunday evening with Mieses Rosa and Nina Church. Mr. and Mrs. Lee J. Church spent Sunday with his son, Mr. Coy Church. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Benge Mary Ann Obnrch. Mn. Roe' Church, of Hopkins, ^jjand Miss Bessie Fletcher, of Bnmmit. Tistted Mr. R. 1^. Blank enship a short while Sunday. Misses Era Kight and Vestie Church visited Miss May Mikeal Sunday. Mrs. Julie Blankenship visit ed Mary Ann Church, Sunday evening. ' Mrs. Mae Adkins and children visited Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Mikeal, Sunday. , Miss Minnie Benge visited Misses Rosa and Nina Church. Sunday. Misses Addie and Lula Adkins visited Miss Maude Beshears Nothing Else Can Do The Job As Well As Girl Scout Notes Report Big Only Slightly Less Than Sales Last Year De^te Back ing Holiday DOCTOR V ■ . I iw mil ' By John JTo(seph Gains, M. D, oqes nmt 1’0aTRlPLE TRAGfiPY — ‘.■f.JS'. ■ 6. ^ Grand Rapids, Mlch.^^pril —^A husband returning to V his Chevrolet dealers in the sec ond ten days of Mgrch reported delivering to consumers 10,006 new cars and trucks despite the existence of a national banking holiday through much of the period, H. J. Kllngler, vice-presi dent and general sales manager of the Chevrolet Motor Company announced today. * In the comparable period last year reported retail sales were 10,378 new cars and trucks, Mr. Klingler stated. Owing to the difficulty of get ting cars to dealers because of lack of facilities for clearing drafts, stocks of new cars In the field were reduced' 3.477 units in the second ten days of the month, Mr. Kllngler reported. “Prom the first of this year to March 20 deliveries to con sumers were 88,068 units as compared with 86,769 in the comparable period of 1932,” Mr. Klingler stated. “In the last ten da.vs of March last year wp sold at retail 13,504 units, and I am in hopes that a v-c ferred by the banking situation , will fall into the last period of I this month to make the March with PERTH,IZKR has got to grow crops PROFITABLY -a job that Can't be done with anything but GOOD PP,KTIU'/,KU and plenty of it. V-C FERTILIZERS pay a profit on their cost, thru bigger yields and better quality. You can be sure you are getting good plant food when you buy V-C. Come in and give us your or der now. Cash Fertilizer & Seed Store (Reported 1 Early in 1927. Mr. Sisk and Tom Ward asked Bess Gordon Finley Grier if she would be the leatJer of a Girl Scout Troop, and help to organize it. As a result, in April. 1927, Margaret Wilkins. Carolyn Taylor, Elizabeth For ester. Julia Finley. Ann Estes. Mary Hix, Kathleen Johnson. I Frances Cranor, Frances McNeil. Margaret Vannoy, Frances fash ion, and several others pas.sed the tenderfoot test and became s„ffj(,jer,t amount of buying de- the Cardinal Troop of Girl Scouts. This troop was soon re cruited to Us full number, of .".tl interested girls whose motto i total compare favorably "Be I’reiiared." In 1928 Mrs. 'i-) \iorch of 1932. H. McNeil became the Lienten- ..j^ poth January and Pebrii- ant. and being a mivsc she Pcc-I.,,.y p.\ceeOed our retail sales pared and pas.sed the girls •>'j „f i;,j(t year bv a comfortable firsl aid, etc. Mrs. Ed Long and ' Mrs. Hell also have been a greal 1 help to the Scouls along this line. BED SWEET POTATOES Dr. Sink has passed quite a num-' FOR EARLY SETTING her of the girls on their 2nd j class first aid. In 1928 and 1929 | the local Girl Scouts provided a j room for. and look care of ha- j hies, ddring the fair. There were many mothers atlelidiiig the fair who took advantage of tiUs op- portunit.v to have trainetl girls j care for their children while theyj onjo.ved the day. During 1931 ' and part of 1932 the Scout wor was inactive in our town, hut I lie interest is renewed, and we are all working hard to make our any SHO.AF & GitKENE I'hone S7:l North Wilkeslmro, N. C. IJiree troops as effieieiit as in the organization. Won't givi' us your operation'.' It will take about eight to ten bushels of average-size sweet potatoes to produce enough slips to set one acre of land at the tirsl pulling but if two or three successive pullings can he made, live hushels of seed will be siif- licient. “It IS about lime now to bed .)j the seed sweet potatoes," says E. li. .Morrow, e.xiension lorticiiltur- isl at Slate' college. “.A good rule to follow is 'o plant tlie beds at least si.x to seven weeks bc'- I . A very ancient complaiiit, and. an annoying one, as you well know, who are subject .to attacks when least expected. Folks with full vessels are liable to It; those with "catarrh,” the old bogey man of the quack. Those with high blood-pressure? Well, If you have It, the nose-bleed Is likely to prove helpful at least for awhile. Let It bleed If you have Increased blood-pressure— it will lower tension. Most people do the very wrong thing for an attack of nose bleed; they rush to a basin of warm water, and tr? to get as 'vnuch. of It in the nose as pos sible. I’ve seen men try to drive their forefingers into the nostril as far as possible, for what pur pose they could not tell. They snort, blow the nose violently, rasp the throat, and do every thing to keep up the local up roar. Everything but the right thing.—which is to try to quiet the nerves, cease snorting, pok ing fingers and washing out with warm water. . . . Just be still, if you can. Let It drain, at least ’till the doctc r comes, if you were so scared that you sent for him posthaste. Every individual has his own time of blood-coagulation. I'his is important to him—that is. the number of minutes it takes bis lilood to form a clot, which ar rests the nose-bleed. A clot can not ever form, niider warm wat er douches, and fore-finger pok ings. and snortings. Sit still—be still-- apply cold if anything— snort not at all. (ieiille pressure at sides of nose may slow down blood flow. Firm pressure up- and-down aifd maintained—each side of nose. No time wasted, no harm done if it does not lielp. But be quiet—deliberate; I nev er saw a death from nose-bleed. The time to cure nose-bleed is to get next your good doctor when the nose isn't bleeding the doctor I said so. ^.,,,1 , fori’ tile plants are interest and in set ling in the lield. wanted for F’or eastern All Kinds of Seeds For and Garden. Field iraroliiia, tills means i.-laiiting the i bells during the tirst ' week in .Aiiioii.g '>"9 aiiplicaiils rorl.xpril and for the I’iednioiil and govei timetit seed loans iii fataw-1 nio'iiitaiii sectinns a few days ba county few have as many as ' Ijiter. By all means use seed inn hens, says the | Dial is free from blemislies and SIX roA.' eiiniity agent. WIN A PRIZE! During the si.x weeks beginning April 10 and end ing May 15 you will have a chance at attractive small prizes and one GRAND PRIZE Take your KODAK HLMS TO BLUE RIDGE STUDIO and have them develop it. The print adjudged b.v three competent judges to be the Oest submitted during" each ot the six weeks will entitle the luckv person to an SxlO enlargement. The one vyhich is given the highest rating during the entire six weeks’ period will be given the grand prize-- a $25.00 Porcelain Miniature with gold frame, made either from a Kodak print or sitting at studio. . He sure to take vour Kodak Films direct to HI,l K RIDGE STl’DIO. Fall at the studio for details. Sponsored by Woman’s Club for Benefit of Girl Scout Hut I'olteii spots. Treat, the seed with a solution of merciirie clilorido to kill any disease spores that may be present." Tile mereuric cliloride solution is made liy mixing one on nee ol the cliemU-al to 24 gallons of water. This will give lietler re sults than the formaldeliyde so lution, .Morrow says. In preparing Hie solution, mix the mereuric chloride with a small ainoiiiit of warm water and then add lilie additional cold water. It is best to use a wood en container and after 15 bush els of seed have been treated, make up a fie.sh soliilioii. .Mr. .Morrow says do iioi bed the potatoes until they are dry, then place tliFai about tliree- fourllis of an inch a’l.arl in the bed to prevent er.miiing oi tile slips. Cover with two to three inelies of clean saiid. If the bed is dry at tlie lime of bedding, water moderately but never soak the bed until it is water-logged. When potatoes are liedded as late as the lii'st week in April, pri'lection is not absolutely need ed tliongh a layer of pine straw about 4 to •> inches deep will pro tect from the cold and conserve Hie moist lire. Tell Eotite with high hopes of « recon ciliation today.foond the wife he left two days ago and theif^ chil dren Blain and the man’'^ whom he blamed- for the estrangement unconscious in a gas-filled kitch en. , The wife, Mrs. Mattie Sue Bengert, 28, was strangled in her bed. and a son. Carl L. Ben gert, Jr„ eight, was similarly slain and the 'body placed in an automobile In the yard. The other child, three-months-old Thalbert Allen, was dead in the kitchen oven; with all gas Jets turned on. The man, Henry B. Bedford, .43, principal of Turner public school here, lay across two chairs in the kitchen, unconscious from gas fumes. He had not regained consciousness this evening, but attendants at a hospital where he was taken said he probably would recover. Police said they found nothing immediately to contradict the theory of Bengert that his wife and children had been slain by Bedford, who then attempted to kill himself. Bengert, a cabinet maker, told police of difficulties which had developed and increased after Bentord went to board in his home two years ago. Benford w-as the owner ot the house, he said, and moved in as a boarder with his tenants after he was di vorced. Tlie husband said he had ac cused Bedford of making love to Mrs Bengert and that on Tues day there was a bitter quarrel which ended with Bedford order ing him out of the house. Mrs. Bengert, he said, refused to move out with him, accusing liim of being “foolishly jealous." Ben gert then left and remained with relatives until ItKiay. This morning. Bengert said, he received a message from his wife asking him to return at 1:30 p.m. He kept the appointment, only to find his family dead. WILKESBORO HIGH ' ^ SCHOOL HONOR ROLL Follot^ng ii the hohor roll of WniEMboro high school for.^ the sixth'month: ■ First grade: Loniee Kennedy, Nancy ^ Lee Tates, Stewart Blev ins, Louise Anderson. /Second grade: Mary Gage Bar- h«r, Nell Hubbard, Gladys How ell, Peele Sykes. , Third graile: Betty. Henderson. Francis Willard, Joy Hiller, Es sie Barlow, Albert Dennis '(due to hav^ been on honor roll for fifth month). > Fourth grade: James Hemp hill, Ray Stroud, Fay Wright. Fifth grade: Peggy Somers. Baxter Davis. Sixth' grade: Pauline Church. Virginia Miller, Boyd Cook, Con stance Smithey, Don Story. Seventh grade: William Gray, JBigljth srada: Bfafrjorie Bler- iiis. Paula Craft, Lorene Guthrie, Bdie Bell • Phillips, 'Willie „ Ham- by. ■ Ninth 'grad(e; i Kate Ogilrfab Trera Johnson) Annie, Lee FergOr son?'Helen Bumgarner. '' . Tenth grade: James Bumgar- ner, Milford Tedder, Ethel Da.ria,^ .Lttclle Hartley, Virginia Laws, Thelma Miller, Basel Walker* Geneva Wallace, Carol Cowles, Myrtle Tates. - Eleventh grade: James Hamby, AlU Ellis, Virginia Craft. Sam Ogilvie, Neil Haf-Iey, Broadua Canter. “As usual, when winter 'givee way to spring, the farmer be comes optimistic and plans for another year, trusting tbst things will change in his favor.”—Coun- . ty Agent R. W. Pou, of Forsyth. CERTIEH ATK OF IH.SSOLl TION Stiit)- of North ('aroliiia— De- imrlini'iit of Siale To All to Whom 'I’liese Presents .May Come—Greeting: Whereas, it appears to my sat isfaction. by duly aiithenticateil record of the proceedings for the voluntary dissoliilion thereof by Hie uiianiiiious consent of all stockholders, deposited in my office, that tue C. & S. .Motor Express Company. Incorporated, a coriioration of this state, whose principal office is situated in the town of North Wilkesboro. coun ty of Wilkes. Slate of North Caro lina (E. F. Caldwell, being the agent therein and in .charge thereof, upon whom process may be served!, has complied with Hie requirements of Chapter 22, Consolidated Statutes, entitled “’Corporations," preliminary to " Announcipg the Opening of Wilkes Dairy Store -Handling- “CATAWBA” PURE SWEET CREAM ICE CREAM We have opened a Dairy Store next door to Quality Cleaners and solicit your patronage. All our Ice Cream is made from Sweet Cream, Pure Cane Sugar, and the best flavors and fruits. Big Cone Pint Quart - 5c 15c 30c m Wilkes Dairy Store 721 “B” Street Next Door to Quality Cleaners Annual Kelvinator Campaign Launched By S. P. U. Company It’s FREO TO RADIO OWNERS We make no charge for inspecting your radio aeri:d or tulies. and charge only for lepairs or work ne- cLsorylo put 'you^ set in good condition Lot us check your set and advise what is needed. Our rharees are motlerate indeed, and our seiwice work • Just call Telephone 22-W and teU is guaranteed, us your troubles. WF’I L PUT YOUR RADIO IN SHORT NOTICE SHAPE ON iff ■•z.'’ FINE WATCH REPAIRING We are also equipped to do ,^pert Watch and ^ Re- nairine. and have a complete stock of repair parts. Well Lve you money on repair work. Give us a trial—our york and prices will make you a regular customer. G. W. LYON EJectric and Radio Service WILKESBORO, N. C. The uiiiiiial Kelvinator paigti .stiiged by ■ Hie Soiilheni I’tililie Utilities cdinimiiy is vow I Linder way-, and prospective biiy- I ers are offered Hie greatest Kel- ! vi.ialor ever Iniilt at lowei j prices. New 1 933 Kelvinators are 'ow the issuing of this Certificate of Dissolution: Now therefore, 1. Stacey W. Wade. Secretary of Stale of the slate of-?4orth Carolina, do here by certify that the said corpora tion di'ti, on the 5tb day of April, 1933, file in my office a duly exe cuted and attested consent in writing to the tfissolntlon of said corporation, e.xeciited by all the sicckliolders tlierecf. which sat'd consent and the record of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file ill my said office as provided by law. In testimony whereof. I have lierelo set my liand and affixed my official seal at Raleigh, this :>Hi dav of April. A. 1). 1933. STACEY W. WADE, 5-141 Secretary of Slate. EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY HERE One. lot Topatco Collar pads. No. 17, each I Galvanized Mail Boxes _ each .... on display at Hie of^ce of Hie S. |Large Aluminum Tea I’. U. company and all who are Kettle i coiilemplating purchasing Ibis'Six Glass I season are invited to see them I Tumblers — j and to get full details of all im-' Six Ice Tea J provenients that have been made ! Glasses - j by the manufacturers. rUhree prackages Lawn ' You are now privileged to pur-[Grass Seed chase a Kelvinator with a down I Two boxes .22 Long 'payment of only $i't.0u. with ^Gartridges i 24 months to pay the balance, j Two Ific Fly I In this way the Kelvinator will gwatters I effect savings that will pay for Good Hoes, I itself by protectiiig foods used byloagh iyonr family. | Good 4-prong i With lower electrical rales I pitchfork I now ill effect and the new low Q^od Flow Handles, I prices announced on each unit. Extra heavy galvanized Bushel Measure, each ill effect and the new low announced on each unit, there is no reason why every Iiome may not liave the conveni ence of a Kelvinator now, repre sentatives of the S. r. U. com pany state. Thi.s is the time of year to think about electrical refrigera tion and when they are so popu larly priced Kelvinator will naturally be foremost in your mind. Lawn Mowers .. Be sure to see-^ur Cole Corn Planters and Chattanooga Plows before buying. A horse that feels his oats usually jumps at the wrong time. ■—Harry R. Detweller. MORRISON Hardware Co, WILKESBORO, N bportant Message To Farmers! There’s no use talking about it—it’s a known fact that there is no better fertilizer on the market than Armour’s. If there • ' was, we wouM be selling another brand as we have always tried to give our customers the very best for their money. Farmers, you are busy now preparing your land for planting corn and other crops. Regardless of how well you prepare the land and what grade seeds you use, you will not obtain the desired results from your labor unless you use the right kind of fertilizer—an(i that right kind is— ARMOUR'S Field-Tested Fertilizers Come and get your supply of fertilizer while our stock is complete. You will find that our prices are most reason able as we operate with minimum overhead expense. Get our prices on farming implements, garden tools, wire . fencing, roofing, paints, etc., before buying elsewhere. You will find in our stock just the articles you need about the farm or home. t