Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Sept. 21, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
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iof IN FOLtnai Mondays uid Thursdays North WOkesboro. N. C D. J. CABTBR sad JULIUB C. flUBBARD, (g PaUlsherB. *- SUBSCRIPTION RATES: tl-00 Twr 1b the State; |1.60 Out of the Stats. & , .N.-CnS 4. 1879. at the post office at North WQkedxnro, I second class matter under Aot of Hareh THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1933 i^'a. B. p.’ Half Right Those who wagered a couple of bucks '6n our predictions as to the major league pennant winners—and be it remembered we advised against it—will break even. Making our pick contrary to the predic tions of the leading sports writers of the country, we chose the Washington Sena tors in the American League and the Chi cago Cubs in the Natio.na! League. The Cubs failed us, but Washington came through. So we were half right. The , In commentingjon. the action of the.'' I--- Ashe County Democratic Executive Com mittee, Ira T. Johnston, chairman of the ai the time dram near for thj whieh recommended thnt the K f election be conducts .jl,., » non-partuanj county, t^unt the chiokena ba- t, said: “I ttiink the members of our .‘fore the hatchery aeaeon •w^ena eo^.ijr «c«««ve eonumlt«,aeM But let it be understood that this action is j„ i^ijt tew yearn. There if not an attempt to doge the issue.^* Ashe Democrats feel, ' Mr. Johnston pointed out in his statement, that “the proprieties of the occasion demand that they refrain from attempting to crack the party whip or from using their posi tion and influence as party leaders to in fluence the vot^ of the rank and file.” Acknowledging that repeal of the na tional prohibition amendment is inevit able, Mr. Johnston says among things: one thing , to keep in mind if yen are thinking of raising ponltry. Don’t begin it If you ate not deperately In lore with WORK .... willing to work like fury, early and late, every day in the week and on Sunday too! There is no "day of rest business during the growing sea son, especially If you are raising chhc for broilers. "fn the "chicken for profit" , business there is a rast amount other I of work, some fun, much oppor tunity for study, a rbry great. fine and tat «a ^Sy had more . . this past winter being on the 'Ue- preMion-ilst, there was no Chrtlt- mas market, no one wanted tine fat broilers, n we had to' carry those two hundred and fifty chiit on till the thirteenth of January, '‘this year. Then we. sold them to the B. B. Bller - Produce Co., about one. hundred and fifty of them at thirteen or fifteen cents a pound . . . uo^^. . . thpre were a number of them that brought only eight cents a ponndt I haVe mislaid the bill of sale and do not recall the exact number. 1 In the chicken eleven cents for those chlx when only one day old too! Well, eight cents a pound was better than carn^ing them over for some weeks. longer, as it cut the feed costs. When the produce men came for the chlx they refused about sixty of them as they did not weigh the required amount. J got busy on those refuse chlx . . , turned them out In the open to graze, and to get the sunshine and exercise, and by the tenth of I amount of aggravation, and" a “Every citizen needs to think what pp-juttig profit. Yes, there Is some sition he w’ill take and what part he will profit, especially if one lives on play in the era which shall follow the end |a farm, and' raises . their own of national prohibition. Shall we not as j feed and has it ground and mlx- a state retain, enact and enforce wisejed according to the state formu- regulatory laws? Shall we not return tojla, why of course, the pfoflt,Pabruary when they too went to the necessity of preaching and teaching j would be much more, as it is the EHer they .brought enough the benefits of temperance? The Eigh-i^°®*^ of feed that makes the great-^^,, pj^y tj,e two hundred, and teenth Amendment did not solve all thel®^* expense: but if the chickens fj,jy j bought from the m-oblems and neither will its repeal solve j Blue Ridge Hatchery on the fit- ♦ oil Tr» +V1P1V al] thp infnrm^^d ‘ ^ rlgnt way March. With all them all. In their heaits, ah tne iniot mea, : W0tp vind drys must agree. This is not the, many excellent feeds sports writers, as the Associated Pre.ss poll j end and we will not live to see the _end. market. 1 have used sever- teenth of March, troubles and low market prices though, Xand counting In the I - , . • -i. J 4. 1 J i,....,.. I— "V ones we used on the table, a showed, have no such consolation. They' Lut let ’.is m a spirit of tolerance and hoP® i,l different brands, and like .all number at that) we did not were not even half right. The Yankees, forward .to u better and a mg er|pf timm; but this year i am us-.j^gg anything on them. of the day.” Mr. .Johnston’s last sentence expresses a spirit of Cardinals and Pirates were out picture. the great need of the hour- Dangerous Days Amead j tolerance. Not all of us will agree during There are dangerous days ahead. Tiiejthe campaign now in progress Some of American people^ave re.sponded nobly to us, strong believers in the Eighteenth the call of President Roosevelt for co-1 Amendment and fearful that no adequate wets, of course, will seek repeal. But whatver our views, we should go into the campaign in a spirit of tolerance and respect the right of others to their views. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON operation in the NRA drive. The co-oper ative spirit manifested will merit a con spicuous place in the nation’s history. But the dangerous days are those which and principles, will vote for repeal be- will come after the oratory and patriotic cause they are not satisfied with prohibi- appeals cease and when those who have|tion enforcement and because they believe been negotiating codes go home and en-i liquor can be better controlled than it has deavor to make sense out of what they been during the last fourteen years. The have done. Julian Miller offers a terse explanation of that period, and what will be needed, in the following comment in The Char lotte Observer: “The dreary stage of the recovery pro- gn'am is just ahead and it would be_ just as well for the public to fortify itself against its drabness and dullness. “It will be the stage of experimentation, of getting down to practical, everyday ex perience with the codes and seeing wheth er or not they make sense. “The period of ballyhoo will soon be over. Excitement will die down. Glamour will peel off like rouge from her lips. And a dull gray, instead of a livid, bright, glowing positive color, wull stretch out ahead. “That’s the time of testing, when there is no applause nor grandstanding, no brass bands nor bass drums, no trumpet blowing, no fervid oratory—just plain, matter-of-fact, everyday, routine of trying to get business to go along uncoaxed into | its new grooves. “Watch yourself in that hour or youj will give out of encouragement.” ...,0.4 And I ing Ring Brothers feeds (laying j learned a great deal In mash) and like It very much. j more ways than one. The most important thing about starting with chickens is ■ to he certain that your bahy! e Still Clieap jhi Price Md Hijir h Quality—Buy Them NOW. Let us do your repair work. We have employed extra help and can give you quick satisfactory'^ service.. Our battery service is up to date. Let us attend to your battery troubles. Wiley Brook* and Jeter Cry*«l The Motor Service Co. North WUkesboro, N, O. substitute for liquor control has been of fered, will vote for the'anti-repeal candi-| ‘ date. Others, eqv.iilly d"- in their belief The next buy was made on the fifteenth day of March, and by .. , ,, ,, , 4 u I then prices had dropped so that chlx come from a reliaible hatch-,,, ,, , , ,. . , , vu't paid only eight cents each for ery. We have bought our baby .... u j . j .!.* t -i , ... r,.j „ 4 u [that two hundred and fifty. Like chlx from the Blue Ridge Hatch- ,, 4, i. r 4. . j . . . 1 the first buy, I started them on ery, ever s nee ey ave buttermilk instead of water, and r s '" 1, ! as these were not being rushed North Wilkesboro, and we have tor market, I gave them growing mash instead of broiler mash. I ■did not lose any of these chlx at all. If ebix are not strong and healthy when they come from the hatchery, it makes no difference how careful one Is with them for the first few weeks they do not grow off as they should. These ■pullets from the chlx delivered to me on March fifteenth, have been laying since the twentieth |day of July, and they had not not lost one chick from disease. We have lost chlx; but that was from other causes, largely care- lesness, sometimes Ignorance. We are not going to blame such as that on the hatchery men are we? Certainly not! Now this is no free advertising for the Blue Ridge Hatchery, and it the men at that plant should happen on this and find who wrote It, why . . . no doubt they might blow me ^ .4 ' been fed any laying mash up to This past season 1 bought five, hundred biddies from the Blue Ridge Hatchery, two hundred and fifty at each buying. ’The 'first buy of the season netted me many experiences. At the end of By REV. CHARLES E. DUNN J^ME EARLY LEADERS OF ISRAEL Lesson tor September 24th. Hebraws 11:32-12: 2. Golden Text: Ephesians 6:10. W6 have come to another review lesson. It has been a pleasure to study the personalities and careers of some representative early leaders of the Hebrew folk. Carlyle, in his famous “Heroes and Hero-Worship," tells us that history “is at I have been feeding them laying mash since the first of August though. Yes: there is much work, some fun, some profit, and a very great amount of aggrava- three weeks those biddies were | whetting con- larfee enough ^ inected with the business of poul- call broilers. They were lareerl than quails. I had fed them all. the buttermilk they could use in stead of any water for the first two weeks, and for feed gave them a good broiler mash and after the first week, all the green feed they would eat, using either “hen-bit” or dwarf Essex rape. I do not like to start my biddies out with a disinfectant In the Said a well known hatchery man to me one day last autumn, of roses.” Seems to me It is very much a bed of roses. Is there a rose without Its thorns? If there is, I have yet to find it, and that calls to mind these lines: What would we do In this world of ours Build Up that Skinny Child! Enrich His Impoverished Blood Sickly, weak, underweight chOdmn an usually lacking in rich, blood. When blood becomes poor, a child becomes rundown. Already weak, he loses app»- tite, which makes him still weaker. Take no chances on a child gaining strength by himself. Start giving him Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic ri^t away. ‘This famous tonic contains both iron and tasteless quinine. Iron makes for rich, red blood while quinine tends to purify the blood. In other words, you grt two effects in Grove’s Tasteless Cbm Tonk. Put your child on this time-provea tonic for a few d^ and see the differ ence it makes in him. Good appetite, lots of pep and energy and red roses in hii dweks. Children like Grove’s Tasteless Chm Tonic and take it eagerly. It is abso lute^ hannless and has bera a rdlabit famffy medidne for half a century. Get a bottle today at any store. our serv ice to be just what your needs re quire, ana we feel that we ai’e doing our best to make it such by keeping the best in materials, equipment and em ployees who under stand and desire to help you. Reins-Stiirdivant Inc. "THE FUNERAL Htr.ME" Phones— Day • 85 Night - 86-m \ bottom the History of the Great Men who have; drinking water. It is alright to **** worked here.” A great man, he farther says, "1b use: but I prefer the buttermilk the living light-foun.ain, which it is good and,'''’uy, and from my point of view Butchery No editorial comment appearing in North Carolina newspapers in recent weeks has been more widely reproduced than the Watauga Democrat’s editorial on w'hat is happening at Blowing Rock, the location of one of the most scenic views in the state. If wrath alone could drive the perpetra tors of this act of butchery from their haunts. Blowing Rock would have regain ed its pristine glory long ere this. But the mistake North Carolina has made is not that it failed to drive the “money changers from the temple.” Rather the mistake was that this scenic spot was not long ago ac quired by the state as a park. Following is the much-reproduced edi torial from the Democrat: If you possess a morbid curiosity . . . like murders and suicides and such . . . just drive over to Blowing Rock and take a look at the butchery that a couple of well-intentioned business men have put across on a gyllible citizenry. Yes. they've buiU a fence right dab along the comb of the mountain, shearing the rock aimost in half. and. to add insult to injury, built a refreshment parlor in the midst of the Inspiring scenery where in fu ture years, the odor of hamburgers and hot- dogs will meet and commingle with the flow er-laden mountain zephyrs. Not in the mem ory of man has greater sacrilege been com mitted, for the Lord never intended that his handiwork should be exploited' by the com- cercially-minded gentry . . . especially Blow ing Rock, the fame of which has spread world wide. And, there’s a rumor afloat that by r,ext season those who desire to revel in the riotous vista of beauty that lies beneath the andient landmark, will be asked to plank down a quarter for the peep. Shades of Julius Caesar . . . Ain’t It awful? While there’s noth ing we can do about the matter, we proffer the guess that If such outrages‘as this are ipermitted for the next few years, some wise guy will come forward with a scheme to place a strong Iron fence arouad the Rock of Ages, and extract at least a dollar from pious pll- ,‘V jrlms vrho wish to cleave thereto. pleasant to be near.” Now while Carlyle doubt less exaggerates the significance of the great lead er, and underestimates the importance of those underlying social forces that produce him, his reverence for heroes is sound and wholesome. “When the high heart we magnify. And the sure vision celebrate, And worship greatness passing by. Ourselves are great.” The lessons of our quarter have made us ac quainted with twelve characters, nine men and three women. We started with Joshua, the em bodiment of obedience, then shook hands with, Caleb, that courageous explorer, and next met Deborah, the Bible’s Joan of Arc. Then we skipp ed ahead, for a moment, and listened to Isaiah hurling thunderbolts against the evil-doers of his day. Returning to the early period, we saw Gideon and his three hundred launch their spec tacular attack against the Midianltes. The scene now changes to the charming idyl of Ruth, one of the sweetest love stories In the world. Then we listened to the fervent prayer of it is more desirable. One morning when the chlx were between three and four weeks old I went down to the brooder house and fired the Jamesway brooder for the day, gave the chii their buttermilk, and broiler mash morning feed. Two hours later when I sent to feed them again I found twelve of the very finest broilers down dragging around on their breast bones. They could not stand up. There seemed to he nothing the matter with them except that j they could not stand on their feet. Hastily I gathered them up and put them in a box away from the other ehix. What kind of disease could they have? When I went down there for the next feeding there were more of them on the floor dragjplng about on their j breast bones. I lost no time call- j ing the hatchery men over to see about them, and after a ahead? For thorns are mixed with the blooming flowers. No matter what path we tread. PAINT MACHINE MADE JENKINS HARDWARE COMPANY “Northwest North Cartrfiiia’a Largest Hardware Store’ NORTH WILKESBORO, N- C. Hannah for the gift of Samuel, and studied the.--- - , v .1, biography of that forceful Judge. Saul, the most 1 thorough thf tragic figure in the Old Testament, so splendid In his beginning, so miserable in hi.s end, next con fronted us, followed by David, the shepherd boy who rose to be the most cherished of Israel’s kings. The noble-hearted Jonathan then engaged our attention, and, finally, we sat at the feet of Solomon, the wisest. W’hat an inspiring list of heroes and heroines! Thankful to God should we be for them all. ;chix and the feed It seemed the i only thing the matter with them iwas that their little bodies were so fat their leg bones were not ■ strong enough to hold them up. They were growing too fast. When one was dressed and the flesh stripped from the bones, the leg hones were bent just like k baby's leg Is bent when a fat bahy tries to stand before Its legs are strong enough to hold It up. I watched those chickens like a hawk. I simply could not lose them. We stopped giving Perhaps one reason money hasn’t been going I them any broiler mash for at back to the banks faster fs because almost every-1 least two weeks, an-d gave only body thinks it’s a wise precaution to have at least a small amount of fine scratch $10,000 readily accessible for the ransom.—Phila- grain, and all the Borrowed Comment delphia Inquirer. Those Cuban revolutionists who are indulging their passion in outrages and atrocities are of course to be trusted to back up an orderly civil govern ment.—Boston Evening Transcript. An Erie, Pa., newspaper recorded it as a fact that the Union City conflagration was caused by mmbustion. The devouring element oftmi gets nnr lar way in that manner.—The Minneapolis Journal. There ought to be a happy onten in the fact that the artist who designed the NRA posters is named Coiner.—Boston Transcript. buttermilk they would drink. Fell off didn’t they? Indeed they did! .... yes .... and they every one got back on their feet again too, In about two weeks or a little more. Trouble was, I was pushing them along too fast. Was trying to rush them for the Christmas market. I got those chlx a^ut the middle of October, and by the fifteenth of December they 1 were beanties, and it had not I cost much to raise them. You | see. they were "hot house" chlx,' raised entirely in a hot brooder [ house, and had never been out of -The poultry business Is no bed Everywhere from Maine to Louisiana the pro^ ,comes pouring in—letters daily, letters by the thousands—= from private owners, tm^ owners, bns owners, fleet owners. Mounting sales in ev«y territory have ]^ed op new reewds: in three short motatlw—proof that E^solene not only guarantees smoother pmionniuice, but aetaaUy gives increased mileage and greater eeon« omy. Try EttcJene today.' >■ ESSOLENE*S dniidbuielt vobie is unsurpassed hr smy regular- priced gaseUnm. 2 ESeOLENK miU sutS gas4oek. ESSO LENS clsmns the upper mo- 3 ter estdheepek^eessfdmteke ^ speeUf bbricestef soleent. ^ bSSOLENEgiMgrealerMilescSk. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY s STANDARD OIL Ca OF ‘ STANDARD OIL COMPANY OP LOUISIANA eCOMWIAL BEACON OIL tXMlPANY, •I tiARf or rROGiiisiivi iiiooifttsir
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Sept. 21, 1933, edition 1
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