Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Oct. 2, 1933, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f me local Eleytn b Downed To 0 In Scrappy Game On CoBege Field ' Waring vithoat the eerrlees at regalara, the MonnUta ^ ol North Wilkeehoro high •Aool loot a hard-tonght coata^t •• to 0 to Booae high school . ••nren Friday atteraoon oa Col- ftge Field at Boone. Baadicapped by the light back- iWd -with which Coach H. V. ©aereaeh was forced to start the t^gaai^, the local boye were neTer ^•hle 'to get going. The Boone eleven »iored in •ha first, third and fourth Quar- •• Considering the light team 1 placed- on the field, tae local Bids put - up a realy scrap and gara^^und grudingly before Poorer drives of their heavier the game, Coach Over- his football squad mo- ,to Hickory where they wit/htdsed the night game be- dvten Lenoir-Rhyne College and FigWbyterian College, ' of Clin- •an, S. O. Fro 4^ lALL LEAGtm (k C. Camp Parlear ^ t WllkeabOro Oiler Mflls Moravian Falls QingmanNews Mr. Rosco Byrd and Mr. Harry .Areen motored to Charlotte Sun- dey. Funeral service was held at Fleasant Orove church for Mr. Wilson Redding, Thursday. Miss Alice Hemric and son, FOddle, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bemrlc, of Ronda. Miss Ruby Gray, Misses Lucile and Aline Creen spent Sunday ■with Miss Josie Calloway. Double Wedding! Mr. Thomas Spicer and Miss Flora Hemric and Mr. Hardin Wilson and Miss Effie Cheeks, of Austin, and Miss Hemric, of Konda, started a march on their friends Sept. 23, and motored to Independence, Va. and got mar ried. Mr. Verlin Lions and Miss Polly H e nt r i c accompanied them. After the marriage the happy couples returned to Mr. J. C. Hemric’s where there were many friends to greet them and a bountiful wedding dinner was spread for them. Those present ■were Miss .-Mice Hemric and Ton Teddie, of Clingman, Mr. and Mra. Beamer Hemric and family, ■f Ronda. Mr. and Mrs. Bo* Sandifer, of Ronda. .Mr. Verlin Lyons, of Austin. iMr. and Mrs. Thomas Spicer returned to Mr. Spicer’s home at Austin, Sunday afternoon. Eydn Defeats WilkesboroTeam Wilkes Outfday Surry Lads But Lose Game 6 To 0 as Ball Is FumUed Although outplaying the Elkin high school eleven at almost every stage of the game, the youngsters of Wllkesboro high school lost by a 6 to 0 score to the Surry lads Friday afternoon In a close game on the Elkin field. Old Man Fumble, who has lost many a game for a superior team, was Elkin's best friend. Every time the Wllkesboro team got around to the scoring position, a fumble would halt the march and the Elkin punter proceeded to kick the ball out of danger. Coach Bennie Troutman, who is coaching his first year at Wll- kesboro, while disappointed in the showing made by his team, was not discouraged. He felt that his team should have done bet ter and regetted the inability of his backfield to hold the ball, but said their inexperience would account for that. Elkin scored the lone touch down of the game as the result of a pass and failed to make good the extra point. Wilkes Electric Co. Takes Agency For Westinghouse New Wa.shing Machine WUl Be Sold By Local l-'irm; Has Splendid Reputation Announcement is made in to day's issue of The Journal-Pa triot by the Wilkes Electric Com pany, owned and operated by W. M. Day and Tal J. Pearson, that the agency for the new Westing- hou.se washing machine is now held by the firm. The Westinghouse has the reputation of being one of the best and most dependable wash ing machines on the market to day. and the local agent is pre pared to make delivery prompt ly on any model you may select. Anyone wishing to buy au elec tric washing machine is cordially j invited to call at the company’s I show rooms in the Meadows Building on ‘'B” street or phone for a demonstration in the home. “Women's work is hard enough .without having to do the wash- •f their daughter, Mattie Laine, to I Messrs. Day and Pearson Mr. Paul Wash, on July 2, 1933, “and when a washing ma- Wise, Virginia. I chine may be purchased at the Mrs. Walsh is a very | present low prices and on con- I young lady. She received her edu-j terms, too, it is not ^•ation at N. C. C. W.. Gr^c'shoro.l jijg and A. S. T. C, Boone, completing carry the extra burden of a two-year course. doing the family wash each Mr. Walsh ;S the son of Mr. I ., James Walsh, of Mountain City, ' , Term. He i.s assistant cashier of That exciting race in the Na- *^the Bank of Mountain City. tional Lea.giie has greatly stimu- - The yoiing couple will make la'ed public interest in llio game. • flieir home in Mountain City.— Attendance at games between SHERWOOD-WALSH Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Sherwood, qf Cove Creek, announce the marriage 'PFatauga Democrat. Wilkes Medical Society (fu Will Mc«t This Eveniiog .A meeting of the Wilkes. Medi cal Society will be hcUl at Hotel .Wilkes tonight at 7:.30 o’clock. The entire lUismber.ship is requested to W present. pennant contenders has been ex cellent. Looks like !ho New York GiaiU.s will be in I he world's se ries. It has been estimated that New Y’orkers spend ?270,000,000 on sports of various kinds every year. i I Repoir dr Replace OU Roofs Bxul UjetUheftSeisAJ r-.- u u ! V il I F your roof ne^s repairing or rq>ladng, better ' have it done before bad weather sets in. One leflV can cause a‘lot of damage—frequently far more than the cost of repairs. Should a nev;‘roof be needed, let us give . ‘ ^ - you a free eslhia^. oh Carey Shingles'dr Aoll Roofings. We carry M vari^, to you caft the type best sidyteej to y^ur needs, Bs»cIk4 1^,50 years of ciperi* en'e^ Carey Roofii cost no mote, and firequeq^ kss^ than niitfsted mater !A» cThat^s/why we thwn.^p' .V * V.1 *■ ■ tn; "“A- T_~jJ^nPM4..pa«^iio»iawnj38S«oi»e.N^ idCUAb ASCUBAN TROOPS N FIRE ON RADICAL PARADE ON crowded street of HAVANA Mr*. Ella Mfflar ^ Dies Near City FoMral 'Servloe Held Sutorday At Liberty Orove; Burial At Lanrelsj^iags Funeral services for Mrs. Ella Miller, Who died at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Church near this city Thursday evening at 10:120 o’clock, were conducted from Liberty Grove church Sat urday morning at 10 o’clock. Rev. H. A. Bullls and Rev. J. S. Elliott were in charge of the service. After the funeral service at the church, the remains were carried to the Miller cemetery near Laurel Springs for inter ment. Mrs. Miller was born May 2, 1861. Surviving Mrs. Miller are three sisters, Mrs. Belle Miller, ol Laurelsprlngs; Mrs. Bettle Mc Crary, ol Lenoir, and Mrs. C. Ward, ol Mooresvllle. Soldiers 'AtteiQpli To Drive Oom- noaMs Ott Btnet; Scene I Of DiMrder Uoet of the New Twk papers printed n stormiest tharBahe Rath, of ths New Ti TanksM, finally adaltled ti this" would he his last utaasoii .PQKOlir, fhll-Ume membsr nuijmr league baseball,. Ruth promptly denied Legion Defeats Lions Club Ten Score 11 To 10 Victory In Con test At Fairgrounds Thurs day Afternoon The American Legion nosed out the Lions Club 11 to 10 Thursday afternoon in the first game of play ground baseball to be played here this season, If not the first ever played here. The game was played at the fairgrounds and was witnessed by a number of Interested spec- tactors. The proceeds went to charity. The Legion boys came through in the closing Innings of the con test and won the right to meet the Klwanls Club in a game which will be played Thursday afternoon this week. The Klwan- ians will meet the Legion boys at 3:30 o’clock. The bride is a sister of Mrs- Ralph G. Bingham, of Wllkesboro, and has visited in the county on several occasions. She made many friends on her visits to Wil- kesboro who will be interested to learn of her marriage. Havana, Sept. 29—Widespread and heavy firing throughout Ha vana late today that started when the army set out to disperse thousands of communist demon- stratiun resulted, according‘to a preliminary ^eck, in the killing of four persons and the wound ing of an undetermined number. Joe Gibson, 66, an American, photographer for Universal News reel, was shot in the leg, but not seriously wounded'>while making pictures. ' '' Gibson was one of several photographers on the root of the Hotel Nueva Isla, but no one else in the group was Injured. Four shots struck him in the leg, ap parently from the fire of snipers on nearby buildings. The clatter of machine guns and the firing of rifles and pis tols reduced uptown Havana to a scene of pildest disorders as students and ABC radical mem bers joined the heaviest army forces ever to patrol Havana streets. The early outbreaks ol shoot ing centered along Reina street, where communists were reported to have • sniped at the soldiers from the top of the antl-lmperal- ist league headquarters at Reina and Gervasio streets. The communist demonstration was in honor of Julio Antonio Mella, a student leader killed in Mexico in 1929, whose ashes were brought here this week In tin boxes. The dead Included a 15-year- old boy. The JapaneM 9Uimioi^ Ned- ilon iM decided to loe% George Kojac, of New York; thlJack Mediea, of Seattle; Ralph Flanagan,'w ^ aud one compete 'la -an to be beld bt Tokyo In Ant««l next year. Read Journal-Patriot ada. ■ ■ •4W5>*V. ne He was driving fairly slowly across the Queensboro Bridge when his rear right wheel came off. A garage helper had neglect ed to fasten the wheel on. He hailed a taxi and hurried away to a garage to get a tow-car. When he returned his car was gone. He made inquiry and fin ally located his car. Inside were two policemen playing the radio and drinking the beer they found on the back seat. “We’re just guarding your car,” they said to the owner. «- if Leader Sai V Ol ^Essolene leads the field, ^ because Essolene is made by the Industry's Leader^^ ■jh “Next to baseball I know motor fad bort. I've sold It for years. I sell ll now—all winter long—down in Memphis, after the season's over. "And let me tell you, folks, it takes a leader to deliver * tbekoods—in b^buU or in motor fad. That's why yon can depen J on Eiaoicnc— the largest oil organizatkm in the world is behind il. When the_ Standard Oil Company of New Jersey says—‘Essolene guarantees smoother par- fcarmance' that certainly means you'll get smoother performance. "I use nothing but Essolene and Essolnbe Motor Oil fai - my car. "Yoa'U get quick starting, smooth pick-np, mileage and economy with Essolene that yon i^er could get in tho old-fasUoned gasolines. Take my word for iL" HANACEB OF N. T. CIAIVrS-NA'nONAL IgACDE CHAMPIONS-im AT RiOULAR OARflUNI PRICI Copr. 19S3. Em, lae. ST.VNDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEYa STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF LOUISIANA STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA a COLONIAL BEACON OIL COMPANY, INC. 10. Of all the ways in which tobacco is ufe^ the cigarette is the mildest form Y OU know, ever since the Indians found out the pleasure of smoking to bacco, theft have been many ways of enjoying it. But of all the ways in which tobacco is used, the cigarette iathe mildest form. ' Another thing—cigarettes are aboi|t the most conve nient smolte. All you have to do is Strike a match. Everything that njoney can buy and everything that- science knows about is used to make Chesterfields. I The right home-grown tobaccof^-acasoncd with just •j. i > *■ enough aromatic Turkish —are blended and cro^ blended the Chesterfield way. Then the cigarettes are made right—firm, well- filled. Chesterfield uses the ^ right kind of pure cigarette paper. There are other good ciga- , rettes, of course, but Chest erfield is the cigarette that*s ■ynUdeTt the cigarette that tastes better. Gh^terfields satisjy^ toe ask you to try ihenC,, ' ■ -■m --7 IS-*'--’-. the cigarette that’s MILDER the cl^fette
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 2, 1933, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75