Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Nov. 6, 1933, edition 1 / Page 4
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G. L. vho died Monday t Oct. ■ SOth, at her home ®y>^''if*r« conducted from »«p«at church Tues- *t 11 o’clock by ,8l»rk8. Rev. ’ Troy ^■iW--‘-r“* Bw- I. C. Woodruff. weeaiped ■was the daughter Jg Kohert msd Dlannah Walker. ^akelMUl bora Sept. 27, 1841. At •®® of 18 she married G. L. to this union were b’’!® children, 9 living and 4 1^'*®*r; husband preceeded her go ttc grave 13 years. Site vras a faithful member of to Methodist church and lived a I g^rlotian life until death and was WoS'by all who knew her. ijir She is survived by the follow- ■ lag"i*hlldren: W. G. Smoot, VothMbury, Mo.; Geo. W. Smoot, ; rolo, ilo.; E. G. Smoot and C. ■ la. Smoot, Abshers; Mrs. A. J. Mrs. W. C. Waddell. Mostey^ Mrs. Nannie Hule, Read- log>‘"Pa,; Mrs. C. Q. Brown, ' Mooil&g River; and Mrs. 0. A. 'Sffloird, Hays; one brother, Wil- Mom Walker, Johnson City, Tlegn.; one sister. Mrs. Julia Mowers, Moxley; 63 grand chii- living; 102 great-grand ''^Itfldren, afO living; 3 great-great Simsd ehtUren. Pallbearers were: W. C. j Brower. Homer Waddell, Quincy Brown, Roy Brown, Geo. Dillard : wad Vaughn Waddell, her grand- ■Oos. The flowers were carried hr her granddaughters. ,'TWE scene is the South Pole re- : ^ glon. The temperature is 70 de- Killed In Wreck lienoir, Nov. 3.—Gurney Hall. JtO-year-old son of John M. Hall, ■of Lenoir, was killed when the toutomobile he was driving left ghe'iroad and overturned one mile wonth of Lenoir late this after noon. Ralph Pope, riding In the ear with Hall, received a leg in- fury. Witnesses said the machine rounded a curve and began sway- lug In the center of the road be fore plunging over an embank ment. NOTICE OF SALE grees below zero. Against the ter- I rifle odds of overpowering cold, the spectre of hunger and threat of I burial in eternal ice, heroic men are battling to discover a new con tinent. Rear Admiral Richard B. Byrd is leading his Second Antaro* tic Expedition to new pioneer gloriea Toasting their feet by a comfort able fireside, Mr. and Mra John J. Radio Listener will share the high adventure of these intrepid explor ers. For the thrilling drama of this fight to conquer the world’s last re maining frontier, is to be brought to the American public, direct from Little America, 10,000 miles away, by weekly short-wave broadcasts. Pioneering Achievement For the first time In history, civil- lutlon will learn the thrills of pio neer discoveries instantaneously as they take place in the polar wastes. When the dials are tuned in on Little America, Admiral Byrd and others of his party will present vivid dramatizations of Antarctic con- quaete. Inaugurating the most am bitious broadcasting project ever ooac^ived. Assigned the most difficult radio reporting Job ever attempted. Charles J. V. Murphy, brilliant | young New York newspaper man, accomi>anled the expedition to an nounce and direct the Antarctic broadcasts from the scene of action. Besides possessing exceptional abil ity as a writer, and a dramatic speaking voice, Morphy, standing six feet two inches In height, and weighing 180 pounds, has the phy sique to battle the hardships he will encounter on the world’s last and coldest frontier. Series Starts November 18 The first broadcast has been an nounced for Saturday night, Novem ber 18, from Byrd’s flagship, the Ruppert, as it sails on its last lap to the Antarctic regions. The series will be heard in this country over a Columbia Broadcasting Sy.stem net work of 69 stations every Saturday night at 10 p. m. Eastern Standard Time, 9 p. m. Central Time, 8 p. m. Mountain Time and 7 p. m. Pacific Tima Silver _ . . Tyeier Wed W ’ .'sip ^jCb4nict«i^Md *ith ebarm d^fty^wsB this wbdMTBg of l^ii| Blance Silver to Mr. Olefin Tuck er on Friday evening at eight o’clock at the lovely home of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lowe In Wilkes- boro with Rev. Avery Church of ficiating, using the ring cere mony. The entire lower floor of the spacious home was thrown en suite and artistically decorated for the occasion with lovely flowers. On either aide of the room were baskets filled with carsanthemtims and the mellow glow of many candles enhanced the picturesque scene. The brides wedding gown was of lovely blue and white crepe with accessories to match. Mrs. Tucker Is the attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Silver of Horse Shoe, N. C. She is a graduate of Guilford Col lege and Is now a member of the faculty of Roaring River high school. The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. 'W. Tucker, of Benham. He Is a graduate of Wake Forest College, and is also fiMillMeljr fiffw the ceremony tor « W4idilliiig trip ttaronglt the out- ^ . ThMw pis^nt 1&» g cere- aMyi^vorfi. ilri and Vxt:. Kyl$ Hapei', rliDh Park* asA.;:;etk*f friends. . Hr. and Mrs. Tucker will he at home at Roaring River after No vember 7th. lOdlty at Roar- inrRiw high aehool. FiW V-lir.' *ni Tucker -left RECEIPTS INCREASE Raleigh,. Nov.. 1.—Federal in ternal revenue coUec^ns in North Carolina for the first four mmths of the. current flscal year were $12,213.45 more than in the same period last year, G. H. Robertson, collector, reported today. New York has quite a bit of fog. Six members of an army aviation squadron enroute to Mitchell Field In New York after a flight to Chicago, were forced to take to parachutes because of the fog over the city the other night. Repi^'Biade to fan& mad^ aiy whm there is plenty and when Near the heart of downtown Manhattan, in the executive offic es of a manufacturfng chemist’s laboratory, a Northern bohwhlte quail spreads paternal wings ov er a bevy of eleven chicks. The quail were hatched in an Incu bator. Wdili- -r' ■ 4 . "With' (he closingr'^'ally i^d work this fall, farmerli haii^ file opportunity to check th^ aqaip- ment and to make all necesaary re pairs," says D. S. Weaver, agri cultural engineer at State college, "Valoi^ hours : 'l^ng ntsy this fall ,i by-' replaeing broken or worn parta, by tighten ing nuts, screwing or clamps, or by painting, and greasing exposed met^ to preserve it from rust. Sometimes, replacement parts may not be secured at the local store. If these parts are ordered in the fall, time ■ will be saved in the spring.’ r Weaver says old cylinder . oil kept in a can and applied with a brush makes a good anti-rust coat ing for all bright metal parts, such as plow bottoms, cultivator shovels and the like. Not only do plows need atten tion but disk harrows may be put in shape in the fall. The mowing machine is always neglected until it is needed and this machine should have a thorough overhaul ing this winter. The farm wagon stands tremen- HM , aBiinaI ihaabaadry dqlurt- xt\etA at State college teeCBtlf tm- chaaed 11 high grad* Herkfrad Ind Angus steers from AUeidtaBy county fanners for some ' expari- mental work. -' i! 'V ir ii(ld that more and more men and women in New York are ^llectlng stamps. 'The stamp shops say that business Is very good. '/-.McDowell county farmers are planning to co-operate in planting an acreage to red raspberries this fall as a new cash crop for the county. Sidewalk cafes have been banned by the police In New York. That part of the public which enjoys Us meals out-of- doors Is protesting. A completely equipped small farm of 46 acres, bought and paid for, and with a nice 5-room farm home, free of debt, is what lespe- deza, poultry and daijy cows have done for one Stanly county couple. Girl Is Changing Into Man While Science Stands Agog Wondering What To Do Glandular speciali.sts, spurred by tion started, according to the girl, a girl’s tearful pleas to save her|iow 23. She appeared at a hos- ' pital clinic ten days ago begging applied an doctors to arrest the con- Ca>>f-!dition. “becoming a man,' I adrenal diet in Oakland, North Carolina, Wilkes County, In the Superior Court. Octob er Term, 1933, Mrs. Lula Kilby. Plaintiff, vs The Mountain View Institute, and Mountain View College, Inc.,j.f^Qj„ Defendants. Under and by virtue i>f a judg- , ., , , j. ment rendered in the above en- recently to arrest the startling | Frequently, she said, she found j titled cause at the October Term.' transformation of a once attract-' herself doing things a man would 1933 of Wilkes Superior Court, i ive young woman into a person do. To illu.strate she thrust her the unders'sned Commissioners |decidedly masculine charac-.hand forward to shake hands. Her 4nly appoirted In said judgment, gnd tendencies. ; gesture was decidedly masculine. J , , Her once wavy golden hair be-1 Examination showed a disturb- the Courthouse door in ilke.s-! Iwro, North*Carolina at 1:00 o’clock p. m, on the 9th day of -will sell to the highest bidder at came brown and coarse during thejance of the delicate balance be- strange change. She developed ^ tween the thyrorid and the arendal December, 1933, for cash to sat- mustache and sideburns, which i j-lands. The sp-'ciali.sts removed Isfy the judgment rendered in made shaving necessary almo.st I the thyroid, leaving her tempora- oaid cause for the sum of $9,- daily. I rily si>erchle.ss, then put her on 000.OO, with interest on the' Rounded feminine contours were j the adrenal diet, same from November 5, 1 ^24. | j ^jjg broad shoulders, In 10 days, they said, the result and the cost of the suit, the lol* ] the rigid muscles of an athlete: | of the operation might b" known, lowing d'escribed real-estate. 'her hands were changed from the but “Miss X” faced the probabili- Of^^^lLrLd" bounded "anS'‘de-I sort ^ °f femininity into mas- ty of many months in the hospital cribed as follows' [culine hardness. before it could be determined def- " All of the land of the said | Internal changes occurred, to n tolv whetiier the alarming trans- Mountain View College or Moun- make “child-bearing impossible at formation had been arr/zsted. tain View Institute. Inc., in and present and to begin the atrophy “It should not be understood,” around the said Mountain View „f her female organs.” said the an attending specialist said, “that College or Institute either in one gpecialists attending her. They re- this woman is becoming a man in parcel or several, together j quested anonymity, consenting to fact- It is only the characteris- the strange case pupblic tics of a man .she is assuming. It among said bui dings , 'I “only in the interests of available is a rare case. In our years of bulldin? known as tn© Aacninis- * ^ , thc^ rtnrmitorv I medical information/’ experience we have never seen Two years ago the transforma- anything like it.” NEW TOWN POPUL-4TION for girls known as the Pearl Kil by home and the dormitory for bovs aniT all the out buildiii.gs^ appurtenant thereto. .All situated ; (’OJVJES FROM COUNTRY the imnipdiate vicinitv of Hays 1 —— postoffice, specifically 'described Between 1920 and 1930. the In a mortgage deed of Trustee’s farms of North Carolina contrib- deed duly recorded in the office I uted 240,000 people net to the of the Register of Deeds of and cities of this state and Wilkes county in Book No. Ij,'” : nation. page 610 and '®’| “Three-fourths This November 9th. 1933. T. C. BOWIE. 12-4-4t. Commissioner. /E OF LAND of the:.e mi- ' grants were young people between ithe ages of 15 and 30 years of i age and one-half of them were be- NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND jntwet'S 15 and 25 years old at the Under and by virtue of power! time of migration to the cities.” of sale contained in mortgage says Dr. C. Horace Hamilton, ru-, d«d executed the 29lh day of; ral sociologist at State college. July, 1929. by J. F. Walker and! “During the ten-year period men-! wife', Sina Walker to the under- ujuned, about one-third of the farm signed mortgagee to secure the I the ages of 15 p^jipest of a note which is past years left the farm for the dde and unpaid and demand hav-I average thgreot!Twin sell to the highest age at the time of miration wm biflderi-at public auction at the around 20 years though many 17, ct&rthouse door, Wilkesboro, N..and 18 year old boys and girls| C- at the Hour of One P. M., on (left.” | the 9th day of December 1933, | Dr. .Hamilton says more negroes I for cash, the following described, whites migrated and that the | real estate. coa I farms lost few people in the mid-j 'tle*"^Township. ^ Wilk“es county, dle-ag^ group- On the whole j Carolina, and adjoining j more females left the farm than, 'did males. j These figures show clearly that i the city is parasitic on the coun try, he declared. “If we want to reform the city, let us begin with the country, par ticularly in the country schools,” he saih “Courses in urban social and civic problems should be taught rural youth before they Sl^afirtto .the cities.” I'T^^^estigator also pointed out that thus migration shows the need for further tax reforms. AU kiial 'fiiblic services should be support^ entirely oot Of state and national funds. “The recent net drift of dty population back to the farm has Worth the lands of R. C. Younger heirs, Carl Redding and others, begin ning on a pine running north 80 poles to a black gum. R. S. Younger’s corner; thence south 7* degrees east 75 poles to a rock on the South bank of a branch, Redding’s corner; thence south tegi degrees west Redding’s line WW 4fi poles to a rock; thence west poles to the beginning, con- U^-'tsinlng 7 2‘3-4 acres more or leas. iiSd mortgage deed recorded in Bok ui9, page 208. In the of- M of the Register of Deeds of ItTgrnkos C^nty. Thla «th l$ay of Nov., 1933. IMA MATHIS, (.4t. ' Mortgagee. Homaean, Attorney Rmssa MatUa. Tni Howard, korticaltariat at Okodale, Calif., vahMS tit* pamt plant frost wkieh the abova donbl* IVaaavaal daiaiea wsra eat at ||60,0(NK It la tha Irat time tUa flewtr batf ever been shown and is tbs only pteafe 'piaat la exteteaea. They are abowa W BtOa Juw Moaday ia h (Beadaie Show lait Weak.' practically ceased- It wis a tem porary phenomenon due largely to the paralysis of city Industrlee," said Dr. Hamilton. They bare a new cat, a great Bonae-catcher, down in the City Hall in New 'York.' Hla name Is Tweedledee. ABSOLUTELY FREE! $ 119.50 C A. VICTOR RADIO R. THIS NEW, 10-TUBE C.A. VICTOR BI-ACOUS TIC RADIO, MODEL 260, IS HOUSED IN AN ENGAGING WALNUT CABINET OF DOOR DESIGN C. A. RADIO- TOMBOUR WITH R. TONE. a THIS RADIO HAS EVERY THING — IT^ A 10-TUBE BI-ACOUSTIC I N S T U U- MENT WITH R.C.A. RADIO TONE ... IT GIVES YOU TWICE THE TONE, TWICE THE RANGE AND POWER OF ORDINARY SETS. * A Wonderful Christmas Gift On Christmas Eve Night at 8 o’clock, the above $119.50, 10-tube R. C, A. Vic tor Radio will be given away ABSOLUTELY FREE at my store. A commit tee of three people will announce the lucky person who is to get this wonder ful Christmas Gift. A. H. Casey, C. C. Faw and R. G. Call compose the com mittee who will announce the lucky person to get this R. C. A. Victor Radio absolutely free. Who will be the lucky person to win this Radio? It may be you. Come to my store and see this wonderful Radio and let me explain to you all about your opportunity to obtain this beautiful Radio set. Remember Prevette’s slogan, “When Better Merchandise Can Be Bought and Better Values Given, Prevette Will Do So.” J. T. PREVETTE THE BIG INDEPENDENT CLOTHING AND SHOE HOUSE NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C. ' STAR BRAND SHOES STAR BRAND SHOES The above Radio was purchased thru Ralph Duncan, Npi^ Wilkeslwo,,
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 6, 1933, edition 1
4
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