Isctlos is tM-
1$^bUiu( program
siftnd xno^BUtn
^ FoUowlnc to U« Jioneir roll" oi
^kwtero Wifi •eiooT'for 'tiw
[IpiHIl flioBthr
rinrt Grade (a) —'Maxing
RoBpe. Harold etnrdlTaa*. ‘
First Grade !»—Irene War^
ner. Clifford Hinton,
Smltfiey. ' ‘
Sectmd Grade (a)r—Vletoria
BtofTiUe'
8ayk
Robbed dJBd On RMe‘
John Hwiry Hauser, ^yer
4 Son■iI^L»w, Paces DottWe
10
, eztraslon dairyKao at
afe Colleae. *
aS'd Uewtock prodnon^
eaUtrly are seeking adrtoe
tfieir eonnty agents tor
to lower their prodaotiop
so as to meet the pre-
prleee and still make a
{Ronpe, Stuart Blevins, Itoe May
berry. Left off third month, Bon
Culler.
Second (b and third)—C.
Brooks, Beulah Welch-
Third—Norma Smoak. Barbara
Ogllvie, Marjorie MUler, Nell
Hubbard, Gladys Howell, Bdna
j Garwood, Sarah Brooks, Rufus
! Moaley.
\GfeMallsts In the dairy field' Fourth—Betty 'Henderson, Joy
^^Itee have worked out a four-1 Miller.
''’^golnt program which Is being! Fifth —Ray Stroud. Warren
amended through the conn- i^oupe. Dare Adams.
^^|«ento as follows: j sixth—Charlotte Harvell. Er-
Wepare a trench sMo: grow a | nestlne Mitchell, Sam Smoak,
Winter cereal hay crop; grow ; Baxter Davis.
pL Realty of lespedesa. and provide 1 s^enth—Ma;rjorie Hart, Vlr-
lognging rooms fcr housing thej.ginia Miller, Pauline Church,
cows during the winter months, j Constance Smithey, Evelyn Paw,
The trench silo has been prov-, gthel Soots, Pauline Lowe, Vada
« n a tremendous advantage, I Roupe, Mildred Walker,
i Vtornham said, in prov^ing silage | Eighth (a)—T. G. Foster, WU-
r tor winter. I iiam Gray, Ruth Hnlcher, Violet
A good cereal hay crop can be ■ Johnson. Rose Stacy,
planted with three bushels ofi Eighth (b)—James Allen, Dav-
tch or Australian winter peas Wright.
'to the acre. Where an ample sup-. Ninth—Lee Settle, Webb Sta-
.^jp of silage is available, les- [ Willie Hamby, Paula Craft,
t^leza may be plowed under and, Dorothy Beshears, Grace Joines,
aaed chiefly for soil building. ‘ Annie Lee Jennings.
Barns remodeled so as to elim- Tenth—Annie Lou Ferguson,
inate many 'box stalls will pro- Culous Settle, Marjorie Allen,
vie excellent lounging room forj Eleventh — Archie Anderson,
the cattle, which should be de-iBroadus Canter. Carol Cowles,
horned before turned In together.
Ample ventilation should be pro
vided.
Farnham pointed out that ma
nure from cattle kept in shelters, Miller.
much better conserved than j
^at from cattle allowed to roam SUMMIT NEWS
over dried or dead pasture lands.!
Winston-Salem, Feb.
doable death threat hangs erar
John Henry Hauser. 84, In a h»-
pltal here—death from old »ge
and dM#! lo tbe electric chair for
the dto&g two years ago of Ids
son-in-law In an argument oyer
whether It was too wet,to plow
corn.
But one of the threats ww
mitigated when the Supreme
court granted the old man a new^
trial—a trial that probably never
will be beld, for the infirm old
farmer. Just recovered from an
attack of double pneumonia, Is
dying of old age, and physicians
refuse to allow him In court un
til his condition warrants.
The plowing argument arose
Geotyto
Statesville, Feb.j
Bowlin, 21, proprietor of a local
grocery store, who .mysterlonsly
'i'
disappeared late Saturday night-
returned to Statesville today with'
a' story of being held up and
robbed and taken Intd Georgia
by his captors.'
^ Mr. BDwHn, ;who lives fhre
miles east of^Stateeville on No.
PO highway, returned to his home
Saturday night after eoapletfng
hto day's Urork at the store here.
He told members of hto family
that he forgot to deliver some
grocerlM, that he* would go hack
to town, deliver the goods and
return In a tew minutes. His fail
ure to return home Saturday
night led hlB family to '^make a
search for him all day Sunday
without results.
■Today on his return be said
that he was held up by two men
mkd St^Baat^ irCoiuiee-
tftnmhD^ofW.W.
Gatnlbill l*dbnittiy 3
Griven a preliminary bearing
before Justice of the Peace P. L.
a^ool
Decemhea 24;|'^
of n chadren
negligence of the has drlyef?
R. Niles."
The jury
employee were not responsible, j Reynolds some documentary
No action was taken against,, dence to this effect, and-
thto Is received the senator wW 4
on
Lee Joines was said to have been' g^^Qf^nd,
between Hauser and Fred Styers,! , i.* ♦ v. ,
his son-in-law. May 28, 1931. The, ** v i,i
White-headed, white4marded old}South Center strwt tjie holdup _
said Styers threatened hlmj “®“ forcing fi*“ ^o take them n g|jejaj,le age when a wheel
'his own car to Charlotte wherei
■f' The jury beld that the At-
Lenderman at the courtl^nse lntjg„^,^ coast Line railroad and its
Wllkesboro yesterday morning,
the three Jolhea boys were
free when the state failed
make ont a case against them in Niles, who was unable to ^tend
cocnsctron with the death of W.fthe Inanest because of the Injur-
W> Gamblll, 28, of Crickett, whoijgg ^ received In the wreck,
was fatally injured In an automo-'pfla^jjjig the forwarding of a
bile wreck near Pores Knob on of the record to Oov-
Phbruary 8. gi lernor Dave Sholtx.
c Tlie Evidence at the hearln|| freight train struck the
was to the effect that It was an^,.hool bus as it croased the rall-
nnavoldabte accident. ''jroad trackir on a foggy morning.
Don, Joe and Lee Joines were More thin- a score ot^ children
along with Gamblll when the fa-'^^re Injured in addition to those
tal accident took place. There gjHed. "
was no evidence to show that thej Conflicting evidence was Jntro-
hoya were intoxicated at that; jnced today as to whether the
time, although It was brought Una stalled on tbe croeelng or
ont that they had been drinking.! guji moving when the crash
lafe'
Tool
of the OC(Taim1
section htgre failed\tK
the the preferential
ment they |i»re supposed
to^l
cetv^ in assigning pep^e to
There w^ a promise
work,
place in
the bands of Senagi^-
take the matter op wlttffthe \
thorittoe here.
HeiMl«rson la Attonwr
J Land
Baalt*
b«f«
For Federal
B. T. Henderson, a menrttor
the Wilkes bar, has been approfW'
ed as attornw for the Fedor*
Land Bank of Columbia and la
already engaged In abstraCttag
titles for the bank. He to now at
tending to matters of thto natni*
for tbe bank. u‘
driving the Mode!-T Ford of con-1 witnesses who were ocouwmta
man
so Hauser procured a shotgun, j .
of his abandoned his car, got an-
tlred it through a door
home and Styers fell.
“I meant to hit him only in
the legs," Hauser said, “but It
don't regret killing him.”
Although recovered from pneu-,
, t . make his escape, running off
monia, he grows continually i ^
weaker. Infirmities
their toll and
other and made him go on with
'them many miles into Georgia.
When the men stopped at a
I filling station, Bowlin stated that
he seized the first opportunity to
snapped off and canged the car
to turn over.
Attorneys Ralph Bingham and
R. C. Jennings , represented the
defendants, while Solicitor Jones
appeared for the state. 'making.
The Joines boys were arrested ;
of the bus all testified they did
not hear the train until Just be
fore the crash. They said they
did not think It possible to b«r
the train whistle because of the |
noise children In the bus were
The last round-up of tobace*
farmers in Caswell county sbowp
that 96.6 percent of the growwm
have signed reduction eontracta.
I
BRAME’S RHEUMA-LAX
FOR RHEUMATISM
Quick Belief
R. M. BRAME & SON
North Wilkeebom. V. C.
following the accident after
are taking J**® captors while they were'^^ investigation by Patrolman S.!
the shrunken «. j resting at a filling station. He j, ;
gure seems to wither visibly as he' ““d® Charlotte
j Ethel Davis. Jewel Emerson. Eva
Lee Guthrie, Luclle Hartley, Vlr-
suns himself In a wheel chair on
the hospital lawn.
He seems not to care very
much whether he is tried again.
His mind wanders at times and
by train, and drove his car back, Kentuckian Fulls Hunger
ginia Laws, Hazel Walker, Ge-j physicians say it would he impos-
neva Wallace, Myrtle Yates, Thel- | slble for him to give lucid testi
mony.
His case is continued from
from that point. He bad about
$65 on his person when he was
robbed, bat the holdup men over
looked several dollars, it was
said.
Strike When Put In Jail;
Madisonville, Ky., Feb. 12.—
Munnell Wilson, a former mem-
PAINT
machinb made
ber of the Kentucky house of*
MAPLE SPRINGS NEWS
MAPLE SPRINGS, Feb.^
10.-
SUMMIT, Feb. 12.—We have
Forsyth farmers report more; continued. I Miss Anne McNeill, ^ss
farmers report
Winter plow'ng done to date than
In many previous years. >!any
growers have carefully terraced
their lands.
time to time. Some months ago Maple Springs school is progress-
a $75,000 damage suit was filed 'ing splendidly under the direction
against him by relatives of Sty-.®* Mr. Z. T.
Don’t Trifle Wfth Coughs
Don’t let thsm get a strangle hold.
Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion com-
,binea 7 major heJps in one. Powerful
but harmless. Pleasant to take. No nar-
ootks. Your own druggist is anthoriied
to refund your money on the spot if
your coogh or cold is not teUeved by
CteomulsioB. (adr.)
this community for the past few
days.
Mr. Lee J. Church and son.
Pressley, were in North Wilkes-
boro Friday on business.
Miss Eva Right, of this com
munity. spent Saturday night in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. C.
.Mikeal, of this community.
.Mrs. Martha Mikeal and -Mrs.
Vergie Mikeal, of this commun
ity, visited in the home of Mr.
Carlle Carnett Saturday evening.
Misses Rosa and Helen Church
Parsons, and
representatives, was on a hunger ■
strike in Jail here today. {
Arrested Saturday on charges,
of false swearing, Wilson about j
60, said he would not eat until,
G7eVne:'prinripeLi‘‘>« grand Ju^ which Indicted j
him “straightened out the case, j
Mrs. Pearl Cook Icharges grew out of a fight,
Wilson had with a furniture deal-
JENKINS HARDWARE COMPANY
“Northwest North CaroHna’s Largest Hardware Store^
NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C.
Michael. The fifth month attend-
iTurn Under Legumes To ITriier over Wilson's unsuccessful ef-.
Increase Com Yield ance was good. Following are tnel * vj « w*-.
, . names of the children who were j ***“ wfi^ d' *'
Profitable corn yields cannot attendance for the;^**® «®“®™‘ Wilson de-,
be obtained from most North
cannot attendance
. month: Duane Church,
Carolina soils unless legumes are Ha^by.
grown during the winter or early j Triplett,
spring and plowed under to in- phurch, Belva Lee Eller
crease the organic matter In the K ^ ^ , McNeill, Chessie
fields, says Dr. H. B. Mann, as- Triplett, Lutrell Triplett, Cleo
sociate agronomist at the North! church. Harbld
Carolina experiment station. ! proffit. Coletta Baker, Hazel V.
Soils low in organic *natter ^ Boyde Church, Toy Cox,
not only fall to provide the corn. xm„gg„g Greene, Lnclen Hamby,
Arveiielined to post bond and
Stuart! ^**® enn*’^’s offer to appoint a
Vetra i lawyer for him.
Veron-, Electrical Appliance
Demonstrationc Given
= and little brother. Johnson, spent sufficient plant food, hut -^^ratson. Carl Carlton, Len-
Ihehuneral
Home
LICENSED
Funeral Directors
AND
Embalmers
MUTUAL BURIAL
INSURANCE
REINS-
STURDIVANT
Incorporated
PHONES—
Day —-
Night -
85
85-228
i Saturday night in the home of; also fall to hold ®”®“Sh j nice Cox, Garvin Foster, Blane
Mr. and Mrs, Coy Church, ot|i° thriving dur ng | Bettle Church, Loy
Pattons Ridge.
Mrs. .Yrthur Benge and two
sons. Coolidge and W’arren, spent
I are oeing lurceu lu utjyvfiu
upon oats, rye, wheat and other
such crops to supply their grain
needs.
When soy'oeans are picked for
seed and the rest of the plant
J. A.
dry summers. ^ I Church, Rachel Church, Verlee
Due to the low corn yields in Roxle Frazier, Juanita
many parts of the state, farmers ^ove, Llnnle Michael. Odis Crane,
are being forced to depend “ore'Arthur McNeill, Flossie Church.
Agness Church, Pansy Church,
SiindP.y in the home of Mr
Kees of this community,
i Mr. and Mrs. Coy Church, of
Pattons Ridge spent a short
, while in the home of Mr. Church's
■ parents. Sunday evening. i ^ j .u „ ■
i »r. /IV u # *vi ' turned under, the corn crops will
I Miss Mna Church, of this com-r , - „ ,
night in I Increase materially even though ^ove
! no fertilizer is used. Soybeans
I harvested tor hay help the soil
' some, but not so much as when
the crop is plowed under.
Application of a complete fer
tilizer containing nitrogen, phos-
! munity, spent Saturday
: the home of her uncle, Mr. C. C.
: Mikeal. of Summit.
' Mrs. Leona Church", of Pattons
I Ridge, was a welcome visitor in
I the home of her brother. Mr.
I Lloyd Church, of this commiiii-
jity.
Mr. Boyce and Burl Mikeal. of
! this community, spent Saturday
I night with their grandfather, Mr.
W. B. Mikeal, of this community.
Ruby Church, Hazel Crane, Rob
ert McNeill Edna Stikes, Edith
Triplett, Vetta Church, Link
Carlton, Paul Carlton, Clay
Church, Roy Church, Peerless
Mack Triplett, Pauline
Chatham, Fay Cox, Colea Foster,
Zelah Foster, Etta Frazier, Maya
Frazier, 01 a McNeill. Louise
Triplett. James Cox, Bruce
Church, Virginia Baker, Calvin
Church, Willard Hamby, Robert
Miss Addie Malone, Southern
Public Utilities company home
economist, gave an electrical ap
pliance demonstration at the lo
cal S. P. U. company office here
yesterday afternoon and will
give a similar demonstration this
afternoon. The time is from 2 to
4 o’clock.
Housewives are cordially invit
ed to attend the demonstration.
Refreshments will again be serv
ed this afternoon.
Bus Fares Reduced
From North Wilkesboro To—
Winston-Salem
Greensboro
Statesville
Atlanta
Charlotte
Lenoir
11.76
2.60
1.26
6.60
2.60
1.00
Wasiiington ..
New York —
Bristol, Tenn.
Boone
7.46
11.00
3.00
1.15
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 12
Adwtic Greyhound Bus lines
NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C.
phate. and potash after soybeans Prestwood, VeniUa Church, Mary-
Surgeons To Meet In
Nashville, Tenn, Soon
have been turned under will '^^^ Frazier and Edna Hamby.
Don’t b« mlilad by
old timo broads
Vkorhod dowa as
Sa”|OHICRUSiaN
On .Monday. Tuesday and Wed
nesday, March •5. 6 and 7lh, in
clusive, at the Hotel Andrew
Jackson. Nashville. Tenn., The
Southeastern Surgical Congress
will hold it.s fifth annual as-j
sembly. I
This assembly will be attended I
practically double the corn yield,. p Church, who has
and will triple the yield over that jjgg^ ^ patient in Davis Hospital, I
On land where the soybeans have * returned home and is now on:
been harvested for hay. (jjg recovery. His friends
When legumes are harvested jiim a speedy recovery. j
for hay the potash content of the | Qarigy Poster, of Taylors- |
soil diminishes rapidly, unless yjjje^ jg visiting his parents. Mr. I
replenished by heavy appllca- ^ M. Foster.
tions, and the leaf tips and edges; pom Bller, who has been
of the corn turn brown and dry goffering from a heart attack, is
by all progressive surgeons I ^rogen in fertilizer greatly
throughout the Southeast who gyg„ part
can possibly be present. This j^jjg iggumes are turned under,
meeting is of especial importance,
and Interest to the physicians of.
Nashville and the entire state of;
up and the roots rot prematurely. ■ improving.
The yield of corn also decreases, j
Nitrogen is probebly the most Sulphur Springs Honor
Important plant food element in i Roll For Fifth Month
production. Omitting ni-
corn
Northern Alexander News
Aaaerie«*s
Vdbs
Ik b th« Mib
j tml lOc. qiulitT civw
MJBug at Sc.
I JOHN RUSXDIIm
•dwn 6094 (boles
^ IM
Tennessee and the Southeastern
states. .At this assembly, which is
the first to be held in Tennessee,
the most celebrated surgeons in
.America will take part on the
programme.
NOTICE
OF S.4I/E
ESTATE
OF REAL
PORES KNOB, Route 2, Feb.
12.—Rev. E. V. Bumgarner filled
liis regular appointment at -Mt.
Olive Sunday. He also filled his
afternoon appointment at Little
Rock. Wilkes county.
Mr. Atwell Bumgarner and
wife, of Boomer, spent the week-
ve-' Following is the honor roll of j
Sulphur Springs school for the *
fifth month: Second grade, Inezj
I Huffman, Harold McGrady and|
M. B. Turner: third grade, Kemp
Elledge and Virginia Adams;
fourth grade. Sherwin Turner.
OF OUR CUSTOMERS
NOTICE
I By virtue of the power confer
red upon the undersigned trus
tee in a Deed of Trust executed
by Vernon Parks and Pansy,
Parks, his wife, which Deed of j
Trust is recorded in the office of'
4dv
,iHmI imI amoitoag
■ By virtue of a venditioni ex-
iPonas to me directed from the
Superior Court of Wilkes County
in a certain action entitled C. B.
Parsons, against H. O. Parsons
end with their parents. Rev. and and Annie M. Parsons, command-
Mrs. E. V. Bumgarner. Ing me to levy upon the property
The small son of Mr. and Mrs. of H. O. and Annie M. Parsons,
L...
IS
Many others of the community ^j^g property as
have been sick but better now. prescribed by law, I will, on
Mrs. J. C. Wlke, who was Monday, 6th day of March, 1934,
raised in this community, died at 1 o’clock p. m. at the Court
last week in Davis Hospital. The House door in Wilkesboro, N. C.
the Register ot Deeds for Wilkes | geryices were conducted for sale for cash to the
County in Book 154, page 427,
and there having been default
made in payment of the note se
cured thereby, I will offer for
sale to the highest bidder at pub
lic auction at the Court House
door of Wilkes County in Wil
kesboro, North Carolina,
Thursday, March 1, 1934,.
o’clock p. m., the following de-
. T., . Tj TV.,, highest bidder all the right, title,
at the First Baptist church, Tay- estate of the de-
lorsville. by Rev. E. V. Bumgar- fendant H. O. and Annie M. Par-
ner. She was the
“Aunt" Tine Eay,
munity.
.Mr. “Bud" James,
daughter of sons, in and to the following
of this com- tract of land situated In Stanton
Township, adjoining the lands
jjved ot W. S. Beshears and others and
^^0^1 at the oirTiltar"d"Lowe place tor ^g^h
, jg_ a time, now owned by Mr. R. A. ppj-gjjg gf i^ewls Fork Creek, Stan-
scribed reaf^tate Tylnra^d be-j Shopping, wfJ>“rled one day ^ ton Township. Bounded on the
Ing In Wilkes county; lost week at Little River. inorth by the lands of W. S. Be-
Bonnded on the north by Claud 1 Mr. R. W. Pearson, clerk of shears, on the east by the lands
Bell, on the west by C. L. Wil-'court, is sick at his'home on the|Of J. A®tiley, on the south and
Hams, on the South by Henry' ^jj^gaboro-Taylorsvllle highway. “ „
Parks and on the east by Lonnie, C^k Con-
Sale, containing two acres, more' Only 20 tobacco growers In Acres. To satisiy sa a
or less. •
This 27th day of Jan., 1934. , ^
AVALON B. I^LI^ tabalatlon was made by tjie'|.i.4t.
Attorneys.
I Only 20 tobacco growers ...
Surry county had failed to 9**“ sJh Sy^ Feb., 1»I4.
reduction contract, when theJ
2-22-4t.
Reece A
HaU,
czfao
"Your New f
Goodyear Path
finder is the hast
buy on the mariiat"
• We’ve made a lot of
friends by sizing up
their driving needs and
recommending tbe pew
improved' Goodyear
Pathllnden. In many
cases Hiey i^osidc all
the tire service a driver
can use—and if that's
our opinion foryour car,
well honestly say so.
Come in and talk it
over, no obligatl(m.
High Quaity at
Medium Price
4.40-21 $5.70
4.50- 21
4.75-19
6.00-19
.5.26-18
5.50- 19
$6.50
$6.90
$7.40
$8.35
$§.70
Other sizes in proportion-
Tires expertly mounted
free.
Trick IserSyLook!
Let us teU yon about tho
service our truck custom
ers are getting from
Heavy Duty
Goodyear Pathfinder
Truck Tims
6.00-20 $14.95
30 X 5 $18.70
Other sizes in proportion.
USED
TIRES
Big Stock
TRUCK AND
PASSENGER CAR
SIZES
$1.00 to $10.03
If you are in need at
good dependable used,
tires fcr .snraig
see us at once.
J
-i
Prices subject to diange without notice and to any state sales tax.
CSC
farm agent.