1
:b
io Force ^Pmes
Of Foods H^her
on, Oct. 4.—K shift in
omary national diet during
B late winter and neoct spring,
laeuee of the drought, was pre
dated today from within the
MAA.
;''.JRie bureau of agricultural econ-
in a lengthy survey of
•n^ and livestock distribution,
!g|||iBDded also that prices would
^SiO'lwt that, with an adjustment
-ittiween surplus and deficit area,
l|hfcre would be no dangerous food
Aorta ge.
^;^^e full effect of the drought
•o'wtail food prices will not be
iett until next spring, when sup-
jfiea of meats, dairy products, and
laalti'y products will be reduced,”
Ak l^reau said.
‘lii^gbt and high temperatures
during the sumn\er were reported
In have so reduced production in
•entral and Rocky mountain states
ttut, despite “bountiful produc-
in eastern and far western
, “consumers will have to
certain chifts in their usual
because of the scarcity of
foods and the abundance of
LADIES MEET” IN ‘VOW AND WOtXVtSBT
Robert L.
Takes Part In Fight
Fist Fight Takes Phu* On Albe
marle Street: Solon Is Bmis*
ed About Face
diitM Gitl
Rhodes*Day Co/s
Big Contest Is
j|gol«uv Gold Seal rug^'tliat'
to make the home so mueh more ,
httmettrs.
■®w
&,
■Rl
r s.
When ladies meet—they generally agree. Here are Carole Lom
bard and little Shirley Temple coming to the Liberty Theatre with
Gary Cooper in Paramount’s “Now and Forever,” Thursday and Fri
day. Other stars cast in the fine photoplay are Sir Guy Standing and
Charlitte Granville in the principal supporting roles. Included on the
same program are Laurel and Hardy in a new comedy, entitled Them
Thar Hills.”
The bureau said a higher level
of ftod prices “in general” may be
mcpected in addition to the 7.1 per
oont general increase during the
'■■■t three months, but at a slower
Itrice increases listed for the
three month period were: Meats,
1S.6 per cent; dairy products, 4.3
per cent; cereal pnioucts. 3.5,
and canned fruits and vegetables,
US per cent. Part of these in-
orease.s. the bureau said, can be
attributed to normal seasonal
troids.
SECRETARY OF LABOR ' WALLACE WINBORNE
WOULD HALT STRIKES
San Francisco, Oct. 5.—
diction that agreements
Albemarle, Oct. 4.—Robert L.
Doughton, representative from the
ninth district, was allegedly as
saulted on the streets here about
11 o’clock this morning hy J. S.
(Ceph) Blalock, of Albemarle. The
skin on Mr. Doughton’s face was
broken in several places and there
were various bruises.
Despite his 71 years, the veteran
representative defended himself in
a vigorous manner, exchanging
several blows with his assailan*’,
and after Blalock had walked away
challenged him to “come back and,
let’s finish th’s thing.”
It was said that Blalock, who is
a prominent Republican, has just
received his cotton exemption cer
tificate and was not entirely satis
fied with the allotment granted
him. Doughton opened the Demo-
ciatic campaign 4ii this oonnly here
last night, during which he de
fended the provisions of the Bank-
head bill, and it is believed that
agner at Doughton because of his
attitude toward, the bill was the
cause of Blalock’s attack.
Doughton’s version of the affair
was that while walking down the
street some man started cursing
him about the cotton allotment and
wher he sought to gdve a reply the
man struck him in the face. He
PrixM Are Beteg Awarded By
Goug^eum-Nalp Oo.; See Lo>
‘’ cal IKHler For Detalli
NEI^ REEL HAS
BEEN TELi
new YOBK . . Miw Joan
Woung (above), daughter of prom
inent Caatoneae and an aeeompliriied
dyer, it aow la be U. 8. ttadylng
American artatioa aad planet, tlto
dyiag {km.
WALKS IN SLEEP,
TUMBLES 22 FEET
-A pre-
“with !
or without the assistance of
URGES PARTY UNITY
Burlington, Oct. 5.—“Work i added that he had never seen Bla-
from the bottom up instead of | lock before, but began tc
Danville, Va„ Oct. 5.—Joe
Stone, registered at the Virginia
hotel thinks a special providence
also presides over sleep walkers.
When policemen found Stone,
semi-nude, draped around the
iron fire escape dazed and shak
en, they wondered how he got
there. They investigated and
found that he had walked
through an open window and had
fallen 22 feet.
Mr. Stone went back to bed
strike; after thanking the police and
the
from the top down,’’ Wallace I back until Blalock ran from
Democratic i scene. Blalock is a man of about
state
mediation and arbitration j chairman, told party leaders at | 45 years and weighs approximate.
gradually replace strikes "'a^ | the sixth district meeting here | ly 200 pounds,
made by Secretary of Labor Per-} tonight. ,
addressing the i He warned the party not to be ; w’a.s sfightly different. He alleged
' of I that Doughton offered to
Blalock’s version of the affair
of Labor
Chevrolet To Broadcast
Outstanding Grid Games
Detroit. Oct. 6.—Fifty-six of
a»e most important college foot-
■i*n games of the 1934 season
#ni be covered play by play in
a series of sectional broadcasts
sponsort'd by the Chevrolet Mo-
Ser Co., which announced the
achedule today. The broadcasts
win begin October 6 and coti-
rinne through the season, with
J4 station.s hroadcastin.g .seven
different games each Saturday.
Seciional networks and powerful
dividual stations will comhiiio
io give full coverage in each dis
trict.
The novel plan of blanketing
M large proportion of the Unit-
States with sectional broad-
aasts was adopted by Chevrolet
in lieu of national broadcasts of
aingle games in order to give
JSsteners in each area the oppor-
tsnity to follow the detail.s of the
game in which they are especial
ly interested. The announcement
declares that this is the first
time that a national sponsor of
aports broadcasts has provided
ftir simultaneous reports of the
most important contests in dif-
terent regions.
To supplement the detailed
description of each sectional
game, there will be broadcasts
.faring “time outs’’ and between
yeriod' of telegraphic bulletins
,-wVEri;.?; other leading games of
partfeniar interest in the same
region.
The most popular sports an-
aoaucers on the staffs of the
varions' netw-orks and individual
atations have oeen engaged to
give play by play descriptions of
dm. $7 selected games.
Ttie scheduled broadcasts of
particular interest to Wilkes
Bateners, together with the ata-
tians carrying the reports, are
aa follows:
Southeastern .Area
3Uticm WSB, Atlanta. An-
■aniteer. Bill Mundy.
OcL 6, Georgia Tech vs. Van
derbilt at Atlanta.
Oct. 13, Georgia vs. North Car
olina at Athens.
Oct. 20, Georgia vs. Tulane at
New Orleans.
Oet. 27, Georgia Tech vs. Tu-
_ at New Orleans.
JS.OT. 3, Georgia Tech vs.
North Carolina at Atlanta.
Nov. 10. Georgia Tech vs. Au-
iBTT\, St Atlanta.
Nov. 17. Georgia Tech vs. Ala
bama at Atlanta.
Nov- 24, Georgia vs. Auburn
at Columbus. Ga.
Dec. 1. Georgia Tech vs. Geor
gia at Athens.
kins today in
American F’ederatlon
convention.
These agreements. Miss Per
kins said, “will be voluntarily
siihstituled for long and costly
strike.s more and more as the
years go by and it becomes dem
onstrated that these methods
hold sound and fair advantages
for both sides.’’
Repeatedly cheered and ap
plauded as she spoke, the secre
tary also announced that plans
for social insurance to be pre
shake
asking for a cigarette.
A big contest, in fact one of
the biggest ever staged by a lo
cal firm, is announced today by
the Rhodes-Day Furniture Co.
The contest, known as the “Mick
ey Mouse” is in conjunction with
the Congoleum-Nalr Company,
manufacturers of the Gold Seal
Congoleum rugs.
The local- prizes are: first, a
9x12 foot Congoleum Gold Seal
rug; second, a 6x9 foot Congol
eum Gold Seal rug; third, a 3x3
foot Congoleum Gold Seal rug.
The “Mickey Mouse’’ answer
winning, first prize here will be
entered by Rhodes-Day company
In the national contest which
gives an opportunity to win one
of the five new Ford V-8's of
fered as grand prizes. '
The contest is now on and all
answers to the question, “What
Does the Gold Seal Stand For,”
must be In the hands of the
Rhodes-Day Company on or be
fore October 1st, 1934. Answers
must not exceed 20 words.
There will be three local Judg
es to decide the three besl an
swers. and It Is expected that ; a
large num"ber of answers will be
turned In by the people of ••this
section. It takes only a 'small
amount of time and you stand
an equal chance of winning.
Incidentally, Rhodes-Day Com
pany carries a full line of Con-
i New York.—What ’ may be, «
Jfdreirjiiifier of a new era in )idme
mtertainment was demonstrstwl ^
in the laboratories of the Pg
Televiaion corporation here, when ^
8 complete motion picture
reel was televised, images-
projected on a screen in a dififep-
ent room by television,
The picture measured! abot^ 12
byf IfiHlntiies, -tod, was bright
enough to be clearly visible, al
though the room was brightly
IV^^tlda sy^in, a fiO-linfr pl««?5^
ture provided enough d^aii • so
that observers were able to see
the bat of a baseball- player, . Jthe
numbers on racing horses and the
sticks being used in a, hoeny
game. Premier Mussolini, SanofiMl
Insull and Eddie Cantor’irolti^l'
eir fti-
easily recogrnized when their
ages were 'shoxrii on the sellBed.
Peck’s transmitter is entirely
g^arless, using a new type of odd
spaced synchronous motor, of,his
design. It sekn's 24 pictures per
second, the standard rate for mo
tion pictures.
Direct? Yes. Most all of onr
goods comes direct from the
factories. You only have to pay
one) ■ small profit. We ondereell
mail order houses. Ev^rythlnAl*
just as described or your mbfley
back. A visit is fline well spent.
—'The Goodwin Dept. Stores.
over-confident in the light --, - t u
present administration strength. hands, whereupon Blalock told
either locallv, state or nationally, i him that he didn’t want to shake
and pointed to a goal to equal hands with any man who had help-
19:?2 when a record majority |ed rob the farmers as had Doug^-
was piled up in North Carolina, j ton, adding, “\ou ought to be
“Don t for.get 192S,” he chal-i kicked.”
lenged. “I hope you will neverAfter leaving the representative,
forget It.” j Blalock, manager of the county
“Head off any attempt for Re-j home farm from 1928 to 1930,
publican gains,’’ he said, and j walked on down the street, where
administer the knockout punch j he was arrested by Chief of Police
this fall—put them lown for the
full count of 10.
Election officials were asked
N. C. Cranford. He was later re
leased under bond of $100 posted!
by J. J. Morton, former sheriff of |
wilii laws, see; the county.. He will be tried on a
.seiitcd before the next Congress,
will “embrace some form of I go that abuses j charge of assault in county court
will not occur in either rank,, October 15.
particularly iii conduct of the ab
sentee ballot lest it be removed
from the statute books.
employment insurance and of old |
a.ce pensions.” |
social security program.’’,
•she said, “has been recommend-1
ed by the President and is now!
being worked upon by a large 1
committee. I
“It includes tinemployment in-i
suranc'e to stabilize income dnr-1
in.g periods of unemployment
and the development of a con-
utuious work program bas-cd on
social needs.
''Minimum wage laws, child
labor laws, and laws for shorlen-
STEEL MAGNATE SAYS
NEW DEAL POLICY IS ;
RETARDING RECOVERY
“Just think, children,” said
the missionary, “in Africa there
are six million square miles
where little boys and girls have
no Sunday school. Now, what
should we all strive to save mon
ey for?’’ i
“To go to Africa!” cried a I
NOTK'E
OI'G SALE
ESTATE
Under and by virtue of the
power of sale contaitied in a
i New York. Oct. 4.—Declaring |
ithat “no busine.ss is willing to‘‘chorus of cheery, voices.
] spend a dollar except for iinnie-; . ■ —
I diate requirements.” T. M. Girdler,
j chairman of the board of the Re-
, , I pu’olic Steel corporation, declared
iug the hours of labor for women , philoso-
will be introduced in 20 states i ^old-
Ihis year and should have the ^ recovery in steel and al-
.support of local labor.’’ ! industries.
Miss Perkins made it clean addressing the Ameri
can Society of Metals, criticized
! the monetary policy of the Roose-
I velt administration, saying:
“When business has some assur
ance as to what the dollar may be
OF REAL
for the i
that she was speakin
administration.
“This speech of mine,’’ she
said, “although I have taken
some liberties with it, was cor
rected in Washington, so you
may know the meaning of any
inference or statement.
FINED FOR DRIVING
HIS ‘HOOVER-CART’
WHILE intoxicated
certain Deed of Irust executed
I by W. A. Durham and wife, Jul-
ina Durham, on the .Sth day of
December, 19.32. to me as Trus
tee for R. R. Crater, to secure
the payment of a noie therein
mentioned, and defauli having
been made in the payment there
of. and demand having been
expected to be worth a year from _ made on me;
now, then business may venture to
Sanford. Oct.
McPherson, of
recorder’s court
before him persons charged with
driving automobiles while under
the influence of whisky. But, at
this week’s session of the court,
before him was George Wind
ham, a Jonesboro white man,
charged with driving a “Hoover-
cart” while intoxicated.
Highway Patrolman Roy Fish
er testified that he found the
man driving the cart in a reck
less manner, that he was intoxi
cated. and apparently had no
control over the vehicle and
plan a year ahead. But until that
time, it will make no commitments
except for immediate needs.
“I have no argument to make
either for or against inflation.
J. i That isn’t the point. The point is,
I will, therefore, on Monday,
November 5, 1934. at ten o’clock
a. m., at the courthouse door in
Wilkesboro, offer for sale tor
cash to the highest bidder, the
followin.g described real estate,
lo-wit:
A certain tract of land lying
5.—Judge T. I
the Lee county I which way are we going^ and howj^nd being in Edwards lown.ship.
frequently has! far When I know that, I can] tvjlkes co.unty. near the Town
plan accordingly. I think business | of Ronda. N. C.
should demand from the adminis
tration a concrete answer to that
question.”
MEADOWS IS NAMED
E. C. T. C. PRESIDENT
Greenville, Oct. 5.—Dr. L. R.
Meadows, head of the depart
ment of English, was elected
president of East Carolina
Teachers college by the colle.ge’s |
1 trustees, meeting here today. |
I Dr. Meadows, succeeds Dr. R.
horse which were traveling from | Wright, who died last April,
one side of the road to the other. I the past five months he has
Judge McPherson ruled that k,gg„ acting head of the college.
the man was guilty of reckless
driving but let him oft with the! Christians compose about 26.9
costs in the case. Windham paid
his fine and left,
“Hoover-cart.’’
driving his
per cent of the world’s popula-,
tion, the largest of all religious,
Adjoining the lands of J. K.
Tharpe, Tucker Road and oth
ers;
Beginning at the Northwest
corner of Lot No. 46, Map 1, sec
tion B. Poplin Heights Develop
ment on T^kaphill Road; running
with road north 50 3-4 degree.s
west 165 feet; north 53 3-4 de
grees west 311 feet to forks of
road: thence with Tucker Road
south 32 1-2 degrees west 200
! feet to a stake: thence south
32 1-2 degrees east 4 46 feet to
a stake, (Southwest corner Lot
No. 46 sold J. K._ Tharpe):
thence north 41 degrees east
200 feet to the beginning, con
taining two and one-tenth (2.1)
acres, more or less.
This Sth day of Oct., 1934.
A. H. CASEY,
groups.
10-29-4L
Trustee.
LOVE Lightly
An
intense story
of
modem youth
ina
modern city
by
Margaret
POOR ELLEN ... poor Ellen Church . . .
Her oddly distorted philosophy was built
from the ashes of her mother’s disillusion
ment ... “It’s better,” her mother said, “to
sit on the window-ledge and see the world
pass by than to be a part of the crowd.
. . , You’re less likely to be hurt.” . . .
Ellen had seen in her mother’s broken life,
the agony that may come from loving
too deeply. . . But love came to Ellen . . .
came swiftly and desperately . . and her
philosophy went crashing down all about
her . . She couldn’t help loving Anthony
. . . but she could, she would . . . and she
did, keep him from knowing that she loved
him, even though they were man and
wife . . . It’s an intense story, neither
over-sophisticated nor hard-boiled . . .
It’s a story all will enjoy. ‘LOVE Lightly.’
u '
Sai^ster
STARTING NEXT MONDAY IN
The Journal - Patriot
T. E. Story Visits
Schools Of District
Cecil B. DeMille’s
jm iWi ^ ATB a Events in the Life of the Glamorous Empress,
of vLCWKAI km Suggested by Cecil B, PeMillers "Cleopatra"
i
Glamorous
" Prof. T. B. Story, superinten
dent of the Wilkesboro central
achooi district, has been visiting
individual .school units in his
district daring the past lew
days.
He, reports that all the schools
STB progressing nicely with few
ditfleulties other than that many
iMDte were keeping their chll-
out a part of the time to
■»ork on their farms and urges
Btet parents send their children
K^Isriy if possible in order
they may gain the greatest
ble benefits from the
■Bfcools.
' tfie average age of persons
id in “Who’s Who In Amerl-
M SI years.
Picture—
‘Cleopatra’
WILL BE
SHOW AT
THE
Liberty
Theatre
AT AN EARLY
DATE
But then Antony lee* Oeopotra bom* from lb*
palace in her golden litfer, carried to Oetovion's j
tent. Heart-broken at whot he belioves U her.
desertion, he does not realize that she U making •
o lo»t plea for his life, even offering to give op'
the crown itself
Completely broken in spirit, Antony drinks one
lost toast to the Antony that might hove been, ond
plunges his Roman sword deep into his breast.
With on insulting refusal from Octovion, Oeopotro
returns to the poloce to find Antony dying, to hear
him beg forgiveness,for the wrong he has done
her. There is but on* way now for her to meet
gloating Octovion who is battering down the
palace walls.
Dressed in her roydj robes,'she presses the
poisonous asp to her whit* breast-;-and, when
Abxondrio's gates fall, the RplM^ find Oeopotro,
l-~#%tting end for the
seated on her throne, idecd-
womofl who found o great love ond, for it, gave oil.
4