Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / July 18, 1938, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE THURSbAY ■ P81DAY p—l'Ibsrty— -«•> lUg, how to ^ • b^^oBd like it, M tauflit li^tiiry^iboper]^|!^^; . . .... . ♦: v«i .-. 4«Wrrla! '5'1J•^.»■ to >: • I.--* |> ¥ f # Ak ^ 0 A P R^iof w.. s^. yo8' f'iiii..--- for lest moM^j trf tt. □i 'i*H' boy Micl like it, *s iwi«ni oy «ory cooper sigrid.****^^^^V^ !^Aif:imaoKt^^M ="~LtBER1*y-er 3 = V> ^ 'll ' v4 DEMONSTRATION. “First you do this with your lips,” Marco Polo in structs the Chinese Princess. She doesn’t see much sense in it, but she’s willing to learn. APPLICA'nON. Now you just lean forward . Don’t be afraid. Prin cess, it’s been done before — and it’s highly recommended by the experts. agitation. “Oo, what a strange sensation!” gasps the Princess. Or maybe she’s saying, “How long has this been going on?” RESIGNATION. It reaHy isn't bad, she decides, once you get used to it —and why not get used to it? Mar co thinks it’s nice work you can gret it. ' % ^//K 9 s' ■ .. ■ ■ 1: ■ ■ - ' ' Wi, m n Uii JU; uim iu HJ E^LTA'fl&N. '^Osculate* me ' an other? Now that she’s got tlie hahjg rf it she’s hanging on for dear life. Well, this is what the Chinese got in exchange for fireworks! ^wfRhn^jjBaSJlSMA: DOANS PILLS ih Aiffr f. .a'-nl. OMTHS ,r W '%y ABi CROSS. A Lion, brought to the extrem ity cl weakness by old age and di sease lay dying in the sunlight. Those whom he had befriended with his strength now came a- round about him to view his pre dicament. Revenge, as it were, Bl SURI TO OIT AM AMERICA’S STANDARD TIMEI ' Cel tnutworlhy dme la a nurt iagenoU watch. Yankee is the amalleat and thlnneat pocket trateh at tl.50. Chrome-plated ease, clear aamerals, nnbreafc- able eryslaL for past superiority. The Boar ripped the flank of the King of Beasts with his tusks. The Bull came and gored the Lion’s sides with his horns. Finally, the Ass drew near, and after carefully seeing that there was no danger, yet fly with his heels in the lion’s face. Then with a dying groan the mighty creature exclaimed: How much worse it is than a thousand deaths to be spurned by so base a creature! Isn't the human term tor such maltreatment, barbarism? The aftermath of a malignant brute. I do not know that I should set down the facts here—as I lay on in infosted matress behind the bolted bars—on good white pap er: the walls, they say. have eyes, the stones have cars But consider these words written in purled breath! The worst of it is I met a brute—and the true form does bear upon his face the living marks of his infamy. I met the brute as the result of a rather unexpected incident. At first, being filled with the spirit of a new adventure, I was not al together pleased with this ar rangement. Our conversation ran something like this; Brute’ Get out of that car and I come with me. i Myself: No, I wish to know just ! why you have stopped me? ' Brute: You .get out of that car and come with me. Myself: I still Insist, before I get out, that you tell me why you have stopped mo. Brute; After be had jerked my car door open and taken a center drive—with something^—at my left face, knocking me out of my car and senseless: Now we’ll see who goes, dragging me from the highway into his official car. I will not attempt to put down all we said. I couldn’t. But by such devices is the truth in this country made manifest. W3 are all tolerant enough of those who do not argue with us, provided only they are sufficient ly miserable! I confess when I first met him I was possessed of a consumin.g desire to be friendly with him. I might have thought of climbing a *ree somewhere a- long the highway—like Zaccheus. wasn’t it’—and watching him go by. It shows how pleasant must be the paths of-unrighteousness that we are tempted to climb trees to see those who walk therein. My imagination must have busied it self with the brute. Can you pic ture him as a sort of Molock rid ding over our countryside, flames and smoke proceeding form his nostrils, his official boots striking fire, his nashamolic voice like the sound of a great wind. At least that was the picture I formed of him vhen he dragged me up from where he'had knocked me. Out here we do not argue that brutes are more admirable than lonest men, I merely argue that, in such fields as those of politics ind highway patrolmen — to which, of course, the master- Cotton Clalsi^ Service Is Given A free cotton-classing service for growers cooperating in one- variety communities will be pro vided for this year’s crop^ by the Bureau of Agricultural EJconomics said J. A. Shanklin, extension cotton specialist at State College. The service will be provided on ly to growers in organized groups who are taking active measures to improve their cotton, Shanklin pointed out. Fourteen one-varie ty communities have been estab lished in North Carolina. The purpose of the service is to and staple length of the bale from wttieh the sample is taken. The organized groups, Shanklin said, must pro^de for the talypg and identification of samples and for shipping to the classing office. Tags will be supplied by the Bu reau, and the government will pay tiransportation charges on the samples. Growers wishing more informa tion may communicate with J. A. ShanMin at State College, or write direct to the classing office: post office box 4072, Atlanta, or 1111 Falls Building, Memphis. Deposits in 11,853 banks were ins'jred by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation at the end of 1937. The hanks hold deposits The purpose of the service is to amounting to about $48,000,000 supply growers with dependable which Insurance protect information regarding the grade and staple length of their cotton so they will know how much im provement they make in their lint. This information will also be a help to both the farmers and the buyers in marketing transac tions. From each bale of improved va riety cotton ginned by a member of a qualified group, a six-ounce sample representative of both sides of the bale will be sent to the nearest classing office. The two nearest to North Carolina growers will be in Atlanta, Ga., and Memphis, Tenn. The office w'ill notify the grower of the grade 000 of which Insurance protects about $21,000,000,000. Fifty mil lion depositors are more than 98 per cent covered by insurance. Incidentally 11.6 per cent of the 7,293 state banks were said to' have unsatisfactory or poor man agement last yoar. The report shows that the capital of insured banks increased $5,500,000,000 since the banking crisis of 1933. Of this, $3,500,000,000 has been used to write off worthless as sets, $500,000,000 to repay all RFC investments, and $1,000,- 000,000 to pay interest and divi dends. Definitidn AiSted For “Ship-Stuff :»> Raleigh.—F’armers will know what to expeet when they buy ’’ship-stuffs,’’ if the State Board of Agrlculturn adopts a defini tion recommended by the North Carolina feed manufacturers, re ports D. S. Coltrane, assistant to Commissioner of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott. The definition, as recommend ed, would be synonymous with the definition of “wheat mixed feed,’’ which is listed in the feed law as follows; “Wheat Mixed Feed (mill-run wheat feed) con sists of wheat bran and the gray or total shorts combined in the proportions obtained in the usual process of commercial milling. This product must not contain more than 8.5 per cent of crude fibre.” Conflicting definitions of “ship- stuffs” were given by feed manu^ 1 facturers when they were queried by State Department of Agricul ture feed officials. \miWKt Top-dressing tobacco with pot ash in Caswell county has return ed excellent results for the past few years and the practice will be followed widely by growers this season. TiM worst Mr t4» coaos from P.tfc— poropIrotloB oior —■ 4or tbo orao. Toko 1 Blasto !• 000 ToSoro—sow* amootoc OooSocM* oroom that worka dlisetlir oa aatorarm oiuimtiaa WirmjiRr otORo odor 1 to I dovt. Todora aloo rodaaw aoionat of aoroplratteo. Hado wttkout lard—Todara ts atlorm faram from otIS, tralnr paotm: (U totk— otoooth oa faao eraam. (I) Laarm ao Matv Aim OB fluaois or oadorariBO. (I) •nardjr" amall on olotboa. W» ISO. flat B day—maoorbaali If aot dallakdad. Trial aim ram. dood eooma. rODORA • • DIODORANT CRIAM • ■ : cDrci i a lIuLLa Robblni, Pairflald, ■ , ■ Conn. Dopt P-L ^ a ■ Wamo 11——«ii 0 Addrttt- NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND 'I OUGHT 10 KlidMf I0BAOOO- V/ aman who aowsToeACiD sets id know ine WFFERENCES IN IDBACCO QUALITY, AND HE SEES WHO GETS THE BEST TDBA(XD. TIAAE AND AGAIN, CAMa HAS BOUGHT MY (3KXE iOIS UKE WST YEAR, (^a RATS A40BE TO GET THE BEST. NATURALty WE PLANTERS SMOKE CAMELS. WE KNOW CAMEL BUTS TOiMJUAljTy TDBAOCD cigarettes alike? Ask North Carolina, Wilkes County. Under and by virtue of the pow- whicn ot course, uie n.«=..^.-,er of sale contained in a certain ed—they are socially safer and, Columbia, more u.seful. The question T place , versus Ida V. Snow, et I before you is a practical one: how , defendants, authorizing and are we to get through life with a empowering the undersized Corn- maximum ot entertainment and amissioner to sell the lands de minimum ot p.s,in? I believe that. scribed in a certain mortgage deed the answer lies at least in part, ' under date of the 9th of July, the answer les. ' „.-.ll927, executed by Ida V. Snow and in ridding the high tt ays of , hugb’and, B. W. Snow, to The Fed- ficial brutes, and putting red - - . _ . . . noses on all the traditional fee- faw-fo-fums. Since I met the brute' at 10:30 tonight while on mv way from seeing a picture. I must here set down a true account of my ad venture. For it is, surely, a little eral Land Bank of Columbia, and recorded in book 126, page 206, in the office of the Register of Deeds for Wilkes county, the undersigned Commissioner will expose to sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Court house door in Wilkesbero, North Carolina, at 12 o’clock. Noon, on the men who grow to bacco. They know Camels are different. And they know why — FINER, AIORE EX PENSIVE TOBACCOS! Tfv Camels today. See for yourself why mUlions oTsmokers say: ''CAMELS AGREE WITH ME.” venuiir. rui It 13, a* Carolina, at iz ociock, inooh, on new door opened in the house of 25th day of July, 1938, the J.— T following described lands, lying tmoM oMiT-mwiw «Mi IomrMimi tataeee is bb woHi and being in TVaphill township, Wilkes county, and more partku- C«I my understanding. I might travel a whole vear away from my soil. among the cities’ mad rush. wiiKes county, a..u nmee pa.w.u- brushlng men's elbows, and not arly described and defined as fol lows, to-wit: All those two certain pieces, parcels or tracts of land contain ing 131% acres, more or less, sit uate, lying and being on the Elkin and Traphill road about twenty miles northeast of the Town of North Wilkesboro, N. C., in Trap- once have such experiences. Out her-3 we develop sensitive surfac es, not calloused by too frequent contact, accepting the new im pressions vividly, keeping them bright to think upon. I As I lay in this dirty, infested cell I wish for John, and Abe: tuiot; - (;A>uidC9 ailU vt and their soft touch might fully appear by reference to the ... M a. 1— Inw 1938 FRI6I0AIRE with Miwmm METER-MISER SENSATIONAL NEW CUT IN CURRENT COST hill township, county of 'Wilkes and |4;en 1 North Carolina, the two just to hold their childish hands. having such shapes, metes. My pulse beats at more than a courses and distances as will more 100 be medicine to me. For nine long weeks in early spring, they sat by my bed just to be with Daddy. In my suffering: my misfor tune bro'i.ght on by this official brute, my soul is lifted up by the thought ot these who have fol lowed the plow and are now rest- tag their exhausted limbs. I am fully aware that if there were no shadows, there would be no sun shine, and that everything In life seems to have its light and dark ness. RALPH DUNCAN Drte..Uffct runu. B-tterle*. Water Sytemz and Ra^o. ’ t North Wiikeaboro, N..C. Hiffh Voltage Line Snuffs Out Lives Of Three Persons West Saugerties. N. Y.—John Schafft decided his radio needed new aerial. Mrs. Ella Simon said she’s help him. Eleven-year-old Jacqueline Kra- ble watched. Schafft coiled the wire, tossed it over the roof of a summer cot tage. Mrs. Simon caught it—and fell dead. Schafft rushed to her side, stooped to lift her—jerked con vulsively and died. Jacqueline’s childish hands tore once at the two bodies—and death took her. The uncoiling wire had looped over a high (tension line, oarrylqg 4,440 volts. At least 5,000 to 8,000 persons die of malaria in the United States every year. . two plats thereof made by Charlie Miles, Surveyor, on the 30th day of March, 1937, and attached to the abstract now on file with The Federal Land Bank of Columbia. This first tract being bounded on the north by the lands of Al fred Spicer; on -the east by the landi of J. F. Stroud; on the south by the lands of D. A. Ab- sher, and on the west by the lands of S. V. Tomlinson and J. D. Mc Cann, containing 69 acres, more or less. The second tract bounded on the north by the lands of Frank (iockerham and Watt Smoot; on the east by the lands of the Cau dill heirs; on the south by the land' of Alfred Spicer, and on the west the lands of Sant Spicer, and containing 62% acres, more or less. This is the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to Ida V. Snow by W. A. Stroud and wife. Pearl Stroud, by deed dated 24th day of Nevember, 1924, and re corded in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds for Wilkes county on December 3, 1924, in book 138, at page 200. The terms of sale are cash. No bid will be accepted unless its maker shall deposit with the Com« missioner the sum of FIFTY DOL LARS ($60.00) as a forfeit and guaranty, the same to be credited on his bid when accepted. Notice is now given that said lands will be re-sold immediately at the same place, upon the same terms, on the same day, unless said deposit is made. Every deposit not forfeited or accepted wifi be promptly returned to the maker upon expiratkm of the period allowed by law for the confirmation of said sale. ■liiis sale will be Juade subject to the confirmation of the Con^. This 20th day. of June, 1988. EUG^ 7-18-4t(M) In Cold-Making Po wer... In Econoiny of Operation! I'lli'ii'i'.ili' MEAN jci$. And Look ! For A Few Cents A Day You dan actually own one.of these beautiful 1938 Kdvinators. Come in and let’s discuss low, easy pasrment terms— A few cents a day is all it takes! DON’T DELAY! SEE THIS CHAMPION ICE MAKER TODAY! NonThM 100 Big lee Gibes For At Local Electrical Rates Actual figures to prove Kelvinator’t amazing economy in ioe-maldngl Only KelTinator Offers These Features: •Speedy-Cabe Ic« Release—fairly pH>» the cubes out of their trays. • SUding Sidf Arrangement—makes room for large, bulky objects. • Built-in Tb«fmc«aeler • Vegetable Cri^Msr and Bin. • America’s handsomest refrigerator. 24,Monllis to Poy Bolonce V-. ,
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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July 18, 1938, edition 1
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