^OURNAL-PATOOlfaN
WBttfc,; ReT. R. Pi^g4
Wa racvUr^ppateibnS^'^
^ V»lW>ir OM'reff
t* ^fr k*M- uidw the dl
oJ .W. B. Jones.-Is preiK>r«
, *» tornttena ti»* Ofth -fihiiMJsy
jWfcg. wfch* -win be held st
: 2^ ®epe ehnreli in IredeU counI
**• Jonee Vanhoy and family,
^ RIate Road, ylslted her mother
■■t tamfly here last Sunday, Mrs.
W. A. Pardoe.
^. and Mrs. C. W. GtllUijn and
«iren. Charlie lU, and Mary,
2“ spending this week visiting
^***. Mrs. Louts Ferlaszo in
■nettovnie, Va., and seeing oth-
•r places of Interest.
Pidnister Morrison from
spent last Sunday
*■* with his .parents, Mr. and
"Mu. J. c. Morrison.
Mr. and Mrs. ^oi)t. Wood, of
Xfefc Point, were the week-end
•■•its of her parents, Mr. and
■ea G. L. Johnson.
W. H. Jones went to Winston-
Bslem last Friday to see an eye
socialist, the doctor removed a
i^Anter from his eye that ' had
given him much pain.
Mrs. G. P. Pardue and son,
Xnel, were the guests of her sis
ter last Sunday, Mrs. Byrd Simp-
x>K. of Dobson.
Mrs. C. W. Gilliam, Sr., Is
•pending two weeks in iMt. Airy
the guest of her brother and fam-
Hy. Mr. J. S. Rose.
Mr. and Mr.». Clyde Walker and
Ktle daughter, Linda, of High
Habit, were the guests over the
week-end of the latter’s parents,
Jfar. and Mrs. T. N. Green.
Eugene Jones went tp Martins-
•flle. Va., this week where he
■wm he for some time. He is a
anwffntative of the Winston-
JUeni Journal-Sentinel.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McBride
•>d little daughter, Betty Jane,
■ Dr. Chas. W. Moseley
IKseases of the Stomach £.nd
Internal Medicine
fn Wilkesboro on Mondays Be-
gianing May 19th, Hours 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Ferguson Pock Build
ing, ’Phone 139.
JMiwH 4nd Dvr-
laai. ffoia^ Rvdn' ipeht l«st
week-end' here with the^^iAter,
Mr*. Martin Green. *
Mrs. yft, T, Mmrrlsen is kpend-
iog tht» week i%,Martlngrine, Va.,
the gueet of Jker slster-tn-law,
Mrs.- D. H. Mathis.
Flake Gilliam-Is at Wilkeeboro
this week tisiting his aunt, Mrs.
JV. A. Stroud.,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T.- Jones
of Arlington, were the guests of
hUi parents last Saturday night
and ‘’unday, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Jones.
Mrs. Fannie Baits and daugh.
ter, of Elkin, visited In the home
of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Caudell
last Sunday.
Lydia C. Blackburn
God said come higher and she
bravely answered the call. While
it brought a sad farewell to us,
hers was a happy good morning
to Heaven's meeting: and greet
ing loved ones who had preceded
her to that fair city.
She will know no more of the
tolls and cares of this life; she
is safe from this world of sor
rows. Tempest mry howl and the
loud thunders roar, the gathering
storms may ari.se, yet calm is her
feeling, at rest is her precious
soul and God has wiped all tears
from her eyes; yet amid bright
hopes and consolation we often
long for her, and are sr.d to know
vVe can never see her again in.
this life. We will miss her at the
church and will never hear her
shout and siivg, nor see her as she
went hither and thither doing her
daily duties'; but children and
friends let’s be faithful to the
end. end she will meet us at the
station of glory wbe'e tfle gates
are pearl and the streets are gold.
Oh, glorious day oh blessed
hope, my soul leaps forward at
the thought. Let’s no longer be
sad. death Lt'n’t the end. In the
house of God it is only the iun by
the road on our way to Crod. Lydia
is not dead, .but sleepeth. Jeans
said: I aan the resurrection and
the life, and he that believeth on
me, tho he were dead, yet shall
he liv'^. And again Jesus said,
“Because I live ye shall live also.’’
MRS. JOE SPEARS.
[rRollne^
“L^f
'W
By ». tk OAtTMiJi^
iWi' lnto' tAs iiobbme of-
V — ■ JiP -v-J ■ .77:. »i^. •• V / 7T^ \ U
At Home of Donfirtir
Aufiute# Ga.
«. H. •’Rqblnott*;' ««J: AT, '#«-
tired limber deetor enjl
of Mt. Pleasant, died Bundby *t
1:30 a.' m. at the home of , fata
dyugfater, Mrs. W. K. Cotr, la Au
gusta, Oa. He ifaad faeeo la 111
her Ufa for several- luoiitfas and
recently enstelned a broken ,hlp.'
Mr. Robinette -was born In
ifa4i?W
'’«*e tto' cQoilotjr
ft. A
eleti^ tdean on ’ifad
Uielr^decontdnn. > Om .,^1^' Uta
ehoieast eehefaiw ta arawil; frfanr,
thfat niifaJltBi|;..Mit«rtalnet^'Molfa^
er Qooso^AsrgMiOne wan^ ex’-.
eeedSb^li^l^f&Iellc. bow ieaps^e*
tton^'4 nkeOM^fai^T
’will .Tieceiv^ U:j^tfa armsi
ttovi^> weOM faaf|4js«)( • a^
Wve^faw’i^ir; illio 4i^F
Idog rears-do faltid yaws Jin , W”
Alexander bounty, and , was a
school teacher as a young inan
In 1882 be was married to KHss
Virginia Church, of ,wnk6?faoro;
rnd In 1918 they moved to Mt.
Pleansant, ’Tenn., where he was
engaged In farming , and the
lumjber buslnees. He and bis
wlfe^celebrated their gold*en wed
ding annirersary in 1932 and
since her death In 1936 he had
made his home with his children.
Mr. Robinette wrs a member of
the Baptist church where he
served as deacon, Sunday School
superintendent, and church clerk,
as well as being active In all
phases of the work of his denom
ination.
Survivors in addition to Mrs.
Corr and Mrs. Holliday are two
other daughters. Mrs. W. T. Eller
of Purlear, N. C., and Mrs. T. D.
lUht the ,9eel!hcle, wtllt ’the
eat jnrodaoes ^nc mnste on hta
Ug basa' tlddlb. jPgnslng ie look-
bsick. ar they ship ’rway togetifatr,
ar« the, .^ioplng dish',_a^ SPOpA^
Vailout':stae4 stars aeeontj^l)|g
backgrt^nA? iT;’r - rV.;
Such A mural Is not fiinwlt
to repr^dticei The antAih^’are
largely carlcelured and nO'more
than four or five color* are used.
For .the background, a warm red
or orange tone, a cool faluo or
green, or a neutral gray or buff
will suffice. Enamel' ta'B good
medium to use and 1» eray to
clean. A dark toned dade, painted
around the lower third of the
wall will be exceedingly practical
as well as decorative.
If the children are zoo-conset-
OU8, paint a chocolfte brown dade
about the room and continue the
brown In vertical bars of a cage.
Ion' to atry boms now and then
of ipt sroningr 71 sinsdl ra^o will
"Sf-muajc for ^olng, Ahd j|^
old upright, piano no iongnr
‘' * things in'
- - P . ’ 4 - - - - - - --
I*: of the State Doitaitineot of Agrl*
llUiro. . AJ:
tp pat wp. sfaelveB
. . • hooks. Perhaps
^11 Adi| too,
Apligre egn , deTolop;»^s
'"^Mhf:7>nlj^tll the faaasipeat be
sgfr a^^ns paAttg ptase
tor-C^t^n op raii^ 4c.ys, bat It
wlU-i^feW lMirk'fiig (Sfes for thieta
etytter
ill* Jivtniiliraoiif. Ch*ckMOVer
OwwMI^jdl'ftiinss yop liVre atnih-
hied trohi'easing a heM to. a
apread^ont'[*lmriertrala'^ track or
skldSed to.,4«atroiUlon on’ * tMt
oflipede. Then balance these mtor
haps’wlth the benafUt of a playi:
room into -which callers need not.
he shown: Ton'll' he counting the
1ionrs.f until yonr, basement ta>
transformed to a cleanly painted,
cleverly decorated playroom.
Then'let It raln^let It' pour!
Everything will still be under
control.
I.and of Mt. Pleasant; six .sons, [ Behind these bars all manner of
R. Z. Ro.blnette of Georgetown, |f.nimala are done in
S. C., B. W. Robinette of Conway.
S. C„ G. C. and O. A. Robinette
of Columbia. S. C., G. E. Robin-
I ette of Shelman, Ga.. and C. C.
' Ro.binette of Nashville; two sls-
1 ters. Mrs. S. A. Wilson of Le-
jnoir. N, C., and Mrs. William,
Reed of Taylorsville. N. C.; one
1 brother. David Robinette of Mar-
I shall, N. C.: 33 grandchildren,
land 15 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were condnet-
I ed at the Mt. Pleasant Baptist
{church by the Rev. Lucius W.
Hart.
CoccldloslB has been reported
among baby chicks In Beaufort
county this year, but In most in-
stances the disease has been
gray sll- brought under control with but
houette — swinging monkeys, ^ little loss.
trumpeting elephants and leap- j
A 1942 national wheat acreage
allotment of 56,000,000 acres has
been announced 'by the U. 8. De
partment of Agriculture, smaller
than the 1941 allotment by 7,-
000,000 acres.
- t*rai«r» ^thta
>*xpeet to harvaM the Uucest
- MrMce i4he« If 88, if9»
iw; junior Mittatletan
Jk.
C*ah*
Carm mArketii^i
pcfmHUs’in
|70#,Oi)0,0(M),’ Tif.j
f«7,000i«0j^to Uwritene
b Not Made dd dr
1st,
Pay Tour 1940 faxes Now Aod
Save This 4 Per Cent
C. T. Doughton,
.‘JHERIFF OF WILKES COUNTY
ABINDANT
Duplin county farmers who let
their Austrian winter peas and
vetch grow until the middle of
April had an a'bundant growth to
turn under, reports L. F. Weeks,
assistant farm agent.
MARLOW’S MEN’S SHOP
Manhattan Shirts — Paris Belts
BEAlTIFK’ATlbV
I i Tweiity-.six high school 4-H
IjC'ub members in Durham county
' have entered a home 'beautlf 'a-
jtion contest sponsored by the Kl-
I wanis Club, repprts Assistant
'.Farm Agent J. A. Sutton.
ing kangaroos. One wall may be
left unbarred but decorated with
somersaulting clowns and floating
balloons.
If you don’t think too highly
of your own artistic ability, there
i'.re always amusing stencils, de-
calcomanias or pasterettes to be
had in the shops. Their applica
tion is a simple process. But if
you are artistically inclined, you
can concoct , your own bright
ideas, drawing on Mother Goose,
Br’er Rabbit—or even the comic
strips from the newsprpers. In
transferring muraU to a wall, In-
cidemally. it’s a great help If you
have your photogi'apher make
glass slides of the pictures you’re
using as a guide and then pro
ject them on the wall with bhe aid
of a magic lantern. St.11 another
way to lend pictorial interest to
a wall Is to cut attractive colored
pictures from magazines and
paste them to the wall in the form
of a frieze. A coaling of shellac
will protect them and make them
washable ThU same type of dec
oration can be applied to the
fronts of cabinets where toys are
kept.
if the foundations of your brse-
ment are not shipshape, they can
made so. If you do not have
New services, new economies,
new conveniences . . . yours
only in a Philco! Come in ..,
see this greatest of all refrig
erators .'. . you’ll thrill to its
brilliant beauty, you’ll admire
its Advanced Design features.
Oaly FHILCO Gives You All these Features
CONSERVADOR. Shelf-lined Inner Door that gives you 26%
more auickh usable space! Foods most often used are right at
'.\
your fingertips . . . without even opening the main compartment
• FROZB4 FOOD COMFARTM9T. A giant-size, separate Compart
ment for frozen storage ... in addition to iceube chamber.
• BOTH DRY COID AND MOIST COID. Cold for foods that
must have circulating, dry air . . . 'Moist Cold to keep foodci
fresh and tasty wisbous need of covers or special dishes. ^
• PHRCO SUPS? POWER SYSTEM.
Built by precision methods, used
for the first time in refrigeration.
PfOS Huge Meat Stor
age Compartment. Slid
ing Crisper Drawer. Big
Reserve Storage Bin.
New beauty. See it!
MCO Sver-Mhy MM MR4
AND
UP
$124.50
now have refrigerators com
with all trays. We finance
our own merchandise which eliai
nates all red tape.
plete
Corner and 10th Street*
Ninth Wilkesboro, N. C
one of the new typ« healing units
ibo section of the cellar contain
ing the furnace and coal may be
enclosed willi wallho! rd par
titions made rtustproof by lining
tliis enclosure with paper. You
may al.-o wisli to apply walUtoard
deepiv so I bat they are below the
1.0 the walls. Set the nailheads
.suiirce. To prevent their rusting
through the finish, touch them up
with red lead paint. Later, til!
the indentations w.th crack filler
and smooth over when dry.
For walls made of cement ap
plied to hollow tile—and there
fore qpite likely to hold daJnp-
[jpKs—there are excellent cement
paints. Dampnc.ss. ."s you know.
Ls one of the chief causes of
paint’s not adhering to concrete
floors. Another reason is that the
ever-present alkali in new cement
may not have been neutralized by
a sulphrte of zinc rinse before it
was painted. Or maybe the wrong
type of paint was used. When
you’re selecting a coating for a
basement floor, choose only good
floor paint recommended for the
purpose. '
.\n inlaid linoleum cemented to
a dry basement floor makes a
good, enduring foundation, easily
cleaned and comfortable to walk
on. A wood floor laid over the
cement is more expensive, but
very siitisfactory. With any type
of flooring, however, there should
also be a rug for the children to
sit on in cold weather. It need
not cover the entire floor. In
fact, portions of the floor left
bare are desirable for general ac
tivity.
Small wooden chairs and ta
bles, painted In cheerful colors,
would please the occupants of
the playroom, but if you’d rather
not buy a new set of furniture,
your porch chairs and tables may
earn their storage by serving
there during the winter. The
baby's sandbox can also go down
stairs when autumn comes—ns
can other outdoor equipment,
such as slides and gliders, if the
celling is high enough. A large
pencil of wallboard placed across
two saw horses makes a wonder
ful table for plngpong, as It can
be taken down and pushed out
of the way in a hurry. A table
with a checkerboard painted on
it also makes a welcome addition.
Children outgrow such thing*
as slides and sandboxes,
course. But playrooms can groiy^;
up, tob. They mature Into gjins
with rings, ■bare and other sports
for the growing ad0le8«»nt. 'With
such a rumiMiSj room, your ’tee*
age' .yoangsten win > find oceos^
FUTURE
For yottiwif osJ yow hows wliwi
yo« apply loop-wsaring, elaor-liiMd
Rogm Moeliin»Mada Horn* Paint,
iIm mort prolocHv* coaling you con
poisibly givo yow liomo.
MACHINE MADE
PAINT
Coven 350 iquore feet to Hio
gallon, two coat*; hides with
dense opaqueness, lasts longer,
and goes farther, thus costing
less per job by the
.year.'"
Would You Rather Paint Twice In 5
Years With Cheap Paint Or
Once With Rogers?
SPECIAL SALE
$3.00
Don’t ever let low priced
cheap paint be put on your{
house. In the end Rogers,
the finest type of paint mon
ey can buy costs less per
year of beauty and satisfac
tion because it goes farther
and wears longer.
Comes in a beautiful array
of popular colors.
Per Gallon ' ~
In Fives....
$2-90
IN NORTH
WILKESBORO
at
Jenkins Hardware
SPECIALS
WHY PAY MORE FOR YOUR
GROCERIES 111 FEEDS!
WE PAY CASH AND SELL FOR CASH
50c Brooms—
Only
35c Brooms—
Only.—-
25c Brooms—
Only
Aspirin—5
grains, 2 boxes
Aspirin, lOO’s,
25c size
Pure Coffee—
2' o-pounds. ..
Macaroni—
2-lb. box....;
Corn Flakes,
large 10c size.
40c large jug
Vinegar
ANOTHER CARLOAD OF THAT FAMOUS
Sunday Biscuit Flour
To Arrive ThU Week to be Sold at these Prices:
98-lbs, plain $2.50 48-lbs. self-rising $1.35
98-lb's. self rising. 2.60 24-lbs. plain 65
48-lbs. plain 1.30 24-lbs. self-rising.. .70
EVERY BAG GUARANTEED
/1
^,1
Pork & Beans—
3 Ig. 31 oz. cans
Peanut Butter
2 pounds
Soda Crackers
2 pounds
Corn Meal—
1/2-bushel
Fat Back Meat—
pound -—
Irish Potatoes
bushel
FRESH VEGETABLES AT BEST PRICES
We handle all lands of Feeds at money-saving prices
Between Wilkes Tie and Feed Co. and C. A* Lowe & Son*’ Wholesale St«^
NOR’ra WUJCESBORO, N. C
‘.‘atj JI-- ■"