PAGEitWo'' IW ’am IN POLITICS PldAith^ Mondays and Thursdays at Y NorA,Wilkasboro, N. C. ^ D. J. CARTER and JULIUS C. HUBBART Publishan SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months .75 Pour Months 50 Out of the State $2.00 per Year Entered at the post office at North Wilkes- horo, N. C., as second class matter under Act af March 4, 1879. THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1941 ■\®/ Misplaced Joke t Much has been written about the prac tical joke a member otf the State Bureau of Investigation pulled on an old friend. The agent is said to have faked a robbery of his friend’s home and much excitement was caused before everything,was finally explained. We like a good joke, but it is hard to reconcile an agent of a bureau of the state government playing like that. The joke could have had disastrous results, as they often do. And another thought is that with the multitude of unsolved crimes in North Car olina it looks as if the agent could have been spending his time trying to unravel a crime rather than faking one. If he can’t find anything else to do we could suggest some case in Wilkes on which he could work. man named Clayton Hough; who as mana ger of a large rivet-manufacturing com pany was faced with the problem of handl ing heavy army, navy, and marine corps contracts. But the supply of available skilled workers was running short. So Hough went looking for men who had served industry well in the past, and who were now in retirement. And they have responded to his call. At the present time, Hbugh’s company turns out more than two million rivets and 500,000 metal stampings daily. Helping with this work for national defense are 20 JULY 10, iYolr.b«ttv^oa«raaid Milk 'ii Hehiu jft it prbl>- eg$t oa a ^nalitr or gt«4ed ba«l‘‘ pOMt encoorcgm produotlcm 9t t>etter: ^7;: Hitler’s blitekrieg is (producing a I small revolution among pipe that ree^i^^v^^^h^jy re-l Detail^ information bn Pfpr a proce^J^gi^^linpflluif^daclDgi handling; and inarfcadB^ woods with quality eggs is eontafnad,.. in' a dne to degrade aiH at the0iiiBe publication aTalUhte ^npon re- .mnkprii in this nonnh-v WitwC "dll make them fife resiAant tque^ direetly to the Extension cXie of fXTS- s™y of at a cost that can ccnnpete Poultry Office. N. C. ^ Col- com. prasainra. eannar. brier root has stopped and pipe Once the lege, Raleigh.' The U. S. Depart- manufacturers are again turning pipe * smoking public becomes ment of Agriculture hcs recent- to American woods, says the U S. thoroughly familiar with Ameri- ly revised lU Farmers’ BulleOn Forest Products Laboratory, Madi- P’P® ** ^ unneces- No. 1378, entitled “Mar^etlnfe son, Wis. ] to again turn to the import- Eggs.’’ It may be obtained free ed wood after the present emer- ny writing to the Division of Pab- r YJftBfneE OP ffiEBtVICE BT ^-■^^^pUBLICATKNf f: ■ ■ • -...a; ■. —— North Carolina, Wilkes County. ' ■'- iiv fna, bJPERIOR COURT Royal Rhodes —■ Vs. The Laboratory research men gency. Pauline Blackburn Rhodes The defendant Pauline Blackburn Rhodes will take notice that an ac tion entitled as above has been commenced in the superior court of Wilkes County, Nora Carolina, point out that American woods t J — make just as good pipes as doesi _ •1' 1J IJ per cent of all his employees who are in the foreign brier. The chief rea-J r armers Told How to 1 f on-., n,,.. nf flip son the majority of smokers use ‘ - — the latter part of middle age. One ot the men is 72 years of age and was a machin- practically been brought up on ist during the Spanish-American War. A,that kind of a pipe and it is ac 1 M orjiicrg 1 Ola now lO Reduce “Bad Esrgs” QUCSuOllS llcations, U. S. Department of ^ for the purpose of an absolute di- Agriculture, Washington, D. C. vorce; and the said defendant will further take notice that she is re- Answei-ed Bi State Colleg ^quired to appear at the office of tile Clerk of Superior Court of A bad egg is just a good egg I said county on the 7tii day of Aug. 1941 and answe- or demur to the ISt "7‘ .uI'coTdir^ly hard toweaTthe^^^^^ T- Brown, ^tables ca„ be put -^pwith a hot | win apply to t number of others did similar work in the, ^ the American woods. »pe«>a»8t of water canner? ! romn^«fn/^ uemanded World War, The company gives the men a ing-up period” while they do similar jobs Because a similar shortage of d during World War, the Forest Products N. C. State College, “-but when, f nd ) uci^auoc a oiiitiiar Biiui cage vi . . , ' Answer: Only vegetables brush- brier occurred during the first ozm eggs go bad— fp^^tg which are "acid” and can Oiiestion: What types of vege-iaction, or the pjjg court said i complaint. as they do each year in the be safely preserved at a boiling Laboratory is frequently being United States that’s something temperature, 212 degrees P„ may to get the' feel of the work again. Then consulted in regard to substitutes. they pitch in with the real work. Hough places great dependence upon them. ‘ I think these old fellows will stay longer than young men,” he says. “Young men are restless, want new experiences, fellows look permanent.” The picture of older workmen, pension ers, peeling off their “smoking jackets” and putting on a pair'of overalls because the country needs their services is another ins; iring example of how a free country goes about doing a big job. As long as the American fibre proves as tough and adap table as this, we can have little fear that the nation’s defenses will not remain se- _ be canned with a hot water cann- for brier as well as to the season-’ Brown said that the way -to er." says Mrs. Cornelia C. Morris, ing of the different kinds of Pr^J®*' tremendous egg loss Extension food conservation spec- American pipe woods. One of the ® production j^jg Includes tomatoes, substitutes is mountain laurel *'*'® ^^rm, and good ffujtg, freshly-gathered, young, Methods of handling eggs from root, an easily obtained wood. tender string beans, and a pre- These which the mountaineers of western, consumer. The cooked soup mixture containing a North Carolina and West Virginia' P°''*^ryman gives some sugges- j^j.gg are now busy collecting. Califor- ^'®r.s on how producers can han- | nia wfild lilac, madrone, rhodod- ”°®ks and eggs to help .i. endron, and apple also produce good burls for pipes, equal in j j workability and beauty of grain, j (D Keep strong, healthy, vig. j and equal or better in smoking I orou.. hens and care for them; qualities to imported brier. Ano- pruperly, f2) produce infertile ther handsome burly wood is the eSKs after the hatching season is , mountain mahogany of the Sierras over, (3) gather eggs -at least hut the wood is hard to cut on a Iwice a day in cool weather and lathe and that may make it too not less than three times a day expensive to work. Applewoo-d, in hot weather, (4) keep eggs probably more largely u.sed in clean and in a cool, fairly moist cheap American pipes than any place, and (5) market eggs fre- Dated this 23 day of June, 1941. C. C. HAYES, Clerk Su perior Court of Wilkes County. 7-17-4t (t proportion of tomatoes. Right To Work With all that has been said in recent years about the rijfht to strike, it seem.s that powers that be have at lea.st tem porarily forgotten that there is such a thing as the right to work. A person who goes through a picket line, where the plant is engaged in making materials vital to the very existence of deispcracy and individual freedom, is with ..ODjjQ^ing. tka “right to^ _ other wood, ranks high because of quently. X-- UI. ;+ Vi.nrflor -fnr onp •‘'fPootb Working, ability to take a In marketing eggs. Brown Night baseball make. finish, and fair resistance to reco-mraends that all cracked, who works in the evening—like a copy boy burning. . i dirty rnd very small or very large on a morning paper as one rarely buries One of the principal problem.s in eggs he .sorted out. Eggs should Richmond American woods for pipe not be washed. They should be making has been the seasoning of packed when cool—never with the blanks without undue losses the animal heat in them—and from splitting and warping. Mak- they should bte 'packed with the ing the finished pipes fire resist- large end up. Egg quality is es- a grandmother after dark. Time.s-Dispatch. All this war in Europe will call for many more graveyards. Who knows—in time iams Motor Company T. H. WILLIAMS, Mgr. BEAR FRAME SERVICE Good Used Cars, Trucks and Tractors • EASY TERMS • Will Pay Cash for Late Model Wrecked Cars and Trucks Complete Body Rebuilding Electric and Acetylene Welding ’PHONE 334-J FAST MOTOR EXPRESS SERVICE BETWEEN North Wilkesboro and Charlotte Two schedules operated each way every day. SCHEDULE Leaving Charlotte, 9 a. m. arriving N rlh Wilkesboro cb'«ut noon. Leaving Charlotte 8 p. m., arriving here for 7 a. m. deliveries. Leaving here for Charlotte daily 7 a. m.— 2:30 p. m. M. and M. MOTOR EXPRESS Headquarters Dick’s Service Station TELEPHONE 371 North Wilkesboro, N. C. the earth may inherit the meek.—Atlanta Constitut-on. T.aid end to end, the rumons coming from European capitals in one day would lie.- Richmond Times-Dispatch. Sure, Hitler is for freedom of the .seas. Only he spells it “s-e-i-z-e.” — Milwaukee Po.st. HOLBUIITm •S>/ Snted ‘liberties have beeiTgV^? groups in the name of labor or- fzations while the individual worker who may not see eye to eye with some of the organized rackets is forgotten. lie is regimented along with the so-called ma jority regardless of the individual rights which we once thought were guaranteed him by the constitution. It seems the law has literally gone hog wi'd in. dishing out privileges to labor or ganizations while forgetting that there is i such a thing as an individual worker. | BETTER WAY FRIBIBAIRE WALTER E. ISENHOUR, Hiddenite, N. C. Freedom Of The Seas After almo.st two years of slipping neu trality, this country is again proclaiming freedom of the .seas. Practically all of the people in this country at the beginning of the European war were for* strict neutrality wh.'ch would not allow our ships in waters about the warring nations. We thought it was the be.st thing, and probably was, but at this .stage we can re flect and wonder if it had not been better had there been no neutrality act and we had proclaimed at the outset of the con flict that we would insitst on and have freedom of the seas for our shipping. With our neutrality act .still on th^’ books, we find our secretary of the navy saying that the navy will rid the Atlantic of daiieers to shipping, a course which the majority of the American people would approve. We have gone a long way from strict neutrality and we may as well admit it and face the facts. We do not want to be a party to a Euro pean war but that would be preferable to losing our way of life, if it comes to that cho.ee. TRY GOD’S PLAN It is an ab.solute fact that multitudes of people are having it very, very hard fin- anc allv. They are in debt, many of whom are out of efnployment, and can’t hardly hold soul and body together. It seems that they are looking to their fellow.s to help them, to feed and clothe them, or to show them the way out of their financial diffi culties. Well, thei;e is a far better, way than this. Let’s turn to Cod’s Word and see what He says about it. This ought to convince us. "Bring ye all the tithes into the .store house, that there may be meat in mine hoiHc, and prove me now herewith, saith I the Lord of ho.sts, if I will not open yon the ' ' windows of heaven, and pour you out a ble.ssing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it.” (Malachi 3:10). Now this is God’s plan. The tithe, or tenth, belongs to Him. That is the least we should offer Him. He promises to open the win dows of heaven and pour us out a blessing if we will honor Him with the tithe. And then we should give Him offerings out of the remaining nine-tenths. This is right. It is acceptable with Him. The great majority of people are robb ing God of the tithe and offerings—spend ing everyth ng they get to live on, and to gratify their fleshly desires and lu.sts, and as a consequence God is letting them suffer for it. He allows them to be out of em ployment, to have reverses, to suffer loss es, and to flounder about and get nowhere. We have said many times in the past that if we do not honor God with the tithes of our crops and our money it will get away from us anyhow. The devil will get it. It will go for doctor’s bills, wrecks, loss of property, bad deals, w'aste and extrava gance. Just count on the fact that God’s part of our means is the tenth, and if we fail to give it, willingly and cheerfully,'it will go in a way that we shall get nothing out of it. God always takes care of an hon est, conscientious tither. He will make the COllSmUdTMII BIGGIST of the SIXES 6% CU. FT. CAPACITY 1941 MODEL LS-6 This sensational price for a Frigidaire of this size! Yet there is , nosacrificeofquality.Abrandnewmodel ^ with the latest styling- newest economy _ and convenience features. Truly a BIG bargain. See it today 1 JUST LOOK AT THESE Back In Harness , ^ xu ^ xv, i It all started with a small but unusual i can make ii, an oi-aixtu tep-tenths. Tithng is reasonable and See the many other Frigidaire values on display! Seethe revo lutionary Frigidaire Cold-Wall -you don't have to cover food! has 325 cubic inches capacity "EXTRAS"! I Plus More Shelf Space. 1 more shelf than you find in 6’s of most other makes! I Excluave Meter-Miser ^ Freezes ice faster... Kttft fee* safer...at less cost 6'S 01 roo!”-i*.. M.» U..W. f~“"'gT"* ” inches plus 4 pounds of icel mcnes p»l» > « . , u Trow* t Automatic Interior Light » Stainless Porcelain in Intsrisr I liCore than 20 othersl advei’^isement: “WANTED — Machinists, lathe and shaper hands, 55 years of age and over.” Back of that classified ad lies another dramatic story of national defense a tale ctf special skills and abilities recaptured and put to work serving the national wel fare in an hour when all our available -strength and cunning is needed for the tasks that lie ahead. The story begins with the problems of a right. God’s blessings are upon it. Try God’s plan financially and see if you don’t get along much better. This is life’s better way. Walk in it. Then can you claim God’s promise in Malachi 3:10. You can also claim His promise In Philippians 4:19: “But my God shall supply all your needs according to his riches m glory by Christ Jesus.” Indeed God is vastly rich. He owns the unsearchable riches of all the earth, of heaven, and of the entire uni verse. He promises to bless us temporally and spiritually if we will honor Him»with the tithe. Try God’s plan. ■v Henderson Electric Co, FRED HENDERSON, Manager ’PHONE 75 NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C.

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