Newspapers / Forest City Courier (Forest … / Sept. 24, 1931, edition 1 / Page 5
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September 24, 1931. - : 1 BY MRS. C. E. ALCOCK rj-i >. of friends will make this column more interesting. Please ~rd report items for this column. All news items of interest to . welcomed. trthdav P art y- Hi'" lot a Ann Hodge, daughter j Mrs. Jack Hodge, gave j her home last Wednes-J ation of her fourth birth- j i sary. A color note ot' j ,in was used in the dec- j Atjtor games and £toryj v si ments were served and; list received an attrac- 1 Thirty little folks were j ... ■* * K feeding Announced. 1 vs. R. M. Andrews, of! • j announce the marriage ! .ghter, Aliss Docia An-j ,i . L. M. Gardner, Sat- i mber 12th, at York, S.! is well known and popu ;o circle in this county, i ity specialist by profes- j graduated from the \) y College in New York; loom is a graduate of -ity of North Carolina, \ aired in business with his York, where the happy vU make their home. ** * i Petty spent Sunday with ; in Union, S. C. ** * , I harles Padgett is spending aj ys with his friend, Dr. S.i f- .t, in Sylva. * * * Wide Tillotson. of Hartsville, l ?. .:s the week-end guest of j v. .sin, Mr. Geo. Carpenter. * * * nd Mrs. Elzie Myers ol (- tte are spending this week w.th Dr '.ill Mrs. G. P. Reid. m * y\:. Furman Hawkins, of New— \. >. C.. -pent Sunday here with: ■ fnem;-. j * * M . C. K. Mc Daniel and Mr. "Man" ; GotYvth. -pent Wednesday after-j i on .n business in Spartanburg. * * * 3 Jr. an d Mrs. Gordon Young, . of dbemarie, spent Sunday here with Ir. and Mrs. Hope Harrill. ** » I I 3!r. and Mrs. C. S. Calton. of Sun- j to-, spent Sunday here with Mrs. I. M. Tate. * * 9 Delia Collins, of Union, S. | L-vcrd Sunday here with her par- ( at?. Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Collins. * * * M: Fred G. Carlisle left Sunday ':t Wilmington where he will re- his position with Swift and Co.. * * * !>. Ellis Wells and daughter,! - \rgyle Edwards, of Marion, j ' ' shf pping here Thursday. * * # Editor and Mr*. C. JE. Alcock " Friday afternoon ir. Spartan iunr. * * * ! Geo. H. Blanton and daugh-j Mrs. (1. F. McCulloch and Mrs. j i ! Carson, Jr., and Mr. Miles! have returned from Knox n. Thev accompanied Mr.; , i Riant on there where he en u ban's Business college. I i I I I ri?l i* H £»»£.ufc> VFT'FBI A J sjh I \ I t e quality reigns| I I I - and prices tick socket booK. i i i J. W. SANDERS j Phone 56 i, I | Mr. Claude Young, of Aubuin, I Ala., is spending a few days here J with his sisters, Mrs. J. F. Alexan | der and Misses Nelle and Margaret ; Young. j Mr. James Harrill who has been |in New Orleans, La., for the past j several months, is visiting his par ! ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Harrill. * * * j Mrs. Chas F. Harrill and daughter, ! Hazel, will attend the banquet in j Spartanburg Friday night, given by | the Spartanburg Herald-Journal. * * * | l Misses Ruth Doggett and Hazel ' Price and Messrs Worth Harris and ! Charles Summey spent Sunday at ; Mt. Mitchel. I -*■ + ■+ \ : Misses Beatrice and Annabelle ! Laughridge and Mrs. Fred Campbell, i of Gastonia and Miss Mayme Rollins, i r' Shelby, spent Sunday here with I Misses Kathleen and Ruth Dorsey. I * n * I ; Mr. Geo. A\ . Rollins and family , who have been living on Arlington ! street for the past two years, mov ied last week to their farm near ? i Caroleen. :Jc * * Mrs. J. E. Haslett, of Portsmouth, i Ya., arrived Tuesday to spend sev : eral weeks here with her parents, ! Mw. and Mrs. F. I. Barber. * * # i Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Williams, of Baltimore, visited their aunt and | cousin, Mrs. R. K. Harris and Mrs. J. D. Ledbetter, last week. s£ aje Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Morton, of Charlotte and Miss Dixie Jones of ! Mayesville, spent Wednesday here ; with Atty. and Mrs. B. T. Jones. & Hs ♦ I Mr. Madison Moss who spent sev i eral days in the Rutherford hospital | for treatment has returned to his ; home. * * * Mrs. S. N. Watson has returned from a visit to her daughter, Mrs. H. R. Dobson and Mr. Dobson in J Spartanburg. |* * * Mrs. R. N. Bell, of Birmingham, Ala., arrived Thursday to visit her daughter, Mrs. R. C. Alexander and i Mr. Alexander. * * * j Misses Oneida Welch and Mary j Padgett and Messrs Roy Cochran | |and Lewis Padgett, Jr., of Charlotte, 1 spent Sunday here with relatives. j Sf if. Mr. Earl King, of Orangeburg, S. C., spent last week here with his . father, Mr. R. V. King wfy> con tinues quite ill at his home. * * » Mrs. Allamae Davis of Eufaula.; i Ala., arrived Sunday to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Calton i near Sunshine, and relatives in For ' est City. I * *■ * I l ; Miss Alice Washburn entered Queens-Chicora college, Charlotte, this week. She was accompanied by | her sister, Mrs. Lillian Washburn j Neill, a former Queens student. *# * I Miss Alice Barber had as her I ■ guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. Hut-, I to, of Kings Mountain. Miss Bar-! ibc-r and Mrs. Hutto were classmat s ( iin college. j * * ~ ' Rv. W. A. Avers, pastor of the; First Baptist c hurch, left Sunday J afternoon for Belmont where he | will conduct a revival meeting fori the next ten days. * :; * Messrs. Geo. Carpenter and James J Padgett attended the dance on Tues. j day night in Gastonia. The music was furnished by Blue Steels Victor! Recording Orchestra. * * * Mr. and Mrs. R. C. King, of Orangeburg. spent Sunday here with the former's brother, Mr. R. V. King who continues quite ill at his home on Broadway. * * * i Dr. Joe Harrison and family, of Loudon, Tenn.. have been the guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Bostic, Sr. Drs. Harrison and Bostic were room mates at the Chattanooga Medical' college thirty-three years ago and had not seen each other since they grrdvat'd. This was indeed a occasion for these gentlemen, n I Mrs. F. C. Heirs who has been j , viisiting her daughter, Mrs. C. A.! Petty and Mr. Petty for the past j month has returned to her home in j A.lan L a, Ga. She was accompanied | home by her two sons Messrs. J. C. j and J. W. Heirs who spent the week | end here with Mr. and Mrs. Petty.! ** f I Capt. D. A. Glickman left early j :n the week to attend the American Legion convention at Detroit. After \ • the convention, Capt. Glickman will j ' i make a buying trip to Flint, Mich., J ■ i Milwaukee, W T is., and points in i -j Canada, where he will purchase goods' j for the Bee Hive. * * -c I Mr. John Lester Duncan, genial - and popular young Forest City at ■jtorney, left last week for Reno, | Nevada, where he has accepted -aj j position with Washoe County Trust , i Company. Mr. Duncan, a graduate II of Wake Forest college, has prac ticed law here for the past year. Mr. j Duncan was /accompanied by his! mother, Mrs. J. C. Twitty. j* * * 11 The Young Matron's circle of the! l j Missionary Society of the Methodist j j church met Monday evening at the j » home of Mrs. M. H. Hewitt, with ,| Miss Sudie Young as joint hostess | A splendid program was given, after j which a miscellaneous shower was , j given to Mrs. J. Goforth, (nee Miss j Elizabeth Stradley) a recent bride, who was a member of the mission , aiy society before moving to Ruth erf ordton. The hostesses served de i lic-ious refreshments. * * * f Mr. George Schaller, superinten dent of the Courier-Journal Job } Printing 00., Louisville, Ky., was . j the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ai ! cock, last Friday. The editor of The j Courier spent a number of years with the Courier-Journal Company, p reputed to be the largest printing ] plant in the South, where he gained ; an intimate knowledge of the print ing business on a large scale that has helped him in a great measure - since going into business for him • self. Consider Child's Health When Preparing Lunch s It is necessary to consider the food requirements of the school child and the relation of this meal to his oth -1 er two meals when preparing the . school lunch. i "Each day a child needs certain kinds of foods "and in certain a mounts," says Miss Mary Thomas, . food specialist at State college. "Each ' day the meals should include at least I one quart of milk in some form, two servings of vegetables in addition to potatoes, two servings of fruit, 1 j one raw if possible, cereal foods, a i j serving of meat, one egg. some fat, , some sweets and six to eight glass es of water. The progress a child makes at school depends on his health » and his health depends in large mea > sure upon the food he eats." At all times, the mother in pre paring a school lunch for her child should think of this lunch as just • lone of his three meals. For normal r nutrition, the child should have a i substantial breakfast. With only a - scant breakfast and a "hot-dog" ] lunch, the child cannot hope to have j a balanced ration by the evening 1 j meal alone. • I Miss Thomas says the well planned '(luncheon has five important ingre i jdients. First, a substantial sandwi.?h ! with a filling of meat, cheese, ege\ ■fish, peanut butter or a substantial •(food with bread and butter: second. -|a succulent food as vegetable salad. vegetable sandwich, raw or cooked j vegetables; third, milk in some form; j fourth, fruit or fruit juices. and I fifth, something sweet. Since ad j school lunches are likely to be (try. lit is well to have one ot the foods j in the form of a drink. This may be I either milk, cocoa, fruit juice or to-j ! mato juice. 1 Miss Thomas also recommends j J that the luncheon be packed well »and put up as attractively as possi ' ble so that the child will consume (it whether he feels like eating or ; , 1 I " ot * ; LEGION MINSTREI DATE POSTPONED TO NOV. 3 ' "The Dixie Blackbirds." a minstrel sponsored by the Willis Towery Po«t., American Legion, will be given: Tuesday, November 3, instead oj October 23rd, as announced last week. This change i? made ;n order! not to conflict with the revival meet (ing at the First Baptist cnurch Four burner, lorg chimney, high hy p !^ more? Farmers Hardware Co. I FOREST CITY (N. C.) COURIER WOMAN'S CLUB The members of the Woman's! Club and the P.-T. A., are asked to ! be present on Thursday and Fri-| day mornings at 9 o'clock at the! high school cafeteria to help the' home economics class to can vege-j tables to be used in the graded school this winter for the underprivi- : ledged children. Please 'renumber,' any one having any extra quart or half gallon jars they can lend at this time, bring them with you. It is very important that this work be done at once while there is still an abun dance of vegetables, such as toma toes, okra and corn. If Miss Jenkins, teacher of home economics and her class, are good enough to supervise this work, surely the ladies of the Woman's Club and P.-T. A., can give one half day each week until vege tables are canned sufficient to take care of the underpriviledged chil dren in our school. Please bring your own paring knives, as there is only a limited supply in the cafeteria. Be- on time Thursday and Friday mornings of this week at 9 o'clock. All will enjoy giving time to this worthy cause. GOOD NEWS. Good news is a word fitly spoken. It nas value beyond that of gold and precious stones. The power of good news is as evident as the air we breathe, as necessary and nourishing as meat and potatoes. A word of approval, a srrile of ap preciation and simple praises releas es within us something briskly regen erate which kindles to flame the smouldering fires of ambition and aspiration. It is as though a weight had been taken from ones back. Real accomplishments in this world have been inspired by the voice of a silver trumpet sounding good news. Be generous and spread the good news about Forest City far and wide so that none within the sound of your voice will go not knowing the mer its of this good community. Be a harbinger of good news not only about your home town but about your friends. Forget the bad news. Many of us are too conscious of our Dalton Bros. 9th Anniversary Sale Sweeps Rutherford County as the greatest merchandising event in ten years. All precedents swept aside in this great once a year event. When you can buy a good wool suit for $9.95, an all silk dress for $4.84, a good pair pants for 98c-, a bisr blanket for 44c, 8 ounce feather ticking for 15c a yard, a good ladies' coat for $5.95, a 25c bath towel for 10c, and good broadcloth for 10c a yard, why do you need to worry? Dalton Bros, is giving you the most you ever had for your money in good clean meichandise and e\erj article guaranteed. 1 his store stands on its nine yeaiv>* reputation for truthful advertising. It has got to be right if we sell it. Extra Special For Fair Week Thursday Morn- j Extra Special Fri- Extra Special AH mg °nlj j ay jyj orn j n g This Week With your first $1 pur sS ?i* .***" 10-vol. rot- „ 19c 10c i 3c mi ■«-!*.. ■■■■■llia — * | Thursday Morning . ~ [ p yf .., c • i i Extra Special An j r.xrra peciai only * i With your first S! pur- This Week ! CuWee's famous 0121 chase we will sell you a S «-?* e Su,ts - re^" ai ' 50c wash basin lA. Loeb Mechanic work w,U(i ' Cl fi GC for , I'JC trousers regular $1.50 lGr - x alue, AO ! for «/Ov Extra Special Fri- Extra Special day Morning ~ " "" * c • i a 7 i 18 yards Druid LL 8 ounce feather tick- ilXira Special Ail Sheeting tf»*| |\|\ ins. regular 25c ior JI.UU value, for yard *"v i **is weeK Dalton Bros famous I? j. c • 1 Extra Special SI.OO stockings, full fash- t-xtra opecial 1 AAA i Dl ,„ nf i ioned and pure thread 1 - 1000 yards Broadciotii ; ID \ards last coloi and Prints in this 1 I perfect, * or 7Qf» Chambray (J»| An sale" at, yard AW pair ■V* | for DALTON BROS. Forest City, N. C. earth-bound condition. Doubt and fear have tied clogs to our feet. Is- i norance and misunderstanding: have; laid heavy burdens upon our backs. \ Our greatest need today as indi viduals and as a community is for words that tear away the leaden sky and let the stars shine through.; Could you perform a greater service [ than this?— Exchange. The power of money, in national J and international affairs, is entirely too great. Our financial system ex- ■ ists for the benefit of our people, j not for their mulcting . SEE n. Li. Kanipe for your auto mobile work, welding, brazing, re building and charging batteries. ■ - ' What Is The Use 1 in trying to save a little part of our pay? We have fl a good Poor House to go to when we are old. Go J look it over and see it you don't change your mind |fl And we want to tell you, there is no better place than the Building and Loan Association to start your sav- j ings. finally, it's the best place on earth to stick p[ close to from beginning of life to the end. It will g& put you in your own home and keep you there. Start with the October Series. Small weekly de- I posits taken from your pay envelope will bring a new || twinkle to your eye. Forest Oily B & L Association 1 DR. W. A. AYERS HOLDING MEETING AT BELMONT Belmont, Sept. 21.—Dr. W. A. Ayers, pastor of the First Baptisi church of Forest City, Sunday nigh*, began a series of revival services iat East Baptist church, of which Rev. R. G. Mace is pastor. Doctor Ayers announced that this is his 228 th evangelistic meeting, since he began preaching. His sermon Sun day night stressed dedication of self as the basis for service to God. Services will be held each even ing at » :30 o'clock. The meeting will continue for 10 davs. i Number three tin cans $4.00 per hundred. Farmers Hardware Co.
Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.)
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Sept. 24, 1931, edition 1
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