Newspapers / The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, … / Feb. 6, 1930, edition 1 / Page 2
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"Gratitude To Sargoi It Beyond Words" ili®? ;O. >?•- • Wmr MRS. WM. N. COCHRAN "Brer since I was a compara tively youuK woman I suffered from stomach trouble and ner ▼onsness. I was terribly consti pated, bilious, rundown and mis erable. The way Sargon ended my troubles seems little less than a miracle. "The first normal bowel mov ment I have had in years I owe to Sargon Soft Mass Pills. My gratitude to the Sargon treaty pent is beyond words."—(Mrs,' Win. N. Cochran, 1147 Harrison St., Portland, Oreg. Bargons fame is based on ac tual results—not empty promises Millions use it—millions praise it! Turner Drug Company, agents Hints ■ 8 'Or th* Iwine fancy ftart _ MKALS AXI» WEATHER In theses changeable days it is rather harder than usual to plan tht meals so that they will surely be satisfactory. For you may plan three meals that would be delicious on a crisp, frosty day, and" the day may turn out to be a mild languorous one of may plan a day's meal that Indian summer. Or theother way around. You would be tempting on a warm day and the day may turn out to be cold, wet and dreary— and the warm-day meals may be inadequate. So when yon are planning your meals, plan them so that they can be adapted to either warm or cold days. You can for instance, have potatoes ready for potato salad, with canned salmon or sardines, for luncheon. If the day is chil ly mix the potatoes with the white sauce instead of mavon aise, and heat them thoroughly. Nothing Is more warming than creamed potatoes if they are good and hot. You can then ser ye lettuce seperately, to give the desired raw green to the meal. Or for dessert. If the day turn oat warmer than you expected it to be, and you have listed a steamed fruit pudding, serve in stead fresh or stewed fruit with cookies or crackers. You can always add to the substantiality of puncheon and make it more comforting for a cold day by adding hot choco late, made with milk. You can use cooked cereal on cold mornings, prepared cereal on those mornings when it i 8 war mer. You can serve hot toast in stead of bread and butter to make breakfast more suitable tor cold days. Another way to add to the heat of the meal is to serve some such simple and easily pre pared dish as boiled rict. For lun cheon, served with honey or hard sauce or stewed fruit for dessert, it is always delicious, and makes a slender meal seem substantial as well a B warmr. Cleaning Light Bulbs Your electric light bulbs will have an extra sparkle if, when cleaning them, you will use am monia in the water. Potatoes en Huprise Bake large mealy potatoes *nd scoop out the centers; mash them, add a generous lump of butter, seasoning and two heap ing tablespoons of graTed Swit zerland cheese; add one tea spoon of chopped parsley and milk enough to make the con sistency of gnashed potato; beat well until light and fluffy, refill potato cases, return to the oven and bake until the fill ing puffs and becomes a golden brown. Serve at once. These are delicious with creamed codfish pr Finan Haddie Delmonico. WHEN A BOY KNOWS MORK THAN KIH FATHKR Sometimes a boy does know more than his father. Ours would have been very differ ent history of Abe Lincoln, age sixteen or so, had been guided by the wisdom of Thomas Lin coln. age thirty-six." "Now Abe," we can imagine him saying, "don't waste time readin' them books. Reading' never done me any good, and what wa 8 good enough for me's good enough for you." Lincoln knew more than his father. It was divine obedience that led him to close his ears to the man who had brought him into the world, and open his heart to the vision that was to help him conquer the world. The boy who has not some firm convictions and a willing nese to d«>fend them, even agaln t the arguments of those older than himself, i a not likely to amount to much. But there must be convictions, not mere prejudicts not selfish impulses or passions. I knew two men who "knew more" than their fathers. One boy is the office manager of a large manufacturing con cern, and his salary is S4O a week. "Better go on to school," aaid his father to him when he was seventeen years old. "Better go on to college: better get all the leducation you can while you! have the chance.'' But the boy quit school and went to work. STHI FAMILY DOCTOR 10MN JOSEPH GAINFS.MD. WASTING TIME The good physician somehow feels that time is a mighty pre cious commodity that everybody has, and that it shoirid not be ruthlessly- thrown., away. To waste time, is to squander some thing that can never be retriev ed. In thi 8 short talk, I am try ing in my modest way, to tell you of my opinion of prodigal ities that I have committed with perfectly good intentions a 8 fol ows: I have found it utter 'foolish ness to tell my lady patient that she should keep her feet warm and her head cool; in other words, that she should not wrap three hundred dollars worth of furs about her neck and go in zero temperatures with her legs clad in thin silk stockings, and her feet in ball-room sandals. And, I have wasted many a word and the time it took to say them, in telling women that jay bird heels of asonishing altitude are most unnaturally freakish, contrary to all laws of common sense—that they will endow >w,/yi->; T W* *P Schootlesso# WARNING AND PROMISES •Matthew 7:12, 15-27 The content of the sermon on the Mount. Matthew 5, 6, 7 will be more familiar after these three lessons therein. This time the entire seventh chapter should be read with proper care, or better still, commit to. mem ory. This lesson is the quarterly one on Temperance and the text is finely adapted to that ap plication. This subject 1 B one of the most popular ones of the day. The newspapers have some outstanding reference in almost every issue. There is need for ctitzens of the Abraham Lincoln type to work out the nalonal problem for his nation cannot exist half wet and half dry any more than it could advance be ing half slave and half free. The Golden Rule verse 12, is poßible of the most extensive application and surely has a di rect import to the question of selling *6lcoholic liquor to others The bootlegger would resent it if he was done by as he seeks tc persistently to l"do" others, R. Wells says. "The Eigh teenth Amendinent is simply the Golden Rule put into our nat ional constitution." There is one word inthis verse 12 that needs particular attention. It is the "therefore." Because God is so good to us always we should in variably seek to treat others up to our utmost aballty. A negativt THE FX KIN TRIBUNE, FIKIN.V. C. "Xou see that man?" said the president of i»is concern to me the other day. "There is a man who might have become manager of this business if he had bad a college education. His salary might have been $20,000 a year: instead it's $2,000- Heia reached his limit. What a shame that he hasn't enough education to go on." He "knew more" than bis father. And his boyish obstinacy is costing him SIB,OOO a year. "Keen yourself clean, my son," said the father ef another boy. some day you'll thank heaven "You'll never regret It. And did." But the boy knew more than his father. He knew that every young man who Is worth his salt must sow blB wild oats. So he sowed right merrily. I saw him the other day. He ; came to me about getting a job. I could not give him a job: no man could. God knows what will become of him. YOUTH Is the mainspring of the world. Its insurgency, its inquisitive ness, its eagerness to try the un tried and do the impossible, drives the world forward in spite of the conservatism of the age. Fortunate are those of Us who recognize the divine importance of youth's cocksureness and con iciet and yet know how gently land appreciatevely to temptr It ! with the riper judgement of ad ded years. coming generations with mental and physical delinquency, if not worse. On several occasions I have fooltd away good advise and the time it took to give it, on the barber that uses a common hair brush on his customers, unquest ionably carrying rubbish from diseased scalps to healthy ones. Along with the hair brush goes the public comb, equally effec tive in doing harm. Maybe you could persuade the good public servant to keep a jar of antisep tic solution in which to sub merge his brush and comb bet ween customer^ —I just can't. I have perhaps, squandered more time against the.six o'clock dinner than any bther deadly enemy of our business men; I I can only convince when I am appealed to the victim of the custom, who comes to me with foiling circulation, a threat of apoplexy, shortness of breath, excess weight and diseased kid ntys—these at the age of fifty or sixty when a man should be at his very best. statement, such as can be found in the writings of Coufucius, is not good enough, neither is neg ative religion. Now i B the time for those who believe in right eousness to be positive in the de fence of the truth, which will be a blessing to mankind. The lies of those who are ea ger to evade the Constitution and the enforcement acts are akin to the false prophets and those who appear in sheep's clothing. They are wolves in deed, and for personal gain will undermine life itself. Right now youth seems to be the tar get for attack. It is the adult sinner who helps forward hip toteing on the part of young men, who inturn dare their girls to partake. The declaration of Jesus is most testing; "By their fruits ye shall know them." By this determinent reach you own con clusions about any alcoholic be verage. Keep in mind that alco hol is a POISON and the reac tion is always the same. A good character or worthy conduct can never be built up by the use of intoxicating drink. The very op posite begins to result with the first glass. 'Life insurance sta tistics should * be sufficient evi dence for any one to reach a conclusion Sfor both principles end conduct. The records of both courts and society are full of accouts of destruction and produce nothing 'that deals with permanent construction as a re sult of using liquor as a bever age. Big lJußinesH is beginning to understand the "fruit" and is now demanding sobriety. The closing parable has refer ence to the entire content of the Sermon on the Mount a& well as to the theme in hand. The two houseg may at first have looked equally well. First came the gradual wearing away and les slng of foundational strength by the stress of years. Then the aw ful storm broke and it was that force which brought complete destruction after the long-con tinued weakening process. Both physically and morally we must be able to withstand the long time wear and tear, as well as the emergency when the blow may come so unexpectedly. There is a rock foundation that will stand any stress and upon which we can build our life structure. That sure foundation is Jesus Christ and His teach ings. He did not deal with af- OFFICERS J. J. ABtRNEYHY. PRCS Paul awvN, v. r. J. H. ICEION. TREAS. LOUIS NELSON, «EC. A. O BRYAN, O. T. VOL. a No. 17 STANDARD SERVICE STATION Bill Price, Mgr. Kiwanian ELKIN NATIONAL BANK JOI INTEREST OX 4 SAVINGS "A Home for your Dollars" Alex. Qhatham, Pres. C. G. Armfleld, Cashier Kiwanians J. P. IPOCK QUALITY COAL PHONK 144 Kiwanian SYDNOR SPAINHOUR COMPANY "Blkin's Finest Store" E. S. Spainhour, Kiwanian Reich-Hayes-Boren 1900 1929 Funeral Directors : : : : : Home Furnishers Ambulanie Day fir Night P. C. Reich W. S. Reich Kiwanians R. J. BARKER INSURANCE AND LOANS Insurance that protects and service that satisfies Kiwanian SURRY HARDWARE CO. "TW*» best little hardware store in the bent little town in North Carolina" J. R. Poindexter, Kiwanian ELK PRINTING CO. Publishers THE ELKIN TRIBUNE Western North Carolina's leading Weekly Newspaper Franklin Hildebrand, Klwanian TURNER DRUG CO. "The Friendly Drug Store" 1 CURB SERVICE Geo. E. Royall, Klwanian fairs in the abstract but in vital life problems* that will face us an Individuals. NOTICE OF TRUSTERS SAI,R Default having been made in ! payment of the indebtedness se > cured by that certain deed of » trust to me as trustee for the I Jefferson Standard Life Insur > ance Company by C. O. Hadley • and Maude Hadley on the 4th ' day of August, 1925, and reoord ■ ed in the office of the Register Lof Deeds for Surry County In i Book 91, Page 16, I will, under ■ and by virtue of the power of i sale vested in me by said deed t of tru*t, «and at the request of the cestui que trust, and for the i purpose of discharging the debt secured by said deed of trust, proceed to sell to the highest : bidder, for cash, at the Court i House door in Dobson, Surry i County, North ' Carolnia, at 12 o'clock M., on Monday, March • 10th, 1930, the following de qfrlbed land, to-irlt: Elkin © Kiwanian Our hlftrfnlh Anniversary by Horace W. McDavid International President It is inventory time. The busi ness man has made, or is in the process of making an itemized list of all goods and merchan dise on hand. He has checked to ascertain whether or not his stock i a short or long in certain departments. He has doubtless analized hi» business. He has llscovered what articles he han deled that made him a profit. He lias probably discovered certain deficiencies In operatipn. He has likely learned what merchandise sold, gave the greatest service and satisfaction. Based 011 his experience he expects to outline his plan and policy for the cur rent year. Every compleetd period offers an opportunity Tor review, anal ysis and reflection. Not only Is this true in business, but it is true of the life of the individual. It is true of Kiwanis Interna tional. On January 21. 1915, fifteen years ago, the first club in Ki wanis International wan built at Detroit, Michigan. Its program at the outset was not certain, and is philosophy as we know it today had not been developed. It was launched, hut sailed, in one sense, upon an uncharted sea. Basically it was built in re sponse to something within, in relation to something mithout. I't was created to help the needs of others. But the founders of that first club/ hardly realize to what proportions our organiza tion would grow, nor the splen lid program which would be de veloped and promoted within a few short years. As we celebrate our anniver sary we have reason to be proud of our accomplishments. As we take stock of ourselves, we can reflect with full satisfaction, not only In our growth in numbers and influence but in the quality and extent of achievement. The only way that past experience can be used profitably as a basis for future effort. We would rather not boast of what we have done In the past on the occasion of our anniver sary but rather would consider it a time to decide what we are going to do and liow we are go ing to do it as we look forwards As grateful a H we are for the service which we have been able to render to humanity, we care not to dwell upon what we have done, but would prefer to ana lyze ourselves—study our organ iaztion—review its experience, so that we might give our best thought and highest energy to those things which would give new srength to our present struc ture, and new purpose to our organization. We would do those things which would increase the field of our usefulness. A proper appreciation of what we have done as an organization prompts us to do those things which would more adequately translate our ideals in trem g of practical life. We should be so grateful for our heritage as Kiwanians, for you cannot look over the field of our organization without com ing to the conclusion that the Frigid* ire Harris-Burgiss Elec. Co. r Iff Westinffhoufte Electric Fa»a "Abe" Harris, Klwanian Situated in Elkin and lying on the East side of Gwyn Avenue and beginning on East side of said Avenue at a corner between Lots 3 and 4 of the Elkin Land Company's Map and running thence in a Nortnernly course with said Avenue 90 feet to a stake; thence of that same wid th extending back 175 feet to an alley, the same comprising all of Lot 3 and 35 feet of the South side of Lot 2 as shown on the Map of Elkin Land Company, which see deed recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Surry County, in Book 53, Page 238. This the 31st day of January 1930. Julian Price, Trustee Brooks, Parker, Smith & Whar ton, Attorneys, Greensboro, N. C. Feb. 6-13-20-27 Mi'B. H. G. Harris, of West 'Main Street is greatly improved aftern an Illness of several days. EIJKIN, K. C. laid on a sound philosophy of life—that its structure has been well built, and that i i 8 manned by a devoed leadership of re presentative manhood. On this fifteenth anniversary as a service organization we need to have the thought deep lin our consciousness that we still face great social problems. We shold realize as we never I have before that there has been ( no time in the North American Continent when there was a ! greater need of leadership of thf | fright type than there is today. | Our organization along with th,e other service clubs .has mad» a splendid to the community life of the United I States and Canada. But as wc | look about us. the challenge ol I social problems yet to be solved | commands the attention of- every I thinking man. The call of hu manity is still being made. Ii comeg with increasing forqe. \V» must as a service organization definately face our responsibll ity through our club ant through ourselves a H individuals We must play our full part ir helping support those forces o society which have for their pur pose the betterment of humanity and development of a finer man hood and womanhood. Thai goal is worthy of our energeti efforts. On this fifteenth anniversary let us realize that we have ha a splendid past. Let us under stand that the present is rich in its opporunities. Let us see that the future with its possibilities for increased useful (effort in spires us to even greater endev or. Let us so plan and so work that we make the present deep ly vftal in its relation to the fu ture as we promote the work of the organization which we ajl love. The wisest men say little but saw wood—how big is your wood pile? —East Cleveland, Ohio HncceM Succe s i s the result of diff 1-1 cullies overcome. Character is the result of difficulties con quered. Success in life is render ing the greatest service .which one's capabilities permit. Service are one. He who serves Ihes. He who serve 8 grows. He who serves succeeds. And he who serves most, succeeds most. The small stunted man i 8 the selfish man who seeks to serve himself Qnly. The large, success ful man is the man who, through intelligently directed effort, seeks to serve all mankind. Opportun ity for service in the banking field has never been greater than today. The greater oppor tunities demand greater prepar ation, greater knowledge upon which to base a broader service. Greater opportunity, successful-) ly undertaken and met, Implies that character of service which most develops the man, and with his development comes ultimate success. —J. H. Puelicher O-Q-M- K-Ray Sinclair Refining Company Sinclair (>ajioline and Oils 'Vhe grade that makes the grade" H. P. Graham, Kiwanian THURSDAY FEBRUARY 6, 1030 . Bread Saute Cut the crust from a, thick slice of bread and brown the bread in a pan containing 2 ibis, hot melted butter. Remove and put in pan 2 this, chopped ham, 2tbls. grated cheese and 1-2 cup cream. Season with salt and cayene mix well and when hot spread on the N browned toast. Backache If functional Bladder Irrita tatlon disturbs your .sleep, or causes burning or Itching Sensa tion, Backache, Leg Pains or muscular aches, making you feel tired depressed and discouraged why not try the Cystex 48 Hour Test? Don't give up. Get Cystex today. Put it to the test. See for yourself how quickly it works and what it does. Money back if it doesn't bring quick improve ment and satisfy you completely Try Cystex today. Only 60c DIRECTORS fICORSE ROVALL R. L. HUBBARD ». B. HARRELL •J. f. CARTER I. S. SPAINHOUR W. M. MICI C. r\ HARRIS PUBLISHED MOUTHLY BANK OF ELKIN "BUILT FOR SKRVICK" •I. H. BKKSON, Caithifr Kiwanian Standard Oil Company OF NEW JKRSKY Distributors Standard Petroleum Product* v KLKIX, N. (\ Louis Nelson, Kiwanian CAROLINA CROSS ARM CO. KLKIN, X. C. Manufacturers |of Natural Hickory Porch Furniture Builders' Mupplies, Cross Arms Pins J. F. Carter. Kiwanian SOUTHERN PUB LIC UTILITIES CO. LIGHT AND POWKR Electrical Appliances All Kinds H. T. Brown, Kiwanian ELKIN FURNITURE COMPANY R. R. Hubbard, Kiwanian ELKIN HARDWARE CO. "Everything in Hardware" Pee Gee Paints. Birds' Roofing E. P. McNeer, Kiwanian FELDMAN'S ELKIN'g HOME OF VALUES Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes Ray Feldman, Kiwanian ABERNETHY'S Driak at onr Sanitary White Fountain "A Good Drag Store" J. Q. Abernethy, Kltoanlan CHATHAM 5 MANUFACTURING COMPANY 1 'C. C. .Poindexter and W. A. Neares, Klwanlans
The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, N.C.)
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Feb. 6, 1930, edition 1
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