"I* >.s. 8 Jr 7 4 • »•«*• Thursday. June 1, 1933 OUTSTANDING r NEWS EVENTS —of the— PAST WEEK ( ————— SHIP SINKS One hundred and eighteen per sons, victims of the first Great Lakes disaster of the season, re turned to shore at Houghton, Mich., Sunday afternoon after a night spent in the cold fog of barren Rock of Ages reef In Lake Superior fol lowing the grounding and wrecking of the passenger steamer George M. Cox late Saturday. INJURIES ARE FATAL Dr. William Joseph McGlothlin, president of Furman university, Greenville, S. C., died in City hos pital Sunday of injuries suffered in an automobile wreck May 16. He was 65 years old. ANOTHER FOR REPEAL Tabulation of nearly complete returns Sunday indicate Nevada voted overwhelmingly for of the 18th amendment at Saturday's primary election. . HUGE UTILITY INTERESTS An uproar, precipitated by a de mand from Virginia's quick speak ing Senator Glass to know the goal of the inquiry into J. P. Morgan and company, climaxed a disclosure Friday that the firm had an inter est in utility concerns whose terri tory embraces almost half the pop ulation of the country. SANFORD BOY DROWNS John Allen Bryant, 17, lost his life by drowning at Morris pond, nine miles south of Sanford, about two o'clock Friday afternoon. The first to enter the water of a party from Sanford, young Bryant ven tured too near the dam and got in to water over his head. His body was recovered. MUST PAY FIRST, TALK LATER France's defaulted war debt in ,4 stallment must be paid before Pres ident Roosevelt will consider any revision of that country's obligation to the United States. BEST WEEK IN THREE YEARS Trade and business during last week, the Dunn and Bradstreet Re view said Friday, have shown more consistent improvement than in any ' week in the last three years. Ctvf Which Do YOU Want.... Sf # MERE COLDNESS SAFE Refrigeration SAFE refrigeration surely requires more than mere coldness. Indeed, what good Ls low temperature if you have to keep your foods stored .in foul, stagnate, un breathable air. We challenge anyone to successfully contradict the statement that the air in any good ice refrigerator is purer, more breathable than ijt any type of ice substitute refrigerator sold for home use. This is true because as ice melts it "washes" the air that circulates in the refrigerator and food odors—always present where food is stored—ore carried down the drain pipe, out of the refrigerator. No refrigerator without a drain pipe—or some system of ventilation—can take the food odors away from the food. In any ice substitute refrigerator these ordors are kept shut up with the foods and intermingle and sour. Isn't it to be expected that foods kept in such an atmosphere would lose their natural flavor and goodness? Equally important from the standpoint of safe refrigeration is the amount of mois ture in the air. Melting ice supplies the right amount of moisture for the protec tion of foods. This moisture keeps vegetables and fruits in better condition just as cold, pure water lengthens the life of cut flowers. Ice refrigeration always has been the lowest price refrigeration you can buy. If economy were its only advantage, perhaps you inightl feel you could afford the more expensive kind. But no matter what price you pay, only iiee can give you the best refrigeration. ... TRY THESE TESTS --- THE THE MELTING ICE TEST npl? A TWT\ T r In any ice substitute refrigerator freeze a tray full of DIUjA 1 VI j ce cubes. Allow these cubes to melt, in the tray, on the shelf of the ice substitute rj£rigerator in whiclu foods TEST are stored. When the cubes have melted, freeze them a second time and allow them to melt again in the same way. Kneel down in front of any When they have melted the second time you probably ice substitute refrigerator in will notice a thin layer of film on the top of the water. which foods have been shut made-up ofsuj- _ up for 12 or more hours and In the ice substitute refrig- \( smell the air that rushes erator. In any I E refrig erator these substances are —fcJo-- —\ V J>) out at the very bottom of drawn away from your food. £7 \ > liaw' the door as von o»en It. taken down the drain pipe Uwsk' MEWIU the door as you open it. out of refrigerator. Make the same test in front If you think the water un- /Sffltv I' of anv ice refrigerator and der thp! Wlm thls fllm nmy of any ice refrigerator and yery thln and ahnost /L decide for yourself in which noticeable; additional freea refrigerator the air is pur- and will make it more pronounced) in pure. f /Y Vl /\ \ est. take a small ta«te of it. * J Carolina Ice & Fuel Company Bridge Street Elkin, N. C. Phone 83 WANTS "GOLD CLAUSE" OUT The administration called on Congress Friday to strike the "gold clause" from all obligations, public and private, thus making all Amer ican money legal tender in pay-, ment of debts. MAY PROBE MELLON A report from the secretary of the treasury on the income tax as sessments and payments by Andrew W. Mellon, former secretary of the treasury, and a number of compan ies allied with the Mellon fortune from 1917 to 1933, was demanded Monday in a resolution introduced by Senator McKeller, Democrat. Tenn. ATTEMPT FAILS Judge P. A. McElroy today denied a retition for an injunction against the holding of an election in Mc- Dowell county June 27 on the ques tion of legalizing pari mutuel bet ting on horse racing there. PREDICT 15-CENT COTTON G. C. Adams, Georgia's commis sioner of agriculture, Monday pre dicted cotton would be selling at 15 cents a pound by the end of the year. F. D. R. BEHIND INVESTIGATION President Roosevelt told members of the Senate banking committee Monday he wanted their investiga tion of J. P. Morgan and company and other private bankers to be pushed forward "without limit." FAIR DRAWS THRONG Attendance figures, although in complete and unofficial, showed more than a third of a million per sons witnessed the world's fair dur ing its first two days, at Chicago. MAKES #10,000,000 CHICKEN FEED J. P. Morgan and company's re port to senate investigators show the firm made nearly $10,000,000 on sale and underwriting of securities in 1930-31, years in which the bank's partners paid only $48,000 income tax to the United States. Home-Coming At Cool Springs Church The Cool Springs Baptist church five miles northwest of this city, announces a Home-Coming Day for Sunday, June 11, 1933. All former members and pastors of the church and members of their families are most cordially invited to attend. They are requested to bring a well filled basket, also flowers for the grave of a loved one. THE Btjqy TRIBUNE. ELKIH.NORTH CAROLINA Doughton And Thurmond News Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Callaway, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. DeJournette and Rev. Grant Cethran attended the Stone Mountain Sunday school convention at Bethel, near North Wilkesboro, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Mason Cooper spent* Tuesday In North Wilkesboro. An infant child of Mr. and Mrs. William Billings died Saturday and was buried at Roaring Gap church ( Sunday afternoon. Aunt Celia Woodruff has been quite sick but is improving, we are, glad to note. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Wiggins and Miss DeEtte Turner, of Winston-j Salem, spent the week-end here the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Black— burn. Mr. and Mrs. Coley Cockerham and children, of Elkin, visited Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Lyon Sunday. Zephyr News Keller Shelton, of Mt. Airy, was| the guest of Clyde Hanes Sunday. Walker Byrd, of Ararat, was the guest of relatives here Sunday. Kelly Smith, of Mt. Airy, was the guest of relatives and friends here Sunday. Harrison Golden and family, of | Mountain Park, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hanes Sunday, j Miss Robbie Nixon, of Mountain Park, was the guest of Miss Nelia j Hanes Sunday afternoon. Boyd Wall, of State Road, spent Sunday here the guest of relatives, j Miss Mary Isaacs, of Mountain j Park, spent Sunday here the guest of friends. Gordon McMickle, of Fish River, spent Sunday here the guest of rela tives. Mrs. Henry Beamer, of Winston-j Salem, is spending a part of the summer with her daughter, Mrs. W. E. Williams. G. P. Dockery, of Elkin, spent j Sunday afternoon here with his sis ter, Mrs. Banner Parks. Mrs. G. W. Morrison, of Elkin, spent Sunday here the guest of rela- j tives. Miss Verna Blue, of White Plains, | was the guest of Miss Alice Wall Thursday. Mrs. Hester Laffoon, of Elkin, wasj the guest of relatives Sunday. More than 250,000 tons of coal I have been produced daily in the j Ruhr district this year. i —————— j ; :; . . SPAINHOUR'S Month of Progress PROMOTION AND ADVANCE SHOWING OF NEW SUMMER MERCHANDISE JOIN «33 AND HELP US CELEBRATE THIS EVENT DRESS UP! EXCEPTIONAL VALUES IN Summer Dresses BEAUTIFUL LINES, LOVELY JjLtmt MATERIALS—AND ABOVE ALL lowest PWCES - $2.88 BpjjlLpß $3.95 and $5.95 %s!' Hlf Show your spirit by buying—We've made the I price of these dresses so low that you will be IHt. able to buy as many as you need. Jacket D - resses ' Silk Swaggers ' Sp ? rt Frocks ~ EXTRA SPECIAL! WHILE 500 ® >ure L * nen Hand Embroidered HANDKERCMEFS EXTRA GOOD QUALITY RAYON A FLAT CREPES I* A real value in these smart new crepes for summer — 36 INCH FRUIT OF THE LOOM gl VOILES AND BATISTES I•) G Lovely new patterns, full width and above all—absolutely fast 36 INCH FAST COLOR DOTTED Jk \7ATI VO New! on white grounds, also Navy, H Villi r j just what you have wanted for sum * mfer's new frock. All Set DD APDEQC? From our for rKUbKLjo! BASEMENT STORE Voiles and Batistes 1 Beautiful new prints and designs, and it's JL just so easy to fashion lovely frocks, yard 36 Inch Special PERCALES ; MS Purchase Solid Colors EylP p RINTS BROADCLOTHS - c SCRIMS , O Yard An unusually good buy was _____ „ made in these fine materials l"9lC NeW and becomln * Patterns —That's why the price is so £ a YARD for summer. low. SYDNOR-SPAINHOUR CO. Elkin, North Carolina

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view