Newspapers / The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, … / May 16, 1935, edition 1 / Page 7
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Thursday, May I, 1935 vilw 1 ill Mir m. 40 Hugh Salmons spent the week end in Wnston-Salem. the guest of his mother, Mrs. L. R. Salmons. Mr. and Mrs. George Bailey of Hickory, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Smith, at Hotel Elkin. W. R. Byrd and daughter, Miss Pamelia Byrd, of Greensboro, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Byrd. Mrs. Earl Ellis and children, of Clayton, are the guests of her par ents. Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Bailey, at their home on Gwyn Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Church and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Price spent Sun day in North Wilkes bo ro, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Forester, Jr. Miss Emalene Neaves, Miss Lu cille Cox, Robert Lankford and Roger Carter spent Sunday at Ga lax, Virginia, the guests of friends. M!rs. Carl Poindexter spent Thursday in Lexington, where she attended a luncheon given by Mrs. John Raper, at her home there. Dwight Bailey, of Sumter, S. C., spent the week-end here--the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Bailey, at their home on Gwyn Ave nue. Miss Caroline Harris, of Raleigh, is expected Friday to spend the week-end here the guest of Mrs. R. G. Smith, at her home on Gwyn Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Reich and children, of Greensboro, and Mr. and Mrs. Gwyn Poindexter and children, of Mount Airy, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Van Poin dexter, at their home on Gwyn Ave nue. I WE WERE CHOSEN TO FURNISH THE I TRIBUNE I CCX)KING SCHOOL W. J. SNOW BUILDING TODAY AND TOMORROW In selecting our store to furnish the vegetables and meats for the cooking school, Miss Malone Khew that she would find a complete line of both vegetables and meats that were FRESH. Our new and modern refrigeration equipment and other facilities for preserving the freshness of meats and produce guarantees it! Because of our large scale method of buying and our fast turnover, B we are able to offer you finer foods at savings that make planning a budget on our prices well worth while. I Meats Fresh Fancy Western Beef—All Cuts \/ I^l Best Native Beef - ▼ BJ Branded Western Lamb T . „ „ „ . —Lima Beans —New Corn Cold Cooked Meats Fresh Ground Meat Loaves — Garden PeaS —Red Bliss Home-Made Sausage —Green Beans Potatoes Sandwich Spreads . Milk Fed Frying Chickens, Fresh Squash Oma Oes Dressed « —Cucumbers * —Peppers Fancy Veal Cabbage —Carrots Fresh Dressed Young Hens * _ . Native Pork — Spinach —Lettuce Fresh Fish —Mustard —Celery I*l 1 I I I No. I—ELKIN No. 2—JONESVILLE ■ • I JOE BIVINS FOLEY NORMAN B. H. Sheppard, of Crumpler, has been spending the past week here the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Neaves, at their home on Bridge street. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Green re turned to their home in Statesville today following a brief visit to H. P. Gray and family at their home on Vine street. Miss Ruth Belton and George Calloway, of Mount Airy, were the Sunday guests of Miss Dorothy Chappell, at her home on Bridge street. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Boyles, of Pilot Mountain, spent the week-end here the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Max Boyles, at their home on West Main street. Mrs. Herbert H. Stevens and Mrs. Charlotte H. Stevens spent the early part of the week in Pinehurst, where they were guests at the Caro lina Hotel. Mrs. R. L. Price, of Winston- Salem, spent the week-end here the guest of her mother, Mrs. R. L. Poindexter, at her home on West Main street. Mrs. W. W. Whitaker returned Saturday ~ from Elizabeth City,, where she spent last week attend ing a meeting of the State Federa tion of Woman's Clubs. Misses Ethel and Irene Abernethy of Charlotte, spent the week-end here the guests of their parents, Rev. and Mrs. L. B. Abernethy, on Hospital Road. Miss Victoria Johnson returned to her home in Winston-Salem Sunday following a week's visit to her sister, Mrs. R. L. Poindexter, at her home on West Main street. THE BLKIN TRIBUNE. BiJUN. NORTH CAROLINA Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Crews, of Henderson, spent the week-end here t.fr« guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Armfield and Mrs. W. E. Paul, the latter Mrs. Crews' mother. Mrs. Thahle James, of Mount Airy Is spending some time here the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. James, the former her son, at their home on West Main street. Mi*, and Mrs. W. A. Neaves spent Sunday with Mr. Neaves' father, J. M. Neaves, at Crumpler, and Mrs. Neaves' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E. Cox, Mouth-of-Wilson, Va. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Walls re turned to their home in Princeton, W. Va., Tuesday following a brief visit to Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Stewart, at their home on West Main street. Mrs. H. P. Laffoon, thirteenth district committeewoman of the American Legion auxiliary, and Mrs. L. I. Wade attended the fourth area conference of the auxiliary In Statesville Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Walls and little son, Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell and daughters, Louise and Prances Ann, spent Sunday In North Wllkesboro, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Steele. Mrs. M. E. Stafford and Miss Vir ginia Staffprd, of Abingdon, Va., were the week-end guests of the former's daughter, Miss Marion Stafford, at the home of Dr. and Mrs. W. D. Turner, on Circle Court. Mrs. W. E. Bohannon and little granddaughter, Patty Rue Young, returned Sunday from Boonville, where they spent last week visiting friends and attending the com mencement exercises at Boonville high school. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Douglass had as their week-end guests at their home on Elk Spur street, Mr. and Mrs. Raynard, of Winston-Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Warren and family, of Dougihton, and Charlie Coe and John and Jim Whitting ton, of Dobson. Hawaiian "Queen" & mlMft HONOLULU . . . Miss Mabel LLkelike Loess (above), whose grandmother was a half-sister of Princess Ksiulani, has this year been named "Queen" Of Hawaii's Lei Day Festival. Miss Ruth Atkinson, who has been a member of the faculty of the Old Town school, near Winston-Salem, has arrived home to spend the sum mer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Atkinson, at their home on West Main street. Mr. and Mrs. J. Coke Marion spent the week-end. in Statesville the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Price. They werr members of the Confirmation class on Sunday, con firmed by Bishop Edwin Pennick at Trinity Episcopal church, Statesville. Rev. Eph Whisenhunt is expected to return Saturday from Memphis, Tenn., where he Is spending this week attending the Southern Bap tist convention. He will conduct regular services at the First Baptist church Sunday morning and even ing. Miss Virginia Price, a student at Queens-Chicora College, Charlotte, spent the week-end here the guest of her mother, Mrs. W. J. Price, at her home on Gwyn Avenue. She brought as her guests Misses Jean Johnston and Virginia Covington, both of Charlotte. Dr. and Mrs. A. H. Smith of Rochester, N. Y., returned to their home Wednesday, following a visit of several days to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shugart, the latter their daughter, at their hbme on Bridge street. They were accompanied home by Mrs. Shugart and little son, Billy, who will spend several weeks with them. Those from here who attended the annual Employer-Employee Banquet of Chatham Manufacturing held in the Reynolds Cafeteria In Winston-Salem Wednesday evening were Roette Cockerham, Leona Darnell, Collie Young, Estelle Pow ers, Bitsy King, Pauline Morrison, Gilvin Angell, Charles Young, Rex Boyles, Mary Etta Laffoon, Pauline Masten, Catherine Brannon, Myrtle Young, Eddie Gray, Jimmy Booher. Jimmy- Young, Robert Lankford, Dick Chatham, Henry Dobson, J. W. L. Benson, C. C. Poindexter and W. A. Neaves. New High Record For Purchases Set By Ford Dearborn, Mich., April 17. —A new high record of purchases of mater ials and supplies for use in manu facture of Ford V-8 cars and trucks was set by the Ford Motor Company in March it was announced at' the home offices here today. Ford disbursements for materials and supplies in March totalled in excess of $81,000,000. The former high was $78,000,000, which was in April, 1930. In addition, Ford payrolls during March totalled $16,500,000, it was announced. " Before the end of the month, pro duction of Ford V-8 cars and trucks in 1935 will pass the half-million mark, tt was stated. Late last year Henry Ford announced that Ford production in 1935 would be a mil lion or better. Sales of Ford V-8 cars and trucks through April 10 this year exceeded total sales in all of 1932. Sales be-? tween January 1 and April 10 to talled 334,437 Ford cars and trucks. This compared with total sales of 328,607 cars and trucks in all of the year 1932. 2 KILLED, 4 INJURED Honolulu, May 12j—A destroyer collision which killed one man and injured four and a plane plunge in to the sea that took the life of an aviator were revealed here today as the casualties in the American fleet's secret mid-Pacific "war" op erations. The casualties were disclosed when 32 of the 153 warships steamed Into Psarl Harbor here this morning and Admiral J. M. Reeves suddenly lifted the rigid censorship that had shrouded the operations since last Thursday. -> In trying to prevent Lem Wayman from shooting a dog, Oaston Will iams of Cincinnati, was shot and killed. Two New York youths stole two coffins from an undertaking estab lishment but were caught when they tried to pawn than. and ' are Says: MISS ADDIE MALONE ... Nationally Known Cooking Expert KBH isv. —wgjgewyul Certainly every housewife agrees with Miss Malone that modern fixtures are an economy and a necessity to good house keeping. And if your kitchen is not as modern as it should be, we can modernize it at a surprisingly small cost. Elkin Plumbing & Heating Co. Jones Holcomb, Prop. Phone 254 -''''s&' JR/nk THE ICE CREAM SEASON IS HERE! We Want You To Enjoy the - Deliciousness and Purity of Supreme Ice Cream Desire for the best never grows less! And there you have the reason behind the ever-increasing demand for Supreme Ice Cream. It meets the demand for full, delicious flavor and smoothness at a price that makes it a real bargain. Because we are not stingy in filling cones or cups—and our prices are lower for individual pints, quarts or larger quantities. We invite you to visit us today. Visit The Tribune Cooking School and Learn Why MISS ADDIE MALONE x Endorses and Praises Supreme Ice Cream We are giving pint packages as prizes! Perhaps You'll be a winner! Elkin Ice Cream Parlor Next to W. W. Whitaker Grocery Elkin, N. C.
The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, N.C.)
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May 16, 1935, edition 1
7
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