Newspapers / The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, … / Feb. 23, 1939, edition 1 / Page 9
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Tfonrgffav r 25» It^SS WpNTS r We bay scrap iron and metak k Double Eagle Service Co.. Eik- I in, N. C. tfc ' Per Sale—food seed oats. Also good pair of mules. J. E. Ham by, State Road, N. C. 2-23p Wanted—to boy hams. We pay cash. Brendle Produce Co., Elkin, N. C. tfc You will find Wood's "Tested Gar den seed at Graham & Click 5c & 10c Store. All garden beans and peas 15c pound. Small seed 5c and 10c ounce. See us before you buy. ltc Girts—Own your own business. Earn $75 to SIOO per week. ► Have others earning for you. Yes, it is the beauty business. ~. s Every Woman Your Customer. \ Today now while you think of it write and learn how you can ~ learn the profession. Open your own shop. We train you—fur nish your own shop with a small payment. We help you to succeed. New classes form ing now. Continental College of Beauty Culture. High Point, N. C. 3-16 c Baby Chieks U. S. Approved Pullorum Tested. They will really live and make money for iyou. Bunch Hatchery, States ville, N. C. 5-18P Just received large selection Dahlias, Gladiolas, Canna Lilies V and Rose Bushes. Reasonably * priced. Graham & Click 5c & 10c Store, Elkin, N. C. ltc Girls—Learn to be a Beauty Op erator. Only a short time re quired to learn this high class profession. There is a demand for well trained operators. En roll now. Write at once for special 1o w rates. Hinshaw School of Beauty Culture. North Wilkesboro, N. C. 3-30 c For Sale: German police pups. Price reasonable. Everette Dob bins, Ronda, N. C. ltp For Sale: Pair of matched mares, i 6 and 7 years old. Total weight 2,400 pound". A C. Phillips, * Thurmond, N. C. 3-9 c Wanted to Rent—2-room furn ished apartment. Call 318. Very special! Assortment of Enamel Ware consisting of cooking kettles, wash basins, pudding pans. Slightly dam aged and going at one-half price. Graham fc Click 5c & 10c Store, Elkin, N. C. ltc l«st—Small squirrel dog, white with black and yellow markings. Female. Notify Billy GambilL 3-2 c PERMANENT WAVES. SI.OO and up. Shampoo, finger wave and rinse 40c. Modern Beauty Shop. Madge Pruett. tfc Notice—For convenience of Crip ples and those unable to get upstairs to our Adjusting Room we have provided an Adjusting Room downstairs. Hours daily 9-12 A. M., 2-5 and 7-8 P. M. Dr. and Mrs. Crutchfield, Com opractic Office. Jonesville. N. C., Telephone 260-J. tfc For Sale—AO kinds of wood, any length; oak or mixed. Delivered anytime. J. S. Hudspeth, H. W. Crouse, Telephone 180. tfc Lost—One female pointer, white and yellow. Notify Billy Gam bill. 3-2 c Flayer Piano Bargain! Instead of reshipping to factory. Player Piano, .like new, can be had for unpaid balance of $48.65 re maining on contract. Write at ' onoe tb Edgar O. Netzow, (De- ' partment of Accounts), 4743 North Sheffield Avenue, Mil waukee, Wisconsin, who will advise where piano can be seen. Kindly furnish references. 2-23p ! Notice—For convenience of Crip ples and those unable to get upstairs to our Adjusting Room we have provided an Adjusting i Room downstairs. Hours daily 9-12 A. M., 2-5 and 7-8 P. M. ] Dr. and Mrs. Crutchfield, Chir- • opractic Office, Jonesville, N. i C n Telephone 260-J. tfc ] Wanted to repair radios. Out j expert thoroughly knows his ] business. Prices right. Harris Electric Co., yikln, N. C. tfc . Bo yon want plenty of egg* from 1 strong, fast growing youns 1 chicks? if so feed Pan am in. We ' have it. Abemethy's, A Good Drug Store, Elkin. N. C. tfr FREE! If excess acid causes yoo , pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indl- \ gestion, Heartburn, Belching, ; Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, f get free Sample, Udga, at Turn- ] er Drug Company. l-26p REAL ESTATE ! Seal Estate for Sale: Beautiful t building lots 2 miles south of l Arlington on N. C. highway 26, t U. S. highway 21. Would sell i In small tracts 1-5 acres. See i was for your real estate needs. Also building. D. C. Martin, t Office across hall from E. C. James, Atty, t 3llfc)N Washington, Feb. 21. —The two important subjects which over shadow everything else in Wash ington are the President's row with Congress and the necessity for increasing national defense precautions. There is little difference of opinion on Capitol Hill on the first of those; Congress, especially the Senate, is in a fighting mood and is defying the Presidential wishes. There is considerable difference of opinion in Congress as to the real need of spending as much money as the Army and Navy, backed by the President, think should be spent for increasing the nation's armaments. Without the barking of in formed public opinion, even those who strongly favor heavy increas es in armaments feel that it would be unwise to go too far. If the public knew the facts, these members of Congress believe, there would be no opposing senti ment against spending all that might be necssary on our fighting forces. The facts about the military strength of America and the democracies of Europe, as com pared with that of the dictator ships, which were told to the Senate and House Military Af fairs committees, are beginning to leak out, and they are making a deep impression upon members who had not heard them and who were inclined to oppose the whole idea that the United States needed stronger defenses. Craig Gives Figures As outlined by General Malin Craig, Chief of Staff of the Army, the comparative figures are very interesting. Military men talk of armed forces in terms of Army I divisions. A division is a com pletely self-contained fighting unit of, usually, 20,000 men and officers, equipped and manned to take the field alone if neces sary. The latest figures show that Germany has 90 such divisions, Italy 44, France 38, and England only seven, Japan has 50 army divisions in China, 12 more in Manchukuo and nine at home. And the United States has only parts of four divisions. There are 400,000 soldiers on the War Department rolis, includ ing the regular Army, the Na tional Guard and the enlisted re serve; but they do not constitute an effective fighting force be cause they have not the equip ment for war. The .Army has developed at the Springfield Arsenal a new type of infantry rifle which is said to be the best in the world, but there are only 8,000 of those modern rifles to equip the entire army. There are only 140 of the three inch field guns which are the main reliance of a mobile army; only two of the modern 105-mil limeter guns upon which foreign armies are relying, and less than half the number of machine guns needed to equip what troops we could put in the field if necessary. General Craig startled the Con gressional committee by citing pages of such facts, and especially I by alleging that most of the gun powder the Army has now was left over from the World War and has deteriorated so that it explodes often by spontaneous combustion, sometimes blowing the gun-barrel to bits. v Inclined To Do Something In the light of such information Congress is more inclined than before to put the nation's defen ses into working shape, but is still inclined to be suspicious of being led into entangling foreign al liances. The real battle between the President and Congress may have only begun. The Senate's refusal to confirm the appointment of Floyd H. Roberts to be a Federal judge in Virginia, by a vote of 72 to 9, was the opening gun. The President's attack upon the an cient system of "Senatorial cour tesy" under which no high offi cial can be confirmed if he is personally obnoxious to the Sen ators from his home state, has opened up the whole question of the power of appointment. The President insists that it is a power granted by the Constitu tion to the President alone. The Senate holds that the power of appointment is a dual function of President and Senate together. Much re-reading of the Consti tution is going on on Capitol Hill, and member are discovering that the Constitutional power of ap pointment granted to the Execu tive extends to Justices of the Su preme Court, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls. He may also, still by and with the consent of the Senate, appoint other public officers whose selec tion is not otherwise provided for - T t - - - ~- - - niinlN, 3?VW»M>'S BIULBTA by law, but Congress Is given specific authority to take the ap pointing power of minor officials out of the President's hands and vest it in the courts or in the heads of departments. The appointment by the Presi dent of Thomas R. Amlie as a member of the Interstate Com merce Commission greatly inten sified the heat generated by the appointment of Judge Roberts. Several other Presidential ap pointees are ilkely to have rough sledding and more refusals of the Senate to confirm them are ex pected. v It all sums up thstt the Pres ident is mad at Congress and Congress is mad at the President. The President displayed his anger when he sent a demand to Con gress for the restoration of the 150 million dollars which Con gress had chopped off from the W. P. A. fund which he had re quested. Congress slapped back at the President by voting, ten to one, to continue the Dies com mittee for investigatnig un- American activities, which the President disapproves. The talk on Capitol Hill is that the two items in the departmental reorganization plan which the President mo6t desires, the changing of the character of the Civil Service Commission and placing the Controller-General under the Executive instead of under Congress, may be cut out of the bills to make it easier for the machinery of government to function. WEST YADKIN FARMERS ORGANIZE FARM CLUB The farmers of the West Tad kin community met on the night 9, at the agricul raral building and organized 9 farm dub. C. R. Wright, voca tional teacher at West Yadkin high school was elected president from certified, unretouchtd photographs of identical foods, refrigerated, uncovered, at comparable temperatures. this NEW 1939 FRIGIDAIRE sii9.so up Made Only By General Motors $119.50 up BMC MAM mr/wr Nttr mutant KgwagjgSj —— • See how it preserves even highly perishable See how far ahead you'll be in every way, with ||jl|pyV |H|B^ —I foods days longer than ever before ... prolongs this new Frigidaire! Ahead in food-preservation, mffifY I their original freshness, retains their rich nutritional witii tiie "Cold-Wall" Principle. Ahead in beauty. f||l.'J L> fi i; j £j£j|HßQ values, saves their peak fresh flavor! Ahead in usability with New MEAT-TENDER for jfpfej vkDc# llllMTfjlf j|H ; J EMkBSEH Fresh vegetables and fruits do not lose their fresh meats and New SUPER-MOISTHYDRATORS |§ii|pf ' P •jKTfI fv«!ll!y|lnffl I H S attractiveness through wilting, shrinking, or that keep vegetables far fresher. Ahead in econ- §|gg||] Plllrt] ilfir I I IH VI e^R changing color. Left-over meats, peas, beans, omy with the one and only METER-MISER. J I | f l| Hi J|| a J oatmeal, stay as fresh and delicious as when first Come in. Get Proof in } Minutes / 'J ru II Ssf ®"v Frigldflir© IH prepared! Even without covering! For food is It's years ahead yet costs no more than ordinary fopfc 1 J |H j: j CBTS CORREMT 60STS TQh not dried out by moisture-robbing air circulation, "first line" refrigerators. Convince yourself in 5 ||Sg|f | jgjf] ijflfl p|§ It*» the Simplest R^ And odor-and-flavor exchange is also checked: minutes! See our PROOF-DEMONSTRATION today! B§jjM Jj IR sren™ therc^heyjfl Can b« purchased on terms as law aa 28c a day jj||| | In H m— — MJi I tgl ■ H m General Moiiki NOW, FOR THE FIRST TIME I IHU r —ll I m \T\ m I* 18 /X_ I 1. THE NEW "DEW-FRESH SEAL"-A SOLID GLASS JBJHBL- jHs tmm fmm HHM l" 11111^*11 W PARTITION-DIVIDES THE CABINET INTO 2 COM- j * frttm ks ■K|3 HH 2. THE LOWER COMPARTMENT IS REFRIGERATED -JSHGSJI 111 DIRECTLY THROUGH THE WALLS BY CONCEALED 'j' \T —j i Mi - 'j| Olrfy FHgfcUIVV REFRIGERATING COILS. jjrfjjjl ||l|j Qltfckube Tl*y* • This provides all 3 essentials for keeping foods vitally fresh I j||[|iji!l I jl Imitatedbut never equalled,.. longn than ever before —l. Uniform Low Temperatures. 2. High | ggjjjjL; •! i to remove—Easier to uso-hfi Humidity. 3. No Moisture-Robbing Air Circulation. All without f fSstir adding a single moving part! AND ONLY FRIGIDAIRB HAS IT! I i Leaking. y„u^i v ' ' only GENUINE nUCIOAUB QU>OKUSM 1 TRAYS. \ HARRIS ELECTRIC COMPANY 1 Phone 250 (j. Youthful Picketers Have Lunch "S ; ' /: X r .'t ■ 7 ,■■ '% . ~..... , . •;• NEW YORK err* ... Children marching in a picket line outride the Board of Education at 600 Park Avenue to protest against their trans fer from P. S. N6. 97 to P. S. 89 in the Bronx, are seen taking thn* out for luncheon. of the club and Harrison Nicks was elected secretary. It is the purpose of the club to promote better farming in West Yadkin community and to foster a better spirit of cooperation among the farmers. The club meetings will be held weekly throughout the school year and continued prob ably monthly during the summer. Topics of various interest to the farmers will be discussed at each meeting and a number of experi enced technical men will be scheduled to lecture before the club at different meetings during the year. The interest shown by those present was very good and a much larger enrollment is ex pected for next meeting. The longest pipe line carrying oil is in Iraq across Mesopotamia. It delivers a daily supply of 85.- 000 barrels. BRANON Mr. Forest Doss spent the week-end at North Wilkesboro. Miss Lucille Steelman and her brother, Carl, visited Miss Bertha Mae Tucker, of Benham, Sunday afternoon. Mr. Dick Cummings spent the week-end in Boonville the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Taft Cummings. Miss Hazel Blundy, who under went an appendicitis operation at the Baptist hospital at Winston- Salem, is getting along nicely, we are pleased to note. Miss Lucille Steelman visited Miss Marie Long, of Yadkinville, a* while Sundaj. Mrs. Carrie Cummings and daughters, Misses Jettie and Bon nie Lee. visited their daughter and sister, Mrs. Glen Mastin, of Ronda, Monday night. ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Adminis tratrix of the estate of W. J. Eur cham, late of Surry County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate to' present them to the undersigned a El kin. North Car» olina on or before February 9th, 1940 or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the es tate will please make immediate settlement. This 9th day of February, 1939. MOUJE C. BURCHAM, Administratrix of the estate of W. J. Burcham, deceased. Barker & Hampton, Attys. 3-17 RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT Whereas, the Supreme Archi tect of the Universe has seen fit to remove from our midst, our most worthy brother, W. S. Gough, who depdrted this life on Sunday morning, February 12th. be it therefore resolved: First: That we humbly submit to the Will of Him who doeth all things well, and commend the spirit of our deceased brother to Him who gave it; Second: To the bereaved fam ily, we extend our heartfelt sym pathy in this, their sad hour of bereavement and recommend that they look to Him, Who can com fort all sorrows; Third: That in the death, of brother Gough, Elkin Lodge No. 454, A. F. & A. M„ has lost a most faithful and valued member and we shall always cherish his mem ory; Fourth: That a copy of these resolutions be placed on the rec ords of the Lodge as a memorial; that a copy be sent to the fam ily; that one be sent to the Elkin Tribune and one to the Orphans' Friend for publication. M. R. BAILEY, H. B. HOLCOMB, A. O. BRYAN, Committee * NOTICE: Elkin Masonic Lodge No. 454, meets every 2nd and 4th Tuesday nights at 7:30. All members re quested to be present. Signed: Secretary of Lodge. v tfc DON'T HESITATE To Bring Your Fi nancial Problems to Us. We Are Always Glad to Serve in Ev ery Way Consistent With Good Banking. THE BANK OF ELKIN R, C. LeweDyn, Pres. > Garland Johnson, Vice-Pres. Franklin Folger, Cashier
The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 23, 1939, edition 1
9
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