PAGE EIGHT MEMORIAL FOR DECEASED LADY Valie Crucis Society Honors Memory Mrs. Mast; Other Valie Cruris News. A very impressive memorial service wa?| heJd for Mrs. D. F. Mast, izi connection with the Wonians* Missionary Society at the home of Miss Giadys Taylor on Saturday afternoon. A portion of the 31st chapter of Proverbs, which is a very fitting description of Mrs. Mast's life, was read by j Mrs. J. M. Shull. Resolutioiis of respect. written by Mr& N I- Mast, Mrs. P. G. Spainhour and Rev. Mr. Parker, were offered by the former A most appropriate prayer was then 1 given by Mrs. C D. Taylor. A beautiful poem, "She is not Dead." was effectively read by Mrs. P. G. Spainhour after which Rev. Parker gave a very inspiring talk on the etiect that a useful Christian life, such as juts, .wasc uvea, snouia re a living example. Mr Ray F.irhting, who is attending Nortli Carolina State College, arrived home Friday afternoon for a short visit with his parents. Mrs. Joe C Mast is slowly improving after 1 avir.g been indisposed with a sevei e cold for the past few uay3. The sad passing of our dear Aunt Josie broug t many friends and relatives to th ; D. F. Mast home among : wtioni were Mrs. Jenny Harmon, ol Richmond, rnliana. and Mrs. E. P. Lur.d of Sui imcrvilie, N. J. Mrs. Harmoi plans an indefi: ate stay with ' her mother. Owing to Rev Dargar. Butts recent illness, he was unable to til! his regular appointment at She Holy Cross Fpisiopa! Cinirch Sunday. Miss Pody Bason-. of Glcndale Springs is spending some time as guest of Mi . \V. H Wagner. Dr. and Mrs. R. O. Glenn of Mountain City spent Sunday with Mrs. G. r.r.'s parents. Mr and Mrs. J. M. Shu';, in tlu afternoon Mrs. Shuli accompanied tl'.Ofh home for a few cays' visit. Due to schKils being Cosed in the Piedmont see "ion 011 account of the heavy snows. Miss Myrtle Caudili spent several days visiting home folks last week. Mr Charlie Dv.-r who mumi.. .... derwent an operation for appendicitis j at the Grace Hospital in Morganton,J is gottipgf; along nicely. Keep Breeding Birds Healthy and Strong The care and management of breed-1 . birds i:-" ail important factor governing the fertility of their eggs and, the iivability ofl the chicks secured.' Tfctis tlie future of a flock depends i a great deal on the proper handling j ; and feeding of breeding birds, said C. J. Maupin, extension poultrynian j at State College. ji He gave the following suggestions > for poultrymen who are breeding and raising their own chicks; ^ Keep the birds healthy and vigor- ) ous; nrov::!e --'can houses, keep houses : \ weil ventilated. keep birds free from : ^ parasites, change the utter often to avoid filth. J i Give the birds a clean yard and 1 range, avoid overcrowding supply; 1 green feed when possible, teed milk's in some form, and provide oyster j I shell or limestone grit. j c See that the birds get plenty of j 1 sunshine, and do not keep breeders 1 c in service too long. The older the j i biids, after the first year or two, the \I lower is the quality and fertility of | 4 their eggs. i i The heavier birds decline rapidly; < ?!t.. ure ursL year, but the lighter . i varieties are good for a year or so 1 longer. If a bird is an exceptionally j good breeder, it may be profitably | ' kept in service for a year or more i ( beyond the customary service period, j I Milk, alfalfa, legume meals, andj I fresh greens contain vitamins needed I by the breeding birds. Cod liver oil < or some other source of vitamin D i tends to increase the hatchability of i the eggs produced. From 10 to 12 pounds of grain a day should be fed each 100 birds in co;d weather, but in the spring the amount may be decreased. We give you the correct 1936 ( nent as the wave itself. For wo permanents?Also genuine Eugcr other oil waves. We have the no quignole Equipment for croquign/ you the flattering new styles. W coming to RUDEMAR BE (Over 5 & 10c Store) 1 TODAY and vWW. FKANfc PARKE tfl lu KING .... human nature 1 Edward VXH became* King of Eng j land on the death or ms latner, | George V, without even a niiid proi test from those of his subjects who still believe that the throne belongs ! by right to the family oi Stuart. Less | than 200 years ago. in 1746. the last battle fought on British soil resulted in the defeat cf the army ied by Charles Edward Stuart the "Young Pretender", grandson of King James XI. who had been deposed and banished in 16S8. Until 1001, when the present King's | grandfather succeeded his mother | Queen Victoria, there was a constant fear iii England of another 'Jacobite j Rising" to put the House of Stuart bach on the throne. Finger bo wis were ' long banned at important public ban- j quels, lest some secret adherent to j Stuart cause, in drinking the toast "To the King" should hold the wine- i glass over the fingecoowl and so 1 drink to "The King over the water.' ! In late years the Jacobites have j contented themselves with gathering j at the statue of Charles I in Trafalgar Square on January 20 each year ; denouncing the reigning monarch as | a usurper. This year, however, they! postponed the denunciation to March j 27, so as not to annoy the mourners; for King George V. Some of my Canadian friends tell j rue that their Jacobite ''Society of j the White Rose," has a jolly time at j their annual dinners, denying the j claim to the British throne of the ' monarch at whose call they would | all go out and fight, for the Empire! ! Human nature is funny in most of j its manifestations. h OMEX bonus j Nobody knows how many American i women took an actual part in the I world War, but there were more i hau 14.500 of them regularly en? isteil in the military and naval serv- j Ices of the United States, who are i entitled to a bonus on the same ba- ; sis as the men who served. They arc I mostly members of the. Army Nurse Corps, enlisted nurses who served in the Navy hospitals, and survivors of that interesting corps of young worn- i en who were given the rating of: "Yeoman" ia the Niivy, and went! through the war in uniforms, doing J clerical work in the Navy Department in Washington and at the various naval bases. Probably fully as many women did war service overseas in the volunteer organizations, such as the Red Cross, Y. W. C A.. Salvation Army! and the r3et, and several limes as \ many were engaged in war work on I this side; but only the ones who j were on Uncle Sam's payroll are due ; for the bonus. Folks who have the \ lea that all! vomcn are pacifists, aon't remember the enthusiasm of the women of America the last time we went to var. IVEAI..TH . . . needs watching When young John Jacob Astor IT quit his S25 a week job with the steamship line of which his halfirother, Vincent Aster, is vice-presilent, a lot of people spoke sneeringy of the "idle rich," jumping to i.*e :onclusion that the young man was lothing but a "playboy" after all. 3ut to me his explanation that the 18 hours of work every week took ip so much of his time that he wouldn't attend to his personal business affairs properly, sounds quite -easonable. nines iiKe rnese," He .said 'you have to watch things pretty dosely." He has had to learn young lhat it is easier to make money than :o keep it. Heir to one of the largest "ortunes in America, he has discov- j ;red that everybody is trying to take it away from him, and that he has to do his own watching, instead of leaving the guardianship of his property to hired men. I know a number of very wealthy men. Most of them work harder at the job of keeping their wealth from YOUR NEW | PERMANENT SHOULD BE NEW! ' Coiffure with curls as permagivei genuine Zotas Machineless ie, Vitrolox Oil of Tulipwood and west patented 1636 Eugene Croile waves and curls. Let us show 'ft Pfln Tiffwlll/'a +Vin rtnn ~ - wv V1W Ull/QW WC- |j | 1AUTY SHOP | Phone 91 H WATAUGA DEMOCRAT?EVER ! slipping away from them than the ; rest of us do in trying to make a j little more. 1101?$IXC? .... for poor l'v c been hearing a lot of talk ! about low-cost housing for the poor. | But I haven't seen anything tangi-! ; bie, so far. that convinces me that i new houses can be built with high 1 j priced labor, at a cost that will en-j j able the lowest-paid workers to pay ! the necessary rent. They've done it in England by buying cheap farm j land a long way from town, and pay:ng building trade workers about onethird the wages they get in America. I've seen some of the European low-cost housing developments. They i are ail based on land values far bej low ours, lower labor costs, and rej mission of all taxes on lands and j buildings for twenty years or more. . Even then, the very poor can't afford | to live in them. I It seems more reasonable to me to I encourage the modernizing of old i houses for the use of the lowest-in-! come groups, and the building of J j new homes for the ones who can af| ford to live i?i them. GLARE killed Every motorist knows that the chief danger in night driving is the dazzling glare from the headlights of cars one meets on the roads. A young Boston scientist, Edwin Land, has developed a new transparent material for headlights and windshields which is said to eliminate this dangerous glare entirely The principle of "polarizing" light has long been known, but up to now it has required expensive apparatus to reduce light beams to a single plane, and so, as it were, take out the dazzle. T hope young Mr. Land's invention will do all that is claimed for it. 1 like to drive at night, but I dread it more and more, as cars multiply speed increases and headlights get brighter. Special Broadcast On Poultry Breeding Or.i* nf llio mftot ~ - ? .11U..V ii.ija'l lailV aO^JCClA of poultry raising', that of breeding, will be discussed on the Carolina Farm Features radio program Friday. Tito speaker will be C J. Maupin, ! extension poultryman at State Col-j lege, and the subject of his talk is "The Value of Breeding in Poultry i Flocks." No pyultryman can expect the best possible returns from his fleck if he is careless in his methods of poultry breeding. On the other hand, the man who takes a great deal of interest in seeing that proper mai.ir gs are ; made is the one who will more than j likely secure a profit from his nock > The schedule for the week of Feb- j ruary 17-22 follows: Monday. L. I. Case, "Sheep Raising in North Carolina"; Tuesday, Dr. D. B. Anderson, "Some Common Misconceptions Relating to Plants"; Wednesday, Zoology Department; Thursday, ifiss Ju[seed I DRY G< I JUST ARRIVED?A COMP MELWA PUDDING PANS?Assortet DISH PANS?Large size . I DOUBLE BOILERS CONVEX KETTLES, with TABLEWARE?All kindsCURTAIN RODS WINDOW SHADES 36"x6 f OIL CLOTH?46" width ya BOYS' AVIATOR CAPS ... INFANTS SWEATER SET CAP, SWEATER & BOC BABY BLANKETS, any si; I WATER BUCKETS COMBINETS CHAMBERS INFANTS' RUBENS SHIR 1 LADIES' PRINT HOUSE I CHILDREN'S PRINT DRE! LADIES' BRASSIERES .... LADIES' COTTON HOSE ( SMI Y THURSDAY?BOONE, N. C. liu Mclver. '"Safety and Satisfaction of Children in Play"; Friday. C. J. Mo up in. "The Value of Breeding in Poultry Flocks"; and Saturday, Enos C. Blair. "Eespedeza Planting." The extension farm program has now been in existence about five months and may be heard from several Xorth Carolina stations. The broadcast is scheduled each day from the two largest stations in the state, Charlotte and Raleigh, at 7 a. m. and i:3i? p. m. respectively. Prices of Cash Crops Expected to Decrease North Carolina farmers anticipate a 20 to 30 per cent, increase in their tobacco and cotton crops this year. This is the opinion expressed by farmers and committeemen attending: the county program meetings over the state, and it is the conclusion of State College agricultural extension workers who have been studying the present situation. Prices have been high enough during the past year to make cotton and tobacco raising profitable it was pointed out, and as a result a large number of farmers wish to increase their plantings. However, agricultural leaders are warning the farmers that the larger crops expected this year will, in all probability, depress prices far below their present level. Most of the growers attending the county program planning meetings are of the opinion that some form of federal crop control program is necessary to hold production within reasonable bounds, reported E. W. Caither and Julian Mann, of the State College extension service, who have hern attending the meetings. The growers are strongly behind the long-time county planning prcIArmom FERTI ??c arc ugait\ Handling tins proved so satisfactory in Wl ers in this section know tha zer is hard to beat, and we a: zor problems with us. We w business. Wc handle all analysis for M. C. Holler Opposite Boone Stcain Launi A4TC VtYlO JOBS oq ! LETE LINE OF ENA- ? RE O 1 sizes 10c to 25c I o 32c FL ; 58c covers 35c -prices Right! 10c I opp t, nice quality 39c I rd, 21c I Star or C 25c 1 Washing DTS. special 97c I 9Zr se 19c to 77c Lmbhhh 45c O 68c ? .... 25c 3 o TS 25c o >RESSES....68c to $1.94 J* 3SES '..._ 48c to 78c - 10c ? ' 10c S" THEY BOONE, NOR! [ gram advocated by tie extension : I service, ami the soiMmprovement j program now before Congress, but | j they doubt that these programs by j themselves are adequate tb check the ; overproduction of cash crop?. Since there is considerable doubt i that a federal control program cen ! be set up this y/ear, the county pro-! | gram planning committees are urg! ing all farmers to produce all the j food and feed they will need at home j to grow soil-improvement crops, and | to raise more livestock. The more a farmer can live at i home, they point out, the less dopenj dent he is on the price of cash crops. Eskimos Shun Gravy, Doctor In North Saysj I Seattle, Wash.?Gravy seldom spot.3 an Eskimo's vest?or parka?because J the Eskimo seldom eats uny. Dr. Henry W. Griest. famous Point Barrow medical missionary, admitted recently he had failed in a 16 year campaign to add gravy to the i diet of Alaska natives. The Eskimo prefers seal meat, "ri; pened" by burial beneath a foot of warm sand in the summer. Dr. Griest j wrote in his mimeographed newspaper. 'The Northern Cross." brought , hero by dog sled, airplane and steani ship. Dr. Griest wrote he tried to get the Eskimo to makp "gravies from well-boiled fresh meat, deer and wild fowl, and to feed the children with bread and gravies in the absence of other food. "But the answer is: "They do not like their meat cooked long. They prefer it very rare, so gravy cannot well be made. Captain (Ronald) Amundsen, the late polar explorer, | contended the Eskimo manner of boil-1 ing meat was the wiser plan. He r's I LIZER high grade fertilizer which ltnuga last year. Most farmt Armour's Big Crop Fertili sk you to discuss your fertiliould greatly appreciate your any crop you have in mind. - L. H. Holler j Iry Boone, North Carolina hi?iiinmiiiimi iiwiinBdwa? SMITHEYS OFFERS FO 3 RIT datc nn \t on J III/. llrtU/3 M 3 BU. BAGS FEED OAT fg GRO< E. > 15 SALMON pt^ I a MATCHES I'Z ? I BROOMS S QAL | COTTON Ml irandma's 1 JJRAN SHOl I Powder g : PECK PKINGJN W O I WATER RIirKl X fj * ? x M. M. JLiJLl/ MJTKJ \JR\i E -n S jg REMEMBER! E or The West Flo m C don't like good b COOTERS fc l 'S STC H CAROLINA FEBRUARY 20, 1936 I boiled most not five minutes.. first cutting the Scan portions into cubes the size of dominoes." To which Dr. Griest commented: "True . . hut Captain Amundsen H hed no babie3 to feed in his entour^The doctor's article thanked donors in the United States for 20 cases of canned milk and a ton of oatmeal which relieved last season's famine. Jackson county farmers are buying iespcdeza seed in large quantites for seeding this spring. Korean leads in demand. IpastimeI i THEATRE IDUUWt, IN. t. I "PIJVCE OF GOOD SHOWS" Program for Week Feb. 24-29 Monday, Feb. 21 "The Three Musketeers" with Margot Graham and Walter I Abel Tuesday, Feb. 25 "Ladies Crave Excitement" S with ft Norman Foster and Evelyn Knapp Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 26-27 "Little America" with Admiral Byrd In order to give all school children a chance to see this picture we will run a 10:00 O'clock Matinee each day. Friday, Feb. 28 ? "Woman Trap" with Gertrude Mtobaol and Geo. Murphy Satui day, Feb. 29 "Heir To Trouble" with Ken Maynard I Special Bargain I? Matinee, 10c, 15c Night Shown, 10c and ZOo. MATINEES AT 2:30 & 4:00 NIGHT SHOWS, 7:15 & 8:45 R YOUR SAVINGS I I nn a i mn a jb mm f* HUUA IS, $l./d I S, $1.60 I SERIES I CANS I lip I llaska 1VV 2f 10c I VND 10(> I SWEEP IvV EAL beve' $1.35 I ITS ,5ur except those that read! BS. t Mud-Turtles Wv )RE HnHUDHnBSHRR