Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Sept. 25, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO Cove Creek Hi School 'h( And Community News ;< Five members ot the Cove Creek h senior class, accompanied by Prof. s. S. F. Horton. attended senior's day J at the University of North Carolina hirst Saturday. Points of interest t visited during the one-day excur- : t sion ware the university campus. a Guilford courthouse and battle- t. ground. and the university gridiron 5 where they saw a football encoun- a tor between Lenoir-Rhyne and the v university. Those who made "he trip with Mr. Horton were Ethel 1 Aldridge. Bernice Badgett. Rebecca a Moore. Dorothy Mast and David i Bingham. The Cove Creek boys' and girl's t softball teams were defeated by the s Bethel high school squads in a 3 double-header tilt at the latter school. f last Friday afternoon. r James Horton. son of Mr. and Mrs. s J. B. Horton, visited hete during the t week-end. Mr. Horton, for some years emolovcd in the skwkiI ar. t counting office of the federal gov- t ernmcnt. was on his way to Texas 1 where he has been promoted to the position of instructor in the field of- i lice of the AAA accounting and au- t diting department. c Rev. Mr. Pipes, field worker of o the Southern Baptist convention, e "" h \ DON'T LET 1 |* 1 t/0l0- I | SEED! \ j1 yh \ i? GET 38-PAGE BOOK FUSE! j' Current cuts in automobile produc- S cion mean that your car will have to last longer than you'd planned. So keep it in good running condition. o Get this free hook from your Esso c Dealer. And take advantage of the n free checkover service he's offering. t; You can add to the life of your car... s< get more miles from every gallon of E gasoline. See your Esso Dealer today! C STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW JERSEY p ; DEALER ^ SSmml if; " , 7 THE SMOKE OF ^? SLOWER. BURNING (is& CAMELS CONTAINS OOflf JL000^ aOt? p| yoc LESS Kte NICOTINE R? eld a series of stewardship meetings t the Cove Creek Baptist church ist week. Ernest Hillard and a number of is agricultural students attended a ale ot Jersey and Guernsey cattle at lorganton last week. It was announced here this week hat Mrs. Ernest Hillard would each courses in nursing and first id every Thursday afternoon in he home economics department rlothers of the community as well s home economics students are in ited to enroil. Mrs. Herbert Nobles has resigned ier position as P.-T. A. president nd lias accepted employment ir tsheville for the winter. There will be a special mee g ot he Cove Creek Parent-Teacher Asociation this Friday afternoon at :00 for the purpose of electing oficers for the ensuing year. A noinilating commitee will submit theii uggestions to the association at his time. Mrs. Dora S Penn and Mrs. Birdie Jilliam Greer have accepted posiions as library assistants iti the ligh school for the ensuing year. rust mcnm examinations are ueng given in the high and elemenary schools this week and report ards will be given to the students n Thursday of next week. L. ?1. Moody continues unimprovd from intermittent heart attacks, is friends will be sorry to learn. Jack Vaughan. graduate of the igh school, visited here last week :aughan is now employed in the hipyards at Columbia, S. C., as a efense worker in the sheet metal elding department. Dana Farthing is constructing a ivo and one-half story building 011 is property opposite the grade uilding which is to contain three bartmenls, a restaurant and sales aom Solicitation of the tourist ade will be the chief business ol :ie new enterprise. According to statistics released nis week by Prof. S. F. Horton, a datively large number of last ear's graduates arc now in attend radualcs and I heir respective atnce at college. Graduates and their nspeetive schools are: Murl Buingaror. Wake Forest; Thos. Hollo way v'akc Forest; Thomas Holloway. ames Osborne, Koss Winebarger, leneva Cannon and Ruth Hodges, ippalachian; Louise Lewis a n d laxine Bradley, Lccs-McKuc: Betty lollins, business college, Richmond, r- 1 A .1 J:.. T? 1. t U-, ?I11U auuiu XDIII^IKIIU, C, t.'liUll " thyne. Tabulations of other gradutes are as follows: Howell EdmisL-n, Clint Cannon and Carroll Baird, I. S. army; Julia Jo Sutherland, Reiccca Moore, Ella Mae Romingei nd Dennis Brown, at Cove Creek ligh for additional commercial raining; Waiter Thompson and Daroll Baird, CCC; and Ralph Stokes, ss is tan I manager of Vilas commuiity cannery. Vlountaineers Victors In First Grid Game The Appalachian Mountaineer: tailed clicking during the last hal: if Uic football game with the New ierry Indians on their home fielc ast Friday night to eke out a 14-1 i ictory. During the first hail of tin .ante the local team could not gel heir plays to work; but during the ast half?ttfid trailing on the shun nil of a 1J - 0 seore?the Mourn ameers had everything their way. The outstanding feature of tin ante was the excellent passing at ack which Watkins' backfield pulld out of the bag. The conibinatioti t Hornfeck to Sigmon was really licking. Hornfeck passed to Sigton to score one of the Appalachian allies, and the sanae combination it up the second touchdown, with (ill Furr crossing the goal line laptain George Watts kicked both f the extra points, and it was these ?o points that finally decided the ante. Outstanding in the line were i'Toole, Watts, Coefield and Newieye Carson Coefield played an nusually good game at the tackle osition and gave the Indian backield trouble all the afternoon. Newerry scored both of her touchdowns a the first half, and Appalachiaf :ored both of theirs in the last to ave the final score 14-12. /fWILBNESS^ ECOTVNE } ( IS ONiy ONE REASON I V | smoke camels, TH WATAUGA DEMOCRAT?EVERY Bethel School News |j Bethel school now has an enroll- j merit oi approximately 349 pupils in | the grades and high school, with the ' prospects of new pupils entering i after the first month. Twelve teach- j ers make up the teaching faculty, j i which is headed by Da!- C. Norris j , as principal. ' ' New courses have been added to ; the high school curriculum this : I year and the school is endeavoring < i to make an attractive and \aried > 1 curriculum in order that the pupils _ may have a wider choice and more j 1 experience. New courses now bc' ing offered are: Physics, health and ' safety. Plans are rapidly being completed toward offering a course in j ' typing. The order for typewriters has already been placed for new t\ pewriters. It is hoped the class will get started before the first < ' month is up. Special provisions are ' being made to teach music to those ' pupils desiring to study it. ( The school lunchroom opened < September 16. About 200 are eating daily. They have painted the inter j lor ot 'no caietena. i lie helpers are j ' Mrs. Carl Matheson, Mrs. Albert | < Tr.vette, Mrs. Paul Norris and Miss 1 Vera Hagaman. j I Sports ; < On Wednesday, September 17, the *1 Bethel Softball team motored to J Boone where they engaged Boone j high school in a softball game. The , < game was hard fought throughout, ; 1 but Boone defeated Bethel 5 to 4. j The following Friday both the j j boys and girls played the Cove : S : Creek teams and were victorious in ; 1 both games. j Saturday, September 20, the seni- I J ' or class visited Chapel Hill where ' S they represented Bethel high school j 1 in Chapel Hill's "Senior Day." j j PRODUCTION ? Crops production in England this 1 J year is at a record peak, arable crop- ! X land having been increased by one- . j third in the past two years. ^ Paul A. Coffey 1 Agent * 1 Jefferson Standard J Life Insurance Co. Office in Parkway Co. Bldg. j c BOONE. N. C. I E I I L ANMCifHC/MG fflfl ^ 7HL" MEW AMB .NVu- stream lined Se./an ( oupe , wss 111 Proud To Be B Pontiac is doing its part for National Defense by building a new type of rapid-fire cannon for the United States Navy. Two plants, covering 426,123 square feet of floor space, have been devoted to the BAI MAIN AND BLOW1NI THURSDAY?BOONE, N. C. [ Basemen! * Bo\ s' High Top Boots, better buy them [ now, priced (g-fl JQ <g-j Q/l i upward from tJIAoTtCJj * * (Basement) [ Men's High Top Boots, buy now and save money, as <g? Qfi" <g?| QE * low as (J/Ailtt/tf> tiJOevt# | (Basement) , Boys' Heavy Winter Union Suits, /I I at tho tmrtr Imi; nt-ir>o nf ; (Basement) Children's Good Heavy School AH? I Shoes and Oxfords, pair ?/ ? (Basement* 1 Men's Good Heavy Work O 4 A O t Shoes, as low as aO (Basement) 1 L L Sheeting. 40 inches wide, Ap ' won't be so cheap again soon JL Vr^ (Basement) Men's Dress Sox. at a new low price fZjn .vhich can't last long ' (Basement) i Children's Long Stockings for lite Ap , cold winter days JL VV ) (Basement I Boys' Good Overalls at the tin- A Qp usually low price of CS\^ I (Basement) Cotton Batts, rolls, despite the | advancing price of cotton j (Basement) | We Now Have a Complete Line of I t Family?Buy N Belk-White ^ BELKSS 200 DEPARTMENT STORES SELL 1 sS"; ''' ' ^ ^ ^ '' ' ^ TMI ? Tbriffac Sixes m P?"tif?s lowest-priced live. .u^ir. even fyrfher improved?r# New Unist?j?Kt3odie.' ^ equal inqiJality?even * *: : .<:'^f55?V.Mwwc? | beautj^hose of any previo . -ir^. 4 1*istons and all vital e ^ ^ * ONLY *2~> M . ' ^ V icing Our Part manufacture of these can- >i SURPRISINGLY non. Thousand* of mfi<- S l*T in stvle and lim. men have been trained for |? Pontiac Sixes 01 the highly technical ma- ? 19-12today come sweepi chines. This means build- spotlight refreshing ing fewer cars?hut Poo- ^ aprearance, but still the tiac places defense work % faithful Pomiacs in timc-u ahead of everything else. Is Two series of new P _ ? elude ten widely varied among them a streamli tNETT MOTOR C< G> ROCK ROAD SEPTEMBER 25, 1941 j| lk"A merit Store t Specials I Men's Good Heavy Sox, while fa Aa jjh :be supply lasts, pair lUv i I (Basement) Men's Good Felt Hats for Fall. fa fio now being offered as low as TtO^ Q (Basement) 1 Ladies" Dress Felt Hats, in all the 4Qa t different styles TlO^ ^ \uaoviiicm/ Ladies' Silk Dresses for the ? ! ft /f L fall days, as low as . ?J7 A 5/ * , (Basement) ; Children's Print Dresses, good A Q/{ t school day values, only A\5V<- *? (Basement) Ladies' Print Dresses, priced most JOa economically, as low as TtCJ?S (Basement) * Ladies" Cotton Hose, at the low- -fl A a t est prices, up from ivv 5 (Basement) ? Prints, in wide variety of patterns and I ( %?.%? 10c to 19c f (Basement) | Good Sweaters for boys and girls. ^Qa K \ Buy now at the low price of . . 1 (Basement) f Be sure to see our Enamel Court- -j| ft vs ter. Enamelware, as low as Aulf \ (Basement) | "all Merchandise for the Etitire J low and Save ; Company j IT FOR LESS BOONE, N. C. j 1,9 I hAASS FINE CAR WITH THE LOW PRICE?OENCRAt. MOTORS* MASTERPIECE ??qhfs ned^kJe-? 4re utrcha*4ged for 1942. i>^ttll yours # Travel of the gearshift lever has b^Cn reduced 30%. ; by Fisher e Ga"s and oil economy has nor been exceed in sacrificed, us Pontiacs. # Front wheel brakes have been inngine parts creased in size. IORE FOR AN RIGHT IN ANY MODEL! ? ADVANCED Coupe in the lower-priced series, ry, the new New features are many. And in p Eights for every instance, they represent actual ng into the improvement resulting from progly new in ress in design. Wc invite you to come same, fine, io now to give these new Pontiacs ied quality. your most thorough and critical inontiacs in- spection. You will find Pontiac models? today, more than ever, the Fine Car ued Sedan with the Low Price! 3MPANY BOONE, N. C.
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
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Sept. 25, 1941, edition 1
2
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