Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 24, 1936, edition 1 / Page 3
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Sunday School Lesson (By Rev. Charles E. Dunn Christianity Spread by Persecu-' tion. Lesson for July 26th. Acts 26: 9-11. Golden Text: Revelation 2:10. The book of the Acts of the Apostles is our only full record of the earliest Christian age, and is therefore of very great value. Here we find real characters of impres sive personality, and genuine inci dents described with compelling power. Of the apostles with whose ca reers the book deals the most im portant by far is Paul to whom one-half of the space is devoted. Next in rank is Peter whose heroic story covers one-third of the nar rative. The remaining sixth of the book is devoted to the other leaders of the apostolic band. It must be remembered, however, that Luke’s real aim is not to out line the deeds of the apostles, but rather to show how Christianity expanded through the impact of the divine Spirit. In this wonder ful development of the Christian movement two powerful factors should be noted. In the first place through the genius of Paul, the Christian messaage became not a Jewish cult, but a universal gospel. Secondly, the early disciples felt behind them the propelling drive of a divine power. Our lesson makes clear the part played by persecution in advancing the Christian Cause. Paul, before his conversion, was an ardent ene my of Christianity. But when, on the road to Damascus, he had that vision of a risen Christ which cut his life in two, he made a complete turn, and henceforth served his Lord with the same devotion with which he had previously hated him. And what persecutions he snuffer ed in the name .of the Master. All through his stormy career he had to combat those who attacked his teaching and motives, and strove to ruin his work. His letters reflect this struggle, and also reveal what incredible hardships he endured in, I order to proclaim the Good News: (See 2 Cor. 11.) And what he went through his successors also underwent, all of which proves that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church. Gives Rate Of Payment For Perennial Grasses I Rates of class II, or soil-building payments offered North Carolina farmers for seeding perennial gras ses under the new farm program have been announced by Dean I. O. Schaub, of State College. The rates in North Carolina and other States of the east central re gion range from 75 cents to 2 an acre, depending upon the kind of grass seeded. The payments will cover the following perennial grasses, seed ed any time between January 1 and October 31, 1936 with or without a nurse crop, the dean stated. Blue grass, $2 an acre. Orchard grass, $1.50 an acre. Permanent pasture mixtures of grasses and legumes containing at least 40 percent blue grass, $1.50 an acre. Permanent pasture mixtures of grasses or grasses and legumes con taining at least 40 per cent orchard grass, $1.25 an acre. Redtop, or permanent pasture mixtures of grasses or grasses and legumes containing at least 40 per cent redtcp, 75 cents an acre. These payments are offered to stimulate the growing of grass and pasture mixtures that will protect the soil from erosion and provide succulent grazing for cattle and livestock, the dean pointed out. The payments are not intended to give the farmers a big profit for planting the grasses, he continued, but are intended to help them car ry out good farming practices that will improve their land. GOOD SIRES PAY SHEEP GROWERS Tests conducted at the North Carolina Experiment Station 'have proved conclusively that lambs sired by a good purebred ram will bring around two dollars more per head than lambs sired by a scrub ram. The sire is half the flock, says John E. Foster, associate in animal husbandry investigations at the Experiment Station. Since the breeding season has al ready started in eastern Carolina and is rapidly approaching in the western counties, Foster explains that much time and thought should be given the kind of rams which will be used in farm flocks. The ideal ram for North Caro line, he points out, is a purebred mutton type with a broad deep body and such development of the head, neck, legs, and body parts that the whole conformation sug o-petc cvtnmpfrv ffn'rVnpQQ mm pactness, and quality. In addition, the ram should be of good size, masculine, rugged, thrifty, and have a desirable fleece, especially if any of his ewe lambs are to be kept in the flock. It is highly important, Foster explains, that the ram as well as the ewe be in a strong vigorous condition during the breeding sea^ son. If they are not, immediate steps should be taken to get them! so, either by providing better pas-! ture or feeding some grain. Whenj the flock is in a strong vigorous: condition the lambs will be earlier,! more uniform in age, stronger at birth, and more twins will result. • Patronize Watchman Ad /er tisers. WlHERE to go and WHAT to do when your radiator boils or leaks. We flush, dean, . repair, and re j bore all makes of radiators. We sell or trade new and second hand radiators. W e are most reliable —see ue before you buy. EAST SPENCER MOTOR CO. Phone 1198 -J N. Long St. EAST SPENCER _ Iron MAIM AMO SCALP JAPANESE OIL Tka RiHnpHe Scrip Mari] clM— HnNmT orvnwry nwr ivmh * Me Ml. FEEL IT WORK! Al All Drvggltta Writ* tar FREE BMktat 'Tta Tratk Atari Tta Heir." Natlrwl Rwriy C*.. Hm T«k Banish Body and Perspiration Odsrs With YODORA, the deodorant cream which conceals, absorbs and counteracts odor*. Yodora is a scientifically compounded white, soft cream—pleasant to use acts promptly with lasting effect harmless to the most delicate skin will not stain fabrics. For those who perspire freely whether under the arm, feet or other parts of the body Yodora is most valuable. It is a true neutralizer of body odor*. Yodora, a McKesson product, may be had in both tube ana jar form and costs only 25f. AT YOUR FAVORITE DRUG STORE * There’s a tune-tested, harmless, preparation, compounded by a specialist in nervous disorders, for the relief of Sleeplessness, Irritability, Nervous Indigestion, Nervous Headache, Restlessness, the Blues and Hysterical Con ditions. During the more than fifty years since this preparation was first used, numberless other nerve Sedatives have come—and gone. But the old reliable has always been in constantly increasing demand. Only one medicine fits this dis cription. DR. MILES NERVINE Ef you are nervous, don’t wail to get better. You may get worse. Take Dr. Miles Nervine. You can get Dr. Miles Nervine —Liquid and Effervescent Tab lets—at your drug store. HELPED 98 PERCENT Interviews with 800 people who had used or were using Dr. Miles Nervine showed that 784 had been definitely benefited. Isn’t anything that offers a 49 to 1 chance of helping you worth trying? Get a package of Dr. Miles Nervine today. If it fails to help you—take the empty bottle or carton back to your druggist, and he will refund your money. [CAMERA ANGIES IN THE LATE NEWS I SAYS HE’LL STOP MAX— Heavyweight champion James J. Braddock, after watching Max Sohmeling flatten Joe Louis, predicts he’ll do the same to the German when they meet for the title this September. 4 m j"i.ii.i. TOSKw.v. ^ .. 11 ^ | SWEETHEARTS ON THE AIR—; Florence Baker and Chester Stratton, youthful stars of the Court of Human Relations program, heard on the NBC'1 network every Friday night. Both are; radio veterans and play opposite each other in love scenes. GOOD-BY TO CIVILIZATION i —Sheldon Taylor and Geoffrey \ : Pope, youthful advocates of ■ & Bemarr Macfadden’s health | I" principles, as they start the! second leg of their 6,000 mile j canoe trip to Nome, Alaska. | Proper dieting and plenty of; fresh air have toughened them S for the 18-month grind ahead, ‘ they declare. § {MaaraaBMaaaawni'r- r CONGRATCLA I TIONS — May S Robson got a | real surprise on | her seventy-sixth | birthday. She | was given a | new, long-term , | movie contract.^!; I I /lli HIS FATHER SAYS HE’S AVER AGE—“All. M. Landon has no hero ic qualities, is not a great man.” That’s what his father, John M. Landon, says in the current Liberty magazine. The parent of the G.O P. candidate says Alf is just a hard working, fair-minded citizen with no illusions of grandeur. Good Program Ready For Farm-Home Week r Arrangements have been com pleted for making Farm and Home Week this year the best ever held in North Carolina, according to John W. Goodman, secretary of the week. The program, filled with a wide variety of entertaining and in structive features, will open at State College on Monday after noon, July 27, and continue through Friday, July 31. Farm and Ffome Week will fol low the 4-H short course, July 22 27, at whicf hundreds of North Carolina’s outstanding 4-H club members will enjoy a week of fun and fellowship while studying worth while things about working, playing, and living on the farm. Special efforts have been expend ed to make Farm and Home Week appeal to farm men as well as farm women, Goodman said, and State College extension service workers are urging all North Carolina to attend the week if they can. Not only will they have a good opportunity to study with experts the better methods of farming now advocated, but they will also have a week’s vacation from their farms that will be "good for the soul,” Goodman stated. He also pointed out that they! will gather valuable pointers about the new farm program from ad dresses to be delivered by notable speakers from Washington and| members of the State College ex tension services. The women’s program has been well filled with recreation, demon-, strations, and class work, he con-| tinued. They will study foods, nutrition, clothing, home improve ment, home and farm management, and many other things of impor tance to rural women. The rural electrification classes and exhibits are designed to help both men and women with pro blems in regard to the installation and use of electricity on the farm stead and in rural home. Use Meadow Strips For Terrace Outlets Meadow strips have proven to be the most effective and inexpensive terrace outlet channels in the Ala mance erosion control project, ac cording to W. P. Elam, agricultural engineer. On a number of farms in the area these grass waterways are re tarding the velocity of water and preventing erosion damage. The meadow strip, according to Elam, need not be designed by any definite formula, but must be plan ned properly to take care of the maximum amount of water likely to flow through the channel. Make them plenty wide, he said. Special ists of the State College Extension Service say that meadow strips have the additional value of producing i hay crop. Meadow strips constructed dur ng this season of the year are seed id temporarily to summer grasses, ivhich have a quick growing sea ion and form an excellent cover intil a more permanent sod can be1 stablished. If terraces are constructed before 1 permanent sod is established in he meadow strip outlet the water rom the terraces should be deliv red from the strip by means of a , liversion ditch. ( Evidence that meadow strips are i dapted to 'Helena and related soils, ’ vhich are predominant in Alamen- < :e county, is the fact that a great 1 lumber of natural meadows are to * >e found in the section. I — _ \ DR. N. C. LITTLE \ Optometrist ] Eyes examined and glasses fitted 1 Telephone 1J71-W. 1 107^ S. Main Street _ Next to Ketchie Barber Shop Checks , Malaria < in 3~day8 COLDS; first day j Headache, ( Lionid - Tablets 30 Salve - Nose minutes 1 Drops Try “Rub-My-Tism”-World’s : Best Linement i STAR LAUNDRY ' "The Good One" Laundcrers and Dry Cleaners Phone 24 114 West Bank St. ONE DAY SERVICE APDfRM WpM Charl'Ormond William/ President of National ^ Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, Inc. Dr. Baleria H. Parker, newly ap pointed director of the Institute on Marriage and the Home, has proposed parental subsides as an aid to youthful marriages. She made this suggestion at the annual meet ing of the National Conference of Social Work in Atlantic City. Dr. Parker, herself a grandmother, be lieves in early marriages. "Post ponement of marriage until a young man can assume full finan cial responsibility too often results in making marriage impossible,” she said. * * * Mme. Irene Joliot-Curie, Under secretary for Scientific Aid in the new French government, is the first woman ever to be appointed to a French Cabinet. She is the daughter of the famous M. and Mme. Pierre Curie, co-discovererrs of radium, and she grew up in a scientific, atmosphere. Her hus band, Frederic Joliot, is a research . . .. 'T*__1 _ ... I 1-_•/. W yjk livl • A vgvViivl XIV axxu XXXO YV XAV discovered the neutron for which they received the Noble Prize last year. Although French women may not vote, they are not prohi bited from holding office. Dur ing the World War Mme. Joliot Curie studied nursing and radiology and also did ambulance work. «■ # » After serving for 25 years as president of Wellesley College, Dr. Ellen Fitz Pendleton has retired leaving a magnificent record. Dur ing that time she increased the col lege endowment by more than $7, 000,000, almost doubled faculty salaries, increased the teaching staff and added several beautiful college buildings in Gothic architecture. * «■ * The only woman blacksmith in New York is Mrs. Martha Drew Smith, who is young, good looking, married to a blacksmith, and the daughter of a blacksmith. She and her husband have a smithy in Greenwick village where they do a surprisingly big business, surpris ing when you consider how few horses there are in New York. GAY DECEIVER The Bride’s Mother: "What’s wrong with you, darling? What are you crying about now?” The Bride: "My husband is such a deceiver! Every time I ask him how he likes my biscuits he chang es the subject and tells me what beautiful eyes I have.” FAVORITE AUTHOR Horace: "Whose your favorite author?” Murray: "My dad.” Horace: "What did he ever write?” Murray: "Checks.” FAST WORKER Teacher—What excuse have you for being late? Johnny (breathlessly)—I ran so fast, teacher, that I didn’t have time to think up one. WORTH A BATTLE Magistrate—For two years you two men fished together peace ably, and yet you had to fight over this fish. Prisoner—You see, sir, it was the first one we ever caught! E. Carr Choate DENTIST Office Over Purcell Drue Store No. 2 Phone_141 Office in Mocksville is Closed } f Ceep a Good Laxative always in your home Among the necessities of home It , good, reliable laxative. Don’t be rithout one! Do your best to pre sent constipation. Don’t neglect It rhen you feel any of its disagree able symptoms coming on. . . “We lave used Thedford’s Black-Draught or 21 years and have found It a ery useful medicine that every amlly ought to have In their home," inrites Mrs. Perry Hicks, of Belton, Cexas. “I take Black-Draught for illlousness, constipation and other Us where a good laxative or purga ive is needed. I have always found Hack-Draught gives good results." Sold In 25-cent packages. Bl^ACK-DRAUGHT Everyday Cooking Miracles BY VIRGINIA FRANCIS Director Hot point Electric Cookery Institute "Oh, Bill, isn t it a beauty! Why I can’t help but be a good cook now!’’ And this bride, being carried over the traditional threshold to view her new home, is right. The new auto matic electric range, installed in her kitchen, is so sure to give cooking success that many modem home makers have called it the miracle range” because they say miracles really happen on it. Take breakfast time, for example, when that new Hubby will be in a rush to get to his office. All the bride will have to do when the alarm clock rings in the morning, is to dress leisurely and then go to the kitchen where, in fifteen minutes, she can have breakfast ready. But that can’t be much of a breakfast, you say? Oh, indeed it can—and is! Hot rolls, baked eggs, oatmeal, and sausages—what more couid you ask? Fifteen Minute Breakfast Ska will be able to do it with the able assistance of the automatic tim er clock on her new electric range. She can place the breakfast (the rolls, eggs, and sausages being pre viously chilled) in the cold electric oven before retiring, and find it de liciously cooked and ready to serve in the morning! The timer clock is set to start the baking at a certain time, ar.d until that time rolls around the food is kept in fine con dition in the well insu’ated electric oven. With a “chef’s brain” in the Family, Mrs. Bride will also be able to go out in the afternoon and come home at dinner time to welcome her Ifsrsband at a “well set” dinner table. And this is not all that the mod ;electric range will do for her. Its Thrift Cooker, which is installed ■ the cooking top of the range, will help her make soup without it be ing necessary for her to camp over the old soup kettle all day long in the process. She can even steam whole meals, consisting of meat, vegetables and dessert, without any exchange of flavors; cook inexpen sive meats to a tender doneness in its slow, moist heat; and prepare dried vegetables and fruits without any preliminary soaking. If it is so easy for experienced cooks to forget to preheat the oven, think how much greater the likeli hood in the case of a young bride! But today’s bride will not have to worry about heating her oven be forehand, for with her electric range one-step baking is possible. She just places her cakes and roasts in the cold electric oven aft er which she turns on the switch and sets the “control.” Not only does this simplify her task but her results will be more than gratifying, thanks to the draftless, heat and moisture-controlled construction of the oven. Heat Is Controlled Even the surface units of the new electric range possess “miraculous” tendencies. They send forth meas I ured, controlled heat by the mere twist of a switch. The lowest speed or heat, in particular, is a boon to brides because the heat is so low and so well controlled that anti scorch cooking utensils — namely double boilers—may be checked off the list of necessary kitchen equip ment. _ The broiler pan, too, is “extra special.” Because of its cover, with a hole in the center, the fat drip pings are caught and kept under cover, and burning and smoking are I eliminated. This young bride being carried over the traditional threshold is assured of success when she cooks on her new automatic electric range. Become One of Our Satisfied Custom* ers Today We Deliver wr Protect your health during the hot sum-1 mer months by eating cool, refreshing | foods that satisfy- You will always find fresh fruits and vegetables in season at our market. We also carry a complete line of meats’ fish and poultry. j CALL 883 E. L. RUFTY <04 North Main Street_Phone 883 INNER COIL We guarantee our Inner Coil Installation. NEW OR REBUILT ONE DAY SERVICE Taylor Mattress Co. PHONE 6 Awnings Venetian Blinds
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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July 24, 1936, edition 1
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