Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / May 29, 1933, edition 1 / Page 3
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Win Be Hdd to ^ And 24; OUier News Of Near DeBaplane J “roaring river. Route 2, May 23.—^From all Indications many former mem'bers of the congregation, both from other states and orer this and adjoin- Inli counties, are preparing to at tend the home coming, which is expected to celebrate the sesqui- centennial at Brier Creek church, four miles from here, June 24- 25. Details of the program are to be worked ou* at the next regu lar service at Brier Creek, which comes at the end of this week. Mrs. N. T. Jarvis was very ill FURNITURE MEN SEE ^ upturn in business I Manufacturing In Sonoth Joins Parade of Other Lines to Higher Ground . High Point, May 26.—-Furni ture making in the south, upon which the industrial sections have depended in a big way in the past, has joined the parade of other businesses to higher ground. Here are some of the signs which were seen in High Point, furniture making capital of Dixie, today. T. J. Ryan, secretary of .the ■Southern Furniture Manufactur ers’ a-ssociation said that there is a decidedly better feeling governor . . . Ffederal Reseiwe In pickipg Eugene Black of At lanta for Governor of the' Fed eral Reserve Board President Roosevelt has followed the ex ample of his last Democratic predecessor in selecting a man from the South' to head up the nation’s financial system. I am one of those who believe that the, late W. P. G. Harding of Ala bama was the best man who ever held the post to which Mr. Black has been appointed. Mr. Black was picked, I am told, mainly because he Is entire ly free from 'Wall Street influ ences. He has a bigger and more Important task than any of bis predecessors had, since ft is on last week, according to her hus- j among the furniture makers I ^ ®“" ^ . , 1banking system of the na- who are recej^ving more orders | and who on the average^ have ex- ^ perienced about a 20 per c®"' band, Rev. N. T. Jarvis, who was listing land for taxes. As usual, the four days of tax- listing and land assessing last week in Antioch township was an Interesting and enjoyable occas ion of getting together and hear ing many interesting facts about the neighbors’ peach trees and laying hens, though apple trees anu crowing roosters are some what slighted in the report. Messrs. Berry Mathis and Simon Currv were the capable assessors head of that system will exercise financial control even greater than that of the .Governor of the Bank of England. Unlike many bankers. Mr. pick-up in business. Furniture prices have advanced about 10 per cent and lumber ;also has had a decided advauce amounting, in certain types of lumber to as much as 50 per' Black has a sense of humor. But cent. Dealers staring the increase | his reputation for sound, home- in prices directly In the face are j ly common-sense is of the high- buying In larger quantities than est. they have for some tim'’. ] ROCKEKKI-IiERS . . . they move Paul W. Casey, manager of | Times change and landmarks and reassessed property very | j^e Southern Furniture show, , pass. The Rockefellers, father carefully,'while Rev. X. T. Jar-j is held here semi-annually, | and son, are moving from the ■vis listed it for taxes, as he has, has just made a round of the' historic address “26 Broadway” done for many years. The older I furniture trade in Georgia and | to the new Rockefeller Center, and shabbier houses were assess-j Tennessee and says that he finds five miles up town. Foe more ed at $150. There are said to be | a feeling of optimism evidenced j than fifty years "26" has been only about two brick houses in | in a fair amount of buying al- the headquiirtars of the Stand- tbe township—the old Foote i most over the whole territory, krd Oil iatere.sts. Noliody knows house belonging to Mr. Miller,.’ "Wo ar.e receiving our can-'tow many lailliens have been and the «ew brick bungalow be-; tract.s for the July market aad | made there, but probably enaugh^ lawgin.g to iVfr. ‘'Fraaoe” Sale | everyth4.n« iaiHoates that more ■ f» pay off our national doht, and fu-mi'l*’- [.buyiiig will be clee« here IImib on f jiie mea who made it had leapt it. Tfce hrak-Mi limb Mrs. F»ank the last mid-summer mai-ket,” i Rm-kefeHenu don’t leoep etaley sustained several J-' mLmk Say' Gandhi Will Fasting Oxiial ( liafaatiiitaiGukUit'wu lacNUbtgly iSth day , of his F»ank ' i weelfsi-said Wr. €asey. I tholT mo-upy. They spend It larrite- for the Apple Crop Win Be 'Ught This Season; Other Pores ^ Knob News PORES KNOB. Route 1, May 23.-kTbe carpenters and work men of this community and ad joining ones have completed the covering of,.. Bethany Baptist tihurch. The people showed &uch interest in the work and helped to get it completed.' Only a small'cro^d attended the Sunday evening singing at Bethany last Sunday. We hope to see a large one next, time. iMr. and Mrs. Dick McCIair and family, of Alexander county, and Mr. and Mrs. Charlie McClain, of Kannapolis, visited Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Moore, a short time ago. Miss Minda Parller was. the dinner guest of Miss Nlta Par- lier last Sunday. Mr. ^ 'Vaughn Kerley and Jim Robinson spent awhile last Sun day afternoon with Hubert Hawn. We are very glad to hear that Mr. Lons Barnette, who has been quite ill for sometime is now i’mproving. Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Hendren and family spent a few hours with Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Moore, last Sunday evening. Mr. Henry Moore spent last Sunday afternoon with his son, Odell Moore. .Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Costner’s little son, Charlie, is real fll. We hope he will soon recoveu". Mrs. Hugh Reavis and little daushteu", have returned to their home at GilreaMi after spemMng* last week wift Mrs. Reavis’ par ents, Mr. attd Mrs. ■. V. Hea- dren. Misse.s Lunda ana Mattie Mae *llendren, ef Nerth Wilkesboro, spent last Saturday night with. fMt—bat « Board eig4>t 4pei«Mi AOiiMiicxg.io Rtih that,'1ie shitmlit ordeal vrithont diffienlty^.^f^. ' Xi. Gradhi, who began 1^^ nil proteat against “n Mid to Iimb no* - plicatioBS' in his pbya^ co [^oHeve me, I know a low price when I see one— rm buying my tires NOW!” of historic is in ago has only receatly begun te "ncali'rs are sto»kl-ng upjdy vast enterprises heal accordine: to her father. against a price advance that is pul)Hc welfare, edscation. health Messrs. A. (5. Segraves and B-kure to come,” the market mana-|and the re.utovatien L. Johnson have been working |ger added as a summary of theantiquities, at the Brown Mamifact'.rriug Co. .onllook lie liiuls in southern ter-! John D. Roekefeller, J In North Wilkeslxwo for some' ritory. : the limelight jimt now because . . . , ^ jj_p —-—;; ^ ;■ I he objected to Communist propa-, ®PP*® going to be Mrs J. T. Love has abcait re-i NEW \ORK GlVEb BIG jganda being put into a mural I 'ovge this year as has covered from her severe illm?ss|j MAJORIT\ lOR REBEAL; f,y 0j(>go (jo Rivera, the i boon anticipated. There was a of a week or two ago. | Albany, N. TTMay 26.—Nearly 1 artist who had been en- very heavy bloom but the eo Arval Johnson, third son of ' tonight showed j sagod to do some work » t he Mr. and Mrs. S. W. .lohnson. is | fj,at the Empire State voted ap-i ffienter. Some Li about the only youth frem th-s o.OOO.OOO to ’inO.OOO or ^a * *e making a gr^t fuss immediate neighhwhood m the iQ to 1 in favor ef repeal- paying that Mr^^RotkeWler s^ ^ reforestation corps. >Vrs. J. L. Mastin is receiver- influenza. or a severe :.g the 18th amendment. With only a few hundred of the but wonldn t he look foolish pro- 8.8.'!7 election districts unreported, i Communism? jHdff> of art. That may be true. their mother, Mrs. F. P. Child ers. Jiidgin.g irom the way the ap ple trees look in this section the wind several weeks ago must halve caused the little apples to drop. Washington.—The board of In dian commissioners, cneated moue than 50 years ago, was ordered abolished Thursday by President late .survey showed the proper-1 GOI/D since i p^j-t pf jjjg govern ing from .Aocording to Rev. W. G., pro-repeal vote which' According to the United States mental reorganization program Mitcheli, of Jeiuiing-s. most of tlic ejigulf d the state Tuesday from| Bureau of Mines all the gold that people of this loc.nlity live in ji^nimtUin to the Canadian border. I has been mined in the world better buildings than their- All up-state cities and the re- since any kind of records have churches, and he stated in a re-1 raining 51 up-state counties joined j been kept; that is. from 1493. cent sermon at Cranberry that, j with Ntw York city in overwhelm-' the year after Columbus discov- during the renovising project be-1 ingly electing the slate of ISOjered America, down to date; Ing carried out over the country, i delegate.^ who will vote “wet" at amounts to a little over a thous- it would be a good idea to make the ratification convention June | and million ounces. At $20 an some minor repairs ani do some 27. Alfred E. Smith, one of thejo„nce that is worth twenty bil- repainting at the rural churches, successful delegates, will be'Ron dollars, and' more than half Services were held at Pleasant cliairman of the convention. | of it is still in the form of money Grove church, at Clingman. at ^ “77T" rT z-niZiT- ‘ or bars held in banks as se- White Plain church, near Roar ing River. Sunday, and at the Roaring River M. B. church. Sun- Right now Goodyear is concentrating on two main lines of tires ... Uiis saves money for the factory that builds them — for the dealer who sells them — and for the car owner who buys them ... If you want to know how real these savings are — and how much they mean to you — just check up on today’s price of the size you need, and at the same time take a careful look at the finest quality that ever honored the Goodyear name . . . This stepping up of quality, this stepping down of price leads the way to a better deal for everj’one — and that’s what we all want now ... Best of all — it means that everyone can sifiord new Goodyear Tires, especially if you buy now while prices are still low. The Greafesf Name in Rubber Goodyear AH-Weathers 4.40-21 $.'S.85 4..'5(>-21 6.50 4.75-19 7.00 5.00- 10 7.60 5.25-18 8.50 5.50- 19 9.70 6.00- 20 M.40 6.50- 19 13.60 GOOl^EAR All-Weather Superfwist jCerd^Tire. $5.25 and up I Pathfinder Supertwiit jCord ^Tire $4.65 and up ryir\ Yadkin Valley Motor Co. NINTH STREET NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C. Pie Supper At Cranberry Saturday Was Big Success; „ „ . , ^ I In the United States, since The pie supper given at Gran-^792. we have mined about 226 day evening, but not many from berry Saturday evening for the j jnjujo^ ounces, worth above $4,- this locality attended. Tiie third benefit of the Wild Tigers, "ell j roo.OOO.OOO; and that, curious- Sunday ks the only Saiiliath upon known baseball team, was a big jy enough, I.s just about the which there is no service in this success, more than $40 being amount of monetary gold still in immediate eommiinity, and the realized from the sales, citizens would do well to attend Miss Minnie Mathis cut the one of these convenient churches, cake in the prettiest girl contest. “Uncle Ervin" Martin, well- while L. B. .Mathis won the known and highly respected eld- pickles tor the most love-sick; erly colored man, who lives near ,„an. Harry Green received the 1 the Brier Greek neighborhood. s„ap for the homeliest man. j lost his fine, big mule recentlv. a large crewd was present and | thjs country. In the same 450 years of gold production the aimoiint of silver mined in the world was a frac tion more than fifteen thousand million ounces; and the ratio of silver to gold in the worW’s monetary system before silver The mule, though said to be the baseball team is very appre-, dropped by one country aft- of the er another, was just about fif teen to one. .Silver is coming back as mon ey. but it is more likely to arrive Judge .lohnson J. Hayes, of! at a ratio of about twenty or Gnited States district court. Mon-j twenty-five to one than the tra- day signed an order granting Ihejditional “sixteen to one” of the Saturday and about recovered. somewhat old, was considered an ciative of the support extraordinarily fine animal and cummiiiiily. ■was estimated to be worth $1j0. — ——- - even in the.se times. "Gncle Krv” Jef/erson Man Gets More riding his big mule to Union Time For Payinent of Debt Grove, the colored church, was one of the most familiar sights RutTLinnev was quite ill P®‘itioi. if T. N. Blevins, of Jet-, old Populist days SMiulay, but has terson, for an extension of ih®; poppi.ATIOX . . needed growth time in which to pay his debts IRiited States could sup- and the matter was referred to j probably ten times the popu- Human Pig Joseph M. Prevette, conciliator, | np-n- have. It used to Teacher; You have named all the for a hearing Jane 22. ; ),e all that nine-tenths of the domestic animals e.xcept one. It The petitioner lists j population could do to produce has bristly hair, it is grimy, it of $1.S()7.89. including food enough for the ten-tenths; likes to wallow in the mud and it ;122.50 in secured claims, and as- takes the time and work loves to eat. Well, Tommy, what sets of $10,925. representing i only a fifth, perhaps less, to is it? chiefly a farm of 400 acres, 6\ejtgpjj gyerybodv. Tommy (shamefacedly) Ifs miles from Jefferson, valued at j p„p„,„tion in the United me?’’ $10,000. i Stales is almost stan^ding still. ^[Unless there is an iine.xpected up- j turn in the 'birth rate or we open : our doors agan to immigrants i from Europe, we shall find our selves still less dependent on the I producers of food. 1 It looks to me as if food farm ing, on any important scale, will he a thing of the past in fifty or I a hundred years from now. More i people will live in the country, I but fewer will be engaged in try- ' ing to make money out of grow- ling food. They will get their cash I from other forms of labor and I of products of the land. May 22, 1933 I not only made cars. The "drive away A ' THIS IS A GREAT SMOKE ! THERE ARE NO TRICKS IN CAMELS- _JUST MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS I suppose that I may claim to be the first - -a - - j" oeuou drove had never seen a motor car before. country Doctors. They ... ■‘-rtrir:.: We had to teach local mec^a^ everywhere in the world. is how Ford Service began. complete our we believed from the ^e.-nxng^that^a^sale^do^^ Ford Dealers know that countsl Girl Killed By Lightning Gaffney, S. C-, May 25^Four years after her father had been I killed by lightning, Welle Porter, 110, met death in the sanve fashion while playing in the yard of her home near Gaffney today. Her father. Ml P. Porter, was struck by a bolt fqwr tifis is he was .■'.c'eslKa^''' ' ■■' ■ transaction with our customer service to see that our customer’s car gives him servi . their duty to the public in this respec . I can say of Ford Dealers generally ,^3^ have Of character and standing in ^t ,e agr e n tasic Coen .ith ne methods used to sell TeToM rrrro:„sre„r:n seu-respeot Of the Oeafers rpU- rerd V.S .the pe. o---—^ po.erfnrr::::rr:n:4. - o.. . .od« Ind has comfortable riding qualities. It is operation because of advanced engine "o^r ouilt. It is the fastest, roomiest and most powerrui car /| •A*-*
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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May 29, 1933, edition 1
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