Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Aug. 13, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
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Mae" 1‘S> *Aill* 8OCEW8U4 EDITOR PHONE 2U Announced r Agnes Powon »nd HwroW irere married ~"flatiiiidf i i^ aMBtag, August 11, at .l(i «’- |^';^«h>ck In 'a quiet ceremonp i^or- by Key. Eugene" Oltte, IMtor of the North Wllkesboro Skpttst. church, at the Baptist Only close friends »jnid relatives were present. , t^e bride was costumed in a *Kwj blue crepe suit with which were white accessories. Mrs. the attractive daugh- of Mff 'and Mrs. W. J. Powell, ? «l Pareonsville, and is a gradu ate of the Wllkesboro high wehool, class of 1932. , ' The bridegroom is the son of *r. and Mrs. F. J. Hartley, of ^ "WOkeeboro. and is a graduate of Wllkesboro high school and 1^? -alteaded Wake Forest College. He holds a position here with tie Wilkes Bakery. The couple left Immediately .a*tef the ceremony for a short wedding trip, after which they will be at home in Wllkesboro. Friday Bridge Club Is utertaiiied by Mrs. Carter The members of the Friday Bridge club were delightfully entertained by Mrs. Dan Carter at a breakfast bridge at her home on Kensington Drive Fri- •day morning. Breakfast was nerved at nine o’clock after which two tables were made up for the game. Bright summer flowers were used for decora tions throughout the home. 1 Social Calendar ^lie Wilhesboro Y. W. A. I will hold its monthly meeting -..on Monday evening at eight o'clock at the home of Miss Vivian Johnsma. ^ Miss Evelyn Deckle will be hostess to the Friendly Circle of the Wllkesboro Methodist church at her home Tuesday evening at 7:45 o'clock. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦a and their guests at a newspaper party. The entertainment, all of which was very informal, con sisted of newspaper contest, re lay race, reading of locals, and progressive conversation. James Cranor won in the contest re ceiving a prize. The locals were very humorous causing much fun. At the close of the evening the large number of guests en joying the hospitality of the Misses Pearson’s were invited In to the dining room where they were served an ice course by the hostesses and their mother, Mrs. Rom H. Pearson. Mrs. E. G. Finley Is Hostess To Sewing Club A delightful club p-arty of the week was the one given by Mrs. E. G. Finley at her home on E Street Wednesday afternoon when she entertained the mem bers of the Wednesday Sewing club, of which she is a member, with a number of additioual guests. Since so manv of the Junior G. A.’s Held Meetings Last Week Around twenty-five members were present for the August meeting of the White group of the Junior Girl’s Auxiliary of the First Baptist church that met Tuesday evening at the home of Betty and Holt Hudson. China and Japan was the topic for study and was given under the leadership of Agnes Elledge. Xellie Hail was in charge of the business session. To close the evening the hostess’ mother, Mrs. Dan Hudson, served the children ice cream and cake. Mrs. Tip McXeil was a visitor at the meeting, and the leader. Miss Liinda Hendren, was also pres ent. The members of the green visitors were from out of town! croup were entertained on Wed- aud also former members of the club the afternoon proved to be a happy reunion for those at- teuding. The out of town visi tors were .Mrs. Charlie Smoot, of Alexandria, Va., Mrs. R. .M. Pound, of Charlotte, Mrs. J. R. Clements, of Greensboro. Mrs. II. C. Landon, of Philadelphia, Pa.. Mrs. Phillip Robbins, of Dur ham, and Miss Hester Farrior. of Warsaw. Other visitors were Mrs. J. P. Mills. Mrs. Br.van Hig gins and Mrs. R. G. Finley. ' Mixed summer flowers were used In profusion throughout the ‘ home forming a colorful back ground for the guests, who spent the hours very informally to- 'gethefi^ Mrs. T. A. Finley and Mrs.'in. G. Finley assisted the koBtesg in serving a salad course Bt the close of the afternoon. uesda.v afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at the home of their leader, Mr.s. Bernard Williams, with a splen- deU attendance. Mrs. PhilHo Robbins Is Feted At Bridge Luncheon To honor Mrs. Phillip Rob bins, of Durham, Mrs. Walter Jlewton was hostess at a bridge luncheon at her home on Sixth Street Wednesday morning. Mrs. Bobbins is a sister of Mrs. New- ■ ton and is visiting Mrs. Xewton mnd her mother, Mrs. W. P. Hor ton, and other relatives in the City.-Play began at 10:30 o’clock and ifter the removal of cards a three cours'e luncheon was serv ed by the hostess with the as sistance of Mrs. W. P. Horton, Mrs.'Palmer Horton and Miss Mary Emma Robbins. Mrs. Char lie Smoot, of Alexandria, Va.. and Mrs. R. M. Pound, of Char lotte, came In for the luncheon. The game was played at four tables which were placed amid a blight setting of cut flowers. Mrs. Henry Reynolds won the top score prize while the prize lor Ijonors was awarded to Mrs. Harc^d Riley. Mrs. Robbins was remembered with a lovely gift. Methodist Young People^ Given Party Friday Evening Misses Beatrice and Lucy Pearson were hostesses at their me on F street Friday evening to the Methodist Young People I FAMILY ' PROTECTION We realize that an insur- sme policy of only $60.00 on diSdreti and $100.00 on ■Mts may seem very small but when we have gone as feiir as we can with those we lots and the time arrives thbt we have to think of plac- itjf them away, even this i^uld be of great help to mW of us. WE WANT TO HELP YOU REINS^TURDIVANT lUBIAL ASSOCIATION (Incorporated) Idlewise Club Hostess At Picnic Thursday Eve. The members of the Idlewise club were ho.stess at a picnic Thursday evening and had as .guest.s their husbands and chil dren. The group, numbering around thirty-five, motored to the Fish Hatchery near Boone where a sumptuous picnic supper was spread. Following the sup per a period of interesting games were enjoyed. Miss Treva Spainhower Is Wed To Melvin Kenerly A wedding beautiful in its simplicity and of much interest here was that of Miss Trava Spainhower and Melvin Ken erly which was solemnized at 3:30 o’clock Sunday ’ afternoon, .August 12. at the home of the Bride on Kensington Drive. Rev. W. A. Jenkins, pastor of both the bride and bridegroom, offi ciated using the solemn ring ritual of the Methodist Episco pal church. Only a limited num ber of relatives and close friends were fTesent. The vows were spoken in the living room, which was prettily decorated in the nuptial green and white with the use of white blossoms, white candles and ferns. While Lohengrin’s wed ding march was played the bride and groom entered the room to gether. unattended. The bride was lovely in a white satin sports dress with all accessories in white. She car ried a bouquet of white rosebuds sprayed with lillies of the val ley. Mrs. Kenerly is an accomplish ed daughter of Mr. and .Mrs. A. E. Spainhower of this city. She is a graduate of the Nor'h Wil- kesboro high school and holds a position here with Ihe Belk store. Mr. Kenerly, eon of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Kenerly, of this City, was educated at the North Wllkesboro high school and is connected with the Auto Parts Co., of North Wllkesboro. An informal reception follow ed the ceremony immediately after which Mr. and Mrs. Ken erly left for their wedding trip to the western part of the state. Upon their return they will be at home in North Wilkesboro. The out ol town guests attend ing were Miss Mary Shockey, of Brookline, Mass., and Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Corbitt, Jr., of Hen derson. now •od Mount performed last’" Saturday "teOfo Ing at 11:30 i«(lock in tha M^h- edist Episcoi^I rckurch at Cum berland, Md-ltBe ^Rev. William Lewis oKlcIatttigi There ,:were no attendants, v "Mrs. Jokoten - M a graduate of the Mpnnt Airy high school and a gj^duate nurse u Martin’s Memorfilly HospitiU ,^/fSere. She was MQtoyed In Westfield, N. J., in^^t^ Convalescent Hospital for Copied Children. ' “Mr. Johnson, also a graduate of the Mount Airy high school, is at present emidoyed with the West Virginia Nevrspaper Pub lishing Company in Morgantown. The bride and groom are making tbelr home here at 208 Wilson avenue.’’ Local People Attend^ National Conye^ion Evangelistic Clubs Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Minton and son. Dean, H. M. Briggs and Mrs. M. M. Darlington, of this city, at tended the annual convention of Business Men’s Evangelistic Clubs at Blue Ridge Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Minton and Mr. Briggs, representatives of the local club, report a most success ful and inspirational convention. Of the seven states represent ed in the national convention North Carolina had the largest delegation with 60 members from 12 clubs. Spartanburg, S. C., had the largest delegation from one club, the number be ing 16. The foHowin.g officers of the national organization wVre elect ed: Boyd W. Hargraves, Chatta nooga, Tenn., ’president; T. A. Worthington, Newport News. Va., first vice president; W. E. Dowd, Cheraw, S. C., second vice president; O. C. Holland, Cleveland, Tenn., secretary; C. H. Schenck, Chattanooga, Tenn., treasurer. After adjournment of the evangelistic club convention the local group attended a .service at the Baptist assembly at Ridge crest and heard Dr. Burroughs, of Nashville, Tenn. Partridge-Johnson The news item below was clipped from a recent issue of the Morgantown Journal publish ed in Morgantown, West Virginia. The bride is^well known here, being a granddaughter of the late Mrs. Alice Prevette. She has Visited her aunt, Mrs. Ralph Duncan, Vq' several occasions; “Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Alice Prevette Partridge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Partridge of Mt. Airy, N. C., to Ben F. John son, formerly of Mount Airy and« PARKW AY DISPUTE IS TO BE SETTLED SOON Point Mule IJkk. fSg. sfP Explosion Occurl >./ .GoMsbortb Ang Powdl, famer ot the Pinkney section, reported in Goldsboro today tiut.a few days ago his pig, Paddy, ate several sticks of Idjfnaraite, that a few hoars later a mate kicked the pig, that the pig was blown into atoms and that the mole was killed by the expiositm. Mr. Powell said he was blast ing stumps in a field, that' he went for a drink,of water, and on his return was horr>,.«d to find Paddy with his head in the box of dynamite eating on the last stick. With the utmost delicacy he ran the pig off the lot. Tlie effect of the dynamite an the pig was to make him become, in his own estimation, a fierce, wild boar. He ran up behind a mule that Was grazing in the pasture and nipped him on the leg. There was a deafening roar and a flash of light. The mule spun arcund and dropped to the ground dead. Paddy disappear ed from the face of the earth and neither hide nor hair of him has been seen since. At The Theatres NEW ORPHEUM Today and Tomorrow—“Cock eyed Cavaliers,” Bert Wheel er and Robt. Woolsey, Comedy and Cartoon. Wednesday, Au,g. 15th—Family Day—“Uncertain Lady,” Ge nevieve Tubin, Edward Ever ett Horton, Comedy and Car toon. Thursday and Friday, Aug. 16-17 —“Merry Wives of Reno,” with Glenda Farrell, Margaret Lindsay, Guy Kibbee. Saturday—Buck Jones in ‘‘Hello Trouble,” also Comedy and' Serial. FIEU>S PLAYS GREAT B«.U Home Cluurt’ • Homer'In Second Frame ’Wfete For Adjuils-MRlls Here 'flinrs- day Afteimoon A ’ ^ Adams-Mlllis hp6i(ti«ll came here Thursday afternoon and ^defeated Home Chair team 2 to 1 In one the clpse^t games of the season Rlmmer, visitors’ pitcher, won his own game when he crashed out a homer in the second with Church on base and held the Home Chair sluggers 'down In the pinches. Home Chair’s lone tally came In the sixth when Crook hit for a dohhle and HenderSon sacri- fieed. Troutman and Camichael were forced to retire from the game on account of minor in juries. Score by innings R H E Adams-Mlllis 020 000 00 2 ’6 1 Home Chair 00.0 001 000 1 8 0 Batteries were: Adams-Millis —Rimmer and Hedrick; Home Chair—Carmichael, Livingstone and Pardue.' Mrs. Calvin Reedy Dies In This City Mrs. Ellen Reedy, 76, wife of Calvin Reedy, of Grass Creek, and a member of a widely^ known family in northwestern North Carolina, died at the hospital here Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. She leaves four children: Mrs. Reed Porter, Mouth of Wilson, Va.; O. G. Reedy, Bel Air, Md.; E. C. Reedy, Rocks, Md., and J. A. Reedy, Morrlsview, Md. Funeral services were held this morning at Grassy Creek. along her young c: LsRoy. . S —^ .... . , Tif rbl, tlm* ig^s hy Jm a^Angi jnelo er, W. Foy t: theatrii Paramod^ w cast as iSSnimt .#4r. Olt's la his new ‘ pictare, “The Old-FasTOMbd- WMcS Is being scraeaed at . (he Liberty Tiestrw today and toroorrowei^v laying the role of, ‘"The Gr^t McGonigle,.’’ Fields is the leader of a hand of vandevine troupers, who go from town to town strug gling for fame and food, dodging sheriffs along the route. When they arrive in Bellefon- taine, the town’s wealthiest wi dow, who has operatic aspira tions, falls In love with Fields, and his troubles take on new hues, especially when she brings loth iffTioe As York. Inddmatally, cast of ■'The pmnkitrd’’ is in ■_* the picttttd^. and a special version 0 of the show'’is given tor the koreen, with Fields playing^the leading role. # rS* The supporting cast meindeif 36e ‘Morrison, who sang "The Last Round-Up” in the ZlegfeUl:&'. Follies,' Judith Allen and Jack . Mulhall, who is making his ' screen comeback. n William Beandine is crpdite/d . with the direction, while- Jaefc Cunningham and Garnett West* . on wrote the screen play. Gates county farmers will buy foundation stock of pure bred Guernsey cows from Davie coun ty as a part of the new deal farming begun by Farm Agent Rich. Washington, Aug. 10.—With Secretary Ickes expected back in Washington next week, the ques tion of the Shenandoah-Great Smokies parkway, dormant since he left on his vacation in July, will be revived. The route for the 400-ruile scenic highway has been approv ed from the southernmost point of the Shenandoah national park in Virginia to Blowing Rock, N. C., but the location from that point to the Great Smoky Moun tains national park in North Carolina and Tennessee is in dispute. Senator Reynolds, of North Carolina, who is now in Wash ington, has an engagement to see Ickes August 16, the day after the secretary is scheduled to return here. It is probable that Ickes will set a date for the hearing shortly after that conference. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT BACK IN WHITE HOUSE LIBERTY Monday - Tuesday — “The Old Fashioned Way,” with W. C. Fields and Baby LeRoy, plus a Thelma Todd and Patsy Kel ly Comedy, 'Til Be Sueing You.” Wednesday — Ralph Forbes in “Shock”, the strangest story to come out of the World War, plus Bob Steel in 8th chapter of “The Mystery Squadron” and Cartoon. Thursday - Friday — “0|)erator 13,” with Marion Davies and Gary Cooper, plus a musical comedy "Benny From Pana ma.” Saturday—‘Law and The Killer’ a big road show attraction giving you a vivid Insight what it means to he put on the spot, plus Rin-Tin-Tin Jr., in “The Wolf Dog,” 9th chap ter and cartoon. QUESTIO.V AND ANSWER Washington, Aug. 1ft.—Pres ident Roosevelt returned today to the White House, after trav eling more than 14,000 miles in 40 days, with a train load of new ideas, having pointed the way, while still on the road, for a realignment of the political parties in America, and after giving to his fellow’ countrymen the promise that the new deal machinery would move .“teadily along the road, the end and di rection of which is yet to be de fined. The friends of the Presi dent are very certain that his trip must be regarded as a tri umph and they are not at all surprised that he apparently construes this continuous recep tion by huge crowds, despite a man killing sun and heat, as a mandate for more action, the while bearing to the left. Question; When should the laying flock be culled for low producing hens? Answer: The most rigid cull ing should be done at the close of the laying season which usual ly occurs from July to Novem ber. How'ever, the flock should be closely watched through the latter part of July and all of Au gust. It is at this time that the non-paying hen goes ino a molt and these should be culled from the flock and disposed of as soon as production ceases. Get rid of all early molters. • Here is a truly all-wave radio set that will give you thrill after thriU. With the “Signal Beacon” it’s easy to tune to the most distant stations. Come in and see it today. While a few tobacco and cot ton growers are found who have planted a small excess in acre age above their contracts, each offender is eager to correct the mistake and come within the bounds of bis allotment, find measuring parties sent out by county agents. ^^uuwur sicwAii mt f-'.rii'i Y6I M THI lUTiaii •»«! k Lyon Electric Co. Pho.:c 22-W Wilkesboro, N. C. The World’s Greatest Automatic -STOKER- ‘SK. Hand firing is inefficient, wasteful, and costly. A STOKOL does away with this method of heating. Many homes have installed STOKOL equipment and are now realizing a substantial reduction on heating costs. REDUCE COAL BILLS 20 to 50% OIL BILLS 40 to 75% GAS BILLS 50 to 80% HYDRAULIC AUTOMATIC COAL FEEDING AND BURNING EQUIPMENT Temperature and pressure electrically controlled with absolute precision and dependability—these controls automatically govern your fire accurately and econo mically. It is the modem fuel and labor saving, coal feeding and firing equipment. Reasonably priced, though highest in efficiency. MODELS AS LOW AiS $227-50 COMPLETELY INSTALLED Wilkes Plumbing Co. PHONE 203 NDRTH WILKESBORO, N. C, Turn Over Insurants Details to m Between your business and home affairs you have many, many details to consider. Why not let your agent take over your protection proUems? He is brained to purchase maxi mum protection at minimum cost. a COSSULT YOUR INSURANCE AGENT AS YOU WOUU) YOUR DOCTOR OR YOUR LAWYER” PROTECTION PLUS'SERVICE ■ JF ? - > J. B. WILLIAMS ELIZABETH BARBER 'I r- JACK BRAME
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Aug. 13, 1934, edition 1
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