Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Sept. 6, 1934, edition 1 / Page 3
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r-THE J01 rPATRIOT,' loutEntire *'”*^,Crop Biap 9iJws • ■■—■■i-'i I—— —~I ' " ' ' " Farmers UsdM Bettw "Prices’wiped — — — — their obligations to the as sociations completely. _ _ _ / Dinner “For Thos. K. Faw Wtadi ^ D^it *ftga»on^op PertoniJ it Csoiiien Comi Enjoyable Time at Pnrlear Home Snnday; Other Conunonity Items Given ■ ^ For Crops To Retire ® Indebtedness Columbia. 8. C., Sept. 6.—Re- string to a map Issued by the _I^ntted Rtates Department ol *^^-g*>rhiulture showing that the crops as of Aug. 1 In the whole , .. ®t the South except Texas. Okla- homa and a part of Arkansas '■'•re “average or above,” Julian H. Scarborough, general agent - of the Farm Credit Administra tion of Columbia and president of the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, said that farmers of the third Farm Credit Adminis tration District comprising the states of North Carolina, South ^ ^ Carolina, Georgia and Florida, F Justifiably realize their good fortune In having crops better than elsewhere In the nation. “Now that the harvesting sea son Is upon us.” Mr. Scarborough said “the farmers of the district who have availed themselves of the credit facilities offered by the various agencies of the Farm Credit Administration to tide them over the worst depression In modern history should plan to protect their credit with these agencies and to insure'a continu- ttce of the agencies by meeting their obligation^ to them. “These agencies, during the past tense months have not only thrown a line of defense against the loss of homes and farms through foreclosure by institut ing a program of refinancing but have set up an organization now capable of giving the farmer a permanent system of complete credit for all-round purposes— whereby farm borrowers through cooperative! responsibility may take advantage of the nation’s money markets under low terms of interest and favorable terms of repayment. “The farmers of the tobacco belts of our district where the markets have already) opened have shown a desire to meet their obligations to the agencies making up this system most promptly and many of them who were borrowers from production "Likewise many ol tiem have made substantial payments on their land bank and land bank commissioner loans. The favor able prospects for cotton ought to put the cotton growers in splendid position to meet their obligations to the production credit associations and to make payments to the land bank. “By making prompt payments the farmer-borrowers effect a saving in their interest charges.” At the headquarters of the Production Credit Corporation of Columbia it was said that the collections from the tobacco dis tricts were continuing to be ex cellent. At the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, it was report ed that substantial payments were being made by tobacco growers on their obligations to the land bank and the land bank commissioner. PARK ROUTE HEARING • TO BE SEPTEMBER 10 PURLBAR, Sept. i.—Cn last Sunday a company of on® hun dred and twenty persona assem bled at the home of 'Thomas K. Faw, at this place, for the pur pose of bringing good cheer to Mr. Paw, It being his 54th birth day anniversary. The honors were also extended to his daugh ters, Misses Eva Zelle and Vlena in honor of their 10th and 21st birthday anniversaries, respec tively. A table was prepared on the yard and when well filled with the choicest delicacies. Rev. Lee Miller made a brief but Interest ing address. Then followed the dinner hour. The greatest of en joyment was In evidence as the crowd talked and laughed and partook of the good things of the table to their hearts content. It is Interesting to note that Mrs. Faw, fifty-three, the moth er of nine children, saw them all together on this occasion for the first time in life. Among those present from 0O8HIIN, Sept 4.—-Mr., Mn. D. Barlow and tani!^ an^ Mr. and Mrs. Talmadcaj Fiwghn and family, of Indepen-j deoee, Va., visited friends relatives here last week, Rev. Isaac Watts v. filled regular f : appointment Snndkr;^ night at the., Goshen Baptist' church his subject was, '‘Rehieinc’^^ her thy errator in the days oC- thy youth.” He preached a woi|*- derful sermon. -i* Mr. and Mrs." 8. T. Walker' an4_ Mrs. A. R. Barlow attended tte Hollow Springs Primitive BapUat I Association, Sunday. ! Mrs. A1 Pearson, of North WO-3 Detroit . . . Above are pictured the claws on the Tiger, Detroit’s American League baseball team which seems headed for the pennant and World Series glory. . . . Pictured are ten Tiger regulars, including pitcher Schoolboy Rowe, who are hitting over ,300 . . . Left to right, Goslln .322; Coch rane (manager), .322; Greenberg, .337; Rowe, .3 33; White, .319; Hayworth, .330; Gehrlnger, .366; Walker, .308 and Rogell, .312. MODERN WOMEN Not SvfFtr montbly pain and delay due to c^ds, nervoua strain^ expoeurc or similAr cauaea. Chi^hee-ten DiamondBij^d PU Is are effect!vOt reliable and give Onldf Rtuef. Sold by all druggistsfor over 45yeara. Ask lor HE! nopngp 'THI SIAMOND SSANIF .iJl USE COOK’S c.c. c. Relieves Flu, 0)ld8, Coughs, Sore Throat, Group, Nervousness. Washington, Aug. 30.—Secre tary of the Interior Ickes will hold a hearing in Asheville on September 10, t o determine whether the Great Smoky Na tional parkway will enter the newest national park on the North Carolina o r Tennessee side. He told Representative Zeb Weaver today he will conduct the hearings himself, after Mr. Weaver had spent about two hours with the cabinet officer. Weaver told Ickes it would be a great Injustice, and in a sense, controvert the objectiv© of the parkway to shunt it into Tennes see at Blowing Rock, below Lin- ville Gorge as the Tennesseans propose. Emphasizing the beauty of the North Carolina route. Weaver pointed out that Asheville is recognlzedly the gateway to Great Smoky Mountain park. He said that to build the parkway from Linville Gorge into Tennes see and enter the park via Gat- linburg would deprive tourists of the enjoyment of a vast North Carolina area. After hearing the congress man out Ickes said he would im mediately notify Governor Bh- riiighaus of North Carolina and Hill McAlister of Tennessee, of his intentions to hold the hear ing. He said he would permit Ehringihaus and McAlister to pre.sent the claims of their states in person, if they wished, or ac cord them the privilege of select ing speakers. One hour and a halt will be alloted each side. distance were Mrs. Mallssie Da- TRADITION .... up our way T) 1 aV> TFa • * a. Dude Mrs. vis, of Richmond, Va Walker, of Becklin, Va.; I Ida Bear, Mrs. Fairmgton and 1 Mrs. Artie Bolden, of Wagoner; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Bear and family, of Glendale; Mr. Mrs. J. Higgins and family and Mr. and Mrs. Finley Church and family, of Wllkesboro: Rev. T. V. Church, of Wllkesboro. After spending a most delight- Up In my county we celebrat ed the 200th anniversary of the Congregational Church at Stock- bridge, Massachusetts, the other day. Founded by Yale College theological students In 1733 as a mission to th© Indians who lived at Charles Stockbridge’s trading post, it was organized as a church In 1734, with the Indian chief, David Konkapot, and one ~ - CUU51, J-ittViu xvuuakapui., vx*x ful social hour lu the afternoon j„y ancestors, as deacons the company left for their homes -- - ’ ’ Our farmers are very busy at this time as the rainy season has somewhat subsided and it is fine foddering weather. We are glad to say that our Sunday school at Purlear is pro gressing nicely. Here’s an invi tation to the people of the com munity to join in this good work. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Matherly, of Brookford were visiting relatives in this section last week-end. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Miller, of Idlewild, were visitors at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Jas. T. Nichols, Sunday. Mrs. Jas. T. Nichols, of this place is visiting relatives at West Jefferson this week. Mr. Balmer Hays, son of W. A. Hays and Miss Dora, daughter of Rell Caudill, were united in matrimony Saturday evening. Rev. D. J. White, officiating. Evidently Helen—They say that girl over there puts all her father makes on her back. Toni—Evidently he must be j out of a joj? now. a LOT or TIRE FOR MONET UTTLE Famous Lifetime Guaranteed Here’s a Goodyear with a long list ot triends—users who are getting real grip, real safety, real mileage at mighty low cost. Come see your size Speedway—a great example of the greater value you get in Goodyears at every price. LOOK AT THESE FEATURES Center Traction for greater grip ■ • • Tough thick tread. ■.. Ribbed sidewalls—Blow out protected in every ply by Supertwist Cord. We cordially invite our motoring friends to pay us a vi^it at our new location on Ninth Street GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY Built with Sup«rtwi$t Cord 30x31/2 4.50-21 $4.40 $5.40 4.40-21 4.75-19 $4.95 $5.70 4.50-20 5.00-19 $5.20 $6.05 Prices subject to change without notice. State sales tax, if any, additional. GOODYEAR ALL-WEATHER that’s the pass word for 43 91 More Non-Skid Mileage at No Extra Cost! . ’. , Just say “G-3" to us and see the greatest Goodyear ever built—latest edition of the famous All- Weather, world’s largest selling tire for 19 years. Doubly OwaranloodI 1. Against road hazards. 2. Against de fects for life. C. & C. SERVICE STATION PHONE 152 Ninth Street North Wilkesboro, N. C. ■ • • ' • ■ .VI wic Many famous preachers have wishing for Mr. Faw many more ©©rved the old church, most cele happy birthdays. ■ ■ - • • - - — brated of them being Jonathan Edwards, w^o left it In 1758 to become president of Princeton College. The descendants of many ot t’f first members of the old church still live in the town. It is natural that those who have grown up in such an envir onment should be influenced by the ancient traditions of the doing time and not enough on one’s job well. In my own experience I know how difficult It Is to find a real ly competent stenographer, and I hear many others make the sam® comment. • * • BUILDING and workers We' hear a great deal about unenfployment in the building trades, and the effort to stimu late home building In order to put them back at work. My late father-in-law, who came of a family of builders and was a builder himself, had a name for the general run of car penters. He called them “wood- butchers.” The quality of work manship with which many who call themselves bricklayers, stone-masons, plasterers and painters Is appalling. Yet they demand, under union rules, the same high pay as the most com petent. I lately had to have a chimney repaired and a fireplace rellned, in my country ^ome. With past experience with poor workman ship in mind, I refused to let any of a dozen masons in my neigh borhood tackle the job, but wait- country and its people. Our an- ^—, — cestors believed that every man ©d until I could get the services was entitled to what he could' of the one really competent man In that line. And he had so much work promised ahead that 1 had to’wait two months before he could get around to my job! There has never been any real lack of work for first-rate men In any line. Most of the unem ployed are second-raters seeking first-rate wages. • mro. va xNuibu ! kesboro, spent the weeT-end wltk -J her mother, Mrs. Dora Wallaeft- . here. - Mrs. T. G. Walsh, who has - been in falling health for soms time, is spending a few dsys^ this week at the home ot Dti Miles for medical treatment. An ancient well, 250 feet deep, , was discovered In Falamleh sev-n ’j eral months ago, relieving;^ ^ drouth In Palestine. QUES-nON AND ANSWER Question: What minerals are necessary for laying birds? Answer; The usual mineral feeds are bone meal, oyster shell or ground limestone, salt and grit. These are necessary for growth and repair,of the body. Bone meal helps-build bone and tissue; oyster shell or ground limestone are used for the cal cium content; salt stimulates the appetite, and grit grinds the food. These minerals should be kept before laying birds at all times. Sonny—Father, is it correct to say that ours is a government of the people, by the people, and for the people? Father—Hardly, my son. Cor rectly speaking, ours Is a govern ment of the people, by the office holders, and for the politicians. FAMILY PROTECTION We realize that an insur ance policy of only $60.00 on children and $100.00 on adults may seem very small but when we have gone as far as we can with those we love and the time arrives that we have to think of plac ing them away, even this would be of great help to most of us. WE WANT TO HELP YOU REINS-STUEDIVANT BURIAL ASSOCIATION (Incorporated) C earn, and that those who would not work should not eat. The landless man, who was content to work for wages, was looked upon as inferior: so it became every able man’s ambition to own a home, however humble, and a piece of land he could till and live on, if wages failed. • • * DEPENDENCTE a la bear The principal trouble with the American people today is that w© have become too dependent upon the pay envelope. We are like the tame bear that a travel ling showman took around the summer resorts in the Adiron- dacks. The bear would do his tricks, th© showman would pass the hat, and the bear would get his supper. Up in the thick woods, how ever, the call of the wild was too strong for the bear. He slipped his leash one night and vanished into the forest. Two days passed and the bear did not return. Finally some woods men at Paul Smith’s organized a search for him. They found the poor beast in the middle of a clearing, all alone, going through his whole repertory of tricks and then looking around for someone to come and feed him. It was the only way he had ever been taught to get a living. I always think of that rather pathetic anecdote whenever peo ple talk about moving city work ers to the farms by wholesale. I am afraid that a great deal of the planning for “subsistence homesteads’’ overlooks th© fact that nobody can get a living oft the land unless he has first learned how. SENSATIONAL IMPROVEMCNT! For the First Time CLEANING PRINCIPLES 3 DISILLUSION of an heir A young man who was run ning an elevator, in the building where my New York office is. inherited a small farm in his na tive Czecho-Slovakia. He took his wife and children and gaily set sail for Europe. Fourteen months later he was back—and, fortunately for him, was able to get his old job hack. “They think they are prosper ous if they can get just enough to keep them alive and warm over there,” he told me. Everything In life Is relative. We think we are In great dis tress because money doesn’t come as easy as It used to. But the plain fact Is that the lowest- paid workers in this country, and even the unemployed, have better food, better clothing, more enjoyment In life, than all but a few anywhere else In the world. CDMPETENOE the Job Charlie, my Czencho-Slovak friend, got his old job back be cause he Is a competent man at that particular work, of running an elevator. It Is not easy to find competent men In any line of work. Too many are just good enongh to get by. “I think there is too much of a tendency to put the emphasis upon the enjoyment of |^nr^ 7 TIMES CHAMPION OF THE WORLD ' it ^ is ui =- PH.’ICllSf.* are combined in the NEW MODEL PJREK\ ^ VACUUM CLEANER ^ wHh MOTOR DRIVEN BRUSK Eiiminates tiresome ARM-ACTIOff from your vawum cleaning— cleans by powerful MACHINE-ACTION Never before have you seen such a cleaner. You merely guide it—it does all the work. The final and successful combination of all three basic cleaning principles in ONE cleaner now makes it possible to dean faster and better by simple, 3 CLEANING PRINCIPLES easy machine-ACTION. We want you to try this marvelous new Eureka in your hom« FREE, positively without obligation. Learn for yourself by direct comparison how poorly your old deaner actually deans. n SPECIAL CAMPAIGN OFFER* 50 '8= COMPLETE.SET OF ATTACHMENTS FREE with every parchese of ■ new model Grand Prize EUREKA with MOTOR DRIVEN BRUSH —during this special Factory Campaign. For limited time only. 1. MOTOR DRIVEN BRUSH-basic principle for insuntly removing lint, a_ AM — TeW hair, threads, and surface litter. 2. “HIGH-VACUUM”-basic princi ple for removing deeply embedded fine dirt. Never before combined with a motor driven brush. The absence of “High-Vacuum” in old cleaners ezplains why floor covef- ings are often filled with embedded dirt while surface looks clean. 3. MECHANICAL DISTURBANCE- basic principle for dislodging em bedded grit and dirt. Eureka Factory Representatives Will Conduct All Home Demonstrations RALPH DUNCAN PHONE 301 NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C. 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The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 6, 1934, edition 1
3
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