ri". X6S r*s& f 10,00a ] Jo! , _hiT& ifbVe To Goshen '■¥i f jH Shady Grove Char^; fe teresting’ News Itesms From Cywe Comnumity ~ CTCLET. April 1.—The fifth •■Sbt singing was hf'’l at Sha- ee* CTrore Baptist church accord- IksB to previous arrangements ■■S' was one of the best ever re- -■petfM (a the Brier Creek associ- ■Hhm. l^vs. N. T. Jarvis, J. M. IWrtt. OijMi-Myers and Roy tkalsr were in attendance and ■■ife some short talks that were jPMUy appreciated. (The choirs ^tf*ltothel, Swan Creek and ■Mir Grove were the choirs ■•A tong. There were three ■■P.tets that took part in the Vneram. the Yadkin Southside. IMthem Quartet and the Bethel Qwsrtet. Mr. Romie Gregory, of Jones- wiBe. Mr. L. A. Harris, of North 'WfOkesboro, visited and attended She singing in this community Ito-mlay. Mr. Dun Benton, of Honda, '•rxs a visitor in this community Swsday. 9Bss Addie Casey, of Fergu- OBfiu spent the week-end with ter parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis tec«y and attended the singing at Shady Grove accompanied by . te^ irolher, Mr. Tyre Casey, and fir. J. W. Robbins. Mrs. I. M. Coleman and son. Mugjeae, and Miss Manda Greg ory were guests of Mrs. B. H. 'Kolerts and Mrs. Ernest Hem- 3ic Friday afternoon. Sirs. E. H. Hanes was in North Whlkesboro shopping Friday. Masers. Ernest Hemric and HBuch Coleman attei>.ied a liall in Elkin Frida Messrs. Preston and Mancie ■Roberts were Morth Wilkes- Mwv shopping. Saturday. Mr. Roy tVellborn and sister. Marie, .spent the week-end wUli ■fe. and Mrs. Elisha \Velll)orn. Mrs. Ernest Hemric and Itaby tore been sick for a few days. iff. Dana Coleman was in .Miwtfr Wilkesboro on business jauarday. Master Charles and Henry ■ .>ifeamu spent Salui day morning •*«(» J. D. Jarvis, Mrs. J. I). Jarvis and son vis- ;teJ» Ml’S. ti. H. Roberts Satiir- jjRr afternoon. Mr. Ernest Hemric was in ■Tvikesbon) Saturday. Mr. and .Mrs. J. D. Jarvis and wv. J D. Jr., visited .Mr. and LOe ANGELES . v . Qeorgie Woolf (gbove), went for an inqtor- tant ride aatrido the back of the raeo horaa Axncar, who romped home the winner in the tieh Santa Anita Handieap. Woolf waa rewarded with 110,000 for (us winning ride. Mrs. Ernest Hemric Saturday evening. Mr. II. C. Roberts and family- spent a while Saturday evening with Mr. T. R. Roberts. Mr. Manuel Roberts visited his brother. Mr. B. H. Roberts, Sunday morning. Mr. Herman Higgins spent Sunday with Mr. Mancie Rob erts. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Johnson and son, of Windy Gap, spent the week-end witli Mrs. John son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Roberts. Owing to weather conditions the farmers and gardeners are getting badly behind with their work. We are all glad of so ranch rain though. Maybe we can get the w’ork done betw’eea sho-wers and not suffer from drouth as is the case some times. Mr. Charlie Matliis and Alma Mathis visited at .Mr. Joe Brooks’ Sunday afternoon. Mr. Turner Goforth, of Win ston-Salem. spent the w’eek-end '.vith hi.s parents. Mr. and .Mrs. J. K. Gofoi’lli. .Misses .Manda and Cann Greg ory spent Sunday afternoon witli tiieir sister. Mrs. Joe Brooks, who is sic'.;. .Mrs. P.. H. Roberts al.so visited .Mrs. Brooks Sunday afternoon. .Mr. Xoali Jarvis, Jr., of Roar ing River, visited a short w’liile with .Mr. Elisim Wellborn, Sun day. Now’ that the lespedeza has iieeii plant'.d. i'nion county far mers are devoliiig considerable attention to their orchards witli the idea of ]iroducing siitticient fruit f.v;’ home u.^e. Preaefataff 8«t«l«e To Be Held At CJhnrch; f Other News Of Commniiity Given GOSHEN. April 1.—Rev. A. J. Foster ■win preach at the Goshen Baptist church the second Sun day in April at 11 o’clock. Mr. John Higgins will move to his home In Goshen within the next few weeks. Mr. Higgins pur chased what is known as the Davis farm. It is said to be one of the best farms at Goshen. The many friends of Mr. Higgins will be glad to have him move here. Mr. Cileiin Proffit, of Lafayette, visited his father ir.d mother, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Proffit, here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Walker. Mrs. Rosette Buren and U. D. Barlowe visited Mr. and Mrs. Foster Bar lowe, in Independence 'Va., Sun day. Miss Sadie Earp, of Boomer, spent Saturday night with Mag dalene Barlowe. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Murphy, who has been spending a few days with telatives in Boomer, retUi'iied home Friday. Mr. Tom Greer and Mr. James Hemphill are working a crew of men on the road that leads from Boomer to Goshen. They are making a great improvement on the road. Mr. and Mrs. Harris Winkler and Miss Bertha Walker, of Le noir. spent the week-end here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Y. Walker. Mrs. Gather Walsh visited Mr. and .Mrs. A. H. Triplette, Sunday. Mrs. T. R. Barlowe is suffer ing from llie effect of some teeth she had pulled some few days ago. We hope she will soon l)e belter. Miss Zora and Belva Ferguson visited Mr. and Mrs. A. J. F'os- ter, Sunday. .Mr. Alton Edminston left here Sunday for Elkin where he w=ll work witli a road construction company. IMPORTS OF FOOD LAID TO THE AAA // Pigs is Pigs /i and crops are crops Yet they’re much alike at Feeding Time IStrangc, isn’t it, to think of sand crops this way ... but ; presents more and more ace every day to show that find requirements of animals aid'prartts are much the same. Animals need vitamins. They cBoId starve to death on chemi- caSy pure food. So could your srops.withoutvifa/tinpur/fies. Oinean Natural Nitrate sup- jfcs the vital impurities—sup- gfcs them in Na- tonr's own balance y»»«f proportion. •yftirtp. vital impuri ties arc the rare ■fements—iodine, toron, calcium, "A Bure Food and Drug Act for plants would be a death warrant to all living creatures." —Scientific Americmn magnesium, lithium, stron- tium, and many others. They’re all there, combined with nitro gen, to make your crops strong and healthy. Chilean Natural Nitrate is ideal for your crops. It is na tural, the only nitrogen that comes from the ground. For your own protection say “Chilean” when you order ni trate. Two kinds—Champion (granulated) and Old Style. They are both genuine. Both are natural. Both are Chilean. And both give your crops the vital impurities. Washington.— Republican po litical strategist.s arc developing a lively agriculture issue ready for discussion when Midwest party leaders meet next month to plan 1U36 presidential cam paign strategy. Senator Arthur Vaiulenlierg (K-.Mich) a presidential possibil ity. is gathering i;’alerial, al though lie will not particiiRite in Hie .Midwest meeting. Acting on a tip in former Pres ident iioover's recent indictment of Hie new deal, Vaiidenherg ob tained Senate adoption of a res olution calling for information on recent agricultural imports and Hie comparative production and comsiimption of cotton and wlieat tty all nations from 1904 to 1933. From tliis data Hiere probably iiltiniately will be shaped plat- foriti planks challenging the new deal on: 1. High cost of living. 2- Allegedly diminishing for eign and domestic markets for .-\mencan agriculture. The Roosevelt tariff bar gaining policy. I’liere is no dispute about in crease of living costs. President Roosevelt lias recognized the trend. Early this year he told conferees the cost of living was expected to continue higher in the general readjustment of dol lar ivtirchasiiig power. Former President Hoover ask ed Hie issues of living costs and of fai’iii markets in his .March 23 letter challenging new deal policies in general. He said: "Because of food destruction and restraint on farm prodiic- liqn, foreign food is pouring into our ports, purchase of which should have been made from our tarmer.s. Cost of living is stead ily advancing.’’ New York, AjiHl t.—One week and one day Bah/ Beatrice Marie Spanitn*- dead. But yoii?dviieT«r believe it t«^ night aa the « darfc-haired little youngater howled and aqnalled and kicked for .her foedlnga u lustily as.gny other Infant in the mate^ll^ wa!rd oi a Brooklyn wmM MTAMT ... On the brunette- enrl wreathed brow of beautiful Min Jessie Smith,V of Miami (above), will rest the crown of Miss Florida for 1935. She is 18 years old. She won over 256 contestants. FOREIGN NATIONS OWE U. S. $13,438,703,471 Washington, April 1.—A to tal foreign indebtedness of ?13,- 433.703,671.61, owed by 19 for eign nations to the United States, was shown by the treasury today in one of its periodic recapitula tions of the situation. This amount is made up of $12,659.022,954..31 of unpaid principal. $595,493,683.53 of in terest accrued and unpaid under funding and moratorium agree ments. and $184,187,033.77 of interest postponed and payable tinder moratorium agreements. M, & M. Motor Express Begins On Schedule The .M. & .\I. .Motor Express, owned and operated liy .M. B. and Chai’lcs .VlcXeiil, began ope rations today lietween this city and Charlotte liy way of Newton and Conover. They liave a iiindernly equipp ed truck of large capacity with a steel body. The truck will leave here for Charlotte at 9 a. ni. ahd retnrii aliont 9 p. m., leaving Charlotte on the retiirii trip about 4:30 111 the afternoon. hosp|_ perfectly normal, in- terdte AMl.^'with a grin, and owes her life to the heroic ac tion of Dr. Philip Manlnberg, chief obstetrican a t Borough Park, who would be the last one to admit it. The physician just shrugged his shoulders and said he had administered n o more than "routine” treatment last Monday when the baby was born—dead. The infant lay still, empurpl ed. with no heartbeat, no respir ation. She had been strangled by the umbilical cord in childbirth. Physicians in attendance moved swiftly. For eighteen fleeting minutes they labored, under the direction of Dr. Maninberg. First they ad ministered adrenalin injections. No reaction. Then alpha lobeline, a respira tory stimulant, was used. Still no effect—and the hands of the clock in the white-tiled delivery room moved on swiftly. Finally Dr. Maninberg forced a mixture of gases, including oxy gen, into the baby’s lungs. Then life began for Baby Beatrice Marie Sparagna. TWO WOMEN FOUND SLAIN IN RESIDENCE New York, April 1.—Two wo men—grandmother and grand daughter—were found slain in a humble Brooklyn home today. The grandmother, Mrs. Nora Kelly, 60, hung from a beam in a basement. Her IS-year-old granddaughter, Florence Mc'Vey. lay dead on a floor. A barking dog led Patrick Murray—Mrs. Kelly’s tenant—- to the gruesome discovery. He heard Mrs. Kelly’s collie barking and broke into the apartment .«-For Mom. 1 High Pofnt/^Aprft f.-PTMiJ partlcaUir sectfoa of iforth CUfo-: liiui—^the areai around Wlastop^ Sktea, High Point and QreeniH: boro, woo th« taitlal round ' of elimination of sites for the. pos sible future location of the movie industry when Fr^ A. Pelton, representative of the Association of Motion Picture Producers, vis iting here last night, declared that the triangular section be tween these three cities made an especial appeal to him. Mr. Pelton came here with Bruce Ethridge, director of the department of conservation and development, and Charles Pow ell, secretary to Governor Ehring- haus, and while here conferred with J. »P. Rawley, member of the conservation and develop ment board. , Discussing the state’s position as a location for the industry, Mr. Pelton said that the state franchise tax did not look so bad. Taxation, first, and then economy and labor costs and commodity costs will have pri mary bearing upon any decision which may be reached in Holly wood. His report on North Car olina will be made to the Associ ation of Motion Picture Produc ers. Rvgsf-'ltaga! •ClfpdOM, cbm •ofowm |Gh>ti SmI. Alt $«Meo wttfc S yMure QwUtors A|»8tro^ ■ ' ^qaality rag, C9uijB«nce ‘isiito Joir Bficee, aUo ttmw i '-Lkf;rk-Dowa Prarnltarw Co. 4-4-tt noowmrr m’HKfmm mvoour HERE’S A MAN who Confederate Vets To Hold Reunion In Amarillo, Tex. really stopped the. neigb- hing bin Nashville, April 1.—The 1935 reunion of the United Confeder ate veterans, Gen. Harry Rene Lee, adjutant chief-ot-staff, an nounced today, will be held Sep tember 3-6 at Amarillo, Tex. hors from mooching telephone service. If yoa are being bothered by bor rowers, you mig^t tiy the same trick I South East Public Service Co. >¥Fesh • Vure • Smeet DIXIE CRYSTALS Read Journal-Patriot ads. I SWEEfEST SUGAR EVER SOLD' Caldwell county 4-H club mem bers set 425 black walnut seed lings in early March. Cbiiean« HATURAL mi RATE Reins- Sturdivant Inc. THE FUNERAL HOME LICENSED EMBALMERS AMBULANCE SERVICE North Wilkesboro, N. C. Phones 85 - 228-M The proved power, speed, economy of the V-8 engine . . . plus improvements that make it a more rugged hauler than ever T he Ford V-8 Pickup has always been a car that could take punishment. Try this 1935 job—whether you -want something that will stand the abuse of farm work, or a tough, speedy unit for town hauling or use around a plant. This year, improvements have been added that enable you to use the Ford V-8 Pickup harder than ever—and to do it at less cost. Even the proved V- 8 engine has been made more economical, more dependable. It has new crankcase ventilation that rids the shaft that outwear forged steel. Thefront axleisstronger— 20%. The frame has been strengthened —'with a new X-member, double reinforced side rails, new cross members at front, center and rear. The chassis is mounted on the Ford Full-floating Springbase— giving more uniform tire wear, longer brake life, better brake action, improved over-all op^- tion, easier riding and hanming. Brakes and clutch are new- stronger, sure-acting, easier to engine of water vapor, minimiaes sludge, reduces oil dilution and corrosion. It has copper-lead connecting rod bearings that re sist burning and poun^g out. It has cast alloy camshaft and crank- operate. But the way to find outwhatthis new Ford V- 8 Pickup will do for you—and save for you—is to put it through a tough trial on your own job. Your Ford dealer will let you have one any time you say. IMMEDIATE DELIVERIES! aS-honepower, 8yUod«f V-^ eogine ... uses no more fuel caai • M**. laa NEW BRAKES Ctst wiioy troD drums. Rilxoolcd. iReioforced aninst *'Bell-oM)uth- lin|f. Longer Cved. Greatly strengtheoed by dual box section side rails to stand open' don under rough condidoos. 1 NEW CLUTCH "Ceocxiforce" doixn, prciiurc in* creases ss speed aovances. BIGGER TIRES —Onc.piece, welded steel spoke wheels. Laege, low.pressuse tires give greater tiac- tioii, easict ridiog. FUU TORQUE-TUBE DRTVH- Laavea springs fret to support load and cushion it tgainst road shodcs. STRADDU-MOUNTED DRIV. INC PINION-And « doetiot rear axle usurer long, iroubie-trce (Wica. LOAD SPACE— Langih SP usthes- Width 46 inches. Height U inches. Flart hoards hmd with tor kets for side racks. Bodf of araJded steel cottimetioa. PUICHASIS-Mar be msde on ForTnauct Plan. Oor ngedimeto *re tboi a«aon»priceB>_ Yadkifi Valley Motor Company ninth street NORTH WILKESBORO, N. CJ

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