Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / May 16, 1935, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
mm' M Mr Team Musk Recital At^ Wilketboro S^kool 'CSMif PItys Faultless It^ Drfeat Cu(^ia T^LMCaeNIne rHome^Clntr b«8«t>«ll players trned Into a real dlimoBd a> atlon bare Tawday aRer- erbea Uwy ^ayed errorless TBE JOUBNAL-PATRIDT, NQ^*Wn^]^80R0. N? ( iNewsTrffliiiBetliel “^felMLsd] and Mt bard to defeat eoli^^Tetta. Mnalc dspartmaat oP.f*''TP|lkee- boro blgb school, of which Mrs.!?*?? R. K. ProTOtte te Instrnetor and director, rendered a most de- H(httul ^recital atj^tlle school bsUdlng'^ on Monday ntpht. The following prograon was render ed: . Plhno Duo—“Melody In ' F’’, Rubinstein, Arthur Lowe, •*er, a number of the Western l.Can^a League, 5 to S In a as eat to uren inniaga M. oant (rf rain and wet greuads. 1 Crook atarted the stick work 'for the locals with a smashing 'circait drlre in the first inning wltSto all of Conorer’s scoring eag|a>'}ii the same frame, after 'Carmichael rattled down tfl'^dltlght hurling. Bush led in ter the locals with two out of three while Porky had a perfect dry tor the risitors with three doublea In as many chances. Score by innings: R. H. E. iM. Wll’boro 110 102 0—6 7 0 .ConoTer 300 000 0—3 6 3 Batteries: Carmichael, Icen- luur; Conover, Grider, Deal, Purky. Will Play Blanketeers The highlight of the season takes place this afternoon when Chatham Blanketeers come here for the first engagement of the 1835 season. The game this aft ernoon is between two evenly matched teams and there is riv alry in abundance to make the affair one of those long to be remembered by baseball fans of his city and adjacent communi ties. LUMBER WORKER TAKES OWN LIFE Raleigh, May 13.—G. W. Ear ly. of Wake county, 45-year-old lumber worker and father of five children killed himself with a shotgun, near here today. He laid his money, knife and other personal effects with a note to his brother by his side, then used a forked stick to trip the trigger of his new shotgun. The discharge passed through his left side. Plano Duo — "Swiss Music Box,’* Heins, Emily McCoy, Mrs. Prevette. Songs—“Believe Me If All Thora Endearing Young Charms,’ Sidney; “Go Lovely Flower", Lemare, High School Chorus. Piano Solo—i“NarclBaus,” Ke vin, Bonnie Bumgarner. Plano Duet — “Arabesque," Lack, Vecle Anderson, Mrs. Pre vette. Piano Duos — "Dreaming,” Pauline Mathis; "Walt*," Vena May Glass. Vocal Solo—"The Voice of the Deep Blue Sea,” Clarke, Howard Pharr. Plano Solo—"Bagatelle In A Minor", Beethoven, George Ogll- vie. Vocal Solo—"That Wonderful Mother of Mine," Goodwin, M. G. Edwards. Plano Solo—“Glittering Rain drops,” Korns, Mary Ix>uise Clements. Piano Duet—“The Shepherd’s Song”, Brahms, Madge Jennings, Arlee Broyhlll. Plano Solo—“Caprice,” As- tenius, Lillian Linney. vocal Solo—“Whisper and 1 Shall Hear.” Plccolomini, Marie .Miller. Piano Solo—“Spanish Dance," Moskowski, Ruth HuJcher. Piano Quartette—“When the Lights Are Low,” Englemann, Irene Phillips, Alma Dennis, An na l^ura Hulcher, Iva Faw. Vocal Solo—“A Gypsy Maiden I,” Parker, Violet Erickson. Piano Solo—“Moonlight On the Hudson," Coombs, Eda Phil lips. Piano Duo—‘Waltz In G Flat,’ Chopin, Tom Story, Mrs. Pre vette. Vocal Solo—“Little Boy Blue," Elkin l/.- iK^RONDA, Route i, Aprils The pulpit was filled here at the chureh hbth teturdey .atfemooa at 8 o’clock ud Sunday mom- ins by the paidor, Rev. R. -‘-J. Pardue. Several visUors worship ed with n> Sunday. Probably the Mrs.^ oldest mother,who wae preeent, was the maternal'^ srBAflmPther of the paetor, Mrs. Hembrie, of near Macedonia. Mr. Perdue • took for bis sub ject, “The tundamcnUl duty of man,” ralecting his text ^-frojn John 6:27-29. Sunday evening at 8 o’clock C. W. Gilliam preached an im pressive sermon to a good con gregation. His subject' being “Greater Love,” reading a part of the ISth chapter of John and taking his text from the 12th verse. There was a good attendance at Sunday school. More mothers were present than had been in quite a little while. An offering was given for the Baptist Hos pital at Winston-Salem. Miss Ethel Harris visited her grandmother at Pall Creek last Sunday. Mrs. C. W. Gilliam. Sr., ac companied Mr. and Mrs. Wm. T. Morrison to the funeral of Mrs. Emma Mathis Walker, that was held today (Monday) at Pleas ant Grove church at eleven o’ clock a. m. Mrs. Walker was the wife of the late William Walker and a sister of Mesdames John Mc Bride, Wm. T. Morrison and J. P. Mathis, of near here, to whom we extend our sympathy. Miss Elenoir Melton spent last week-end at Ronda with her friend and school mate, Miss Joyce Jones. Mrs. W. A. Pardue has been right sick for the past week, but is better, we are glad to note. A good many of our people are enjoying the commencement exercises at the closing of Hon da high school. There are three from this section who are mem bers of the senior class: Misses Mozelle Burchett, Opal Mathis S|i^ Mhy 14.—The igU of edneatfon, in" Aight elected ti’ lAc M f snpwfntcB-^ at of the rahoola in Elkin dia- to auceped Walter R. Seb- aff who declinadti to serve anoth er year In that rapadty. -- the incoming anperintendent^ a graduate of Elon Cal|eg^-"1wB had ten sneoeBaful yrafe in pub lic school work ^ and bears jthp. highest ,^oraenieats of edhof. tlonal authorities in the niim^ ous fields in he hiss Mr. McAdams is a fornief.pria-- cipal of the North . Wilkes^'o city schools. During ’'the past few years he has been ^ncipal of Mountain Park high school. Dirt Fnnaera From 2B SUIn At CnciUl To Ask EztonaM of AAA ^Washington, May II,—ficores^ of weather-worn diri farmers from, more than 26 ^states began aasemhilngnin Washington to- Roliof Drivro s l#.^With tonight ingnin ws a , Washington, May _ ;7S' per cent of the conntTf al ready surveyed quick action, is expected from the rural electrifi- ratlon section of the $4,600,060,- bave been sidmiftted to jtkivjWy Division of Applications fonnatfea for preUAiBarf^i prorah to show 6,>BgflS($ and bnsiness criHcs that agriChE era mnts the farm adlnstment act, continned. a H, Day, Tex., un- otfldal Irader of the pllgrimaget' Mtlmated that more- than S0I^ taraieta w«re ^ the capital to- The. vlMtttsds rapnted iven special trafna; each eayiy-. IsB around flO fanrafp. as fcli^ ^uM to ain^ve here tetween 7 determinaUonBooo work raliet drive. Morris L. Cooke ssld today. He said that.-fonr piojecU, the first of which the government hopes to supply lights and?power . to :i,OOP,000 farm Jimhes,--al^dy V ' t'M Bartnukd Siwll Attncka- The Affaiiiiaistettiaii Washington. Mayns.—In ons Director {'Of the sharpest Republican at tache OB the New Danl this saa- siOB, iDaority Leader Bertrand Snell warnpd in the hoole today that ’'disaster is Imj^mllBi^ un less nationar credit is stahfllned. and 9 o'doc|t. tgmolSoir ^r morn ing. Personal Service . BUI Of . Aaaembly is Over $170,000 Raleigh, May 12.—The 1936 North Carolina general assemb ly, which adjourned Saturday afternoon, cost the state about $170,796.30 in personal service though the entire legislative ap propriation was only $158,000, it was indicated today. The auditor’s office reported It has already Issued vouchers for $170,796.30 with a "few odds and ends” of personal service still to be added and no print ing bills were included. Printing usually costs about $25,000 a session. The 1935 lawmakers wrote 1,345 new laws and 66 joint resolutions into the statute books. In 1933 there were 1,- 406 new laws and 64 resolu tions. Delegatea from*. North "Caro lina, said 1,600 famera flfooi that state would be here for to morrow’s^ mass meeting. Fifty, arrived today from South Da kota. One was here from Mtm- tana and said 12 others will Jobs him. -'S SuprMB* Court To Medf- - i btoh Monilay UntU Janie Washington, Supreme court without taking case "phraslere May 13.—The recessed today action on the lemke’’ of farm 'No nmttcr orbat to vafaM, your hfomele your most ia^xiftent inweatmeot. TliePa vdiy yoa riibtild Mfegnard it by needed repairs witlioat delay. Crasli Injures 3 Concord, May 13—Three Kan napolis young people were in jured, one critically, in an auto mobile accident about midnight Saturday near Jackson training school. The injured are N. T. Wilkinson, Jr., Miss Mattie Sides and the latter’s sister, whose name was not learned. m'ortgages and the National Re covery Act. The court announced that It win meet each Monday until June, when it will end its term. The two New Deal test cases will doubtless be decided on one of those days. Child Is Killed 13.—Jean- Fayetteville, May ette Faulkner, two-y ear-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Faulkner, was fatally injured beneath the wheels of a truck driven by her father at the Fay- text mill village this afternoon. The father, an employe of the mill, was hauling cotton for the factory and had stopped at his home for lunch. Apparently the little girl was under the truck when he started to drive away from the house, and a rear wheel passed over her body. THI NATIONAL HOUSINO Mt makea it poMtt)ie for yon to borrow Cram $100 to $2000 for the work and pay it ba^. in eBay monthly installments r«tm>gng over a period ae long at 36 months. This is your opportunity to have your houae re-roofod with Dependable Carey Shingles on the most favoraUe terms ever offered. Let us nplein bow easy it is to have this woric done NOWl • Wilkesboro Mfg. Co, ■ t ■Vi- ROOFINGa £ SHINCLES^’^sg.^ STANDARD TOR OVER (50 YEARS Facts And Briefs Whales are estimated to live np to a thousand years. Australian sea turtles live to n period of 800 years. ^_Elephants are estimated to up to one hundred years. Crocodiles i n their native aunts live up to 1,000 years, pike, 30 years; salmon, 16 '^ears. Eagle lives up to 100 years. Stag at 50 years. Kevin, Agnes Pearson. Piano Solo—“Second Mazur ka," Godard, Virginia Laws. Piano Duo—"Country G a r- dens,” Grainger, Mildred Smiih- ey, Mrs. Prevette. Song—"Come Where the Li lies Bloom,” Thompson, High School Chorus. We Shall Not Sleep By Lieut. Col. Dr. John McCrae "In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row. That mark our place; and In the sky The larks still bravely singing fly. Scarce heard amidst the guns below. We are the dead; Short days ago we lived. Felt Dawn, Saw sunset glow. Loved and were loved. And now we lie In Flanders fields. Y OU can depend on the per- fonnance of Superfex, die oil burning refrigerator. It is dtsigmed es^cialiy for tae in yostr bom hs]tbt eostntrj, and operatea -without outside power. Just fill the small reservoir with kero- •eoe, then light it and leave it. nh^ut two hours, die' burners out automadcally, and you I refirigeradon for 24 hours, out bother or worry. A full r of effident refrigeration for I than $10! ?wsdiout the Take up our quarrel with foe; To you from falling hands We throw the torch— Be yours to hold it high; If ye break faith With us who die. We shall not sleep, though pop pies grow In Flanders fields.’’ We Can't Underatand It iSuperfex your foods are alway* and wbolesome. Soperfex t^ves you plenty of large ice ' . You can depend on fewer of toil in the kitchen ... steps to take while pre- Bg meals, because your foods I within easy reach. dependable Superfex is table in five models. Ask ay about the one that suits hesc A demonstration will : obligate you. H RALPH DUNCAN Dealer in Electrical Supplies at Coatractor—Radios and SnM>tiea .St Delco-Licht Plants. Parts North WUkesboro, N. C. lUPERFEX o'^ According to Roger Babson and other authorities on busi ness conditions througnout the nation, everything apparently is on the up-grade. There are many millions of dollars more in bank deposits to day than there were a year ago. Retail business, during the past two months, is said to have been better than at any time since 1931. Insurance companies are re porting big gains in the volume of business they are doing. There are many more people employed in mills and factories than there were a couple of years ago. And yet— There are almost twice as many people on relief today as there were a year ago. There is something decidedly wrong somewhere, and we are frank in saying that the whole thing is beyond us. We just nat urally can’t grasp its meaning.— Carl Goerc n. In The State, May 4. (Publication requested by Miss Ruth Linney). Kiaaes While Driving Worth $10 in Greenfield Greenfield, Mass.—You kiss while you’re driving, and the fine Is $10 In Franklin county. That was the experience of Robert Denniston of Burlington, Me., who, according to Police Chief Edward J. Redmond, kiss ed a woman companion at inter vals of about a mile and a half while driving along the highway. Denniaton was fined $10 in Diatriet Court for driving wlth- and Wayne Stroud. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Osborn, of Jonesville, spent last week-end with Mrs. Osborn’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Yancy Harris, here. Mrs. Bryant, who makes her home here with her daughter, Mrs. N. E. Burchett, has been right sick but Is improving some, her friends will be glad to know. “Grandma Bryant” as she is af fectionately called. Is near 90 years of age but has been able to be up and walk around in the house and yard most all the past winter. Mrs. J. B. Green visited her mother, Mrs. William Gray, near Pleasant Grove for a while last Sunday. ' -'HP Mr. and Mrs. Henry Groce, of near Fall Creek, Yadkin County, Osborn, near here. They came visited Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Mel ton the first Sunday. Mrs. Whit- ker is the mother of Mesdames Melton and Groce. She has just returned from Georgia where she spent the past winter. Mrs. Clinton Baldwin has been ill for several days but is some better, we are glad to state. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Armstrong, .Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ferlazzo, of Winston-Salem, and Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Gilliam, of Jonesville, all were the guests of their mother, Mrs. C. W. Gilliam, last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong came In time for service at the church. Miss Francis Gilliam, of Jones ville. visited her aunt, Mrs. J. T. Triplett, here last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stenson and little son, Orville, of Elkin, were the Sunday guests of Mrs. Sten- 8on*8 parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Orsborn, near here. They came with Mr. and Mrs. Osborn ^to church Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Spaman Dobbins, of Elkin, attended service here at the church last Sunday morn ing, going from here to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Worth Sales, near Brier Creek, where they were invited for dinner. Elmer Morrison and some of his friends went to Jonesville Sunday evening to be present at the baccalaureate sermon that was delivered by Rev. Mr. Whls- enant, of'Elkin, to the gradu ating class and a well filled au ditorium. Elmer is a junior in high school there this year. A number from here went to Ronda Sunday afternoon and en joyed the fine sermon rendered by Rev. W. E. Linney, of W31- kesboro to the senior class there, which numbers 42. This is the largest class ever finished at Ronda high school. Mrs. Bryant Gray and chil dren, of Pleasant Grove, recently visited her brother, Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Pardue, and family here. Let RHODES-DAY Transform Your Porch Into a Summer Living Room IJEAUTIFY your porch ... in the most comfortabfo’And pleasing man- ner so that you may enjoy the hot days that are ahead .. . Plan now for delightful warm weather hours at leisure . . . sewing, reading, enttr- taining your friends on your pordu Again this season we are featuring' outstanding lines of Gliders, Porch Sots, Rockers and Chairs. Bunting Gliders oat n Itranra. Girl Seriously Hurt Hickory, May 13.—Miss Inez Bumgarner, 18, near Catawba, is in the hospital here In a critical condition as the result of in juries she suffered today when she fainted and struck her bead on a wood raw that was in opo- Am:: We have secui’ed the agency of one of the finest makes of gliders to be found on the market . . . the faanous BUNTING GLIDER. This glider has sev- sral features not found in any other glider. bearing ... stabilization .. . rubber shoes to keep it from slipping on your floor. See the BUNTING be fore making your purchase. $14-75 to $22.50 BEACH CHAIKS Hardwood, with arms and kidney straps. Special Price $1.50 WITHOUT ARMS - $1-25 PORCH SETS Phree-piece suite .consisting of settee, rocker and chair. Hardwood (maple)— $16i5 Swing to match included with let for $21.50 M PORCH ROCKERS Decorated and plain ... a fine selection from which to choose the rockers youlike— $1.75 up 6x9 GRASS RUGS ble-w see $1.75 We have a beautiful line of double-warped grass rugs, and we invite you“to see them—^ 9x 12 \SAVE MONEY ON YOUR SUMMER FURNITURE AS WELL AS OTHER ARXICXES FOR THE HOME BY TRADING WITH US. WE GIVE A LIBERAL DISCOUNT FOR CASH, OR LIBERAL TERMS IP YOU DESIRE. ' rm- es^ NINTH NOra-WOKBSPWM), N. C. j:. ].
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 16, 1935, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75