Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / July 4, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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• 4 ■ ^ Vfj). l-l-iP'. ■ •N RArriB: & 92.00 pa* Year iBterrf «k ttM port (Mm at North WOkM- , N. C.. M Mcond dam natter wader Act 4. 187». THURSDAY, ^ULY 4, 1935 *l4dy Golfiva Shocki Broadaray.**—HeadUne. CSaaht Yoa reckon ahe waa smoking: a pipe?— XaloB Telefraph. . Yhe biologiata find a relation between brain- and dieat derelopment A wrestler who thouffat of something is a cynical sight.— ttchmond 'nmes-Dispatch. ' "Bine Bagle Substitute Taking Form.”— Head-line. It will probably resemble a hen rampant on a nest of code-storage eggs.—Mi st Herald. Rath says he nerer learned what "the vice presidency gag’’ was all abont. It Is a thing that has baffled better vice presidents than the Babe.—Atlanta Constitution. American youngsters can be thankful. Think of the trials of the French school kiddies In naming a'l the premiers.—Oil City (Pa.) Bllz- aard. “Those who have hobbies rarely go crazy,” asserts a psychiatrist. Yeah, but what about fhoee who have to live with those who have hobbies?—Mobile Register. All the youngsters with npsidedown stom achs seem to be cured. But how did that girl «ver turn out who went to the University of Chicago and felt herself getting Red?—^New Yorker. H. G. (“Outline of History”) Wells has an- Boonced that he finds the Roosevelt program **zestrictivc on the one hand and cAPonsive on the other.” That is what you might call the (dHmate outline of knowledge.—Philadelphia In- 4oirer. Independence Day It is just 160 years since that little gioup of men gathered in Indepen dence Hall in Philadelphia and affixed tlieir names to the document which Iftiinched the United States of America upon its venturesome course. To any etadent of history it must be clear that tliese signers of The Declaration of In dependence were those in whom two 'qualities of character predominated— determination and courage. As Benja min Franklin remarked, when he call ed upon all of those present to affix ilieir signatures to the Declaration: “If. we don’t hang together we will _jmrely hang separately/’ - - They literally took their lives in their hands, these rebellious subjects of the JKing of England who, as Woodrow '^Wilson phrased it, “felt themselves to be free men of England, and as free "Englishmen could not tolerate the . granny and oppression of the English King.'’ They had no distinct idea of found- iBg a new nation, these signers of The Declaration of Independence. They were the representatives of thirteen colonies, each of which had suffered jfrievances which its people could no longer bear, and each of which asserted ft* rights as a free and independent mation. They could not win that inde- sndence except by acting in common; but OB that Fourth of July, 1776, it is doubtful whether any of them looked /forward to anything more than a tem- ‘ porary alliance for war. The idea of a ted group of nations as a permanent ^institution had hardly been bom at that Be. From that little gathering in' Phila- owever, has arisen the richest ^tbe world piple of VcUuv acci the li cies indicate jJdlled in the first Ea]|r of 1936. ^ Thus it is seen that the number year corresponds with thd^Il%*t year. Fifteen thousand lacki^ree thousand of being half the number hilled year but we must consider in a compan* son of these flgures that the h^vy mo-, ^ring season is just beginning and‘the maximum number of cars will be speed ing over the highways during the lat ter half of the year. And strange as it ’ may seem, the heaviest accident toll is taken in the fall months. ‘f All this leads up to our_ which is the crusade the press nation is directing againrt carf tomobile driving fiiiHlWllilbile acci dents. In this up against a predict tha' public opi: tremenduo law and ma! heart of [ press is )ut we will t^ and that be swayed to such .a mt that fear irl^God, be instilled into the demons who ^make ;Yoiir Gar kwAtoo SAVi (. ;BE 1 BROOKS paths of slaughtel*Sii]ui£4hdiWif high ways built for service and convenience to the people of the greatest nation on earth. Many types of criminals are. to be found only in the lowest class of crimi nals who have little self respect and to ward whom the public has already for saken all semblances of truce. But the automobile killings represent an en tirely different problem. It is not only the low class of human beings who kill with automobiles, but we find the pros perous and popular youth as reckless and negligent of the rights of others just the same as the lowest class of the criminal element. This makes it more difficult for those whose rights have been trampled to find justice in the re course to courts and the law. But the time is rapidly approaching when the mass of public opinion will show no quarter to bad drivers, regard less of how much money and social po sition they may have to enjoy. Killings by automobiles should have already reached its zenith in the 36,- 000 killed on the highways last year but our prediction is that 1936 may set a new record that will represent a blotch on the record of the most high ly developed country in the world. Mustafa Kemal seeks to simplify the Turk ish language. Seems as if “gobble, gobble, gob ble” were down to the irreducible minimum.— Pontiac (Mich.) Press. As we understand it, crime wishes democ racy would oust yet another Mr. Hoover.— Dallas Morning News. Sunday School Lesson By REV. CHARLES E. DUNN , MOSES Lesson for July 7th. Exodus 24:3-8. Golden Text: Psalm 33:12. , Moses was one of the greatest leaders the world has ever seen. His people, exiled in Egypt, and pressed into compulsory building operations, needed a resourceful champion to arouse them, bind them together into a well integrated arm, and persuade them they could successfully escape. Such was Moses, God’s man of destiny. He was the third child of Joohebed who hid him three months that he might escape the death decreed by the king for male babies. Then placing him in a chest, or ark made of papyrus stalks, coated with slime, she set him afloat on the Nile, where he was discovered by Pharaoh’s daughter Thermutis. She had come to bathe in the sacred waters of the riv er, and her heart was touched with pity at the sight of the weeping babe. At once she took him home (.'here he became her adopted son, and received the education of an Egyptian prince. Thus he grew learned in the lore of the Egyptian tradition. Moreover, according to Josephus, he was appointed general of the Egyptian army, defeating the Ethiopians, and was slated to be king. But the privileges of the court and the army did not wean him away from his suffering peo ple. He remained a patriotic Hebrew with a capacity for righteous though overzealous in dignation. Excited by the sight of an Egyptian cruelly abusing a fellow Hebrew, be killed the tyrant, and hid his body in tfie sand. News of this marder reaching the ears of Phanioh, • MosM waa oompelkd to flee to, Midian,^t of I’ the Jordan, where he acqaired that dlselpliae, foiheart^to, and f)nt hand communion with God which stood him ta such good stead in the flight from Egypt .fi#: the^witdemess. What a prophetf Ai^ what a tai/giver! greatest "achievemiait wu to unite thd 1U|S in the worship of the **« God. -r Seven song bito^«kthfd “ClA Into Tour Oa|b||^4elightfaI picture sdhe4l(}ed for sho^ng at .tte New Orpbeuzd Theaffp^ Monday and Tueadih July and 9. The inimilabls^Al'Jolson-Is jarred oppoeiU^ Rnbwpj^ler in thl»-prod«ction, which is hailed nr. of the of tS aeason, Jolson, aeknowledgefi the giwa^/'..‘^B^my song^^ singeW of all times, introduces a new style sang bth the title ot “Mamd^, I’ll Sing a Song About Tou.^. g \ ^ PliOii* 335 p.' aPAui; fortb :of A gosOUne sta- OI^ RADIO tfeature BY LOMBARDO Colttin^ Changing 'hack to the bia Broadcasting System he first gained national Guy Lombardo and His Canadians will initiate a new half-hour program at 7 p. m. Eastern Standard Time on Mon day, July 8, The show, titled “Lombardo Road, The Highway to Happy Motoring,” will be broadcast over 36 stations cover ing the Atlantic seaboard and the south. ’The new program will present Lombardo music uninterrupted by any other type of entertain ment and will be marked by a new type of short commercial announcements. The Esso Mar keters are sponsoring the show. For the first time in radio his tory, a special stage set has been designed for the presentation of the program at the Columbia Playhouse, New York, where studio andiem^ •ktfir* witoert; the broadcast. Bng^e Duhkel, ? 9^^^HPnlflion acres of farm widely known sUtge designer,' lamHIim been destroyed by di^the a modefnfs- erorton in this country alone. . . M,-: Rumanfaa sdentists have found a way ot isolating pure nicotine solntion in concentra tions of SO to 80 per cent from waste tobacco. HOME MADE 15c MAYONNAISE 25c Tendi SSmt Cash & Carry l^r-Loiig Davis & Gn^any R.&0. Grocery Co. NOTICE North Carolina, Wilkes Coun ty- In the Superior Court. General Motors Acceptance Corporation vs J. L. Payne, et al. The defendant, J. L. Payne, will take notice that an action entitled as above has been com menced in the Superior Court of 'Wilkes County, North Caro lina, lor the purpose of recover ing a certain sum of money on a note, which note is set out in the complaint; and the said de fendant will further take notice that be is required to appear at the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Wilkes Coun ty, in the courthouse in Wilkes- boro, N. C. within Thirty days from the completion of this sum mons, and answer or demur to the complaint in said action or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This 26th day of June, 1935. C. C. HAYES, Clerk Sui»erior Court of Wilkes County, N. C. 7-18-4t See These Used Car PASSENGER 1 1934 Ford Tikk>r 1 1934 Ford V-8 Coape 1 1933 Ford DeL. V-8 Tudor 1 1933 Ford Coupe 1 1932 Ford DeL. Coupe 2 1933 Ford Tudors Values Before You Buy A Car or Truck: Sport ^1932 Chevr«det Roadster 1931 Ford Tudor 1930 Ford Coupes 1930 Ford Touring 1930 Chevrolet Sedan 1930 Chevrolet Coach 1929 Ford Coupe 1929 Ford Roadster 1929 Buick Sedan 1929 Chrysler Coupe COMMERCUL , 2 1934 Chevndet Pickups 1 1935 Ford Pickup 1 1934 Dodge Truck 1 1933 Chevrolet Truck 1 1932 Chevrolet Truck Yadkin Valley Motor Co. Ninth Street SALES SERVICE North Wflkesboro, N. C. Bny Your Used Car on the Easy Payment Plan of the Universal Credit Co. LEND US YOUR tank for 3 weeks * Thrt Good Gnlf- SSSwonteOid'* /- t ^ to frt f--
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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July 4, 1935, edition 1
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