M9per
W|-imCt ^ j~u II II !■ - ' _'■■■■■ Jl^y# fjOTl VIWII AsBUIW r a
? trMT DoiiteA - ■" for; Other News Pur-
ibyter-jMjrrtl* Chareh left last week for ^-| leiur Cooummity
w«h frlonds «lS.
at the Prwbyter-
Mra.''l^ M
taw days irtth friends
Va,
C.
mr.
Miss Klrkman’s sister, Mrs
Oray. is y^t- Bryan- Hlcfinn* ,:(
~ Misses Thelma, Rose and Vir
ginia Laws and Mrs. L.' O.
Critcher, of MoraTlan Falls, left
Wednesday to spend seToral days
In Washington, D. C. and New
relatlyes In Richmond, Va.
^i^myra, Md.
C. N. Myers, of Elkin,
his father, Mr. J. I. Mj-
Btjiinday,
|^r..H. B. Keck, of Greenville.
|nt ^he week-end here
l^«dk and children.
with Miss Audrey Miller, memoer. neti. oi ueorgeiown, o. Bimui. ymui o»m *.«7 vo...,,',.
of The Wilkes HosplUl nursing Wednesday night with their sis- vatlons to the grave. “I am not
. ..... . « 1 . . ew wwv m Vrit.... Bwvetldev a# wKoi T WAS A>lArAJMl
slth' Mrs.
A. R. Gra
Mr.' and
ave as
. Mrs B M. Snead, of returned from her va-
>k. Va., spent last week
River and a visit to friends in
Winston-Salem.
Master H. C. Ewing, Jr.,
Snead’s sister,
R. Or^-wlll
Ir. and
thjpf gnest this il^-end Tuesday for his home at
^ - wk/%e>f XTAVDa Vo • AftAr
-Leili
Roy S. Thomas, of
r-D. Henry, of Marlon,
.1 weOk-end here with his
^Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hen-
^S. S. Jennings is a pa-
_ Statesville hospital,
where ma was to undergo an
operatlo^^lils morning.
Miss Bess BreyBove, of- Dnr-
yiam, is a guest tf^week Af’i^ll38
Sink. Miss and
Sink are classmates at
Jreensboro College.
Attorney J. H. Burke, of Tay-
‘ loraville. Attorney J. E. Hol-
shouser, of Boone, Attorney B.
-tj. Brock, of Mocksville, and At-
_tomey Archie Elledge, of Win-
! Bton-Salem, have been profes-
[aional business visitors to Wilkes
court this week.
WANT ADS
wanted — Small .\partment;
close in. Phone or write Tho
Journal-Patriot. 8-81t-pd
LOST DOG—Lost in town, white,
black and grey. Solid grey
head. Female. Any Informa
tion will be appreciated. I. M.
Eller. 8-5-tf
WANTCai TO SELL—.\ntiqae
GIms and China. All articles
in perfect condition and low In
price. The Book & Gilt Shop,
MeAanine Floor Rhodes-Day
Furniture Co.
Any size developed
I and printed, 30c per
roll, cash with order. One diamond
print free with each roll. Elstra
prints, 3e each. Tunnell's Studio,
“ Station Bldg., North Wilkes-
N. C. 8-11-tf
PEACHES
Wigh quality canning Peaches
for sale; Elberta, Hale, Brackett
and other varieties.
C H. OPITZ, Oakwoods, N. C.
Indigesdoii?
1 you have never tried R-149,
famotLS remedy that has
so snccessfv-.’ in thous-
of homes for the past forty
^ J, If you suffer from Indl-
' prntinn. Gas, Headache, Nausea,
iiXMsainees, Overeating and Drink
ing, try a bottle and be convinc-
"Cd. Bold In 50c and 25c sizee at
'Horton Drug Co., Rexall Drug
; 8to««, Brame Drug Store and
Drug Co.
|)|bUlNA6Mel
iMAfiiHE-
Miss Thelma Kltkman and
im •‘Barbara Hunt have retnrn-
M, and Mra v wdiiaerfnl ienhona. leaving Sun^ Ij! and. dlgnltledly and Wimams
of their ^Jiomee In Greensboro ^ revlval-at LeFU a*wettlng his with a good deal of
*MShto5. Fork church. The pastor tt ruh^l gusto. He was in shouting mood
with relatives here.
Messrs. R. J. and B. W. Robl- guarded his statement, hut bis
member nett, of Georgetown, S. C.' spent pastor said he carried no reset-
_ _ . ... ... Ai .1..^^^... ItT ^^4
left
New-
mnaSfw
troubld thof he ms pre
taluMhisowshK.^a
iad «SMA*»EXanel 9of
i^f thot he now eota ow*
mino^ likes ond con hordly
H- to be troej
port News, Va., ■ after a two
months visit here with his grand
parents, Mr. a^ Mrs. C. L.
Sockwell.
Dr-, and Mrs. R. P. Casey have
as dSfests in their home Mrs. T.
E. Ctehran, of Newell, Mrs. R.
W. Mtchell and Mrs. Luke
QueV, both of Charlotte. Mrs.
'OoAran is the mother of Mrs.
Casey.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. O’Daniel
and son, Rufus, and daughter,
Ella Mildred, of Carlisle, S. C.,
are here for a visit of several
days with Mr. and Mrs. O. C.
Holcomb. Mr. O’Daniel is a bro
ther of Mrs. Holcomb.
Mr. and Mrs. T. I. Caudill, of
Burkevllle, Va., and daughter,
Mrs. Nannie Rotenbury and chil
dren, Tommie, Ruth, Virginia,
Jimmie and Paul Rotenbury,
have been visiting in the home
of J. A. Caudill and family for
several days.
Little -Miss Sue Queen Hender
son, daughter of Attorney and
Mrs. B. T. Henderson, of Wins
ton-Salem, returned home Sun
day after spending a month with
her aunt, Mrs. T. M. Whitting
ton, at her home on Hinshaw
street.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lanier, of Na
thans Creek, attended the funer
al of her sister, Mrs. Nancy Cau
dill, at Liberty Grove Saturday
and is spending a few days in
the home of Mr. John A. Caudill
and family, of North Wllkesboro
route 1.
>?rs. W. B. Henry and daugh
ter, -Miss Georgia Henry, of Tar-
boro, and Mrs. Henry’s sister,
Mrs. G. M. Moses, of Narcosse,
Fla., are spending sometime at
the Henry cottage on the Brushy
Mountain. .Mr. Henry has just
returned to Tarboro after being
up for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. V. C. McLain
and children, of Los Angeles,
California, left Friday morning
for De.Moines, Iowa, after visit
ing for ten days in the homes of
Mrs. Jack McLain, Mrs. Ella Mc
Lain and Mrs. J. F. Jordon. Mr.
McLain is a brother of the late
Jack McLain, who was killed in
a wreck in May.
LAST HOPE FOR BONUS
THIS YEAR IS BLASTED
Washington, Aug.
reXPiANATlON
sBlWBO-Rex is an antacid treat-
oent that’s different from the
By other Ineffective tteat-
BtB you have tried. It acts
_ • Wys to give you a new kind
relief from acid indigestion,
grkbvyn and other acid stom
ps ponies.
gmo^Bex neutralizes acid, re-
omacb of gas, soothes
,.jkted stomach membranes
d4s digestion of foods that
at likely to lerment. Bls-
sold only at Rexall
Get a Jar today at
oro
> jjjPw
ment of the bonus were planning
to attach their proposal, in
amendment form, to the tax bill.
Such action would have caused
long and heated debate.
The Democratic steering com
mittee took cognizance of this
threat at a meeting today. Its
members are a small group of
senators, headed by Democratic
Leader Joseph T. Robinson, who
map the policy of the majority.
What they arrived at was a com
promise.
In return for abandoning the
fight for this session of Con
gress, the veterans’ bloc will be
assigned a definite dey in the
next Congress—sometime in Jan
uary—in which to bring up a
bonus bill.
Most members of the bonus
bloc seemed satisfied. Among
those who were not was Senator
Elmer Thomas (D), Okla. He
said the fight would continue. In
reply, Robinson announced that
if the veteran's bloc Insisted on
trying to attach their plan to the
tax bill, he had been authorized
by the steering committee to
move to table the bonus bill.
That would be a polite and rain
less way of killing it.
Revival Heetiiigi
. Q tor. of GfAnvill
Grmim Columbus. .t»4ra«l In
tbo eleetricj^halr today to d^
Levi GrM» autstad the sUy deeimafed
Rot.'A. W„ Eller
;ai^ meettag at ' Haw
fwOek and i plreaclied
In
._ a it' Both young blacks‘.went deay-
BOpe fng their gulR, Waller, the eld-
soitte er, declaiing .bis innoosnee aniet-
B.
lO BimrE W I^TITCM Mvwa* « y*«avaaa» w-V
Fork ehureh. The pMtor tt gaeto. He was in shouting mood
ning tho mtmrng. The'^Nfckr Hope and in an evangelistic derror In-
T. P. U. went to Pilgrlhi to yftlng the specutors to meet him
after- on the other side. Theeo lookera-
on would have felt better if at
Jess Watts, of least one of them bad admitted
week-end his guilt. -
Waller ' appeared to have
give a program
noon.
Hr. and Hrs
Hickory, spent the
ter, Mrs. W. T. Eller.
Mr. and Mrs. Landen Crane,
of Maple Springs, spent part of
the week here visiting relatives
and attending the meeting.
Mrs. Claud McNeill, of Elkin,
spent some time with her broth
ers, Messrs. C. C. and Joe Hayes,
last week.
Miss Elma Blackburn, o f
Jonesville, returned home Sun
day after spending some time
with her uncle and aunt. Rev.
and Mrs. P. C. Watts.
Mrs. Delphian Crame was burled
at New Hope Wednesday. Rev.
Levi Green and A. W. Eller had
charge of the funeral. There was
a large crowd of relatives and
friends present.
N,
C. Legion Men Select
Daniels As Their Chief
Fayetteville, Aug. 6—American
Legionnaires of North Carolina
ended their seventeenth annual
convention here today after
electing Josephus Daniels, Jr., of
Raleigh, state commander.
Daniels, son of the U. S. am
bassador to lilexico.vwss chosen
by acclamatioh. He succeeds Hu
bert E. Olive, of Lexington.
The delegates sel««ted Ashe
ville for their 1936 convention
after Winston - Salem Legion
naires had campaigned intensive
ly for next year’s meet.
Vice commanders elected to
day were Burgin Pennell, of
Asheville; W. T. Dowd, of San
ford, and Junius H. Rose, of
Greenville, Fennel and Dowd
were elected without opposition.
Rose defeated Harry G. Green-
leaf, of Elizabeth City, by a Vote
of 138 to 25.
A. R. Newsome, of Raleigh,
was elected historian; Louis L.
Rochelle, of Oteen, judge advo
cate, and Eugene Alexander, of
Manchester, chaplain.
Auxiliary Officers
Mrs. R. S. McLeland, of Wil
mington, was" chosen president of
the Legion Auxiliary.
The five vice presidents were:
Mrs. Clay Hundley, of Reids-
ville; Mrs. Marvin Revel, of Wil
mington; Mrs. Herbert W. White,
of Fayetteville; Mrs. C. P. An
drews, of Charlotte, and Mrs. C.
M. Taylor, of Oteen.
Mrs. M. E. Shumway, of Lex
ington, retiring president of the
Auxiliary, was elected national
committeewoman. Other officers
were: Mrs, L. W. Davis, of Wil
mington, ^aplain; Mrs. J. L.
Wester Jr., of Henderson, ser
geant-at-arms, and Miss Bernice
g Demo- Turner, of Statesville, historian.
,, , J * oil The legion convention resolv-
cratic leaders today killed off all ” , * „ ,
chance of passing a soldier bonus unanimously to ask immedl- ..
bill this session of Cpngress, and service ju^ns may come from the student
thereby blasted away the biggest certificates by the federal gov- ..hnnl or the
thereby blasted away the biggest nimseir, me .aw ^
obstacle to early Senate approval ernment It was decided also to under whom he studies,
of the Roosevelt tax measure. replace the state’s athletic offl- ^nd they are to tell what kind of
the Roosevelt tax measure. , ana u.ey a.c lu ic.
Advocates of immediate pay- ^er with a three-naan commission „„rk the student is doing. If the
tn Yui flnnnintpn hv the Btate iViof fhla xtrfsrV is
Two Bom To Death
Savannah, Ga., Aug. 6.—Two
persons were burned to death to
day in an automobile accident
near Midway, 30 miles south of
here, Mrs. Blanche Poore, 2 Bull
street, Charleston, S. C., has
been identified as one of the
Tictlnu of the accident. One oth-
er woman, ae yet unidentified te
Ston. i.4ead, and a ehUd la daneronsly
MBfnred, .
to be appointed by the state
commander.
Daniels was elected &s a dele
gate to the national convention
to be held at St. Louis along
with J. M. Caldwell, and Hubert
Olive, of I.«xlngton; J. F. Beas-
ly, of Carthage: Dixie Moore, of
Kinston; J.-J. Burney, of Wil
mington; J. D. Maddry, of Rich
Square, and B. A. Pennington, of
Oteen.
3—-Dortch Wt3r
lor, of Granville, and Taft WH
plete death'row at the^ state’s
prison, which colony
not
guilty of what I was charged
with,” he'said, which might have
meant that he was in some wise
mixed up with the crime. The
minister said he bad made no
such admission, but forthright
declared bis complete Innocence.
Maanfactnred Ecstocy
Williams made his disclaimer
in a manufactured ecstacy. He
walked gingerly to the chair and
when asked if he wished to say
anything he chanted his confes
sion of faith. He was anxious to
meet all and sundry in the next
world. He bad cast his entire
hope on his newly found redeem
er, he asked prayer and pity for
his “old mother.” He was not
guilty of the crime.
Both men were convicted of
murder. Waller of his farm
neighbor in Granville, with
whom he had quarreled, by
whom he had been ordered away
and to whom he returned later
with a shotgun to fire into the
house occupied by the white
man. The victim almost made the
infuriated fellow miss fire, but
there was deadliness even in the
struggle to knock down the gun
to get the load into the thigh and
Wallers’ enemy died. Despite the
meekness of the murderer today
there was a feeling that his phys
ical power would have been
enough to beat the White man.
Witnessed by Woman
The double execution was wit
nessed by local editor Olivia
Glascoe of the Carolina Tribune,
a Raleigh weekly negro news
paper.
Here was the first request ever
made by a negro girl to witness
an execution. Twelve years ago
white women often attended
felectrocutlons and once in 1923
there were 10 women at the cere
mony. Amc-'g them was the vic
tim of the criminal assault for
which the prisoner was dying.
Bar Aspirants To Face ^
Stringent Regulations
Raleigh, Aug. 5. — Higher
scholastic and professional stand
ards, an apprenticeship in the
applications, and denial of en
trance into the law' profession
after disbsrment are features of
the newly promulgated rules of
the North Carolina State Bar,
incorporated, which were an
nounced today.
The profession undertakes a
supervlsorshlp 'while the study
goes on. The law license which
the candidate undertakes to win
is conditioned on three years of
study and during that time the
state board of law examiners
may require reports from the
prospective applicant. These re-
himself, the law school, or the
Detroit Butchers Appeal
To AAA In Buying Strike
Detroit, Ang. 5—Harassed De
troit butchers want the agricul
tural adjustment administration
to explain existing meat prices
to the army of women whose
buying strike has cost them
thousands of dollars In spoilage
and lost sales.
“Housewives are naturally up
set over _hlgh prices,” Emil
Schwartz, director of the Nation
al Association of .^Retail Meat
Dealers, said today, “but we are
going to try to get a government
man in here to give an official
explanation.”
Both dealers and packers have
asserted repeatedly since the
boycott was begun two weeks
ago by several hundred hair-
pulling, face - slapping women
pickets, that AAA processing
taxes are largely responsible for
the prices which the strikers de
mand be reduced at least 20 per
cent.
Sehwarti predicted th%t al
most all Detroit- hatcher shops
would he closed after ITinrsday
unlsss the strike were termlnat-
board decides that this work is
not satisfactory, that it does not
comply with the rules, it may
deny the applicant credit for
such work or it may teke^ such
other action as ‘ seems appropri
ate.
Each person seeking to pass
the examination which is to be
held in August. 1938, or any ex
amination thereafter, must have
received a standard four-year
■high school education or its
equivalent. After 1940 and be
ginning with that date, prior to
the beginning of the study of
law, the candidate must have
completed at a* sUndard college
at least two years of work re
quired In the bachelor’s degree
at the university of whateirer
state he is a resident. In North
Carolina the University of North
Carolina would be the standard.
Planet Bump In Landing
Chicago, Aug. 4.—Two men
were killed and two others in
jured today when two airplanes
dropping down in suburban La
Grange collided and plummeted
100 feet to the ground.
John D. Harvey, 36. of Glen
coe, sales manager for the Bur
dick Enamel Sign company, was
dead when dragged from the
wreckage of the rented ship he
was piloting! ,
Kermit Hobbs his friend .and
passenger In "* the plane, died
shortly afterward : In^Hlnsdkle
sanitarium.
al Bl«^
Jaraft'A-
25c Extra
Nei'^Tork. Aa*. ' 5,.^^'^tieriil
Motoi^;%rporatlon, world’s larg
est automobile company," today
ordered a distribatlon .of $83,-
036,000 to sto^boldera, bring
ing the total dividend 'declari
ationi this year to 164,376,000.,
Directors doubled the preVlouc
annual rate by placing the eom-
mon stock on s |3 annual baais^^
In addition to declaring a 50-^
cent quarterly they ordered a 26-
ceatv extra, and President Alfred
P, .Sloan Jr., said the Increased
cate reflected “the financial po-
sUtlbn of the corltoratlon, the
current rate of earnings, and thq
futnre trend, ao far as that can
ever be discerned.” ^ ,
preach at Pender Prlmi-
tlve Baptist .^c^chl Si^Biiay,
Angoat 10,jiM'i M o’ei
puhlio.is if9ted
n»rine cables, over
^les ot telephone wt
Oe^OO^iMlbe'^f loleSMi
‘Tu-the4Mch;; 901, PnasMl
Bjr House, la Sent to Senate
Washington,* Ang. 6.—Presi
dent Roosevelt’s plan for ahartng
the wealth by increasing taxes
on corporations and rich indlvi-
dnals passed the House today.
It. now goes to the Senate.
Once the bill is acted upon
there, the chief obstacle to early
adjournment i of the Seventy-
fourth Congress will be removed.
The vote was 282 to 96.
After weeks of bickering the
House approved a bill that will
yield about 1260,000,000 a year
to’ the treasury. For a govern
ment that is spending at the
rate of $26,000,000 a day, this
measure will pay federal expens
es for about ten days.
Republicans made a last-ditch
fight against the measure just
before it passed the House. Rep.
Allen Treadway, of Massachus
etts, knowing he was gqing to
he defeated, offered a motion to
recommit the bill to the , ways
and means committee—a parlia
mentary device that kills legis
lation if it succeeds. Tbe''. Demo
cratic majority, flllhig virtually
every seat on their side of the
chamber, defeated the little knot
of Republicans across the aisle.
This tax bill is ImposM on the
top level of American incomes,
and nowhere, except indirectly,
does it affect a man earniifg less
than $50,000 a year. The normal
income tax rate of four per cent
remains unchanged for persons
in the low and middle brackets.
These new taxes will be paid by
only about 8,000 Americans.
ETHIOPIA NOT READY
TO GIVE UP LIBERTY
9ni|,9bediat
momcement
TO THE AUTOMOBILE OWNERS
OF WILKES COUOTY:
We wi^ to annoonce that we have
opened a service garage in the Poindex
ter Bnilding on Gordon Avenue (near
Hotel Wilkes). We are in position to
do . . .
ALL KB®S OF AUTOMOBILE
B#AIR WORK
on any make of car or truck, and we
most respectfully solicit, your patron
age.
We specialize in WASHING , GREAS
ING and POU5HING.
Save on your service work by investi
gating our price. Every job guaran
teed to give satisfaction.
Joe Barber’s Service Clarage
Phone 84
JOE BARBER, Owner
Gordon Avenue
Addis Ababa, Aug. 6.—The
foreign office of Ethiopia reiter
ated its determination to refuse
either limitation of its sovereign
ty or alienation of its territory
today. It declared it did not
know of an Ethiopian offer of
territorial and economic conces
sions to appease Italy.
As evidence of military prep
arations', came from many sourc
es, Emperor Haile Sellassie nam
ed Foreign Minister Heroy pres
ident of the new Ethiopian Red
Cross and arranged personally to
attend its first official meeting
tomorrow.
Neither he nor his ministers
would comment upon a report |
that contracts had been made.
with Japan for the purpose of ■
arms and that a Japanese mili
tary and commercial commission
wae coming to Ethiopia.
(This report was firmly de
nied by government officials in
Tokio.)
One official hinted, however,
that Ethiopia is short of muni
tions and would entertain offers
from anyone in the entire world.
Injuries Are Fatal
Winston-Salem, Aug. 5.—Har
old Franala. 8ta«V?4, ft Kerners-,
vllle, a member ot the CCC camp t
at Old Fort, died in a hospital
here today of Injuries suffered
last night when a truck In which
he was riding wrecked on a
curve in the city.
Eleven other CCC boys were
injured, but mot seriously. Offi
cers said Wilbur Curtis, of Old
Fort, the truck driver, would be
charged, with imaasiaughter.
Ho'w Modern Women
Lost Pounds of Fat
Swiftly—Safely
Gain Physical Vigor—Youthful-,
ness with Clear Skin and Vivaci
ous Eyes That Sparkle with Glon-
ons Health I
Here’s the recipe that banishes^
fat and brings into blossom all the |
natural attractiveness that every
woman possesses. , ■
Every morning take one half
teupoonful of Kruschen Salts in a
^8 of hot water before breakfa^
—hut down on pastry and jatty
meats—go light on potatoes, but
ter. cream and sugar^in 4 wmm
get on the scales and note hoy
mny pounds of fat have vanished.
Notice also that you have gamed
in energy—your skin is cl««rer^
your eyes sparkle with glonomi
health—you feel younger m bo^
—keener In mind. Kruschen will
give any fat person a joyous sur-
a bottle of Kmschmi Salts--
the cost is trifling—it laata 4
Brt be stire for your health’^
sake tiiat you ask for aro »t
Kruschen Salts, Get them at Hot-
Sultana
PEANUT BUTTER
2 Mb- Jors 35c
Gelatin or Ice Cream Dessert Assorted Flavors
SPARKLE 417e
Yukon Club Sparkling
BEVERAGES 3'--25
Fius not. oca.
Assorted Pure Fruit Flavors
Whltebouse Evaporated Double Bich
MILK 3 19c
$Aandmaih£/iL
I Bye
ROLLS 2 dyrr^te|Bread is-”- 8c
Bound
Seminole
c:i
Mlt
20c
iWeetar Orango »oa
Tea A. 15e
^ ‘ 5U‘"23c
Oneeda
Biscuit, 3 pksns* 13c
or Jr. Nabisco
Chocolate Drink
- Coconogr
4sZSp 3 13c
Sultana
Dox.
-25e
^ “ 19c
Can
TonaFMi 'cJT 15c
20c
Ann Page pure Pmlt^^
Preserves jar
Encore Stuffed
Olives
Iona Balaff-
’Dressing ^ 29c
Bajah Pare Cider
Vinegar jug
Caps
Jar
Rings 6 ”” 25e
Bight (FCleeii
Coffee, lb 17e
Fruit
Pectin IT 19e
Sblnelu White Shoe
Polish ^rvk
Pun Pack BIpe
Tomato^ 3
Brepe Fruit f *'
4K
But-Net-awo'
Juice 3^^’ 25e
Cana
Cuiultaa
Pickles
Sweet er Sweet MIxM
5L‘'"23e?
BANANAS
Goldoi Ripe
[Ibse 2Sc
TOMATOES
J’ • Home Grovm ^
6 lbs.. . . . . . . . . 2Sc
IONA FLOUR
^ Ibu 82d
48 lbs. UM
981bs....!