* 'li ir 1' !>ji
fl935’
i'^
to-fir. »nd M«.‘^ C, C. B. Vannoy, ot near
on if, &
tllp Aabniry:
son;
Ir. »nd Mrs. John'TevepaM|
Mtn Mas Foster were i^f>
in SUtesyBIs, Sunday.
LBom
to Mr., and
mdi
’ Mrs. Paul
on 'Wtedneaday. October
Oil
and Mrs'. TT. Tt. Wright, of
J)n, Spent, the^ week-end at
ling 'Creek with his mother.
C. C. Wright.
‘Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Snyder, of
atoa-SSalem, spent the week-
wlth his father, Mr. N. G.
yder, Wilkesboro route 1.
Miss Ruth Colvard, accom-
.nnted by Mr. Dean Colvard, of
Brerud College, spent Sunday at
Uraaf^sCreek with relatives.
her
Miss Mae Self has returned to
home In Lincolnton, after
mding two weeks here with
sister, Mrs. John Tull.
Mrs. Carrie W'eaver has return-
North Wilkesboro after vis
ing relatives and friends in the
Boone, returned to her home to
^4y after spending a few days
with Mlrs. J. C. Critcher, wt Mt>-
ravian Falls.
Mls^Mary Kate Whittington,
student nurse at the Baptist
Hospital in Winston-Salem, spent
the week-end at Reddles River
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
S. E. Whittington.
Rev. and Mrs. Walter Grabs,
of Bethania, spent last Wednes
day night, in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. T. G. Perry. Mr. Grabs
has been pastor of the Bethania
Moravian Church for about thir
ty years.
Among those who entertained
Judge Rousseau and Solicitor
Gwyn last week were Judge and
Mrs. T. C. Bowie, Mr. and Mrs.
Baldwin Pless, and Mr. and Mrs.
W. B. Austin.—Skyland Post,
Oct. 31.
THE
irATKivit tNUKXxl WllalJJdDJDUiWj, u.
. . - '■(r-r'IL
Quintet To Berve Sentenoea For
Oinie At Blare HUl In Which
Htndent Wae Wounded
n3 .b
I’J
Miss Irene Morphew has re
turned from the Wilkes Hospital
where she had her tonsils remov
ed. She has been absent from
the Jefferson post office for sev
[118 Tciaiinco auu *— -- - , * rt *.
,nnty.—Skyland Post, Oct. 31.>eral days.—Skyland Post, oa
^rs. Percy Walters and daugh-
Iter, Moouyne, spent the week-
liKid In Concord with her sister,
■Mrs. Sydney Perry.
..Mrs. W. P. Horton has return-
- her home here from Uur-
where she has been for
HBometime visiting..in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Robbins.
Mr. Rufus Colvard. who has
31.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Goodman
have returned from the Wilkes
Hospital where Mr. Goodman had
a badly infected hand treated.
The hand, his left one, has been
in a bad condition for several
weeks hnt is somewhat improv
ed.—Skyland Post, Oct. 31.
Mr. C. C. Watson, who recent
ly resigned as fire warden in
Mr. Kuius y.oivai u. «| , j
en ill for several weeks and. I'n-on townshj^p, stated that he
been treated in a Winston-(wished to publ.cly express h.s
Marshall, Oct. 28.—Clay Bax
ter, James Carr, Herbert Hill,
John Cochran and Cecil Buckner
were sentenced in Superior court
here this afternoon for partici
pating in the robbery of the Cltl-
sena bank of Mars Hill Septem
ber 10.
Baxter, Carr, Hill and Cochran
received from 28 to 30 yeara
each for the robbery with fire
arms and from 9 to 10 years each
for assault with a deadly weapon.
Buckner was given a 9 to 10-
year sentence for conspiracy.
All of the defendants entered
pleas of guilty. The sentences are
not to run concurrently.
All of the prisoners are from
Tennessee with the exception of
Buckner, whose home is in Bun
combe county.
Witnesses told the court that
Eddie Nichols, who is still at
large, was the bandit who shot
and seriously wounded Miss
Dorothy Sanderlin, a Mars Hill
college student, during the hold
up of the bank. Herbert Hill was
identified as the man who took
part in a running battle with
Tennessee officers at Del Rio,
just across the North Carolina
line.
r ^
■" S:
Honor Students
In City School
alem hospital, is able to be out
gain.—Skyland Post, Oct. 31.
Mr. Percy Walters, who is con-
lected with the Burlington of-
of a paint and wallpaper
tmpany, spent last Sunday with
family here.
ac©
thanks for the cooperation ex
tended him by many friends dur
ing the lime he served in that
capacity.
90nt COUCH HEAD OFF
vr
ASK FOR
‘menthomulsidn
If it Fails to stop
''our-^otjqh immediately
for your MONEY BACK
Mr. Evan R. Souther, who is a
student at Lces-McRae College,
spent the week-end with his par
ents, .Mr. and Mrs. J. A. South
er, at t’uion Grove. Mr. Souther
was the third person to go to
Lees-.McKae from Wilkes county
and will finish there in May.
Mr. Reginald E. Walters, of
Long Beach. California, has been
spending a few days in this city
with his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
R. E. Walters. He is radio ope
rator on U. S. S. Houston, on
which President Roosevelt re
cently cruised the Pacific.
Brame’s Big One Cent
Sale Starts Wednesday
Sold by
»H0RT0N’S
UT-RATE DRUG STOKE
DELCO RADIO
iMable model
1106
5 tubes—American Broad-
- ^st. Police hands. Ama
teurs, Airplane and 49
meter Foreign band.
Rrame’s One Cent Sale .starts
Wednesday ami will continue
through Saturday.
This is the second One Cent
Sale that this well known drug'
firm has staged during its thir-'
ty-five years of dealin.gs with the
people of Wilkes and adjoining
counties. 3'he first sale was held
last Spring and was a success
from every standpoint being a
complete sell-out, the manage
ment states. Customers are now
calling for another similar event,
and owing to the great demand
made upon the firm it will
launch a One Cent Sale Wednes
day with a larger and more com
plete line of the famous Penslar
drugs and dru.g sundries.
Those attending the sale will
have the opportunity to select
just the articles they need for
tall and winter, paying the regu
lar price for the first article,
and then getting a similar one for
only one cent extra.
The inanagenient of the store
States that the sale will be in
progress only the four days
Wednesday through Saturday—
and urges the people of this' sec
tion to take advantage of the
sale on these days.
Prospects are bright for
Brame’s second One Cent Sale to
be a complete success, too.
First Grade; No marks are giv
en first grade children for first
six-weeks period.
Second Grade; Pat Cashion,
Mack Eller, Tom Eshelman, Pat
Hunt, John Ellis Justice, Dicky
Sloope, Geraldine Caldwell, Kath
erine Irvin, Joanna McNeil, Ruth
McNeil, Billy Casey. Donald Hor
ton, Bobby Hubbard, Dean Min
ton, Lloyd Turner, Doris Casey.
Sue Landon, Nancy Long, Peggy
Pearson, Nancy Rousseau, Alton
Ahsher, Donald Coffey, Bobby
Kerley, Thomas Nelson, Emily
Olive, Gordon Reins, Mildred
Ritch, Ruby Mae Shumate.
Third Grade; Glen Golliher,
Edwin Long. Mary Elmore Fin
ley, Margaret Jones. Vivian Sue
McNeil, Bobby Foster, Eugene
Hayes, Cecil Wyatt, Marie Eller,
Patsy Mc.N’eil, Betty Hutchens,
Betty Gwyn Finley, Elizabeth Mc
Neill, Mary Louise Newton.
Fourth Grade; Gladys Temple
ton. Kate Porter. Frances Ken
nedy, Frances Rousseau, Ruby
Lee Johnson. William Hayes.
Henry Waugh, Bill Halfacre,
Lewis Hill Jenkins, .\nnie Ruth
Blankenship, Peggy Finley, Mary
Moore Hix. Betty Jane Turner.
Fifth Grade; Margaret Rhodes,
Carl Coffey. Ward Eshelman,
Hill Carlton, Betty Hill.
Sixth Grade; Bobby McCoy,
Katlierine Finley. Betty Halt-
acre, Henry Landon, Edna Mae
Ahsher.
Seventh Grade; Mack Miller,
Billie Bateman, Paul Haigwood,
Uoyd Palmer, Bessie Lee An
derson, .Mary Jane Higgins,
Dorothy Jennings, Loreiie Joi.es,
Yolande Kerboitgh.
Eighth Grpde; Ozelle .Andrews,
May Lonise Clements, Margaret
Craven, Margie Gabriel, Joanna
Gentry, Virginia Morrison, Rus
sell Pearson, Joe McCoy, Jane
Perry, Corinne Faw, Florine
Craven, Ted Hulet.
Ninth Grade; Ralph Bowman,
Mary Frances Pardue.
Tenth Grade; Ruth .Ybsher,
Grace Dancy, Mildred Finley,
Helen Kelley, Udell Painter, Lu
cille Seckler, Robert Wood Fin
ley, Charles Sink.
Eleventh Grade; Mary Jo Pear
son, Hazel Ervin, Sarah Poole.
Rose Wade Scroggs, Mayme
Y’ates.
WANT ADS
Last rlt«8 ver© held Thursday
at the gravesidh in th© Bpiscbpal
cemetery la Wllkeehoro for Dr.
John 7'^ Hoyl»t ' former resident
of thh Ijfclty who '^d Mondair In
Syracufe, Sj Y.’-"
Dr. Hoyle was an outstanding
literary figure who gained fame
aV, the man who compiled El
bert Hubbard’s scrapbook after
Hubbard went down with the
Lusitania. ’
Mr. Hoyle, a native of Hamil
ton, Ontario, Canada, for the iiast
year had been 'making his home
In North Wilkesboro. Mr. Hoyle,
who was 52 years of age, had
been in Syracus© for the past few
weeks engaged in the com>pilation
of an eighth grade literature
textbook for use In the New Y'ork
state schools. He had not been in
good health for some time, hav
ing spent six weeks In a Char
lotte hospital some time ago.
The deceased had been head of
the English department of Car
negie Tech at Pittsburgh, Pa., for
a period of eight years, and he
also taught English and Greek at
Buffalo university for several
years. He was style editor of the
New International dictionary pub
lished by the G. and C. Merriam
company.
During his earlier career he
acted as Elbert Hubbard’s liter
ary adviser for a period of 12
years and edited several maga
zines published by Hubbard.
At the time of his death he
was planning the compilation of
other works in addition to the
literature textbook he was work
ing on.
Prior to coming to North Wil
kesboro he and Mrs. Hoyle made
their home in New York city.
.\fter taking up residence in this
state he was engaged for a time
in the publication of the Wilkes
News.
He was a member of the Ma-
•sonic fraternity and several oth
er fraternal organizations.
He was married to Miss Nancy
Wellborn, a member of one of
the oldest of WJIkes county fam
ilies and a postgraduate of Salem
college, a graduate of the Emer
son college of oratory at Boston,
.Mass., and who took further gra
duate studies at Sorhonne univer
sity in Paris.
Two brothers of Ontario. Can
ada. are the only near survivors
besides Mrs. Hoyle.
Last Rites Are Held
For Mrs. Annie Church
l^oatiiig h
By MISS OBRTRtJDB 0|Uil4|f
The Girl Scouts of Novtti i
kesboro ere very fortunate
having a group of c^ic>vtodoI
women as their spoiMOrsA - The
Senior Woman’s club has taken a
very actlv© interest in our girls
and as to their usefulness in our
Kew;
L liner Plemied
erk CUy—The iiljjlMS
Jilted States Lines’ eabin-
^ns-JtttM^MInew '’Wash-
an*^ is
and
for ' st^MUiriiiD
fly % AQinrtoM lUur
of IS 87. Aunounse-
ment -ptetares a syaft of 80*089
tons, of 2i*kneds, costing
ifll^Pi.lioON'' larg^ and fastest
ever bjMft hi htmntry. Two
BWlinmtBg .pools, eveiy top-class
rdoin wlt^l:^^rl^ratn hath,..promise
community in years to - come, iJL-.-.* w t -♦
community in Years luxury, at lower rates
very few ScouU crack- Un«w ft^ng foreign
have as nice a Lltle House'.as^3^ •-- - >•
the one the Woman’s elnb hak^*^*
built for the girls of our town;
We as citizens of North 'Wllkes-
* t^bTioiriLirD iJWtiJBB '
** qnestion: Wkat siie IflM*
must I put la'my poultry hoei^
boro should he proud of the work
done by this organizstion.
Under the able leadership of
Mrs. T. A. Finley as scout •com
missioner, a full program for the
girls has been planned. On
committee with Mrs. Finley ‘to
assist In the scout work is’ Mrs.
C. C. Faw, Mrs. I. E. Pearson,
Mrs. Jack Brame and Mrs. W. D.
Halfacre.
There are two scout troops In
North Wilkesboro. Troop 1, the
oldest troop, under th© leadership
of Miss Gertrude Gllllain and
Miss Julia Finley; troop 2, all
new scouts, have as their leader
Mrs. H. V. Overcash.
What is Girl Scouting? What
does It do for the girl? Shall I
let my girl join? Just a few of
the questions asked by numerous
people of our town. Girl Scout
ing is more than a program. It
is a code of living. It Is not an
Idea that Is “preached” at young
people who know when they hear
it they cannot accept It. It Is
indeed a livable code, one a girl
can live In her home, at school,
at church, on the street, any and
everywhere she may go and in
any situation she must meet.
Christian? Yes. Yet, not a sub
stitute for the girl’s religion nor
her religious training. It helps
for urtlfi^l lifbtinc?
Ai^er: '’tWs depMiIa'^n:
s^ of top house,
^./-ifptt bnlfe for
pgdbye.siteet of" floor ipkesYgimfc
tho m.dst 8stisfftet»ry results. Tfem
hklPt^ehouTd ho placed la Xtat'
center of 'tib 'kouse tea Jaaft
apart aad feet abore ttl^
flooE ^ To preyent lighting
entire house, a reflector. ztatssm
inches in diameter an^foa?‘lififl|»
ei deep ahould be need with oaA
light hulh. •' !
-ttr
.vi r„
-.4C
Roosevelt’s Re-Election
Is Favored By Johnson
A truly artistic cabinet, 16H
, bigh, 12' wide and 9' deep,
h^j^j^top plaque of American
(k^Jf^round Walnut, Stump
Walnut front panel with Ma
hogany Overlay in pilasters
and grille. Variable tone se
lector and automatic volume
controL
PMICE
W.WTKI): To rent a .■> or 0 room
house ill North Walkesboro.
Call Journal-Patriot. 11-4-lt
FDR RENT—Building suitable
for store, cafe, or rooming
house; on main street next
door to Quality Cleaners. Rent
reasonable. See F. C. Tomlin
son, North Wilkesboro, N. C.
11-4-lt-pd
RALPH DUNCAN
Doleo Light Plant.s. Batterie.s
and Parts
©ne 301 North Wilkesboro
I.OST: Dark brown purse con
taining $10 bill and blue linen
handkerchief in North Wilkes
boro Saturday morning. Re
turn to Journal-Patriot office
i for reward. 11-4-lt-pd
Cleveland, Oct. 28.—General
Hugh S. Johnson denounced the
new deal in a speech tonight for
“amazing blunders and failures’’
—aud called for the re-election
of President Roosevelt.
Reducing current controversies
to a choice between those who
would “do something” about a
maladjusted economic situation
and those who would “no noth
ing,” he espoused the former
view and declared Mr. Roosevelt
its outstanding exponent. But he
added;
Final rites were held Sunday
afternoon at 2 o’clock for Mrs.
.4nnie E. Church at Plea.sant
Home church. Mrs. Church had
been in ill health for several
years. A few days ago she con
tracted pneumonia, which caused
her death Friday night, October
25. Rev. F. C. Watts conducted
the funeral services.
Mrs. Annie E. Nichols Church
was born .August 2. 1801, being
74 years, 2 months and 13 days
ot age. On December G, 1885,
she was united in marriage to
Calvin C. Church. To this union
were horn 5 children of whom
one, Albert Church, survives. She
also leaves her husband, C. C.
Church aud four grandchildren,
all of Millers Creek.
Flower girls were; Annie Liz
zie McGlammery, Louise McGIam-
mery, Gladys Bumgarner, Mrs.
Norma Pierce, M r s. Ernest
Pierce, Mrs. Etta Whittington,
Mrs. Veada Nichols, Mrs. Ada
Caudill. Mrs. Blanche Kirby,
Irene McNeil, Bernice Pierce,
Grace Whittington, Vernice Whit
tington, Vaiinie Beshears, Bertha
Pllk, Roemantha McNeil, Winnie
McLean. Bessie McLean, Doshie
.Myers, Mrs. Haggle Faw, Ruth
Nichols, Mrs. George Greer, Mag
Church.
Pall bearers were; Tom Mc
Neil. Anderson Lovette, John
Whittington, Allie McGlammery,
Luther Nichols, Spainhotir Whit
tington.
her to be a better Christian, no
matter what her church creed.
No girl can keep the Girl Scout
promise and with it her ten Girl
Scout Laws and fail to be better
church member than before she
took her promise to “try to do
my duty to God and my coun
try; to help other people ot all
times; and to obey the Girl Scout
Laws.” These laws require her
to be: loyal, useful and helpful
to others, trustworthy, friendly
to all, courteous, kind to ani
mals, obedient, cheerful, thrifty
and clean in thought, word and
deed. It would be rather diftlcult
to keep one’s thoughts clean and
fail to comply with the ether
parts ot this code of living.
The Scouting activities are di
vided into outdoors and indoors.
The weekly troop meetings make
it possible for the leader to guide
her girls into habits and ideals
that help them to grow into the
highest type of womanhood. In
the outdoor program there is no
place that affords the leader any
better opportunity to instill into
her girls the brightest ideals of
life and living than does the wide
open fields, or the wooded hill
sides of the babbling brook. Liv
ing and playing with the girls in
the God-made-out-of-doors opens
to Scout leaders gates nothing
el.se can unlatch for her. Living
in the out-of-doors offers to the
present-day youth pleasures that
, can follow the boy or girl on
i into later year.s and continue to
afford a deep joy as a personal
friendship. We should see the
beauties of the nature world.
NOTICE!
Pay your electric light bill before the 10th of
* each month. 5 percent will be added after the 10th.
Southern Public Utilities Co.
PHONE 420 —
eirnmmmrnmlmmm
“I know oi no duty ot loyalty
j or devotion to the side on which
I stand that suggests to me that
there is the slightest virtue in
attempting to conceal or gloss
over these tragic and dangerous
tendencies.
“On the contrary, it is my firm
conviction that while the salva
tion of this country will be found
only under the leadership of
Franklin D. Roosevelt, as the
single effective exponent of the
policy of ‘do nothing,’ that we
shall not attain that salvation
unless the new deal is purged of
these failures and blunders and
of the Influences and administra
tors who are so obviously respon
sible for them.”
Read JoDTual-Patnot aca.
PENNEY SALESMEN
ATTEND GROUP MEET
Walter Presley Johnson and
Harvel Howell, salesmen in the
J. C. Penney company store here,
attended a Penney’s young men’s
group meeting in Greensboro the
first of this week.
The
Man Who
Knows
Whether the Remedy
You are taking for
Headaches, Neuralgia
or Rheumatism Pains
is SAFE is Your Doctor.
Ask Him
Don’t Entrust Your
Own or Your Family’s
Well-Being to Unknown
Preparations
B efore you take any prepa
tion you don’t know all abo
NOTK'E OP SALE OP l.uAND
By virtue of the powet of sale
contained in a certain order from
the Superor court, I will offer
for sale at the courthouse door
in Wilkesboro, Wilkes County,
North Carolina, on the 30th day
of November, 1935, at 12 o’clock
M. a certain tract of land lying
and being in Brushy Mountain
township Wilkes county. North
Carolina, adjoining the lands of
R. S. Parker, Emmett Cheeks,
and the lands of John Adams,
containing 50 acres mor© or less
and this being a one seventh In
terest in the above described
lands which belongs to Rebecca
D. Barnett, deceased.
The terms of said sale will be
cash.
This the 29 day of October,
1936.
JOHN W. BARNETT,
ll-25-4t Commissioner^
F. J. McDuffie, Attorney.
tars
ia tion you don't know all about,
for the rdief of headaches; or the
pains of rheumatism, neuritis or
neuralgia, ask your doctor what he
thinks about it — in comparison
'with Genuine Bayer Aspirin.
We say this because, b^ore the
discoveiy of Bayer Aspirin, most
so-called “pain” remedies were ad-
'viaed against by phvsicians as being
bad for the stomacn; or, often, for
the heart. And the discovery of
Bayer Aspirin largely changed
memcal practice.
Countless thousands of people
who have taken Bayer Awirin year
in and out without ill effect, have
proved that the medical findings
about its safety were correct.
Remember this; Genuine Bayer
Aspirin is rated among the fast^
methods yet discovered for the relief
of headaches and all common pains
... and safe for the aYwage person
to take regularly.
You can get real Bayer Aspirin at
any drug store — simply by never
asking for it by the name “aspirin"
alone, but always saying BAYER
ASPIRIN when you buy.
Bayer Aspirin
- Thiirs.' - Fri. - Sat.
NEXT WEl
ORIGINAL REXAU i
CENT SALE
BIGGER A^Ifl ^^fTTER THAN EVER.
JUST A FEW ITEMS TO SHOW WHAT
YOU MAY EXPECT;
25c Tooth Paste, 3 for
Pints, Rubbing Alcohol, 2 for
$1.00 Fountain Syringe, each
Milk of Magnesia, pints, 2 for
You WiU Be Glad You Waited!
The Rexall Store
(North Wilkesboro Drug Co.)
Always
the Best
Always
LIBERTY
THEATRE
A Wilkes
County
InstitutioB
TUESDAY ONLY-ONE DAY
; Adolph Zvkor promts
A|
Bing nlngt:
"TalteiTwo To Mok*
a Borgoinl
And who! a borgoln you'll
geCwhan you toko "Two for
Tonlght'with Bing and Joon
sweetheorts of Mississippi!
A Poromount Picture
KELLY-TODD
COMEDY
CARTOON-NEWS
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
THE SMASHING FOUR-
STAR PRODUCTION
"Barbary Coast”
EDW. G. ROBINSON, JOEL McCREA, MIRIAM
HOPKINS
COMING
“DARK
ANGEL”
"MUTINY ON
THE BOUNTY
Only The Liberty Can Give You Productions Like These
We Are Back In
No. jWilkesboro
at Our Old Stand
With a largei’ and more complete line of
MEN’S, WOMEN’S and CHILDREN’S
CLOTHING, SHOES, and DRY GOODS,
AND NOTIONS.
We’re going to have bigger values than
ever for you.
WAT^ (THURSDAY’S PAPER FOR FURTHER
^ ANNOUNCEMENT.
Bare’s Fair Store
G. T. BARE, Proprietor
TENTH ST. NORTH WILKESBORO, NJ
'I1,- -JUtii: