Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Nov. 14, 1935, edition 1 / Page 10
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[f^lfclTT* A. Q. Hen£r«n riWntm visitor to Win hUtb. W^Msy. ■p. Mias Botty Tnttle spent k«iid In WlnstoQ-Sslem Fher mother, Mrs. C. E. Tut- ^JEonrsd Pesrson, of Char- Kj^pent the . week-end here parents, > Mr. and Mrs. Pearson., n :M ‘ ^Doshie Myers, of this recovered from injuries in an automobile wreck It a week ago. * 'ko. Ir. Wm. A. Stroud went to ^hasboro Tuesday to attend a dns of apents of mutual in ace companies. Mr. .ffialr .Gwyn attended an organisation meeting of agents of mutual insurance companies held in Greensboro Tuesday, Miss Carolyn Carlton, student of Mitchell College, spent the week-end at Boomer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Henrltxe and daughters, Helen and Jane, of Welch, W. Va., were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smithey. Mr. Jack Spainhour, student at State College In Raleigh, was here for the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Spainhour. Ir. ti. J. Joines, of Galax, Va., on a several days’ visit and Mrs. I. M. Myers tlKHotel. Rev. Robert S. Moore has re tained to Providence, R. I. alter spending several weeks on the Brushles with his daughter, Mrs. Robert Morehouse. [Mias Amy Blackwell, of Dur- has returned home after ting her uncle and aunt, Mr. Mrs. J. F. Womble. B. Liomax and little jllip Asbury, were remov- ^to their home here on C Street ridv from the Davis Hospital kesville. ' Miss. Izetta Smithey, who is attending Woman’s College in Greensboro, was here for the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smithey. Mrs. Myrtle Freeland and Mrs. I Mable Lottes spent a few hours in Yadkinville Sunday with -Mrs. Cox, a Friend minister who was . recently injured in a wreck. ^•dicated rith ingredients of :ks VopoRub pothing Ever fore Like In the History Motion Sctnres! NOW SHOWING Mi. and Mrs. Ray Barnes, Mr. iaiul Mrs. Roy Barnes, accompan- I ied by Miss Josie Barnes, of Tay lorsville. spent Sunday in Kan napolis with Mr. and Mrs. .\bner ' Barnes. utiny )N THE unty’ le $2,000,000 Film Sen- ! sation of the Century tARK GABLE [CHARLES LAUGHTON FR-ANCHOT TONE the"¥iist See It . . ttend the itinee Always the Best All Ways. IBERTV THE-ATRE A Wilkes County Institution ING )NDAY ^DAY rhe New Sweetheart Team of the Screen CHARLES FARRELL AND CHARLOTTE JIENRY “FORBIDDEN "HEAVEN 99 I Mrs. Clarence Call, of North i Wilkesboro. is spending several weeks with her daughter. Mrs. Omul Boren, on Madison Ave nue, Sunset Hills,—Greensboro Daily .News. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Spainhour and -Mrs. J. W. White attended the funeral of Mrs. G. B. Hard ing at Farmington Tuesday. Mrs. Harding was the mother of Mrs. W. It. Spainliour. of Hickory. Mrs. Harold Riley arrived Saturday, from St. Louis, Mo., for a visit to her mother, Mrs. Rosa Reeves. Mrs. Reeves will accompany her home and spend the winter with her in St. Louis. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Sale, ac companied by Mrs. Sale’s mo ther, .Mrs. L. M. Jarvis and daughter. Vena Jarvis, motored to Fairmont, W. Va., Saturday, spending' a few days visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Henderson, Jr., also sightseeing in Pennsylvania. Thomas McNeill, with his wife and little .son. visited in the home of his father, I. H. McNeill, for two days, returning Tuesday morning to his home at Welch. W. Va. Mrs. Mc-Neill will be re- memhered as Miss Bessie Hedge peth, formerly a member of the school faculty here. Mrs. W. V. Williams and her son. Mr. J. B. Williams, spent the week-end in Durham with their daughter and sister, Mrs. J. L. Hulse. .Mr. and Mrs. Hulse will sail Saturday on a business trip to England and will be away from three to six months. Mrs. Hulse is remembered here as Miss Della Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gilreath, Mr. and -Mrs. Basie Jarvis. Mrs. Stacy Martin. and Mr. Silas Marsh motored to Roanoke. Va., Sunday, where they vi.sited Mrs. -Martin’s /liusband, iMr. ’S. D. .Martin. He is receiving treatment at the Veterans’ Hos-pital there and is improving very much, we are pleased to state. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Finley spent the week-end in Washing ton, D. C.. visiting Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Mitchell. Mrs. .Mitchell is their daughter. .Mrs. Finley re mained in Washington for a few days while Mr. Finley, who is secretary-treasurer of the Forest Ptrfniture Com(pany. ;proceeded to -New York City to represent lys firm in the furniture show. CARLTON’S HARDWARE draws customers with honest-to-goodness merchan dise and honest*to-goodness prices! ENery customer ’a winner! You cannot lose. By all means visit us this week-end. No regrets. DAVIS SHOT GUNS $.5.9.5 NEW C. SHELLS 50c WASHING POWDERS 3 for 5c RUGS $4.98 ’ou Can Always Save On Your Drug Needs at lorton’s Drug Storu .T'.tS' Margaret Staley, age 4, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Eld S. Staley, of t 'Wllkeeboro, died Tuesday morning. Funeral service ■was held this afternoon with Rev. Avery Church and Rev. W. E. Llnney In charge. Interment was in Mountain Park cemetery. Surviving are the father and mother and the following broth ers and sisters: noyd, Eugene Lake, Clanton, Flora Madge and Jewel Dean. AVOID WRONG WAY OF KILUNG HOGS The farmer who uses haphaz ard methods and trusts to luck at hog-killing time runs a big risk of losing his meat. The right way to kin hogs Is just as easy as the wrong way, suggests R. E. Nance, professor of animal husbandry‘at State col lege. and with pi^per during, It virtually asures successful pre- f t servation of the meal. hpft. Many of the methods employed in“dad’s time” were responsible for the heavy losses usually ex perienced. Nance points out some of the worst faults, as fol lows: Hogs were usually kiled on the coldest day of mid-winter, under the impression that the extreme cold helped preserve the meat. Biter cold weather made the task difficult, and it was rushed thru in too big a hurry. A temperature of 28 to 40 de grees is preferable. The carcases should be allowed to hang up overnight in the smokehouse so as to let all the animal heat dissi pate before the curing Is started. The custom of shooting hogs or knocking them in the head was prevalent. Then the hogs were dragged to a vat of water that wa.s either too hot or too cold. The bodies were Itruised, the carcasses did not bleed properly, and the hair did not scrape off as it should. Stick the hogs, Nance says, allow them to bleed thor oughly, and scald them in water heated to 150 degrees, nO more, no less. Do not feed the hogs within 24 hours of killing time. Doing so wastes feed and makes the car casses harder to dress. Do not cut up the carcasses until the next day, he advises. rFriday, Noveri^r 16, will b« Th# American Red Crihee“'h»e launched a nation-wide campaign to eliminate haxarde Itj the home and on the farm that now take idi an nual trtl of neaifly''86,000 llvee, ah- cordlng-to a ■Otntement hy James I*. Pieser, vice chairman in charge of. domeetlo operatltme. “Every Red Ihoee chapter It being asked to play a pact in this earn* palgn,” Mr. Plewr said. "Haearde Inr the various communities . Iw pointed out The children hTonr schools throughout the country will be given a list of the home hasards and asked to enroll psJents or rela tives in the fight sgalnst them.” Nearly five million men, women, and children ■were temporarily dis abled in the homes of America last year by accidents, ofllclals of the National Safety Council have re vealed. Most of the accidents in which persons ware killed and In jured could have been prevented, according to this safety agency, this fact alone largely motivating the Red Cross drive for accident elim ination. • Active cooperation of social, civic, educational, veterans’, and other groups has been secured. Red Cross inspection forms or home check lists will be distributed to homes where there are no children with the help . : .am* Mwem: i Lwt Dhy To SgBW [On Cmitracts For the Com^ Ye«r --rw . - - --f -- the last day for tohaceo grovcra in M^llkes county to sign 'OOB* tracts for the 1936 crop, It w^ learned today from A. Q. dren, county farm agent. There are more than 400 to-' f0 m.m M -V. ttrrtef ‘tiTy atk .$t-jro«$4j1d residotit of fioek who died h^ft dabdivi'^was' held w'’r4»k - — _ bacco growers In the county: Mrko' were under contracts fdir the 1936 cro'P and the office of the county agent had r^eived yes terday more than 30 appllcathans for contracts from growers who did not sign for the present crop. WPA To Put Neariy 1,000 Men To Work In Dstrict The sixth district works pro gress administration wilt ^ have projects starting during the' next seven days which will put 997 men to work and Involve the ex penditure of approximately $228,- 346, E. W. Coe, district engineer, announced yesterday. A total of 22 projects In prac : ■« . if ^ g,- - - - . PEOh reasonable — BEPsmieHB if desired HAERY h. DUI4A Telephone 404-R, wakesboio, N. C. -•.'T .• - '■ a/ tically every one of the thirteen j counties in this district will bei started during the next seven days and will keep these men at work for several months, Mr. Coe said. Mr. Coe said the largest of the projects would be the improve' ments at Miller Municipal Air at ivnijci *vaua*i\/i*r«** irc/ssihimy and lack of compensation coverage, little or no pioneering has been done in the field of farm safety, the Red Cross states. However, more people were accidentally killed in agricultural pursuits last year than in any other occupation, making the need for safety education and farm home in spection apparent. Other agencies now active In the accident-prevention field point to the faot that, because of Its nearly 13,- 000 chapters and branches, the Red Cross has a unique opportunity to Buocessfnlly promote a project of this nature. Home accidents injure many more than do automobile accidents; they kill nearly as many, claiming an av- erageofahout 80 lives dally. In terms of dollars and cents, for the practi cal minded, home accidents cost more than $1,000 per minute. Accidents of all types are Public Enemy No. 4. Only three diseases cause as many deaths each year, heart disease, cancer, and cerebral hemorrhage. ' “The home is not the place of safety It is commonly supposed to be.” said Mr. Fleser In commenting $70,000 and providing work for 200 men for six months. Mr. Coe said this project would be start ed next Monday, having been ap proved by Truman Miller, air port engineer of the state office at Raleigh. The work will in volve the grading of the runways immediately. This is Forsythes only project to start at once. . The Davidson County Farmers Exchange did $37,159.97 worth of business between January 1 and September 30, 1936. FIELD MICE OFTEN ,/e. - KILL APPLE TREES on the new Red Cross service to the community. "The Red Cross! as a Hungry field mice, gnawing away sapwood from the trunks and roots of apple trees, will sometimes ruin a good orchard during a single winter. The mice attack the trees at the siiriace and just under the ground, occasionally girding a tree completely around the trunk, saj's H. R. Niswonger, extension horticnlttirist at State college. Sometime.s the damage is only slight at first, but usually root- rot organisms enter the tree and eventually kill it by causing the entire root system to decay. Two kinds of field mice are commonly found in apple orch ards in winter; the common meadow mouse and the short-tail ed pine mouse. The latter is more destructive. Niswonger says. The meadow mice migrate to orchards from open fields when their food supply becomes scarce. They make numerous runways under grass and other littler un der the trees. They gnaw the tree trunks at the surface of the ground. The pine mice come from near by timberlands and burrow holes and runways under the ground surrounding the apple trees. They eat away sapweed from both the trunks and the roots. These pests may be controlled, Niswonger pointed out. by de stroying the grass Jpnd weeds under the trees and by putting out poisoned wheal bait. The bait may be placed In old tin cans or bottles laid on their sides or in bait stations made by bending a rectangular piece of tin into a half cylinder and tack ing the two edges to a narrow strip of wood. The tin forms a hood-like covering for the bait. The control measures should be carried out in November, as the first migrations of mice to orchards begin in this month. part of Us chartered obligation to prevent death and alleviate suffer ing, Is conducting this humanitarian program to cut down the mounting toll of avoidable personal injury and death In the homes of the country.” I The annual Red Cross roll call, running from Armistice Day to I Thanksgiving Day, Is one of the | means of backing such a campaign, j All citizens of the United Staies are | offered the opportunity to join and j assist In the work of the organiza tion. SPECIAL Permanent Wave* 75c Shampoo and Finger Wave 25c Shampoo Henna Pack and Finger Wave 50c All work done by graduating class, under supervision of the instructor, Mrs. Church, who has had six years experience in Beauty Culture. Mae’s School of Beauty Culture Next to Mayflower Beauty Shoppe. Phone 189 WILKES BARBER SHOP lOTH STRKT BARBER SHOP WILKES COUNTY’S TWO BEST BARBER SHOPS When you want a good haircut and shave, always try one of these shops. You will find first class barbers with years of experience. W. J. CHURCH, Manager G. W. FELTS I. T. CHURCH M. G. BOS-nAN H, A. WELLBORN J. H. THOMPSON GUY MAHAFFEY H. T. PLESS Big Special ON Permanents AT THE y I i MAYROWER BEAUTY SHOPPE THE LEADER IN BEAUTY CULTURE Our Permanents last longer and look better. All work done by Licensed Cosmetologists with years of experience 110.00 Realistic Permanent $5.00 $10.00 Bonat Wave - $5.00 $10.00 Duart Wave — .- .$5.00 $10.00 Vitrolox Wave i— - $5.00 $10.00 Mayflower Oil Wave — $5.00 $7.00 Oil of Castor —- - $3.25 $7.50 Regal Oil Wave —- $3.50 Other Permanents as low as $1.25 When you want the liest in Beauty Culture, come to the MAYFLOWER. MRS. W. J. CHURCH, Manager MISS SINA KILBY MISS RACHEL McKOWBN MISS PANSY 'THOMPSON MISS GLADYS ABSHER MAIN STREET PHONE 189 Mr. C. A. Lowe, one of the south’s largest buyers of furs,} wa , a business visitor to Wins ton-Salem today. Mr. C. T. Doughton, cashier of the Deposit and Savings Bank, was in Charlotte today attend ing to business matters. Part of every ^ame — the pause that refreshes WANT ADS I'OK RENT: One three-room apartment, private bath. See G. W. Sebastian. 11-14-lt-pd I,K.4RX BEAUTY CULTURE—A profitable profession. The State’s most up to date Beauty school, fully accredited. A com plete course for only $50.00. Mae’s School of Beauty Cul ture, North Wilkesboro, N. C. ll-25-4t LN SPECIAL: U’ash retluction frOm now until January on all fur- niture, stoves, ranges, circu lating heaters, both wood and coal, floor coverings, etc. Terms to approved customers at regular prices. Gray .Broth ers Furniture Company, oppo site courthouse, Wilkesboro. ll-18-2t QI ESTIOV AND ANSWER Q.—How long should a hog be off feed before killing? A.—Hogs should not be fed at all for at least 24 hours before they are killed, but should have plenty of fresh water. In this way the animal gets rjd of the contents of the stomach and In testines and insures a good bleed when the animal is slaughtered. The meat will also cure better STOLEN—Black brood sow on November 11th; sow has one ear clipped and one ear nipp ed; weight 125 to 150 pounds. Notify Parks Billings, Congo, N. C. 11-14-lt-pd Coea-Cola is pure, wholesome, energy. giving refreshment... containing no artificial flavor or coloring. FOR.. SALE—1929 Ford coach; A-1 condition. Joe Barber. ll-14-2t. FOR SALE 1 Theatre In town of 1,200, now when the small blood vessels are showing profit; complete In all free from food products and details; ’ ’ blood. The animal should __ . _ be excited or overheated before in operation; one Prosperity pop- killing as this produces a fever- corn machine. All for a sacrifice condition which prevents if sold at once. Address J^rn- proper bleeding and causes the al-Patriot. meat to sour irhile in cure. All games have their tense moments—so does every-day work. Take time out for an ice-cold Coca-Cola. Its energy-giving refreshment sends you back to work or play feeling fit. Coca-Cola Co. ll;14-T^-tf ICE-COLD COCA-COLA IS EVERY PLACE ELSE, IT BELONGS IN YOUR ICE»BOX AT HOME ... ayi. , i"'*'
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1935, edition 1
10
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