1 yORTH Wn^ N. C. ^ FATHER tegK .. Itjttatwwd ^ i.Zi.r*L'- -■ lij||« v- M ace ,■%:"- *6. Tu^'dar at ald- ,ll»r^' atattos by a^taderal ^^a.%arlQite aaid Deinn- t Hi C. ^Iby. lajNderal penttea* Vli^'a acri^ai^ of aliaaea, '*a raputitiodl It'^s said, [ h$,9'-9prr9i ttibo on a nnmber ' >«*a. -The nharye {Inferred t Uaa Tuesday was f ylola- «»ii of the automobile theft act he is being held in Jail at ■-• > 'to 4ttand the funeral service. ■Kiwiou Dorothy Hta, Priscilla aii^' Charlie HudBQtt, Mrs. Kell idoore, Mn. Muririty Hunt WIliDOAT ;’%«itt«rw oot issoore, «rs. rauriHiy nuu» ••»• ubw», =— - _rj|«ifteo focH» iW. €. Marlow visited in the home beast^on the grounds of the Hum^TvSfa ‘gikher got ^yeste>day evening, Belk’s store Connty. Club the othw t>ennttitolt W ** here was closed during the funer- ^ y,' g’„n bin, she woifld*‘oa®SL-.?®(/ *8^1“ . one of my neighbors, itejlce aad Lacoli, saw a strange-looWi^ i»wtb4 doads during al hour. : Mr. Gabriel is survived by Ms wife aad the following children: Mrs. J. O. Whitensr, Monroe: Mrs. R. M. Lockman, Iron Sta tion; Ralph Gabriel, Hunte ' and I*aul Gabriel, l^eolnton; W. O. and Howell Gabriel. North Wilkesboro; Mrs. E. C. Link, —~ •" I Hickory; Misses Geneva and wnkesboro in default of $1,000 c^ueen Gabriel, Goodsonvllle. XJa ^v$11 j«a Ov^IaI I va dbwn'^a 20-pound wildcat. Old ties she neede^^Hm-mo^ timers up our way say It Is the on. She and A'ef eon tot, first wildcat seen In Berkshire as Paris, where theylbld 30 years. tion; Ralph Gabriel, HunterKj,, There’s still a lot of wild, un- vllle; 3oe Gabriel, Daivldson:,Hal gg^tied country, even In New qih P«,ii nahrtpl Llaeolnton; gngjand. Up on top of a rocky toad. He will face trial in the fcderal term of court beginning ■uday. Funeral services were held this morning, eleven o’clock, at the First Presbyterian church in Lincolnton. Father and Son Are On ^ Trial For Killing Atwood; 3. Taylor Fatally fContinued from page one) ' *“ ^ acb several paces away. He was aabjecled to a gruelling cross ex amination by Solicitor John R. 3eoes. • ' Tom Love, Ornaville’s father who was nearby when his son dSd the shooting, corroborated Us son’s testimony. Jfcrt less than five nor more than seven years was the .senten- ae Bieted out by Judge Phillips t* Carl Ballard, convicted on a charge of storebreaking in con- aerticm with the robbery of J. C. Creea and Company store at SSiagman one week before he waa tried Monday ol this week. Ballard, it was brought out, has a lengthy court record, aanalt with deadly weapon on Charlie Par.sons. convicted for Caia Minton, drew a term of frw.i three to five years in the PEsitentiary. Charlie Bauguess, who escaped while serving a sentence at the CMUCy home, was sentenced to 3K months on the roads. Hilary March, colored man csjwvictcd of manufacturing and jmmessing liquor, was sentenced days In Jail. Vince Casey and Avvil Wood- T9V Martin were convicted Stricken In Mooreaville (Continued from page one) Taylor, of Wilmiiigton; Mrs. Bennett Lewis, of Wadesboro, and Mrs. J. F. Thomas, of Derita. Three brothers and two sisters. Adolphus Taylor, Harley. R. A. 'faylor of Boone. Hampton Tay lor of Idaho, Mrs. Joseph Wardin of Charlotte and Mrs. J. L. Lewis of Boone, also survive. Funeral service will be held this afternoon, two o’clock, at Broad Street Me:!;-, ‘.isl church in Mooresville unJ burial will fol low in Elmwood cemetery in Charlotte. -V- ■ r>-' which luiTe toM' :ftow|gJgiiitt com Vlil {, of tW whon h*rr««todr!^ J wnuutot of to iMvter day. M6 naa nii guu v-.vu so he took a shot, and brought person and tatli^Ttlto - .... ...... ..... J spur of West Stockbrldge Moun tain there Is said to be a herd of wild goats. T’ve never seen them, but venturesome hoys sometimes scale the crags and bring back reports of being menaced by fierce, long-horned, bearded bll- lygoats. Now and then hunters up our way sight a black bear, and every so often we have a wolf scare, while the deer seem to be increasing In numbers. I hope this country never gets so crowded that there won t be room for all the wild things as well as all the people. • • • TERMITES moving north The other day Fred Shaw and I went up into my farmhouse attic to see about winter-proof ing the gable ends. “Say, did you know you’ve got termites in your rafters?” asked Fred. He pointed to half-a-dozen mounds of sawdust on the attic floor. Sure enough, the little white ants were at work there. I thought I’d stopped ’em, seven years ago, when I found they d eaten away one of the old hand- hewn 12 X 12 sills that the old house rests on. Now I’ve got to spend a lot more money, maybe put on a whole new roof, if I don’t want the house to fall down on our heads. Termites have been working cu - uieir way north from —v. trial production to prevent any Mexico for twenty years. Now threatening accumulation of in- expert bug men tell me, ventories. they're busy even in Canada. In event of continuation of the j inside of a piece of GOOD INVENTORIES ENCOURAGINGLY LOW Washington. Nov. 11.—Stocks of uncoiisumed goods—especial ly raw materials—were reported al encouragingly low levels today by official figure gatherers. Generally speaking, they said, increased consumption has match- jermues ua»o ucc. —a ed the last year's rise in Indus- „orth from the Gulf trend, tliey foresaw steady pric of I es and firm demand as present fcffrniug a vacant dwelling and aestenced to 12 months each on tb« roads. James Sale, colo ed, drew a W-«onths' road sentence tor as- ualting his wife. Poverty-stricken husbands, of CMoa, who pawned their wives CKHdain they can’t get them back, cwn though the mortgagors have mficiemt funds to repay the slocks are depleted and replaced For the present, they added numerous manufacturers delib erately are building up their in ventories in anticipation of big Christmas sales. Commerce de partment reports have indicated a holiday trade substantially a- bove that of recent years. timber and eat the heart out of it, leaving it only a hollow shell. Looks to me as if we’ve got to figure out new ways to keep in sects from licking the human operator. - ■ • of . • race and taking possession the world. GERMANY liolds cash ratrolman Joseph Barrow of New York Citv was held up and as the wives refuse to be j relieved of his badge, revolver rmed. 'and? 2 nof slipped and broke her h couldn’t go to Berlin, * money la ,etlU there, d^ bwlyianjF'geed.' * ‘-'v... My friend’s’ account of that experience brought home sharp ly to' me the effects of national istic V>llcletr carried to their ex treme, and the trouble dtvnsed by setting up artificial barriers to free International Intercourse. • « « TELEPHONE . Improved I saw a new kind of telephone instrument the other-day, which the telephone people say Will be In universal use in a few years. It doesn’t have any box to fasten to the wall; the bell Is contained in the base of the receiver. There are two clappers to strike the gongs. One is the usual one, the other is made of wood, to give a softer note for the benefit of nervous people who “jump out of their skins” whenever the telephone rings. And the two gongs are pitched to different tones, giving a musical effect as the clapper vibrates between them. A little thing, parhaps, one more example of the way business enterprises are always trying to improve their product. >No IB ths.lleld to hg gloaned _, hogs. Harvesting the hMns )» better than turning the ho^^i the, field to eat them iftiw^,’' com -has been removed, alto. W. Anderson, Perquimans farm agent. For a number of yeai%>-’li« said, farmers In tbit cpuntjr'^vW been growing soybeans with their corn, hut did not try to harveet the beans, since the com stalks prevented the i^^e of a harvester. Many of the growers were sat isfied, as the beans improved the land and provided feed for their hogs without reducing the corn yield. But some of the more thrifty farmers noticed that seed from moat varieties of soybeans do not remS^(j^4d'’'thb pod long after they becoihe n«p.re. They fall to the groinna.^bsorb moisture, swell, ferment, Jnd lose their feed value. ' . The fermented beans frequent ly cause stomach disorders, es pecially In young pigs. With this in mind, some of the leading farmers began har vesting the corn as soon as it matured, and cutting down the stalks. With the stalks out of the way, they were able to save the soybeans with a harvester. In this way, they are able to secure a normal crop of corn and but 1 of beans from each field. Moreover, he said, harvested beans can be crushed into meal and the oil removed. Dry meal Is preferable to whole beans as hog feed, for it does not produce soft, oily pork. | ROARING s. WHA cavr Th* W«M»an’f Mii Eogring EIa :« short program la. t v;,. toJltorlwa, i^fotoa thirty nr' attlof - Tin ptogThM IndBdR^ 'mtaslonary play In tfia -MU -vWlnalBtf of ■ V Bart # opf^ ~ Comi'iM iwas w^B over. A friartR'^ log. will b« taken. tik I PJU.fl IdKNBAJ^LIS . . . M». Vwa Vath of this place invented n tear less onion pealer, which is being ex hibited above by Miss ' ^orenee Sosag at the national inventors show being held here. 1 ^dslmolhile £ and Servi^]!^ Electric and Acetylene Wi Body and Fender Bn Radiator Repairinc and 1 Automobile Work. Wrecker Service Dey or Williams Motor T. H. WILLIAMS, Owner, - PHONE V, Mile West, N. 1% QUINTUPLETS SIGNED, PRODUCER ANNOUNCES Hollywood, Calif., Nov. 10.— Darryl Zanuck, vice president In charge of production tor Twen tieth Century-Fox confirmed to night the signing of a contract by David A. Croll, Ontario minister of welfare, tor a motion picture of the Dionne quintuplets. Croll is special guardian for the five sisters. Banuck said the quintuplets will play important parts in the story to be titled “The Country Doctor,” the work of Snoya Le- vlen and Charles Blake. Henry WKIj over nation 1 sat in my New York office tlie other day and asked the telephone operator to call my farm home, 150 miles away. “Hold the wire,” replied the ope rator and in three minutes I was ii;i)zaDei.u vraunc, - - --1 ans anu talking to my daughter. Elias Gabriel, of McLeansville,; jeave for Callander witliin two I hung up, then called for a j six miles east of Greensboro, was ; ^yeeks to pliotograph the famous Washington number. It took even fatally injured shortly after noon, sisters. ^ .. I « . « .. t- Pavll fwrtTll tna ._ GUILFOI^^J^^^^FALL'1'^'"E will direct the picture. IS killed in PALG, ^ personally Greensboro, Nov. 11.—Mrs.: ^vould head a group of teclmici- Elizabeth Gabriel, 57, wife of|a„s and cameramen named to Keep a Good! always in your koi||il^ Among the necesslUes of JRmb B a good, reliable laxative. IXot bn|^ without onel Do your best tO-pcav vent constipation. 'Don’t aeflii^lk when you feel any of lt« able symptoms coming on. . have used Thedford’s Black-DnRl^ for 21 years and have found J$ a very useful medicine that fai^y ought to have in their home,' writes Mrs. Perry Hltdis, of BR Texas. ‘T take Black-Draugtaa biliousness, constlpatimi and other ills where a good laxative or purga tlve is needed. I have always foun Black-Draught gives good results.' Sold In 25-cent packages. black-draught! m yVUSlllll&l'V - I " - 1. # 11 F less time to get my connection j today when she fell irom with the Senator I wanted to talk to. I had barely finished with him when my ’phone rang again. “Pittsburgh calling,” said the And that night I got a tele phone call from another friend who was stranded in Los Angeles and wanted me to telegraph him A New York friend of mine of enough money to pay his hotel German descent owns, with his bill and Imy a ticket back East! mother, a number of houses in t went to sleep marvelling at Berlin. A Berlin bank manages the miraculous web which the the property and collects the telephone has woven all over the rents. My friend can’t get any nation. Sixty years ago, nearly, the second story of the store operat ed by herself and her husband. The Gabriels lived in an apart ment over the store. Mrs. Ga briel was leaning over the bannis ter of the second-story porch when the bannister suddenly gave way. She died before medi cal aid could be summoned. Preaching Service | Kev. Roby Johnson will preach at Cross Roads Primitive Bap-, tist church Saturday, 2 and 7:30 j p. m., and Sunday at 11 a. m. j The public is invited to attend. 1 I saw Professor Bell’s first tele phone, at the Philadelphia Cen tennial of 1876. It was looked on as an ingenious toy, nothing more. Charles Longley of Pontiac, I 111., having “got religion,” con-* fessed to railroad officials he caused a ?15,000 wreck in Jan uary, 1934. He said he pulled the tracks out of line while get ting a truck out of a nearby ditch. GE SURE TO SEE THE NEW 1936 MODEL ALL-METAL TUBE Westinghouse Radio I BEFORE YOU BUY Wilkes Electric Company Refrigerators, Electrical Suit's pliee. Motor Rewinding ^ ^J) PHONE 328 L North Wilkesboro, N. (?. J| Wise Farmer Will Sow This Fall With INTERNATI % NAl Lime Filler Fertilizer International has proven its worth with the Fanners of Wilkes and Adjoining Counties. If it had not been good, sales would not have increased from 400 bags in the Spring of 1932, to 6,600 bags in the Spring of 1935. Any of the dealers listed below are now ready to sell you any quan tity of btemational you may need. (J Claude Pearson PURLEAR, N. C. W ingl RTH WILKESBORO. North Wilkesboro Grocery Co. NORTH WILKESBORO, N. C. Caswell Brown ROUTE 1, NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. C. A. Forester, North Wilkesboro, N. C. S->~r ^ i.-. V.'-"

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view