Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Jan. 27, 1936, edition 1 / Page 5
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THU I6l >10-Iocfa Snowball on Mr uii Mn. S«rl MmAovs Ids la StatesTiUe Sun- fSlrfWywid Mr. O. N. Myeyrs, of Elkin, was a Tialtor to this eity a short while ;..Woek. Miss Helen Bum^ner^^^tu- dent of W. C. t). N. C., Greens boro, spent the week-end In Wll- kesboro vlth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Bumgarner. Prominent Citixen of Poras Knob Community Pasaeti Funeral Tu^ay hijth sch(^l baAetball teama split ^a double 'header In ^the ^%o#mty ads win be glad to know kt ‘^rs. Russel Hendren, who I %een 111, Is Improving. ■'K.. Jfam to Mr. and Mrs. C. T. f-DmiChton. at the Baptist Hospital tla WlnstonTSalem Saturday, a ’daachter. Hr. and Mrs. R. J. Long, of rWlBa|ton-Salem, are spending a iw days here with their son, Mr. Bd Xiong. Mr-. ■ees yf. O. Gabriel, manager of Department Store, was a visitor t o Charlotte V. will be saddened to Attorney Frank D. [dll at Smlthey Hotel in torney Clyde Hayes. Mrs. Hayes. Misses Lucile and tllne Hayes were visitors to harlotte Tuesday. Friends of Mr. P. C. (Tom) Forester will be pleased to know that his condition continnes to improve. Mr. Forester Is a patient of the Davis Hospital In States ville. Dr. S. L. Perkins, well known Wilkesboro physician, is seri ously ill at his home. Relatives have arrived to be at his bedside and his condition is considered quite critical. Mrs. Robert Morehouse will return today from a week’s visit in New York City with her sister and to confer with a publisher about her novel, to be published on February 21. Miss Louise Foy spent the week-end at her home In Mt. .\iry. She was accompanied there »by her little niece, Anne Clark, of Mt. Airy, who was here the past week with Miss Foy. Attorneys C. G. Gilreath and ' W. H. McElwee were in Rocking ham Saturday several hours look ing after business njatters. Slight improvement was re ported today in the condition of Mr. R. L. Earp, prominent citi zen of the -Moravian Falls com munity who has been seriously ill during the past week. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, eleven o’clock, at Wal nut Grove Baptist church for J. S. (Center) Jennings, who died at his home In the Pores Knob community Sunday evening. Death followed a long illness, he having suffered an apoplectic stroke several years ago and since that time had been confined to bis home. Mr. Jennings was a prominent farmer and orchardlst In his com munity, being proprietor of a Brushy Mountain orchard. As long as his health permitted he took an active part In church and community life. Surviving are the following children: Eugene Jennings, Thomasvllle; Mrs. J. 0. Earn hardt, Charlotte: Mrs. J. Webhr Moore, York, S. C.; R. G. Jen nings, Thomasvllle: Fred, Edwin and Miss Alma Jennings, Pores Knob. Rev. C. C. Holland, pastor, of Taylorsville, and Rev. W. E. Linney, of Wilkesboro, will con duct the funeral service and in terment will be in the church cemetery. boro tbursaay afternoon. *1. WHlteebdro glrk lost the «ret * ^ * “SO RED THE ROSE” AT LIBERTY THEATRE Mr. T. S. Barnes writes to have his paper changed from Sarasota, Fla., to Nashville, Ga., stating "it got too cold in Florida for me.” Carolyn Cowles, student Ijell College, Statesville, ie week-end at home In foro with her parents, Mr. C. H. Cowles. Mr. D. Saws, who has held a position in the Western Union Telegraph office here during the past few months, has been trans ferred to Leaksville. He took up his duties there today. Mr. Fred Hubbard, who is in School at the unlversi .y at Chap el Hill, spent the week-end at home here with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Hubbard. -Mrs. J. W. Woltz, secretary of the Woman's Missionary Society of the Methodist church In the •Mount -Airy district, participated in the services at the North Wil kesboro and Wilkesboro Metho dist churches Sunday morning and evening. Mr. and Mrs Bill Absher, Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Forester. -Mr. and Mrs. Henry Moore left Saturday night for a vacation trip to Interest in Florida. ■ rfVll return in two •week*. mt Headquarters FOR MEN AND BOYS I l)r. and Mrs. U. G. Templeton, i Mrs. W. I’. Horton and Miss Ma- I niie Sockwell, of this city. Rev. W. -A. Lynch. Mrs. B. S. Call and Mrs. J. R. Henderson of Wllkes- boro. and Rev. J. C. Gentry, of Moravian Falls, were among those from this community at tending the Missionary Institute held at the -Methodist church in Elkin Friday morning. ABSHERS S GOODS r COMING IN I ^ I‘'Attractive Colors You’ll I Like. The Goodwill Store -Mrs. A. L. Griffing returned ilie latter part of the week from an extended trip to Helena, Ar kansas, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Memphis, Tenn. In Helena Mrs. Griffing visited her mother, Mrs. H._ A. WenzoL and her brother, Mr. Henry Wenzel. In Cincinnati she was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Julia Wenzel, and in Mem phis she attended the Southern -Methodi.st Conference for sever al days. FARMERS CLUB MEETS ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT Movie enthusiasts will be Inter ested to hear that “So Red The Rose" will live again in the ro mantic old town of Natchez, Mis sissippi, scene of Stark Young's famous novel and Paramount screen success coming to the Lib erty Theatre Thursday and Fri day. when the Natchez Garden Club holds its Fifth Annual Pil grimage this Spring, March 27th, April 5th—inclusive. During this period twenty-sev en stp.tely, oldworld mansions of the Antebellum South, so vividly pictured In Paramount's stirring screen-play, will be open to the public, and ladies in the hoop- skirts and jewels of their ances tors will receive the thousands of enthusiastic Pilgrimage visitors, with old-fashioned Southern cour tesy into the country of "So Red The Rose.'’ These famous, tall-columned houses of historic Natchez, used by Mr. Young as the background of his thrilling and beautiful ro mance, are still In a wonderful state of preservation Guests of the Natchez Pilgrimage may visit the very scenes where was enact ed the drama of the Bedford fam ily, and may wander through the halls of the sUtely Southern mansion where Valette and Dun can Bedford were finally married. (Above Is a photograph of one of the famous Natchez mansions, shown on the Pilgrimage tours, in the ‘‘Country of So Red the Rose,” where the Old South still lives.) COUCH HE AC OFF ASK FOR MENTHOMULSION If it Fails to Stop Vour Couqh immediately .4 sk for fOur MONEY BACK Sold by ORTON’S [TE DRUG STORE The Mountain View Farmers club will meet Wednesday eve ning at 7 o’clock. The subject for discussion wll! be ”Breed.s and .Market Classes of Swine.'' The Hay Meadow group has changed their time of meeting from Wednesday to Thursday. They will meet every Thursday evening at 7 o'clock until further notice, 'llie subjects for discus sion will be. “The greater corn borer'’ and "corn ear worm." -At the last meeting the group decidid to put on a rat eradica tion campaign. It is hoped that many of the farmers of this com munity will cooperate with the group and rid their premises of their "Star Boarders”—the rat. Come on men! Let us make these meetings pay us dividends. The Barrett Co. is offering a sack of -Arcadian Nitrate to the farm ers who have the best record of attendance. See if you can’t win one. R. S. THOR-VTON.' Adviser. . SAYS LESPEDEZA IS VALUABLE FARM CROP 3 Arrested In Connection With Robbery of Spurgem Johnson Wednesday Night (Continued from page one) kin where his injuries were given sttenUon. Officers of Wilkes and Surry counties (the alleged hold-up oc curred in Wilkes), with the aid of private Investigators, are comb ing the country for clues which may bring the guilty parties to justice. The sum of money claimed to have been carried on the person of Johnson, a man in bis thirties, is thought to be authentic, as he was known to have had that sum while in Elkin. Three Are Killed As Ship Crashes In Texas Pastnre Itasca, Texas, Jan. 25.—^Three men were killed today in a sput tering airplane that fell in a dense fog on a farm six miles southeast of here. Growers -of flue cured tobacco in eastern Carolina are now hav ing their seed cleaned for plant ing the seed beds. One farm agant'cieened 489 pounds week. - ■ It will soon be time to sow lespedeza, E. C. Blair, extension agronomist at State College, re minds North Carolina farmers. Lespedeza is one of the most valuable crops that can be grown on the farm, he staieu, and it can bo grown under a wide variety of climatic and soil conditions. Lespedeza makes a good hay that is relished by stock and is high in proteins and carbony- drates. It also makes good graz ing in the hot summer and fall months when other pasturage is dormant. Blair also pointed out its value as a soil builder when plowed un der at maturity. Even when the crop is cut for hay, he added, the roots and the lower part of the plant that is left in the field will improve the .soil to some extent. Eight tests with lespedeza showed that on an average, where corn was producing 21.3 bushels lo the acre without lespedeza, the same land would produce 44.1 bushels to the acre after a growth of lespedeza had been turned under. Similar effects ha' e been noted on small grains, cotton, soybeans, and oven weeds. Lespedeza grows best on medi um to heavy bottom land, but on mot uplands satisfactory yields can be obtained. Common, Tennessee 76, and Kobe varieties of lespedeza grow well in most parts of the state, but are hardly worth planting on coarse sandy soil. The Korean variety does not grow well on poor or acid soils. Lespedeza should be sown In Februarjf’or March in most sec tions, 'as germination should be late enough to avo4d freezes and early enough for the plants to become ^well established before f _ Rhrer A|mI ‘Split -» Wilkafbord; and4fto*rta*-' btsketbtll sehddnls at Wllkae- »1 to 8 but the RoaAnf IHirer boys were unable to follow set hjr the girls rf tWT' Mliool and lost to the Wnheeboro *e teU6. : - X MEN'S FRENCH WORKP ONLY 97c Si?'-.’?!!! * •.->4 lie Goodvrill’ NEW YORK Till* world’s greatest citv civakened from its mid-v.inttr dream of a mild, mild winter to start wrenVimg with the year’s record snow fall of 10 inelies and a 100 mile an liimr g.ale. ?Tr:iliic was :n a snarl and 42nd stn*et- and Hroadwiix shops (’upper jhoio) might ha'.’c done a good business in shiis, if the) d had any sliii.s. Lower |.hoto shows one of "the city’s finest’* hetpiiig a lady hold ,i true erinrso across Columbus Circle in the 100-mile wind. PEN8JON8 all hands The people of the United States seem to me to have been infected tvith the pension-craze as I have not seen them since the 1890’s. Even then, nobody thought of pensions for anybody but veterans of the Civil War. Now the American Legion comes out for pensions for soldiers’ widows, and the Veterans of For eign Wars is advocating pensions for all veterans, and on top of that, Dr. Townsend and his fol lowers would pension everybody over GO years old, while almost every class of iniJt>rtc'»>89iwjint, from school teachebS dnd pollce- nien to governors, are nowadays being pensioned at public expense. It is an understandable human desire to live comfortably in old age without working. But I have never been able to convince I It was Alexander HaI^i^0n who first put forward and ibAIn- tained the view that the taxing power of congress under the "General Welfare" danse of the constitution was unlimited. That view. was bitterly contested by Jefferson~and Madison, but every one of the nine justices of the Su preme court upheld Hamilton, al though they did not all agree on the AAA case on other points at issue. There is hardly a phase of our national development that has not followed along the lines and principles first laid down by Alex ander Hamilton—who died at 47. jnjgyH - that It Is . duty an;rihlW ^bniAficpnt SubsIsWnc^ for the indigent aged. hot, dry weather comes. Although in the best of health, William Currie, of Shadow Lake, Canada, has arranged his funer al. He deposited $2 to be held until the time to rent a building (or dancing and merry-making. The Davidson Mutual Farm ex change did $66,805.67 worth of business in 1935. wUch is an in crease of $10,311.12 over tbgt df im: - THIIII'T host pensions I have not seen in any of the projects for supporting old peo ple at public expense anything that does as much -for them as ev ery man can do for himself, if he wills. Even the contributory old age benefit plan of the social se curity act does not provide for as large old ago annunlties as the ordinary man could buy for him self from any Insurance comp.xny, if he would pay out of his wages the same percentage that the gov ernment now proposes to take from him In old age taxes. I am reminded of Bob David son. an Albany newspaper man, who died only a few years ago. Bob never earned more than $28 a week in his life, but when he died, after 4 0 years of work, he left an estate of $100,000. He had the qualities of thrift and self-denial, which are so repug nant to the folk who are now loudly demanding old age pen sions which they have done noth ing to earn. MONEY ...... evU J. P. Morgan proved himself the other day a better student of the Bible than his partner, Thoa. ,'W. Lamont, who is a minisUr’s son. Mr. Lamont remarked be fore the senate committee on foreign affairs that “The Bible says money is the root of all evil." Mr. Morgan corrected him. "It is the love of money that Is the root of all evil, according to the Bible,’’ he said. Nine people out of ten mis quote St. Paul, who never ex pressed any hatred of money as I such, but was everlastingly right when he said that the love of money Is the root of all evil. I Those who love money for its own sake and not for the good it enables them to do are the. rhal enemies of the people. Blit-mon ey itself can be and often Is a tremendous power for goo^ in the hands of a possessor is imbued with the Christiah spirit of service to mankind. Money is no more evil than any •' its human owner who is evil. CONSTITUTION change The latest decisions of the Su preme'court holding that con gress had exceeded its delegated powers in undertaking to regulate business and agriculture have re vived talk of amending the con stitution. Half a dozen amend ments have been proposed to give the federal government broader powers than It has yet been granted by states. No good American can quar rel with the idea of amending the constitution. We have done it a good many times and doubt less will do it many more times in the future. The constitution itself provides three ways for Its own amendment. The only thing it doesn't provide for is amend ment in a hurry. And that, it seems to me, is very wise. Whtitever party is in control at Washington would always like to have more power. But it can’.t get it without giving all the Peo ple and^-ail the states plenty Of time to think it over. I am not worried a bit. about the constitution. HAMn/rON inflaence Every tlmo I pass Tiinlty churchyard, in New York, I pause to look at the tomb of Alexander Hamilton, who died when he was only 47 years old. I believe no man in our history has exerted such a strong and enduring in- (ludnoe. I was " lidth that .belled irbeh.^1%^ opp6aln9‘c^loni 'ieioart io the AAA ea^ WANT ADS W.ANTED—l.eoo Suita, Coats and Dresses to Dry Clean and Press per week, at 3 Be each. Teague’s Dry Cleaning, 10th . Street. 12-9-tf FOUND: A sUk. glove on Tenth Street. Owner may have same by calling at Journal-Patriot office and paying for this ad vertisement. 1-27-lt-pd FOR SALE: Chevrolet truck, ton and half, 1930 model. Will sell cheap or trade. Call at L. R. Carpenters, Route 2, 8 miles east of North Wilkesboro on route 268. 1-27-lt-pd FOR SALE—40 acres land on Glendale-Deep Gap road 1 mile Idlewild. Nice location for any one wanting small farm. Ai>- ply Spencer Blackburn, Falls- ton, Md. l-27-2t-pd PHONE 229 for your selectJon potted lilies, kalenchoes, prlm- .’’■'^ro^, freeeias, narclssmhv . he- .gdWs, cut flowers, bluets funeral offerinjgs. Da vis, The Florist. l-2.7^1t FOR ' SAXIE-^Btgixtvoom with baMment; all • modern'oojiK venlences;luRt trees; splendid comm'nni^. Will sell now at a bargain. Phone 896-J. J. R. Henderson, North Wilkesboro, N, C.: 1-28JM STEADY W(HMK—POOP PAY. RELIABLE MAN 'WANSBD; So call oh farmefS- in '^Ukea and, AU^hany ConnUes. .-Ko exp^u^ flpw to Keep Cofdt Catching Cold?,. Vicks Va-tro-nol hoips Prevent many Colds' Caught a Cold? • > ' yicks VapoRub helps End a Cold Sooner • At the first warning nasal irrita tion, sniffle or sneeze, use Vicks Va-tro-nol—just ^ t^^ops up each nostril. Va-tro-nol is esp^ally designed for the nose and upper throat—where most colds start. It stimulates Nature's own functions —in the nose—ro help prevent colds, and to throw oflf head colds in their early stages. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps avoid many colds. If a d)ld has developed, rubViili VapoRub on throat and che£.M b^tlme: VapoRub acts direct ways at once: (1) By stkmiedm through the skin like a pouldco*’ plaster; (2) By inhalation medicated vapors direct to InOemA air-passages. Through the this combined vapor-poukSoe ac tion loosens phlegm, sootlw Bi^ tatlen, hdps br^ congefioa Follow Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds A helpful guide to fewer colds and shorter colds. Developed by Chemists and Medical Staff; tested in extensive cUnics by prac ticing physicians—further proved in everyday home use by mil lions. The Plan is fully explained in each Vicks package. \ii/ Vkkt Op€n Houm: ivil* ^jrA^tTlfOOAt anf ^ Momisy 9:M »■ »• («■ *■ T.) NBC OvertffMillion Vick Aids Used Yearly for Setter Control of C-Jr- THEAM MANAGER THE WORKS TO GIVE YOU THE CLASS SHOW OF THE YEAR ON THE STAGE Tuesday, Jan. 28 Only “CAPERS OF MIRTH” 25—PEOPLE—25 OANCING QUEENS VAUDEVILLE ACTS MUSIC MASTERS A SHOW FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY, CON SISTING OF SINGING, DANCING, COMED^ ACROBATICS. CYCLING AND TUMBLING Direct From iMPHUAL Theatre CHARLOTTE GRACE NEAL You’ll Approve her interpr^tion of Blue SoMga FEATURING HAL and RABY. CRIDER Comedy KnocheuI Team MOORE & THARF Those two dancing sisters—Tooth and pep. POPEYE THE BIAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE PEREZ TRID— Senndonal Cuban thriUen MLLE. LA FLOR— The Human Butterfly DANCING ROCKETS MODERN DANCING. DIF'FERENT. UNUSUAL RflYTHM OF MIRTH ORCHESTRA 3 PERFORMANfCES ONLY 3rfK) — 7:30”->9;30 ATTEND THE MATINEE TUESDAY ONLY THEATRE JIO^^WltKESBOBO* HMiii mm
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Jan. 27, 1936, edition 1
5
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