mtm, C. O. DimniMte, aens ]
lift ud CIitnd«^ Jr» »nd daaKbt
WMhioKton, t>.
9eBt Um «tak*«d vlth Mr. «fd
Mrp. Jobs K. Jonm.
opw.
-th« adult Mhools
Bty ar« atteudlag a
lift today,
je* •
iiOVft, aoa ot Mr.
8. Lowft, was a bual-
to Charlottft Tde«-
Mias Mary Qwya Williams, stW
dent at Peace Junior College in
Raleigh the past year, is at home
now tor the summer with hef
parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. M. WU
Hams.
L.gad. Mrs. Olmtn Prottlt, ol
are rlsiting his parents,
V^kiA Mn. R. L. Promt, at
Slight improvement s noted lit
the condition of Mrs. C. J. Tay
lor, of I^rei eprlngs, who has
been critically HI for sometime
'She Is a patient at the Lowrance
Hospital In Mooreerille.^
’aeh Promt, of Hlck^,
parents, Mr. and Mra
it, at Ocahen during
'his
h-ond.
Mr. .and Mrs. C. H, Cowles
went Saturday io attend the co»-
.mftBcemeot lU Mitchell College,
SUtesTiUe, where their daughter.
Miss Carolyn Cowles, was a mem
ber of the graduating class.
Mrs. Prank Crow, of
a, Wftre week-end guests
ow’s parents, Mr. and
"iSv Lowe,
^j^d Mrs. R. S. Crisp and
^sr, Margaret, of Lenoir,
ek-end guests of Mr. and
D. Moore.
" Miss Nina Call, who has been
attending college a t Lenolr-
Rhyne In Hickory the past year,
came home today to spend the
summer vacation here with her
mother, Mrs. C. G. Poindexter.
,,J. C. Grayson, Mr. and
Grayson, Jay and Cecil
jvere visitors to Wln-
Sunday.
Miss Carolyn Taylor, a student
I at the Southern Atlanta Dental
(College, at AtlanU, Ga., Is ex
pected home Monday to spend
her vacation here with her par
ents, Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Taylor.
Beach Blankenship and
‘ Lovette e'njoyed a fishing
_ ■ ii lAke Waccamaw near
^flmingt’on this week.
- Prl^tds of Mrs. Homer A. Carl-
wltl'be sorry to learn she has
i !l?avl8 Hospital, States-
for treatment.
Mrs. C. N. McNeil and daugh
ter, Miss Minnie Ruth McNeil, of
I Elkin, visited relatives here Mon-
j day. Miss McNeil Is a member of
I the senior class at Meredith Col-
i lege in Raleigh and was at home
I for a few days.
■•rg
Mrs. Albert J. Church, of Mil-
Creek was carried to the
:1st ^Hospital at Winston-Sal-
Baturday for treatment.
Mr. Allen Ward, who holds a
JUon in High Point, was here
^the week-end with his par-
&Dts, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. D. Ward.
j Mrs. J. D. Moore. J. D., Jr..
: and Mrs. Bill Moose will leave
I tomorrow for Decatur, Ga. They
' will be accompanied home by
Miss Annie Catherine Moore, who
has been in school at Agnes
Scott College during the past
year.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cooper re-
snj^ed Monday from a visit with
Cooper’s parents, Mr. and
O. Cooper, at Greenville,
Rev. J. E. Hayes returned the
Itlrst at the week from Wlnston-
tm, where he conducted a suc-
ful rfclval. at Urbu Baptist
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Finley and
Mrs. P. M. Williams motored to
Greensboro Sunday. They went
down especially to hear Mr.
James Jackson, a brother of Mrs.
Finley, preach at the Church of
the Covenant, for his uncle. Rev.
R. Murphy Williams. Mr. Jackson
graduates from the school of re
ligion at Duke University this
spring.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hafner, of
Clarksville, Tenn., were guests in
the -home of Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
Wright in Wilkesboro the past
[week-end.
QineBnoN and answbb
/or Rheumatism
'BRAME’S BHEUMA-1>.AX
$1.00
fBrame’s Drug Store
1 EXPERT RADIO
REPAIftlNG
On all makes of Radios.
Joe Palmer at
WILKES ELECTRIC CO.
Phone 328
Question: How much manure
should be applied to the home
garden plot? ^
Answer; This, of course de
pends upon the size of the plot,
but on soils of average fertility,
about ten two-horse wagon loads
should he used to the acre. One
load, therefore, would cover a
space approximately 50 by 100
feet. Be sure that the manure Is
well rotted before applying.
Where it Is desirable to use a
combination of manure and sup
erphosphate for the garden soil
the ten loads Of manure should
be supplmented with from two to
three bags ot superphosphate.
Over 1,000 Johnston County
farmers have received cotton ad
justment checks for sales made
last fall, and nearly 3,000 have
signed work sheets for the new
program.
Wll
Msaday. and
Hay^Sth ai^
ijWbT^Metlo*;
vette. lnt»r«a{|
glvtaipbotb eimloff &
appreciative. _ _
pila displayed talent
thorough tralnihii^fty.weieft as
aisled by Mrs^oy^Mltchel,
prano, and Mr. Zeb Dtxon, teno^
7^;, following studenta
piano numbers. wlUt true
pretation; MIsm Ritth and
Laura Httlchpii and";.
Phillips, Connie - Lowe, Lofle
Wright, ConstaiR!#'. Spsithey,, Ro^
ena Bullls, Madge Jennlags, Ella
Mae Moore, Lueile, Robinson, tfm,
die Rpblnson,;. Joal® idPt^rson,
Ruth jolnee, Alma, Anderson,
Mary Louise Clemekta. Jane Rer-
ry. Blmlly McCoJ!?‘1|ary Parker
Kelley, Jean Greer, lloselle Jar-"
vis, Arlee Broyhill, Sadie Elarp,
Pauline and Arlee l^tthis, Pau
line Brock, Luclle Adwns* Vena
May Glass, and Measrs. ‘ Tom
Story, Arthur Lowe,, George Ogll-
vie and Flake Steelman. Vocal
solos were rendered by. Mlasea
Iva Fatv and Peggy.Church. De^
llghtful readings were given by
Frances Kennedy, Mary Dettor,
and Nellie Gabriel, and violin se
lections by Misses Jean Hemphill
and Rebecca Gentry. A junior
chorus of thirty-five voices and
the high school chorus qf sixty
voices sang several numbers.
Miss Katharine Hendren was ac
companist for the chorus.
Mrs. Prevette announced that
she would continue her classes
eight weeks longer, and express
ed her appreciation for the siden-
did patronage she had received
during the past school term. Her
junior pupils presented a fine
recital on the evening of May
15th.
/ '
departure of the grMt Ow^-dir^e^indenl
.of her nine echeduled round trips for. ItW, found toeriea hlffciy
cnthuaed. Thousands visRed the field at LiG^ortt, N. to iMNMt
the huge craft Tlwtoe aSV two views of Hindstilhaif.^ tw«t.
left Dr. Hugo Edu^r, Connodi^; and'rigot Helen Letaf'^o*
Peoria, HL. the. mt Ameriean paseenger te . ptnrchaM a tkkat for
the return trip *to Germany.
Honor Roll 8th Month
Wilkesboro High School
MT-PAINT
First Grade: T. R. Bryan, Jr..
Lytle Howell, Jr., Fioyd Minton,
Clifton Roupe, Norman Williams,
Charlotte James, Caroline Ogll-
vie, Clyde Elledge, Don Reins,
Robert Triplett, Ina Anderson,
Betsy Barber, Leana Beamer, Es
sie Hayes, Helen Miller, Rebecca
Miller.
Second Grade: Elizabeth Pharr,
Elizabeth Carlton, Evelyn Steele,
Sarah Webster, Blanche Living
ston. Carl Davis. Britt Steelman.
Second and Third Grade: Mary
Dettor, Ona Mathis, Stella Male
Glass, Ray Watts, Ralph Jones,
Arnold Jarvis.
TMrg-G«de> RleharU niiuw,
Joyce Brooks, Mary Dnia, Pranc
es Miller, Maxine Roupe.
Fourth Grade: Calvin Ander
son, Stuart Blevins, Don Culler,
Douglas Dettor, Louis Dula, Lee
Mayberry, Pauline Brown, Vic
toria Roupe, Mary Jane Shep
herd. Edna Yates, Nancy Lee
Yates.
Fourth and Fifth Grade: Eu-
lala Warren, Louise Anderson,
Mary Nell Morrison.
Fifth Grade: Nell Hubbard.
Allie Lou Saylors, Barbara Ogll-
vie, Mary Gage Barber.
Sixth Grade: Joye Miller, Fran
ces Willard, Settle Henderson.
Seventh Grade: James Hemp
hill, Rebecca Gentry, Faye
Wright.
Eighth Grade: J. B. Brook
shire, Ernestine Mitchell, Mary
Parsons. Peggy Somers, WlHlam
Scroggs.
Ninth Grade: Constance Smith-
ey. Virginia Miller, Marjorie
Hart, George Ogllvle.
Tenth Grade: T. G. Foster,
Horace Minton, Madge Jennings.
Eleventh Grade: Willie Ham
by, Don Michael, Marjorie Blev
ins, Paula Craft, Lorene Guthrie.
'Bbonk t
„„„ of pMsenger air service bet
Europe and Am^es, whidt hecume a reaUtf upon the arriyaUurf
- - -“-'-"Me ‘'Hindenbutg" on the^at
ils pr(
'P^er-ast
as-Oku of' the
.pf.tbo year.
. By tpousorisg the *now tbe
fire department will. Share lu
profRs>|hMu. tieketai^rd and the
funds will be used teJfipppleiBsnt
the fund now being nisei for
much needed life saving equlpJ
ment for the North Wilkesboro
tire department.
bait.
poi^
50 pounds corn meal
Wheat fertilised with triple
supe^hosphate is from 10 to 14
inches bigber than that not so
treated on the farm of Logan
Bell of Madison county.
SPHTACW w j . ‘V «., fdkM * rap
^me people eat -spinach,v be
cause they 111^ It,. biU most ehil-
dfeh 'eat It'b^ltV^ ^k'elF pu^ots
have been told that it is good |or
them. Now comes along Dr. Gilt-
ford Sweet, a California child
specialist, and tells the American
Medical Association that spinach
isn't any- better food for children
than any other green vegetable.
He also ridicules the common
Idea ^ that everybody requires a
completely balanced diet at every
meal.
I think most of the diet fad
dists have thrown away the most
important ingredient, which Is
common-sense. If all the non
sense that is talked about mal
nutrition were true, few of
¥hat Is a' bard dbetrihe, from
the point' of vletr of the send-
mantaliat. But tbe bard araif,.
what- Theodore Roosevelt' called-
“the strenuotth- life,” Is fhe-''biitr-
way of ’lire tn %hleh the lildHddV i
al is really free. It ienot iCo hlgbj
a price to pay'for' liberty.
Gains of two pounds a day are
Recorded with hogs lu feeding
^hionstrations throughout east-
e'rn Carolina and farmers are
flUaing it profitable to feed out
4£e animals at prices which pre-
'vkUed this spring.
PUIWTANS
My friend
one of' .hfc - Sunday'- night '-bfea4
pl^^^Way’r
p{f^ today’s standards to tbe peo
ple of those, times. But they did
have one quality which meaanres
le highest standards ot all
'hat was respect for the
and liberties ot individu-
UUkg - l/k .UA* OUMWtj, SS10U« ui i s yieviy —
casts, gave me .a new thought ojrdwand suspicion of everyone who
^ ’ “ tried .to get along without work-
the character of the early cblop
lets of New England. As Ode'of
the thirty million descend'ants of
those 20,000 Puritans who set
tled In New England before
I was Interested when Mr. Cam
eron pointed out that In their
time, and judged by the . stand
ards then prevailing in Englsnd,
they were regarded as dangerous
radicals, they were so far ahead
of current ideas in their liberal
attitude toward life and human
affairs.
The stThwberry crop of si
eastern Carolina will be s
this MMon due to the lefit
spring, the snheequent dry
ttaer and the prevalence, ot
diseases.
Nitrate of soda applied te __
ton just after chopping and l|»
fore the following eultiMilip
should be doubly valuably digs
Benson, due to the late pbudhgb
T©NE UP YOUR SYl
FOR SUMMER
Take PRNSLAR Beef, Wtam
and Iron. gl.OO
Brame’s Dtur Si
Turner’s Wax PirfiAl
Fresh Shipment
sPBCiAL LOW pmciiak
8mell siae
Medlom sine
Large siae .
€arhon>
Haryana
That is quite contrary to the
current impression of bur Purf-
would ever hqve lived to grow Ngu gg • narrow and
up. But I Imagine it will be a long j hidebound. The world has moved
time before mothers generally; jg joq years, and we cannot ap-
wlll get rid of the notion that a |
fat baby Is a healthy bab/—or,
for
that matter, that they can
keep themselves slender- and
well nourished at the same time.
DOUGHNUTS .... . oyer In
*' eelehrirttew in
York the other day jn honor of,
Helen Purvlance, the Salvation
Army lassie who fried the first,
doughnuts in France for tbe boys |
of the A. E. F. in 1917. [
I would hesitate to say that the |
Salvation Army doughnuts won |
the war, but they certainly help-;
ed a lot In keeping up the morale;
of the American soldiers "over j
there.” And they put the Salva-!
tlon Army into first place in the j
affections of millions of Ameri-1
cans.
^YOU’VE TRIED THE REST ( P
^OW USE THE BEST ^ Oe" ▼ ▼ el •
(
P «.,r.jWIN-WILLIAMS PAINT will give you com-
aatiafactlon. Theae neighbors of yours
so.
^A few recent users of our
I..
!*4
S.
7j
9."
pll.
|l7.
Glenn Dan;y, County
Gord. Anderson. I..ocal
Noah Hayes, Local
L. Vyne, Local
Guy Brooks, County
J. >L German, County
M, Brook Dairy, County
Bev. G. Sebastian, Local
Hobson Pardue, County
A. Whittington. Local
Mrs. 6. Cox, L, Springs
Ckas. McNeill, Local
Tom Bnssell, Local
Mrs. J. s. Kilby. Hays
Grady Hayes, Local
Robt. Ogilvie, Coonty
J. M. SUley, Wilbar
Glenn Carlton. County
paints:
19. Q. Hutchison, Local
20. W. E. Snow, Local
21. Roy Reins, Local
22. Bud Jones, Local
23. W. M. Wells, Ronda
24. H. R Dodson, Local
25. W. T. Snyder, County
26. J. G. Hackett, Local
27. Rufus CalL Local
28. Don Coffey, Local
29. Eugene Sebastian, Local
30. Jas. Brooks. Local
31. Clifford Moore, County
32. A. G. Hendren, County
33. C. C. GamWll, Local
34. M. J. Steelman, Local
35. R W. Wellborn, Local
36. W. J. Finley, County
than other
PAINTS. Pauntere here m North WiHcesoOTo
have inude the teeU.
I don’t know which I admire i
more, doughnuts or hte Salvation •
Army. I am an enthusiast about 1
both. I have to restrain my ap
petite for doughnuts as I grow
older, but I find it impossible to
restrain my admiration for the
self-sacrificing labors of the Sal
vation Army. When I meet,, as I
often do, young men and young
women who have left wealthy
homes or good jobs to don the
Salvationists uniforms in order to
help others, I always feel that
these folks have found what
Buddhists call “The Why of
Life.”
REPUBUCAN PRIMARY
o,
FQA.-.
A BUSINESS MAN
A RELIABLE MAN
A COUNTY MAN
VISIT THE PRIMARY JUNE 6TH AND VOtf^
FOR A MAN WHO REALLY HAS THE COUNTY*
INTEREST AT HEART
■'1
:si
■iV
y
QUESTION AND ANSWER
Question; When should I make
the first culling for my breeding
birds?
Answer: The cockerels and
pullets to be used as breeders
should be selected when the
birds are from eight to twelve
weeks old. Select only those birds
that show good health and high
vitality. A broad, deep, well-bal
anced head, prominent, bright
eyes, full breast, and strong
straight legs set squarely be
neath the body Indicates he^th
and vigor. Watch the birds se
lected all through the growing
season and those that lack vigor
or are slow in developing should
be discarded.
t
k'
So reireshing*.
QUESTION -AND ANSWER
WARE
Question: If a farm is located
in two counties should the owner
make application and-, submit a
work sheet in both coutitles?
Answer: No. The work sheet
and apipilcation is submitted in
the county in which is locatod t^
headquarters of’, of farm. Wh)at^
the owner or operator lives Is
supposed to be the headquarters
and this will establish the coun
ty In which the application "Is
made. However, where the owner
or operator doee not live on .^a
farm and maintains no headquhill
ters then application is .'made in
The county in which the laripijtd
imrt of the land (s Ifteatod.
- ■ i
Cherokee farmers are testing’
MKTH(H>ISTS policy
Through the union of its three
great branches, the Methodist
Church, is about to become the
largest Protestant denomination
In America. In its recent general
conference the Methodist Episco
pal Church went deeply Into the
question of the attitude which the
church should take on economic
and political questions.
A strong element favored ad
vocacy of a planned social econ
omy, but. the decision, of the con
ference was for freedom under
democracy. - *-
I like the language in which
the conference report proclaimed
that "a free church canndt long
survive the death of the free
school, the free press, free speech
and free assemblage. We will re
sist dictatorship. Economic jus
tice is to he won by extending
democracy to tbe industrial or
der, not by setting up therein
the autocracy of dictatorship,"
It seems to me that the Meth
odists have* fnily grasped and
clearly expressed the essentials
of Americanism.
FREEDOM ,. . . fakr chanc«
The American system fa based
upon the freedom of the Indi
vidual to plan his own life. That
doee not mean that hooiety should
not give hi«f„®i&». poMible aid.
through setu^ 'and church, to
help the indljtidual to. fit himself
tor the struggle tor ezlsteu^ It
does lmply,.^TheWTer,; .thi^ no
Will
A TMtuee for an ioe-edd Coi^CkiU
h ehwtys thipituM th»i ttkiAh-,
ge. It -fits into aiiy guoe • . ..liiSpi
take tbe teriaion out cS work or
piny, ftder by tfie case (24 botfly.
COCA-COLA
^Bhone 32
North
V/UWavsw aaea iiswre o wmvaaa^ aawaw ' IV • ' • Vr r'
the value of nitrate of soda; foir ^ild should jie taught to .^lleve
that section fn a seriesv(;-pf,; six
-aemonstratikms- amsiged-a’tth the
l-Ohllean I^rate of Sodtf-HCttea-
•‘tlonai^Bateau.
that Hie 1* *nyflrinF 4^*:^ atpng-
gle, or that aocletp owes him any
thing hat a tala tWaaig to
best ot wlunever is ift bix^