Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1 / Page 7
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m r TODAY,AND TOMORROW m ;>^'’ m WAJi^JUk •' • •' '•'^v • • ^ • • • • At ImuU one ot the candldatea Who ran tor Congress at this week’s election Is not ashamed to admit that daily prayer tor Diylne gnidance has a place in politics. Mias Melinda Alexander, an at- tractire,- blonde young woman. Republican candidate in the 21st New York district, concluded that there was too much mndslinging and not enough Christianity in politics as It is practised. So she conducted a campaign which was so different from the usual thing that, according to the early re turns from a normally Democrat ic district, she seems to have been elected. "I spent two hours every day pvaylng, not for my own election but for a fair break for the peo ple of my district,” she said. That is the kind of prayer that means something. Most folk, when they pray, ask something for them selves, and then wonder why they don’t get it.’’ • * • DBER The state of Wisconsin has de cided that a hunter who wants to shoot deer with a bow and arrow Instead of a rifle may have a lic ense to do sO. There has been a great revival In recent years of interest in*the primitive weapon of the Indians, but very few mod ern archers have demonstrated their ability to bring down big game with the bow. For my part, I think it is a much more sporting proposition to hunt deer with bow and arrow than with a modern high-powered rifle. It gives the game at least a better break, and certainly pro vides the hunter with just as much exercise and fresh air, or perhaps even more. I have never been able to sym pathize with the desire of men to go out and kill harmless animals like deer. It is quite a different proposition from killing in self- defense or for food. It seems to me there is just as much sport and a great deal more humanity in shooting game with a camera than with a gun. • • • l-OOrER/lTIOX I am more interested in re ports d1 poople who have dowe something to help themselves than I am in those who win priz es in the sweepstakes lottery. I Liqnid. Tablets. Salve. Nose Drops checka MALARIA in 3 days COLDS ^ first day Headache. 30 minntes Try “Rub-My-Tism”—World’s Best Liniment Dr. Milea NERVIN* "Did the tpoyir* says Miss Glivitf WH7 DOST YOU - ray m . After more ftum three trmnHf rf from a nervous ■Mot, Miss Glivar used Dr. MlW Nervine which gave her rack gdendid results that she wrota ■ an endiusiastic letter. If you tuffer from "Neroea" ff you Um awak* uightM, start at sudden noises, fxrt easdy, are cranky, blue and fidgety, your nerves are probably out of order. Voiet and relax them with tha same medicine that “did the work” for this Colorado girl Whether your “Nerves” have troubled you for hours or ins years, you’11 find* this tinw* tested remedy effective. ‘ ‘ At Drug Stores 25c and ;got a real kick out of the report of a group ot aildft»Afed then living In the .mib Hotel In New York, a * eeml-phllanllirople In stitution for th® needy, who pooU. ed their capital, amounting to 14 cents, and organised a campaign for mutual self-help, i Out of the 100 who joined this movement the last report is that everyone has got a job, 69 of the ^obs be ing permanent. I saw a report the other day of a group of people living in a su burban community who had com bined their Interests and energise to build homes and provide food for themselves and others of small means, and who by co operative effort, have pulled themselves up by their own boot straps, as it were, lifting several families out of despondency into comfort and reasonable security. I think that sort of folk is much more interesting and use ful to the world at large than the ones who cry and grumble about their hard luck and hold out their hands for somebody else to feed and clothe them. GOLD Old Jeff Casserly died last month. He left his 16-year-old granddaughter, Jean Kuster, a box containing a nugget of gold worth $5,000 and a reminder that he had once pointed out to her the spot where he had found it. Now Jean s organizing a real treasure hum, in which several prospectors have joined, to search for the mother lode from which her grandfather took the big nug get. With all the gold hunting that is going on, it would not surprise me any day to hear of the discov ery of another Rand or another Klondike. I have seen more than one depression, In my time, dis pelled by a great gold discovery. So long as gold is the only me dium which the whole world ac cepts at the same value, we need more and more of it as civiliza tion and the Interchange of goods continue to develop. America’s history rests on a gold foundation and every great perid'd of prosperity this country has ever known followed on the heels of new gold discoveries. I hope Jean and her friends find that gold deposit ot her grand father’s. • * • CI...\S.‘t Never before in the history of has there been such a widespread and determined ef fort to set class against class. The less able and less fortunate, betrayed by the fallacious doc trine of Karl Marx, have been trying to gain control of the gov ernments in the belief that their condition will be better If they control the material wealth and means of production. It was the belief of the father of modern socialism that there is an Instinctive class solidarity which has more power to move men in the mass than any other human emotion. That this is not true .has been demonstrated whenever a nation has had to face a crisis in its affairs. Under such conditions class distinctions vanish and national feeling takes precedence over class feeling. Something like that is happen ing today in Russia, where the largest experiment in socialism has been going On for IS years. The Russian people are losing their class consciousness and gaining a national or patriotic consciousness. They are beginning to recog nize, as people eventually always come to recognize, that the inter- e.sls of one are the interests of all and that any effort to partition mankind into permanent oppos ing economic groups is bound to fail. I have no fear of any serious class war developing in America. *FIRES1DE PHILOSOPHY f O. M. 1H0K8ON Th» rankest ingratitude—lor, .a man to smite the band tihat feein him. • If more sermons were infused with the "gospel” there would be fewer empty cbarch pews and backsliders. 1116 reason, ‘‘just because,” has caused many a fellow to go "down the road” and some to look ‘‘up the rt>pe.” As a rule, a prise that is eas ily won is not greatly appreci ated. Greater sport hath no man than for a defeated candidate to congratulate his successful oppon ent after saying all the bitter things htf^ can about Ibtni - ddilag' »the ea>hPilKn. ' ' " ' P It hr soMMlmes as sensible and. as safe to run ae It la to tight. The deadest killin’ a man ever got is that which he does hlm- irtt . ' ^ IP:. djce difference -;ibetween two obws,^' one^ of which Is on one side the fencei'’and the other on the other side la— ,the fence. N o man’a good name should be Im- .peacbed just because he has resp e c t a b 1 e kinsfolk. Somehow, Somewhere, at some time, or in some way, excellence will always win. Before a person can fall from grace he must be up there. Failur^miFI become so ha- bitnal as to heeome^chroulc. , Ottentlm^. when^ a person claims that, ho la*working lor principle, he ia I’eally vorklng tor, the "interest.’' ■ If a person takes neither side M a question. If he works At all. he will have to wofk from?the end of It. ‘ There is.at least some^isi^: latlon in becoming bald-headed— the prpeese is perfectly p§lnl^' and the victim la uncon|i.cldhk of Its hapimnlhg. ^ l Brilliancy has its place, but it can be substituted for neither honesty, industry, nor character. Preparation liiay^be termed the antecedent, and accomplishment the subsequent of all successful activities. ^ ’The "clever” fellow MAY lose, but the "plodder” will eventual ly get there. ' If all excuses were reasons for non-performance of duty, but few people would be condemned crime. No scientific pslHatlre is equal to that which is censed by a clear conscience. Mom than 286 club members at tended the recent banquet at the State College folloiHng !jadging, eon teeta at the Nbrth '.CefoBiu^r StBtA Pair. ■ " »D , ^ TION OP kHIDOCTOB YTjH ORZORED THB WIPE TO A VAOATIOJI PROM HER OQ| EACH YBAB ANH IT Akit.WOBiaED OUT. tolM article In ^4|1 ftkafely' with next SM ^s WAmaoTos hrrai^ Ads. get Attentiofr-Aad TM A NEW WOMAIM THANKS 10 PUi Vtty ruHwng coatelng dwAciita et j»areawita^tmb*»Oigaale Copper add Iboib vUcii qaidUp aid DAtore in bqOdfaig ridi, red eorpoadei. Wb« tiliil ftte Appetite improvcA. Werpoatosss dkMipeAii. Energy and etWBgUi anally retain. Too fed Uhe A neir penoo. Get Pozeang from year ^""11'^ I CAROLINAS CRASHES KILL 25, INJURE 42 Twenty-two persons died and 36 were injured in week-end highway accidents in the Caro- linas, according to a survey made last nigiht. Of the deaths, 15 oc curred in South Carolina and 10 in North Carolina, while South Carolina had 17 Injured and North Carolina 25. George E. Collier, of Clarkton, route 2, Columbus county, has a small acreage of fall tomatoes that he is selling rapidly at 5 cents a pound. The Home of A SIZE FOR EVERY CAR OR TRUCK ... A PRICE TO SUIT EVERY POCKETBOOK CENTRAL SEVICE STATION H. P. ELLER, Prop. Phone 27 North Wilkesboro, N. C. TWCiEVROLETH Pke (amplek Gui.’' Gmiplete£ijT|^ ON DISPLAY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 It’s the newest of all low-priced cars •.. new in every feature, fitting and fabric . . . also the most thoroughly safe, the most thoroughly proved, the most thoroughly dependable. NEW HIGH-COMPRESSION VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE Much more powerful, much more spirited, and the thrift king of its price class. NEW ALL-SILENT, AU-STEEL BODIES (With UNISTEEL Turret Top CooetructlM) Widei', roomier, more luxurious, and the first al4«teel bodies combining silence with safety. NEW DIAMOND CROWN SPEEDLINE STYLING Making tbis new 1937 Chevrolet the smartest and most distinctive of all low-pnced cars. GENUINE FISHER NO DRAFT VENTILATION tniminsting drafts, smokc, windshield clouding —promotiiig health, comfort, safety. O N SATURDAY, November 7, Chevrolet will present the brilliant successor to the only complete low-priced car—Chevrolet for 1937, the complete car—completdy new. You’ll want to see it, for it reveals an even greater measure of superiority over its field than the fine car which In 1936 set n new all-time high in Chev rolet sales. Chevrolet for 1937 is new all througfi... new in the unequaled beauty of its Diamond Crown Speedline Styling . . . new in the unmatched comfort and safety of its All-Silent, All-Steel Body, now available for the first time on any low-priced car . . . and most excitingly new in the greatly increased power and acceler ation of its High-Compression Valve-in-Head Engine. Then, too, this thrilling motCHT Car is proved ail throu^. It embodies aU the extra-value features which have made Chevrolet depend able and complete beyond any other car in its price range. Visit your nearest Chevrolet dealer. See and drive the com plete car—completdy new. Let your own good judgment teU you that this new Chevrolet for 1937 is the outstanding value of this new motor ypar! ^ CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN ALL THESE FEATURES AT C H E V R O L ET’S LOW PRICES *Knee-Aetion and Shockproof Steering on Master Do Luxe moddt onfy. General M^ Installment Plan—monthly poyments to suit your purse. FOI ECOHMBCAI. TXAISrOtTklieM AJIlaif « eaanu. imaM sum Tenth Street PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES (WM Dwell ArtviSilrt Bnfci Stm LWwei) Rwognized everywhere as the safest, smoothest, ] most dependable brakes ever bailt. IMPROVED GUDING KNEE-AaiON RIDE* (MoiwMeoiO Proved by more than two millkm Enee-Aetioa users to be the worid’s safest, smoothest ridsk SAFETY PLATE GLASS ALL AROUND (stassammO . The. finest quality, deareat-visioa safety pfart* glass, included as standard equipment. SUPER-SAFE SHOCKPROOF STBERING* (St at am smO Steering so trae and vibratioaleis diat dsMog- ) is almost sffordsm. CO. t ■■ ‘v , ^ , Telei^KMie 1] ’irnSiiim y f*' , vN -It M.
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1
7
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