The Journal • PatrkA INDXPBMDBNT Di POUT1C8 PubUskod Mondays and Tkwradays at North Wilkosboroi N C. D. J. CARTKR sad JUUUS C. HUBBARD. PabUsben SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year — .|1.60 Six Months .76 Four Months .60 Out of ttie State »2.00 per Year Entered at the post office at North Wilkes* bcro, N. C., as second class matter under Act of Uarch 4. 1879. MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1937 Another Industry The joint meeting of the merchants association and city board of commis sioners Thursday evening and the en thusiastic interest shown in preliminary efforts to induce another industry to North Wilkesboro is perhaps one of the most encouraging signs of the year for North Wilkesboro and Wilkes county. A fine spirit of cooperation was shown in the meeting and all were of one acord that every reasonable induce ment should be given to any industry that will invest and locate in North Wilkesboro. It is such cooperative ef forts that gets results. Industrialists have been for the past fifteen years lo cating mills and factories of various kinds in many southern cities. Some of these have become great assets in towns more unfavorable as a location than North Wilkesboro. The merchants’ association is substi tuting in an admiral manner for a cham ber of commerce and as such should be given wholehearted cooperation. It was pointed out by some of the public spirited business men in the meeting Friday night that this section has something to offer that cannot be found anywhere else—^that is pure Anglo-Saxon labor of the very best type contented with any reasonable and fair treatment. Labor troubles are practically unknown here because the people are native, free from foreign agi tators, communists, fascists, or any oth er "ists” or troublesome cliques. No one here believes in cheap labor, that is wages below the point where one could earn a decent l.vlihood, and no industry com ng here expects to pro mote sweatshop methods. Any fair dealing industry will find that this .section has a great natural re- source—a bountiful .supply of labor. Lo cal industrial men tell of the constant number of applicants for jobs that they must necessarily turn down. These peo ple—generally speaking—desire jobs because they want to earn a better liv ing than they have in the pa.st. The Research Station Apple growing being one of our lead ing branches of agriculture in Wilkes county, the research station to be erect ed on the Brushies has rightfully at tracted wide interest. The state made an appropriation for a two-year period of research and the orchardists are collecting funds with which to erect a building to house the gtation. The funds appropriated will do much in research work but are not Bufficient to erect the building in addi tion. Those who are interested in the fruit growing industry should help this move ment as much ag possible. No doubt, the fruit growers will take advantage of the opportunities afford ed by the research work and will show such improvement that the appropria tion will be continued at the end of the biennium. 'The project can and will prove of much benef^ to the fruit growing indus try, a big income producer, and deserves widespread support. Rules of The Road 1. Make everyone that you meet smile every time you meet them. 2, Make everyone feel more comfort able, happier, or better for having met you. 3, Be constantly looking for pleasant experiences and enjoy them. 4. Multiply yeur enjoyment in them by teUlng of your pleasure to others. 6. Persist in following these four rulee unto they become fixed habits and are followed wWiout effort THE JOUBNAL-PATRIOT, NORTH Li^orlitid Education While many differ as to whether’^or not liquor should be legalizedt “con trolled” or prohibited, very few people are willing to try to defend'liquor or its use. They can point out not one benefit from the use of liquor as a drink. People will watch with much Inter est the results of teaching the^evil ef fects of alcohol in schools. The course was instituted for the first time during the past school term and was given in the sixth grade, it being the theory that sixth grade children were of the proper age and development to begin to under- stnd some of the things about the hu man mind and body. The children are being taught in the schools that liquor will wreck bodies and minds. If parents will follow up this course and also pro-^ vide a background by even earlier teaching and training in the home there should be some noticeble results in the next few years and a drop in the con sumption of strong drink. It is deplorable that some liquor ad vertising is apparently directed to se cure more consumers of liquor in gen eral. If the government is to “control” liquor it should be able to curb this type of advertising which is in conflict with the teachings in the schools. Sugar For Needy Vigilant officers hereafter will be aid ed and unfortunate poor in Wilkes coun ty when they destroy stills and confis cate materials. Gone are the days when grain was used to make moonshine. The moon shiners have been working for volume production at low cost and their chief materil is sugar. By a special arrangement the sugar found at the still by county officers will be turned over to the welfare depart ment to dispense to the poor. In this manner an evil will be converted into a blessing for the underprivileged. What is your hobby—? If you haven’t one, you’re cheating yourself, your fam ily, and your neighbors. Success is not measured by the work of a few years but rather the consistent, conscientious efforts of a lifetime. It’s the long, con- .stant pull that counts—and it takes a hobby to keep you from breaking under the strain and make you enjoy life as you go along. FIRESIDE PHILOSOPHY Bjr O. M. DICKSON What a dangerous thing is a headless tongue! More girls need to know how to knead bis cuit dough. Unless one goes to Reno, there are some knots that are harder to untie than they are to tie. Just anybody can make love to just anytklng. If all the original meanbers of the English Church had swallowed “line, hook and sinkers,’’ we would probably have had no Puritans, no Plymouth Rock, nor no Jamestown. As an allb'l for one’s ec centricities, he is often re- feir.#J to as being in his “dotage,” whan the truth Is he has never been out of it. Some people are too busy aigging into the cemetery of the past, or trying to peep into the future to be conscious that the present actually eodste. An example of self^lerant religion—a man who preaches that he' belongs to the only church, and possesses the only kind of religion that Ood will accept. Tom Dixon, the famous author and lecturer, has proven that a “Leopard’’ can change his spots. The question is often asked, “WSll yon stay with me?’’ ’The answer should he: “It depends upon where you’re going and when you’re coming hack. If a man is afraid to take a side on a ques tion, it is possible for him to take the end of it. 'Thera are times—usually about three a day —when fibers aesona to be a eloaa proximity between the atomScih and ths ibeart. Webster says, "A Judge must not be a bad man.’’ ’This is another way of saying that be ought to be a good man. How generous of a school boy who, during his vacation from school, will not reflect upon nls father by re-settlng fences and getting wood for winter. During political campaigns, some men fight for principle, wflille others fight exclnslvely for "pie.” If laws were passed admitting only the high born and well-to-do into our jrahllc schools. In stead of having to nse hlood-hoanda to trace down truants, every man would lead his child to the Mbool honae and demand Us rights even at the point of a ibayonet. Apparently some ehnreh menibeira attend chnrdh'regalarly In order to show Jnat how prelnt^eM they m ecidait other’ deunmina- tione. ^0, N. C. 5-Minute Biogi^dphies AhAot and Infmc$ The Spinrter Who Turned Down the Mar- riafire Proposalt of a Thou«and Men The most wonderful woman I have ever known has had a thous and men propose to her. She has turned down offers from mil lionaires and from flshertnen and farmers and penniless men on the Bowery. A prince from one of V Europe’s most prominent royal families followed her for months and begged her to marry him. And now, although she has al ready reached her three-score years and ten, she 1* *tlll getting so many proposals by mall that her secretary doesn’t even bother to show them to her. Her name is Evangeline Booth, and she is tlhe head of the grand est army that ever attacked an enemy—the Salvation Army—an army with thirty thousand offi cers, feeding the hungry In eigh ty-six far-flung , countries and spreadng love in eighty different languages. “I got 80met^ing of a shock when 1 met Evangeline Booth. I knew she was old enough to be a grandmother, yet her dark red hair was Just beginning to show a few streaks of gray. And she was sparkling with vivacity and blazing with enthusiasm. Every summer when she is in America, she goes to Lake George and does fancy diving—Jack- knives and turtle-^backs and swan- dives; and when she was sixty- three, she swam clear acroes Lake George in fonr hours. It takes her an hour to motor from her house to the office; and she dictates all tihat time in her automoMle. Evangeline Booth sayu that one of the most thrilling experiences of her life occurred during the gold rush to the Yukon. You may recall that Just before the turn of the century, gold was discovered in Alaska, and the news set the nation seething with excitement. Hordes of men 'began hurrying to the far North and Evangeline Booth knew that the Salvation Anny would bo needed.there; so wtUi a couple ot trained nuraee and three dr four asetetants, she hMded for the Yukon. When she landed In Skagway, eggs were worth twenty-five dollars apiece and butter three hundred dollars a pound. Some men were hungry and all of them carried guns. And everywhere She heard men talk ing about “Soapy’’ Smith, the killer of the Klondike, the Dll- Ilnger of the Yukon. “Soapy” Smith and his geng laid In wait for miners returning from thie she asked him to sing a song they had learned together at the Salvation Army meetings; My heart is now whiter than snow. For Jesus abides with me here. My sins which are many I know Are pardoned. My title Is clear. Miss Booth! asked him to kneel with her; and the Salvation Army girl and “Soapy” Smith, the most notorious bandit that ever terrorized the North, got down on their knees together and prayed and wept together under the northern pines. With tears rolling down { his cheeks, “Soapy” promised her that be would stop killing people and would give himself up, and Miss Booth promised that she would use all her influence with the government to get him a light sentence. At four o’clock In the morning, he left her. At nine o’clock, be sent one ot his men to her with a present ot freshily baked bread aAd Jam tartlets and a pound of huttw— delicacies that were priceless up there. He bad stuck people up with a gun and stolen the flour and the butter, and one of the bad women of Skagway had re quested the privilege of baking the bread and Jam tartlets for the good woman who had come to Alaska to preach love and pur ity and forgiveness. Two days later, somebody shot "Soapy” Smith and Skagway erected a monument to the honor of the man who killed him. Elvangellne Booth is one of the happiest persona I have ever met. ^ jEo® Older YouUi Meeting a The older youth ooaterenee at State College this wesk is Bie first organised attennA ever made In North Out>lln> to help tom youth through onh it the most slgnijicant yet unsettled periods In life. The oonlerenee i« deeigoed to give gnidanee and tpedal train ing to rural boys and girls be tween 18 and 26 years of age, said L. R. Harrlll, 4-H club spec ialist at the college. These young people are a lit tle too old for re^lar 4-H club work, yet are not served ade quately by adult organizations, Harrlll pointed out. After the conference, he con tinued, an effort will be made to form older youth’s organisations in the different connties which will be patterned somewhat on the nature of advanced 4-H clube. Besides the-studies in agricul tural engineering, dairy cattle, swine, work stock, plant pathol ogy, poultry, home beautification, foods, clothing, and ifaome man agement at the conference, the boys and girls are being given wholesome recreation and are hearing helpful talks by agricul tural and educational leaders, Harrlll stated. Among the speakers are: Dr. O, E. Baker, senior agricultural economist o^ the U. 8. Depart- - cent of ABnengufer P. Orahaa, presfdsat veislty «e North Carolina: L. Poteat, president Wake Forest. Dean I. 0. Bckanb aai Dr. . 8. McKlnunon, director and aa-^ aistant director. reepeettvely ot the the Btate Colleca aztwaloa Q j earriea; I. M. Ballegr, former pnt*: ident of the North Carolina Bar Association; Dr. .^yCari V. Rey nolds, of the state beard of health; and Geoige MoCntlo of the TJ. S. Mologiesl snrvey; Reading the acx art T -tor less money. it you more Dea*l In your chlUteB suditr i tnemcai leoMr ihss tokdf^ ateemtry. Home mi «UKt SR mc«^, imdly, ^Treafmeiil lioy mkt* that burmu - . ooder dw ddn aad caam Per Sale By HORTON DRUG CO. Happy because she Is living for others. She told me that the deep est passion of her life is a desire to make every person she meets —even every waitress and pull- man porter—a Ittlo hotter be cause sh« had passed that way. NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND North Carolina, Wilkes Coroty. Pursuant to the power of sate contained in a certato judgment of the Superior court of Wilkes Mun- ty, in the case of The Pwe^ T jTid Bank of Columbia, plaintiff, versus J. H. Hendren and wife, Pearl Hendren, G. 0. Moore and wife, Mrs. G. 0., Moore,' M. E. Williams and wife, Mrs. M. E. Williams, Mrs. Emma Jordan, and Conrad, Comer, Redder and Poun- tain Jordan, minors, defemtents, in which judgment the undersigned was appo’ntM commissioner to sell certain lands, and by virtue of the power of sale contained in said order the undersigned commission er will expose to sale at public suction to the hig^st bidder at the courtWise door in "Wilkesboro, North Carolina, on Monday, the Suit Headquarters FOR MEN AND BOY5 ABSHERS Oldsmobile Sales ’ and Service ' Electric and Acetylene Weldlag. 1 Body sad Fender Repairiag. i Radiator Renurhis aad Genera) Aateaudrfle Work. ^ | WredEcr Service Day er Night. Williams Motor Co. T. H. Owker, V, Mile West, N. WiikeabMn 14th day of June, 1937, at twelve for miners returning from the foUowing d>- gold Helds and shot them down j g^ribed la^ lying and being in without warning and robbed them p Wilkes county, and more particn- of their gold dust. The United larly described as follows: States Government sent an armed All that certain pi^. . 1111 hi.,,- Kilt “"Snnnv”! containing 87 acres, posse to kill him, but So py situate, lying and be- Smith shot all of them and es caped. Skagway was a tough place. Five men were killed there the day Evangeline Booth arrived. 'That night, she held a meet ing on the banks of the Yukon River; and preached to twenty- five thousand lonely men and got all of them singing songs they had heard fihedr mothers sing In the long ago—Jesus, Lover of My Soul, Nearer My God To Thee, and Home, Sweet, Home. ’The Arctic night was chilly and raw and cold, so while she was singing, one man brought a blanket and threw it around her. This vast crowd of 'mien sang until one o’clock In the morning; and then Evangeline Booth and her hdpefs *** eat to Bleep on the ground undw the plM trees. They had started a fire and were maUng a little ooooa when they saw ftve men approaching them with gniu. When they got within speaking distance, the head man took off his hat and said. “I’m ’Soapy* Mountain graded road, about nine miles southwest from the Town of Wilkesboro, in Brushy Mountain township, Wilkes county, and State of North Carolina, having such shape, metes, courses and* distances as will more fully ap pear by reference to a plat there of made by Hendren and Hendren, Surveyors, on Jan. 19, 1917, and being bounded on the north by the lands of J. M. Costner; on east by lands of J. F. Moore and J. A. Campbell; on south by lands of J. A, ^mpbell and ftank Child ers; and on went by lands of PraiA Childers and J. A. Costner. This being the same land conveyed to the said J. H. Hendren by F. B. Hendren, Commissioner, by deed dated December 2%. 1912, and re corded in the afOee /ft the Regis ter qf D««ds for Wilkes eoonty, in book 85, at page 491, D. A. Lackey et nx-by deed dated 7th Sept., 1987, and recorded in book 86, at page 488, by W. J. Hendren by dew ^ted Sept.,* 1912^ and recogdeo Bi doA % ,at pake 4^, by V. M. Bendreb rt ux by deed dated 24th ^., .1912, afipi leeordid in bo^1l^i&>page 485; and by W. A. Jenhinp et ux by deed dated Idlb ^t., 1912, and his hat and sam. im recorded in book at page 487, amltlh; end I’ve come to tell you ,n4 the pffleB of tSTBegis- how much 1 enjoyed your sing- of for Wilkes coenty. tng” And he added, “I was! the | The terms '«# 'sale, are ebe-half .hat ««nt you the blanket. cash upon confirmation of said n»n that sent you^ ' gale by the Court, the baionee on while you were »*'* *^; 'credit, payable in two equal .an- keep IL 11 ^ ,*l nual installments,' with ipterest et doesn't sound like much of a, thereon from date of the sale at rfft now but it was a royal pree-jtke rate of rfx perc«it (6 per . where men were cent), per annum. No bid wiU be ent up there wnere accepted unleaa its mater shall de- dylng from chills and ’ pos t with the eoluateaioner at the She asked him if »h® would he bidding tee su m of in any danger there In Skagway.! FIFTY. DOLLARS (|60) lu a for- Kftt while I’m here,” he said, feit and gnahmty of Ms complimce NO. Not wni e ^ ^ ^ ^ itedton bis : bid adinr. ucceided. Notice is now gitriai that said will be rerB^ immediately at tne same plate kt_ tba asms t^vM On tile sdme day unless said is made. Brevy deposit not fotf^ed nor aeooptod will be PRPpq^gytaqpd.lD the mak» . . •It' • Star Siaglo-edge Blades solve the mystery of good shavse. Mode steso 1880 by ths Invswtors of the original safety raaor. Keen ‘ latdag, aalfbrm. \;rv4!S Dk. leiM. lOBvmi DUnmwmir «9* MteiCaiwr j WHYOOn I YOU > T*T IT? .. I a siiffniiig fraoi a aarsuus aR- mbA Mbs CElvaa- tmed Dr. Miba- Smiao which 0ifb hmx tmdk vlenfid regults timt itee uoate fli flD coifcoriMtic Isttv* ff ym tm§or from *V«rBaai* 9 Vnt ■> MaaJbs stert at saddau aoiaea^ *« aaaflg. ars crsufcg,^U«M aad /Upety, yarn uaruas ana ynbMy out of oedar. Votet and rdax titem witi> fts auaa madkfaie tiuit “Ad traty foa' this Colporudo gtd yow Harvaa* _ JOB far bom yooll ffad^thte q Iriwn ramedy effebtiva. * ^ At Drily Store* 2St'o»d tlM ru protect you.” - She talked wtih him 1“ wWte. uighU,of the midnight Sun for three hours. >’flhe said, i a glyi^ng That’al not right. You cant ^n. They’ll- kill you sooper or later.” Sbp talkod.te..^^’®* hood aad bl» ^ hoit-ibat JSKSr aid alnk and dap bll hands. And ha doiininrtbat when kii frandmotWer lay STAR RLADES in? C[>f !\sn fVFR RF.5DY RfiZORS Nervine Sold Locally By HORTON’S CUT-RATE DRUG STORE At Money-Saving Prieas ^ Star Blades For Sale By HORTON’S CUT-RATE DRUG STORE At Money-Saving Prices -■J- ' 4:. i)«oOr). WAKE UP YCUn LIVER BILE- rdbai Cahm>-*ri Twl Jny Oil (I Bet it As Monai Raris’ I* Gs Th« Hw-»boald pour oot two ^ liquid bile Into yoorboweta delly. If liiiotflowinffi^y.yoorfooddoeen’ldlgeet. It Joet deeayi in the boweb. Cm bk>«*5 np mI yeoy etotntech. Yoo get oon*tjp»led. Voo* ^'1 whole syntefs b poiaofied end yoo feel Four, sank the world looke ponk. LenUvM are enly mekeahlfte A. Bwre _ bowql loovMMtit docen t gel at Um ca^. It ^|| Amywm tboee good, old Carter'a Little Vves Fitli to get tbeee two pootuk of bile IV’Wtng freely a^ make yon feer*op and op". Harm* ji leet, gentle, yet ameiing in cnakinK biV flow 4 freely. Ask foe Caeter'i Little Liver Pilk by { | aeme. Stubbornly refooe onythirie ehy Pc- [ Carter’s Pills Sold ^«ca"? HORTON’S CUT-RAtE DRUG STORE .At Meney-Saving Prices [TlW»KSiPIHir~ yMiPursangoaotsinStin^iop^y ,4?] propottisM, fiwew wo OMacym* wammam vraaimi | tUs bwMite.^^«te«|r;^jOaDglh] -iiiOanyiMl>*a.'¥daralaal VMkoaw. ’pH&et Waaeg faamryggr Inertt use the BABY POWDER that FIGHTS OFF GERMS Don ba)?y;s using ordiriiyf jbahy Msoiwu doMtolf gsrh&'.TIM'l I off , sofa os smobOi and m as a ' pbwdsr can ttt But in addMow- rr mns tout aaa« aWBO^pro- 'K' sacted4eahot.Wa'praat 1 •tep^jod IgtectibB h mera wayourdrsi^V ■ .s p'.. 1 . . r-irn me."- ' p-.. 1 HU'iMff '-. . i-ifn inp if'll mm .-smem For soi»Si>asatorrs oauu stow