if till ‘iiWsW wiLKi^'^ m h • ■ ” dK i' - • 't*i-^.. \ - >■■ Mi.:.-i, T|^P6TstQT^s In th© tftmous -Mt.ot th* Brashy Monn> tatai^nin true to tom this morn- ^ and littla If any damage yrvt *^P®f4©d to the future aj^le crop now in 4>eautitul full bloom stage. Tbermometers in the valleys this morning registered as low as thirty, two degrees below freez ing, and there was a heavy frost which did great damage to fruit crop prospects. But It was different weather on the Brusbies. The warm air pushed up out of the valleys by . tfeo odd air blanketed the Brush- iee throughout the night and the tstoporature did not drop belo-w forty. There was no frost in the main fruit belt. However, the temperature on the Brushies Sunday morning dropped to 34 in high winds but there was no frost. It is expected that the chill did some damage to the bloom and may cause some few of the apples to fall off but orehardists say that no serious dfim^e has been done by the weather so far. flfe. John R. Jones ^ TfJeen By Death; i^-lweral Tuesday ^;dely Known Local Resi dent Waa Rofniblican Na tional Committeewoman do; „ p.hBBt>;tM.»d.y. iaa^&aaiiw- ■ OTiag-wansmoRo, N. c. MONDAY, APRIL 11 Am fSTAI Lai^ Circulation Features W i 1 ke s Public Library In First Year In City Circulation For First Year Over Thirteen and One- Half Thousand NOW HAVE 1,494 BQQ|^ Public Institution Is Result Cooperative Elffort And Contributions Mrs. Rose McNeill Jones, wife of Solicitor John R. Jones, died at nine o’clock this morning at The Wilkes Hospital. Mrs. Jones had been in ill health for the past few months. Last week she suffered a relapse from a ser'ous illne.ss and return ed to the hospital here after be ing at her home for several days. Funeral service will 'be held at W''ilke8boro Baptist church Tues day afternoon, three o’clock. Rev. Howard J. Ford, pastor, will be assisted bv Rev. J. M. Hayes, of Meredith College, and Rev. S. L. Blevins, of /lays. The body will lie in state from two o’clock un til the hour of the funeral. Burial will be in Mountain Park ceme tery in Wilkesboro. Mrs. Jones was one of the most highly esteemed women in North western North Carolina. She serv ed as Republican National Com mitteewoman for North Carolina since 1936. She was a member of one of this section’s best known families, being a daughter of the late R©'’. Milton McNeill and Mrs. Martha iarlow McNeill. Her father was >a beloved Baptist minister and served as pastor of churches in all parts of Wilkes county. Ho also took a prominent part in public life in the county, beinn a former sheriff and tor several years was clerk of federal court at Wilkesboro. Mrs. Jones was a granddaughter of the late George McNeill, a pioneer minister and head of the McNeill family in this part of the state. After her marriage to Mr. Jones, at that time a young mem ber of the W'ilkes bar, she served as secretary to the law firm com posed of her husband and John son J. Hayes, who was solicitor of the 17th judicial district. Mr. Jdnes was elected to succeed .Mr. {Continued on page five) Jack Spainhour Is Dye Foreman At State College * Jack Spainhour. son of Mr. and W- J. E. Spainhour. of this city, is Woing foreman in the textile •chool at North Carolina State k College. The State College textile school is considered one of the best in tie country and will hold Us an- HBtol exposition and style show April 21. ■ -r—: r- The Wilkes County Public Li brary, a project of the council of social agencies composed of rep resentatives from civic bodies and instllwtlons. has reached it« first annivlWskry-And the librarian, Misf'Mable Hpttser. reported a successful year. From a beginning at the zero point a little more than a year ago the library has grown to have I, 494 volumes and the year’s circulation was 13,526. In addition to the central li brary here, the library this year has furnished books to 17 .«chools in the county and during the summer months will place books in the hands of responsible par- tie* in sever«-l conimunilies for free and convenient use by the public. The most rapid growth iu the library has been since January 1. During the past three months 84 3 books have been added to the li brary. These were donated by the “Save Your Children Fund” and the public library of Newark, N. J. The circulation since January 1 has been over 2,000. The library has been aided ma terially by the WPA library pro ject, which mended books with out cost, and by the N\A. which constructed shelves, ciuarters for the library have been furnished by Reins-Sturdivant. Fifteen books, are now on the rental shelf which is maintained to get funds for the purchase of new and popular fid ion and for incidentals, .•\monv the n e w books now on the rental shelf ar» “Shadows Slant North ’’ by Mary Bledsoe, aud “Hoiis'-.s of i’eace.” by Ernest ,\1. Eller. The latter was donated b}' the author's fath er. E. E. Eller, of this city. P.-T. A. Meeting Date I.s Changed Aid To Aged And Children Will Cost More During 1938 m _ Number EI4[ibles Doubles Original County Estimates Home? >1 London . . . Again persistent rumors are heard that the Lind berghs plan an early return to the United States. One of the rea- son.s cited is the recent overhaul ing given the Lindbergh homo at Hopewell. N. J.. indicating that the now deserted house, scene of the tragic kidnapping, may once more become occupied. Neitiier Mr. nor Mrs. Lindbergh would af firm or deny the reports. Hosier Speaks Tentative Allotment of State And Federal Funds Are Inadequate COUNTY SHARES COST If estimates of the Wilkes county hoard of welfare are ac curate there will not be sufficient funds to provide old age assist ance and aid to dependent chil dren as provided by the state so cial security act to all eligibles in Wilkes county. This week the board of welfare submitted to the county board of commissioners the estimates for the next fiscal year. The esti mates were also forwarded to the state board of charities and pub lic welfare. Charles McNeill, welfare offi cer, in his report stated that 335 hive already been approved for old age assistance. This number e.xceeds the original estimates of 315 by 20 cases and hundreds are yet to be investigated and rws n 1 i At I passed upon by the board of wel To School Groups f8^ Bet^r Fir Poor Is ObjedHp Welfare Pruje^ SPAIN . . . Crushing all Loyalist resistance, the mighty Rebel war machine composed of Moors, Italians and GeriMBk pushes relentlessly toward the Mediterranean and toward a spee^ end of Spain’s bloody Civil War, now in its second year. Hen, Geoeroliasimo Francisco ! mini r Franco (left foreground), with his staff, inspeicts the terrain over' homes more comfortable and Hv- which his troops will advance in drive to the seacoast, a few miles - a Way. ' Disc&rded And Broken niture To Be Renovated For Unfortunate APPEAL IS MADE Trucks Will Call For Dom^ lions Of Furniture Te Be Repaired The Junior Woman’s Club of North Wilkesboro has launched a major welfare project ip coopera tion with the Wilkes county wel fare department. “If the citizens oi our city and county could see ho-w the other half live a plea for discarded fur niture that would make poor Four Legged Chick Is Exhibited Here Bruce Combs brouid>t to. The Jounud-Pntriot offin one day last week a Siamese twin chick- eo. The chick, hatched- on the famv of L. W. Curry, of North Wilkesboro route B, had two heads and four legs. It lived only a fow minutes. total number of aged eligible to receive aid Is 690 or more than j receive Safety Director Of Carolina double the estimate last year be- Motor Club Pleads For Safety -Noiioc is given llnil Wilkesboro I’nreiu-Tput'lior Asso ciation will meet Wednesci.-iy of this week instead of Tbnrsdny. The meeting will In' '■eld a'. '’,:ie. The study eoiiise will meet at three o’clock and Uev. Kname Olive will lead the disci th.' s.ihject. ’Livin.'. lianidly ill til ■ Home.'' Waller Y. Hosier, safety direc tor of the Carolina Motor Club, will conduct a series of safety talks with the students of the schools of North ..Wilkes ginning at 12:55 p. m. Tue.sdav.' Th^se safety talks are being made in conjunction with Gov. Hoey’s saf-ety movement to cut highway fatalities in the state. North Car olina was one of the ten highest stales in the union for highway accidents in 1937. and the co- oreration of all aiitoniohile ope rators in the state is reqnested to make 193.'i a safer year. If aiilomobile o|ierators will ii.-e the same amount of courtesy j on the highways as tiicy do in j tile average home, then many of the -North ; onr accidents can lie prevented. Slid .Mr. Hosier to Tiie Jourual- : Hairiiil today. “lull it would s. c n. that most drivers seem all p.uuied up and like to take it out f u n heliiiid tile stcaring wheel OI their automobile. Remember, iie continued, tins is tlie time of lie- year when automobile fatali- (Continued on page eight) ed.l'li of Blind Man Successful In Business Endeavors fore the program began State authorities, Mr. McNeill said, insist that the average monthly grant to aged be $8 and oil the basis of the estimate of number of elij^bles that phaw of the sociaL..^ “ ^'l6,Sf»^woFUld be the county’s part. On the basis of the estimates compiled from number of appli cants and reasonable expectations as to eligibility, 148 families with 474 children would be eligi ble for aid to dependent children. With an average grant of ?4 per month for each child the total cost for a year would be $22,- 752, of which the county would pay $7,584. Aid is now being given 234 cliildren and according to the al- Promote Safety On Hie Parkway Urges Children Be Immunized To D^hdieria Now Deaths From Diphtheria Could Be Prevented, Health Officer Says A grief stricken mother walk ed Into the office of Dr. A. J. El- ,ler, Wilkes oonaty health officer, {recently and said to a nurse, "I [feel like I murdered my little Cross Roads Eliminated By girl. Overpluses; Property Owners Are Warned Her curly-haired daughter, the pride of the home, had died a tew days before of dlptitheria and the _■ [wotiiiM: had fofe:«rtriiad th* child Se^'eral deaths occured 1 n sary crop* .oads, side/’oads and oe,ciai ucaiuo other accident hazards, parkway -wilkes last year from diphtheria. officials said today in the Ridge Parkway news. Blue Mrs. Bertha boulevard in North Carolina and ■Virginia. In order to eliminate these hazards the government is con structing overpasses where the parkway crosses hi.ghways and has a limited number of entranc- |es to the parkway. lotment of state and federal | Where the parkway grade has funds to Wilkes only .334 can he ; disturbed existing roads the park helped even if the county can' -service arranged for the roads to raise its share of the cost. This | be rebuilt but said: “W-e do not would mean. Mr. McNeill said,, ‘bat the individual owner al- that only 100 more children can so needs a private entrance to be given aid although applica-' the parkway. Accordingly, we tions for aid to about 200 are 1 have discouraged private roads to pending iu addition to the 231, the parkway . . . and we have already approved. The original a«bcd that you enter the park Bell, county nurse, _ a monthly B^id today, ‘‘and if the parents publication issued by the Roa noke, Va., office and distributed to landowners along the scenic estimate of number of eligibles last year was 280. Under tlic state allotment the limit for number of aged to be helped in Wilkes under the pro jram at way from the nearest public ac cess provided. The Parkw'ay is not a local road. It is a national road.” ^ Parkway rangers have been WiiKes uiiuei lue pru- - an average of $8 per i asked to warn adjoining property Mr McNeill' owners not to cross parkway month would be 449, ..... .......v..., .... u I lands where no right of way has According to estimates of the [boon granted, welfare board the social .security, R- Caniipbell is Parkway program would cost Wilkes coun- i ranso>’ from the Virginia line to ly approximately $30,o6o, which I laurel Springs and has head- woiild represent the county’s part j quarters in North Wilkesboro. K in financing old age assistance; | Hale, with headquarters %t aid to dependent childron, aid to RR'sville, Va., will cover the ter* blind and administrative ex-■ ritory from Ruggles Gap to ’ pense. I North Carolina line. ''tX' Wat ilkesboro P.-T. A. To Meet Thursday •? — '■ ■Wilkesboro Parent-Teacher as- Rociation will hold the last meet- Irg of the school year in the school auditorium on Thursday 3:15. Every school pa- \ Is iDTlted tp attend. An in- ItlBg presra® bas been pre- iVe'd. , . he »tu4y ocufsa.vill nifet at. i.WUh ilre. A, R. Ogllvle in fiSpd Sale Friday ^OArdner Circle of the t b Wilkesboro Methodist Hsth will sponsor a Food Sale store Friday, April 16. “ ft* at 3r80 o’clock. Oakes, -A|r|rfl aad AH^ferent klnds^ Wilkes Man, Blind, Is Successful Merchant and Dealer In Livestock Despite blindness, the most dreaded physical handicap, A. T. (Turner) Nichols, has earned a comfortable living for himself and his family at his nlaco of business eight miles from North Wilkesboro in the Pleasapt Home communitv of Wilkes county. when hp was only ten years old. A muzzle loading gun cap ex ploded and put one eye ©I't ®f commission. The other was so badly damaged that he could not take care of it because he could not see very well and be los^ it when a harness rack struck him And his success has been in j in the' face. linos of business in which many Ho entered the school for the .— people blessed with all senses; .blind at Raleigh and before he to make a clean sweep of have failed—operating a country j would give much information a- honors Friday in the district ,101- and dealing in used automo- bout his school life he made this conducted at'Gran- reporter promise to give full rUllUlLCl yiuuiioc VW o-"' _ .. credit to W. A. Bullis, a proml- nent citizen and former mayor of - * ,T.' , fironR® Falla The girls glee club In competl- biles, horses, mules and cattle 'I have never been to a relief or welfare office for anything ex cept help for unfortunate neigh-j North wiiKesDoro M,^on ”and 'TaylorsvIlU high bors,’’ Turner told thl» Inquiring! said, is responsible for bis edu- Reporter who' managed to put cation. Ho encouraged the blind highest “’’“r forward a few questions as the youth to enter school and carried ^‘be^fghMt blind man; went about his busi ness of waiting-on customers. And be has not ^pnly. JeOPt^ him self out «f. the relief Office but during bis; lifetime has supported h4s fathewtet mothert. now-dead, hirtr at his own expense to from the institution. able would not go unheeded,’’ the club said in making annoiini^ ment of the drive to secure brok en or discarded furniture which will be repaired and renovated and distributed by the welfare de partment to the most needy homes. The appeal for support of the project follows: “Have you a broken or discarded piece of fur niture in your home? If so, the Junior Woman’s Club asks you to contribute same to the county welfare project wjjere the furni ture donated wHl ' he reFafred. stained or painted and placed In the homes of the less fortunate In Wilkes county who have no furniture. ‘‘If you have a table, bed, chair or other article of furni ture, broken or for other reason discarded, which you will be glad to contribute for betterment of homes in your community and ,cen&ty, please call any member W. k. Sturdivant, Mrs." ndfSathy-” Carter,or Mrs. Rachel Absher. A truck will call for the furniture and your contributions will he greatly appreciated.” of those children could talk to all parents in the county we would not need to per-suade any of them to have their children immuniz- i ed.” ! Dr. Eller, health officer, said that all children over six month, of age should be immunized and Juniors of the seventh dis- he explained that a few months trict. composed of Wilke.,. .Sdf- are necessary after the vaccina-|ry and Yadkin cotinties. will con- tioji before the child becomes im-|diict a class initiation with Elkin mtine to the disease. Therefore, it j council number 96 on Friday eve Class Initiation Of Juniors Friday is important, he said, that chil dren he vaccinated now in order to ill' i imiine to the disease be fore 111,! beginning of the next school lerni. Because no funds for that pur pose is provided, the county (Continued on page eight) ning, .iVpril 1.5. beginning at 7:3(>, Junior Order leaders said liere today. Several candidates will take degrees and an enjovable meet ing i.s anticipated. The North Wil- keshoro degree team will confer degrees. Continued Neglect May Result In Prosecution Number of Dog Owners “Not a week passes wilhoiit at | tially the most dangerous dog least one mad dog being found | when it goes mail.’’ the health of- In Wilkes county.” Dr. A. J. | ficer said, and went on to explain Eller county health officer, said’that the “no count dog which the today in a statement warning dog owners to have their dogs immunized or face prosecution in the courts for failure to comply with a state law which he describ ed as being for the protection of all the people. “No one knows where bis dog goes if it is not confined and no one knows what kind of dogs visit his dogs. Therefore, it is most essential that all dogs be immunized against rabies.” Eller said. owner says is not worth Usting and for whom there is ik| ac claimed owner can become very- dangerous as a rabies carrier.” Dr. Eller said that prosei;ntion8 must follow continued neglect to have dogs immunized and that ho iis determined that the people comply with the law for the pro tection of themselves and espec ially the children who are inno cent victims of the neglect of Dr. 'dog owners who faii to hav,? their I dogs vaccinated as the law re- “That harmless pet is poten-^ quires. North Wilkesboro Wins Top Honors At District Music Contest Friday North Wilkesboro school by the narrow margin of one place rating and given a contestant from North IVilkeoboro school. ever the Will 7i tX Snt he cea«d talking,The Wisp” was the number about himself to say that som«-, ren^e^ . . . . Unio ^hfett he can find'time he la Q^dolyn H^ard won first ItStog to Write a ■9-tit Gwendolyn Hubbard, Mary Tioutee Clements and Burchie St John won first in competition with iMarion, Granite Falls and Tay lorsville. m^ry Louise Clements won sec ond placet with a piano solo in competition with entries from Marion, Taylorsville and Granite Falls. ' . , : - By virtue of their ivlctofiee in the district contest, the North' Wilkesboro 'high, school entries will compete In. tee state cogteirt to be held-on Apyk ^ an’s College^ in ’Wilkesboro wlU class B sehoo.lv -eptei; MiteolatLipHhr. a roUmsnt of less tean ifo. North vriteteiR Cl««s B. rvpall Mi