iGKAllfUAtK «Wmi, » Ittoil m1m7 iavir goad 'iaaM to. A la.'aiMne at 00LLB6S ^ jro« Ae aarest way to al and of earninc £»,:JtHE;J6U]WJA^ Fh wmfOfiBBORlj;^. a^' ^—■- ^ Mho W It SUMMER CLASSES NOW FORMING stor . . now and gain three ntha' salary ahead of those wait till September. You vu> have here the .advantages H one of the best equipped busi- i,Bces colleges in North Carolina. RCollege and University trained Itoaehers. Send for information. Jones Business Colleg e HIGH POINT, N. C. P. P. Jones, M. A., President Fully Accredited by American Association of Commercial Colleges Diroctor of the' North Caroline' Asaoeiation foi' Whw Control, today aanounc* ed that he,has petitioned the Got. •moy to make an approprlatlona, out of the Contingency and Bhnef^ geney Fund to create a la'boratory 1 for the purpose of testing and an alysing samples of wines offered for sale in this State. Chffey said that he has had a [conference "with the Governor re garding the testing of wines. Director Catfey, who is at tempting to ‘clean up’ the Wine Industry in North Orollna, point ed-out that with the outlawing of fortified wines, he Is appre hensive of abuses of the sale of lO per cent wines which may be adulterated or of a synthetic character and not of the genuine type made from the natural fer mentation of fruits or /berries, without the addition of foreign substance. It was learned that Caffey has also conferred with Cutler Moore, Chairman of the ABC Board, and Mr. Moore has pledged the co operation of the Board in the wine control progrr m in making j /iuch tests and analysis it the funds tor same can be made avail able. 1 MIHSJO jl*- DreainCdmeTn& Wdj^ I ghoult Robert Cummins and Jean^Artouj Mfss Arthur i^starrd b/ RKO Radio. Bob h^as the featured romw tic ?oU in support, with Charles Coburn and Spring Byington alw WaX featur^ Norman Krasna wrote the piew, a laugh-p^ed story of WorWng people in a big city of totTay! , '‘The Devil and Miss. Jones” opens at the Allen Thursday. The is4o letiuce acreage hsr- vested of 2..TOO acres was a record -_;ifor the Slate, reports" the N. C. Nitrogen Capacity Meeting.Called Adequate For All On Fertilizers Demands So Far 'Department of Agriculture. Rjleigh, June 10.—A confer ence of farmers, agricultural lead ers, manufacturers, 'dealers and 8 HOURS AFOOT 8 HOURS ABED Henry Jones Is on his feet from 7 till 4, every day except Sunday. But he takes this steady grind in his stride—and he’s getting ahead—because every night Henry Jones gets 8 hours of unbroken, restful, health-restoring sleep. Y’our health demands that you restore mental and physical energy with good, sound sleep—and plenty of i». Y ou’ll get it on a Its Comfort-tiyelet Tufting eliminates hard buttons and lumpy tufts. Relax instantly, sleep soundly, keep your youth and pep. A small payment down puts the Kingsdown Mat tress in your home. Leading furniture dealers sell and recommend Kingsdown. $39‘®® “ Easy Terms I COMFOWT-EYEliT TlirTINCJ You’ll fiui uo uueomjortablo lumps or buttons ou a Kiugs- dotem Mattress- -instead you’ll tujoy the flat tape Comfort- Eyelet tuftiue. Our Mattress Sa’e is just beginning. Come in today and let us show you this fine mattress. See Window Display Rhodes-Day Furniture Co. “Complete Furnishers of *the Home” ninth Street North Wilkesboro, N. C. - Ulitti uiavt u Priorities Unlikely On Nitro- farm organization representetlves Demand wlll.be held June 16 to suggest , gen Desp ^ grade? of mixed fertilizers to For Explosives !,,g North Carolina. D. S. assistant Will Sooi^ IW tYwfiibf - Out Over lOndOOtPlcuM. Pj'dsyS'dbNMqo# .iw h’' fehin^P* doodle itnerfoia war ^ aeme ajv^"41»»m a little^thba and ' j^eM'iiew ^ produce; *)■ much as a»T'®MWHuI oi^bther Ttiations out together, their man- agets say. Yet they'll need the tune. , . - ' ‘ ,~A trip through the guarded gates of the factories and a talk with the engineers who designed them shows the how and why. With other returned war corres pondents I have , gone through key defense factories in five states with army and navy offi cers as guides. On suefi sites as a former corn field near Detroit, a tobacco farm near Hartford, Conn., and a pas ture on the outskirts of Indianap olis I saw engine, tonk and air plane factories being started, fin ished or getting Into producUon. On the desks of indnstriallsU from the eastern seaboard to the middlewest I saw plans for still factories. But wg can match tbetn ht^ anyi thing that’* made;. The wry f It our war prodmUon right now U Ilka BoanavUia dam. ^e'ra hhlldhig tha dgm—^a .factories. It’s hut atarftpg to Sadc np wato er. When we gat and WhetJ the power ooma . inyiAare^hro^*'^. '■" iaa^i,'tw^;w“inS.4 at hw«d‘ J*- eht'T ,iowr w«titfIt- tfkaf/uf4V;, . h.e • conttou^:d,4 V*o*h*ng % «’»’■ duatioB per la^ ww^.d«_ 16.7H^efgB per Mfd during Agrif of last year, yepoita the Ctata 1 ' partmeat aay »oe 'i- Z . Buslnees ;mep exp^ the gen;:,, ehal run of manufactured grocery products to 'begin reflecting. the. higher raw materials and’ labor co^ta in early fall when this year’s crops have been processed and ffloyed. “t' ' '• Trndbi and Tractora-."-, a r EASY TERMS a F*7 Otuh for Uto MeM Cars and Tmehe iSbmpiete Retniil^^B^ ]3eltric and A:etylene Wctifiig *PHONE 334-J JCINGSDOWN MATTRESS AND KINGSDOWN SPRING M’hite Sulphur Springs. W. Va., June to.- -Despite the fact that (luring the World War the coun try was entirely dependent upon foreign sourres for nitrogen, we now have the capacity to produce all the nitrogen needed for mu nitions end fertilizer, C. C. Con- cannon. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. U. S. De partment of Commerce, told over 400 fertilizer manufacturers and distributors at the opening ses sion of the 17th annual conven tion of The National Fertilizer Association hern today. •'The nitrogen requirements of the Army and Nrvy of the United State.? and of the gO'vernment of any country whose needs the President deems vital to the de fense of the United States, can be supplied by American plants,” he revealed in making an im portant statement on supplies of his vital chemical. “Although ammonia supplies are tight at the present moment, the future outlook is favored h> !ncrea?ed supplies from the three litrogen plants in course of con struction. and the possibility of obtaining some additional nitro gen from Canadian pi: nts. The nitrogen supply will he watchetl closelv hv the C.overnment and every"effort will be made to fur nish the normal needs of agricul ture without recourse to priority regulations,’’ he said. John E. Sanford. President of the Association, in his opening address announced a rttcord y«r of fertijizer consumption. 'An all-time high for fertilizer con sumption was establish by farm ers when 8.311,000 tons of com mercial fertilizer were used on farms during the past crop year, he reported. “This is an increase of more than one-half million (oas over the preceding yerr. Tonnage figures themselves do not tell a complete story of plant- food consumption in this banner year, since there has been a sig nificant increase in the amount of plantfood contained in a ton of fertilizer. This year's tonnage figure wfs 16 per cent above 1920, hut the amount of plant- foods’ contained and used was 64 per cent greater. •It .?eems likely that another tonnage increase is in store for next year, since tag sf.le figures for the first four months of 1941 od in 1940. May. 1941, was the driest since 1936, reports the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service. Coltrane, assistant to the Com missioner of Agriculture announc ed today. Not less than 35 nor more than 50 grades of fertilizer will be ap proved foi* sale in the state in conformity with the 1941 ferti lizer law enacted by the General Assembly. Final adoption of the grades will be made by the State Board of Agriculture and the di rector of the N. C. Experiment Station. The conference will be held in the board room of the Agrtcul- niral building here at 10:30 a. Coltrane, who will discuas' the provisions of the fertilizer act, explained that '‘the purpose of the meeting will be to O'btcln from all interested persons a definite view as to the grades of fertilizer needed in a sound agricultural program.’’ “Much confusion has resulted in the past becau.se of the un necessarily large number of ferti lizer grades sold in the State and the provision of the law provid ing for grade reduction will toe of substantial benefit to farmers,” he added. The N. C. Experiment Station recognizes approximately 2 2 grades of fertilizer as sufficient to meet plant food requirements of soil?' in the State. Dr. L. D. Baver, liead of the Slate College Agrcfomy department, will dis cuss the recommended grades of the Experiment Station. An explanation of the new North Carolina lime law will also be a feature of the conference. more Everyone Confident Everyone with whom I talked j army officer, engineer, produc- .tion cnief, draftsman, or mechan- 2Q—was confident that this coun try eventually could turn out more and better equipment than all of continental Europe put to gether. The men who knew .tnost about European plants—such as R. K. Eivansi, sturdy, gray-haired Gener al Motors vice president who man ufactured automobiles in Ger many from 1926 to 1936 and wh5 showed me through the Allison airplane engine factory in Indian apolis—expressed even more con fidence in American production (Opacity than the others. “The Germans make good ma chines,’’ Evans said. “And they If you want the atrongett-puUing truck in the lV4-ton field,,get a CMC with the new 97 horsepower 236 cu. in. Super* DuV Engine. Its 192.5 ft.-lbs. torque has not been matched in any comparable truck. Regular I’A-ton GMCs arc eqiiipped with 228 in. 93 h. p. engines. Time Paymonfs through our own YMAC Plan at lowest available rates ir . ★ GMCs ARE PRICED WITH THE LOWEST To relieve Misery of COLDS MMor ServKe Saks Co.. Inc. North Wilkesboro, N. C. 666 LIQUID TABLETS SALVE NOSE DROPS COUGH DROPS AMfckiCA S LOV/ PRICED TRUCKS OF VALUE GASOLINE-DIESEL Try "Rub-My-Tism"—a Wonderful Liniment Auction Use the advertising columns of this paper as your shopping ifuid*- EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Minday Almedia An derson, late of W'lkes county, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersized whose address is North Wilkes- boro, N. C., duly verified, on or be fore the 6th day of May, 1942, or this notice will be plead in bar of their right to recover. All pereons ' .ndebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This 6th day of May, 1941. Andrew Gwaltney Anderson, Executor of the estate of Min day Almedia Anderson, dec d. 6-12-6L (t) NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND. .„. Under and by virtue of an order are 9 per cent over the same per- Superior Court of Wilkes the Fo EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of last Will and Testament of ,y Chentwood, deceased, late of 'Rilkes County, North Carolina, his is to notify all persons having laims against the estate of said leceased to exhibit them to the mdersigned at Glade Valley, N^h Carolina, on or before the 21st day of May 1942, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of fheir recovery- ■All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay- ment. This the 21st day of May, 1941. F. Q. BLEVINS, Executor of Foy Cheatwood, deceased. 6-26-6t (t) ADMINISTRATOR’S NOnCE Having qualified as Administra- County, entitled “Ethel Harris anil husband. Bob Harris, Marshall Harus, Ollie Hegge and husband, Robert Hegge, Arza Holloway and wife, Lottie Holloway, Lula Had ing and husband, Carl Nading, Eu nice Needham and husband. Coy Needham, Annice Hayes and hus band, Noah Hayes, Fay Hayes and husband, Walter Hayes, Opal Se bastian and husband, Ray Sebas tian, and Buford Harris versus Cioria Mae Harris, Jaunita Harri and F. J. McDuffie, Guardian A Litem,” the undersiOTeil Commis sioner will on the 30th day of June, 1141, at 12:00 o’clock, noon, at the courthouse noor in Wilkesboro, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, that certain tract of land, lying and be ing in Edwards Township, )Wilke8 County, North Carolina, adjoining the lands of Ji T. Byrd, John ^i- cer and others, and Ixmnded as fol lows, viz: I “Beginning on a. pine or we^ bank of the Stone Oak road, West with the meander The Remainder of The Harding Jennings Preperty Subdivided Into Beautiful Homesites and Small Farms Located on the Mulberry Road at Ae New County School and Old Sulphur Springs, Five Miles From North Wilkesboro, N. C. Saturday, June 21 at AT 1 P. M. Prizes West or of the estate of Louise Melville! running — "lole, deceased, this is to notify *11 lings of J. T. Byrd’s line poles lersons having claims against said to a Spanish oak, john_ Spiceris state to present them to the un-jromer: thence South with John dersigmed, whose suidress is North Spicer’s line 45 poles to a red o^, Wilkesboro, N. 0., duly verified, on Spicer’s comer; thence East with sm i-i ^ W 1 ^ si AW AT Mm J Y 1 aI AA ^ fl H. H. Jennings and .Wife, (^ers W. R- Abshei’ aid P E. Dancy, Agisits ir before the 14th day of May, 1942, or this notice will be plead in lar of their right to recover. All persons indebtw to said estate will ilease make immediate settlement. This 14th (lay of May, 1941. DON MELVILLE, Adm^^ trator of the estate of Lemise said Spicer’s line 116 poles to a stake or rock on Weri; bank of Stone Oak road; thenca North with the meanderings of said road 24 Iioles to the beginning, indudbig 2E 1-2 acres, more , or less.” ; ■ 'z-'. R. L ENGLAND, Anctioiiea’ Melville dec’d. 6-19-fttL 6-26-^t (t) beginning, r u more or . This the 314 day of May, 1841 F- J. McDUFft^ If You*IUv« t|u»d To Sdl, Sw or .Write U4 CommiSBioner J-*;.-• ■Mii. 19 I 1 ' ■ * ■' ■Msl. jm.

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