. ^^ifeiipor the , liOO p. ■^ ..^C^ ... ^>Kht fa\mie^ farm 4|tnds; 4 hoiatae and white mad colored. fier week. Intrastate (^pfwia^: Eight toppers. 39c doseo; 1 Uootype operator, $30 per week; 1 cook, $80 to $100, per month. Interstate Openings: Two engine lathe operators, SOc per hour; 250 millwrights, %1 .00 per hour; 500 sheet metal workers, $1.15 per hour; 2 per operators, 9,0c per hour; 12 time study eugincers, $125-200 per month; stock clerk, $22.50 per week; 350 stock control clerks,,,75c par,', hour; 24 tool draftsmen, $1.00 per hour; 100 electrical' assemhlymen, 75c per hour; 150 Shaper operators, 85c per hour; 24 machine parts in spectors. $200, per month; 350 Inspectors, 75c to $1.15 per hour; C'seamers, $18-24 per week; 25 tadical drill press operators. 90c ler hour; 20 internal grinder op- wators, 90c per hour; 10 jig hearing machine operators. PRESBTTElRIAlr Rev. Lewis J. Yelanjlan, of Glendale Springs, a famous Bi ble student, will conduct the 11 o’clock service at the North . Wtlkesboro Presbyterian church. He has preached here a number of 'limes and Is always heard with much Interest. In the evening service at sev en o’clock Rev. John W. Luke of Glendale Springs, will occupy the pulpit. An offering will he taken for home missions at the evening service. The better perhaps to kiss her. Bob Hope tugs Paulette Goodard by the ears in “Nothing But The Truth,” new Paramount comedy due tc^ay at the Liberty Theatre per hour; 10 vertical boaring mill operators, 90c per hour; 25 en gine lathe operators, 90c per hour; 3 Keller machine opera tors, 90c per hour; 20 milling machine operato.''s, 90c per honr; 90c I 10 planers, 90c iwr hour; 10 hori zontal boaring mill operators, 90c per hour; 6 brass niolders. 90c per hour; 4 automobile body re pairmen instructors. $200 per month: 16 automobile mechanic Instructors, $200 per month. WANTED WA.N'TED—To E»cluuige Bir*l .dog for shot gun.—T. R. Hayes at G.P. Market. ll-10-2t I Sunset Ramblers, I Gospel Singers At Mount Pleasant MIDHI/F .VGKD Woman Wants work in pleasant hbihe. Mary Mastin. Wilke.'thoro" N. C. Up COLOR KD M.Am'^'WAN’TRD at the Douglas hoarding bouse. Telephone 318. 11-10-21 W.4NTEI); Used baby carriage. State price and condition. Address (M), care of The . Journal-Patriot. 10-23tfpd 3='OR SALE FOR S.AI.R: Team, extra gool, thoroughly broken mare mules coming three years old. J. 0. Mayberry. ll-lT-2tpd 1N>R S.VLE—Used Ijwbcs’ Bicy- 'i-le. Goed condition. Belknap make. Address ”1^’’ veare of Journal-Patriot. ll-10-2tp FOR S.AI.E—.Slightly u.sed hoy-ii' bicycle. Yadkin Valley Motor company. It PL.ACE A'OVR ORI>EK.s now for dressed turkeys for Thank.s giving rntl for Christmas. Mrs. .A. J. Eller, I’urlear 11-17-it FOR -iALE: 'rwi-iity t*ure till'd PoUnd China pigs six week.s old. T. W. FergusoH, Ferguson N. C. Upd Clay Jennings and his Sunset Ramblers will present a string band program in the Mount Pleasant School auditorium Sat urday night. November 8, at TCiO. With the Sunset Ramblers will al.so be Rex West and his Gospel Singers. This band of musicians and merrymakers seem to be very popular In this section, having ■jcrformert at several of the lar ger .schools in the county recent ly. Tlie string band is composed of five members end features two black-faced comedian.», which promises to provide a full even- ng of hilarity. , In conjunction with the pro gram there will be a cake walk. The proceeds will be used to eQuip the newdy constructed lunchroom. Wilkesboro Methodist Church Dr. James C. Stokes, the pas tor. will hold services at the Wilkesboro Methodist church both Sunday morning and evening. H's topic for the eleven o’clock hour will be “Life’s Sacred Vows.’’ Special music will be furnished by the choir. At the evening hour of 7:30, Dr. Stokes will speak on "What Shall We Do With Our Poverty?’’ A cordial invitation is extended to all strangers and visitors. SUNDAY SERMONS AT FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH “Master Of Circumstances’’ will he the sermon subject of the pas tor, Dr. John W. Kincheloe. Jr., ,at the morning worship in the First Baptist church this Sunday. Sunday school convenes at .9:45 a. m.. and the preaching service bypins at eleven o’clock. At the 7:30 p. m. service the pastor will speak on “The Be ginning of Sin’’. Baptist Train ing Union meets at 6:30 p. m. The public is cordially invited to attend the services. Jonesville Home Is Destroyed By Fire Three Camp Davis Soldiers Are Killed FOR S.ALE—l.’l-rooiii h(>us4“. with .three apartments,. on Tiogdon Avenue; good investment for rigTit party. Priced right. Telephone 295-W,.Or see C. B. iGrayson. ll-13-4t Hi(''!and- Tliree Camp Davis soldier- 'vre ki'led and iwo oth ers injured. one seriously. as their car left the highway and r.lunced into a l>rick wall near here early Sati'rday. The dead were Corporal T. B. (’larke. of Chicago; Staff Ser geant iM .1. Jenkins, of Dixie, ('.'a., and First Sergeant Fred A. Mukley. of Vancouver, Washing- A seven-room frame residence located on Mineral Springs Hill in Jonesviile. owned by Charles G. Mathis and occupied by John Blackbilrn and family was total ly destroyed by fire late Monday afternoon. Only a few pieces of furniture were recovered. The Elkin fire department, called to the scene, was unable to conquer the flames with the small water supply available. The loss is only partially cov ered by insurance. The fire ap parently originated around the kitchen flue. > drwa- tlc of how hla 12-ton trans port plane “started to flutter or shake’’ with the controls dead and speed Indicators “out” was related here .yesterday by Pilot Clarence Bates, only survivor of the Northwest Airlines crash hear here early Ifst Thursday in which 14 persons lost their lives. Discounting theories that ice formation caused the tragedy. Captain Bates from his hospital bed gave a deposition for a for mal investigation describing his futile fight to keep the big shir flying with the cargo of 12 prs sengers and three crew members. Ominous commands rang out ir the tiny plane cockpit as Bate' and his co-pilot. Alden Onsgard. 25. began struggling to avert dis- aster after trouble first develop ed when they were 600 feet above the- F,"rgo airport to consider landing. Fargo, N. D.. is sepa rated from Moorehead by the Red River. Bates said he yelled to Ons gard to “gear up.’’ or lift the landing apparatus while he stepp ed up to maximum motor power. But, he continued, the huge plrne acted “peculiar,” began to settle and despite all efforts to keep it inf the air, crashed,hurling Bates to the ground and free of the flaming wreckage that trapped the other 14. Government experts hoped the .story of Bates. Ps one of the few pilots to survive such a crash, might help clear up mystery of aviation catastrophes afternoon in game for tho ' i Coach 8, 1... , , . .. „ today that^.-Wti4irtl)PTir'/jBfUl,!rs feet and. aa the result, Oie alr-,,^,^,, ^ speed indicator wra.IO mile. ’Siiplay hour, but I disregarded that en- ^ ^eat dhaiaajife tlat'-wh- tirely because they were Inopera tive . . . ■ i,; ‘“rbe airplane began" acting peculiar, and I knew lomething was the matter. 1 didn't’’kfiow what, but it was rlghf at the hot. tpm of the descent. We had des- 'ended 400 feet which was down ‘0 600 (above ground) so I veiled, ‘Get up’ to the co-pilot, ’he idea being to keep ail the '.peed I could possibly get, and I increased to full horsepower to fly straight ahead . . . until I could find out what was the mat ter, but 1 didn’t have any time to check for ice or do anything be cause the period didn’t,last very long. I n^aan the airplane start- to flutter pr shake, and the con trols worked hard. I h?d diffi culty turning the wheel, as it would go down and thereafter I had difficulty bringing it back, and the yoke worked hard fore and aft. “.Abiut that time we must have settled, because I started seeing lights, srw all the lights on the horizon, and I know we were in a level position from the instru ments, and from the fact that lights were all on the horizon. It was Just a few seconds after that thht we crashed. “I don’t remember anything Bates said before taking off at from that time pn. I had no aen- Minneapolis he had checked with Pilot L. S. Delong, flight c?p- tain on a trip just in frpm Fargo and learned that there was no ice at higher altitudes. So, he added, his course was set at around 2,- 700 feet above sea level. With the de-icers working Bates said he began picking up ice about 25 or 30 miles out of Fargo but that he noticed none on the wings. 'There was ice, he went on, on the projection that shields landing light glare from the cockpit. He said he last checked for fee at about 1.100 feet above the ground when he was coming in for the Fargo landing. Right af ter he reached a level of 600 feet above the ground. Bates related that he began picking up “a lot more ice.’’ "It began building up,”’ he add ed “but there wasn’t one-quarter sation of a stall.' Sercpaiit Kduai' seriously injured. -^%nf I„ Butcher was FOR SAT/E—Xylwi mrotton. See or •Claudia Joines. Jlose, Silk or phone .Mrs, Itp WILIi TR.ADE Nice l{iul(iing Ix>tw lor late model car. Phone 45F32. " ItP OR SALE—AO Or Part of 125 barred rock pnllels, age 5 1-2 months. See J- ' L. Parsons, 3 1-2 miles out on Wilkesboro route one. HP OUR 20-INCH Ure, rims and tubes, used but In good con dition. — Tyre Bumgarner’s Service Station, Wilkesboro, N. C. ll-3-2t-pd' FOB SALE OR RXCKANGE—Lot Fulton Street;.) Winston-Salem, 160fxl45, suitable . for dwelling ■wood yard and store or oil tank storage. Will trade, for rtjuntry hams, cattle' Or, what have you. Terms to suit. Value $1,000. Pul ton St, Middlefork Township. J. W. Hollingsworth, Newton, N. I .... ll-3-4t Harmony To Have Quartet Singing Next session of the Bine Ridge qquartet singing association will be held at Harmony pfaptist church five miles west of this city on Sunday. N’ovemhoi- 16. All quartets eare invited to take part Poultry- All Day Singing Zion Hill Church The game AthBuiTi^ le »■ high light in the atfdeffe . program of the schools. LoCBlIJt'it TB second only to the ahDuj^?,'el|&ldc with Wilkesboro as the maltt ;6vent. North Wilkesboro whool will have a half holiday Friday as a reward for better than 9,7 per cent attendance In the first pert- cl and many of the students will go to Elkin to see the game. Use the advertising columns ol this oat>^> 1- V'Mif ur't»v Ads. tret attention 'There will be an all-day sing ing at Zion Hill Baptfst church. Boomer, Sunday. November 9th, beginning with Sunday School at ten o’clock. 'There will be preaching service at eleven o’clock with the Reverend E. S. Morgan, pastor of Elizabeth Bap tfst church, Charlotte, fn charge. There will also be a group of peopfe from that church to sing. A number of church chofrs and quartets have been invited to I sfng, among them the Carolina i Trio and the Wafsh Sisters Quar-J tet, and others. 1 There will be a picnic lunch on | (the church grounds. Everyone, Is cordially invited to attend, sing an-d Ikeor some good siirgfitg. j THE SQUADRON has a military smartness that merits fall approval anywhere! Wear it. .. enjoy its Mallory-crafted comfort...adimrethesciiartnewcnstom-stitch,imder- welt bsim and talk-of-the-town Mallory shades. At aiREB MAUOIY STYLES FK08 «5A‘lO 1. Encourage all farm families to keep sufficient poultry for home use and perhaps ■>. few for the market. 2. To ask millers and feed dealers to handle necessary poul try feeds for poultry producers. ADDS THE EXPERT'S TOUCH TO YOUR COOKINGI “Good workmen must have good tools. The wonuin in the kitchen deserves as good equipment as the man in the factory or on the farm.” FOR RENT FOR RENT-^4>a© fumi.sli«1 ap artment and one five-room unfurnished apartment; large lot and garden. Call Journal- Patriot. (S) ' Itpd S-BOOM AP-ARTWCENT with bath, suitable for couple, newly painted, lights and water fur nished. PhOB® 195-W. See C. B. Grayson. ,•.? , , It FOB BENT—FtveyRoom Apart ment on I street near Sixth in North Wilkesboro, modem con veniences. R. L. Wellborn, Phone 28?-M. ’ 10-23-tft There are four Naval Training Stations where Naval recruits are trained before going aboard ship or entering one of the Trade Schools. They are at Newport, Rhode Island: Great Lakes, Illi nois: Norfolk, Virginia; and San Diego, California. On this beliei Allen engineers set out to design and build the finest kitchen ronge that scientific research' could devise. They now present it — the new Allen's Streamline Princess Range. Women thrill with its stylish beauty, its relief from drudgery, its perfect performance. You will thrill, too, when you see itl Come in today and examine this new range that changes all ideas in range demgn. Journal-Patriot’s Miss Kathleen Crow Lecturer “Let me talk to your homemakers about the simple foods that I have found are most popular x/ith American families.I’vemade that a specialty—and that is where my usefulness to them will mainly lie,” said our lecturer, when we talked over with her plans for the school “My methods will save them minutes—maybe hours—^in the kitchen." It sounded good to us. You’Ulike thisptactical mind ed person. UP-TO-THE-MINUTE FOOD NEWS is something in which this newspaper specializes. All the year ’round our columns carry a wealth of attractive menus, stimulating recipes and market information. Now comes the Cooking School—high point of our Food Year. Here we show Jbow to make delicious, popular foods in the shortest time and in the easiest way. Our Cooking School is part of our food service to our women readers. Be sure to attend. All are welcome. Bring your friends. FOB RKiNT.— AparanHi with thrac rooms and bath, on Ken- eln^n Height*. Paul J. Vee-I M, Worth WUkeaboro. 9-35-tf Willkuns Motor Company T. H. WILLIAMS, Mgr. BEAR FRAME SERVICE New Low Prices—Easy Terms A style and size to meet your reqnirements> Liberal Allowance For Your Old Range Good Used Cars, Trucks and Tractors e EASY TERMS e Will Pay Cash for Late Model Wrecked Cars and Tracks Complete Body Rebuilding Electric and Acetylene Welding ’PHONE 334-J GRAY BROS. FURNITURE COMPANY FURNITURE — STOVES — RANGES ’Phone 607 Wilkesboro, N. C il»»sM Last Session FRIDAY 3P.M. Free Admission GIFTS Local merchants have done much to help us make this school a success. To theit generosity we owe the gifts that will he awarded following each session. To the lecturer, also, we owe the foods she will make. For all of these will be given away without mone/’nlffepithout price. Lucky, lucky recipients!!! NORTH WILKESBORO WOMAN’S CLUB HOUSE 'U' -J.,-.:!; '-L.

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