DEPEND ON
COURIER WANT ADS
THEY WILL WORK FOR YOU
Want Ad
Rates
1 Cents A Word (This Type)
Each Insertion
Twenty-five Cents Minimum
Charge
2c a word this size.
To insure proper position, Want
Ads should be in office Tues
days, Thursdays by A. M.—
Saturdays 3 P. M.
Cash must accompany all ads
unless you have an open account
with us.
All Keyed Ads Strictly Con
fidentiai. These can be reached
by letter only.
GftinuA'
JEWELRY C®
ASHE BORO, N.C
SILER CITYNC
Lon# Distance
Hauling — Moving
DAY or MIGHT
Earl’s Transfer
PHONE 28")-J
Dr. Wilfred C. Carr
OPTOMETRIST
Announces change of office
hours—Now 1 P. M. to 5 P. M.
SATURDAY ONLY
I
i
i
i
I
GARLAND LAKE
DAIRY
Grade A Pasteurized
“The Safest Milk on Earth”
Phone 129-R
Madame
Honore
Hours: 9 A. M.
to 9 P. M.
Daily & Sunday
Special Reading, 50c
Located on East Market Street
Half Mile from Greensboro City
Limits. Look For the Sign
McCORMICK-DEERIMG
D. W. Holt & Co.
Asheboro, N. C.
Old Ford Building
MONEY
LOANED
On
Real Estate
Refrigerators
Vacant Lots
Automobiles
OR ANY OTHER GOOD
SECURITIES
Autos Refinanced
(1) Use Your Car as Security
(2) No Endorsers Needed
(3) Confidential Service —
Insurance — Bonds.
OLDEST AND LARGEST
FINANCE COMPANY IN
HIGH POINT
Money Available on 10
Minutes Notice
WANTED— Contracts for pint
wood, cedar ( logs, cross ties. J,
D. Ross & Company, West
Salisbury street, Asheboro, N. C.
4 18 tf
Cash Registers, Scales, Slicers,
Choppers, Coffee Mills. Sought,
sold, exchanged. Expert repair
ing. Low prices. J. P. Yancey,
221 S. Spring Street, Greens
boro, N. C. Dial 2-0771.
(itc-J-11-37.
Will pay highest prices for wheat,
corn and oats, or will exchange
for flour and feed. Interstate
Milling Company, Charlotte, N.
C. 12t-6-29-37
j \\ \N FED—Saw mill man who will
! ut timber and get through with
job at once, to see Joe Betts or
J. A. Sikes, Asheboro, N. C.
2tpd J 15-18
For good, dry, sound milling
wheat testing 59 pounds and over
$1.30, wheating 58 pounds $1.25.
Lower grades are discounted pro
portionately. Statesville Flour
Mills Co., Statesville, N. C.
tf 7-15-37
FOR SALE—Extra good dairy
feed. 100 pound bags for $1.95;
4 pound buckets lard, 59c. Prit
chard’s Seed and Feed Store.
2t J 15-18
FOR SALE—$3.25 laying mash
for $2.89; yellow scratch, $2.59;
good hog feed. 100 pound bags.
$2.35. Pritchard’s Seed and Feed
Store.
12t J 15-18
' FOR SALE—Wood’s tested crim
son clovyr seed. Pritchard’s Seed
and Feed Store.
2t J 15-18
■■
! 5
SiORiES IN ,
iWV ►
STAMPS
Me Sought The
SouuOf Man*
CON of a professor of law, Gott
^ fried Wilhelm von Leibnitz
only naturally directed his studies
in that profession. He was born
in Leipzig, Germany, in 1646, and
qualified for his law degree a year
before he could get it legally. Im
mediately he set out to reform the
“Corpus Juris,” or body of the law.
But his interest quickly veered
toward a search for the source of
man’s soul, and an effort to ex
plain God’s trust in man. Out of
this came Leibnitz’s basic philoso
phy, that the soul, like all the
senses of man, was born with a
person, and that it is the con
sciousness of its presence that is
acquired later by education and
experience.
In mathematics, as in philoso
phy and law, Leibnitz became
world famous. He improved and
added to the study of calculus, or
the mathematics of reasoning, and
to analytical geometry. In 1700,
he became chief organizer and first
president of the Berlin Academy
j of Sciences. He died, in 1716, at
the age of 70
years.
Germany, in
1926, included his
portrait on one of
a series of stamps
honoring its fa
mous sons. It is
shown here.
REAL
ESTATE
Are you in the market
for a piece of property or
! have you a lot or acreage to
I sell?
Place an ad in the Classi
! fied Columns of The Cour
, ier. The Classified Section
is the meeting place of
Buyer and Seller.
The Courier
Phone 144
Expert Typewriter and Adding
Machine Repairing—We rebulid,
repair, overhaul and adjust all
makes of Typewriters and Ad
ding Machines. All work guar
anteed. Cooke, Hornaday. Head
quarters Scott Book & Station
ers- Co. Phone 250. Asheboro,
N. C. 6tc-J-ll-37
! Extension Dept.
—Conducted by—
B. S. MILLS APS, JK.
County Axcat
L. L. RAY, Asst Agent
Field Dajr
The thirty-second annual farm
ers field day will be held at the
Piedmont. Experiment station,
Statesville, N. C., Thursday, July
22, 1937. It should more than re
pay any farmer to take a day otT
and attend this meeting.
On the program will be heard
many prominent men in agricultur
al work in the state, such as Hon.
W. Kerr Scott, commissioner of
agriculture; D. S. Coltrane, assist
ant commissioner of agriculture;
: Pr. J. S. Dorton, manager N. C.
state fair; Frank H. Jeter, agri
cultural editor N. C. State college;
and many other forceful speakers.
In addition to this, there will be
contests and prizes awarded in
livestock, crops, soils, hog calling,
husband calling, horseshoe pitch
ing, etc., which will add to the
entertainment.
Experimental plats will also be
open for inspection and labeled as
far as possible. Farmers are in
vited to look over experiments un
der way and will be given informa
tion by men in charge. Such ex
periments as crop fertilizing, live
stock feeding, and a great number
of other experiments will be view
011 OUR WAY
By WILLIAMS
IN
V
THERE'S a pathetic case -
THAT GUV’S GOT BRAINS
AN' THEY BEEN WANTIN’ TO
PROMOTE HIM UP TO A
FOREMAN, BUT TMER AFRAID
MIGHT HAVE TO ASK
O DRESS UP AN’ NOT
SUCH A BIG CHEW,
AN’ SO FORTH...
THEY
IF THEY’D MAKE
HIM PRESIDENT OF
TH‘ COMPANY, RIGHT
QUICK, THEY’D BE
ALL RIGHT, BUT
YOU CAN’T BE
ECCENTRIC TILL
SOU GET UP
THERE.
jSpS)
k <%> r
LT.f?vyu.LIAM£>
LOW CLASS
AND HIGH
'cOfgTfrTBY NEA SOIVICE. INC T. M. REG. U S. PAT. Off
1 DON'T KNOW,
AND HOW ARE THE
LITTLE 5CAM PS
.THIS MORNING, j
b MYRA? ^
DR. JASON.. ONE
SEEMS TO HAVE
A TOUCH OF .
COLIC- rrl
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
HILE
JACK AND
LEW STILL
ARE TRYING
TO UN
RAVEL
THE
MVSTERY
OF THE
EGG
NOTES,
MVRA
15
COMPLETELY
ENGROSSED
WITH
THE
TWINS
IT’S MOST CONFUSING *
THEY SHOULD HAVE
NAMES OF SOME
SORT, DON’T YOU
THINK? >
7 1VE BEEN
TRYING TO
THINK OF
SOMETHING
APPROPRIATE
''so: SOU CAUL THIS OLIVE >
BRANCH TATTOO MACK A
CLUE-THIS ONLV CONFUSES
THE ISSUE... WHV WAS OWLV
ONE OF THEXTWIN5 /HARKED?
1 SAV, LANE-HDUD BETTER
GO INTO THE NURSERV
MISS NORTH HAS OUST \
FOUND ANOTHER CLUE J
FOR VOU-y
THANKS
£-* AH, HERE COMES OOP- X
I'LL SHOW 'IM A FACE OF JO//
HI, THERE, OOP, OL' THIKJG -• >
Y-, HOWZA ,w^
V BOV? —
WHV CAM'l I BE LIKE
OOP’MOTHIM' EVER
GETS HIM DOWN)! AL
WAYS FULL OF PEP AW'
CHEER -TH’ BEST
s MATUREO GUY /
\ IM TOWN !
BV COSH, I CAM!
I WILL REFORM, 1 SHALL!
MO MORE I'LL FROWN) .
AM' SCOWL / I'LL BE r
JUST LIKE MV PAL! J
_ » V .— ■ ..
ALLEY OOP.
YOU'RE MOT TH OUlV
SO OOOLA GAVE V'TH' OL' ROJ-ABOUT?
WELL. IT'S WHXTCHA DESERVE, VA
CRAZy LOUT' IF y'WANTA GET f'
OVER WITM THAT LITTLE GAL, /
. MOU'LL MAFTA GIT WISE <
\ 70 VE8SELF,OL' P3AL.'
(MOULD BE GLAD TO DANCE; \
IF I THOUGHT SHE'D GIVE ME
V^v.JUST HALF A _
CHANCE! F
ed, which should be valuable in
formation for any of us to bring
home.
Let us again urge every farmci;
to make every effort to attend this
field day; and don’t forget the
date—Thursday, July 22, beginning
at 10 a. m., at the Statesville ex
periment station.
Farmers Convention
It is now time to make definite
plans to attend the State Farmers
convention, o be held at Raleigh
August 2nd to 6th. This is the an
nual get together of farmers and
farm women throughout the state,
and is something that is vevy
much worth while from all angles.
Some of the greatest agricultural
leaders of the country will be on
the program there, and it will be
! a vacation week filibd with fun.
education, and wholesome recrea
tion and pleasure. Let’s all pre
; pare now to attend.
Terrace News
The terracing unit is now oper
ating in the eastern side of the
county, near Brown’s Cross roads.
Farmers in this area interested in
having terracing done should get
in touch with us immediately, as
that is the only way in which we
car tell who is desirous of the
work. All land that is to go in
small grain this fall or that will
lay out in lespedeza, should be
terraced now if it is sloping enough
to afford soil erosion.
Remember that our agricultural
existence is no better than our
soil, and the soil is exactly what
we make it through imp**
such as terracing, propn®
etc., and we cannot imnw
land unelss we can keep?
Winter Feed
Through the year 0f famjJ
fill barns with feed for
and it is still not too late
some preparation for the*
winter in regards to our L_
grain for feeding livestoJ
destiny as a farm people
pend upon crops through
tie to market, and we cannot
Uin good cattle without
plenteous feed.
Cheese consumption by th»
amounts to 15.4 pounds per
annually.
OUR WAY
B-H-H-WOO'
WE WON'T BE
GONG MORE'N
A COUPLE OF
YEARS.
I'M GONNA
MISS MV MA
SUMP'N AWFUL!
, buh-hoo. j
CX«t,vvjiU.i*M5
5
rr.ra 1917 Bv MCA scavicc. INC.
. 7 m arc u s *■»! off
By THOMPSON AND COLD
'DOCTOR - LOOK! UNDER "THE >
CLASS. IT APPEARS TO BE
A MICROSCOPIC REPRODUCTION
^ OF AM OLA/E BRANCH.' j
PLEASE, JACK...THE WEDDING
CAW WAIT.. AT LEAST UNTIL j
WE KNOW MORE -^
ABOUT THESE \- -
'—vTDTS- J JPa
WAV BE WE ARB TAKING
SAS(MVGA
THIS WHOLE THING A BIT TOO ^
SERIOU5LV. WHAT SAV WE \
FOLLOW THROUGH WITH OUR \
ORIGINAL PLANS, BEFORE ANV- 1
--.THING BJ.SE j
•^^^^HAPPENS^/
I
so MV J*VIU’ COURT T’OOOLA IS
A LAUGH T’MOU? AWCUOHT, M’LADDIE,
I1L SHOW VOU A TWW600 TWO!
I'LL THROW A HITCH IM M3UR BUMP
OF OOWCBlT-'CAUSE, #GOfiH,lVS^
/ SOU-»
PAVIN* COURT
T’OOOLA
60T TH' STUFF MOUR
, TIME TO BEAT.*