TOWNSHIP SCHOOL
WORK NOW MOVING
ALONG SMOOTHLY
First Grade Can Take Care of
A Few More Pupils—
Compulsory School
Law
The parents in Cool Springs Town
ship Schools who have children near
er six than five years of age, see
Mr. A. C. Finch this week if you
i
want your children to go to school
this session. It will be possible for
the first grade to take care of a
few more pupils. All pupils who are
six years old now are urged to be
gin school at once in order to be en
rolled before the grade is filled. The
first grade will not take pupils un
der seven years of age after a few
more days. It is necessary for first
grade pupils to begin at once if they
intend to go to school thie year.
All pupils between the ages of sev
en and fourteen in Cool Springs
Township who have not begun school
by Monday, September 17th, will be
indicted for violating the compulsory
school law. All parents in the town
ship are requested to see the follow
ing principals this week if you have
a valid reason for not sending your
children to school: Eugene Allison,
Alexander School; Morgan Cooper,!
Bostic School; A. C. Finch, Forest
City Grammar School; C. C. Erwin,
Cool Springs High School; Rex Long,
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
I wish to announce to my friends and customers
that I will continue Hemstitching and Picoting,
and am taking this means of letting my former
customers know I appreciate their patronage and
to invite new customers to call.
I have a new supply of silver and gold thread.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
My machine is now located in the Young house
next door to Moore's Hotel.
Mrs. W. P. Chaney
Time Is Passing
And with it your opportunity to forge
ahead. What financial progress are you
making as time passes? Have you a sav
ings account at our bank showing an in
creased balance with growing interest
credits? The days to come need to be pro
vided for. Care for your money now, and
it will care for you later.
0
Rutherford County Bank & Trust Co.
RUTHERFORDTON UNION MILLS
SPINDALE
• Mt. Pleasant School; Annie S. Har-j
lis, Pleasant Grove.
The schools in the township have i
| a better beginning this year than
they ever have had. The enrollment
is larger and the pupils are more
interested in their work this year
than any former year.
Last year the hign school won
first place in French. First place in
agriculture and baseball. It is unus
j ual for a small High School to win
i one first place in a state contest.
| According to the law of averages
j Cool Springs High School is not due
j to win another first place in over a
hundred years. However, the boys
j and girls are a bit selfish when it
1 comes to winning first prizes and ex- i
i pect to win again before their time
according to averages.
Forest City Grammar School was j
placed on the A-l list last year by j
the state department of education, j
j Alexander school will be accredsted j
this year. The other grammar schools 1
in the township are doing standard j
work but they do not have the re-,
quired number of teachers to be ac-'
credited. It requires at least seven 1
teachers for a school to become!
standard. This is only one of the
many requirements for a standard
school.
A number of pupils from the gram- j,
mar schools entered the National;
Highway Safety Essay contest last j 1
year. Dorothy Moore of the Forest; ]
City Grammar School won third i -
prize, consisting of $5.00, and a;
bronze medal. 1 i
i J
The football squad is looking good i 1
now. Coach Seitz has over two teams
out each day. Most of the material
this year is green but all the fans
THE FOREST CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1928
know that Coach Seitz has been
working hard the past week seas
oning the material.
FLOYD'S CREEK NEWS
Forest City, R-l, Sept. 11. —Mr. J.
M. Mauney who had the misfortune
to get his home destroyed by fire
last May is erecting a nice bungalow
at the same place, which will add
greatly to the appearance of our com
munity when completed.
Misses Ethel and Bertha White
spent the week end with their cous
in, Miss O'lema Putnam, at Henriet
ta.
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Scruggs and
little daughter, spent Saturday night
with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Green.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Edwards spent
Saturday night at Mr. Elisha David
son's.
Mr. Gillet Hamrick and family, of
Sharon, and Mr. and Mrs. D. E.
White were the dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Powell Sunday.
Mr. F. E. White and family spent
Sunday at Henrietta, the guests of
Mr. Will Putnam and family.
Mrs. J. W. Honeycutt had been on
the sick list for a few days, but is
improving, we are glad to note.
Mr. and Mrs. John Tate spent the
iveek at Shelby.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar White and lit
;le daughter, Lucile spent a few days
ast week with Mrs. White's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Elliott, at Uree.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Toney, of i
Henrietta, spent Sunday at Mr. A. 1
W. Tate's. »
BASEBALL ;
RUTHERFORD COUNTY
TEXTILE LEAGUE
Standing of Clubs
Club . W L Pet.
Ellenboro 8 2 .800 i
Caroleen 6 4 .600
Alexander „ 5 4 .555
Henrietta 5 5 .500
Cliffside ...: 4 6 .400
Avondale ... 1 8 .111
Games Saturday, Sept. 8
Alexander 1, at Ellenboro 17.
(Protested game, lateness of begin
ning game.) I
Caroleen 5 at Henrietta 3.
Cliffside 7, at Avondale 9.
TRAIN SCHEDULES
Seaboard
No. 21, South Arr. 1:18 p. m.
No. 109, South, Arr. 10:30 a. m.
No. 22, North Arr. 4:21 p. m.
Southern
No. 113, South, Arr. 6:20 a. m.
No. 36, North, Arr. 10:09 a.m.
No. 35, South, Arr. 5:35 p. m.
No. 114, North, Arr. 8:56 p. m.
Clinchtield
No. 37, North, Arr. 10:45 a. m.
No. 38, South, Arr. 4:48 p. m.
No. 110, North, Ar~ 11:20 a. m.
William C. Durant offers $25,000
"for the best and most practical
plan to make the eighteenth amend
ment effective." The best way would
be to jail all the bootleggers and
their customers, and then put all
those who are left within one of the
smaller states where they can be
closely watched.
Three young men who set out for
Spain in a thirty-two foot boat re
turned after going a short way be
cause their water supply went bad.
Well, they could have bathed in the
ocean.
AdvertiseJft)sence?
ACCUMULATED milk bot
> ties, stacked papers, drawn
shades, these are some of the
ways that absence from home
is advertised. House-breakers
are quick to note and take ad
vantage!
/ETNA-IZE
9
An Residence Burglary
and Theft Policy gives com
plete protection from loss at
a/1 times.
C. P. PARKS
315 Farmers Bank Bldg.,
"Insurance That
Protects"
High Speed Motors .
this oilier oil
it's a tougher
more durable ~
oil / "STANDARD"
that'S overcomes friction at higher speeds
' A special friction machine is used in Standard Oil
rnvArTalkr WrArPCCPfI Co. of New Jersey laboratories to study the ability
> SpvLWllj |II vvwOvU of different lubricating oils to overcome friction*
_ It is operated with different quantities of oil, at
to Stand the various speeds, and with varying loads.
® In one series of tests, the weight of the load was
J» J_ kept at 175 lbs. per square inch. The quantity of
SHU VIQ lla Jvlf oil supplied was 12 drops each minute. With
"Standard" Motor Oil the machine operated per~
llUlflPf* fectly at 700 revolutions per minute. With other
Ullvvl GUI* motor oils used by motorists today, the machine
-• • became overheated and the oil failed at from
conditions 300 to 400 revolutions per minute.
%
HCHV much do you spend for
gasoline? Hon much for tires?
CTAkinADn When did your battery last
aiAWUWiai have water? The "Standard"
V S(it /y Motor Record will tell you.
Ask your "Standard" Service
Station or dealer for a free copy.
"STAN DARD
MOTOR OIL
0
"Standard Greases; Transmission Oil and
Gear Compound are made with the same care
as "Standard" motor fuels and motor oils.
)
Get Standard Products at
MAIN AND KING STREET FILLING STATION
Cars Greased and Washed. Operated by J. D. Camp.
jj It Pays a Double Profit to
| Lime Small Grain
g THE N. C. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE SAYS:
3 "Crop yields are enormously increased and cost of production
g correspondingly lowered by using pulverized limestone in combination
3 with acid phosphate or other commercial fertilizer.
3 At one experiment station limestone in combination with fertiliz
-3 er under the wheat crop gave an increase of an average of $18.23 an
3 acre more than was secured with the fertilizer without the lime. .
jj At another station pulverized limestone, in combination with acid
g phosphate, nitrogen, and potash, increased the clover hay crop six
3 times what was secured from the fertilizer without the lime."
3
3 Any small grain crop that has been LIMED and fertilized
prior to, or when seeded, will develop a much better root system
□ and will go through Winter freezes far better than a crop not lim
-3 ed or fertilized.
a THE INCREASE IN THE LEGUME CROP THAT MAY
jj FOLLOW WILL USUALLY PAY THE COST OF THE LIM
a ING.
a MASCOT DOLOMITIC LIMESTONE is Carbonate of Cal
a cium and Carbonate of Magnesia—both essential plant foods re
a quired by all grain crops. The application of MASCOT may be
jj made in connection with Super-Phosphate or any complete ferti-
J lizer at one effort.
jj LEAVE A LAND THROUGH THE FIELD THE WIDTH
a OF A CORN ROW, UNLIMED, BUT FERTILIZED, FOR
I COMPARISON.
a THE UNIFORM FINENESS OF MASCOT INSURES DEPEND
a ABLE RESULTS.
[ (MASOy I
jj "MONEY SPENT FOR LIME AND LEGUMES IS THE SAFEST I
1 INVESTMENT A FARMER CAN MAKE."
a WRITE US FOR LITERATURE
u I
jj American Limestone Co.
jj KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE SEE YOUR MASCOT DEALER '
■'■WsraiaißiHiaigiaiaaraziziaiaiaiziajgran'iPPiaiaraianrannrarjr. "