Newspapers / Forest City Courier (Forest … / Oct. 4, 1928, edition 1 / Page 2
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GOLDEN TORNADO v WINS FIRST GAME OF THE SEASON ' I Cherryville Loses to Cool Springs Lads Friday by a 67-0 Score i Forest City Hi's "Golden Tornado" swept Cherryville off their feet to the tune of 6 7 - 0, on the local grid Fri- • day afternoon.Every player saw serv-; ice in the game. Whitlock, Peeler and Moss was outstanding in the line. Mc- Keithan, Blanton and Ford played a stellar game in the backfield. Ford, Speedy fullback ran 60 yards from the kickoff for a touchdown. Frye and Houser showed up well for Cher-; ryville. Forest City Pos Cherryville j Peeler (c) Wells j • | L. E. Moss, J George, H. i L. T. * Horton Carpenter! L. G. Whitlock, V : - Hiss, (c) C. Matheny Eaker R. G. Hall —L Hoyle R. T. Whitlock, R. Stroupe R. E. Blanton Thornburg Q. B. Moss, M George, E. L. H. B. * ' McKeithan Frye j R. H. B. Ford Houser ! F. B. Score Forest City 67; Cherryville j V 55 DAYS WITHOUT FOOD r Toronto, Ont, —Peter Henderson, / thirty, whose normal weight is 171, reduced to 90 pounds. He is re covering at the Toronto General Hos pital after fasting fifty-five days and subsisting seven days more on lime i juice only. This is Henderson's sec ond fast this year. In May he went without food of any kind for thirty days. His fasts are on the advice of a 1 physical culture publication advo cating this treatment for indigestion, from which he suffered. His case brought to mind Mrs. Leontough, who died last year after fasting fifty-five days on the advice of a "specialist." Six farm homes in Yadkin County are being beautified by the planting of shrubbery and grass in the yards. Two hundred and forty-nine club members attended five meetings held in Pender County last week. What A ISnap lave if there wasn't anyone to ually take all the joy out of ast about the time we had con [ to stop worrying about things comes an Astronomer who pre that in 2,000,000 years all the will sink into the sea thereby ting every mother's son of us. rhen we stop to ponder over it, ould worry about what will hap ,ooo,ooo years from now. In the time we are selling more and r groceries every day. Friend ewife that better meals e prepared with better table del is. We grow by pleasing. » >nes Grocery Company OREST CITY, N. C. j FACULTY RECITAL i The music department of Boiling i Springs Junior College will give a faculty recital next Friday evening, October sth, at 8 o'clock in the col lege auditorium. Miss Katherine Goggans is director of music and Miss Lorene Woody, head of the voice department. Much interest has been shown in this coming recital, and is anticipat ed with great pleasure among the people of the community. The pub lic is cordially invited. R. F. PUTNAM WEDS ! CAROLEEN GIRL \ i I . i ♦ % I Miss Elizabeth Strouo Married to Asheville Man In Cere mony September 25 • Caroleen, Oct. I.—Of exceptional j interest is the announcement of the wedding of Miss Elizabeth Stroup to Mr. R. F. Putnam of Asheville, which occurred in a private ceremony at the Baptist pastorium in Caroleen Tues day afternoon September 25, at 5:00 o'clock, in the presence of a few intimate friends. Rev. R. N. Chil dress, pastor of the bride, perform ed the ceremony, the impressive ring ceremony being used. The reception-hall of the residence was the scene of the ceremony and! was uniformly arranged with ferns | and baskets of pink and white roses. | There were no attendants, the couple , having entered together. The vows were spoken before an improvised al tar, the background of which was banked with ferns and English ivy, with silver candelabra holding white tapers and softly lighting the altar. Prior to and during the ceremony, a musical program was rendered which included, "Because," Schu bert's "Serenade" and McDowell's | "To a Wild Rose." The bride was gowned in a Marine blue georgette dress, with accessories to match. She wore a smart hat with ostrich trimming. ! Mrs. Putnam is the attractive daughter of Mr. E. Stroup of Cher ryville and received her education at Asheville Normal. For the past three years she has been a mrat popular member of the faculty of Henrietta- Caroleen school. She has a host of friends whose best wishes go with her. Mr. Putnam is connected with the Imperial Life Insurance Company of ! Asheville and is a young man of ster ling worth. Immediately following the cere mony, Mr. and Mrs. Putnam motor ed to Asheville, where they will make their future home. FIELD SELECTED SEED INCREASES CORN YIELD Raleigh, N. C., October I.—Go through the corn field before gather ing time, with a bag strapped over the shoulder, and secure seed ears from the proper type of stalks grow ing under average conditions and thus spend a highly profitable day. This is the formula for better yields advocated by C. R. Hudson of the farm demonstration department at State College. The seed corn, ac cording to Mr. Hudson, should be se cured from stalks that are strong and stocky and have stood up under the storm conditions of the summer. Two-eared stalks give larger yields. The ears should be of medium height from the ground and the stalk should have no advantage over the other stalks as to space on the row or fer tilizer. Other good qualities in the seed stalk are that the ears droop over to prevent the entrance of rain into the husk, the shuck should cover the tip of the ear to keep out insects and the ear should! be large and short rather than long and slender. Once the seed corn has been select ed, the ears should be hung in a dry place or spread on a dry floor to per mit evaporation of moisture. Never store them in bags, boxes or barns until thoroughly dry. It is a good practice to make a germination test sometime in the winter and use only those ears with high germinating power. Mr. Hudson states that good seed corn is adapted to the soil and cli mate where it is to be grown; is of a high yielding variety afed from high stalks; is well matured aid properly cased for from maturity to planting time and is free from insect and di sease injury. By following these suggestions for a few years, any farmer may have good seed corn for his own needs and may in time build up a trade with his neighbors in the same local ity. w'JL THE FOREST CITY COURIER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1 928. 'GARDNER FLAYS ! CRIME AGAINST i WAR VETERANS I i Sharply Scores Republican Par ty for Treatment of Dis abled and Sick Sol diers Wilson, Sept. 29. —Appealing to the young men of North Carolina, the American Legion and the mothers of this State, 0. Max Gardner, Demo cratic gubernatorial nominee, plead ed with them here last night to go to the polls in Nqvember and defeat the Republican party because of "the high crimes . . . committed against the disabled and sick veterans of the World War." "There is one bill of indictment against the Republican party that I call upon the young men of North Carolina to prosecute on November 6." Mr. Gardner said. "This bill is the serious charge involved in the responsibility of the Republican party for its conduct towards the sick and disabled soldiers of the World War. American soldiers returned from the camps and fields of conflict to become the victims of the corrup tion, bribery and treachery of the Veterans' Bureau, the speaker charged. "Some of these soldiers were blind, some had been gassed, some insane, some with a leg gone, some with both legs and with both arms gone, and some had come back in bas kets. How they suffered! How pa thetic were they! How helpless their condition! We must never forget for Economical Transportation dnd now, a / Million . L Chevrolets ) / Since Tail 12J /X J * CiIJUL j j I •y\yv*iV u fln v, VBflj^HfjME^||n of the Nation for'\f)l& Sweeping month after month to even Powered by a valve-in-head motor The COACH • more spectacular heights of popu- incorporating alloy invar strut pis s mmf x-x m* larity»• • making and breaking new tons, mushroom type tappets and a WSt W records of success with impressive highly efficient carburetion system, JOJ regularity throughout the year— today's Chevrolet is so powerful, so *495 -the Bigger and Better Chevrolet a"thl wheeUs UQC - - 695 America's greatestindustry? 11 ° f a source of pleasure and de.igh, r rt * 1 1 715 « , Andas a result of thoroughly proved n-c-p., 595 utnitrTn.ck $520 construction,moderndesign,quality coopo , (Chassisoniy) Body by Fisher, it reveals beauty, materials and precision workman £*t Do-r . 675 Vjfeiff-ff *375 smartness and luxury typical of the ship, the Bigger and Better Chev " prices to.b. TTiifir Own iiiit riiif iTi iim a * e l° n ß> low and graceful and to amazing dependability and economy Th*r iadinde the lowest handling md tne softness of deep spring ~ctishr under every condition of usac!e« See £m>aciag charge* avmiiaUe* ioned seats is added the comfort of this remarkable automobile today 107* wheelbase omlong, semi-ellip- and learn why it has become first tic springs set parallel to the frame. choice of the nation for 1928. Model Chevrolet Company FOREST CITY, N. C. j- - > ' Q-U.A LI T_Y AT LOW COST | them. We shall always recall that out lof the din and glamor, out of the ; bitterness and strife, out of the fierce j passion of combat, into the dreamless I silence whose shadows mark the path , way to the stars, out of the fiery , furnace of war, these Americans | were corralled by the Republican i party as dumb sheep and directed in jto the folds of Mr. Hardin's faith ' less shepherd, Colonel Forbes." The | criminal law of the United States sent 1 Colonel Forbes to the Atlanta peni [tenitary for "his bribery and for the soldiers' money he stole," Mr. Gard ner declared, "but the moral and po litical law of responsibility will never be vindicated and made clean until the Republican party, responsible for the dirty crime against nation's young men is rebuked, convicted and re pudiated at the bar of a long delayed but perpetually outraged public opinion." "I appeal to the young men of North Carolina, to the American Legion and to the mothers of this State in the name of patriotism, in the name of our great chieftain, Woodrow Wilson, in the name of the unimpeachable integrity of the Democratic party during the world conflict," the speaker said, "to ren der on November 6, a verdict of guilty against the Republican party for the high crimes and misde meanors committed against the dis abled and sick veterans of the World War. "I appeal to the first voters to commit their cause and hearts to the Democratic party on its record in State and nation." A small flock of White Leghorn White Rock hens has paid J. N. Sutherland of Mount Olive $47 per month above feed costs for the past ten months. RELIEF FROM CURSE OF CONSTIPATION A Battle Creeß physician says, , 'Constipation is responsible for nore misery than any other cause." But immediate relief has been ound. A tablet called Rexall Ord erless has been discovered. This tablet attracts water from the sys tem into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowel called the colon. The water oosens the dry food waste and causes a gentle, thorough, natural oovement without forming a habit or ver increasing the dose. • Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderless at night. Jext day bright. Get 24 for 25c to day at Hall-Rudisill Drug Co. 26-tf We handle all kinds of Building Material Just unloaded a car of extra clear Cedar Shingles. We have our Ginnery in Tip-top Shape. Will have a carload of new Cotton Seed Meal in a few days to exchange for your seed. Will Gin your Cotton and pay highest market price for Cotton and Seed. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Doggett & Champion Forest City, N. C. / ALFRED SMITH HOOVER Boston.—Add a new one to ycur list of queer names: A son, born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hoover, has been named Alfred Smith Hoover. Puzzle: What are the , political be liefs of the boy's l parents? I"For Better Eyes" ♦ SEE J DR. D. M. MORRISON J At office of Dr. Duncan on £ every Thursday from 8 to 0 ♦ a. m. and 2 p. m. to 3 p. m. % Eyes Examined; glasses fitted and repaired. t
Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.)
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Oct. 4, 1928, edition 1
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