Grits and Gravel♦♦♦♦ jjy T. MOSES JONES You may not have missed this rolumn from the yesterday’s paper, ns you may not have looked for it. Hut' many things have happened since i w ,ote my junk Monday morning for . Tuesday's issue. True to his word, Fenton Seat really took me out Mon drtV r jght, instead of us both getting „ po d fooling as we got the last time, when he had to work that night. We left town about six-thirty, when tiir moon was in its best of the eclipse We again took James Reg'an with us. Fenton had left his wife and baby out at hcr folkses home Sunday. So we ‘C o( to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams’ nfton three tables of corn-shuckers had eaten. We sat down to that table which was piled up with a big dish of cabbage and corn bread, biscuits and butter, coffee and water, cake and pie, meat and pudding, chicken and dressing, and what not. 1 forgot that I was afraid the cab baae might make me sick, and ate two big helpings, and then to the beans, and so on down the bne. When wo finished, there were still several others to eat. We were supposed to have our little stringed orchestra to play some after supper, hut the fiddler went ’possum hunting and did not get there. So we played some hymns and sang a while, anti then they played their usual pieces on the guitars and they sang some, and we had a most nice time in general. Uncle Billy Williams was there in son Charlie’s, and George and family, and John Roy and family, and tho long, tall [jaws man who used to wear a coon-skin capp about twenty years* ago when he was such a great trap per. He and his family, were there. Reuben Sidney Greenway, who lives up the road, was there. And I don’t know who all else, but Graham West and several other young fellows. At bedtime we left, and Fen ton get me back by about ten-thirty. And what did I have to do? I had to get up at five to get ready Xo go down to the court house and ueip fin ish getting everything ready for the voting, which started at sun-up I do not know how the vote was, over in Vance, but our precinct voted about one-third the number that voted in the primary several months ago. That goes to show thcit folks just do not care somehow about voting in an election around here as they do vot ing in a primary. But we lived through :t all, and fin ished the count and the heoorts and got home before nine o’clock. And T mean I was tired and ready to go to sleep. And the papers tell about one precinct in New York which has only one registered vote*, and all that had to be gone through with just one per son to vote. I do not know whether they are teaching that sort of thing, but if you do not know, then let me tell you that there are a great number of folks who really do not know how to go to the KiDNEYS ’’V MUST REMOVE EXCESS ACIDS Help 15 Miles of Kidney Tubes Flush Out Poisonous Waste If you have an excess of acid waste in your blood, your 15 miles of kidney tubes may be over-worked. These tiny filters and tubes are working day and night to help Nature rid your system of poisonous waste. ‘ When functional kidney disorder permits poisonous matter to remain, in the blood, you won’t feel well. This may cause nagging backache, rheumatic pains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the evfis, headaches and dizziness. If you have trouble with frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning, there may be some thing wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Kidneys may need help the same as bowels. bo ask your druggist for Doan’s Pills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the 15 miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from your blood. Get Doan’s Pills. 90 pr OOF COPYRIGHT 1938. SCHENLEY DISTILLERS CORPORATION. NEW YORK CITY Farley, Voting HHHHHHK "111 fli? Postmaster General James A. Par ley, chairman of both national and New York State Democratic com mittees, is pictured as he signed the register in New York City before casting his ballot in the guberna torial election. (Central Press) polls and vote. There were several ways in which we found that our yes terday. Now let’s forget that we have ever voted and have a little foolishness. Dick Wjilkins thinks that I am posi tively idiotic and insane for telling that big lie about the mari who bought the new car and wanted 'the fog lights' put in the rear of the car and the radio in the spair, now isn’t that some spelling when I meant the spare tire. Well, Dick, I’m not the on ly foolish man in the world. Just look at yourself. You could actually eat half the amount of food you do eat, and still live. Then you wouldn’t be so fat and stout and so almost unable to walk. Then you could prime to bacco much better. And you could plow much easier. You would even i be much more comfortable just sitting down and driving your car to town. Your breath wouldn’t be so short. You could buy yourself two pairs of overalls where you now buy one. And also have three Sunday hats yihere you now have only two. Yes, you could put a dollar in the collec tion plate every Sunday. And you could take Old Mose to the movies opce a month, and still have money to throw away, if you just wouldn’t eat so much. But I have always heard that big eating is reaaly a disease with stout folks, Dick, and I don’t blame you. If I had the where-with-eVer, I would be a big eater, too. So you are ex tremely excusable. • Marvin* Blackwell fend Art-hpr Hart; were sitting down in one of those in-' visible booths in the case eating, when I walked in. My hawk eyes spied them through the wood, but I was not looking for either of them. I was look ing for two other fellows who live a a good hit away from town. Nothing would do but that I sit down by Mar vin and eat something. But I had just finished dinner, so told him I would only take a slice of pie and a glass of milk, which I did. It was surely delirious, Marvin, and truly bounced me back to normality. Arthur Hart and George Riggan both got them a small, what you might call pocket radio, last summer to take to the field to plow. Later on they moved them to their strip house. Some days ago I heard that George had hung his radio up cn the head of his bed, and turned it on every night just after supper, got in bed, and went to sleep with it tuned in on Alexan der’s Ragtime Band. T. MOSES JONES. HENDERSON, (N.. C.) DAILY DISPATCH THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1938 PliT AT350,f100 Wednesday's Sale Is 184,- 318 Pounds, With An Average Os $20.67 Offerings on the Henderson tobac- J? toda y were estimated by Pred Allen, sales supervisor, at 850,000 pounds, following sale of 184,318 pounds for $38,098,53 on Wednesday. The average was $20.67 per hundred pounds. Today’s offerings and those anti cipated tomorrow are expected to put figures near to above 16,- 000,000 pounds. About 80 per cent of the crop is understood to have been sold up to this date, and the mar ket is expected to sell probably close to 20,000,000 pounds for the season. an< * thl3 A special purchase ■ —— —— ' •—|| j j ** ' It’s worthy of a price far more. But during this week-end _ only you have the opportunity to buy this 8-piece group for this v T Occasional Chair Set of 3 Lamps More 37 lH JlggL ;r - v"--' u rT\ mSS 7-Piece Studio Outfit • • ... ' .«**•> Comfortable and convenient is the name for this studio group. rrEr SI.OO Down—sl.oo Weekly, ~ - FIRST ISSUE" FOR ‘BULLDOG’ IS OUT High School Organ Gives Many In teresting Items on Activities of Students There The first issue of the present ses sion of "'Hie BuiUjdog”, Henderson high school student publication, was off the press today and being dis tributed to the student body and friends of the school. The issue was filled with interesting reading mat ter about the school and the various activities of the student body. There was a liberal sprinkling of advertising by Henderson merchants in support of the enterprise. Charles Stewart is editor-in-chief of the paper, which friends considered had made a good start for the year. Some four or five numbers will be put out during the school term. A judge in Texas says there is much to be said against our present system of taxation. He probably means repeated. TESTS FOR WATER FOR PRISON CAMP Tests are being made for a water supply on a site near Gillburg that may be purchased by the State High way and Public Works Commission for a new £&nvict camp for this coun ty. An artesian well is being sunk near the main Henderson-Epsom highway, where the camp will be located if the water supply is found adequate 'to justify purchase of the site and erec tion of the barracks there. When built the camp is to he modern in* every sense of the word. At the present time Why Get Up Nights Its Nature’s “Danger Signal" Make this 4-day test. Your 25c back if not pleased. Geft juniper oil, buch” leaves, etc., made into green tablets. Flush the kidneys as you would the bowls. Help nature drive out wasti and excess acids. This helps soothe the irritation that wakes you up, causes frequent or scanty flow, burn ing, backache or leg pains. Just say Bukets to any druggist. Locally at Miles Pharmacy,. Parker’s Drug Store —Adv. and for several years the tamp here j has been used for Negro prisoners only. "in your quest FOR _ TREASURE, REMEM- fife . */ BER THERE'S A lOidraers hillside Vi!./ UDmc^ WIDMER’S WINE CELLARS, INC., NAPLES, N. Y. by Volume PAGE THREE Arthur D, Ficke of Hillsdale, N. Y..' I poet, born at Davenport, lowa, 55 j years ago.