THE TA KOK 11Γ Y Iii J
CLASSIFIEDS
SEE V. C. Ward for Monuments and
Headstones. Pecan trees. Lighten
ing Rods. Cure-Ail Tobacco Curers.
and burial insurance. Tabor City.
TRADE Where Your Dollar Goes
Further. We appreciate your bus
iness. Lewis Gore Company, Tabor
City, N. C.
WANTED: All People Suffering from
kidney trouble or backache to try
sLIDDO. SI Money back guarantee,
tfaireLson's Pharmacy, Prince Drug,
2o. tl-1
PERSONAL: For individually de
Signed lie-:Ith or style Sper.cor gar
ments see *<r -write Airs. Diracum,
Box 2. Tabor City. lfcJj'19
WANTED: To Rent In This Vicinity
furnished or unfurnished apart
ment or house. See The Tribune.
For Tops
IN
RADIO SERVICE
IX
Tabor City
BRING IT TO
Wade Hodges
AT
WESTERN AUTO
ASSOC. STORE
■
Local and
Long Distance
Hauling
Call
6 9-6
OR SEE
R. B. Elliott
TABOR CITY
Cure-All
Tobacco Curers
15 YEARS PROVEN
SATISFACTION
Sales and Service
See...
Raloh McCullum
TABOR CITY
Watch Repairing
Prompt Service by Man Experienced
in Repairing Watches
for War Plant.
CRYSTALS FITTED WHILE
YOU WAIT
REECES
JEWELRY STORE
TABOR CITY, - - - N. C.
LIFE INSURANCE
— For —
THE WHOLE FAMILY
— See —
Your Local Representative
G. Garland Fowler
GENERAL AGENT
ATLANTIC USE INSURANCE
COMPANY
Tabor City, Is. C.
i) t Ν - RIΤ Ε
tLüANERS
• t-LE-A-N
ii—l—G~H—Τ
Γ» L Λ Ej
NEW LIFE
air. and Mrs. Ralph Jolly s;:e;
Sunday night at Mollie with ν
Jelly's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J
Jolly.
# * $ *
Mr?. Levi Fling and sor. of W:
minster» \i-ited Mr. and Mrs. Ε
b?it \V.tifs la^t week.
t. m ii λ
Mi s Lucille Cox spt-nt the w:e
er.r. wit λ \"ii?es Ar.*;lie and ΕΙλ'τ
Rcilly.
Mrs. W. A Fipps i, out again >'·
tor b?lng iu several cays on accou·.
of an attack of flu.
$ t- * *
Mrs. J. L. Pr'nce w;.s th? Sund'
dinner guest of Mr. and Mi's. Lestf
Witts.
Mrs. Earle B. Fonvielle is a patter
at the MulUns hospital where si:
undrewent a major operation t'e
days ago. Her condition has be·1
serious, but she is reported improv
ing at this time.
I <^—ι—— ι
j DR. JOHN Β. MANI
Optometrist
j Eyes Examined . . .
j. . . . Glasses Fittec
j office
Whiteville, N. C.
over
First National Bant
PLENTY OF
I * LARD
* CORN ΜΕΛΙ
!*MEAT
*RICE
Trade Where
Your Dollar
Goes Further
LEWIS GORE
COMPANY
TABOR CITY
AUTO
LOANS
.
j Financing
Refinancing
Ι
! Sales Financed
C Ο L U Μ Β US
FINANCE CO.
SECOND FLOOR
MAIN AND FRANKLIN STS.
! Whiteville, N. C.
FOR THE BEST
RADIO SERVICE
IN TOWN
]>riii£ us any type Radio, Electric Iron,
Tester or small electric appliance for
^».•"•antcHl repair service.
THIS DEPARTMENT IS IN CHARGE OF
H. L. HARRIS
WHO HAS HAD IS YEARS EXPERIENCE
Give Us A Trial
FIRESTONE STORE
Dicus-Fowler Company, owners
OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
TABOR CITY, N. C.
J
i Farm Income 58 Cents Per Hour in 1943
FAB8S WiJBKESS 1943
American farm o- :raters in a re
cent year received an average i;ei
income of $2250. as eenijnrtd with
the $2513 in wages turned by work
ers in steel mill·«, nrenrdivg to fig
ures released by tiie American Iron
and Steel Institute and the Unit .J
States Departm >nt of Agriculture.
During th" b-ise ysar of J!M3.
workers ia steel n.ll's worked an
average * of Mpi.:v::mate!y 2240
hours, wh!!e farm workers aveia.v~v!
more than 3JÖ0 hours during the
same period.
The farmers' income in 19 ±3 fig
ures ont to sn average of about
SitaLli. ίοΦϋ
' öS cor.ts per hour of work, com·
pared with slightly loss tiiaii $1.14
. per hour pti'J in the ®a;ne yev to
' the ma a working in a siosl
ι T!»r> 'vt '■"fo'i'io of ahont 5.'".·'"Ό
I farm v....·: ma;!3 P';.>fjWs
j i>y an investiert in Ian·*', '»»r.i i'nes,
I (ΐ!Τ.·1.·!ΐ)«':7,· - u' <.<jiiipnt::iU >\ u&*e&s
! of $3C.0ö.<.· ··'.'··♦»»>. of whioa r.:·.,".-»
j than .'5 !^π:; η dollars r^;·; v-j^nts ·:η
i investr.:fi)i u: lah:-r-t:aviiis ruachin·
! er j and »>·: •■:vrr.t.
Γ.!:·?" rr^'rcncnts f~r ~i?.eh'ncr:.'
ar.l ti:·r-t-i'-s arc mountias and will
j apia'ü.'iirna'.o 73;> million dollars in
ι 1 '·1 .·?. -«»for'Hnsr to estimates.
ι
ILITTLE THINGS *« the Slars[
4r By GEORGE LILLEY *
VTEW YORK, Ν. Y.—Back on
^ the air and working on her
second million is Μ 'onna Jose
phine (Joan) Davis οfreckle
faced "Queen" of radio comedy.
Tt is the second year (Monday
nights, ^ η ο ;
of Joan's mil
lion - dollar -
a-ycar radio
contract out of
which she pays
the other per
formers and
writers of the
show. Her tea
room support
this season is
full- bodioa:
Joan Davis Wally Brown,
...million No. 2 Si Wills, NVerna
Feiton, Sharon
Douglas, Pat McGcchan and the
Delta Rhythm Boys. Miss Davis
at last can afford her hobby—
expensive clothes ($350 dresses)
for a re-sleeked 5-5 Powers girl
figure. To match the clothes is
a Hollywood mansion and de
luxe swimming pool. Just a Hol
lywood girl despite her millions!
BY MATHEMATIC EQUATION
. τ . That's how Paul Taubman,
scientific minded organist on
radio's "Rosemary" (Monday
through Friday, CBS) creates the
niood with music as the story
unfolds. His is a technique
brand new to
ι radio. Taub
man is an ar
d e η t follower
ι of the late Paul
Schillinger, sci
entist, mathe
matician and
eminent musi
cian, whose in
teresting s y s
tem of musical
- c ο m d ο s ition
• came of his de- Paul Taubman
sire to find a ...math musican
truly scientific
reason for what makes music
tick. After years of research, he
took what the great masters did
by intuition and worked it out
by mathematical formula. Using
this infallible method, Taubman
portrays practically every mood
of the "Rosemary" script, accent
ing the emotions with new com
binations of rhythm patterns and
pitch -tones. A busy composer,
"The Bomber Command" is
among Taubman's works.
MAN OF DlblllNUiiurc
Clifton Fadiman: His only hob
h" ><? an interest in cheese and
kvi j. He's said to be able to tell
some 300 varieties of cheese by
taste. Fadiman, 44-yoar-old em
cee of "Information Please," the
erudite quiz
re c e η 11 y re
turned to the
air (Oct. 2,
Wednesday
nights, CBS),
never earned
less than $1000
a year while
going through
co11e g e (Co
lumbia). Fadi
man: "But af
Clifton Fadiman terwards, lor a
... no banknights while, I earned
less. "Infor
mation Please," which started as
a "class" show in '38, has changed
little. No bankrolls, auto give
aways, trips to Timbuktu. This
season's cast, aside from Fadi
man, consists of regulars John
Kieran and Franklin P. (for
(Pierce) Adams, plus two guests
weekly. Fred Allen is scheduled
for a couple of programs.
Very Little Things
Phil Spitalny, who has made
quite a study of dressing up
women (director of the all-girl
orchestra Sunday afternoons,
CBS, on the "New Electric Hour")
prefers their color blendings as
f λ 1 1 η w s :
blondes in pale
blue; red heads,
nile green;
light brunettes,
coral; darks,
orchid ... Wal
t e r Winchell,
unless he stirs
up 50 "fightin*"
phone calls,
considers h i s
Sunday broad- —;
cast a flop, re- Phil Spitalny
ports "Radio blends his dames
V i s i ο n." the
new radio weekly. He stays
around issuing statements to the
phone handlers , . . Mark War
now, "Hit Paradcr,"^ never met
his late boss, George" Washington
Hill . . . John Daly, CBS news
man, has three sons, all named
John.
YES, WE HAVE IT
ALUMINUM "5V"
L
6-8-10 and 12 Foot Sheets
ν
τ
ASPHALT - RoH and Shingle
ONE CARLOAD
ALSO CARLOAD OF
- - BRICK - -
Give us a ring for your everyday needs
in building supplies and builder's
Hardware
TABOR HARDWARE CO.
TABOR CITY
I Southern Farm
I Market Summary
ATLANTA. GA.. Nov. 15— (USDA>
—Hcth cattle ard calf slaughter at
eight major packing plants in Geor.
512, Florida, and Alabama increased
:h;s week. although receipts at many
luction markots were lighter, and hog
numbers, sv.-rlled by midwestern in
hi'^ncnts. jumped to around 17.330
head, according to the Produition
"ird Marketing Administration.
T':s currently-expanded hog opera
irv.s Η the ri;jht plants compared
with receipts last week cf only
ir nnr 7.660. and some 4.300 at thi
Lime a year a?o.
Despite the heavier supply, pri"iv.
wcrked higher, and by Friday show
ed a 50 cents gain for medium to
dioice butchers over 180 pounds
which topped at $23.50.
Other southern hog markets show
ed equal price gfins under a broad
demand. Nashvills closed $1.50
higher with a top of $25.50. Mont
gomery was steady to 75 cents high
er at $24.00. Louisville was up .0
cents to a dollar, with the closing
top price Friday at S25.00. At Balti
more, prices advanced steadily, and
closed $1.25 higher at S25.75.
Cattle and calf marketings in the
Georgia-Alabama-Florida area, which
last week totaled about 2.900 head,
this week amounted to some 4,300.
Marketings were somewhat heavier a:
Nashville and Louisville, and about
the same at Montgomery.
Prices, too, were up. Slaughter
steers and heifers in Georgia, Florida
and Alabama were GO cents to a dol
lar higher, with the bulk of good
grade grassfats moving at $16.30 to
$17.30. Nashville price trends were
25 to 75 cents higher for better
grades, with lower grades strong to
50 cents higher. At Montgomery,
slaughter cattle were unevenly 25
cents to a dollar higher, and Louis
ville closed strong to higher on all
classes.
Cotton staged a comeback amount
ing to around 3 1-2 cents a pound.
However, country buyers' prices con
tinued low in comparison with cen
tral and futures market prices.
Live poultry prices were about
steady at most southern points except
the north Georgia fryer area, where
an active interest from out-of-state
trucKers kept the market firm at
from 36 to 37 cents. At week's enc
some nervousness developed, how
ever, as prices elsewhere were lowei
As for eggs, the shortage of goo.
quality fresh eggs brought a strong
er price tone on both fresh and ook.
storage stock at Atlanta, but price1
in Richmond, Raleigh, raid Mont
gomery were steac'y ;
gomery's retsil cut] \
dullest trade we?«t ... ^ t'*1"
Old Eelt tobacco r.r ··,· *·*
ued to report heavy ΐΓ'"'^
prices. Season's "" ·;<ΐ
Wednesday was c. ·.·. ·
hundred. ·
GIVE HER ONE OF OUR
FINE CEDAR CHESTS
FOR CHRISTMAS
• Living Room Furniture
• Bed Room Furniture
• Radios ®Odd Beds ® Dressers
• Innerspring Mattresses
• Baby High Chairs
PRINCEBRGTP.Fi
— FURNITURE —
TABOR CITY
Oliver, Arthur and Harry Prince,—Owners
^96βΟΟ09ΟΟΟ9Ο6ΟΟΟ9ΟΟΟΟΟΟΟΟΟ6Ο8Ο6Ο66Ο9ι66Ο60βΟ6Ο6Ο66βΟβΟ9ΟΟ9«
ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF OUR · Ρ
NEW SELF-SERVICE GROCERY
TODAY-FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 11
COME IN See our Stock of
—FANCY GROCERIES—FRUIT —VEGETABLES
—DAIRY PRODUCTS —
We Are Anxiuos To Serve You
ELBERT SHELLEY & COMPANY
8 1-11J ou-11... n..:u:— TABOR CITY
S Old Shelley Building
8
• Fine Selection of
DINETTE SUITES
BLANKETS
100 percent Pure
Virgin Wool —$12.95
50 oercent Wool
—$6.95
INow in Stock
• Safe - Dependable
Baby High Chairs
Electric and Battery
RADIOS
Bedroom Furniture
Living Room Furniture
Φ Dish Sets
Φ Tables
Φ Pictures
Φ Lamps
Φ Rockers
Φ Odd Pieces
W. F. COX FURNITURE COMPANY
TABOR CITY, N. C.