Btrtlidu\ l\irt> James Stall Inys, son of Mr ;? ii?! Mr*. J. T. Stalliiii's. pave a birth diy and Halloween party Prlilj* evening at tile offices ot He Southern (las Improvement Com pany on South I'oliKh xti r streei Hallowern decorations were iih< <1 Games were playe<| and randy. i< ?? crMiti and rakes, in Halloween colors, were served. Lueky TliirtiTn ('lull Miss Dorothy lllcks ? nt ertaine,) the Lucky Thirteen Club Satur evening, at tin- lmnie ot her aunt. Mrs. K. S. Chesson. Jr.. on Went Church street, at a deliKht ful Halloween party. The Hal loween Idea was carried mil in the decora! ioiiH, and in the re freehnients tohh-li were uohiin sandwiches and pines pp!<n with pimento eyes, nose and mouth. Games wpre played and fortune telling was enjoyed. The guests were: Misses Suzanne M.-li. k. Mat garet Winder, it nth I.ane. Itennie William*. Itutli I'Vrehee. Sarah Dillon and Augusta Walker. Mary Cibulae White. Clara Thompson. Glenna Glover, l'aulitie Dean and Dora Wells. Illrt Inlay Surprise A birthday surpiise paitv was given K. W. Cox at h i: liotiir, City Route Five, Tuesday even no: in honor of his forty ?fourth birthday by friends and relatives. Many Useful jrlfts were received and de licious refreshments were served. lVnuinnl)i Mrs. ("In ti<l in Lamb has re- 1 turned from Newport N?'?k, where i she spent i wo weeks willi her sin ter, Mrs. J. \V. F.ubank. She was | , accompanied Iioiih l?y Mrs. Ku-j I bank who will oe lu>i' vu?st for, several days. Mr*. Calvin II. Twidily re i; turned Tuesday from Cape i CharlrH. Virginia, wlo-re she was I ? the guest of her mother. Mr*. W.J [ J. Warren. and Philadelphia. Shere she visited her sister. Mrs. Urry Condon. Shu wan aceoin-. 1, pan ltil home U> Mrs. Warren, wlm ? Will b? her guest for severul days. " J. C. Perry of Willoughby Heat h I la visiting IiIh brother. W. M. Per i ry, 808 North Koad at reel, j Mrs. Frank Weeks a pent Friday In Norfolk. Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Gilbert and I Mra. William narllett have re turned from New York City, where t Mr. Gilbert baa been purchasing new goods for his store* for the but week. ! 1 Mrs. Flossie llaum of Norfolk has accepted a position wlthj Prltrhard's Heaniy I'aiior here. Mra. Ja rvls Seeley. Sr.. is vls [ itlng relatives In Norfolk and I Newport News. Mr. and Mrs. W. If. Gait her I motored to Norfolk Wednesday to j aee The Student Prince al the I Academy. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Hoy | Sawyer of Qkisko Saturday. Oeto ! ber 3 1 , a son. h , j Ed ward Hughes, son of Mr. and | Mra. J. E. Hughe*, is ill at his home on Went Main street. I Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank November 2. a daughter. | MBtalle Louise. v'Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kramer and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pluuer motored to Norfolk Wednesday lo aee "The Student Prince" at the! Academy. Mrs. Miles Scott of Weeksvllle ! was the guest of her mother. Mrs. E. J. White. Tuesday. J Born, to Mr. and Mra. Alex I Armstrong. 212 Pearl street. Wed ! nesduy. October 28. a son. COAI, s M.| s si. I Ml? Boston. Nov. 5. Coal sales | throughout New England have; Slumped sharply in the l.r t f.-w 1 days and deliveries are at a loss j ; (6 account for it. Hetnand is j light and consumers are not tak-l tag to low volatile bituminous bn I cause prices asked ure almost as [ high aa anthracite. PENDER'S I YELLOW FRONT STORES swirrs pitKMiuivi HAM. PoiiikI 33c Hold-Up Men Specialize Now On Petting Parties ii) uv.s a. ki.im) ICowiaht. I''2J. by Th< Advancr) San Francisco. Nov. 5.- This is l h?> day of speeializat ion. and San Francisco at irk-up men. over i>n i he alert for some new source ?>f revenue i?r?? just u??w specializ ing in raids tin petting parties, Jii?i mh t'ncle Sam doesn't HHirn to i ineonu* taxes from men of Minttll means. ami chain stores', reap riclt harvests from small pur Hiases. so the hold-up gentry are itndiiig ii profitable to collect the! surplus ciiKh on hand from modeKt young men. who take their lady loves out for an evening'* ride anil park with dimmed lights in a ?<? elude I Meet ion of the highway. Sunn* fishermen prefer to eat eh it large ii umber of small fry rath er than work hard- for the p?sr,i biliiy of landing a bis one. Sunday night the victims were found In wooded nooks in the Presidio, an army reservation | where parking as well us spark ing at night is prohibited. A MMreli hy a police sliot gun squad after nearly a dozen couples had BEGIN RAISING FUND FOR PARK Two Organization* Work ing for Money to Srt Aside National Park in VteMtern North Carolina Asbevllle, Nov. 5. ? With the two tit a to organizations whose pur pose is the creation of a national park in the Great Smoky Moun tains working hand in hand, n campaign for funds for the pur chase of I he park are under way in North Carolina and Tennessee. The organizations, the North Carolina Park Com m ission, head ed by State Senator Afark Squirqs. of Lenoir, ami the Great Smoky Mountain Conservation Associa tion of Tennessee, are Jointly ai work to raise one million dollars to acquire this park area, which a Federal commission has found worthy of netting aside as one of' the two great national parks In the eastern part of the United States. Active work toward raising thin fund, which will be In the nature of popular subscription, will begin in North Carotin alate in Novem ber, Headquarters for the cam- > paign have already been opened In rooms of tho Asheville Cham ber of Commerce. The sponsors of the movement derided to press their efforts for the establishment of a Great. Smoky Mountains national park when It was shown that unless the mountain ridges of Eastern Tennessee were soon act aside for j park purposes, tho timber inter- j ests owning the land would begin { logging operations in the virgin forests in this region. Clear weather is all that is need ed to insure the completion of the great task of photographing from an airplane of the lengths and broadth of tho proposed Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Western North Carolina and Kastern Tennessee. Charles L. Williams. United States Army aviator. who has completed tho photographing of AI*I*I.KM. ohan<;k?s, I1ANANA8, (illAI'KH ? flRAPKI'IHIT IMIJCIiY, LITTRIfi, CAIIItAUH AND Itl'TAIIAUAH Wc carry a complete line of <;it?K KltlKH AT ItKillT I'lUCKH. R. A. Byrum Co. It It O V K It S Plume* 3 and 57 Cor. Main & Wiilcr Sti. Pale, Tired Mothers Should Beware of \ Chronic Fatigue ?Cany a discouraged mother thinks , hat har thin, pale, tired-out condition | doc to exhausting housework snd of children? when as a matter of 1* real cauaeof all her distressing nta la chronic faiifru*. onfuae chronic fatigue with ary fatigue yoti feel after a | walk. Chronic fatigue cornea n. Your organs and muscle* ne debilitated due to lack of organic iron in yottr blood ?ar chronic fatigue you must your system by restoring this organic iron to your blood. But don't take the older mineral iron med icinea which many doctora now My do little good. Take organic Iron? Nuxated Iron? which la Hke the iron in your blood and like that in apinach and lentils. Unlike ordinary mineral iron it will not injure the teeth or dta turb the stomach, bat la promptly ansimilsted. Take Nuxatedlron for jtsat two weeks and youll be astonished hoar much stronger and better you feel. Money back if fKH unproved. Allgooildrucgtat*. hoeu held up fsi ii> r even I tin* mnim-i/.t <1 ;in<l arm* ?l hold-up ui I t Ih t K. This was ho su? ???-??sful -Him on J Monday night it wa*? repeated on Twin i'cakit Itoul?-vard. whcti' ??Ity motorists drive in the evening i fin* a panoramic view of tin? Ii'-:1H* i'?l oily. Fourteen i-nrx, either parked by ih'* roadside. or pro I i-iM'diui: slowly up the steep In cline. wore victimized in quick 'succession. A dollar t? <i ty-tiv. here, a watch ami in or 12 dollars there, switch keys confiscated and thrown away to make the victims .hoi pices ? then a clash with some stubborn customer several shots, a police alarm ami a speedy Re l - away. Whether vigorous youth will rise up and fight for freedom for pottlnc or the police will manage to choi-k this newest outbreak of crime i? hard to say. but anxious mothers are finding little conso lation in this new development which a?lds to the hazard** of daughter's evening joy rides and petting parties." the boundaries of the park area. Ik at work on the photographic mapping of the interior of the park. At least nine more days of clear, and for his purpose, cold weather is needed to finish his work. When every square foot of this mountain park tract, which cov ers approximately t?49 square miles, has been photographed from Lieutenant Williams' air plane. the negatives will he de veloped. and the pictures so fitted that they will make uti Immense topographic picture of the pro posed national park. Lieutenant Williams has been at work about five weeks, hut the favorable daiys for his task have been few and far between. It Is necessary for his purposes that the air ho free from fog and smoke, although it is possible by means of intricate photographic devices to penetrate the haie that is so common In the mountains. The most favori\Jdo time of day to obtain satisfactory pictures, which are taken from a level of 12,50ft feet nbove the earth, is between a.m. and 1:30 p.m. (eastern standard time). Moth Lieutenant William*. who pilots the airplaue, and his able. Sergeant Sam Houston, who takes the" photographs, wear parachutes strapped to their bucks while in the plane, and are prepared to leap for their lives if the engine should fall while they are flyitiK over the rough and heavily tim bered confines of th" park. It has not yet been necessary for them to use these extreme dvices. Once, however, whilo flying I'IKTRO LA VERDI AT WEEKSVH1E >1iiM<?iaa, \rlUt and Hu morist Present* Pro gram Friday Night Weeksvllle. Nov. 5. ? The Pied mont Lyceum Bureau will present I'ietro La Verdi on Friday even ing at elghl oVloek at the Weeks vUli> High School auditorium. Mr. La Verdi, "the man of many talents." is a muslclon of rare ac complishment. It l? said. With a violin bow he performs an old hand saw with as much ease as upon the piano accordion. lie is also a lightning crayon ar tist juid a vent riloqulst and iu th*> latter role he makes an especial appeal to the young people. His dialect songs are varied and hum erous. This Is the first of a series of entertainment* under the auspices of the local lyceutn committee. high over one of the mountain peaks, the gasoline supply was ac cidentally shut off, and the en vlne stalled. Just as the pilot was about to give the command to leap, he relates, the engine start ed. Conditions for airplane photog raphy are best. Lieutenant Wil liams Hays, on clear, cold days, because in more temperate woath er clouds form so near the earth lhat the visibility Is greatly Im parled. At an altitude of 12. 500 feet, even on mild days. It becomes bitterly cold, aud on one occasion this fall the oil spatter ing from the engine froze on Sergeant Houston's camera. Lieutenant Willliama was as signed to the task of mapping the confines of the Great Smoky Mountains proposed national park after he had completed an air plane map of the Shenandoah National Park In Virginia, which, it is planned, will be'a sister park of the one iu the Great Smokies-. The assignmeut was made by the War I>epartment. at the re quest of the Federal park commis sion. appointed by Secretary of Interior Work, to define the boundaries of the Great Smokies park. Once the boundaries were photographed. Lieutenant Wil liams was authorized to contlinue his work and map the interior. This Is the task on which he is now occupied, and which ho will complete as rapidly as the weath er allows. BRAY'S FRKWH DRY CMCANKR8 AND DYKIU4 riionn 7 SO. Water Ht NOTICE Mrs. I'Iiihkh- ISii inn of Norfolk, who in well trained and hai Inul sever al yearn' experience in Beauty eulture, is now lo rated at I'riteliard'* Beau ty I'arlor. Permanent Wave, Mar re I W uvr, Shamimo, Maui cure and racial and Scalp Treatment*. SPECIAL KATES ON PERMANENT WAVING FOR NOVEMBER, $10.00 A HEAD. Pritchard's Beauty Parlor I N. Poinilrxtrr St. Plionr 911 for Appointment*. FA MO AND LEBANON BELLE FLOUR ?re absolutely Hmirn of .|ii*lltjr miM bj the lewlln? nmn. ? DMTKII1CTKD IIV ? A. F. TOXEY & COMPANY Water Street. MOM'N POP r xt just mucont get . AtONS TtKStJHER - HE NEVER DAWCCD OR SOUGHT ME CAN DYOR TtCMCt IS AND MHENEVER WE XENT OUT To<5?TnE* HE MADE ME Ride cm The 'Street or instead of hiring A TAXI - you Exfecr *?bo i M0O4CflrATEUCW| WHEN X WAS oajsmua vauR AUNT SHE NEVER VWtfTeo SUCH LAVISH TJ?N3S How EVER. 1 DID BUY hsr em drops, 1 AND THEN / The Woman's H ear Store I/. LEU. II SHEEP UK The W oman's II tar Store Extraordinary CO A T AND DRESS Values for Friday and Saturday Beautiful Dresses Attractively Priced Fashioned from every new fabric ? in all the new warm shades of fall ami winter ? made up in a va riation of attractive styles that give one that smart, well groomed look that is so desired? For this week-end we have arranged two attrac tive lots ? made up largely of dresses that one would expect to be priced much higher ? SfJi ciiil fur l i iilay and Saturday ? Smart Coals Unusual Values Of fine materials really smart modes ? irood work manslii|> ? with fur collars and trimmings ? A tfood assortment of Coats ? unusual styles and excellent values ? wilh just a little touch of distinction lliat all of our jrarments possess ? Extraordinary ralnrs for I riilay ami Saturday at $16.95 and $25.00 % Hosiery Features Now Being Offered Full Fiifliioued Sheer Silk Hnxieiii with mcrccrized Kartcr tops. AM the new light shades and black. Priced at ? _ $25.00 to $59.50 Knit Underwear to Suit Every Need The name "Mniixiiinircar" (ii'arantees a prrfrct ly filling garment; ? and is so wmvn Ihnt it fits as well after washing a? before ? $1.50 Chiffon Hill, Hoxici a : In all the new light shades, full length and size. Priced at $1, $1.50 and $2 S h e c r Silk Hosiery : A cleanly / woven jrood silk hose with mercerized gar ter top. All new shades. Priced at $1.00 We have a full line of Women's and Children's Union Suits, Vests and l'ants. Prices ranjje on ll? imcii's I'niiiN Sails and up i.hildrvn'x Inioii Sit its 7!k and up M. Leigh Sheep Co. W O M A IS 9 S W E A ft ' \ - ANDHE VMS A BRvSe N H/8 VyAVS HE 05?)Tb SCOLD ME TkffSlBLY IF I LOOttMD AT AWO"TKR MAN - HE HAD No compassion For mv Ttwoea. ^ - fUUMGS/y^ VJELL.tM GUO To WJ 1/ He WAS A MAN >NSK > IV CTACAKEEATWGWI I \ HOW MUCH /VlOHCi I V WDH??WM? . Dumbbell u?e A That '_/ rtfj Be (jjrrful What Von Say, Henry ?Y TAYI/OP 111 hame you owder?,'tm)d H t's no Dura bell- its remarkable The way he cam flay a ukelele and he writes THE M03T ROMANffi C LOVE LETTERS ? YOU VE <3<Jr A usr OF NERVE TO CALL H/M A 0OM& BELL/

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view