Newspapers / The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, … / Feb. 6, 1930, edition 1 / Page 3
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THURSDAY FEBRUARY 6, IPSO Two hundred and twenty-one lioyß and girls of Davidson coun ty have enrolled for Four-H club work. Poultry, corn, calves, and pigs are the major projects for the boys while the girls are studying nutrition and clothing for health. Farmers In Matrin County re ceived an average of 21 cents a pound for their poultry ship ments last week. Shipments to taled 100,241 pound for which they received $2,116.50 in cash. '« C. G ARMFIELD Notary Public Elkin National Bank H. G. HARRIS Hailing of All Kind* AB>llbif Anywhere Plionn Day HH Night 14OR MARTIN' INC. RENTAL. AGENTS Real Estate and Insurance Office Greenwood Bldg. Phone 195 Elkin, N. C. DELMONICO CAFE "Finest Place In Town" We servo the best food the world's markets afford Sunday Dinner A Specialty Meet Your Friends Here GEO. PAULS, Mgr. CAR STORAGE JIM GREENWOOD Chrysler Dealer 82.00 Monthly fiast Main St. Elkin, N. C. MASONIC NOTICE Regular communication El kin Lodge N0.454 A. F. and A. M., on second and fourth Saturday nights 7:30 p. m. Members urged to attend. Visitors cordially invited. A. D. Harmon, W. M. M. R. Bailey, Sec. DR. E G. CLICK DENTIST New Location Across Street From First Baptist Church Ellrin, N. C. CAROLA CAFE A Good Place In Town To Eat Phone 271 Elkin, N. C. DR. ROY B. HARRELL DENTIST Office Over Turner Drug Company ELKIN, N. C. EXPERT WATCH & JEWELRY RE PAIRING One of the most modern and best equipped jewelry stores and repair shops in North Carolina. Two expert jewel ers in charge. T.E.STEEE LYRIC THEATRE BLDG. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE The undersigned having qual ified' as adminstrator of the state of the late William J. Mas ten, this is to notify all persons having claims against said es tate to present the same to the undersigned before the 6tii day of January 1931 or this notice will be plead in bar of their re covejy. All persons indebted to said estate must make immediate settlement. W. M. Gray, Administrator Jan. I*6-23-30 Feb. 6 NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain Deed of Trust executed on the 12 day of August. 1927, by C. C. Shore and Wife, L. M. Shore to A. O. Bray. Trustee, in tfre sum of $1200.00, the same being recorded in Book 84, Page 290, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Surry Coun ty, North Carolina and default having been made in the pay ment of the same, I, the under signed Trustee, will sell at pub lic auction, on the premises for cash at 2:00 P. M. on the 21st. day of February, 1930, the fol lowing described property to wit: Beginning at a rock at the Southwest corner of Mrs. J. W. Pardues lot on the bank of the road and runs East with said Mrs. Pardue's line 150 feet to the Southwest corner of said Pardue's lot; thence South 50 feet to a rock at the Southeast corner of this lot, and thence West parallel with the first line 150 feet to a rock on the road at the Southwest corner of this lot: thence North 50 feet to the heginnig, being 7,500 square feet more or less. This the 22nd day of Jan uary, 1930. A. O. Bray, Trustee Januray 23-30 February 6-13 NOTICE By virtue of the power con tained in an order made by thj Clerk of the Superior Court of Surry County in proceeding en titled Margarett Burton, Admrx. et al vs. Rousia Stanley et al, the undersiyned commissioner will offer for sale at public auc tion to the highest bidder on the premises on the Bth day of Feby. at one o'clock, P. M. on terms of one third cash and balance in one and two years equal pay ments the following land: Ist tract: Beginning at a white oak, T. S. Wilmoths line, John Jones coiner, runs E. 13.86 chs. on Jones line to a white oak, S. 54.15 chs. to a stake in back line. W. 13.86 chs. to a red oak and North to beginning contain ing 75 acres more or less. Second tract: Beginning at a stake in old Alberty line an runs with said line South 4 d. W. 27.25 chs. to middle of Cody Creek Road, then up the road as it now me&nderß North 77 deg. West 6 chs. W. 7.5 chs to C. F. Siasell's Store House Lot, then with said lot North 4 d. East 2. 25 chs to a rock, N. 86 d. W. 2. 25 chs. to Dobson road and with said road as it now meanders N. 30 d. E. 2chs. thence N. 5 d. W. 90 links to a rock in Wilmoth line, thence with Wilmoth line S. 86 d. E. 33.18 cha. to beginning containing 60.9 acres more or less. Exlept 29.59 acres sold to W. L. Alberty, for this exception see deed in book No. 61 pagel3o and also ten acres sold to Nora Jones by W. D. Bates. This Jan. Bth 1930 Maragrett Burton Commissioner Jan. 16-23-30 Feb. 4 A. D. Folger, att. Notice of Sale of Land By virtue of the authority ves lic auction, to the highest bid executed to the undersigned trustee for Workman's Building and Loan Association. Dated May 12, 19 27 and recorded in Book 101, Page 199, Aug. 11. 1927 and recorded In Book 101, Page 255 in the office of the Re gister of Deeds for Surry Co., N. C., default having been made In payment of the notes therein se cured, at the request of the hold er of said notes I will sell at pub ted in a certain deed of trust der, for cash in front of the Court House door in Dobson, N. C. t Friday, February 28. 1930 at 1 P. M. the following describ ed real estate, towit: Beginning at a stake on the south side of Cherry Street at G. M. Whitlock's corner and runs with hig line South 40 degrees 45 minutes East 20J feet to a stake;«thence North 48 degrees 30 minutes East 60 feet to a stake; thence North 40 degrees 45 minutes East 20 feet to a south edge of Cherry Street; thence with the edge of said street South 58 degrees 30 min utes West* 60 feet to the begin ning. Sale made to satisfy principal. $3,000.00 $2,500.00 interest and costs of this sale to add. This 23rd day of January, 1930. M. H. Sparger, Trustee Jan. 30 Feb. 6-13-2J NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA SURRY COUNTY In the Superior Court Jas. H. Burke sv. Sadie M. Burke The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above lias been com menced in the Superior Court of Surry County to secure absolute divorce on groynd of 5 years sep aration aind the said defendant will further take notice that he is required to appear and answer the complaint within 30 days from completion of service or the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint. This 15th day of January, 1930. F. L. Llewellyn, *Clerk of Superior Court. Jan. 16-23-30 Feb 4 CORNSTALKS ....Just as the invasion of the European cornborer has put up to every farmer in the corn grow ing regions the problem of how to get rid of his corn stalkg and hold the check, new in ventions for the { utilization of this farm waste for making pa per and also a substitute for lumber have been perfected. Now capital in large amounts has been subscribed to finance industries which will contract with farmers for their stalks after harvest, send their own machines into the fields to gath er thtm, haul them to central points where they will be man ufactured into |us;ful products. This will help conserve the for ests and will also add, to the profits of the farmer. GAS The International Red Cross i 8 preparing for the next war. One of the certainties about the next war on any large scale is that poison gas will be used on a larger scale than ever before. War is no longer an affair of king and hired armies; it is whole nations against whole na tions. The aggressor in the next great war will not wait for the enemy to assemble an army, but will try to wipe out a whole city by droppig poison gas from the clouds. What the Hed Cross is look ing for is some means of detect ing the most minute trace of poison gas in the air. A prize of $2,000 is offered to the success ful inventor. And we call this a civilized world! EMOTIONS Anger, fear, worry especially the latter kill more people than "real" diseases, according to a report recently made to the New York Academy of Medicine.. There is no such thing as over work, either of hodv or mind. The body given sufficient nor- Ishment, will quit of its own ac cord when fatigue becomes too great, and a night 8 sleep will put. it back into trim again. Prob ably no human belong has ever used his brain to its capacity. Men who have studied that sub ject say that most of us use less than a quarter of our power of thought. But let worry, jealousy, fear of losing one's job, one's money or one'n sweetheart, creep in, and the whole picture is chang ed. The emotional tension tires both mind and body, which cani not go on without violent stim ulation, and the process of de cay is hastened. Most of the deaths from heart disease and kidney trouble are the result of emotonal tension rather than any real defect in the physical organs. LIFE With all the talk about the in creased average I *igtli of hu man life, the age ut seventy still remains the normal limit for hu man being. So Dr. Louis Dublin, medical head of one of the great insurance companies reports. Only exceptional individuals live be yond 70, and in America the pro portion who die between 65 and 70 l 8 Increasing. Yet the aver age American lives longer than hi|B father's generation did', much longer than in his grand fathers time. That is because the illnesses which used to kill off babies, children and young peo ple of both sexes are not so pre valent a s formerly. Every American baby born to day has a reasonable chance at living to 55, which is the aver age length of life in this coun try, as agaist 48 In most of Eu rope. But the man who reaches 55 cannot count on more than fifteen years of life with any de gree of certainty, and the chan- THE ELKIN TRIBUNE, ELKIN, S. C. State Farm News MORE LIVESTOCK NEEDED ON FARMS A growing demand for more milk, butter, beef and poultry makes it absolutely necessary that farmers in North Carolina increaaes their livesock produc ion If they continue to "live at home." "The rapidly increasing urban population, has brought to the farm door the opportunity of buying those things that at one time were of necessity produced on the farm." says A. C. Kimrey. I dairy extension specialist at I State College, "but it is also in creasing the demand for all kinds of livestock products. In neglecting to increase hig dairy herd und poultry flocks the far mer is neglecting a wonderful opportunity to not only produce a good living but also make a good income from the farm.'' I In the early days of our his tory, states Mr. Kimrey, whenj the markets were few and far apart is was not only good bus iness but a necessity to produce everything needed on the farm. This naturally led to the produc tion *of crops that were adaped to slow marketing such as cotton tobacco and grain. But now, he states, it is not only necessary to produce the things needed on the farm but also to produce those things most In demand at the nearest market which in most cases is at the front door. The f-onstant demand today la for food products from live stock. According to Mr. Kimrey, live stock, pasture and feed crops in reasonable proportions will en- able every farmer in North Car olina to utilize a maximim per cent of his acreage and will at the same time produce a decent living and a marketable surplus of livesock producs. ''This is the only permanent solution and as long as tlic far liners of North. Carolina refuse to follow this system just so long will they have a small and insuf ficient farm income and a stand ard of living not in keeping res are that he will pass in ten years. COAL Geologists of the Byrd South Pole Expedition have found coal in Antarctia. Great Britain takes Qccasion to remind the Uni»d States that conslderablt parts Vof the land are under the protec tion of the British flag. Trouble makers, especially the sensa tional newspapers which prefer war to peace because war is more "newsy,, are alreday Trying to lay the foundation for inter national strife. If we ever do go to war against Great Britain it will be over something more important than a coal bed located where it is always belffw freezing and usually 40 degrees or so below zero. Even if coal were access ible it would not be worth fight ing over. Coal is losing it impor tance in the economic scheme of things now that oil has becone the pricipal fuel for the worlds navies as well as the merchant marine. Seed-Corn Queen T Nuth Thomas is only thirteen, but she won over scores of men and boys in the "best seed-corn" contest recently held at Scdalia, Missouri Corn of hei personal sctcction and planting being adjudged the best shown. OBIT U All Y Mr. Edward Loyd of Thur mond, N. C., was born May sth 1897. He joined the church at the age of *5 or 16, was mar ried to Miss Pearl Thompson Sept. 4th, 1927. To this union wos born one child, Dorothy, near two years old. Brother Loyd departed this life January 21st at—tht age of 32 years 8 months and 16 days, leaving his father ahd mother, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Loyd, three brothers Frank, W. H., and Earnest, one sister Rosey Crigger of Va., his good wife and little Dorothy and a host of friends to mourn his loss. He had been in failing health for 2 years or moro, but was taken seriously ill and pass ed away in three or four days. He left evidence that he would be better off in the next world. He died in the hospital at Mt. Airy, N. C. January 21, was with other livestock producing sections.says Mr. Kimrey. NEED HOG AND HOMINY IN EASTERN SECTION Hogs and corn, milk and hay are the great needs of south eastern North Carolina farmers according to a survey recently made by extension workers at State College. Pork is needed not so much because it is not produced in sufficient quantity, but because more of it is needed to substi tute for beef and mutton which are not produced in anything like cufficient amounts. Corn, of course, is needed to feed the hogs, and the production of this crop is generally below re quirements for the section. Only a fraction of the requir ed amount of milk is and the failure of this supply] is doubtless one of the causes of the wide spread of the dreaded pellagra in the southeastern sec tion. The survey, however, shows a distinct "bootn" in milk pro duction with every county in the southeast showing a 100 percent increase in 1928 over the production in 19 20." Hay. which is needed for feeding purposes is not raised in anything ap proaching needed requirements and millions of dollars are spent annually for this commodity which could be produced at home. There is a silver lining, how lever, as the section raised a sur- Iplus of Irish potatoes and prac tically all the sweet potatoes needed. Poultry and eggs are also being produced in sufficient jquantities to fill home require jments and some counties are producing a surplus. The far mers are not growing enough oats but production has shown a steady incresase since 1920. The trend in money crops has been toward tobacco and away from cotton, especally in those counties along the southern edse [and along the coast. Here the boll weevil has done great dam age and farmers are turning to other crops. brought to White Rock 22. Fun eral ' conducted by Rev N. L. Fulk. Interment was in the White Rock cemetery. One ton of lime used under lespedeza by J. L. Cauble of Al bemarle in Stanley county in creased the yeild of green hay 5,280 pounds to the acre. The yield on the land without lime was 3,520 pounds as compared with 8, 800 pounds where lime was used. Vr ' / ' , ' you R. HANDS/ ) DOWNY LITTLE THINGS ... not long out of their j shells . . . how much they must depend on you for } '3 the things they need to live and get big. They need V f a feed filled with nourishment. A feed which will build bones quickly . . . building muscles strong . . . change fuzz to feathers in a hurry ... all this they demand . . . and yet their little crops can handle * .. only one tiny thimbleful of feed a day! What a job for feed! Consider Purina Chick Startena (mash) for this job! In every thimbleful are twelve ingredients! Cod-liver oil. . . dried buttermilk .. . alfalfa flour ... «w—mom*. ■ i granulated meat. . . these and eight others are there m . . . each one with a real job to do. Purina Startena I - is mixed over and over again . . . 960 times just to . be thorough! And you will find the same care taken > jn o|iriiW A '* with Baby Chick Chow (scratch) ... to be fed with nrv . H Startena. . USTART^A^ Your chicks . . . what they do for themselves ... in CUfvyy JpVf f'uJv*' what they do for you ... is entirely in your hands. fclg They eat so little . . . yet it counts so much . . . that 0 | you can afford to do only one thing . . . feed Purina F. A. Brendle & Son, Elkin The Store of the Checkerboard Front "Commoner's*' Widow I>T- & Mrs. Mar> Baird Bryan, widow of the late William Jennings. Bryan, parsed' away a! the bom? of her ilaifelncr, Mr». Grace Ilargreaves, in Hollywood. Cal. Mrs, Bryan was al most as widely known as her famous husband, in whose work she took an active j-ait for many years. Mrs. H. B. Davenport, of West Main Street, who has been sick for the past several weeks is im proving. HALF PRICE Save money all year! "Golden Ribbon" I Brand Coffee and Chicory has twice the ■ strength of ordinary coffee and you use ■ only half the quantity to a cup. When you I buy a pound of "Golden Ribbon" Blend its like buying 2 lbs. of ordinary coffee—and it tastes better too. IBLvl u >oniv priflUNH A* Or oao>*uff XTK'® I 1 T tkT | WILKES HATCHERY OPENS 1930 SEA SON February first. .Make your reservation for canton* hatching. Only i|tS.OO per tray of 112 eggs. I'lace your order early for strong husky chicks from range grown flfV'k.M pure-bred, inflate inspected and blood tented. Barred and White Rocks, R. I. Reds. Hatching eggs and. poultry equipment. Wilkes Hatchery, N. Wilksboro, N. C. NOTICE Under a deed of trust execut ed to the undersigned trustee for Surry County Loan and Trust Company. Dobson Branch, due and unpaid, recorded is Surry County Records Book 88 page 233 dated Mr. 10th. ,1924, I will offer for sale at public aucUon to the highest bidder for cash at the courthouse door In Dobson on Mar. 4th. 1980 at One o'clock I*. »j. .thfe following land: Beginning at a stake, Dock ery Corner, runs S. 73 d. e. with line of rail road 1 ch.. and 1.5 links to a stake, N. 15.5 d., schs. 52 Jinks to stake. N. 73 d. W- 1 ' ch. and 81.5 links to stone to Dockery line, S. 15.5 d. W. With said line to beginning. One acri more or less. Also Lot No. 1, Block No. 1 fronting on Main St. and ig 25ft. wide and runs beck liOO ft. to an alley as shown by mau of lota near Burch Station N. C, in sub division of ~C. A. Sebastian laniL This January 31st. 1930. C. M. Llewellyn. Trustee by A. D. Polger, Attr- Feb. 6-13-21-2S
The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 6, 1930, edition 1
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