Newspapers / The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, … / May 8, 1930, edition 1 / Page 9
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NORTH CAROLINA, SURRY COUNTY; J. F. Vauglin, va. ■. > Superior Court Mimle Vaughn* The defendani In the above entitled action will take notice, that an action in the Superior Court, of Surry County, N. C., has been started for an absolute divorce, on the grounds of five years abondment, and that if the defendant shall fail to answer, or demur to the complaint now ' L. 1 " " ' j^H Wr i m • b * I Save money al) the year! -"Cold Ribbon" Brand Coffee V fl 4n d Chicory has twice the strength of ordinary coffee fl ' ft and you use only half the quhntity to a cup. When yon I. buy a pound of "Gold Ribbon" Blend, it's like buying ft 2 lbs. of ordinary coffee —and it tastes better too. rim.:m ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ » NOTICE NOTICE j Pay your electric light bills before the of ■ each month and save the discount. p I SOUTHERN PUBLIC UTILITIES CO. | Siaia : "B ■■ m m ■■ m ■■ ■ ■ ■=*•■ »'»•• w•» INSURANCE LOAN AND TRUST CO. INSURANCE—ELKIN, N. C. OUR AIM IS TO SERVE J. F. HENDREN, Pres. R. M. BATES, Mgr. 3-M m&ftom 1 IULL ROWS ® .VOL. 111, Mo. 8 Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporal Copyright 1930 ii i Stagnant water and sour soil are poi son to a tobacco plant. Drainage is the first essential. - V-O With V-C, You're Set "An average crop of tobacco withdraws from the soil large Quan tities of all the elements of plant food," says an exchange. An aver ue herd of cows withdraws from the barn-loft large Quantities of - x VvW // animal food, too. And a drove of Xuigs can do tome pretty thorough withdrawing from a field of peanuts. But the more they all withdraw, th« quicker and liner they grow. It's not the withdrawing that matters. Ail the bother is about being sure there's plenty provided to be with drawn. -O "My sales have increased hun dreds of tons. Farmers in this sec tion are fast learning that tobacco crown with V-O brings the highest prices."— J. S. THOMPSON, Bealer, Danville, Va. I -O QKOKGIA IS the only state that produces more watermelons than Florida. -O "The increasing of yields. ls by no means an overnight process. Be yond a certain point It is a process of soil building over a period of years."— Wheeler McMiUeru -O "DARK TOBACCO has decreased In price since the war, largely as a re sult of Increased foreign production of dferk tobacco and a change in consumer preference toward mild tobaccos." — U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. -O » + "Used 400 lbs. of V-O Owl Brand under my tobacco with gratifying results. V-O gives color, size, qual ity. The tobacco stays green all the way to the bottom until cutting time, and there is no firing of the bottom leaves. Been using V-O IB years and have no desire to change." —C. A. HILTON, Greenville, Tenn. ' i i YIICIXIA - C A«G LIN A CHEMICAL CORPORATION ' i ... rr ,if ' ' - * • -••]|)ia-ajia>|i7ir''- : '" J "" - *•" -• 'f' " ' «bL .. jnajS* HiKs jon file In the Office of the Clerk 'of the Superior Court at Dobson, N. C„ within 30 days the plain tiff will apply to the Coifrt for the relief demanded in the com plaint. This the 28th day of Ap ril, 1930. F. T. Llewellyn, Clei'k Super ior Court, Surry County, N. C. May 1-7-14-21 I Thirty five Richmond County farmers will grow tomatoes as a commercial crop this season. ■ INTENSIVE FARMING "A sound land utilization policy will look toward the more intensive use of land that is truly agricultural. But Intensive use Involves the maintenance of high fertility."— 1. G. LIPMAN, New Jersey College of Agriculture. V-O —» "The farmer of outstanding business ability realizes that the successful management of the larger farm of the fu ture offers as wide a scope for his resourcefulness as do many of the enterprises of the city. The farmer of the larger farms of tomorrow will be a business manager In the strict est sense of the word." —RENICK W. DUNLAP. -C "Have been Handling V-O over 20 years. V-O gives all-around satis faction and best results for all crops."— J. L. Powell t Co., Dealer, Whiteville, N. O. -O EVER HEAR or the fellow * who got away from the grAss widow by taking a hay fever cure? -O Indians Venerate the Stem Among the North American In dians the tobacco pipe has a pecu liar symbolic significance in con nection with the superstitious rites and upages of the race, says Encyclo paedia Britannica. The pipe or medicine pipe is an object of pro found veneration. Though the most ancient pipes had no stdru. It Is the stem only of the medicine pipe which the Indians venerate. The bowl of a nutticine pipe bas no im portance, one or another bowl being used Indifferently. "We have used and sold V-O In dian Chief brand for many years, and without exception the results have been essellent. V-O's effect seems to be perfect on growing and | burning Qualities." — Lowe A Welles, Big Flats, N. Y. THE ELKIN TRIBUNE, ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA : 3H*i' TUNNEL s . ( i The committee appointed by the British Government to inves-, tigate the feslbility of a tunnel, under the English Channel con necting England with France! has reported in favor of the pro ject. It seems to Americans such - a simple and desirable engineer ing Job we wonder why It has, not been done long ago, but] there are plenty of "dle-hards"j in England who fear that such a; tunnel would make It easier for an enemy to Jnvade the British Isles. They are deaf to the obiv lous answers that all that would be necessary to stop a French army would be to let the water into the tunnel. The British Channel, from Do ver to Calais is about twenty miles across measured direct-i ly north and south. The shallow! waters of the Channel are easily stirred up by winds and the croßs-| Ing is one of the roughest in the, world. Undpr the water is a bed of solid chalk miles deep, through which a tunnel could, easily be bored for electric trains! It would cost about $150,000,000 !?j he committee estimates, and| „ jtake eight years. The French, PjGovernment is friendly to the| I j project. When done. England, • would no longer be In a position, I where v an eiurniy's ships could | cut off her food supply, unless I that enemy happened to be France. I It seems" more likely now than | ever before that the Channel tun nel will be built In Hie next few ■ 'years. | POLICE One of the reasons why crlm nals are caught more speedily ~ n England than in America is that England has a single police force for the entire country and in the United States we have as many different police depart ments as we have towns, each operating under a- different sys tem and with no cooperation between them except iu rare in stances. The Commonwealth of Penn sylvania has made a staj^Jowarj i Each individual leaf is handled 88 times. In the Qulncy area, to pre pare Florida shade tobacco for cigar makers. -O Heavy Fertilizing Pays Tests hi growing bright tobacco, made by the Virginia experiment station through a period of nine successive years, show clearly that heavy applications of fertilizer pay better than light applications. The record of the tests shows that 1,400 pounds of 3-8-3 per acre brought an average yield of 1,038 pounds that sold for an average of 8186 per acre — f . whereas only 700 pounds per acre, of the same analysis, brought a yield of 648 pounds that sold for 891 per acre. The' difference in favor of J heavy applications was 320 pounds u or 895 per acre. s "Most of the great surpluses and price declines have been brought about by acreage expansion." — J. C. Marquis. V '° t Got Any Azotobacter? a Azotobacter is the name of a brand-new microbe that scientists have found workins in the wheat lands of the west . They say it puts a nitrogen back into the soil at the ' rate of about 40 pounds per acre per v year. Old Azzy is worth about 8800,- 8 000,000 a year to farmers, the scien tists figure—and all this time he's been working without thanks. No body-even knew he was there, much , less what his name was. . / , —v-o— .; American flue-cured tobacco is sit- " ting pretty. The world Is smoking £ more cigarettes every year, and foreign production of the flue-cured Is limited. -O t "The price of progress today it a scientific research." —EXCHANGE. . T -O . t • C "We have handled V-O exclu sively. and sales have Increased each year. V-O grows fine crops.' '—BecUey Ice * Feed Co., Dealer, Beclcley, W. Va. t remedying this. A network of 1 telephone wires connecting eve- ry important town in the state i with aU the rest, and wjth four main centers of operatioh, oper- i ates a typewriter-telegraph sys- ' tern in every police headquarters, i The moment a crime is discover- * ed anywhere,"all the acts and i possible clues to the criminal are reported to the chelf of po lice and the whole criminal catching machinery of the Com monwealth is set in motion. We shall never get our criml? j nal element under control until;, such a tie-up is in effect in eve-, 'jy state and -throughout the na-, tlon. Then we may have a chance| ( 'of equalling England's record | or the suppression of crime. AGE "A woman is as old as she looks and a man is as old as he feel," runs an ancient proverb. I Many men of eigbtly or more are 'capable of doing as much work [with as much enthusiasm asl most men of forty; many more men are old and past their use , fulness at sixty. The difference recent scientific research has discovered lies in the secretions ,of certain glands of the body. When these .diminish old age . supervenes. Dr. Harry Benjamin . of New York, working In associa tion with Dr. Caßimir Funk, dis jcoverer of vitamins, and Dr. Benjamon Harrison has found a way of introducing the hormones ,or essential secretions of these I glands Into elderly .men with surprising results. The effect Is not to prolong life In all probabi lity, hut to enable a man to re i a period many years longer than ijlaln his youthful energy through , the average , So far th'is Is experiment, but 'the experiments have been sue cessful and the time may be close at hand when old age and help lessness will no longer be synon-. ymous. Itl'ST One of the greatest enemies of progress is rust. For years • the iron and steel industries have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars a year In research into means of preventing the rust that destroys bridges, factories. Iron. Protecting metals aglainsfc everything made of rust is an expensive part of all kinds of construction and manu facturing processes. So called "stainless" steel Is providing one answer. Instead of protecting the surface, certain other metals are alloyed with the steel and the metal becomes rustless, capable ,of taking and keeping a brilliant polish. Cheaper than ntchel plate, more durable than chronlum plate, |one automobile manufacturer is already turning out cars whose bright parts are of stainless steel and now other makers are con sidering entire bodies and chas sis of the same . metal if this works out our roads may become as glittering as they were when everybody rode nickel plated bi cycles. n tuts dime by SVancf/ Hart Fruit Sauce Whip a cup of cream solid and fold into it half a cup of fresh or preserved fruit rubbed through a selve and sweetened to taste. Jam, marmalade, or Jelly may be used instead of ths fruit and the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs may be used Instead of the cream. Golden Sauce Rub to a cream half, a cup of butter and brown sugar, heat in a double boiler, and add gradu ally the beaten yolk of one or two eggs. Cook slowly until thick, stirring sonstantly, and season to taste with wine or lem on. Add a little splce if desired Lemon Sauce Cream one-third cup of butter with one cup of and a tablespoon of flour. Add one and one-baU cups of boiling water, simmer until smooth, and add a lemon which has been chopped without peeling, removing the' seeds. Foaming Sauce Cream half a cup of butter with a cup of sugar and add a teaspoon of cinnamon. Add .one egg wel beaten and very grad ually, one cup of boiling milk. Serve immediately. Hard Sauce Soften a eup of butter with two tablespoons of boiling water and Tttdd gradually two cups of brown sugar. Add grated nutmeg to flavor, beat until light and creamy, and serve cold. Rice Rice has a large amount ot the coated sort, it has also vlta mjne propertied. It is lacking in starch lit its makeup. If you use fat and proteins. So rice should always be served, if it Is the mainstay of the meal, with food containg protein and fat. It is a good accompanleut of meat or eggs. Rice pudding ,Is a well rounded dish. Boiled rice served with butter or sugar is good as a hearty dessert for children and with tilenty of milk to drink and some fruit would an ex cellent meal. NOTICE Under and by virtue o? thj power contained in a deed of jtrust executed by S. R. Collins and wife, Rosa Collins, to the undersigned trustee, to secure a Jdebt to R. D. Gentry, which it of I j after t u ° S ' Ves s t a,re con ' "i.'l WWJtti. 'LV*g- ' Se rvim , a^e e /, a l °n s ./ « re nd C Sbo »ld b, e *P>e/ : • ' Harris-Burgiss Elect Co. * ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA > j jP I /mmSsM/ Irs WISE TO CHOOSE A SIX | A demonstration tells I yon why it's wise ' I to choose a six : I ✓. i H Everywhere, buyers are agreeing springs—the four Lovejoy hydraulic I "Ito wise to choose a Six." And if shock absorbers—the weatherproof X" you want to know why, get a dem- 4-wheel brakes—and the sturdy jSf I onstration of the Chevrolet Six. hardwood-and-steel construction Learn what an amazing difference of the luxurious Fisher hodie *' two more cylinders make—in It will take only a few minutes to smoothness, in* silence, in flexi- confirm all the reasons why it is bllity and in comfort. to choose a Chevrolet Six. So com* And learn what It. And inwatlT a difference all Roadster qr phaeton Sate Chettp^ of Chevrolet's "*ca*cho,c*ur.ssH Th*a«bs.jon... «M 5 let's easy Th* Sport Roadster IMS other modern TJ payment plan « I features make •?,«= . . . Choitii with Cab. t61%: Raadrter Dtllnry (Pick-up most liberal In • ■ / —the four long *>« «"->• MO. ALL PRICES f. O. B. FACTORY, FLINT, MICH. aUIOmOOIf, gjM semi-elliptic __—2 industry. | CHEVROLET SIX | H F-W Chevrolet CQ, I Ellon, North Carolina B 1 ty in Book 117, page 20, default i having been made in the pay r ment of the nqtes, secured by 1 said deed of trust and at the I quest of the holder of said deed sof trust, I ~will sell at public i auction for cash on Friday, May 1 30th, 1930 at the Postoffice door -in Elkin N. C., at one o'clock P. M. the following described real estate. Lying and being it* Surry coun ty, N, C., Elkin township, Begin- Jning on a rock on the bank of r State Highway and runs South sSB dgerees West to the Alley, e North 13 degrees West 145 feet ato lot no. 5; thence East with g thence South 93 feet with State THURSDAY, MAY 8, IP3Q Recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Surry coun ' Lot no. 6 to State Highway; Highway to beginning. , Representing lots nos. 1, 2, 3, of J B. Hudson on State High -1 and *4 in Block L in the land sale way running froin Elkin o Spar- Sale wili be made to satfsfy ta. ' debt and the cost. This the 30th day of April, . 930. , Frank H. \Mkitaker > Trustee i - May 1-7-14-21 Columbus County farmers have i sold over SIO,OOO worth of fat.
The Elkin Tribune (Elkin, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 8, 1930, edition 1
9
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