6. G. iERosl«r^uini^ Pajr LaboMn Accnr^-* fait To Revfaed Rales ’ ■ ' • * Mksdnle ot pay for ro8 .annoanoed G. O. Fos^r, ^fdmlntetrator. Btor stated tliat" tit'e rates were recelred from' state administration and that UMpsiaat tor labor can be made IpIlF ui the new basis. Ilbllowlng is the new schednle; Labor _4 .45 l.JO "apprentice __ .75 60 tWANTADS SALE—Locust Poets,' any .^ ■Jangth want^. Write or see >ll«l«rd Brown, Jr.. Hays, N. SAJU^^ISSS Model Ford . V-8; 'driven only 3,000 miles. T'i;",:-. Terms reasonable. See or write E-fMia. Otha Mattiis, Roaring ’ > Hirer, N. C. 2-19-2t-pd i WA^fTED—At once, tenant for ipO*aere Ashe County farm; S' ^ Ilf you are dishonest or afraid "'''■^?^^^.,:Work,..please do not apply. J. C. Miller, City Barber Shop. Wllkesboro. 2-19-21 tract, lo- ;i-2 miles west of city olK IBobne lhall. Priced cheap. TMI aoeept good automobile ta payuneat.' See or write J. I. Myers, North' Wilkesboro. 2-15-lt-pd OPUNING'—f«r man be tween '86 and 46, owning car. Abusive Watkins route In ]£ut)y locality for right man. Ae or write T. S. Welbom, C^le.'N. C. 2-15-2tp WANTED — The farmers and chicken raisers of Wilkes and adjoining counties to know that .ere *. .*0. mixing Starting Mash at we sell at |2.35 per 100, will grow your chicks to afcroiler size as quick as any on the market regardless of the price.—WILKES HATCHERY! North Wilke-sboro, N. C. 1-22-tf Caititawih wor;~«tc.> Plumbers ,I.IO Plsasber' epimnttes .0. Eleetrldlenjs **r?ar~'— Blectriciana apprentit^ .v.—,*0 Skilled Iron woi|t,era.^. (Ornamental) Skilled iron workera , ,, (Struetural) ——- i-i® Hoisting engineer (on -k * elevates) — —-i,*——.* Plasterers - — 1-1® Plasterer apprentice .*0 Plasterer Mortar Mixer —_ .60 Lathers (Metal) —j— ■•0 Roofers & Sheet Metal Workers — 1.10 Roofers & Sheet Metal AilPirentlce .... -80 Steam Fitters 1.10 Steam Fitters Apprentice — .60 Painters 1.10 Painters (Primers, etc.) — .76 Tile & Marble Setters 1.10 Cement Finishers '....— .16 Mixer Operator (Small) — .60 Mixer Operator (Large) .... 1.10 Truck Driver (1 1-2 ton and under) — .46 Truck Driver (Over 1 1-2 tons) .75 Glaziers .76 PlPe Layer .60 Caulker -— 60 Blacksmith — 1.10 Apprentice Blacksmith .60 Machinist — —- 1-10 Apprentice Machinist 60 Skilled Foremen .... 1.10 Semi-skilled Foremen .60-.80 Unskilled Foremen .BO Timekeepers 50 Tool Checkers — -BO Quarry Drill Operators .76 Tree Surgeons 80 Higdiwsy Projects Unskilled labor .30 Skilled labor — - .40 Truck Drivers (1 1-2 ton and under) — -30 Truck Drivers (Over 1 l'2 ton) .40 (Wage rate Is determined by the nature of work which worker is performing). WeStinghouse Representative To Be In City Next Week A representative ot the West- inghouse company will be In the city the first of the week to dem onstrate the new 1934 model WeStinghouse electric refrigera tor at the Rhodes-Day FMrniture show and at the show rooms of the Wilkes Electric Company, lo cal distributors for the Westing- house. All who are Interested in htmoghaa electric refrigerator for iha season are requested tn att.enH the demonstrations. NAM : liS [o ■ I spent Sifsiirerkl hours the othey btMlmi iHth ini old hdend, AMorlen^'^tlMii who h»s lived tor many years in dermany. “What is at the bottom of this revolntioni^ movement -in Ger many t" f-asked him. His answer was prompt' and conelse. ' '.j-jfc . “nie’ Trsaty of VorsaiUps.’" he replied. “The German people feel that they hsve bees placed in a position of Inferiority ever since the war. ilioy a»a* proud people. They-belleve themselves superior to all other peoplee. The present generation-refuses to pay the price which its parents accepted to end the war. It took only shrewd leadership and an appeal to patriotic pride to arouse them to a new sense of nationalism. Everybody In Germany Is in uni form. The military spirit Is be ing cultivated. When the right time comes there vrill he another war unless the nations whom Germany regards as its enemies yield their rlghte under the Ver- satllles treaty.” Other observers have told me the same thing. I think they are probably right. But I also think j that thS United States will not Itself be drawn Into another European war. *• patriotUBBy and^Wyoutly Gor man than the Qermana them-, solves. The appeal was to the iK«i norant maases, and the to sutter.” I may be wrong, but I maiiae it,,wlU not be easy tor dermany'i tinanee Its next war. , *e; . . 4 . - revised One'ot the amatiiig things my friend told me was that the Oer^ man people are oppnly abaBdon.> Ing Ohristlanity; not all ot them, but the element which Is strong est in support ot the Nasi pro gram. • '\ 'it - “The children are being taught to believe In the old goda of Val halla, in the ancient ■. Teutonic myths Instead of the Bible," he WAJSHINGTONt # . . Mrs. Jeu — _ . ^ Whitteaow, cf Ksnsss (abofs) said. The very next day I read a ^ *ade Cmtelsr of Me Pert wa M ^ ' dispatch from Berlin giving’ the text of a new version ot the 87th Psalm, which has been amended by a Nasi leader so that it be gins: “The Lord loveth the height of Germany more than all the dwellings abroad." ef San Jaaa, sest to tha most portaat job in Powto Btoo. Whaa asked how she ebtahaei the appoiat- Bient, replied, “Good poker p%,’is what I call it” hsjs hoeh j^ng t^; tlM curse laid by Pheinoh. Tut-Ankh-Anl^^j* whomever might despoil ■ hi« >n tomh/1 havs heard serioueJr'dlsj t cussed by othenriso Intefllgentpb* tonight at people, who tnformed me>4yavely that every one, or nearly every one, of the members Of the expe dition whlA found the treasures in that ancient tomb a few years ago had since died a inysterions death. ■ v'-'i ^ ... A check-np by Director Win- lock of the Metri^lUan Museum ot Artfproves that out of' the focty*9|K>uji present when King Tit’nlamvff was unwranted, thih^Hnfise are still, alive and in good'hfltltln after ten years. The seven who died lived to an aver age of sixty. ".'if V Tbft doean’l sound as if Tat’s curse had been very Ad made no charges a tion against any iheadw of- present house. Last week ; i withdrew a remaclt. that. tA quor trade had paid soma meww; An) $10,000 a year to defend ito, . interests. ^ fS Havaha, Feb. 18.—-TA dwtolot' attorney of Ante Oteia provlalt. today aaAd tA cowit tp. paw a sentence of 18' years - taUPsAl*!'.,ig ment on former Senator Carlos Machado, brother of fonaelr p»i* ident Gerado Machado, on cAfg* es tAt he plotted the assaiwlw*- lection, but President Rooeevelt's e dwellings abrOTd.' , .jls also a very fine and complete In the preface to this one. Many stamp collections are Version It Is asserted that the | hundreds of thousands Biblical story of Christ must be wrong, because 11 represents tlon of a rival cattle man,'®M^hj effective, Jmo Gousales. Gonsales .esoapad but I Imagine foolish people will ^ death but was gravrfy wquBded.;,*.. continue to repeat the original' Machado Is how In prison. heM|^ Christ as a Jew. I got an entirely new Idea of what Is happening in Germany. It Is not a pleasant picture. GOATB were needed “What Is the motive behind the antl-Jewlsh activity of the Nar sis?” I asked my friend. "What was the motive behind the antl-Hoover activity in Amer ica?" he countered. “The people were In trouble and they needed a scapegoat. Mr. Hoover was elected the goat. It was easy for THRIFT two ideas The outstanding example ot thrift In modern times. It seems to me, Is the case of Emily Smith. Miss Smith spent her lifetime in charge of Hampton Court Maze in London, a famous labyrinth of hedges in which a visitor can wander for hours and not find either the center or the way out. Miss Smith’s fee for each visi tor to the Maze was one penny— two cents. She died the other day and left an estate valued at $250,000. !Anybody can accumulate mon- valued at hundreds of thousands of dollars. If I were twenty again, and Ad as much sense as I have ac quired since that age, I would put my spare cAnge Into postage stamps, collecting jadicldasly, specializing in some particular class or kind of stamps, with the certainty tAt for every dollar in vested now I could get a hun dred dollars or more forty years from now. Have irt!' J PRANCE hoe grafters I find a certain patriotic satis faction In the disclosures of offi cial graft and corruption In France. It proves, what I have often said, that political crooked ness is not solely an American , trait. Some of my friends would j have me believe that everything elected the goat, it was easy lor . ^ j European Is better than anything people to lay the blame for every-1 ®y 7)y spending less than his In-) American. My observation Is that OD I FgW ]*6&liZG tllftt it is ilftrd™ waAhwa (a tho aama nil “Just BO the Nazi movement |er td keep money than to get It. needed a goat. Why not the. • • • 'Jews? They were not numerous | STAMPS an Investment I enough to set up serious resist-1 Like thousands of other boys, I ance, only two percent of the po- I Agan stamp collecting, when I i pulatlon; but they were the was ten or eleven years old. I bankers, merchants. Industrial- traded my collection for a rifle, Ists, against whom it is always and nearly fifty years later one easy to stir up the populace of any nation. Nothing Is easier than to arouse the poor and tA lazy against the well-to-do and. the industrious. “So Hitler and his aides made the Jews the scapegoats for Ger many’s troubles. It makes no dif ference that the German Jews have for centuries Aen more set of uncancelled U. S. Depart mental stamps which I had own ed kola for $30,000! .7 if'went the other day to ah international exhibition of post age stamps. Nobody in the world, I believe, possesses an absolutely complete set of all the adbestive stamps ever printed. King George of England has the largest col- buman nature is the same all over the world, and tAt given the opportunity to get away with It, men who will use their politi cal offices to feather their own nests at public exAnse can A found anywhere. French Alitics hM always been corrupt. This time It looks as if the gang which has been In Awer for years was through. Some of ray Paris correspondents are greatly alarmed: they predict another revolution In France, (TUT no curae Superstitions are hard to kill. Humanity is credulous because most of us want to believe In By some of our customers why their (mOSLEY BATTERY RADIO holds its same volume and power over a period of many months when their neighbor’s radio (not a Crosley) -T’l holds its volume only a few weeks— both supposedly modem battery ra- dios? This question will be answered in following issues. Wilkes Elcclric Co. EXCLUSIVE CROSLEY DEALERS Meadows Bldg. North Wilkesboro, N. C. 7 Drink More Milk For He i-t But BE SURE IT IS GRADE T MILK i I Montview Dairy Produces Only Grade “A” Milk, According to Rules of the N. C. State Board of Health S I ?DRINK SEVERAL ’ ■ gl.,’.:e.es daily There is plenty of rich cream in every bottle of our milk . . . from pure bred Jersey Cows . . . fresh daily to your door ... Our cows are groom ed twice every day . .. stalls washeed out thoroughly every day and all vessels used in our dairy &re sterilized before using . ,. Our milk is cool ed immediately after milking both winter and summer. “You Can Whip Our Cream . . . But. . . You Can^t Beat Our Milk.” I f:l f-A.1 k’M xwwr.c active Iiod)’ ■ ' ' Ihe health that gives ve.iy to go . - . fresh milk Doctors advise it for childreiwiS well as grown-ups. You Are Invited To Inspect Our Modern Dairy Farm At Any Tinie USE PT.EN'fV’ OF MILK IN COOKING * Milk contaVs nil the necessary'pi’O-^fi teins . . G:i'!>ohydrT,te.q . . - Vita-^ mines . . . rn l minerals found in’ vegetables . . .and all .von do is pour rit.. . fresh, sweet and creamy from the bottle. * . ,v. \ ONTVIEW m ta, • V GERMAN , f- . '*\f. • • - BOOM^'Ni C.'