Hi
Mir*
l«r JHaiUT.
W* to’
-BWwln
VaTUb laronifod—Bad
K adUtod (or tlio con-
LttsM )r«7«. Tke matiiod li
; /’ptdi^iBC,’' AVlodows,
idCbt driTlac are ex-
b« coaslderajyiy^ dUt«r-
% fov /out Keaco .tmcaaae
aMt Airmdy kt* method itt '’«oo-
■Jjfttfttltkt Uckf kM iaiproTed
and photograidiy.
Ur. Land ia only 30 now. His'
ansaUng diseoraries about light
bapaa whan ha was still In his
’toads. In thoea aarlr days he
a^Sdled aoUtods of ''polarising’’
In a nidlmeotarr home laib
dViltory. Later, la Harrard TTni-
JWaity physiaa laboratory, Ur.
J ooaid be tcuind saroral days
. weak in long attar-claM diacns-
^Jons with his physics professor.
'tbm professor was Oaorga Wheel
wright, who is now Vice Presi-
nt of the Polaroid Corporation
sdad hy Ur. Land.
Iha '‘polarising’’ pi^ess was
first made public in 1936. It ap-
pearsd than in sanglasses, light
nttars fw cameras and anti-glare
dertt lamps, while experiments
continned with methods lor ap
plying it to anti-glare anto head-
■iSat ' 'das.
and. yiii,ilitUjijlli'iiT’*itder
^ _ui»asa of eUmiahHott.
idda was draosaltaad et^y in
the history of the Polaroid Cor
poration. Toang Land, wanting to
demoastrate tha sahie of hts dis-
cowary, ashed a repradtatatlre of
> !ar^ optical eampany to see a
demonstration. Rather than aek
tbS man to his htnoble bssemant
laboratory,’howerer, ha rented a
Boston hotel room tor the dem
onstration. In a window he i^aeed
a large goMflsh bowl. He TiSced
the bowl in such a portion that
the san reflected from its surface.
He-then asked the representatfre
to look down Into the bowl and
see It there were any fMi la It.
The aua’s glare, howerer, pre
vented the man from seeing into
the bowl. Handed a pair glass
es with “polarlxed*’ leases, he
was asked., again to look Intc^the
•bowl. That time he saw the fish,
and signed the contract.
Polarised windows can be made
that will permit any desired a-
mount of U^t to enter by simply
turning a handle; experiments
show that three-dlmenelon movies
can be made, meaning that fig
ures will appear on the screen in
life-like fashion.
The experiments with anti
glare automobile headlights are
still going on, but they show thus
far that it is not ‘’wishful think
ing*’ to vision the time soon when
.-7.■■ -.'f
FsUiaml
PW « to anti-glare a^ h«d- „ approaching car,
Kghte, windows and three-dlmen-1 ««werfnl. will «>-
atonal movlee.
In sunglasses and cameras the
NOTICE
m THE SUPERIOR (X)URT
SERVICE BY PUBUCA’nON
North Carolina,
Wilkes County
Wilkes County
▼8.
Va.-Car. Mica Co., Inc.
'Hie defendant above-named will
take notice that an action entitl^
as above has been commenced in
the Superior Court of Wilkes
County, North Carolina, for the
purpose of foreclosing a tax cer
tificate and sale of land, and the
saiid defendant will further take
Sbtiee that it is required to appear
at the office of the Clerk of the
fj Superior Court of Wilkfs County
4 witiiin W days from this date and
wiipwer the said complaint as r^
qoir^ by law or the plaintiff ^1
•apply to the court for the relief
. tdenanded in said complaint.
* C. C. HAYES,
Clerk of the Superior Coart
This the 18th day of January,
IMO. 2-8-4t
,NOTICE OP SALE OF
BEAL ESTATE
no matter how powerful, will ap-
•pear to another motorist only as
two purple “blobe” on the road.
Safety organizations and insur
ance compenleB are especially in
terested in that part of Mr.
Land’s experimenting. To them
“polarized” automobile h e a d-
lights and windshields are looked
to hopefully as a step toward In
creased safety In night driving
and the saving of many lives.
When this process is perfected,
they believe, there will be a great
many living tributes to the genius
of Bhe young man who began in
bis ’teens to learn interesting
things about light and ways to
control It.
EXTENDED
The U. S. Department of Agri-
t’.’.Uure has announced that the
Food Order Stamp Plan for dis
tributing suiplus agricultural
commodities will be extended to
Greenville, S. C., and the rest of
Greenville county.
_Iorth Carolina,
WQkies County.
BY VIRTUE of the powers con-
taine4 n> a certain d^ of' trust
aaecutod by Lester Queen and
-^.wifa, Annabelle Queen, to the un-
•^vtlataigU'ri trustee, on the 20th day
of October, 1938, and recorded in
tlw ottice of the Register of Deeds
of Wflkes County in Book 184,
" page 292, said deed of trust being
to securB a note of even date
tbereiu exeented, and default hav
tag been made in the payment of
MUe. I will, on Monday, February
19t. 1940, at one o’clock, P. M., at
the eourthouse door in die town of
WQkesboro, North Carolina, offer
far aale to the highest Wdder, for
eeah, the following described tract
of laud, to-wit:
beginning on a stake on the
South aide of J. Street, 60 feet
Ukmtwardly from the South Cor-
netOfJ. Stnel and 4th Street, and
nmntag South 27 degrees Ewt
pmOd with 4th Street, 140
gnm to an alley; theiwe runn^
Ncrth 82 degrees and S3 uunutesj
SSt^^^eNorth Side of said
alley; 80 feet to a st^e; taenc«{
Nbitik 27 degrees and 27 mrautM
Weal paraSwwith 4th Street,
fbai to J. Sbwet; themce Sot^
^greea ^ mmntes West,
akn^'ton So^ of J. Strert,;
J4 Block No. 88 as *own on
in’s of the Town of
Wllk«^, N. C. ^
tiie 16th day of January,
ALUE HAYES,
'TuHtfw
By: JOHN R. JONES,
Attorney
They tell about the Scotchman
who is learning the Braille sys
tem—so that he can do his even
ing reading without running up
the electric light bill.
_ .. JlkiTkF’-ir-* tq>' toe
batter ga^ of ;ik.kour to^ to
ed&iastaa tia£’'he wua weary of
being karraseed, about bis third
term tatentiona
Too, IndlrecUy k^ pumped fig
ures favoraiWe to the new deal
at eome qf those who e»at to
sueoeed him In the White Hon®®*
Attempts of newsmen to lure
him Into diaeloalhg hm stand on
a third term, the President mid
at a press conference, Jiave been
awfully amusing and henre pro
duced same perfectly grand wise
cracks on hla part and theira
Suggesting that they'quit try
ing to draw him out, however,
the Chief Executive declared that
vshen anything was said It would
•be at a time chosen by himself
and not by newspaper 'editors.
After all, be asserted, yr t can
drive a willing horse to death—
both the preee and tbs President.
While he said In no uncertain
terms he was tired of all the
third term antics at hla press con
ferences It was Indirection that
Mr. Roosevelt supplied -an answer
to critics of his domestic poli
cies.
He toA no note by name of
men like New York County Dis
trict Attorney Thomas B. Dewey,
Senator Taft (R), Ohio, and
Frank Gannett, newspaper pub
lisher, who have lambasted the
administration in speeches in
which they have campaigned for
the Republican presidential nomi
nation.
Nor did he speak of some ex
ecutives of the American Federa
tion of Labor who took potshots
at the new deal yesterday from
Miami, where the federation’s ex
ecutive committee met.
Advances Cited
Mr. Roosevelt merely read to
reporters a list of figures, with
a few comments Intsrpolated,
which were designed to show
there were big advancss in na
tional Income, wages and saiarles,
factory pay roils, farm income,
dividend receipts, exports and
nonagrlcultnnU employment be
tween 1932 and 1939.
'These are pretty formidable
figures he commented, to take on
and try to show that the country
is as he put it, bust.
Again, as in a message to Con
gress in January 1939, Mr. Roose
velt said thq administration was
aiming at a national income of
380,000,000,000 a year—an in
come which he said would 'permit
a budget that would be a little
better than balanced.
There seems to be no question
at all he said, that there would
be a balanced budget if the na
tional Income reached that level,
since obviously federal expendl-
^^jpaUipkt Mt|3>ated to-
ddj^; .
Tba 1939 figara was about |t,-
090;0g0>000 naifir the 1937 r»-
eorary peak. EkUf of this differ
ence WfMWttalbuted by the de-
i'partnen(^. lower prteee and
half to sales in the auto-
mobUdflelA-
Seeretary Hopkins, in a n-
Donnetng the estimates, said that
the dpsvring was shared by all
major bueineee groups. Althongh
autompblle sales were below
1937, they Increased 28 per Mnt
•over 1988. Mall ordm* hoiues
showed the grMtsat gain In
general merchandiss salea with a
12 per cent increase.
A less favorable outlook for
1940 was forecast by the C. I. 0.
today In Its monthly survey of
sitw ej^e^ ,8rtib
in ^oQCfan;. as ;Qte'
A "subetantlal’’ deelliia in
steel production, which it said
would come in Uie first quarter
of 1940.
ghaip declines in production
and employment in the aotomo^
bUe industry, said to be “coming
soon.’’
A “continuing decline’’ in ord
ers tor basic taw materials.
Fslhtre of private''" Investment
to pick up. ,
The survey contended that the
federal budget played “the chief
role among the dOprecslng fao-
torkV. Curtailment of the govern
ment’s contribution of purchasing
power by reduction of WPA ex
penditures, the eurvey added,
’’will reenlt In a aharp drop In
consamers’ expeadltnree.*’
?[‘*'^v**“* Larger IncMne For
fivk .IaKc lfitrtnr YAifeiP O
Farmers Is Seen
On Jobs During Year
Raleigh.—During the calendar
year 1939, the Employment Serv
ice Division of the NortOi Carolina
Unemployment Compens a 11 o n
Commission placed a total of
107,621 workers In jobs as com
pared with total registrations
and renewals of 343,006.
Of these 107,631 placements
during the year, 63,429 were In
private jobs, 36,366 of which
were In regular employment in
private Indn-.ry, 27,073 were
i temporary f nployment In private
Industry, and 44,194 were In
public activities.
During the past calendar year,
the active file was reduced by
68,169, a drop of 43 per cent,
which Is exactly equivalent to the
ratio decline in registrations.
These figures indicate the Im
provement in Industry and work
conditions in North Carolina over
the preceding year of 1938.
DiXkmt
rot BATf OF
•IICOMFOtT
HRP
UA
r j fc 5 T E R : PILLS
SERVICE
_ OaicM Drirm
(E 431->
A 15c Cab
I Storfoy 25c
This Spring You’ll Want
at Least 2 “Soft Suits”
Dreaamaker Styled
Soft Suits
in Shetland, jersey, and
twills pastel colors and
navy . . . battilions of
buttons and cany all
pockets make these up
to minute news.
$10.95
$1^95
tures for such items as relief
would go down, and government
Income would rise with virtually
no change in taxes.
Toying wWih a cigarette that
had just deposited some ashes on
a brown tweed suit, the Presi
dent took another dig at bis crit
ics.
Of course a lot of people do
not. want to balance the budget
by attaining an income of 380,-
000,000,000, be remarked. They
want to cut government expendi
tures immediately, he said, and in
such a drastic manner that there
would be another recession like
that which started in the fall of
1937 and continued until the
spring of 1939.
Washington, Feb. 4.—^The agri
culture department predicted to
day that American farmers would
receive a larger cash income dur
ing the early months of 1940
than in the same months last
year.
Large quantities of agricultur
al produce was said to be mov
ing into domeatic consumption
channels at prices averaging high
er than a year ago.
Hie department emphasized,
however, that the purchasing
power of farm products in terms
of non-farm goods and services
continued below the pre-world
war level It is the goal of the
department’s farm .^programs to
restore prices to a level which
would give farm products pur
chasing power equal to that of
the 1910-14 period.
Although prices of most farm
commodities are higher than they
were last winter, prices are low
er for tobacco, hogs, poultry and
eggs. The supply of tobacco is the
largest on record, the Europ^n
market has been shut off as a
result of the war; the 1939 pig
crop was the largest in 16 years,
and production of poultry and
eggs b^s been unusually heavy
this winter.
Girls, when they went out to swim
One dressed like Mother Hub-
hard;
Now they have a bolder whim,
And dress more like her cup
board.
—From “It’s Said and Done.”
She’ll be proud of her
NEW SPRING OUTFIT
Because It Came From Spainhour’s
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One and two piece print and solid
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witii jackets and boleros make
these dresses the pride of any
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$1.00‘“$3.95
Girla’ New ^ring
COATS
Cute styled coats in sizes 4 to 14—
carefulbr.tailored of nica woolens
in colors daughters love to
and mpthera like to buy . . . ESaa-
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$5.95 $10.95
' Giris* New ^rtng
toppers
Girls 8 to 16 flee-* toppers to to-
ling styles and co1ot»—B»ater
WiQ soon be here . . • •
$2.98 $3.95
-« a
Weelitaftoa, IM. S.>»4aay A-
Mit4eaa Atreraft pUste have de
livered more than 1,109 -irar-
plaaee to the British and French
fighting foteee, an aetborttative
coopUation tiionred today.
Tha two gotonwdnta together
have pladed ordeTa tor approxi-:
mttety 4,000 lOIanes since they
first turned to the United States
for help M months ago.
Ourrent nagotiatlens for up
wards of 8,000 additibnid bomb-
era, pursuit craft and other types,
which Secretary Morgenthau is
nratching to proteet this govern
ment’s interests, testify further
to allied reliance on American
faot^es.
’These and existing unfilled or
ders, coupled with the ipreeenre
for speed from purchating mis
sions, promise to step up mater
ially the recent delivery rate of
imore than 100 craft a month.
Since War Began
More than 300 planes have
'been loaded on merchant ships or
tugged across the Canadian ibor-
der since the Eluropean war .start
ed. Moet of the other planes were
delivered last spring and sum
mer.
France first turned to the Unit
ed States to supplement her own
lagging warplane' output In mld-
1938, but British and PTench ord
ers did not become large until
after the Munich crisis dramatiz
ed the threat of the Nazis’ air
force.
In addition to the British and
French contracts, about 1,000
American planesi have been order
ed by other goTemments.
The compilation covered two
years ending Jan. 31, but many
details were confidentlEd. Officials
would pennit disclosure of only
round-figure totals.
Actual deliveries thus far
roughly equal a month’s full pro
duction of Britain’s aircraft in
dustry. Expert Information here
is that British and French pro
duction is far below the 2,000 to
2,200 planes a month credited to
the Nazi factories.
iHU 1. bat fmit Hdak
tier gf tSa' astato of Mnv
.fUffitaWL lito (tf 'W3kM
ka?^ daima. agataoi aaiAgitoto
to pi'iaart tiMi to ^ nmsijSfi*
ad, iriMM g^tdftog If Mmrtb WHhaa*
flra fha llto Xanaarr, 2^
or thhi aotica udUtba plMd |a>bar
of tlwir rigkt to taeovw.
Admilditiitor of tha satato of
Mn. W. T, WUiSama, disc’d.
ADMINISTBATOBTS NOTlCai
Having qualified ar aiTmliiltor*-
tor of the aatato of Robert AdaaA
lata of Wilkes oomity, N. C., Iliia to
to notify an parsons toevtag dafaw
agtinst the said eOtata to praaent
toem to the undersigned, itlioM
address is North Wukesboro, N.
G., duly verged, on or befoia lha
17th day of Jannary, 1941, or tUa
notice be plead in bar of their
right to recover. All persons ta-
dwt^ to said estate will plsaas
make immediate aettiameiiL
Tto 17th day of January, 1940.
JOHNSON SANDERS,
Administrator of the estate of
Robert Adams, dec'd.
^2A4t (t)
’THE BEST OF US
“You’re lazy, you’re worthless,
you’re bad-tempered, you’re shift
less, and you’re a thorough 1|^.”
“Well, my dear, no man is per
feet”
WDJiAMS
MOTOR
CO.
’IHLEPKNUB 8S4-J
T. H. WflUasfM, Owner
OldsmobOe Sstles-Sanriea
Bear Fcaau Servlea and
Wheel AUgninent
General Auto Repairing
Wrecker Service—^Electric and
Aectytoae Wtlding
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How To ReKeve
Bronchitis
Branebitis, acute or chronic, is an
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tubes. Creomukdon goes right to the
seat of the trouble to Ido^ germ
laden phlegm. Increase secretion and
aid nuure to soothe and heal raw,
tender, inflamed bronchial mucous
membranes.’TeU your druggist to sell
yon a bottle of Creomulslon with the
imiiTirfi^ntnng that you are to Uks
the way Itqmckly aflays the couA
r you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
br Coughs, Chast Colds, Bronchitis
Budget Priced! Just Arrived
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