Fay. )KO. ♦•'I Mr> L. L. Cftppenter, of this ‘ elty, Tlstted relatives 1?. Burilng- 'toa Sunday. Mr. S. P. MUler, citizen of the Pergueon community, was In the Wllkeeboroe Friday on business. Mrs. Lula Weir, of Elkin, was in this city today looking after bu.vii ess matters. Miss Eula Andrews, of Galax, ta., erpent the week-end here with irs. I. M. Myers. Mr. and Mrs. George Wall, of ^Cannapolls, spent the week-end at Boomer with Mr. Wall's moth er, Mrs. Victoria Wall. Miss Lucille Sfcroggs, of Mo ravian Palls, spent the week-end with friends In Greenaboro. Mr. W. E. Parsons, prominent citizen of the Buck community, was. a 'business visitor in North Wilkesboro today Mr. James Larkin Pearson, of Guilford College, spent the latter part of last week at his farm home in the Boomer coimmunity. Mr. P. S. .Alexander, of Roar ing River, ■is improving from sev en weeks illness of flu and com plications. I Are Selected Here Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Allen re turned last night to their home here after spending two weeks at Tangerine, Florida. Misses Hassle Wall and .\lma Shoaf, teachers in the school at Newton, sipent the week-end at their respective homes at Boomer and this city. Mrs. C. Bryan Higgins and two children are on a six weeks visit with Mrs. Higgins' sister, Mrs. John Wynne, at Nashville, Tenn. Ruby Johnson, Miss Grace *uart, and Miss Martha Sue Hag er spent the week-end in Gvens- boro and while there went to see “Gone With the Wind.’’ Mr. E. D. Byrd, postmaster at Ronda, and Mr. Dallas Church, also of Ronda. were in this city Friday looking after business matters. Miss Arlee Jones, member of the Mountain View school fac ulty, spent the week-end with her mother, Mrs. Mollie Jones, of Purlear route 1. Mrs. Emma Dark, motlier of Mrs. L. L. Carpenter, of this city, continues very ill. we are sorry to state, at her home in Burling ton. M "s. Carpenter is at her bed side. Mrs. Russell Cook, of High Point, is visiting her parents. Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Taylor, in this city. Mrs. Cook is pleasantly re membered here as Miss Johnnie Taylor. SMART for BUSINESS SMART at NIGHT . . . • The adaptable hair style is the kind mo.st girls need. And that’s the kind we specialize in creating for you. Phone 532 for your ap pointment. BELLE'S Beauty Shop Over Rexall Drug Store Mr. A. H. Andrews aid family, of Graham, were hers visiting friends Saturday. They forrrerly resided here, Mr. .Andrews having been superintendent of the Wilkes Hosiery Mills for a num ber years. Mr. N. P. Myers, well known citizen of the Hays community, is seriously ill with pneumonia, iiis daughter, .Mrs. Kiidd McNeill, is ill with flu at his home and her child has bronchial pneu monia. -Mr. and .Mrs. Coite Jone.s, of Gastonia, visited Mr. Jones’ moth er, Mrs. .Mollie Jones, of Purlear, and his brother, Mr. Howard Jones, near this city Sunday. Mr. Coite Jones was recently elected president of the Gastonia Cham ber of Commerce. Mr. E. V. Williams left today for New York City, where he will spend a week buying machinery for local industrial plants. Mr. Williams is considered an excel lent authority on machinery and his services are often in demand by management of plants in need of various types of machinery. Mr. and Mrs. Russel Hendren ami children have moved to North Wilke.siboro and are occupying the C. A. Dimniette house on the cor ner of D and H'ourth streets, which wa.s formerly occupied by Judge T. B. Finley and family. -Mrs. Hendren will operate a boarding house, Iteginning March 1. ^he/ieHm(MtkG4t GOOD LOOKS P GOOD PAINT! Wii HP TO SCAL TMO p ft ' nt Good loob trt only holt the story whon you paint your home with Shorwin-WJIIiams SWP Houso Paint. This rich-Joohing, truo-tonad house III oatremely dur- fibis that can ’’tala it" from any this Spring with SWP and its good tools will last many Springs to come! We're featuring SWP right now at a new low price that's a real savingl Drop in today and sea the new Sherwin-Williams Paint and Color hind of weather. Coat your house* Stylo Guide while you're here. PAINT and COLOR Headquarters,for Sherwin-Williams Paints Call Us For Paint And Painter, Good Grade Paste Paint. .. Carlton^s Hardware ’PHONE 109- All Outstanding Players In Goodwill Tournament Will Receive Awards Mr. G. T. Bare, prominent lo cal merchant, is confined to his home with an attack of flu. His many friends hope for an early recovery. Mr. Lin Bumgarner, who suf fered a le.g injury in a tall a few weeks ago. is still confined to his home at Millers Creek but is ex pected to be out again in a few days. •Mr. Ivan D. Anderson and fam ily moved today from an apart ment in the home of Mr. Ralph R. Rei.'.s to the Tevepaugh apart ment on Kensington drive. Mount Pleasant and Millers Creek dominated the boys’ all- toumament team selected here by officials of the annual Good will Tournament which* ended Thursday night at North Wilkes boro school. Ronda, Mountain View and Roaring River furnish ed the all-tournament girls team. The selections were made by Referees Blackiburn and Church, Par.l S. Cragan, superintendent of the city schools, and Jack Massey, North Wilkesboro coach. The teams were selected on the basis of tournament play, team work and sportsmanship. From the Mount Pleasant team, which lost to Millers Creek in the finals by one point, the board Picked Huffman and Greene, for wards, and Michael, guard, on the all-tournament team. Millers Creek placed R. Parsons, center, and Gilreath, guard. Boys receiving honorable men tion were: Adleman, Wilkesboro; Benton. Roaring River; B. Par sons, Millers Creek; Walls, Ron da; Royal. Traphill; Younce, Mountain View. On th^ girls first team were R. Tharpe and Hemric, of Ronda, forwards. Woodruff and C. D. Hayes of Mountain View, and Bradley, of Ronda. Receiving hon orable mention were Blackburn and E. Blackburn, of Roaring River, M. Tharpe, A. R-oberts and R. Roberts, of Ronda, L. Hayes, of Mountain View, and Bauguess, of Traphill. Each player picked will be a- warded a silver basketball award In a public program to be held soon, when trophies will be pre sented to the championship teams, MlUers Creek boys and Ronda girls. N. g a nr A BIG tAY . nIA tos troops turn tholr Crossing Crash Claims Lives Of Three Girls Rowland. Fob. 25. — Three young women were killed and two others seriously injured here today when their automobile and a southbound Atlantic Coast Line passenger train collided at a double-truck crossing on Main street The dead were tentatively identified as Miss Jane Collier and Miss Gladys Eli'od, both of Chad-bourn, and Miss Lila Moore Stanton, of McColl, S. C., home economics teacher in the Chad- boiivn pu)blic schools. The injured were Miss Betty Elliott and Miss Sara Hughes both of Chad'bourn. They were both taken to a Lumberton hos pital suffering with concussions and lacerations. Hospital attend ants said they were seriously hurt but had a chance to recover. Police Chief J. B. Bullock, a wilness to the accident, said he tried to warn the young women of the approaching train by shout ing at them, but that they appar ently did not hear him or see t’le train. Oh, Well, Perhaps It’s Close Enough Pompuno, Fla., Feb. 25.—In vestigators who sought to deter mine the needs of negroes suffer ing from effects of the January cold wave still are talking about this one: A woman, asked the ages of her four children, declared she couldn’t remember. Pressed, she finally said: "Well. I got one lap child, one creeper, one porch child and one yard young ’un.” 3,000 REDS KILLED Helsinki, Feb. 23.—The Rus sian army thrust forward at sev eral points along a jagged 30- mile front in an intensified drive through the western half of the Mannerheim line today, but at tremendous cost, losing nearly 3,000 killed in a single day’s bit ter combat. The Russian pene tration at one point reached to within 10 to 12 miles of Viipuri— to the vicinity of Naykki lake, roughly four miles northwest of Kamara railway station, where fighting began Thursday, accord ing to today’s communique. PIPE X pa-ssenger was* seated in the first seat behind the driver. The driver noticed he had a pipe in his mouth and politely informed him there was no smoking allow ed there. 'Tm not smokin’,” answered the passenger leisurely. “But you have a pipe in your mouth.” "Shure, I have. And I’ve shoes on my feet, but I’m not walkin’.” See ns for yoor need* in seed potAtoes, seed oats, onion seta, iespeteja seed, seed beans, and all kinds of garden seeds. PBAR* HON BROTHXNRH. risen New York, Feb. 21.—A North Carolina farm -boy, already recog nized as an outstanding Ameri can industrial leader, today gain ed new stature in the business- world. He is E. H. Dime, a native of Mecklenburg county, and now president of the Colgate-Palm- olive-Peet Company. After less than two years un der his leadership, the giant Col- gate-Palmolive-Peet Company, as revealed by a preliminary report of profits and sales for 1939, has established a new record for to tal world-wide sales. The prev ious sales record for one yjar was made in 1929, the last of the boom years. The 1939 sales totaled |101.- 935.438, not including those of the German, Italian and Polish subsidiaries, while the previous boom sales of 1929 amounted to $100,565,165, including those of every foreign subsidiary of the company. Mr. Little was born on a farm eight miles out oLChaxiotte, the third from the eldest” of 10 children, and went to work in Charlotte as a gangling you ns- ster of 17 for J. S. Withers, the county cotton weigher. Following the custom of that day, he room ed and boarded with the Withers family, and after two years be came a salesman in Charlotte for a wholesale and retail grocery finm. Two years later he joined the old Oolgate Company as a soap salesman. In 1906, when just 21, Mr. Little was made district sales manager, in Memphis, Tenn., for the Colgate Company. His rapid rise in the business world seem ed imminent, but he contracted tuberculosis and was hospitalized in Denver, Colo. There Miss Suz anne Trezevant of Memphis, his fiance, joined him. As she nursed him back to health, they were married, and at the end of three years. Mr. Little once again -be came active in the business world. He wa.s advised to live quietly in an agreeable climate, but has lived a strenuous life, traveling throughout the world and living in every kind of climate. In 1914, he joined the old Palmolive Company and .as made district sales manager on the Pacific Coast, with head quarters in I>os Angeles. The Palmolive sales in his territory, extending from the Pacific Coast to the Rockies, soon rose to a new high. In 1919 he was transferred to New York, first as district and later as divisional manager. There he reorganized his com pany’s largest and most import ant territory. In less than two years the territory’s poor sales record was reversed and the larg est sales volume the company ever enjoyed was secured. In 1924, Mr. Little was made assistant general sales manager of the Palmolive Company, and in July, 1926, he became general manager of the Palmolive foreign business. During the next seven years, accompanied by his wife, Mr. Little spent most of his time in foreign lands. He organized foreign subs-idiaries, reorganized sales forces, and opened new for eign markets. In 1933—five years after the organization of the present Col- gate-Palmollve-Peet Company— Mr. Little -was named vice presi dent in charge of the company’s sales and advertising. In April, 1938, he was elected president of the company. Since then the business of the company, wWqh traces back to the foundation of Colgate & Company In 1806, has rapidly limproTed. It is one of America’s giant In- doetrial firms asd Mr. LttUe, the North ICoTOlioa farm boy. has: a place of emlawtee In tho American business world because of his achievements. The com-pany has plants scattered across the United States and in many for eign countries and employs thbus- j ands upon thousands of -workers. . Maupin Gives Hints To Turkey Gro’wers Successful turkey production depends upon saving and growing to maturity a large number of poults from each brood started, according to C. J. Maupin, exten sion poultryman at State College. Since good^ management and strict .sanitation are highly Im portant in Turkey production, most .succes-sful turkey growers use artificial incubation and brooding methods, .because sani tation can be more easily con trolled. Most of the tur-key crop is pro- I duced between. February and ' J-une, the normal breeding season. 1 In general farm flocks, an aver- jage of 10 to 15 mature birds may -be secured from each turkey hen used in the spring breeding pen. i Where special care and attention I are ptunlr-’-ed. it may be possible to grow 20 to 25 turkeys from 'each hen. I Whether eggs are set under ! hens or in an incubator, the first ' requirement for successful hatch ing is fresh eggs. If hens are con fined to a small yard or range, land this is a good turkey prac tice. the eggs should be gathered j twice daily. They should be stored - in a well-ventilated room or cel lar with a preferred temperature of 50 to 60 degrees^ If they are to be kept longer than a week, they should be turned gently once daily. For best hatching re sults, the eggs should not be kept more than 10 days. Where hovers are used in the brooding house, the temperature should -be kept around 90 to 95 degrees at the hover edge for sev eral days, or the general house temperature should be at least 70 to 75 degrees near the floor. The exact temperature is of minor Im- I>ortance if the poults are kept comfortahle and good ventilation maintained. Feeding the poults may I)e much the same as for baby chicks. 1 Greensboro.—Judgments total ing $40,1 78.75 in U. S. District court against the county of Ashe in favor of five holders of coun- j ty bonds in default, will -be af-1 fected by the recent refunding of Ashe bonds as approved by the j state’s local government commis- ■ sion. Judge Johnson J. Hayes has signed orders -providing that bonds and coupons previously de livered to the clerk of the court for collection under terms of the j judgments are to be turned over to Charles A. Hines, Greensboro, counsel for the plaintiffs, and will be by him delivered to the local government commission and sub jected to the refunding plan. REOEPTION Mrs. Smythe-Brown was mak ing the final arrangements for her elaborate reception.' "Bridget,” she said to her old servant, “for the first thirty min utes after six o'clock I want yon to stand at the drawing-room door and call the guests^ names as they arrive.” Bridget’s face lit up. “Very well, ma’am,” she re plied, “I’ve been -wantin’ to do that to some of your friends for years.” Yon find all kinds of fresh' lleUl sod garden seeds . at our store. All at lowest ,prioee.,*jP^ potatoes, ipeed I—“ BBotemms. DON’T BE TO THOSE THO ARB PLANNING TO S|B GONE WITH THE WIND SEE IT AT THE . LIBERTY —SOON— Gone With The tVind will be shown here exactly as presented in its famed Atlanta Premiere. Notice To Taxpayors Town Of Wilkesbo Additional Penalty Will Be Added To All 1939 Town Taxes Not Paid On Or Before MARCH 1st, 1940 Be Sure To Pay Now, and Avoid This Extra Penalty. I. R. HENDERSON, CAerk and Tax Collector Of Month _ ^ TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND THURSDAY CHILDREN’S WASH D R E S S E S FAST COLORS 17c Limited Quantity Come Early For Best Selections! WOMEN’S WASH DRESSES FAST COLORS 27 Sizes 14 to 44 Limited Quamtity for Tues day, Wednesday and Thursday Only MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS FAST COLORS—FULL OUT VALUES—COMPARE - 50 MEN’S SHIRTS and SHORTS 15' FULL SIZE—WELL MADE! EACH - 36” WIDE SHEETING ONLY 600 YARDS Limited Supply Yard. FAST COLOR BEDSPREADS 80x105 KRINKLE COTTON 49 Full Size Cotton BLANKETS Etar Tlie Same Blanket That You Have Paid Much More 37' For FLQFFY TYPE! SANITARY NAPKINS BOXES 29^ BOX OF 12! Much less than you ordinarily have to pay for this quality! Tapered Aids and rounds ear ners for comfort—n»d a mois- tnreiMuof baddng for greater protection!—Better Iniy am am ple supply!