fcVJ- -t*-' ■ *y~
■42.>’‘‘
North Wllh^U^^ pi^h
School
■ad, under dlrec^ictn ot W. p.
V;*?*'’’ » a»®MH>er ot the high
' *®®> faculty, -mu organized
\u N***^*!^ a year ago, and has
splendid progrosB. In the
Beginning no member had ever
' aaeeived any muatoal instruction.
^ The band Is now composed of
-■k™t I'Jt v-t
FOR RENT
NOR R£NT: , 4-roem-afmrtincnt
_v eloee In. CalJ 4l8-J. S-7-2t-pd
, Nlvifi-ROOM HODBB wtUi bath,
basement, good garden. Two
miles from city limits. Mrs. P.
9. Mitchell, :Wllkesboro. 2-29-tf
OR REXT—FIt^Roobi House
■with garage la "wniteeiboro. Ap-
Oly to J. E. Spalnhour 2-19 tf
ilh, as toMorws:
— Charles Williams,
Ts^1iy Caudill, Ray Jennings,
Ahdrs'W Johnson, Bill Qabrlel,
Bill ' Gardner; Clarinets—'Mack
Miller, Joe Clements, Tommy
Bshelman, Ben Blakewood, Jim
my Moore; Tronrhones—Lomax
Kilby, Tal Barnes, Bob McCoy;
Alto—Tommy Gllreath; Base—
Walter Jones; Drums—Malcolm
Butner, M, W. Green, Bruce Dy
son.
Others who are taking Instru
mental lessons and will soon be
ready to join the band are Bobby
Hubbard, Henry Waugh. Genlo
Koonce, Bob Day and Carl Coffey.
Recent programs have been
presented 'before the Kiwanls
Club, High School Assemibly,
Grammar Grade Assembly, and
Primary Assembly. The Band
made its first appearance at the
football games last fall, and has
added much to the spirit of the
spectators at the basketball games
this winter.
The baud presented a_ pro
gram at Millers Creek high school
at 1:00 o’clock Tuesday, March
5th.
A movement is under way to
purchase uniforms for the band.
As quickly as funds can be raised,
the order will be placed. Samples
are now being examined and as
quickly as colors and styles have
been decided on, the drive for
funds for the purchase of uni
forms will begin.
Wayne Morris and Priscilla Lane In “Brother Rat and
A Baby” at New Orpheum Theatre Monday-Tuesday.
FOR SALE
1*0R
SALE: TWO a(Tt‘s of land
near North Wilk^S(boro; beau
tiful home si^^htj The price is
right. See 6r wfjte Don Mel-
■yllle. care WUl*^ Plumbing
Company, North,'A'WUkesboro,
N. C. . ■ 3-18-4t
FOR S.tl.E: nii4*«, good work
mules. See A. Stni-divant at
Reins - Sturdivant Funeral
Home. It-pd.
FOR .SALE: Pair goHl mules,
■wagon and harness. Sec or
write J. C. Whittington, Mil
lers Creek, N. C. 3-ll-2t-pd
FOR SALE: Ijeispedeza seed—
Korean 5 l-2c; Kobe 7 c per
poaind. Vv. E. Morrison, Stony
IRxint. N. C. 3-U-2t-pd.
FOR S.ALE: Six room house; out
buildings, five acres' of land:
?31 feet fronting on hardsurf-
aeed highway 421; located mile
iad half east of North Wllkes-
■ioro. See or write ,T. Hen
derson, Route 3, North Wllkes-
!*»»>. N. C. 3-7-2t-pd
FOR SALE: 30 acre# at Lenoir,
a. C., 1000 feet frontage, large
bouse, excellent 'building lots.
Manufacturing district. Good
investment. Must be gold to set
tle estate. 0. McGhinnis, Green
Bay. 'V'a. S-7-4t-pd
BUOTORS: F13, FSO, tO-20,
J2-3 6, Fordson and high class
u?ed farm implements. Cars,
1>39 Buick 41 Sedan. 1937
LiaSalle Coupe. Trucks, 1939
International and Ford Pick
ups, 1938 Chevrolet 1 1-2 ton.
Ridiculously lO'W prices. Henk-
al’A, Statesville, C. 4-1-1 It
j5u8UA1 bargains tn good
used cars and trucks, several
makes and models. Wilkes Mo
tor company, two miles west
on Boone Trail. 10-2-tf
PHILUPS ANNOUNCES
FOR SEAT IN CONGRESS
(Continued from page one)
“Brother Rat and a liurty,’’ the
comedy successor to last year’s
comedy success, "Brother Rat,”
will ibe the next big attraction at
the New Orpheum Theatre, start
ing on Monday. Written by the
months old the day he was signed
for the part.
The characters are all brought
together, and the new story starts
on its way when Albert, Miss'
Bryan and the baby are brought
same authors as the delightful | to New York to see about a better
original stage and screen play, job for the head ot the family as
been sufficiently punished with
Congressional candidates, and you
doubtless feel about baif way be
tween I.ord help a, and dammit.
’’iThaps you are wonderiu.g who
l as .sinned, yen or your parents,
chat such an affliction should bo
visited upon you through the
years. And yet. in spite of the
clear knowledge of this never dy
ing scourge and my sincere sym
pathies for every citizeu who has
had to wait through a war of
nerve.s for the hatching ot a Con
gressional candidate, I am declar
ing to vou in open meeting I am
a candidate for Congressional
Nomination on the Democratic
wing, 'S' a fact! But let me hasten
to say that my purpose in doing
so is not to add more fuel to your
bewilderment, but after a fashion
to simplify the going tor you,
and to give you an opportunity
to pick a candidate from the non
belligerents.
Two years ago I had serious
intentions ot making the race,
but at that time such a fine ar
ray ot talent offered itself for
tills public service, that 1 tried
to follow the biblical advice of
not being forward in the presence
of superiors and let ths impulse
pass. I thought it was going to
be a short cauii>aign, hot and
.sweet, with little difficulty in
picking a .star candidate with
.such a starry field to pick from,
but as we all remember the pick
ing was not done at a single pick
ing. Alter two full feathered pri
maries the picking spread out
over all the summer and then
went on into frost, and barely got
finished in time to make the mail
in Xoveinjt.er.
l:i the meantime the contest
shuttled back and forth from pil-
John Monks, ,Ir., and Fred F. i varsity coach.
Finklehoffe. the film continues | Complications immediately en-
the adventures ot a group of Vir- sue. Before they even arrive in
liii
to post till everybody got dizzy
Stoves, Heaters, and Heatrolas
k-Rhodes-Day Is the place to bay
kem. Prices to suit your pocket-
Uok. Rhodes-Day Furniture Oo.
10-»-tf
If ft Is ajiythlng you need in
ke stove or heator line, be sure
> see ns. We have a wide solec-
i^B,—Rhodes-Day Pumltare Co.
10-»-tf
WANTED
IANTED: To do yoor radio re*
jpir work on all mukeo and
models. BIxpert repairmen. Sat-
iafactloi guaranteed. — Day
Blectric Lo„ Phone 1*8. 8-16-tf
fAN’TEDff Brin* your typewrit
ers, cash registers. Adding Ma-
ahines, computing scales, check
writers, clocks, and sewing ma
chines that need repairing and
cleaning to me up stairs over
Carter - Huibbard Publishing
Company, Ninth street. W. G.
Harrison. 1-1-tL
and nobody seemed to know for
certain who was who or why,
l)ut they had Id slop for the elec
tion and !et one of the twain run.
The 'umps” called time out while
the other warrior went to Wash
ington and back. He’s 'back now
and from announcements in the
newspapers, these hard fighting
belligerents are mobilizing to car-
rv the war on where frost caught
ginia Military Instilu'e cadets
after theii- graduation.
In following ii|i last .season’s
comedy hit. Warner liio.s. has
combined calendar fact wi:h film I
fiction by making the period be- 1
.New York, Commencement, the
liaby get.s tiiem into trouble by
■ wallowing a diamond ring be-
langing to one of the passengers
on the l.ns. Jane and the baby
are forced to stay as security
tween the two stories coincide
with the 'line lap.“c be: w en the
pictures.
“Brother Kaf was filmed just
a year ago. In I’le follow-up pro
duction, the same players are
picking up the lives ol the same
movie characters after a lapse of
just one year.
The first production, it will be
recalled, say Wayne Morris, Ed
die .Albert and Ronald Reagan
safely graduated from miilitary
college. It also saw Albert and
Miss Bryan the proud parents of
a newly born ba.by boy. Morris
and Reagan got no further than
engagements to Priscilla Lane
and Jane Wyman.
When “Brother Rat and a
BaJby’’ picks them up once more,
Morris and Reagan are working
in New York. -Miss Lane and
Miss Wyman are still in college.
Albert and .Miss Bryan are living
in a small southern town, where
he is the high school athletic
coach. And their baby is a
'bouncing, mischief-making young
ster just past his first birthday.
The baby role is played by
Peter B. Good, the only member
of ^ ':io cast to fudge a trifle on
the calendar. Peter was 14
'vliile Eddie goes on the New
York to try to gel the money
needed to gel them out of hock.
Ill order to gel it, Eddie has to
appropriate some funds entrusted
to him by Uie people they are to
visit in New York. Finally the
whole clan are together in the
■big city, hilt the other two cou
ples aren’t having too easy a time
of it either. The two girls are
supposed to he going on a vaca
tion trip to Honolulu, hut they
cash in their tickets to help the
boys out of financial difficulties.
Baby Commencement further
complicates matters by causing
his daddy to lose the jab he came
to New York to get, and finally
by setting fire to the apartmlnt.
But he squares matters for every
body in the surprise finish.
Pay Enright directed the film,
which Is played with emphasis on
the comedy side, and advance
preview critics have pronounced
it even more fresh and delightful
than the earlier “Brother Rat.”
Besides the seven principals al
ready mentioned, the cast in
cludes Arthur Treacher. Moroni
Olsen, Jessie Busley, Larry Wil
liams, Berton Churchill, Nana
Bryant and .several othei-a.
When anything becomes badly
soiled the' only remedy is to ap
ply the soap and thoroughly
wash.
I might make :i monkey out ot
myself, hut there 11 be other mon
keys made in the meantime. Be
sides how much worse is a live
monkey than two dead lions? Im
not going to burden you with a
story of how good I am or what
a noble Congressman I’ll make,
hut I will say that if you nomi
nate and elect me, I believe you’ll
be glad of it. It’s a safe bet I’ll
be m> worse than many who have
trod the journey before me.
I have no fantastic dreams or
rv lllc wai y * - -
them in ’38; only they are going pgj, schemes to push over, hut
MISCELLAW^OUS
LOST: Bird dog, pointer,
white and lemoni' answers to
name of "JacJt”.\ ^otify Lee
Edward Harris, 273-M,
North WMlkesbor^;^
COA’TS-OF-ARMS:
It
prepared
to paint «*r ■mWHnm.
Prices reasonable.-' Mrs. L. B.
Dula, ■Wllkesboro, N. C.
3-ll-2t-pd
wuA’T UK MJiuaiiw. Tbere
mllUona of clrcuUtlEg heater*.
»nt only o“® Oanntna Urtate
HeatroBL Leok tor the name
Heatrola. It appoare on no oth-
«r cabinet except an
Bhodee-Day^Hoto Co..
North WUkeiborh; M. 0.
by
heat-
Oo.
‘.^abodeo-Dor
t0^
l>ack to the beginning corner and
start all over again.
Voters remember that ten’ihle
cat-fight, how the me-o-oo-OWS
levei'bcraled from mountains to
sea coast, and the stench of which
was smelt, “down here and up
ihar.’’ They do not want such an
awesome situation to arise again.
Good citizens—listen. If the
armistice late in the fall ot ’38
had settled this vexing Congres-
.sional cat-fight and removed it
from our hearing for awhile,
you d never have heard one
whimper out of me. F'.r be it
from me to have broken the peace
if peace could have been preserv
ed. But now, inasmuch as the old
war is going to break out again
in spite of us. I loo, am coming
out and do what I modestly de
clined to do two years ago.
I hereby, announce my candi
dacy for the Democratic Nomina
tion for Congressman from the
eighth district of North Carolina,
subject to t’.e action of the pri
mary.
I am just a plain, blunt man,
who is not a lawyer, but a sales
man and former newspaper man.
I don’t pretend to have all the an
swers to all the questions, but I
have ray own answers to a few
that nobody has answered yet. It
may be because I am a salesman
of laundry supplies, but there
are many things In this country
I’d like to see thoroughly cleans
ed, and I’d like to have a hand in
all walks of life and not from
just a select sophisticated group
who pos.se.ss single track minds,
which happens to be that of force.
It’s too dangerous!
I’ll make only one promise if
you’ll vote for me we’ll clean up
this dirt, tilth and mud which has
been smeared over the face ot the
Eighth District and the skirts of
N. C. and get through with the
primary before corn shucking
time. I’ll appreciate your sapport.
Portrait Exhibit
At Harvel’* Studio
if 1 am elected to this high of
fice I will devote my full time
and ability to serving the inter
ests of all the people. I am not the
candidate of any faction or clique,
and no individual, corporation or
group will hold a whip lash over
my back. I’ll be free to serve the
people and to follow the guidance
of Almighty God.
I am a firm believer in the
Gospel of old fashioned hone.sty,
man to man—even in politics and
believe we must return to it if
we are to save this country from
all the Isms which now seem to
threaten the ■Citadel ot our De
mocracy. The average man now
thinks for himself, and realizes
that ho has always had to fight
the battles of this country. Eve
ryone should become interested In
politics, and should fight with his
sacred vote before it is too late.
There has aot been a Congrees-
man nominated by the rank and
file voters of the Eighth District
in a regular primary in a dozen
years. Every average person Is
going to see to it that God is not
outlawed in this country by the
encroaching influences of mater
ialism, Atheism and Communism
This is going to he one time when
the Eighth Congressional seat
will not ibe for sale.
Our first Congress was In the
main composed of plain, blunt
men from various vocations, and
never since has that orie’hton 'ex
celled. The world today even mar-
q'lkd'
'4011
f.
'blnociilt
:Xx$0faft,-JAi.
sab-macliltie
completely
ed soldier
Harvel’s Studio, located in the
Eller Cafe building on Main
street, has an Interesting picture
and portrait exhibit, which will
be shown until March 15.
This exhibit contains beauti
ful wa.ter colors, photographs,
tone sketches and miniatures.
Harvel’s studio also announces
that the same type of work as
shown in the exhibit may be se-,
cured at the studio. The public iS'
cordially invited to visit and in
spect the exhibfit.
Chairman “Fightiiiff FnneU
For Finland” GiVea Price
LUt War Equipment
J. B. Williams, chairman for
Wilkes county for Fighting Funds
for Finland, Inc., reports that he
had fonr •'-'’itri'bntion- from Pnt
M. Willfan*'
of North wirx p AVai-
ter S. Reavi , of Moravian Falls,
N. C., and Lewis Williams, of
Goshen, N. C. He is somewhat dis
appointed that more contributions
have not come In. He feels that
this is a worthy cause and one
that all should cooperate in.
Mr. Williams haa furnished
this paper with a price list of
finished war equipment and as
can 'be seen, It takes a lot of
money to conduct a war. Since
Finland is one of the democracies
of Europe fighting for its very
existence, and the only one who
paid its debts to the United States
Government after the war, the
American people have a friendly
feeling to this small nation, who
i.s 'battling one of the largest na
tions on earth and is still hold
ing its own. Help is greatly need
ed, and contributions will he glad
ly received. Anyone desiring to
contribute can take their money
to either ot the local hanks here
in North Wilkesbpro. where it
will be transmitted to the State
Headquarters in Durham.
The price list of Fightin.g Finn
ish Equipment referred to above
is as follows:
1 p'air socks $ .50
20 cartridges .. 1.00
1 pair shoes 2'®0
1 pair skis . .. . 3.00
1 uniform coat 4.00
1 steel helmet 5.00
1 overcoat 6.00
1 gas mask 8.50
1 bomb, 300 {founds
1 30-cal. machine gnn
1 field radio station
1 50-cal. machine gun
1 Stokes 81 mm
mortar
137 mm Bofors aintl-
tank gun
1 3-in. field cannon'
11 155 m-m Howitzer
11 motor torpedo 'boat
i pursuit airplane —
1 attack airplane
1 bom-oing airplane „
'■■■■I-t-'ffefP
76,00
ido.oo
150.00
600.00
W 1,4)00.00
' 1,260.00
1,500.00
- 5,000.00
10,000.00
25.000. 00
50.000. 00
60.000. 00
75,000.00
125,000.00
CAIvD OP ’THANKS
V/'e wish to take this means to
thank our friends and neighbors
for their many acts of kindness
and sympathy shown us during
the sickness and death of our dear
mother, Mrs. America Welch. Al
so for the imany floral offerings.
We especially •want to thank
Judge Hayes, C. C. Hayes, Tip
McNeill and Patrolman Carlyle
Jordan.
THE CHILDREN.
!kla«& ' •$
Jackson Bitrgesav 76, pro
citizen' of TarlorsriUe, died
this /morning at bis hdme
long illness. Mr. Burgees;
of the county, lived in
vllle 25 years. He was a
the late Mr. and 'Mrs.
Burgess. His wife, the
Miss Mary Deal ot Ale
county, died eight years algh'if
Four sons and three daught
survive: Messrs. Fred and '
Burgess of North Wilke
Messrs. Graydon and Ch
Burgess, ot Taylorsville, Mrs. \
C. Gwaltney. of Atlanta, Ga., i
W. H, Moose, of Canton, Ol
and Mrs. L. O. Hawkins,
Statesville. There are four
children and one sister, Mrs. Jo
Reese, of Alexander county.
Mr. Burgess was a member^
the Junior Order and of the Ta
lorsville Lutheran church,
neral services will be held Thu*
day afternoon at 2 o’clock fr
the 'Taylorsville Lutheran chur
with Rev. R. L. I.ail and Rev.^ i|
L. Summers in charge. Interm'jijL
will be in Fairview cemetery. *3
ROBERTSONS
PROVEN
FERTILIZERS
“The BETTER Ingredients Fertilizers”
-FOR SALE BY-
0. F. Eller and Sons
Warehouse Located At Phillips Building On Forester Ave.
Listen to Robertsons’ Hill Billies Over WBT Every
Monday, Wednesday, Friday at 12:15 P. M.
AU-American Clothes
ea, auu X U 4XXUO vvr Ve — k^OliXPV*. j. ww-a— ~
the cleansing. Using the terminol-1 vels at Us accompllsihments. For
ogy of the laundry, I shall apply!the welfare of the country, we
the soap to the eighth dlstrict.| should hare representatives fromj
ALL THIS WEEK!
20% OFF SALE
ON ALL—
Helena
Rubenstein’s
FAMOUS COSMETICS
Buy Now and Save
%)
RED CROSS
”Your Service Druj Store”
Tenth Street 98
FOR ALL AMERICAN MEN
with Europe at War
American Stylists Set The Pace In
Men’s Fashions
Year in and year out, men’s clothing has looked
much the same but not this year . . . and what a
pleasing difference.
And wise Americans are putting their money in
merchandise bearing a label that they can trust.
Spring Suits
Tailored by Englishtown, Schloss,
“Michaels-Stem"
$16.M to $35.00
Remember
Easter Is
March 24tb
Sport Coats
Prom Schloss
$9.75 to $15.00
Sport Shoes
•Vom “Bdgerton”, Portagd
$3.50 to $6.00
Neckwear
“Jockejr” Underwear
“Faultless” Underwear
“Faultless” Pajamas
Manhattan Pajamas
Spring Hats
Mallory and Wilsoa
$2.95 to $5.00
Prom Botany, Spur
and Wilson
50c to $1.00
%1
Hosiery
from Westminster
25c to 50c
SHIRTS
‘•'Shirtcraff’ and Manhattan
Slacks
8
$1.00 to $2.00 $2.!fito$5.00
MARLOW’S MEN’S
“NEW AND CORRECT MEN’S WEAR”