next s«88lctt'ot StoM JlldDBtmlii
Vifeii alnrlng irlll b« ^ held M
IWtlit Home charch tlVe mllee
--irth of this cltr on Sunday, June
bT this
, ,-'Xk* day’s program rirlll
> tea a. m. with «>b||^ ).
choir, and derotlonal by the
erter, Bev, S' L. BloTlns. All
■tpflBg classes are Inrlted to at-
•eed hhd t«he part in the pro-
mnue,' which will continue
•rorgh the afternoon
^ • : ..*• •••»--
A STAR
TflJ6,JOT
mF
t-.J
GSlIii^ii
^DrOffSl
Let the adyertiBinic eolomns of
fam paper be poor ehopping foide.
WAHTKI); a cook at tbe Popular
Cafe in Wilkesboro. It
Qukk AtiioN
%
Ifo r t b Wilkesboro baseball
team gained an even break In the
week-end games, winning over
Cleveland Saturday 8 to 3 and
losing to Tomlinson’s from High
Point Sunday by a score of 13 to
6. ''
MnlUs and Gilbert were North
j Wllkesboro’s battery Saturday
and ..Meade led In hitting with
three.
Sluggers of the Tomlinson
nihe, one of the best amateur
teams in the state, worked on
Rhoades and Wendland hard Sun-
day, collecting three . hornets.
Reavls led in hitting for North
Wilkesboro. '
—GiU^m, pf Ib^';
hoT '^iifur Irt
^tts^PeiOcilldBe iti ’^8^’^' ' ‘
on. Ifap, 28‘r.haB'aodepted -
tion wib Hoit^ |>rBC podjiiaftr
and hsgJfidceji.ehM^ of-lth* u#>;
metle depa^m«^'tMgi^i|ng
i dutiev lliaivtUyi^l^^i;
fbPMl poBltioii th»^
iVL, im .to her 'Maitda
ffltlo id
OB her Ht^hy
b tometle jaid li:
- waitf ft sr
yritb fhe fia^elljoi.
o^ef. offfro
'^1
. -••■/V *’i 'i
FOR RENT
Fishing Continues
Good At Banner Elk
VOB RENT: Stz room house, near
Ae Wilkesboros; good pasture
and barn. See D. R. Parker,
Wilkesboro, N. C. 6-10-lt
Brian Aherne discusses matters theatrical with Laraine Dayt
his first play has made her a much talked-of prima donna In Edward
Small’s production of Howard Spring's “My Son, My Son!” at the
Liberty 'Ilieatre TTiursday and Friday. ■
c"
•B RENT: Three apartments
OB B Street, four rooms each,
ane bed room, Kensington
Drive. Phone 205-M. it-pd
PC« RENT: Furnished apart
ment, close in. Mrs. R. J. Hln-
ahaw, Kensington Heights. It
“My Son, My Son!”
At Liberty June 13-14
ROB RENT: House No. 502 I
Street with water, lights and
good big garden. R. L. Wel-
born, Wllkseboro, N. C.
6-10-2t-pd
FOR SALE
VECLAL! E-Z-Do Wardrobe,
tot the thing for storing
woolens, going at only fl.98
each as long as present supply
lasts. Mark-Down Furniture
Sompany. 6-13-2t
IKAOQUARTERS for Poultry
and Stock Remedies—Walco
tablets and other known pro
ducts, at lew prices. Red Cross
lAarmacy, “Your Service Drug
»ore." 10th Street. f-18-tf
ROR SAEE: Fairbanks - Morse
Light Plant; in good condition;
price reasonable. Also want to
'buy good hard yellow \r^TSC
dSlT’^oute 1,
posts. K.
"IteSfe wllkeeb&o, N. C
^ 6-13-2t-pd
91TSUAL BARGAINS in good
nsod oars and trucks, several
xakes arj models. Wilkes Mo
lar company, twe miles west
30 Boone ’Trail. 10-2-tf
MISCELANEOUS
CENERAL R.4DI0 Repair work
now One-Half Price. See us for
quick service. Parker-’Triplett
Electric Co.. Phone 23-W.
6-13-2t
WANTEID: Bring your typewrit
ers, cai t registers. Adding Ma
chines, computing scales, check
writers, clocks, and sewing ma
chines that need repairing and
cleaning to me up stairs over
■Jarter - Hubbard Publishing
Ibmp&ny, Ninth street. W. Q.
larrison. l-l-tf.
ESTABLISHED R A W L E I G H
ROUTE available in Wilkes
County. Products well known.
Dealers in nearby Localitlee
making good Sales. Good op-
yortunity for right man with
ear. See L. G. Harrold, Route
1, North Wilkesboro, N. C., or
write Rawlelgh’s, Dept. NCE-
1S4-204H, Richmond, Va.
6-9-16-13-30—6-6-13-(T)-pd
.JOST: Female Wlretrairod Ter
rier about grown. White with
few black spots, carries one ear
np and one down, answers to
name of Mitch. Mrs. Glenn Mc
Neil. North Wilkesboro, N. C.
It-pd
Headed by a cast of superlative
players and starring Brian
Ahernt, ’.dadeleine Carroll, Louis
Haywa.-d, Henry Hull. Josephine
Hutchinson, Sophie Stewart and
Laraine Day, Edwards Small’s
film production o f Howard
Spring’s international best-seller,
“My Son, My Son!” is scheduled
for Its premiere showing at the
Liberty Theatre on Thursday. Di
rected by Charles Vidor from the
screenplay written by Lenore
Coffee, “My Son, My Son!’’ Is be
ing released through United Art
ists.
Due to the fact that the story
of “My Son. My Son!” travels
through several cities and country
sections of England and covers a
period of more than 25 years, Mr.
Small called in John Ducasse
Schulze, his noted art director,
and explained that England would
have to be brought to Holls’wood.
Schulze, in turn, put a corps of re
search workers to w
serve oi every iittle
"of set construction and
decoration. The result is that au-
dtencee wlU see the cast perform
ing in settings that are minutely
patterned after places which ac
tually exist in England.
Among the many sets con
structed for the production, one
of the outstanding shows the
slums of Manchester in the latter
part of the nineteenth century.
Schulze unearthed an old photo
graph showing just such a street
and from this photograph the set
was designed, built and decorat
ed.
Among the other spectacular
sets constructed for the film are
included a massive beach home
known as “Heronwater’’ and
“The Beeches,” representing the
country home of William and
Nellie Essex after the former be
comes a famous novelist. In ad
dition to these massive sets,
which required the services of
hundreds of skilled workmen,
'Art Director Schulze built nearly
40 other sets representing work
shops, living rooms, bedrooms, a
theatre and auditorium, trenches
as they were known to English
Tommies from 1914 to 1918, a
chateau in France. Victoria Sta
tion in London and numerous oth
er places.
Scenes of Drama
The story of “My Son, My
Son!’’ revolves around the-dreams
of two men who are life-long
Poisons Control
Tobacco Insects
Protection of this year’s tobac
co crop against preying Insect
enemies is being urged by J. O.
Rowell, entomologist of the State
College Extension Service.
Various insecticides or poisons
applied in a well-timed and per
sistent program of defense will
assure the leaf farmer of a better
crop, the State College man said.
For Instance, the flea beetle
may be controlled with a mixture
of Paris green and arsenate of
lead. One pound of paris green to
five pounds of arsenate of lead
is the recommended proportion.
For small or newly-set plants,
three pounds of this mixture tvill
treat an acre. For half-grown or
larger plants, four to six pounds
will be necessary. Because of the
dense growth of tobacco and the
necessity of applying the poison
on the underside of the leaf, the
mixture is most effective when
dusted. Horn wormi»~a^o~ are
fSils mixture.
The best known control for
bud worms, another common en
emy of North Carolina’s No. 1
cash crop, is poisoned corn meal
bait. When used on a large scale,
one pound of arsenate of lead
should be mixed with 50 pounds
of corn meal. For smaller a-
mounts, six heaping tablespoon
fuls of the poison to one peck of
meal is recommended.
Applications should be made
only In the morning when the to
bacco buds are open, and the
treatment should b’e repeated
every week until the crop Is
topped. One peck, or 12 pounds,
is sufficient for one application
per acre. A small pinch of the bait
Is dropped into each bud, Rowell
pointed out.
Banner Elk, June 8.—With the
weather warm and clear, and the
streams in the best of condition
after the showers during the past
week, trout fishing at Banner Elk
has reached a new high. ,
More permits' have been sold
than ^ ever before and the fisher
men from all parts of the state
have journeyed to the “Fisher
man's Paradise.” Some say that)
the best catches ever have been
made. Eighteen to twenty inch ‘
trout, both browns and rain
bows, are landed almost dally. '
m
WORLD HISTORY IS BEING MADE EVERY MINUTE.
Latest War News Events Are BrMdcast Almfost Hourly
Is Your Radio In Condition To Receive These Without Interference.
Let Us Check It .Over sad Put It In Good CWdition. We Maintain A Most Complete
Radio Service D^partaients Free Estimates Gladly Given. No Inspection Cnargres.
A TrisI Will Convince That Our Service Is Best, and Charges The Least.
Cooper
“YOUR PHILCO RADIO DBIALER’
Next Door To Liberty Theatre
Telephone 134
Forester Urges Early
Orders For Seedlings
WANTED
W.ANT WHITE GURL to do gen-
al housework and care for lit
tle boy. Apply at Eller’s Cafe.
6-10-lt
JAN TED; To do your radio re
pair work on all makes and
modela Expert repairmen. 8at-
tafactlot yuaranteed. — Day
Electric uo.. Phono 828. 8-10-tf
men
friends. The novelist William Es
sex, played by Brian Aherne, and
the furniture designer Dermot
O’Riorden played by Henry Hull,
get married while they are still
poor and unknown. When each
has a son, they make their plans
for their children. Essex plans a
glorious future for his son. O’
Riorden, and enthusiastic Irish
patriot, looks forward to the day
when his son will return to Ire
land.
How these plans are carried
through amid changing times and
unexpected drama carries the
story of “My Son, My Son!”
through many exciting scenes.
WANTED: a cook at the Popular
Cafe in Wilkesboro. It
"OR SALE: Fordson Tractor;
New Type motor; Bosch Ignit
ion system. A-1 condition. Yad
kin Valley Motor Co. 6-9-tf
WILLIAMS
MOTOR
CO.
nLEPHONB U4-J *
T. H. Wfflfa**, Owner
DldsmobOa Sales-Serrfca
Bear Frame Service tai
Wheel AUfBBMit
I Gaoei^ Anto RefMtidnf
‘ Wrector
Acetylene Welding
BpiBI fABTO—For^
Answered By
_ State College
Questions
Question: When should bay
feeding begin with a young calf?
Answer: Hay should be fed to
the young calf about the same
time as the feeding of grain. On
account of the laxative nature of
alfalfa it is best to use a clean
bright mixed hay for the first
three or four weeks. Feed the
hay sparingly at first and gradu
ally increase the allowance as the
calf becomes used to it. Be sure
that the hay is not soiled as this
kind of hay often causes scours.
It is best not to feed any grass
before-the calf Is five months of
age, but after that time a good
pasture will furnish a satisfactory
roughage.
During the past planting sea
son, 24 4 farmers in 69 counties
ordered forest tree seedlings from
the State nurseries, but were un
able to obtain them because of
a depleted supply. So R. W. Grae-
ber. Extension forester of N. C.
State College who handles orders
placed through county farm a-
gents, says that requests for tree
•seedlings for the 1940-41 planting
season should be made early.
“The nurseries have planted In
creased amounts of seed. The sup
ply will be greater; but so will
the demand. Landowners in Row
an, Scotland, and Warren Coun
ties have alreadjr filed applica
tions for 250,000 trees for deliv
ery in January, 1941. I would
urge farmers to file their appli
cations early,’’ Graeber said.
TTie price list for State forest
nursery trees, as announced by
the Department of Conservation
and Development which operates
the nurseries, located near Ra
leigh and in Henderson county,
is as follows: Black locust, yel
low poplar, cypress, white ash,
red cedar, and loblolly, longleaf,
shortleaf and slash pine, $2.00
per thousand delivered and $1.80
per thousand F.O.B. the nurser
ies; two-year old white pines,
■$3.00 delivered and. $2.75 F. O.
B.; two and three-year-old white
pine transplants, $4.00 delivered
and $3.60 F. 0. B.; and black
walnuts, $10.00 per thousand de
livered and $8.60 F. O. B.
No order for less than 600
seedlings of any one species will
be filled, except that orders for
100 black walnut seedlings will
be accepted. Stock may bo used
only lor forest jriantl^, erosion
control and windbreaks. It can
not be used for ornamental plant
ing, and may not be resold.
Graeber suggMta that farmers
Immediately place orders through
their county farm agents, who
will advise about species desirable
and the correct methods of plant
ing the trees.
«■ • J
^^Please Give Me
MayLe you thought of shirts
But ten to one, he’s hoping you thought of Man
hattan Shirts.
He knows they have the knack of making him
look and feel his most important beat! He likes the
flattery oi beautiful strong materisds, the comfort
a well-cut shiii (n^ a fraction of an inch wrong
anywhere!) and (trust dad to appreciate this), he’s
crazy about the way they wear—so well and so long!
MANHATTAN
PAJAMAS
BOTANY
TIES
“NEW AND CORRECT MEN’S W^’’