Our Strme Is Designed For Mity j ? FROM HEAD TO TOE ? - | Slenderizing - Conditioning ] - Beautifying - | MacLevy System ? Swedish Massages t STEAM BATHS - f SKILLFUL, EXPERIENCED OPERATORS + We Wish to Express Appreciation for the Patronage | Enjoyed the Past Year | The Shop of Charm | MRS. A. Q. ROEBUCK, Owner and Manager | Dial 474-1 108 North Main Street t x AHEAD OF THE FIRST COLD SNAP .. ? WITH NEW SMART FALL THINGS! ? JUST RETURNED FROM BUYING TRIP TO NORTHERN MARKETS . . . AND WE HAVE NEW MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY Men, Women, Children?Depend On Us To Outfit You! N. THOMAS Main Street FarmviUe, N. C. ? SPARE YOURSELF THIS DISCOMFORT! We Offer You ( ? EVERY SANITARY, COURTEOUS AND ? PERSONAL SERVICE ? Including Shower Baths. CITY BARBER SHOP WILSON STREET ? OPPOSITE ABC STORE R. E. Braxton?R. E. Dudley?L. W. Cowan OUR FARMER FRIENDS ? KNOW ? BLOUNT'S J FERTILIZERS Were Widely Used In Growing The Fine Crops In Eastern North Carolina LEWIS & LANG ? LOCAL DEALERS ? For The Land's Sake Use BLOUNT'S and Sow Our SELECT SEED! We Buy And Sell Quality Goods ?AND? ? CHARGE REASONABLE PRICES A Complete Line Of HEAVY & FANCY GROCERIES ?At?. CARR'8 GROCERY Wilsoto Street FarmviDe, N. C. I ICE ?? COM, ..Refrigerators.. To Fight Enemy Bombers! I II . Would Steer 11 s e 1 f Automatically By Sound, Attacking Bomber, Dropping Sound - Directing Bombs on Its Victim. New York?Plans for a flying bumblebee, a tiny robot airplane of a new type for defense against bom bers, were announced recently by Edward F. Chandler, 1 well-known marine engineer. The bumblebee plane would steer itslf automatically by the sound of the attacking bomber and then' buzz along with it dropping sound-directed bombs on its victim. This is not merely a clever idea. For Chandler is a recognized expert in automatic steering controls for torpedoes, aircraft and marine ves sels. In the World War he was dis tinguished as the inventor of a gyroscopic control system for accur ately aiming submarine torpedoes. He assisted in developing the Swedish navy's sound-controlled torpedo. The bumblebee design calls for a plane which would be launched by the fire control officers at a bomb ing defense station. When the course of a flight of attacking bombers had been charted with fair certainty, and while the planes were still some miles distant these officers would launch some of the flying bumblebees. The automatic gyroscopes already in use on planes would keep these little robots on the course fired to intercept the bombers until they were well within the range of the noise of the big ships. At that point a sound control de vice would take over the steering and guide the little ships to the in vaders. The bumblebees, however, would not strike tiiese ships, as is planned for the flying torpedoes about which much has been written recently. The reason, Chandler said, is that not more than one hit in a thousand is likely for a flying torpedo .with present available sound steering con trols. There is, he explained, a lag of a fraction of a second at least in these controls. This lag, at the high speed of airplanes, would permit a human flown ship, under attack, to avoid its robot enemy. Chandler plans a set of four sound J controls which should lead his bum blebees to wheel into line above a bomber and slightly ahead of it. The controls would also tend to keep the little bee at a pretermined distance above the ship it pestered. Either the sound waves from the bomber or certain normal electro magnetic radiations from the big ship could be used to trip from time to time an automatic bomb release in the bumblebee. These bombs, Chandler said, need not necessarily have to make a direct hit to explode. They could carry devices which would ex plode them whenever they reached an effective distance from the bomber. These detonating devices would be set off by, sound waves or normal radia tions from the large ship. Chandler said that while these ideas may appear theoretical at first sight, they are no more so than sub j marines, torpedoes , and airplanes themselves were before becoming practical and that he is confident that something like his can be done. He said the robots should be manu factured inexpensively and be trans portable on trucks to the firing areas. The objective, he added, would be' not only to destroy attacking ships, but what might be more important, to disrupt the order of a large forma tion flying under the direction of a leader. , He said the bumblebees could be readily shielded against interference, either that which would lead them off their course or cause their own sounds and radiations to Interfere wih their bombing. ' | Under his plans the^ robots would make their attack before the arrival of defending combat planes. " I He's Just Himself! The I Secret of Eddie Guest, I Bard of Common Men ? 1 I The hold which Eddie Guest has I on the common man is no mystery, I says Maloolm W. Bingay, of the De I troit Free Press, who "knew him when." "There's only one Eddie Guest, not two, or three, or four. He is Eddie Guest to himself and he is Eddie Guest to his closet and most intimate friends, and he is Eddie I Guest to all the world," Bingay writes in the current Rotarian Maga zine. "Eddie - is always true to himself. When he writes a poem on Mother's Day, he doesn't just 'dash something off to fit the occasion. To him is Mother's Day, with all that it moans to everyone who has ever lov ed a mother, His poems are lived by him before they are written. He once remarked: The only person I have to live with 24 hours a day and 865 days in the year is myself. 4??l I never want to be ashamed of the company I keep. So I try to do that which is right that I may always feel exportable with myself.' He's Thank God For A Dull Life/ Muses Pollock Who Can't Enjoy One! ' ' *r" r ! Is your life "ordinary" and "doll?" Then count your blessings and be thankful! This is the admonition of Channing Pollock, distinguished play wright and lecturer, who draws upon his own hectic routine to describe the "gold-fish bowl lives" of celebri ties, in the cufrent Rotarian maga zine. "Celebrities?even those ? not so celebrated, except in the advertising ?don't lead dull lives," Pollock as serts. "They merely hop from one of Irvin Cobb's metaphoric fishbowls Into another. . . I think a few years of it cures all but the most chronic cases. Take it from me, for people who 'do things'?even second-rate things in a third-rate fashion?even we bush-league celebrities?life isn't a grand, sweet song; it's going to bed in a greenhouse next to a billard parlor or a jazz band. "When all's said and done, we Who's Whosers pay a high price. Fame is a full-time job, and the most 1 avid celebrity must grow weary of living in a zoo and having people throw peanuts at him. Even ap plause comes to be all in the day's work." - County Progress To Be Exhibited Again At Fair v Only about six weeks remain before the 1940 N. C. State Fair opens in Raleigh on October 8, and counties are being urged to begin preparation of their progress exhibits which again will be one of the features of the fair. F. H. Jeter, agricultural editor of N. C. State College, is chairman of this department of the fair, and he announces that premiums totaling, $2,000 are being offered for the 10 best county progress exhibits. The first prize in $650, and second prize $500, third prize $300, fourth $200, fifth $100, and sixth through tenth prizes $50 each. Dare and Alamance Counties al ready have signified their intentions of entering exhibits. Caldwell County had the best exhibit last year. Jeter saitl that, as in-the past, county farm and home agents will take the lead. in arranging the ex hibits. However, he said it is desired that vocational teachers, school super intendents and principals, boards of trade and chambers of commerce, manufacturers, civic clubs and wom en's organizations have a part In planning and preparing the exhibits displayed. The exhibit should be prepared to cover 30 running feet of 'space. It will be judged, 35 percent on the at tractiveness of the exhibit, 30 per cent on the balance of the display, 20 per cent on how representative it is of the county, and 15 per cent on the quality of the materials. "These exhibits are being encour aged that the great resources of North Carolina?agricultural, indus trial and educational?may be brought | to the forefront in a fitting and com I prehensive manner," Jeter said. "The premium money is divided so that ex hibitors are assured down to tenth place of a prize which will in part help to defray the expense of bring ing the exhibit to the Fair." South Lags In Using Cotton By-Products Prof. Earl H. Hostetler of the State College Animal Husbandry Depart ment says that one of the reasons for the eroded and gullied fields that are so common throughout the cotton belt is that the South has lagged in recognizing the value of by-products of the cotton crop as a livestock feed. "Livestock feeders in other parts of the United States and in Europe have long recognized the importance of cottonseed products as food for both plants and animals, and they have prospered through the purchase of by-products of the South's so-called 'king'," Prof. Hostetler declared. "The present change^, in Southern agriculture and the universal recog nition of the necessity of livestock for the conservation and improvement of soil fertility has emphasized the need of retaining toe by-products of the cotton crop on he farm. Experi ments and farm experiences have shown conclusively that cottonseed meal is a satisfactory protein supple ment for horses, mules, cattle, sheep and swine. It has also been found that cottonseed meal id a very definite aid in the production of firm pork. "It is encouraging to see," the ani mal husbandman ' continued, "the present trend in the South, toward livestock, which means a greater use of cottonseed meal ajid and other high protein feeds as well as more and better pastures and hay crops. This tread will mean a mora prosper ous and contented rural population in the cotton belt." Prof. Hostetler invites livestock feeders to write him for detailed in formation on the use of cottonseed ; meal and cake in livestock feeds. I Year of 3,500,000 automobiles is predicted by Buick head. -.ijiivy y -y, FRESH, PURE DRUGS ALWAYS . y''h-. V. '.' ;;?" . ? ' i ' . .;;;*:. i.\?"/?VjrvW* iV ''^ I ? OUR ANNUAL PRESCRIPTION RECORD DENOTES CONFIDENCE IN OUR ABILITY AS Experienced Competent Pharmacists AND Distributors of Quality Drugs ??OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE UNEXCELLED?* Our Store Recently Remodeled and Redecorated City Drug Company 103 S. Main street . DIAL 361-1 Farmvifle, N. C. H. M. WINDERS B. R. NEWTON ? ? t, f.AAAJ ELECTRICITY IS OUR HEAD MAR I , ? Electric Milkers Provide Waste-Free, 1 Sanitary Milking of our Guernsey Herd of Over Forty Cows. , ; f "t | The Milk Is ELECTRICALLY Cooled, Bottled, Capped and Placed In An Elec tric Refrigerator 5 Minutes Later, then Rushed by Truck to The Customer. " > ? * ? From the Cow to Your Table Untouched by Hand Pecan Grove Dairy t WE INVITE YOU TO SEE OUR MODERN PLANT "" Dial 212-3?Farmvilie, N. C. ? For Grade A Milk & (Yeam ? % Greetings... Friend Farmer! MAKE OUR STORE YOUR V HEADQUARTERS WHEN IN TOWN T} ? Supplying This Community With ? * General Merchandise Tweijty-Eight Years ? ? ? ? WE URGE YOU TO SELL ON... The Farmville Market BUY YOUR SUPPLIES FROM ?= D. F.&R. O.LANGj "WHERE YOUR DOLLAR HAS MORE CENTS" '?! 1 \ ,'?^.?.7 - " ' ? - : - u:. ?- . . ? ? ' ? t , rii ? , 1 -'?> * - ? " . " ?* ? ? ? ? ? ? VI', "> '/(J-If : 1 . . * "5 In Plentiful Variety AT : . . v BAKER'S BAKERY FARMVILLE'S NEWEST ENTERPRISE i . ? ? Maker's bread, Please ? It's Always Delicious, Wholesome and Satisfying *j *' ???? ? '? ?: ? -L/v;:#' \ M.# ..