Pro DAY ITOMORROW I num/roanm gfiTOCKBBIPOI TOWERS Eiffel From the beginning of time, mankind has tried to build as far up toward the sky as he could. Primitive men built in the tops of trees to protect themselves from prowling enemies on the ground. The Bible tells of the effort to build a great tower. at Babel, which never was finished. Two recent news items remind ed me of modem efforts at tower building. It is Just over 50 years since the tallest structure ever SEE IT TODAY AT Harris Electric Co. Elkin, N. C. ' ' 1 —I ■ I SATURDAY IS POPPY DAY! Compliments of ~ r / ■ " 1 A Cash Purchase Is a Compliments of J. M. Franklin Turner Dru? C). i ® --I ' C " h Sa,ins *' The Bank of Elkin Architect George Royali Member F.D.I.C. and Seirice that Satisfies w. H. Combs, Loponnaire Goodyear Tires A Good Drug Store s£Zr* J&-. TwWiZ ITbuv h poppmll SS 1 Isl' Compliments of Compliments of *■ '■ 11 ■ 1 • V "■ ,v m „ii,„»„ t s «f Compliments of The Basketeria Stories c In r landers Field *•• w - Elkin-Jonesvi lie Vetera * W Pure Oil Product*' Legionnaire By John McCrae—lß72-1918 Walker's Say u Wiih Fto * er » - „ J, frMpl Take U P our quarrel with the foe; Tnn r •„ p.w Chevrolet Co 5c & 10c Store Morrison's Flower In Flanders Fields the poppies blow To you from failing hands we throw «on-l n ur I*. F Walker, Legionnaire Shoppe Between the crosses, row on row. . . er aays a *° The torch; be yours to hold it high Elkin's Best Place to Eat S* l ®* Service That mark our place: and in the sky " e i' ed^ e ' t »wr »un«* Blow. „ y( , whQ The larks, still bravely singing, fly 111 were v ' 4ll now we lle di e In FH&ndprs Compliments of Coke Marion's Esso Scarce heard amid the guns below. We shall not sleep, though poppies Ideal Beauty Shoppe Carolina Ice & Fuel Co. H. B. Holcomb Station grow Modern Beauty Service "Cold Alone Is Not Legionnaire Standard Products Flanders Fields. 5y Trained Operators Enough" Real Estate Remember You Always POPPIES MADE BY DISABLED VETERANS M D I D c %££? for ywur Beik-iKuJhton Co. Poppy Sale By Woman's Auxiliary, George Gray Post, American Legion w°S«kie & G^c e^ e Bu "~e Jd sav ° Legionnaire R. L. Mills. «**kmiuure ® j. F . Moseley, Legionnaire ' * Compliments of The Men's Shop Graham & Click Elkin-Jonesville Surry Hardware Co. ~ Elk Printing Co sc»& 10c Store Building & Loan Assn. Quality and Service J- H. Beeson Ya km u o saes Better Printing Elkin's Quality Store "Trade K ere and Save" Paul Gwyn, Legionnaire Edworth Harris. Legionnaire Dodge - Plymouth im/u- 4 a r Elkin Lbr * & Mfg * Co * Carolina Service Station „ r „„ r „ Auto Parts Company „ . 4 . ~ White Swan Laundry Smithey's Dept. Store "Everything to Build Anything" Texaco &, Firestone W. M. Wall Guaranteed Parts for Harris Electric Co. "Laundry Does It Best" Phone 68 Elkin, N. C. L YV. Laxton. R. L. Davis, Jeweler Ford, Chevrolet, Dodge and Electrical Contractors Phone 205 Tlace c whltner, Legionnaire Legionnaires Musical Instruments S° Uth Frieldaire " Victor THIS ADVERTISEMENT MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH COURTESY OF FIRMS LISTED IN THIS SPACE built by man up to then was fin ished. That Is the Eiffel Tower, 984 feet high, built as a show piece for the Paris World's Fair, and still standing, the dominant figure of the Paris landscape. Only two higher buildings have ever been built, the Empire State Building, 1,248 feet high, and the Chrysler Building. 1,056 feet, both in New York. New York learned to build high steel-framed structures from Chi cago. For years the Chicago Masonic Temple, first of the "skyscrapers." 302 feet high, was the tallest building in the world. Only the Washington Monument, 555 feet, and the Eiffel Tower, neither of them really "build-> ings," surpassed it. But now, the papers say. that pioneer of high steel buildings is being torn down. MYSTERY Roanoke The most fascinating mystery in American history is what be came of the colony of Englishmen which Sir Walter Raleigh plant ed on Roanoke Island, off the coast of North Carolina, in 1587. Here was bom the first white child in what is now the United States, Virginia Dare. But when an expedition with supplies for the colony reached Roanoke a year later, no living person could be found. Many legends have centered around the lost colony, the most credible being that they joined a tribe of friendly Indians on the mainland and intermarried with them. Gray-eyed Indians were still found arouni Cape Hatteras two hundred years later. Just the other day a storm swept Roanoke Island and uncov ered the frame of an ancient ship, of the type built by English men 350 years ago. A crew of CCC boys is digging away the sand in the hope that there may be found, in the old hulk, some thing tp give a clue to the real fate of the Roanoke colonists. Raleigh's name is perpetuated in the capital city of North Caro lina, and the memory of the "Virgin Queen." Elizabeth, who sent him to America, is preserved in the name of the Common wealth of Virginia. IMPOSSIBLE radio The older I grow, the more ab surd it seems to me to hear peo ple say that anything is impos sible. I have seen so many im possible things come to pass that I am ready to believe anything can be done if the right man puts his mind to it. I think of my old friend, Lee de Forest, inventor of the vacuum tube which gave radio a voice. In 1913 de Forest was indicted on THE ELKIN TRIBUNE, ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA the criminal charge of using the mails to defraud. His letters to prospective subscribers to his company predicted that eventual ly the human voice could be car ried across the Atlantic. That was so obviously impossible that it was called a crime to take money from people to develop the radio. Lee de Forest was acquitted of crime, but I thought of him the other day when I listened to a former King of England talking to all the world in a moving ap peal for peace, from the battle field of Verdun, while his brother, now King, was on a ship bound for America. Not many years ago we would have said it was impossible for the most powerful King in the world to be forced to give up his throne because he wanted to marry someone of whom his Gov ernment did not approve. Among the things which the world owes to America are tur keys, Indian corn, tobacco, cocoa and chocolate, rubber,, potatoes, and one of the most valuable and essential drugs in medical use, quinine. The Indians taught the Spanish settlers in Peru how to cure malaria with cinchona bark, and modem science learn ed how to extract its active prin ciple as quinine. For a century, the best cin chona has been grown in the Dutch East Indies, which have almost a monopoly on quinine. So the United States Department of Agriculture sent an explorer over there to see if he could get some seeds to plant in South America. He had trouble getting them but he got them and now the Western Hemisphere will no longer be dependent upon the East for its quinine. Dr. Walter Swingle, the Gov ernment scientist, also brought to Brazil some rubber seedlings, bet ter than any that now grow in America. The world depends on the East Indies for commercial rubber, but it is to be grown again in the land where it is na tive. , LOST ......... arts An art died onty a few weeks ago, when Rudolph Blaschka died at 82 in Gei'many. With his father, Leopold, he had spent his life for fifty years making color ed glass reproductions of flowers and botanical specimens for Har vard University. There never were such skillful glassblowers as the Blaschkas were. In the Har vard Museum are 840 glass flow er models they made in fifty years, which cannot be disting uished from the natural flowers. They are perfect in every detail. Asked why he did not teach a young man his art, Rudolph Blaschka said: "Find me a boy of ten with generations of glass workers behind him, who will work ten hours a day for ten years; then I can begin to teach him." NBMS FROM THE The new spacious building for housing the prisoners at the prison camp north of Dobson is about completed and ready for occupancy. It will be dedicated at an early date and Hon. A. D. Folger, of Washington, D. C., has been invited as speaker of the oc casion during his ten days vaca tion from Congress. He is ex pected to arrive today to attend the Democratic Woman's meet ing to be held in Winston-Salem Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Hoyle Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Wade Lee and Miss Esta Lee, of Polkton, were week end visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Stone. Mrs. Nannie Hundley, of Stuart, Va., has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Mary Folger, for the past two weeks. Mrs. Folger and Mrs. Hundley spent part of last week in Mt. Airy visiting rela tives. Mr. and Mrs. Miller Hundley and little daughter, Jo Ann, cf Stuart, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ivy Rogers, and Mrs. Mary Folger. Spencer and Miss Mary Betty Norman spent a few days in Rockingham last week in the home of Mrs. Blanche Palmer. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wolfe, of Mountain Park, were visitors in town Saturday afternoon. Rev. Richard West held his regular service in the Baptist church Sunday at 11 o'clock. He was accompanied by Mrs. West and her mother, Mrs. Caldwell. Dr. and Mrs. Joe Folger and Mrs. Elizabeth Bolick accompan ied Mrs. Edwin Bowles to her home in Asheville Wednesday. Af ter a short stay with her sister in Asheville. Mrs. Bolick will return by Denver to join Mr. Bolick and son, Gray, in a visit to Mr. Bo lick's parents. Mrs. J. T. Threatte entered the hospital at Elkin last week for treatment and perhaps an opera tion. Her friends wish for her an early recovery. Mrs. W. H. McNeil spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brady Norman, here, and re NEW BODIES FISHES It leads in acceleration .. it leads In hill-climbing . . HYDRAULIC BRAKES and it also leads in sales! In more ways than one, this fleet, handsome Chevrolet, the ace per former of the low-price field, is the first car of the land! PERFECTED KNEE- It's first in sales, of course, for the eighth time in the last nine ACTION RIDING years, topping all other cars in public demand! SYSTEM It's first in all the many things which speil value, which means (WKkhmmmd high quality in every single part that goes into the car, and low cost (Qn Ma>t , r 0 . lult . mod#l , to you for ail the fun you get out of it! It's first in acceleration— first in hill-climbing— first in all-round performance with economy! Get the most for vour money—buy a new Chevrolet! NEW "O a?c R¥AT!ON a CHEVROLET ,' ~ v-Lfc* *2/J? ' Every 40 seconds of every day, somebody buys a new CHEVROLET! k general motors v*lu» F-W Chevrolet Company Phone 255 Elkin, N. C. turned to her home in Carthage Thursday. Mrs. Fred Lewellyn, an em ployee in the office of Collector of Internal Revenue in Greens boro, spent the week-end in Dob son. Rev. C. W. Russell and family left this morning for a ten-day Thursday, May 25. 1939 visit with relatives at Asheboro and Denton. Mrs. F. P. Riggs returned Sat urday after spending some time with relatives in Charlotte and Pilot Mountain. Don't be alarmed if the baby girl doesn't talk the first year. She will positively make up for it later.