ATTEND ELKIN DOLLAR DAYS, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Elkin Gateway to Roaring Gap and the Blue Ridge VOL. No. XXVin. No. 43 LATE / From NEWS ___ State IN DDTET Nation DtllM • LOCAL LINVTLLE K. HENDREN, of Elkin, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hendren, has received the appointment as substitute clerk in the Elkin postoffice, it was announced Wednesday morn ing by French Graham, post master. Mr. Hendren was among the many who took the civil service examination here January 21. He was to begin his duties Wednesday morn ing. Jack Smoot, of Elkin, has held the job since the latter part of last year while postal officials were awaiting an ap pointment to be made. MRS. J. H. POPLIN, injur ed last week in a collision in Washington, N. C., wben the motorcycle on which she and her husband were making a trip was in collision with an automobile, has returned home here after being detained in a Washington hospital for treat ment. Although badly shaken up, Mrs. Poplin was not ser iously injured. A BOY SCOUT court of honor will be held at the Elkin Methodist church Thursday evening at 7:45 o'clock, it has been announced. STATE TARBORO Miss Anne Winslow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Winslow, of Tar boro, is believed to have been a passenger on the Fll-fated liner Athenia. Miss Winslow was scheduled to leave London last week but her last-minute passage was cancelled and she was expect ed to leave on the next boat, the Athenia. No word of her whereabouts has been received yet t>v her parents. WINSTON-SALEM will make a bid for an authorized $10,000,000 aeronautical re search laboratory to be estab lished by the United States government, William Hitter, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, announced Tues day. The matter will be con sidered this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at a meeting to be at tended by Congressman Lon Folger, President James Weeks of the Chamber of Commerce; Harvey Lumpkin, possibly State Senator Gordon Gray, and Ritter. NATIONAL NEW YORK Large-scale buying swept into commodities and shares of corporations calculated to benefit from war demand, as Wall street mar kets resumed trading today for the first time since declar ation of European war. Shares of leading oils, coppers, steels and motors jumped $2 to more than $lO a share in the stock exchange, as they were taken in blocks of 1,000 to 9,000 shares. ' INTERNATIONAL PARlS—Fifty German air raiders bombed and partially destroyed a Red Cross train near Szydlowicz, Poland, at 9 a.m. today (4 a.m. E.D.T.) the Polish Telegraph Agency re ported. GALWAY, North Ireland Three hundred and eighty sur vivors of the British liner Athenia, Including about 200 Americans, landed at noon to day, haggard, weary and wrapped in dressing gowns and blankets. BUENOS AIRES Two cruisers from Great Britain's West Indies fleet, the sister ships Ajax and Exeter, had German shipping holed up to day in South Atlantic ports, or seeking to outrace them for the safety of neutral harbors. The Ajax opened wartime op erations at dawn Sunday by winking the German cargo ship OUnda after first taking off the 42 members of the crew in two life boats that had THE ELKIN TRIBUNE Final Plans Being Pushed For Start Of The Elkin Fair BIGGER MIDWAY, FIREWORKS ARE NEW FEATURES Horse Show and Parade to Be Held Thursday PREMIUM LIST IS S7OO Error m Advertisement Stat ed Premiums Totalled Only SIOO DOG SHOW ON FRIDAY Final >plans for the opening of the Elkin fair here next Wednes day, September 13, are being completed, and fair officials are expecting the event to be the most successful in the history of the fair. This year the fair will present a new midway, with fifteen con cessions and four modern rides, to be brought here by the Bullock Amusement Enterprises, Inc. Rides and concessions are expect ed to arrive at the fairgrounds about noon Sunday, coming here from Taylorsville. As usual, one of the main fea tures of the fair will be the horse show and parade to be staged Thursday morning, the parade to start at 10:00 a.m. from the Chatham ball park, traverse Main street to Elk Spur and from Elk Spur to the fairgrounds, where the judging will take place. Many fine horses and mules will appear in the parade, and several clowns will add to the merriment of the occasion. Cash prizes and ribbons will be awarded in the various classifications. All ani mals to appear in the parade and show should be at the ball park not later than 10:00 a.m. Another new feature will be a display of (Continued on Last Page) COMMISSIONERS HOLDJEETING Surry Board Gathers at Dob son Monday to Consider Routine Business JURY LIST IS DRAWN The Surry County Board of Commissioners met Monday morning at the court house in Dobson. Routine business' was disposed of and the jury list was drawn for the regular term of civil court, which will begin Mon day, September 25, with Judge Zeb V. Nettles presiding. Jurors to serve for the term are: First week —Benton Carter, Brisco Wilson, C. P. Hines, George H. Badgett, R. L. Rine hart, S. K. Harrell, Grov'er Scott, J. A. Roberts, Jesse Bennett, Sam Atkinson, Jr., Edd Ward, Robert A. Flinchman, Paul Venable, Roy Hunt, J. P. Chilton, Zeli V. Hatcher, J. P. Blue, A. D. Bean, Albert D. Forkner, W. N. Cox, C. A. Tickle and G. C. Ellis. Second week P. D. Inman, Fred Eidson, G. L. Hampton, Ba ford Good, M. C. Gentry, J. C. Nance, Roy E. Hlatt, Reid Flip per, Clyde A. Wall, R. J. Wil liams, R. G. Royall, E. S. Hen dren, Vander Cane. T. A. Steele, Brady Coe, J. A. Layell, Elmer Caudle and T. Vera Cockerham. S. S. CONVENTION TO BE HELD 10th The monthly meeting of the Surry Baptist Associational Sun day school convention will be held with Mt. Carmel Baptist church, near Mount Airy, Sun day, September 10, at 2:15 p. m. All Sunday schools in the as sociation are requested to have a representation present. Miss Janie Tucker will leave Wednesday for Marion, where she will resume her place on the faculty of the city schools. f/JV.C. Off Is to Address Surry Teac Dr. Harl R. Douglas, head of the department of education of the University of North Caro lina, who will address the teachers of Sorry county when they hold their first meeting of the year in Dobson Saturday, September 9. Surry Teach To Hold First Meeting of Year Surry county teachers will meet in the first meeting of the year in Dobson high school audi torium Saturday, September 9, 10:30 a.m. Dr. Harl R. Douglas, head of the department of education, of the University of North Carolina, will address the teachers at this meeting. Dr. Douglas is recog nized as one of the outstanding men in the field of secondary ed ucation. He is the author of a number of books on organization, administration, and supervision. He came to North Carolina from the University of Minnesota where he had done outstanding work for a number of years. The American Council of Education selected Dr. Douglas to write a book on Secondary Education for Youth in America. This work has been completed and studied with interest over the nation. Superintendent John W. Comer will speak briefly on plans of the schools for the coming year. J. Sam Gentry, president of the county teachers association, will preside over the meeting and at the conclusion of the meeting of ficers will be elected for the asso ciation for the coming year and departmental organizations will be set up to function during the present school term. OFFICERS MAKE RAID IN YADKIN Swoop Down on Home of Alonzo Plowman; Seize Quantity of Whisky FIVE ARE ARRESTED Yadkinville, Sept. 7 (Special) —Sheriff A. L. Inscore and Dep uty R. M. Haynes think they broke up one of the sore spots of the county Sunday afternoon when they raided the home of Alonzo Plowman in the Flint Hill section and seized a small quantity of whiskey. Plowman was arrested along with four others who "dropped in" for their supply of spirits while the offi cers were present. The officers state that tkey have received many complaints about Plowman, but on previous occasions had been unable to Ids whiskey. Plowman has serv ed a number of road sentences (Continued on Last Page) ELKIN. N. C., THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1939 AAA PAYMENTS MAY BE HIGHER FOR YEAR 1938 National Payment Will Total About $500,000,000 MORE THAN IN 1937 Money Will Be Paid to Sur ry County Farmers for Conservation Practices $116,583 PAID IN 1937 Washington, Sept. 4 Total AAA payments to Surry county farmers for 1938 conservation practices, still being made, are expected to be higher than for 1937, when payments totalled $116,583.39, AAA officials said to day. The national payment for 1938 will total about $500,000,000 as compared to $325,856 887 paid for 1937 practices. Delays and ad justments in payments delay final county computation for about eighteen months. The 1937 figures were announced only to day. The Surry eounty 1936 pay ment was $114,400.56, lower than that for 1937. North Carolina payments were $10,015,932.42 in 1937 as compared with $12,304,- 301.25 4n 1936. National pay ments also were higher for 1936 than for the latter year, totalling almost $400,000,000 in 1936. Payments for 1936 and 1937 were made under the Soil Con servation and Domestic Allot ment Act, passed February 29, 1936, eight weeks after the Su preme Court invalidated the pro duction-control features of the Agricultural Adjustment Act. The new act emphasized soil con servation as well as production, and payments are for practices which conserve and build up soil fertility. CHAS. R. BELL DIES SATURDAY Illness Suffered Early in May Proves Fatal; Deceased Highly Esteemed FUNERAL HELD MONDAY Charles Robert Bell, 69, of Hamptonville, route 1, died late Saturday afternoon in a States ville hospital. Mr. Bell was stricken early in May and his condition had been regarded as serious since the beginning of his illness, and the greater part of the time he was confined to the hospital. The deceased was a life-long resident of Yadkin county and a son of the late Shadrach Bell and Mrs. Jane Burgiss Bell. He was a member of the Flat Rock Bap tist church and a highly esteem ed man in .his community. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon at 2:30 from Flat Rock Baptist church. The rites were in charge of Rev. R. L. West, pastor of the deceased, assisted by Rev. E. W. Turner of Mocksville, a former pastor. In terment was in the family plot in the church cemetery. Mr. Bell is survived by his wife and five children: Shadrach Bell of Elkin; Hal Bell of Washing ton, D. C.; Mrs. W. E. Overstreet of Roanoke, Va., and Noel and Sam Bell of the home. Two sis ters, Mrs. R. P. Crater and Mrs. W. S .Sale of this city; three half-sisters, Mrs. Leßoy Salmons, of Winston-Salem; Mrs. Richard Stark, of Memphis, Tenn., and Mrs. Calvin Huff of Boonville; two half-brothers, S. Walter Bell and Will Bell, of Winston-Salem, and four grandchildren also sur vive. KIWANIANS TO ATTEND JOINT MEETING FRIDAY The Elkin Kiwanis club met last Thursday evening at the Jonesville Methodist church and enjoyed a picnic supper served by the ladies of the church. Kiwanian Stacey Weaver pre sided over the session, which was well attended. Friday evening the club will go to North Wilkesboro for an inter club meeting with North Wilkes boro and Lenoir. The meeting will begin at 6:30 o'clock. Roosevelt Proclaims Nation's Neutrality As War Rages In Europe; British Liner Sunk AIVW J lAIJ7T) The largest merchant ship ever IfEjJt Lilly Ljlx built in the United States, the United States Liner America, which exceeds in size any other ship in the merchant fleet flying the Stars and Stripes, and which was launched August 31, is pictured below in an artist's sketch. It was to have been operated on the passenger service between New York and European ports, but the outbreak of war in Europe may alter these plans. Elkin Merchants Are Expecting Big Crowd Here For Dollar Days Local Stores Have Been Preparing for Big Three-Day Event for Weeks, and Hundreds of Money-Saving Values Will Go on Sale at 8:30 Thursday Morning This week-end, Thursday, Fri day and Saturday, will be Dollar Days in Elkin. Practically all Elkin stores are cooperating in the event an event designed to offer unusual values—values which will save everyone really worthwhile amounts, and stores report that everything will be in readiness when doors swing open Thursday morning at 8:30 o'clock. Local stores have been prepar ing for Dollar Days for weeks. Special buys have been made at prices which will enable the mer chants to pass on the savings to their customers. Extra sales people have been employed so JONESVILLE TO OPEN SCHOOL Session Will Get Under Way Next Monday Morning at 9:30 O'Clock USE FLAT FEE BASIS Preparations are complete for the opening of the 1939-40 ses sion of the Jonesville schools next Monday, September 11. Opening exercises will be con ducted at the high school audi torium at 9:30 a.m., directed by Superintendent L. S. Weaver. No estimate has been made of the expected enrollment, al though it is generally believed the building will be filled to capacity for the term. All Jonesville children who have reached the age of six—or v/ho will have reached that age by October 1, will be eligible to enroll. The flat fee system of renting books, effective throughout Yad kin county this year for the first time, will be used in the Jones ville schools. PRACTICALLY ALL OF SURRY SCHOOLS OPEN All Surry county schools, with the exception of Eld ore, Dobson, White Plains and Pilot Mountain, opened Monday morning. The enrollment is one of the largest in the history of the schools.^ Harold Tucker left Monday to resume his studies at Phieffer College at Misenheimer. that the throngs of value seekers expected here will be put to no in convenience in getting waited upon. The Tribune, cooperating with the merchants, whose advertise ments appear in this issue with complete details of the bargains to be found here, is mailing five thousand additional copies, and is appearing one day earlier than usual so that the paper may be widely distributed before the event begins. All regular sub scribers and new readers who will get the paper this week are urged to read all advertisements so that they may be better informed as to the oportunity that is awaiting at Elkin stores. CHATHAM BOAT EXPECTED 7TH Thurmond Chatham Believed to Have Sailed on Empress of Britain NO WORD IS RECEIVED Although no word has been re ceived by the Chatham Manu-f facturing company from Mr. and Mrs. Thurmond Chatham and Mr. and Mrs. James Q. Hanes and children, of Winston-Salem, since they were scheduled to have sailed from Southampton, England, last Saturday at noon (London time), aboard the British liner, Empress of Britain, it is believed that their ship should enter the St. Lawrence River, Canada, sometime Tuesday night, it was learned Tuesday afternoon from Albert Butler, vice president of the company. The Empress of Britain is sched uled to dock at Montreal, Canada, Wednesday, Mr. Butler said. Absence of any word from the big boat could be attributed to the fact that its radio has remained silent in order to prevent subma rines from learning its wherea bouts. It is hoped that the big liner will arrive as scheduled. Once it enters the St. Lawrence it is believed that it should be safe from attack. Mr. and Mrs. Chatham are ac companied by their two sons, Luck and Hugh. Mr. and Mrs. Hanes are accompanied by their son, Gordon. The party hfid been vacationing in Scotland. 24 PAGES THREE SECTIONS PUBLISHED WEEKLY HITLER'S ARMY IS SAID TO BE NEAR WARSAW Sound of Shell Fire Heard In Polish Capital BRITISH BOMB BASE German Torpedo Sends Liner with 1,400 Aboard to Bottom of Sea FRENCH ARMIES MOVE President Roosevelt issued neu trality proclamations Tuesday af ternoon designed, to keep this na tion out of war. Even as this action was being taken, the war in Poland in creased in violence, with the Ger mans being reported (according to radio dispatches) to be dan gerously close to Warsaw, the sound of shell fire being plainly heard there. Roads leading out of the city were said to be crowd ed with citizens fleeing to safer quarters. It was also reported that most of the 311 Americans who were aboard the torpedoed British pas senger liner Athenia, had been saved. Five hundred passengers of the sunken ship are as yet un reported, radio dispatches said. Late radio dispatches received about 5:30 Tuesday afternoon said that rumors had it that the Poles had bombed Berlin. How ever this report was entirely un confirmed. Germany's armies—with Adolf Hitler at the Vistula River rain ed sledge hammer blows against (Continued on last page) SHERIFF PLANS WHISKY RAIDS Boyd Announces He Will Padlock All Places in Sur ry Selling Booze SEVERAL RAIDS MADE "Every place of business found selling liquor in Surry county will be padlocked in the future," Sheriff H. S. Boyd stated last week, following the second raid of a station on the Fancy Gap high way. In the raid Deputy E. H. Jones came upon Harley Dawson in the act of selling liquor, he said. Dawson was brought to Mount Airy and later released on a SSOO bond for appearance in court here next Monday. It was the second time that the station had been raided since the opening of the "liquor purge" in Surry. The station closed on its own accord last time and avoided padlock procedures, the sheriff said. "We are going to stop it all. Padlocking is the best answer," Sheriff Boyd commented. Local School Enrollment Is More Than 600 An army of 685 marched in Elkin Monday morning, not ,to war bni to the classrooms ;of the city schools. The enroll ment in the high school Was 232 on the opening day, ex ceeding last year's enrollment by 27. in' the elementary school a total of 453 was en rolled, which was approximate ly last year's average. Textbooks were issued on the opening day and class work will be underway as within a short time. The oot look for the school year ■to good, according to J. Mark McAdams, superintendent of the schools.