Thursday. November 30. 1939 (flfeloC'Al t Miss Agnes Gray spent the week-end In Reidsville, the guest of Miss Marguerite Bartee. Reserve Friday night, Decem ber 5, for the senior class play to be given ii| the school auditorium. John Maybe rry and L. Q. Baker left Tuesday for a business trip of several days to Richmond, Ind. See Elkin's first mystery play on Tuesday night, December 5, at 8 o'clock in the school auditor ium. Mrs. R. W. Davis was called to Mocksville Sunday on account of > the death of her uncle, John W. Oreen. Mrs. D. O. Smith left Wednes day for York, S. C., to spend the Thanksgiving holidays the guest of her family. Miss Ora Williams of Halifax, spent the week-end with her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Will iams, of Mountain Park. Nick Teague, of High Point, was the Sunday guest of Mrs. Fred Colhard and family, at their home on Church street. Miss Mattie Mae Powell has re covered sufficiently from a serious illness to return to her home, her f friends will be glad to know, t Mrs. R. L. Walker and Mrs. S. t" A. Harding, of Mocksville, spent Friday with Mrs. Walker's daugh ter, Mrs. Rowe Davis, on West Main street. Mrs. Ora Walls Vanhoy spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Char lotte, the guest of her uncle, H. T. Clark, and her cousin, Mrs. Sam McLester. Misses Mattie Brendle, Willie Guyer, Lucy Gray and Mrs. Pauline Masten Pardue spent Sunday in Boone, the guests of friends. Mrs. R. C. Anderson of Mon j treat, spent the week-end here I the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mason Lillard, at their home on Gwyn Avenue. §A GLAMOROUS Helena Rubinstein You can now obtain the famous Helena Rubin stein line of cosmetics at our shoppe. We will be glad for you to come in and inspect the entire line. Pasteurized Cleansing Cream, for dry, oily or normal skin SI.OO Youthifying Tissue Cream , SI.OO Face Powder, for dry, oily or normal skin SI.OO Skin Toning Lotion, for dry, oily or normal skin .*. SI.OO - $1.25 All other Rubinstein beauty preparations similarly priced RUBINSTEIN FACIALS Lucy Grays Beauty Shop TELEPHONE 380 Lucy Gray Rose Reich Julia Gray I DON'T LET A COLD SPOIL YOUR CHRISTMAS FUN At the first sign of a cold hurry to us for a dependable cold remedy. Or better yet, see your doctor and bring us his prescription. ABERNETHYS A Good Drug Store - Phone 42 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jurney are spending the holidays in Harmony, the guests of Mr. Jur ney's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Jurney. Misses Eleanor Hayes, Peggy Royall and Mary Elizabeth Allen will go to Mount Airy Friday for a week-end visit with Miss Mary Lee Moody. Friends of Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Salmons will regret to know that their little son, Joe, is seriously ill, suffering from a throat in fection. Mrs. Dona Inman and daughter, Adeline, of Ellerbe, were the guests Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Laffoon, at their home on Elk Spur Street. The many friends of I. C. Yates will be glad to know that he is recovering nicely from a major op eration at Hugh Chatham Memo rial Hospital. "The Marlenburg Necklace," an exciting mystery in three acts, will be given by the senior class on Tuesday night, December 5. Don't miss it! Mr. and Mrs. Castelyn Revelle of Norfolk, Va., and Mrs. B. O. Danley of Raleigh, have arrived here tq be with their mother, Mrs. C. C. Fulp, who is seriously ill. Miss Mary Elizabeth Saunders of Roxboro, arrived Wednesday to spend the week-end the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Neaves, at their home on Gwyn Avenue. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Davis had as their guests for dinner on Sun day Mrs. Frank Walker and chil dren, of Mocksville. Mrs. Walker is a sister-in-law of Mrs. Davis. Mrs. C. C. Fulp is seriously ill in a Statesville hospital, her many friends will regret to know. She was removed to the hospital Sunday from her home here. Miss Barbara Weir of the Wadesboro school faculty, arrived Wednesday to spend the Thanks giving holidays with her mother, i THE ELKIN TRIBUNE, ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA Mrs. Lula Weir, at her home on Surry Avenue. You will get a big surprise when the Elkin high seniors solve the mystery of "The Mar lenburg Necklace." Be at the school auditorium on December 5 at 8, o'clock. Walter Combs of Elkin and State Road, is a patient in the hospital here, his many friends will regret to know. Mr. Combs is suffering from bronchitis and complications. Mrs. R. G. Franklin and sfon, Richard, and Mrs. Fred McNeely and daughter, Betty, will leave Friday for Venice, Fla., where they will spend the remainder of the winter. Miss Ruth Craig Bell, a student nurse at Norfolk General Hospi tal, Norfolk, Va., spent the week end here the guest of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bell. Mrs. Fred Colhard and daugh ter and sons, Miss Dorothy and Fred and Charles, left Wednesday for Thaxton, Va., to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her mother, Mrs. Charles E. Marshall. Mrs. E. F. McNeer and Mrs. R. L. Mills attended a formal tea in Statesville Tuesday given to hon or Mrs. W. P. Dillon on her 70th birthday anniversary. Daughters of Mrs. Dillon were hostesses. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hopkins of Stuart, Va., will spend the week end here the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gwyn, at their home on Gwyn Avenue. Mrs. Hopkins is a sister of Mrs. Gwyn. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Legon and children and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Angell and children of Winston- Salem, were the Sunday guests qf Mesdames L. E. Aldridge and Jane Smith, at Home Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Gillies Brown and son, Gordon, of Princeton, N. J., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Browning, Jr., at their home on West Main street. Mrs. Brown is a sister of Mr. Browning. Mrs. George Royall, Mrs. Ed worth Harris, Mrs. Joe Bivins and Mrs. T. W. Church attended the meeting qf the thirteenth district of the American Legion Auxiliary at Rural Hall Monday. Miss Frances Smith, of Win ston-Salem, spent the week-end here the guest of Rev. and Mrs. Herman F. Duncan, the latter her sister, at their home on Market street. The many friends of S. E. Shu mate will regret to know that he entered at Statesville hospital for treatment Monday. Mr. Shumate has been confined to his home 6y illness for the past several weeks. Garland Calton will arrive the latter part of the week to spend the Thanksgiving holidays here with Mrs. J. F. Hendren and family, at their home on West Main Street. Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Sale had as their week-end guests at their home here, Miss Lois Barkley, Miss Rachel Morrison and John E. Dur ham, all of Statesville. Miss Morri son is a sister of Mrs. Sale. Mr. and Mrs. Z. E. Tharpe are spending the Thanksgiving holi days In Washington, D. C., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas G. Morrison. Mr. Morrison is a broth er of Mrs. Tharpe. Mrs. E. B. Lawrence, Mary Frances Tower, Misses Elizabeth Anderson and Hannah Reece spent Sunday in Raleigh. Mrs. Lawrence visited her daughters, Misses Virginia and Edwina, stu dents at Meredith College. Mrs. T. F. Cooley will leave Wednesday for Newberry, S. C., where she will spend the holi days. She was accompanied by her brother, Joe Purcell, of New , berry, who has been her guest for the past week. Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Hiatt were called to Lewisville Friday on ac count of the death of Mrs. Hiatt's mother, Mrs. J. S. Jones. Mrs. Jones passed away Friday, fol lowing a brief illness. Funeral services were held Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Franklin and daughter, Vicky Ann, and Mrs. D. N. Masten left Wednes day for Chapel Hill, to spend the holidays with the latter's daugh ter, Mrs. R. D. Roscoe, and Mr. Roscoe. Mr. and Mrs. Hoy Moose, of Mount Pleasant, and Mr. and Mrs. James Shore, of Winston- Salem, are expected to arrive the latter part of the week for a week-end visit with Mr. and Mrs. Errol Hayes, on Church street. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Howard and children of Matthews, and Misses Ethel and Irene Abernethy of Charlotte, arrived Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving with their parents, Rev. and Mrs. L. B. Aber nehty, at their home on Hospital Road. Mrs. David Brendle and Mrs. L. C. Couch spent the latter part of last week in Raleigh, thg guests, of their sister, Mrs. Leßoy Mar tin. They also visited Mrs. Couch's daughter, Miss Geraldlne Couch, a student at Meredith' College. Miss Idelia Benson, a student 1 at Duke University, Durham, ar rived Wednesday to spend Thanks giving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. L. Benson, on Hospital Road. She brought as her guests four of her classmates, Miss "Muriel Edwards of Long Island, 1 N. Y„ Miss Mary Elizabeth Smith i of Woodbridge, N. J., Miss Betty Partenfelder of Canton, Ohio, and Miss Louise Price of Ashland, Kentucky. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. McClam rock and children, Jean, Sylvia, and Dale, of Cooleemee, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Davis at their home on West Main street. Mrs. McClamrock and children remained for the week. Rev. and Mrs. Eph Whisenhunt received a cablegram Wednesday from Kaifeng, China, telling of the death there of Mrs. Whisen hunt's sister-in-law, Mrs. Wesley Lawton, Jr., from a heart attack. Mrs. Lawton is well remembered here, where she visited three years ago. Miss Emalene Neaves left Fri day for Boston, where she visited Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Harvey and attended the Yale-Harvard game Saturday at Cambridge, Mass. Sunday she went to Kennebunk Me., for a visit in the home of Hartley Lord. She returned Wed nesday. Miss Harvison Smith, a student at Salem College, Winston-Salem, arrived Wednesday to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Smith, on Gwyn avenue. She brought as her guests her class mates, Misses Marge McMullen and Elizabeth Read! Miss Mary Elizabeth Poster, of this city, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Poster, a student at Meredith college, Raleigh, has been appointed on the staging committee for the play "Sun- Up," by Lula Vollmer, which has been selected as the major fall offering of the Meredith college Little Theatre. Bad Memory Prof. Mr. Dzudi, do you know what happened in 1776? Fosh: 1776? Gosh! I can't even remember what happened last night. CHRISTMAS OLrn'M. gPFriAn 5 lljpl II ® IER S ELEC ™ C For An Equivalent Model «. and Equipment! Here Are the Features: mf jßfwj£*fg9R 1. SUPER-FREEZER DOOR—lmproved ap- daddy of 'sill sil! ■ pearance and increased efficiency in freezing and storing of frozen foods. Iwii - INTERIOR LIGHT —automatically flood See This lights the entire cabinet interior as the door yP|§g is opened. Amazinir 3 - ICE TRAYS —One 3-pound tray—two ,v! —® 2-pound trays and one Press tray with rub- HHHB.. _ ber dividers. Famous, Silent, S«aUd-in-Stttl | V3IU6 Gm wab H a ■■■ |a■ ■| m I 4. VEGETABLE PAN —retains the natural "C Itl Kir I UNIT m j • moisture of vegetables and keeps them gar with Oil Cooling and S yeare I A OQ3.y • fr® s **. Performance Protection j ___________ 5. FRUIT BASKET—Stores fruits in a compact wire basket for greater convenience AN APPRECIATION OFFER and c 0 " 8 "™ 110 " 01 mi ... , - „ , - 6. COOK BOOK—a General Electric New Ihe enormous public acceptance of General A jm me Xrt Recipe Book with (four color) illustra- Electric Refrigerators has made it possible Jm tions and hundreds of tested recipes, for us to make this unusual offer. The IP I Mm ■ let/w Christmas Special 6 Refrigerator with its I 7. SET OF DISHES One Fiesta-ware many added conveniences is a gift that will ■ A W water bottle, two square crystal ware green hp rpmpmhprpd Inner nftpr th* thrill nf A mJ dishes with clear covers. One meat loaf De rememperea long alter the tnriii 01 a crystal dish with clear cover. Three 5-ioch Christmas is forgotten. (red) left-over bowls with clear covers. MAKE HER HAPPY WITH A LABOR-SAVING t/*4VtAI General Electric Washer! 69' Elkin Plumbing & Heating Co. PHONE 254 ELKIN, N. C. Bfrte.tk.tti.Kk tth ttN to. fed tth «». «■ «k «> «k Ih Ik V*. V*. Wat Vtt. W*. «*. M Hb Mb °SOCI ETY. Parent-Teacher Association Meets Tuesday Afternoon The monthly meeting of the Parent-Teacher Association was held in the school auditorium Tuesday afternoon with a splen did attendance. Rev. H. P. Dun can, pastor of the Methodist church, conducted the devotion als, using as his subject, "The Ideal Parent, Teacher and Child." ' Mrs. J. Mark McAdams, presi dent, presided over the business session, which featured routine matters. The program was under the direction of Miss Ruth Atkinson, and consisted of a Thanksgiving playlet by the students of the fourth grade and a health play let and a group of songs by the seventh grade students. A fea ture of the program was the fashion show of woolen dresses made this year in class by the second year home economics stu dents. The dresses were modeled by the students. Attendance awards went to Miss Josephine Paul's seventh grade in the elementary school, and Misses Elizabeth Anderson's and Mary Holland's grades tied for the prize in the high school. Each class was awarded one dol lar. WHO STOLE "The Marlenburg Necklace" • Find out at the Senior Play on December 5 COMMISSION OKEYS NEW TRUCKING LINE A hearing was held before the Intra-State Commerce Commis sion Monday in regard to a trucking line from Charlotte via Statesville, Flkin, Dobson and Mount Airy. The vote was to allow the line and the Lowther Trucking Co., of Charlotte, have applied for a franchise. The following Surry men at tended the meeting: John W. Try Our Complete HEAD TO TOE WE ARE EXPERTS AT MASSAGE AND WE KNOW HOW TO MAKE THOSE ACHING MUSCLES AND JANGLED NERVES RELAX. WE STREAMLINE YOUR FIGURE AND MAKE YOU FEEL LIKE A MILLION DOLLARS. A SPECIAL PRICE Six Swedish Massage Treatments for SB.OO PEDICURES 50c HELEN'S BEAUTY SHOP Phone 366 for Appointment Comer, superintendent of schools; Kermit Lawrence, register of deeds; John Llewellyn and R. L. Reeves, all of Dobson. BASKETBALL TOURNEY TO BEGIN WEDNESDAY The basketball tournament at West Yadkin will begin Wednes day night, December 13, and will continue through December 16. All Yadkin county teams and the Ron da team have entered the tournament.

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