THE [mrnSi GAB^jJ J BftOVMING,^ * 1 ' i -% I THIS AND THAT It's getting about the time of the year to start looking at seed catalogs, but our experience in the past has taught us that looking is about as far as we should go. For every time our wife plants a seed it always comes up in somebody else's yard. With people dashing around here hunting for houses like they are, why tempt fate by planting anything? Last sum- mer we had our garden plowed, harrowed and ready for planting. The house was sold the same day. We've often thought that al Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly be cause It goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, Increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, Inflam ed bronchial mucous membranes. No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding that you are to like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis PKV 'IIT LESS DOW SALE! EMERSON MODEL 330- With Built-in Loop Antenna -No Outside Aerial or Ground Needed • AC-DC Superheterodyne with "Miracle Tone G amber •Automatic Volume Control • Large Electro-Dynamic Speaker • Eye-Ease" Dial and many other advance 1940 features. ■ Foreign and American Broadcasts and All Police Calls • AC-DC Superhet. with 'Miracle Tone Chamber" and 8-inch Dynamic Speaker • All new features. EMERSON MODEL 332 - GET "J" 0 ""* I I EUROPE DIRECT! London W Paris' Berlin •Rome-Ameri can and Foreign Reception. SB AC-DC Superheterodyne with "Miracle Tone Chamber" SjjsSSSSS and 8-inch Dynamic Speaker H • All new features. PRICE AFTER |^i|OW $4295 \ $^2 95 ■UY NOW FOR \ I ' $lO. IBS ~ 63 New 1940 Emarion Models from $7.95 to $99.95 Eagle Furniture Co. Elkiit, N. C. though the Chatham Manufac turing Company did a great thing for Elkin by bringing their Win ston plant here, they sure have kept us on the move. However, for your benefit, we are still anchored at the present. • • * Aunt Frousy said, the last time we saw her, that Uncle Culpepper was always one to move around a lot. She said she guessed he got it from his Uncle Algernon Fogg. Uncle Algernon was always on the move—with the sheriff only a few steps behind. Uncle Algernon was always getting into trouble. Once his pastor went to him and told him that if he would listen to his conscience,' all would be well. But TEE ELKIN TRIFUNE, ELKIN, NORTH CAROLINA he found out that Uncle Algernon and his conscience weren't on speaking terms. That was his trouble. uncle Culpepper, always foot loose, nearly sailed on the Titanic, and no doubt he would have gone down with the ship when she sank in the North Atlantic if something hadn't occurred at the last moment to prevent him from sailing. Aunt Frousy said he was one embarrassed man when they found him stowed away in a life boat just before sailing time. For the benefit of you children, the Titanic was equipped with only 12 lifeboats because its builders said it couldn't sink. It sank on its first trip with the loss of over a thousand lives. Moral: don't ever say so.and so can never happen, i*» • • HOMETOWN BOY MAKES GOOD When, back many more years than we like to think about, we trudged off to school for the first time (gather around Grandpa, children, while he recalls the days of his youth) one of our school mates was a good looking, neat appearing youth whose clothes were always neat and clean and who possessed ears that always had the appearance of having been freshly scrubbed. 1 As one who was always having trouble with the "gee string" of our blouse, and who never wash ed our ears in a manner satisfac tory to our mother, we looked upon this schoolmate with quite a bit of disapproval and figured then and there that he would never amount to much. The years rolled slowly by. Then came the age of fifteen. Somehow or other someone got it into their head that our home town should organize a commun ity chorus. Our father, who sings a mean bass and who can get his chin down out of sight in his col lar when he turns his attention to a real low note, was mixed up in it. Several dozen other citi zens also had the fever, and sev eral times each week they met at the school house to make the night resound to a mixture of voices—some good, some bad, while a good lady who professed to be the singing director made wild motions with a baton (in form of a yardstick). This hadn't gone on long until someone had an inspiration that turned out to be a nightmare for us; for the schoolmate whose ears were always clean; and for a couple of other boys who were sons of the Methodist preacher. They roped us into a boys' quar tette! A concert was in the offing. The mother of the boy with the clean ears was our pianist and in structor. And we practiced long and hard on a song, the first lines of which went like this; "I saw a ship a-sailing A-sailing on the sea, And oh! It was all laden With pretty things for thee." Can't you imagine the agony that was for boys who were much more interested in damming the branch or digging a cave? Well, to make a long story short, the concert was given, it went off okey, even our quartette coming in for some applause. But then, because the commun ity singers had exhausted their hometown audience of white peo ple, they arranged to present it in the local colored Methodist church for the colored people! Can you imagine anything more cruel? Both to the colored people and to us? Can't you just see us and the boy with the clean ears and the preacher's sons standing up there before an aud ience of natural born singers, quavering about a "little ship upon the sea?" But what we remember best was the way the boy with the clean ears took it in stride. He seemed to be a natural born actor. More years passed and we went our different ways. We to news paper work after a try at college; the boy with the clean ears to the University of North Carolina, and the preacher's sons to California, where one has since departed this life. \ For a number of years we lost sight of the boy with the clean ears. Then, just Monday we were down at the Lyric theatre getting the Lyric advertisement which appears in this issue. We were looking at the press sheets on a movie which will be at the Lyric next Wednesday, "Congo Maisie," starring Ann Sothera. Then our eyes fell on this line, "With Shep pard Strudwick." If you see this picture, watch for Sheppard Strudwick, for a number of years a leading man on the Broadway stage, and con sidered, although turned down, tor the part of Ashley Wilkes in "Gone With the Wind," and now working in a new "Dr. Kildare" picture. - He is the boy with the clean ears. | MOUNTAIN PARK Rev. E. O. Jordon filled his ap pointment at the Baptist church here Saturday evening and Sun day morning. Mr. A. M. Linville, who is em ployed in Lexington, spent the week-end with his family here. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thompson and son, Jerry Bill, of Boone, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Thompson. Misses Vetra and Irene Hanes spent Saturday in Winston-Sa lem. The members of the Mountain Park band, with their leader, Mr. R. A. Mills, and several members of the Mountain Park school fac ulty, motored to Greensboro Sun day to attend a band program at the National theatre. They re ported a most enjoyable trip. Mrs. Gertrude Simpson and son, Joe, were visitors in BiHn Saturday. Mrs. Will Shores returned home Thursday from Elkin where she has been a patient for some time in the Hugh Chatham Memorial hospital. We are sorry to note that Mrs. P. C. Sprinkle is on the sick list. Mrs. Huston Cockerham is quite ill at this time. I STATE ROAD We are glad to welcome to our community Mr. and Mrs. Thur mond Eldridge and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gentry and fam ily and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sprinkle, all of Winston-Salem, employed by the Chatham Man ufacturing company. Mr. and Mrs. John Alfred Hanes and daughter, Anne, of Kings Mountain, spent the week end with Mrs. Hanes' father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Dicker son. Eugene Wilkerson of Kannapo lis, visited relatives and friends here Sunday. Bobby Hamby of Salisbury, visited his grandmother, Mrs. Emma Walters, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Irvin and GIBSOKggg B fl V JH JNfl WBm H *BH njjjjlH .19" \fl 3 y If you're smart, YOU'LL ACT I NOW! Inquire - here's a new v I S& 3-ZONE . \ # PRINCIPLE In * FRKZ ' R SHELF OIBSONS Monomleal quantity burin*- Ful ! width I .--fcs ~ : - 2 Fiw'r Shelf add. groatl? «• freemin* ,—— -\ and dewert Mpieitj, IteriuM mmmbm \ t L 7 ahalf area* provide# big Fro«a» Stora®a i >l ' M »afc*i 1 I nh 1 W Zoas. Beneath la the Normal torn*, fa* ril -~7 an UM.I food keepln«. Balow that la ,M*d «*• Moi.t-Cold Zona, la kaap f*J»lt» aad ' .fwM!! It&tjß regatablaa without drylns, »hrlnkin«. / - I Better food, wldar uae, real aeonaarlaa t UMrri No other refrl«aralor Uka thla eaL earth 1 0 I Bat —aat your* aside now IAI S 9 9f)"> III) up, thla loekjr porehaaa will (• faaJl V Hinshaw Cash|Hardware Co. tIT T7"TTkY "%T n children of Arlington, visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill Walters Sunday. INCREASE The number of people working on American farms increased by approximately 140,000 persons from January 1 to February 1, reports the U. S. Agricultural marking service. Important for Women A weak, run-down condition often gives a foothold to functional dysmenorrhea, causing much peri odical distress from headaches, nervousness, cramp-like pain for women. CABDUI so often helps in such cases, for it sharpens appe tite, boosts flow of gastric juices; so improves digestion, helps build physical resistance. CARDUI, tak en a few days before and during "the time," is another way to help periodic distress. Used 50 years. FOR Lawn Mixture, Kentucky Blue Grass, Evergreen Lawn Grass, Shady Spot Grass Seed, Lime, Lawn Fertilizer, Cotton Meal and Bone Meal, See— F. A. BRENDLE & SON Elkin, C. f* 1 *. Ml*" HOLSUM Ey e » Glasses Examined \\H|KhJ) Fitted Dr. W. B. REEVES OPTOMETRIST EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD OFFICE OVER ELK THEATRE I j/k An exciting new Idea la radio entertainment. Find fJ 1 AI out bow much you know about America'* atrange si and unuaual placea. Many valuable priaeal Liatentot " ! —FRIDAY 10-10:30 mLw/. Say, "1 sau) it in The Thursday, March 7, 1940