• "a • ' Inued from: '' Mt ap under t&e Mrsis without .e: fmkM»aa. That waa 1 realized that whoever played mu. would be up agataat a tflaailMiic block in this ..respect, ■fee^liitchell had etched Rhett •Ko the minds ot mtiUons of peo- each of whoo knew, exactly ■aw Rhett wonl^^ook and act. & would be Im.poeelhle to satisfy Aem all. An actor would be Kek^a te please , even the major- ■r. It wasn’t that .1 didn’t want te play. Rhett. l^d. No actor eaeld entirely resist such a chai- teage. But the., more pedlar ■hett became, the more I agreed wBb-tee gentleman who wrote, TWeeretion is the best part of telor-”’: j;* Out of Hajids HatihkK read book enabled mm Miteee clearly^what I was In ter a I played tdteftart. I decided te..a^tp^'Mthing. It became more tePteisji; anyhow, that it was Ite’biHtey hands.' The public In- pteat lii my doing Rhett puzzled iet:'Leng before anyone had for the picture, I was . Mkeil for interviews. When I re- tteed comment, the columnists tef-aaiw me. My mail doubled •wd then trebled. I saw myself aictnred as Rhett, with skleblurns. 1 don’t like sideburnse;'They itch. V was the only one. 'apparently, who didn’t lake it fhr granted teat I was going to "play Rhett. ■ wa.s a funny feeling. I think I haow iiow how a tlyVinust react zteer being caught in' a spider web. It wasn’t that 1 didn’t ap- gneiate the compliinpiit the pub- iia was paying me. It'was simply teat Rhett wa.j too big an ordei. f didn’t want any part of him. To. make sure that I hadn’t aired in my first inipres.sion. I read "Gon&” again. It convinced •me more than ever that Rhett was too much for any actor to tackle in his right mind. But I couldn’t escape him. I looked t(>r (jrery out. 1 even considered writ- iug Miss Mitchell at one time. I thonghi it would he great it she would simpl.v issue a statement awying, “I think c-r 1, Cnhlo would be the worst tms-ible se lection for Rhett Bulier.’’ Per- ■ after'Miss Mitchell sees tny Rhett, or rather what I’ve done to hoc Rhett. she’ll wisii slie had. It mav he of interest as a side light that my. own sincere choice for Rhett was Ronald Ckilman. I still think he would have done a fine Job of it. Rhett a Real Person I found upon inveetigatton that Mise Mitchell, very intelligently, didn’t care a hang what Holly wood was going to do with her book. All she wanted was peace and quiet. She wrote a book be cause it was the thing she liked to do, and having innocently caused more excitement than any author in memory, asked only to be left alone. When' I was told this, I immediately felt a sympa thetic fellowship 'With Miss Mitch ell. I was sure we would under stand one another, for, after all, Rhett has caused more than a little confusion in both our lives. Incidentally, I wanted to ask Mias Mitchell where she met a man like Rhett. I am just guessing, but to me he must have ibeen the real thing, with very little fic tional embroidery. During the months when the casting of “Gone” reached the proportion of a national election, and acrimonious debate was be ing conducted on every street corner, Rhett became more of a mental hazard than ever. I was still the only one who didn't have anything to say about him. I nev er did have. F’or when the time came to get down to business, I was still out on a limb. I knew what was coming the day David O. Selznick telephoned me. His piirc.luise ot the hook for a mere $50.00,1 iiad started the riot. Our talk was amicable. I did the sparring and he landed the hard punches. David’s idea wa.s to make a separate deal, pro Po ^Dollar Three developmanU of IntwMti to the Amepicgii*iarmer are Oorted In & roView ot the nitrate . Indnetry which has been pnblizhed by the'Chileah Ni trate Educational Bureau. 'Sheee developments, affecting the jjttioe of natural nitrate, its mechani cal condition, and the ibags in which It is sold, show, among oth er things, considenfble increase in today’s buying power of the farmers’ dollar. r ;,, Turn back the calendar to’ 1927. That year new and more economical mining and refininl; method went Into operation. Price reductions followed. Today the price of natural nitrate of soda is about $20 per ton less than in 1927. Mechanical condition has stead ily improved. Today farmers eve' rywhere are familiar with the famous natural nitrate pellets which are so easily applied and which reaist the hardening ' and caking, to which other nitrogen fertilizers are subject. The Im proved form of this hundred year old product retains, of course, the natural balance of many olant food elements besides nitrate. Thirdly, in a large-scale effort to as.sist in .developing new uses for American cotton, natural ni trate of soda was offered in even- weight cotton bags. Today farm ers can liave their natural nitrate delivered either iu cotton or bur lap bags, as preferred, at no dif ference in price. going to try to get me from M-G- M if he could. We shook hands on it. I could have put up a fight. I didn’t. I am glad now that I didn’t. Hollywood always has treated me fairly. I have had no reason to complain about my roles and if the studio thought I should play Rhett. it was not up th me studio would release to duck out. I had nothing to do tiding my me to make the picture. I thought my contract was an ace in the hole. It specified that iny services belonged exclusively to (ioldwyn-Mayer. I told with the negotiations. I learned that I was to play Rhett in the newspapers. As a part of the Metro- deal, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was David fo release the picture. that, adding on my own that I was not interested in playing Rhett. t'liaiiee of l.ifetiuie That didn’t stop David. Being a friend of long standing and knowing him, I knew' that it wmildn’t. He pointed out that no actor ever had been offered such a chance. There had never been a moFe talked of role than Rhett. That was exactly my rea son for turning him down. Ho put his cards on Hie table. He was That was a weight off my mind. There was no longer anything to argue about. Now I had a job to do and it was up to me to give it all I had. I read and re-read the book until I could visualize Rhett as Miss Mitchell had pic tured him. How he reacted to eve ry situation. I memorized many of the revealing lines in the book and it .may be of interest to know that most of the dialogue in the script is e.xactly as Miss Mitchell wrote, it. iWARNIiNG! ) II ^ DonH put away your winter clothes without a thorough j cleaning ... and if you don’t take precautions against moths, next summer your apparel may be . . . and because you’re fus sy about the good appearance I of all your clothes—^put them in our hands for expert dry , -cleanig. V With The ★ ANOTHER WARNING! I Right now, before the hot summer days arrive, have all your summer wearing apparel dry cleaned and pressed, ready for the first impluse to “go places’. It will give you new clothes appearance at mere dry cleanmg prices. Try it. kfigblW church Mr. nephew, Edwin^horch, spent ftte urday night in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carr, Church. , -Rev. Joe Noah BeslJii^-' at ,Pattons ... I SUrrS-^J)ry Cleaned and Pressed 49c CASH and CARRY ^TAX Ic DRESSES—Dry Cleaned and Pressed 49c CASH and CARRY ^TAX Ic North Wilkesbord ^I^l^roBORO’S OLDffiT AND MOST MODE»N DRY CLEANING PLAOT tCj^Oi It yt -■ glrji' who oHde tW '•r”'’'eirnndv are Iwgietimea abound of avenging li^’a surrender jii^e^ling beaux ^rom Yankee rivals ' ‘ But a technical riser employ ed on a motion l^ietvire laid in Myrick. of of -Tfi yeans- ego to "Gene jWRb' '0>e opens Monday at liidatre; ■■ ■- ’’ don’t think many girl i really nt,ed to uai, ■f-jt' 5-Vj Satafrday n^|^ M;i8sas Church spent %ndny .tneir ifetra Church. Mrs. Fannie Church and dangh-i ter, Helen, spent Sunday after- no6h in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Coy Church.*. Mr. and Mrs.'/ Demp>7 Church spent a short while in the home, of Mr. and • Mrs. Grady Chufeh, ‘ Sunday.. . Messrs. Johneon and Raleigh Church visited Meaare. Silas and Gean Church, Sunday. ' - Mr. Atris GreMA'spent a short while In the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee J. Church, Sunday. Miss Hazel Phillips spent a short while with Mrs. Nina Church, Friday. Mrs. Iner Church and son, Cliut, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey Paw, of Idlewild. Mr. Marion Church, of this community, and Mr. Herbert Church, of Deep Gap, were visi tors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Grady Church. Sunday. -Mr. Johnson Church spent Sat urday night with Mr. Raleigh Chu’rcli. .Mr. Clint Church wa.s a visitor in the home of Mr. Fred Blank enship. Saturday. Miss Helen Church spent Sat urday night with Miss Novella Church. Let the advertising columns^ of this paper be your shopping guide. iv- - ^ ifAi-’-- 1*’ ttere»ent«A •“ sunk ye ’!>"’We9tlp|L^t^se Electrie, '^fft of'posterity at th* IWI York World’s Fair, with a i I of a modern safety tlf* tprap by the Fisk Rubber Corpe-vatIdsJ Chicopee p’aUs, Mass. Y- The Inscriution on the tack the section reads: “In 1939, year? after the discovery vulcanization of rubber, the aaf^ est automobile tire manufacture^! consisted of a cover or tread plTI rubber containing a substanGgl portion of carbon black, ed by multiple layers of oottoa'. cords, insulated from each otheg by layers of rubber. The t$re^ served as a protector for a OMn- rubber air container. The trdad portion was rendered flexible by the insertion of cross strips of white rubber, providing increased, traction.” The “Capsule.’’ Hurled beneath the site of the Westinghonse building, contains a resume of modern civilization. It is not to be opened for 5000 years. Clues to its location will he mentioned i n book.s placed in libraries throughout the world. gBP Vivien Leigh and Hattie McDaniel in “C5one with the Wind" the Old South today eTin«H what she called tlie “Southern a"oen.t racket.’’ and told how any North ern girl could invoke, if •'ury, the specious advantage of an exotic linguis.Hc charm. At the same time the acceti: c',-eri ,,io tested, as a native Georgian. Hie assumption that a “get-your- man” technkiue of vine-clinging and buttonhole twisting i. ">i- fined exclusively to the mockin’- bird and magnolia country. Tlu accent expert i- .Miss S ;san Let the advertising column* of this paper be your shopping guide. gerated radio-vaudeville f^outhern j poor Ford.’ and ’Barbara accent.” said Mias Myrick loyally, | admired our car.’’ "and I’m told plenty of button- j "Speak with the lower jaw re- boles are twisted by girls who taxed, aud remember that in the South one doesn't hurry or wor- -.ouldii’t know a magnolia from a cotton blossom. Just to demou- ■’rate my low opinion of an ac- ry—ini.ch. That will give you the languid, lei.surely diction that cent as a beau catcher I’m willing distinguishes Southern speech, to teil you here and now in'it how I Terminal ‘.g’s’ should he suppre.ss- a girl can learn to talk Southern gd, but not entirely dropped.” in one or two easy lessons. j ,.aid there is a "First of all. soften your T’s’. s ronsiderable variety of Southern It don’t do it too broadly Prac- accents, and a person really ought rice sayin.g. ‘I can t afford a fo-.ir- know which one .she is using. “Gone With The Wind” ... A Thrilling Experience For You In One Of Our ... / Guaranteed QUALin At Low PRICES See the picture “Gone With the Wind” (if you can get a seat) .. . and tee the car of your choice on our lot (if you can get here tofore it it taken at our low price). We’ve turned the “air hote” on our Uted Car Lot and all cart will toon be “Gone With the Wind” at the pneet now being quoted. Hurry in fof a look, a ride, and a “buy you luid not dreamed of getting! Beware . . . pricet may take YOUR car quick. CHEVROLET Is The Nation’s Choice liberal TRADE-INS -LVERY EASY TERMS— ' YOUR PRESENT CAR OR SMALL D(MV:N payment is sufficient!, vr-a TENTH STREET V ■ - H WILKSBORO. N. C. CHEVROLET Is The Nation’s Leader TELEPHONE 112 A ■