/ WM 1 ^ * cfy "Ladies In Love". On Air," Are Ca * With the most exciting and brilliant star combination ever to .appear in one picture, "Ladies In Love," opens Thursday at the -Carolina Theatre, Wilmington, a bitter-sweet romance of four lonesome, lovely girls, and their .-adventures in search of love. A quartette of Hollywood's most famous reimmne personalities, Janet Gaynor, Loretta Young, Constance Bennett and Simone Simon, appears in the film, with the cast featuring Don Am- . eche, Paul Lukas, Tyrone Power, . .Jr., and Alan Mowbry. i Of the four lovely ladies, one gambles for love and loses, one ' gambles and wins, one asks for love and gets it, love asks for the fourth?too late. ; Janet, Loretta and Constance, ( modern young ladies all, have pooled their resources and taken ' a small apartment, where they 1 eagerly plan for the romances | they intend to have. Janet is employed by Don i Ameche, a young doctor, to feed his laboratory rabbits. Loretta is I m the chorus of a reigning mus- I ical hit, and Constance is a model, with dreams of becoming a luxurious lady. Loretta falls in love with Tyrone Power, Jr., a wealthy young J man, and is heart-broken when j she hears that he is soon to be married. Janet is in love with her! doctor, but when the opportunity comes, incredibly, for a job as valet to Alan Mowbry, a famous magician, she leaves the young physician. Constance is having a mad round of pleasure with Paul t Lukas, a mining engineer on va- j cation from South America. Con- ' stance and Lukas have a creed?; no good-byes, no tears when it is ? I Tabor City, Sept. 30.?Chief of r Police Frank Hayslip, of this city, on Sunday night shot Char- s vie Tyler, of the Clarendon area, P through the leg following a spec- d tacular chase which covered r parts of two states. "Hie officer r said that he was acting in his own defense, and that Tyler was f coining on him with an automobile crank at the time he brought ^ bis gun into play.- ' i Chief Haysljp" noticed the au- c tomobile being driven along the highway two miles east of this city in a dangerous manner, he said, and set out to catch the clriver. Tyler allegedly drove through Tabor City at a rapid rate of .-speed and got nearly to Loris before he was finally over taken the Officer. When the officer attempted to place him under arrest, Tyler grabbed an automobile crank and came ' on him. The wound was not serious, sand he was able to return home after having it dressed at the clinic here. Bright Belt Opens Unofficial estimates' Monday indicated about two and a half million pounds of tobacco were .sold at the eight markets Monday at the opening of the old bright belt. Price averages were unofficially estimated to have ranged between $22 and $28 a hundredweight. ? C1IUCU. . J Simone Simon, an appealing t tout determined young girl, is al- (c so in love with Lukas, who does p not realize that she has grown to womanhood. ? NEXT WEEK F Featuring the first radio chase j ever staged in films, the hilari- j c ous comedy, "Walking On Air," j g starring Gene Raymond and Ann c Sothern, coming Monday to the ^ Carolina Theatre. j _ The high spot of both comedy and plot is the attempt of Ray- s mond to prevent Miss Sothern from marrying another man p through the medium of a frantic a broadcast. As his sweetheart v speeds toward Yuma, Arizona,' j, Yrom Beverly Hills, Raymond "battles attendants in a broadcasting studio in an effort to | :stay her flight and deny that he is already married, as she has erroneously supposed. The story, based on magazine! istory by Francis M. Cockrell, relates the experiences of two ' young college men who adver- j tise for positions as secretary and bodyguard when they find Themselves without work and -destitute. Unbeknown to each' -other, they are hired by a Bev- 1 <erly Hills millionaire and his f temperamental daughter respec- c lively. The complications which t -.develop and the final denoue- c ment combine to provide a fastrrnoving, gripping entertainment, i Officer Shoots < Man Near Loris, t Tabor City Police Forced To Use Gun On Charlie 1 Tyler Sunday Night In t Own Defense 0 THE STATE F Short Session Of \ Recorder s Court \ t Only three cases were disposed t ' of here in Recorder's Court last 1 Wednesday before Judge Joe W. t i Ruark. ; The case against Buck Hankins, colored, for assault was dis- t missed. r Mattie Fuller was found guilty t of being drunk and disorderly a and of damaging property. Judg-' c Iment was suspended upon pay-, f ment of the cost. I, Henry Riggs, white, was found guilty of operating an automobile j while he was inan intoxicated 1 condition. He was required to t pay a fine of $50.00, the costs in t his case and his drivers license f was revoked. ; i LITTLE BITS : OF BIG NEWS ? t: (Continued from page 1) tl entertain the motion will be c argued Saturday, second anniversary of the kidnaping. f' b Court Convenes i Opening an eight-months term o (lost. For example, the living room hould not be cluttered up with lictures intended for the nursery r a child's bed-room. Likewise, lark or somber pictures should lot be placed in the children's oom. Omit pictures when color and igure interest of background are ufficient; use a mirror or textile langings. When there is enough | :olor but not enough pattern, J hoose etchings or drawings. | Vith sufficient pattern and not :nough color, use strong color lictures. Place light pictures on light vails and dark pictures on dark vails. Don't place a picture in a rame that is more conspicuous han the picture. Oil paintings ?auire larger, heavier frames han water colors or prints. Warm colored pictures should >e framed with warm colors or gilt. Cool colors such as blue, vhite, or gray should be framed vith a cool color or possibly silver. Fine picture wire should be rsed rather than large ornate :ords. Medium and small pictures should be hung "blind," that is, :o a hook or nail hidden behind! he picture. Large rectangular J lictures should be hung with two vertical wires, and large round >r oval pictures should be hung vith a wire going over one hook >r hanger in the form of a triingle. And "Walking rolina Attractions iNumberOfWPA Workers Now 320 According To Figures Released Following Last Check-Up This Total Working On Seven Projects At the end of last week there were 320 people at work on 7 projects of the Works Progress Administration in this county. Throughout the 14 counties of the fourth WPA district 3344 people ivere at work on 100 projects. Of the workers in this county 249 are men and 71 are women. Of these 240 men and 67 women ire from the relief rolls. There ire 1949 men and 1395 women it work in the district, of which j 1855 men and 1335 women are I from relief rolls. Students Form 2 Athletic Groups iouthport High School Students Organize 2 Branches Of Athletic Associa- j tion; To Hold Joint Meetings The students of Southport high j chool met Friday afternoon and reranized two athletic associa-' ions. The Freshman and Sopho-1 nores make up one, while the [ ther is composed of juniors and eniors. Officers for the first are: Vice'resident, Earl Bellamy; Secre- j ary-Treasurer, John Lancaster; j heer leaders, Mary Hood and tivers Westcott. Program committee: Belph'a ,ennon, Marion Frink and W. T., 'ullwood. Officers for the second assoiation are: Vice-President. Robrt Marlowe; Secretary-Treasurer lusie Sellers; cheer leaders, Lucy inderson and Thelma Johnson; irogram committee: Edward Tayor, Louise Niernsee and Susie | iellars. The president will be elected ly the joint association and each issociation will meet once a I veek. A joint meeting will be leld once every month. Good Pictures Add To A Room Dn Otherhand, Poor Taste j In Wall Decorations Is Worse Than Having Bare Walls Exposed A selection of good pictures larmonizing with the color and urnishings of a room will bring iut latent beauty and atmosphere hat would otherwise go unnoti:ed. Pictures are constant companons in the home, said Miss Pauine Gordon, extension specialist n house furnishings at State College, and they should be seeded with care. "A bare wall is better than ugy, distasteful, or tiresome picures," she declared. In the first place, she continled, a picture should be beautiul. It should also harmonize with he room, suit the space it is to I ccupy, and be appropriate for | he persons who will use the room which will determine the fate of 2 much New Deal legislation, the 3 supreme court was urged by the 4 state of Massachusetts Monday to reconsider its decision upset- C( ting New York's minimum wage jc law for women. Apparently in a good health after a four mon- cj ths' vacation, the nine aged jus- si tices filed into the marble-colum- q, ned chamber through crimson- a draped doors to conduct a 30- it minute session. y> Straus Dies ei Jesse Isidor Straus, 64, who J" recently retired as United States l ambassador to France, died Sun-1T day. Pneumonia was given as the immediate cause of death. Smith Turns gl Alfred E. Smith closed his ad- j dress in Carnegie hall Thursday! night with an appeal for the el-1 ection of Alf M. Landon of Kan- j sas as president of the United j ]e States. Speaking before the antiRoosevelt National Coalition of R American Women in Carnegie hall, Smith said "I firmly believe g| the remedy for our ills is the 3l election of Governor Alf M. Landon" al BRUNSWICK BOYS ? ENROLL IN CCC t ! in (Continued From Page 1) tl Davis, Supply; Winfred Hewett, a Supply; Jasper James Sullivan, c( and Walter Tharpe, Winnabow; yMalcolm Beck and Howard Bland of Longwood; Leon A. Modlin, Thomas Wolfe, Walker Williams, j 1 ti 1. n C<?111?,nn T alonH I.., dim r rantv n. ouiuvan, utianu, Orbie Inman, Newman King, Cly- g, de King, Clement Milliken and Alton Price, Freeland; Adell g, Sommersette, and Newman Sim- a, mons, Shallotte; Robert T. Ben- w ton and Newman Simmons, Ash; 01 Harris Gore, Shallotte. \ey ;? . Ic Road Map Posted Showing L Proposed Change In Route ta (Continued from page One) |ki already is drawing protest from p] a number of Shallotte citizens. b< The proposed route connects pi highway Number 30 with U. S. ei Highway Number 17 at Captain th A. W. Clemmons filling station, about three-quarters of a mile te from the Shallotte business dis- B I WILMINGTON Carol shop...not men! THURS., FBI., SAT., OCTOBER 8-9-10 I ?ORT PILOT, SOUTHPOR' rict. Shallotte citizens are in erested in seeing that the White dlle-Southport road runs througl heir town, and favor a junctioi >etween the bride and the Shal otte high school. They use at he basis of their argument tha he route they favor is shorte: han the one coming out a Clem nons' station. Actual work will not begin un il protests have been heard an< i definite decision has been rea hed concerning the route to b< laved. IEFUNDING BONDS EFFECT SAVING* (Continued from pagre 1 i he net saving to the county or he debt service requirement rom July 1, 1931, to July 1 935, will be approximately twc lundred and seventy-five thous nd dollars. Under the new schedule on in erest which goes into effect a.< f July 1, 1935, the County wil ave the first year of its operaion between eighty and ninetj tiousand dollars, likewise for tlu urrent year, and 1937-38. All of the bonds are to be reunded as of July 1, 1935, anc ear interest at the following ates for the indicated periods: % pet. July 1, 1935 to 1938 pet. July 1, 1938 to 1945 \<2 pet. July 1, 1945 to 1955 pet. July 1, 1955 to 1960 pet. Until paid. There is a graduated saving ammencing with the present per>d of approximately $85,000.00 nd gradually reducing with each tiange in the interest rate to a iving of approximately $20,000.} from 1960 to 1965. All bonds re optional for redemption, and is contemplated that quite a :w bonds will be bought in each ear, thereby reducing the interit payment for the succeeding jar. entative Date Set For Races Here Next Summer (Continued from page 1) ram for the year is as follows: Scheduled Regattas: Savannah Yacht Club, July 8. Beaufort Yacht Club, (S.C.) lly 15th. Carolina Yacht Club, of Charston, S. C., July 22nd. Mount Pleasant Yacht Club, of ockville, S. C., August 3rd. Wilmington, Wrightsville and suthport at Southport, August d. It is expected that a considerSIe number of boats from each ' the above clubs will enter the iangular Regatta at Southport. be name of the local event beg selected because of the fact lat harbor at Southport affords great triangular twelve-mile >urse and the further fact that iree communities are jointly invested. Northern Boats Interested In addition to the something ke 50 boats expected from the Duth Atlantic Association, the Wilmington, Wrightsville and Duthport interests have verbal jsurance that many boats from aters north of Southport will be i hand to participate in the rent. Clubs all through the hesapeake Bay section and in ong Island sound will be conicted and invited to participate. Having an old and favorably nown harbor, the event at this lace should attract vast numirs of the sporting fraternity as irticipants, in addition to sev al thousand spectators for the iree days. As an illustration of the invest taken in these regattas, eaufort, S. C. has a population lina WILMINGTON 1 Mon. and Hi Tues. 1nm > Only r, n. c. -' of only about 500 souls and their! p - j races this past summer attracted o i i about eight thousand people each i< 1 day. 1 y For both interest and wide- p g! spread publicity the event prom- s ises to be the biggest thing ever ti staged here. While not now ownr j ing any racing craft, there is a n "j fair assurance that Southport a sportsmen with the interest of ? j the town at heart, will either buy tj - or build two boats and enter j ti ; them in the event. (t! county council * elects officers c! > ' I SI (Continued from page one.) h nutrition, Mrs. K. B. Dresser, Le- 'n i land; clothing, Mrs. D. L. Henry, c] 3 Winnabow; house furnishings, j , Mrs. C. G. Ruark, Southport; ^ >: home management, Mrs. Geo. -: Cannon, Bolivia; home beautifi- jj. j cation, Mrs. J. E. Dodson, Ash; jj -' home gardens, Mrs. Berlyn Lan- a] i' caster, Supply; home poultry, E 1 Mrs. Lofton Mintz, Ash; home - dairy, Mrs. Arthur Dosher, j g, r Southport; child development and i l : health, Mrs. Fred Smith, South- J ? port; education, Mrs. J. D. John- H son, Bolivia; recreation, Mrs. C. w [ W. Shaw, Phoenix; 4-H Club E ; work, Mrs. C. A. Watts, Leland. POLITICS TAKE STAGE HERE FOR OPENING OF EXTENSIVE 1 CAMPAIGN AS ELECTION ) DRAWS NEAR ! I )! (Continued from page 1.) ) I . speaking engagement; and Con- W l gressman J. Bayard Clark is sla- Jj i ted to speak at least three times Jj ,' in the county before November Jj i ^rd- g i! According to C. Ed Taylor, ? chairman of the Republican exe-1 I , cutive committee for Brunswick ( county, important speakers have ( been invited to come to this I county before election day. Defi- j i I nite dates for their appearance i I i will be announced later. I I I t Kenneth McKeithan Heads j j Young Democratic Club j | (Continued from page 1) Other officers elected by the | Brunswick county club include: j . Mrs. Lucile Frink, vice-president, I Burnice Russ, secretary; Mrs. A.1 'R. Mercer, treasurer. The speaker was introduced by j j : Representative R. E. Sentelle. \ \ ! Mr. Stevens launched forth in j j ii - - - II I KAl II II I I )[ )f im it mi- - ' || 1 $5.0 jj For 1 I f ON THE PURC j|! KARP1 || INTERS I !! II Wilmingtc j | 1905 !( 208 North Front Stre< )( i * f WEDN raise of the record of the Den cratic party in state and na :>nal affairs during- the past ears, and declared that he we roud of an opportunity to "he! pread the gospel of Democrac hroughout North Carolina." The former legion command< ecalled the trying days of 19 J nd 1932. He said that he visite very state in the union durin lose years, and declared tha ie morale of citizens of this na ion reached a low ebb durin lat period. Critics who seek t ttack the administration fc pending money to retrieve thi luntry from ruin are in effec lying that the United Statei er people and her resources wer ot worth the investment, he d< lared. The meeting was called to 01 er by R. I. Mintz. The following precinct chaii len were appointed by the new r elected president to assist i n intensive campaign to hav democrats register and vote i ie coming election: H. O. Petei >n, Jr., Hoods Creek; W. A. Su< eland; James Galloway, Tow reek; H. Foster Mintz, Bolivia omer McKeithan, Smithville [rs. Carl Ward, Mosquito; F arl Sellers, Supply; C. G. Roacl | Battery MAYBE NOT. The tr a mmmmmmmmm mm ?**?! x-k mm mm mm m* mm. , miy w<xy , wim uui lu cost more than $100.( the cause. IF YOU DO NEED / WIL1 Hood Sen SOUTHP tPEN s HAR ACQ. U. s. w w&m .s-K ]0 Allows four Old Mat HASE OF THE FAMOUS iN GUARAr PRING MAI THE in Furniture1 "THE OLD RELIABLE" 5t ESDAY, QCTnorp 3 ing W,f C?J',S5 IS Town; W E lHew?t 'Pitree; Mrs. y Longvvooci; Daltor < ^ | Elmer Smith. \ya> |r;and Evans. Exum. ^ d SENATOR~RFY^r^ I IN southpor0^ i- A business : - -St* wS"f, Jt,? -t where speeches will i s. three o'clock this aft? ' ;e Senaftor Reynolds 5; " Preventative of thisT this morning that it > j great regret that his I | arranged schedule pjJJ > from speaking to Ve " Brunswick in behalf ,? n Roosevelt this trip J e were, it was only bv n the most of his night,, - he was able to come ^ " 'ook mto some things n deems just as impoL .; speech. His parting wort i; "I am relying on vou f, t.iin Brunswick to stands l, democratic party." Trouble ouble may be elsewhet mplete testing outfit I )0) we can quickly fi ^ BATTERY . . BUY LARD ^tafinn I r *vv uiuuuil ORT, N. C. tXXXXXXXXMXXIi Mr ~ ~ " NUG BOR iTENT 0"iCC 0 r mlt '39| Vou will believe [hischi^H made to order for vnu^B over six feet and wome^B than five feet sav, "It'^B right for me." B The Snug Harbor is^B when you first sit in stays restful through even V. '^B No spine twisting, no ^B Fine genuine maho^B luxurious upholsterv. R?^B Karpen guarantee tagoj^B chair. Covered in a soilH trous, and Jong-weario^B hair tapestrs in mv ne?BB ?guaranteed light proo^B ance I tress I i"CROYDON" I iiTtrrn I TRESS I Company I PHO.\E 36SH I

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