ALWAYS ABREAST WITH
THE CHANGING TIME
IN RANDOLPH COUNTY
THE COURIER LEADS
' *■ r ■
THE COURIER AND
ASHEBORO MARCH
IN STEP—AHEAD
BOTH ARE LEADERS
' '
TRI-WEEKLY
Bit. As The Regulator
February 2. 1876
VOLUME LXI
Oldest Paper Published In Randolph County
PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN
ASHEBQRb7frC^WNI)AY,MARCHl,ri9377
Changed To The Courier
September 13, 1879
PUBLISHED TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND S
\
$2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE
NUMBER 15
State Assembly
Sets March 18th
For Adjournment
Johnson Of Buncombe Intro
duced Bill For Adjourn
ment In Twelve Days
Old-Age Bill Passes
Will Meet At Edenton, One Of
State’s First Capitals, For
Thursday Session
With the major problems of the
North Carolina general assembly
either solved or well* under way,
the members agreed on Friday
night to adjourn sine die on
March 18th. A joint resolution by
Johnson of Buncombe calling for
adjournment on that date and pro
viding that no new bills could be
introduced after Wednesday, March
10th.
The house passed the resolution
without debate at a night session
and met again shortly after mid
night to approve the resolution
and clear its calendar of routine
proposals.
By a 97 to 1 vote, the House
passed the old-age assistance and
child-aid social security bill, call
ing for expenditures of $16,000,009
during the 1937-39 biennium, and
sent the proposal back to the Sen
ate for concurrence in clairfying
amendments. Grant of Davie voted
against the measure and Davis of
Hyde was paired against it.
Leaders predicted that the bill
would be enacted into law next
week. Earlier in the session, it
passed the Senate with only one
opposing vote—that of Bell of
Mecklenburg. ,
Lieut. Gov. W. P. Horton, presid
ing officer of the Senate, said he
and Speaker R. Gregg Cherry of
Gaston had agreed on Thursday as
the day the Legislature would meet
in Edenton.
said they^ had invited President
Roosevelt to the meeting at “one
of the State’s first capitals.”
(Edenton officials were notified
by Marvin H. McIntyre, a presi
dential secertary, that Mr. Roose
velt would be unable to attend the
session at one of the State’s early
capitals.)
A subcommittee was named to
arrange transportation for the law
makers.
A bill to provide free basal text
books for children attending ele
mentary public schools, already ap
I proved by the House, passed the
Senate, 37 to 5, on second reading
and may be enacted into law Satur
day or early next week.
§£ Voting against the proposal,
S which carries with it authorization
f for a $1,500,000 bond issue to fin
ance the program were Bell, Hill of
Durham, Massey of Union, Rod- j
g man of Beaufort, and Taylor of j
M Anson.
Many Activities Progressing
Now At Asheboro High School
Extending the book drive which
( the elementary grades of the Ashe-1
I boro schools have been conducting
f in recent weeks, the high school is
now putting on a campaign to in
crease its stock of standard
volumes. Plans were discussed and
adopted at a chapel meeting Thurs
day, and 24 very desirable works
To Friends Of
The Candidates
Your Favorite Gets 27,500
Votes For Second Payment.
Subscribers and their friends
who have already given their fa
vorite candidate a subscription
during the first period in The
Courier Cash Offer campaign
can do a great service and help
wonderfully in that member's
work by giving her another
year s $2.00 payment* Of course
second and third period county
almost as many extension votes.
Such payments entitle mem
bers to an additional 27,500
votes and with the race so close
it will be extra votes which may
decide the winner of that $600
Cash Award.
Help those who are helping
themselves—give your favorite
candidate a call and show her or
him you are a real friend by giv
ing another subscription. They
are all working hard—help them
along! Your encouragement may
be just the incentive needed to
win one of those wonderful
awards. Hurry, for the cam
paign ends Monday, March 15th.
!*■
Will Reorganize
Aviation Bureau
1
—
Reorganization of the Bureau of
Air Commerce, much criticized
since a sequence of air tragedies
on the west coast shocked the
aviation world, was started with
the appointment of Fred D. Fagg,
Jr., above, to succeed Eugene Vidal
as director. Mr. Fagg has been
consultant to the bureau, is a
World War air veteran and found
er of the Northwestern University
Air Law Institute.
Dies At Pleasant
Garden Thursday
Mrs. Naomi Keele Whitaker, 70.
died Thursday at the Home of her
son, M. -' -L. • Bouyer, - Pleasant
Garden route olid, after an illness
of three weeks. M*a. Whitaker
*aa a fomer WdenHif 'fttrfteA*
and Atlanta, Ga. She is survived by
two sons, M. L. Bouyer and E. K.
Bouyer of Pleasant Garden route
one; and two daughters, Mrs. W.
M. Clark of Washington, D. C.,
and Mrs. Carolyn Bargeron of
Atlanta, Ga.
Funeral service was held at 11
o’clock Saturday morning froir.
Gray’s Chapel church with Rev. J.
A. Cox of Central Falls officiating.
Pallbearers were Clyde Routh, W.
L. Kirkman, Benny Lineberry,
George Wallace, T. E. Routh and
Hal Connor. Interment was in the
church cemetery.
Call For CCC Veterans
—
Robert Lloyd, county, welfare
officer, has issued a call for ap
plications to the veterans branch of
the GCC. Applications must be
made immediately, since they must
be turned in to the central bureau
in Charlotte by March 20.
of fiction have already been added.
Standard book lists have been
posted at the school and students
are to familiarize themselves with
the names of suitable volumes and
ipake solicitations either of the
books or of money to be used for
their purchase. It is hoped that a
great many additional books will
be obtained in this way.
There will be several prizes to
reward those who work the hardest.
The students are to turn over the
money and books they collect to
their home room teacher, and the
room having the greatest total will
receive a class picture. There will
be a prize for the second best room,
and the individual who makes the
best record will receive a copy of
“Gone With The Wind” or some
other desirable book.
The high school is planning to
top off the basketball season by
an inter-class tournament to be
held the first of this week. Each
class is organizing a team for the
boys and one for the girls, and the
interest is very keen. The pre
liminary rounds will be played
Monday and Tuesday afternoons
and the finals Wednesday night.
At the chapel assembly Friday
Gerald K. Ford spoke to the high
school, using as his subject
“Labels.” After describing a
variety of labels and the many
ways they might be used, Mr.
Ford applied the term to aspects
of character, telling his listeners
that they must be mindful of ac
quiring a good label or none at
all.
There was a session for the first
three grades in-each school Satur
day morning in order to make up
(.Please turn to Page S)
Mrs. J. D. Ross Is Winner For
This News Tip Theatre Tickets
Mrs. J. D. Ross was the winner
of The Courier news tip contest for
the period ending yesterday after
noon for sending in a tip on a very
unusual news story. There were
many extraordinary news items
phoned in during the time allotted
to the period and Mrs. Ross finally
was awarded the two (2) tickets
to see Jack Benny and Mary Boland
in “College Holiday’’ at the Sun
Greensboro Woman
Thwarts Robbers
Guilford Officers Hold Two In
Connection With Robbery
Early Thursday
Used Stolen Car
Mrs. Mattie Williams Scares
Off Two Men Using Clever
Stratagem
C. T. Wood of Greensboro and
P. G. Coy of Reidsville were taken
into custody Thursday afternoon by
Guilford deputies in connection
with the robbery of Mrs. Mattie
Williams at her store and filling
station near Greensboro early that
morning. Woods denied any connec
tion with the theft, as did Coy, the
owner of the automobile driven by
the robbers, which he said had been
stolen.
Two holes, apparently made by
bullets, were found in the wind
shield of the car and were first re
garded as an indication that the
robbers were fortunate to escape
With their lives from Mrs. Wil
liams’ premises. However, McCoy
|$d officers that the- windshield
nad already been shattered. The
bullets, or whatever missiles made
the holes, did not go through the
glass, having given it a glancing
blow.
The men entered the station,
flourished a pistol and ordered Mrs.
Williams to hand over her money,
she told officers. She took some
change from her pocket, amount
ing to little more than a dollar, and
gave it to them. They insisted that
she had more and commanded her
to get it right away. 'About that
time a shutter in the rear of the
building was blown shut by the
wind, and pretending that her son
was in the room, she called for
help, she said. The strategy was
successful; the robbers ran hurried
ly to their car, and Mrs. Williams
procured her pistol and followed.
She shot at them as they drove
away, she stated.
Woods said that the car had
been driven by his wife to Work
and had been left parked on the
street. He had not reported it
stolen. The keys were found in the
vehicle when it was abandoned by
the robbers.
The car had two sets of license
plates. Virginia plates for 1930
were covered with 1937 North
Carolina plates. The windshield
bore an inspection sticker issued by
the state of Virginia. Reidsville
officers said that McCoy had been
arrested a short time ago by a
highway patrolman and made to
(procure North Carolina plates. He
said he had put them over the Vir
ginia plates.
Rep. Rankin Asks
War Widows Fund
Representative John E. Rankin
of Tupelo, Miss., asked Congress
Friday to increase the compensa
tion of dependent survivors of
World War veterans who died of
service-incurred causes. The bill
would set up the following new
scale: widow, $60 a month; widow
with one child, $80, and $10 more
■for each additional child; no widow,
one-child, $40; two children, $80;
three children, $100 and for each
additional child, $10; mother or
father, $50; mother and father,
$75.
SLIGHTLY INJURED AS
HE CROSSES STREET
Bud Phillips of North Park
street while crossing Park street
at the intersection of Park street
and Sunset avenue about 8:30
Saturday morning was struck by
an automobile driven by a colored
man and owned by J. T. Tyree of
Rocky Mount. The accident was
said to be unavoidable. Mr. Tyree
was said to have stopped the car
and rendered all possible as
sistance to Phillips carrying hi^ to
Dr, Tiffany Barnes office for an
examination where it *as found
that his injuries were not serious, j
set, Monday and Tuesday, after
much consideration.
The new period begins Monday
morning at 8 o’clock and continues
until Tuesday afternoon at 1:30.
The winner will receive two (2)
tickets to attend “A Calvacade of
Stars” on the stage and “They Met
in a Taxi” on the screen at the
Carolina, Wednesday or the screen
version of “Folies Bergere” at the
same theatre Thursday.
Pipe Line Ready
For Pumping Now
—
New 12 Inch Line From City
Ponds To Reservoir Com
pleted On Friday
City Board Meets
Water Works Crew Has
Worked Hard To Put Pro
ject Through
The new 12 inch pipe line frpm
the city ponds to the reservoir
within the city limits was complet
ed Friday morning and everything?
is in readiness to pump water
through them. The new line will be
put in use some day this week,
Walter Yow said Friday, and the
city of Asheboro is now assured of
a plentiful water supply.
The waterworks crew has worked
hard and faithfully on this project
and feels proud of its accomplish*
ment. The work was begun back
the fall but was held up by thfe
heavy rains, and the force seized
every fair day to rush the jok
through.”.
With , ' the return of pHWftgl
Weather -the Street force is baelpj[
the job and is putting forth every*
effort to get the streets in good
shape after the snow.
The city commissioners held their
regular monthly meeting Thursday
evening, but nothing out of the
ordinary came up. The usual bills
were paid, after which a discussion
of future plans ensued.
Gerald K. Ford
Speaks At School
Gerald K. Ford, director of young
people’s work in the First M. E.
church, addressed the Asheboro
high school assembly Friday morn
ing on the subject of “Labels.”
After a few words of introduc
tion by Bernard Henley, of the
sophomore class, Mr. Ford asked
the assembly to sing “S-m-i-lee”
with him. He then read the story
of Cain and Abel from Genesis and
called especial attention to this
verse: “and the Lord set a mark an
Cain.”
The speaker called attention to
many kinds of labels—for instance,
in the drug store. “And so it is with
life,” he said. “We find that each
one of us has a mark upon him.
Who makes that mark?”
“The marks of dishonesty,
cowardice, grouchiness, and lack
of ambition were declared to be
dangerous. Honesty, unselfish am
bition, cheerfulness, and initia
tive,” he said, “were marks of
worth.” continuing, Mr. Ford dis
cussed the close relation between
lying, cheating, and stealing. “I
don’t know of any place a liar can
live and be a success.” said the
speaker. “Who is it that is making
the label?” was asked. “You, your
self, you cheat, and someone is
going to cheat you.”
“Let us be careful how we make
our lives,” said Mr. Ford. “Honesty
is said to be the cornerstone of
character.” He closed by a re
ference to the mark of the
Christian, quoting, “The followers
of Christ were first called Christ
ians at Antioch.” In closing, the
speaker said, “I wonder how many
of us could go out on the streets
and have it said of us, ‘There goes
a Christian.’ ”
N. C. Editors Plan
Cruise To Bermuda
The executive committee of the
North Carolina press association^
meeting at Durham recently, de
cided upon a cruise to Bermuda for
the annual mid-summer meet. The
1937 convention would have met
either in the mountains or the
seashore—alternating each summer
with the midwinter session held at
Chapel Hill and Duke University
jointly. C. C. Council, president of
the N. C. Press Association, stated
that the members will sail Jor|
Bermuda on June 19th and return ,
on June 24. It is thought that j
there will be about 160 in thsj
party.
Girl’s Chloroform
Death His Nemesis
Self-possessed in spite of the
predicament in which he found
himself, Dr. Richard G. Miller
(above) smokes a cigar and puts on
his coat after allegedly confessing
that Cleo Sprouse, Charlottesville,
Va., high school student, died while
he attempted to perform an illegal
operation “as a favor to her.”
Publisher Airs
Disputes Of Com.
Governor Hoey revealed Friday
.that J. L Horne, Jr., Hocky Mount
publisher who gave Federal-State
rural electrification disputes an
legislative com
"nesday, had
ation as a
rural electri
fication authority.
The Governor said he had re
ceived the resignation on February
8 and that Home’s action was
prompted by a ruling of the At
torney General that no person
might serve on two boards, unless
one was a charitable agency.
“The resignation has no relation
to the present electrification con
troversy,” Hoey added.
Commissioner of Agriculture W.
Kerr Scott also has asked to be re
lieved of his duties as a member
of the State REA, on the ground
that he was ineligible to hold both
offices.
Horne is a member both of the
state board of conservation and de
velopment and the REA. He offer
ed to quit either post, and the Gov
ernor asked him to remain with the
conservation board, where he has
-pu averts 3uido[OAap ui oajidu uaaq
vertising plans, Hoey said.
The Governor stated he would
not accept the resignations until
the General Assembly adjourns,
when he will appoint successors to
the two men. i
Addison Hussey
Rites Saturday
Funeral rites for Addison Hus
sey, 69, who died at 7:15 o’clock
Friday morning at his home in
Moore county, near Hemp, were
held at Smyrna Methodist church
at 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon by
Rev. C. M. Oates, pastor of Pomona
Baptist church.
Mr. Hussey, who was the father
of T. H. Hussey and brother of
Mrs. P. T. Moore, both of Greens
boro, is survived, in addition, by
his wife, the former Miss Julia
Ann Garner; two daughters, Mrs.
Martha Garner, of Moore county,
and Mrs. Ella Ornsby, of Rocking
ham; five sons, C. H. Hussey, of
Asheboro; B. I. Hussey, of South
ern Pines, and J. B., D. E. and
F. E. Hussey, all of Moore county,
and two sisters, Mrs. Bessie Garn
er and Mrs. S. H. Davis, both of
Moore county.
Mrs. Roosevelt Is
Invited To Speak
The South Carolina house of re
presentatives adopted a resolution
on Friday to invite Mrs. Franklin
D. Roosevelt to address it on her
Southern tour on March 26, or at
a date more convenient to her.
Sponsored by Representatives
Long of Union and Smith of Barn
well, the measure, which was sent
to the senate for concurrence, set
forth that the President’s wife “has
made a diligent study of public af
fairs and social conditions, and. . .
by her life, interest and conduct!
she has shown a keen interest in
the affairs of the South.”
Clerics of the two Houses would
be instructed to forward the invita
tion to Mrs. Roosevelt.
President Starts
Court Attack At
Victory Dinner, 4
Advisors Disagreed As To
Whether Or Not President
Would Mention Court
Need Action Now
Asserts Definitely That He
Does Not Intend To Run
For A Third Term
At the most popular of the
many Victory Dinners, President
Roosevelt spoke creating interest
from coast to coast. This dinner
was held in Washington at the
Mayflower Hotel on Thursday even-'
ing with cover costs $100 per plate.
President Roosevelt was the prin
cipal speaker, although James
Farley and several other well
known political figures were also
on hand and made short speeches.
For several days before the
dinner, it was a matter of con
jecture over the nation as to
whether or not the President
would mention the Supreme Court
in his speech—and he did. The
President swung into the very
center of the fight, which has been
imminent for some time, charging
that the tribunal’s majority had
condemned the nation to be “a no
man’s land of final futility.” On
the grounds that the justices ’stand
on many matters of vital im
portance is rendering congress im
potent to attack social and econo
mic ills, he called for action
“now.” This word “now” closed
many a sentence and phrase.
Mr. Roosevelt recited the New
Deal’s effort to deal with the farm;
problem by the Agricultural Ad
justment administration, and of the
effort to improve labor conditions
through the NR A. After each ref
erence he asserted:
“You know who assumed the
power of veto, and did veto that
program.”
Again and again he emphasized
in short, emphatic sentences that
the conditions which his adminis
trations seeks to correct by legis
lation are conditions that exist
“now.”
“If we would keep faith with
those who had faith in us, if wa
would make democracy succeed, say
we must act—now.”
“After election day in 1936,” he
said, “some of our supporters were
uneasy lest we grasp the excuse of
a false era of geed feeling to evade
our obligations. They were worried
by the evil symptom that the pro
paganda and the epithets of last
summer and fall had died down.
“Today, however, those who
placed their confidence in us are
reassured. For the tumult and the
shouting have broken forth anew—
and from substantially the same
elements of opposition.
“This new roar is the best evi
dence in the world that we have
begun to move against conditions
under which one-third of this na
tion is still ill-nourished, ill-clad,
ill-housed.
“We gave warning last Novem
ber that we had only begun to
fight. Did some people really be
lieve we did not mean it? Well--I
meant it, and you meant it.”
Early in the speech, the speaker
made it perfectly clear that he has
no intention of running for a third
term, as has been a general rumor
over the nation.
Dr, Ralph McDonald
Now In Sanatorium
Coming as a shock to his many
friends throughout the state was
the news that Dr. Ralph McDonald
will have to spend six months rest
ing in a tubercular sanatorium.
Dr. McDonald, who amazed the
people of North Carolina with his
unusually large vote in the last
primary, has recently suffered an
attack of flu. It is thought that his
strenuous campaign during which
time he made often as many as
six speeches a day, is partly re
sponsible for his lack of strength
at this time.
Dr. McDonald entered the
Forsyth county tubercular hospital
Friday for a six month’s rest
possibLy longer.
FURNITURE ORDER FOR
MERCHANTS ASSO. OFFICE
The board of directors of the
Asheboro Merchants Association
met Tuesday and authorized the
purchase of a quantity of office
furniture which had been inspected
and recommended by Tagg Cox,
secretary. All supplies and furni
ture for the association’s office are
now here or have been ordered and
will be set up soon. While arrange
ments for opening the office are
being made, the drive for mem
bers is continuing.
Subscriptions Sold Last
Few Days Oi Campaign
To Decide $600 Winner
Blazing Car Sets
Woodland On Fire
A fire which burned over a
considerable stretch of woodland
before it could be put under con
trol Friday afternoon was caus
ed by a blazing car, which had
been stripped and abandoned
about two miles below Gray’s
Chapel before being set on fire.
Sheriff C. E. King is conducting
an investigation to identify the
car, find the owner, and disco\er
why it was left at that place
and burned.
A group of colored boys from
the Randolph CCC camp fought
the fire the entire afternoon and
by their hard work prevented
considerable more damage to
the surrounding property than
was the result of this fire.
Building, Moving
At Franklinville
M. F. Cheek Completes Mod
ern Home On His Farm;
New Families Move
C. F. Moon Dies
J. A. Wallace Attends Funeral
Of Father In Virginia;
Other News Items
Franklinville, M^rch 6.—Clarence
Yojk, who has held a position in
the FmnfciftivflTe Difug store for
the past few years, left this week
for Mebane where he has accepted
a position with the Carolina Drug j
company.
M. F. Cheek has completed a
dwelling house on his farm, south
of Franklinville and Oscar Henson
has moved from his grandfathers’
farm to this building. Jasper All
red of Central Falls has moved
into the house vacated by Mr. Hen
son. J. A. Ellison has moved from
the Curtis farm into the home of
George Evans.
Mrs. M. G. Godfrew of Pomona;
spent Tuesday here with her hus- j
band.
Parris Spoon left Thursday j
evening for Hollywood, California.;
Clate T. Moon, 44, of Revolu-1
tion, Greensboro, died Wednesday!
morning in Clinic hospital, of I
paralysis. He was a veteran of the j
World War, having served .13
(Please turn to Page 8) ^
Valuable Old Newspapers Are
Found In County Court House
* *
Four old newspapers, three of
which will be 100 years old this
year, are the most recent of the
many valuable old documents which
have come to light recently in the
court house. These papers are
copies of the Southern Citizen,
dated December 16-23-30, 1837, and
December 13, 1843.
This newspaper, which was pos
sibly the first published in Ashe
boro, was edited by Benjamin
Swairn, a lawyer and leading
citizen of the county. He was well
known as a man of learning and
wrote several treatises on the
laws of North Carolina. He lived
in the town of New Salem at the
time when that community was the
foremost in the county, and was a
member of the Society of Friends.
The papers were found in a
bundle of wills, inventories, sales,
etc., dated 1837-1838, and had been
placed there for the purpose of
showing certain legal requirements
for sales and legal notices had been
complied with.
These issues are a storage house
of information regarding old re
sidents and customs of the coun
ty. Coffin & Clark, merchants of
New Salem, have just received a
shipment of fall and winter goods
which they are inviting the public
to try. They also want to get their
accounts settled as they are wind
ing up their first year in business,
and they remind their customers
of the fact still heard today, “short
settlements , make long friends.”
Blum’s Ahnanac, still a favorite,
is advertised in the earliest of the
papers. M. A. Hamlin inserts an
advertisement for a runaway
slave, “a rather drowsy looking
molatto woman.”
The editor, who seems a man of
determined views, lashes Congress
for wasting its time spending the
public money at the call of every
“sycophant who has hurried to
Washington”, when the country is
in need of a stable currency. His
biting editorial accuses the con
gressmen of neglecting their duty
(Please turn to Page 3)
nts or ex
»d for the
votes that
ALL WORKERS
EXTENSION NOTICE
All extension subscriptions on
hand must be turned in by
Saturday March 13th by eight
o’clock p. m. This is the latest
date of the campaign depart
ment can accept extensions that
have been originally sold by
another worker. THIS RULE
has no effect on extensions of
which were originallv
the same candidate.
SIONS sold on your
ness are good up to
campaign provided
checked from your records and
properly marked when turned
in to campaign department.
Other second payments
tensions will be go~J
regular schedule of
is in effect this last period.
This applies to all candidates
and those of you who are ex
pecting extension subscriptions
on other candidates. Collect
them up now and turn them in
by Saturday night—Remember
an extension subscription car
ries a far greater number of
votes where the original was
turned in during first of
p»>gn ' $Mam
Campaign
..—..
Great Excitement
Increasing Daily
All Workers Must Make Cash
Report During Last Period
In Order To Qualify
No Checks Accepted
During Last Period
Workers Warned To Lose No
Time Nor Or Be Prepared
To Take Smaller Awards
Only seven more short working
days and The Courier’s far-famed
and widely advertised “Cash-Offer’'
Campaign will come to a close.
Asheboro and surrounding ter*
ritory is waiting, wondering and
hustling for the favorite members.
The city section is seething with
hustle and expectancy; the towns
outside are of one accord, deter*
mined to help their favorites fight
valiantly. Excitement is keyed to
the highest pitch.
Riding on the wave of this wond
erful demonstration of enthusiasm
are the ambitious prize aspirants.
From every point of the compass
they are making vigorous efforts
to capture the magnificent prizes.
Two very large cash awards will be
awarded, together with numerous
other awards and a supply of cash
with which to pay commissions.
From every section the workers
are gathering the storm of votes
that will be showered upon the
campaign department in the clos
ing hour.
Rich. Prizes '
" Nevfer'T>ef6re was such amrgif*!
and valuable array of gifts present
ed by a newspaper in this section.
Never was such a tremendous bat
tle waged to win them.
Present indications point to a
close finish, and it appears certain
that the close margin by which
the prizes will be won will occasion
the great surprise. No member
can appear certain of victory and
there is abundant speculation as to
the outcome. The last week will
decide. The race is too close among
too many to bank on any possibili
ties; and again there are too many
people interested in each member
to assure anyone of an easy vic
tory. Relaxation at this time is
suicidal to success. Determination
to win coupled with relentlessness
in gathering votes will go a long
way in deciding the winner.
Judges To Be Announced
The names of the judges who
(Please turn to Page 8)