r ^ "1 4 Members 0hr Council ^ *• Run Again f o r m a I Announce ment Made for City :a .-on or May 7 by One Councilman in lav h Ward Whose Term h Expiring. v m'HM s of the v.' nril whoso of ..".o t:icd today lor os I'rum each of ward. T. H. Crab i. M. W. Wester: v. Kll>: fourth ward. .:>••• aity year, and I' >v ell continues - - -ond two-vear chief executive. - of the Council o-electlon this <•••* .>•! will be held on to-t:Mral;on bonks • :i next Friday tor , nci ;d:nsi Sunday. - been ordered vie candidates will :!ct not be said to v.in>. a candidate ■ r at any time, even •• i>! vat {is*, it he ■w have, however. | T>SoB" ttttt April 17 to 20 WED. • THUR. • FRk • SAT. Parkers Urns Store been no indications of contests in anv ot theese wards this year. Local G. 0. P. At Meeting Five Vance county Republicans at i tended the congressional district con ' vent ion in Raleigh last Saturday, when H. E. White, of this county, was eleeted district secretary along with Clyde L. Stancil. of Smithfield. as district chairman. W. H. Finch, of \"ance. was named i»n the State exe cutive committee, and Mr. White on the congressional executive commit tee. Vance county Republicans attend ing the convention were Mr. White and Mr. Finch, and J. W. Coghill. J. F. Coghill and John F. Hicks. The convention named district delegates to the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia as Mr. Stancil and W. L. Ward, of Asheboro, with T>. L. Spence, of Chatham, and Willis Briggs. of Raleigh, a?- alter nates. Cooper Here | Tomorrow Mayor Tom Cooper of Wilming-| ton. candidate lor the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, is expect-1 ed to arrive in Henderson tomorrow j afternoon in his big red. white and' blue sound truck, bringing his cam-! paign to Vance county, it was an-j nuisnced today from Cooper's Wil mington headquarters. Cooper, it was stated, will come here sometime during the afternoon; Tuesday, alter speaking during the! morning at Kocky Mount. Nashville., LMiisburg and Warren ton. After speaking from his sound' truck here. Cooper will proceed to j Oxford and Roxboro. He will speak | tonight in Wilson at a meeting of the! Junior Chamber of Commerce. SPEECH CONTESTS ARE FRIDAY NIGHT Intermural contests in declama tion and recitation, sponsored by the Junior Dramatics club of Henderson ! high school, will be held Thursday . night at 7:30 o'clock in the high school auditorium, it was announced today by W. D. Payne, high school principal. The complete program for the contests. Mr. Payne said, will be announced later. Representatives of Wake Forest i college will judge the events. Glee Club To i State Contests The girl;-' glee elub of Henderson J high school will go to Greensboro i on Friday to compete in the state music contests at Woman's College of the University of North Caro lina. The glee club recently quali fied for the state finals, in district contests held in Raleigh. The girls' glee club is the only musical organization which will represent the local high school in the state contest. AROUND TOWN Kotary to Meet—The weekly meet ing ot I he Kotary Club will be held Tuesda> evening at 7 o'clock at the Vance Hotel. Pays Trillin- Fine—N. U. Wilkcr son |>:iirl 81 into the office of the city clerk as a traffic fine, records there revealed today. Severn! Lots Conveyed—T. P. Cholson. et al. sold Mamie Inscoo several lots on Booth street for $1(1 and considerations, according to a realty deed I iled with the Vance registry office Saturday. Clinic—The monthly clinic for crippled children, sponsored by the Vance county health department, will l>e held Wednesday at Central school. Dr. W. F. Cole of Greens boro will conduct the clin:c as usual. Home Demonstration Meeting The district home demonstration I meeting for district No. 14. origin- j ally scheduled for April 19 at Jack son. lias been changed to May 17, to] be held in .Jackson. All home dem onstration club women are asked to ! note the change. Norwegians Prepare To Attack Nazis (Continued From Taae One) troops in Narvik again. Thcv said that there had not been any heavy British bombardment be fore landing forces were sent ashore but that Narvik's biggest building, a hotel, had been destroyed. In southeastern Norway sporadic fighting between Germany and Nor wegian forces brought the invading Nazis nearer the Swedish border. The Norwegians, meanwhile, were urged to greater efforts by their ag ing sovereign. King Haakon VII, who last night broadcast an appeal to his people to fight for "freedom and in dependence." Swallows Rivet Richard Harmon, 9-months-young, who thought a rivet was something pood to eat, is shown in St. Joseph's Hospital, Baltimore, Md., after the rivet was removed l'rom his esopha gus in a three-minute operation. Richard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Harmon, of Baltimore. Hitler's Latest Move May Not Be Pleasing to Stalin ''Continued From rage One) Hitler can yet around to attending to the Green landers, but that time's forseen. IIow About Stalin? What Washington diplomacy would like to know is: What does Russia think about Germany's push to its northward? In the last World War the Rus sians' ambition was to scoop in the northern end ol' the Norwegian Swedish peninsula, with an Atlantic outlet by way of the now much-ad vertised port of Narvik, Norway. This time, when the Soviets hop ped on Finland, it generally was taken for granted that their purpose was realization of the original scheme to get to the western ocean as per Petersburg's earTre. rrustrated am bition. It wasn't questioned that hav ing disposed of the Finns, the Com munists' next step would be to seize the whole Arctic-Atlantic coast down to Narvik at least—maybe farther. Today Comrade Stalin has been forestalled by Hen* Hitler. The best guessing in neutral cir cles is that this must make Comrade Stalin extremely sore. He probably doesn't particularly care about Den mark. Copenhagen is a mere incon venient side door into the Baltic. Even if the Germans and the Rus sians succeed, between them in OWN THE SMARTEST CAR in the low-price field You've never seen such stunning lines—such richness—in a car that costs so little. Behind Ford's dy namic V-8 engine is a smart and luxurious body—smoothly stream lined, no unpleasant bulges. Amazingly roomy, beautifully tailored, it's interior is strikingly different. Look at its handsome,, finely-tooled instrument panel, the new two-spoke steering wheel, the new finger-tip gearshift lever. Go to your nearest Ford dealer, look at all 22 new features. You'll see why Ford's the buy for '40. F0RD-40 tfave Me cvtfif /Ow'/mced aw Clements Mo tor Company -o- Henderson, N. C< r none 437 managing to °et possession of the latchkey, Germany may get a spell jot anti-Russianism and lock the, door ■ against the Muscovites. Whichever une gets possession of a port like Narvik or Bergen or else , where on the Atlantic coast, will have access to the whole outdoors. It's a lair surmise that they're jealous of one another. Italy Versus Russia Newspaper quotations respectively from Rome and Moscow and diplo matic reports from our Italian and Russian embassies indicate to Wash ington that II Duce Mussolini is quite well satisfied with Herr Hitler's Scandinavian campaign, but that j Comrade Stalin seems pretty glum. TK.,t j II Duce's realm is too far removed from tlic North Sea, the Baltic and : the Scandinavian Atlantic to concern him. What frets him is the prospect at Gibralar. Suez and in Balkan j waters. He doesn't care a hoot for the northern Atlantic outlet. Correspond ingly. Comrade Stalin's headache i isn't with Italy's Mediterranean. He has his responsibilities to the south eastward. but he can take care of them by land. Herr Hitler \r right in trie middle. It keeps him guessing. Wife Preservers I ■- 1tv n 1, * III ■ I NUIIH ^ ■" ' Keep a large paper sack in the kitchen wastebasket. When full it is easily lifted out, ready for disposal, and no small bits are scattered about. In addition, the in side of the basket is kept clean. 91 Seniors Are Seeking Diplomas At High Schcul j Ninety-one members of the Senior class of Henderson high school are candidates for diplomas at the com mencement exercises to be held May 30, it was announced today by W. L). Payne, principal of the high school. The list was compiled following scholastic reports issued last week. Members of the graduating class, according to this list, include: Mary Wilbuth Allen. Doris Pcrlv mon Andrew. Betty Paul Arml'ield, Ora Exell Askew. Beatrice Virginia Ayscue. Harriet Louise Ayscuc. Scot tie Marie Ayscue. John Wayles Bailey, Jessie Hayes Baity, E\'elyn Kline Baker, Mamie Lee Bridget's. Willie Furnian Cash. Mary Adeline Catlette. Arthur Alexander C'handa. Alston Hayes Cheek. Jr., Mildred Jeanette PI 1- T7» "» " "" v-iwiuuuicc ivicta11it* Vw luyion, i4 run cis Hunt Cooper. Mary Louisa Jack son Cooper. Paul Norman Daeke. John Hoyle Davis, Tom Jack Davis. Ellen Andrew Diamanduros. Dalton James Dixon, Hunter Hart Dunn. Bessie Pauline Dworsky, Molly Bugg Ellis, George Peoples Eppes, Joseph Stradely Evans, Jr., Mary Gene Falkner, Clyde Lovelace Finch. Jr., William Lawrence Finch. Annie Dell Floyd. Olive Joyce Forsythe. Melvin Sterling Fowler, Jr.. Mary Frances Glover. Elizabeth Marie! Gupton. Lottie Mae Hale. Dorothy Cameron Harrison, Kathleen Callis Harte. Emma Lee Hawkins, Marina Ann Hawkins, Estelle Adeline Hester. Gerald Hinnard Hooks, Edward Lyndon Houghtaling. Mary Frances Houglltaliiig, Jesse Howard Hul l man. Mary Allelic Huffman, Hazel lJean | Hushes. Ernest Cleveland Hunt, Jr., 1 Marshall Thomas J ess up. Jr., Altoij j Mitchner Johnson. Evelyn Mae Johnson. Kenneth 1 Donald Johnson. Mildred Roberta,. : Johnson. Robert Ligon Johnson, Harry Le Rov Keller. Jr., Dorothy i Ann King. Charlotte Lee Knight, j Virginia Louise Lassiter. Althea Maxine Lewis. Dorothy Charlotte May. Clifton Edwards Mills. Ralph Murray. Helen Virginia Mustian, William Keal, Dorothy Elizabeth Newton, Paul Ellwood Nowell. Curtis Ed ward Owens. PrNcilla Anne Parham, Mary Elizabeth I'arrott, Barbara Wood Patterson. Henry Leo Part in, Ruby Nedra Peek, Glenn Worth Pow ers. Mary Gladys Reams, Clyde Carl Register. Jr.. Marjorie Breed love Royster. John Wesley San ders. Jr., Mary Charles Smith, Stan ley Ariliur Teiser. Russell Turner, Edward Ashlon Warwick, Rosalie Sadler Watson, Lucille Chandler White, Mildrew Louise Whitley, Mil dred Ruth Whitniore. Arthur Clay ton Wiggins, Jr.. Mary Virginia Windley, and Stamo Dennis Za pant is. Officers of the class are Jack San . r». c president: .Jessie Baity, secretary, and Dorothy Harrison, treasurer. Faculty sponsors are S. M. Crowder, Miss Mary Ramseur and Miss Mary Mar garet Richardson. Mascots are Martha .lane Newcomb and II. M. Robinson, Jr. Whenever Mussolini shouts that Italy must have more land we don't know whether it's geography or just plain jaw-graphy. AMERICA'S BUSIEST CIGARETTE Chesterfield goes to bat with the Definitely Milder Cooler-Smoking Better- Tasting . . . these are the three good qualities that every smoker wants and every smoker gets in Chesterfield.That's because Chesterfields are made of the world's best tobaccos, blended in the right combination. You can't buy a better cigarette. "The Yankees," soys JOE McCARTHY, "win cham pionships because they're good in the box, at bat and in the field". . . CHESTERFIELDS win more smokers every day because they're fops for cooler smoking, belter taste and real mildness. 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