PNEUMAEIL CORPORATION 2516 Wilkinson Bird. CHARLOTTE, N. C. HOME OF THE KILOWATTMAKER PLOO- WALL IN THE PAST 20 YEARS ALONE,THE ELECT MIL INDUSTRY HAS MORE THAN DOUBLED ITS GENERATING CAPACITY, TO KEEP AMERICA FAR AHEAD OF ALL OTHER COUNTRIES IN WAR AND IN PEACE. The Butcher, the- Bcker, ond obout every other producer in the Piedmont CoroHnos ere colling on the K;lowottmoker for more power thon they ever used before. A ■ Kilowotts ore row moteriol thot they quickly turn into profit ond progress. This row material is delivered on coll in the exact amount called for, ond its cost it low. . • _ ‘ * « • To meet this rapid increase in demohd, the Duke Power Company has opened two new units ond is providing other strategically located steom electr'c plants. With the opening of the lost of these, the capacity of the Duke System will be SEVENTY PER CENT GREATER THAN OUR TOTAL KILOWATT OUT PUT ONLY FIVE YEARS AGO. DURE POWER COMPANY ^^divtru^ j^iidnunit/ (Jaudincu. I By GEORGE LILLEY DON QUINN, • jolly. Ave-foot nmo 200-pounder, co-created and haa been top writer the last I5 year* of the Fibber McGee and Molly radio show. A while back he sat down, on a kind of post Don Quinn mans r.onaay, and knocked out another comedy script. This one. "The Halls of Ivy" (Friday nites, NBC), starring Ronald Colman as a staid col lege president, and his wife, Benita, as pert ... no gag fileejt . mulicai comedy star. may. in ita subtle situation humor, be as great as his first. Quinn started out to be a cartoonist but he. quickly got an idea where he was going when editots kept his gags and rejected his cartoons He is today prob ably radio No. 1 man in situation and characterization comedy. An other point of note: Quinn keeps no gag file! CAVALCADE'S MAN Raymond Massey: distinguished actor. "To English theater goers he is American, it is said. To Americans he is British. Actually Raymond Massey is Canadian born (Toronto. 1896), of Canadian unit r ana American moth er. the latter whrose fore bears fought in the Amer ica n Revolu tion. Massey has been an American citi zen since 1*44. One of his proudest p o s - Raymond Massay gold medal -•**""*" awarded him by the Woman'* Na tional Radio Committee for par ticipation in radio programs fur thering democracy. He has appetr ed on “Cavalcade of America,” one of his favorite programs, seven times. Next appearance on this popular Tuesday night NEC show- early February. RAILROAD TIME i The Railroad Hour,” Monday nights, NBC, now in its second! season, has turned out to be one I of the truly pleasant musical pro grams. Typical of its bright* lilt ing fare the broadcast of January Dorothy Kirsten . . . mr freot U, wun metro politan Opera's blonde Dorothy Kirsten in "The | Merry Widow," charming oper etta that made Frans L e h a r world - famous when it was first produced' in .Vienna. Young <2i) versatile Gor don M a c R a e. who appe ar* equally at home sing ing, acting or as the program’s master of ceremonies, snares the show's acclaim. MacRae, with ’The Railroad Hour” since its be ginning, has climbed fast, recent ly was named in an editors’ poll "most promising star of to morrow.” AMONG THE PEOPLE Dominick Felix Ameche—Four i colleges can claim credit for Don: Columbia College (Dubuque, la.), Marquette, Georgetown, Wiscon sin. He wanted to be a lawyer, turned out a top poker player and possioiy moil popular of radio emcee*. He i* considered a n authority 6 n comedians, hav i n k appeared with most of the best. Great est line in radio, Don told a re cent Fn. nite NBC "We the ’ D*n AiMtkc «opit radio- rn... TV audience. * * * we* *"*** was uttered by W. C. Fields back in ’36. It was on the Edgar Ber gen show, which Don worked— that famed Fields' rebuke to Fharlie McCarthy: “Shut up or 11 slash you into a Venetian blind!” The audience howled 10 minutes. It was the Arst of a joke variation still standard on thst program. N. ' - ... / • ,b • * • BUSINESS MAY GET THE POINT! (Continued From Png# 1) 500,000, admittedly. (Actually un employment may be higher because of part-time employment.) No talk * ”$5255041 Tin— W C—k. HI pm ■— wrtu. win. n— % Wm Ofttetog Parfcor-Sardner Co. - > * * Gaston County Dyeing Machine Company Stanley, N. C. J ( J. A.. ones (instruction Company 4 General Contractors 209 West Fourth St. Telephone 4*3061 Charlotte, North Carolina ■ • % ■ ti » f Green to Green ■ Washington.*— AFL President William Green (left) pins dower an Leonard Grass (no relation), assistant general secretary Na tienal Union of Operative Heating, Domestic, Ventilating Engineers snd General Metal Workers of Great Britain daring latter’s reeent visit to Washington. -:-- i about bureaucracy, higher taxes, socialism, the welfare state — the varied cliches of the NAM closed system. Business Week concedes things ahead look tough and im plies that pump priming may be in order to make business ex pand. PRESIDENT HAILS AFL UNION SHOW (Continued Prom Page 1) bition in Philadslphia. I am sure that the thousands who will visit the show will find in it a good ob ject lesson in democracy, and tang~ ible evidence of the economic pro gress that is fostered in our free enterprise system.** I Pedestrian Protection I Darkness Increases Hatarda | "• I PEDESTRIAN HEAD LIGHTS AND TAIL LIGHTS MAY BE EX TREME, but so are the haz ards to pedestrians at night. Three-fourths of all pedestrian fatalities occur during the hours of dark ness. Few drivers have sec ond sight so, when walking at night, Wear' or carry something white—You may live longer! . , —AAA Safety Features n | ■ i 1 , \ ‘ ■ 0 Letter-Press V Letter press printing in !4he graphic arts means the direct application of inked type and engravings or other type material to paper. It is the simplest of all graphic methods of reproduction and at the same time the most lasting. It was the method employed by the medieval craftsmen who first ap plied type to paper and it has persisted throughout the centuries over all innova tions, until today, when the best of crafts manship is sought in a job, there is no al ternative to letter press printing, along with high grade paper and typographic good taste. We suggest that if you have some print ing in view that you want well done, you consult us. Simply telephone 5-1778 or — • . else call at the office, 118 East Sixth St.,. Charlotte, N. C. H* A. Stalls Printing Co* PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE AT Y ©*U R DISPOSAL P.O. Box 1061 CBARLOTTR, N. CL . Incorporated i • * ■ ■ . ^_____ \. . . i_—« -7‘- . ' . Insured Petroleum Transporters % * \ . • ’ ; - -1 « ». -“!• » 1 Home Office: GASTONIA, NORTH CAROUNA Phone 145 • . ' ‘ . • ir ‘ i / ‘ ■ . •r 1 ' * i • ' " ' SPARTANBURG TE CAMP CROFT, S. C. > — THRIFT TERMINAL i ' * , thrift, n. c.