AT THE MOVIES __IN CHERRYVILLE LESTER Thurs.-Fri.—Jack Carson and Jane Wyman in the Comedy—“Make Your Own Bed” ONE DAY only—Sat. at The LESTER—Action Thrills in “The Last Ride”—Richard Travis, Eleanor Parker STARTS L- S- Sun. Nite “White Cliffs of Dover’ With Irene Dunne, Alan Marshal Alan Marshal and Irene Dunne in a tender scene from "The White Cliffs * of Dover," inspiring story based on Alice Ducr Miller’s famous poem. WOOD TAKES TRUCKS & PARTS TO AFRICA m * 1 mm fc (Official Signal Corpi Photograph) American soldiers uncrating truck parfi, Casablanca, French Morocco. Your trees will furrprS lumber to crele material like this. r nd <- -• ' BUY MORE WAR BONDS AND STAMPS T FLICHT LOVE H ARLES SPALDI OTIS CARNEY % CHAPTER III Barred from the Navy’s V-7 program because he lacked two years of college math, Lester Dowd tries to enlist in the Coast Guard but is turned down be cause of a “facial squint. Ihe doctor refuses even to examine him. Commander Whitman, an old firend of the family, endeav ors to get a waiver for Lester so he can join V-7, but after weeks of waiting Lester learns they still insist on two years of college math. He is successful in joining the V-5 Naval Aviation and is sent to Anacostia Naval Base. The instructions went on in the same chilly vein to explain the arrangement of articles about the washbasin. “Towels will be stowed in lock er. Washcloth will be hung on gooseneck.” The gooseneck, reflection made it plain, was the nub of things. I didn’t know what the gooseneck was. There had been up to this moment no reason for traffic with goosenecks. If basins wanted to go around in goosenecks it was perfectly all right with me. They could wear slacks if they wanted. I approached the mate of the deck on the subject. After almost choking to death on a lump of bubble gum the size of a tennis ball, he arose un steadily from his seat, still suffer ing from shock, took my hand and led me ceremoniously to the “This is the hot water.” “This is the hot water,” I re peated as if reciting after nurse, Chapter One in the Big Animal Book. “This is the stopper.” “This is the stopper.” Then leaning over he pointed underneath at an iron intestine. “And that’s the God-damned gooseneck!” he shouted. Once things were on a friendly footing with the plumbing, 1 turned to the stowing of belong ings in the bureau and then wait ed for inspection. Except that my khaki shirts were cozily snuggled next to my black socks in the sec ond drawer, instead of under my shorts in the third drawer, all was well until a fine interpretation of the rules turned success into dis aster. The boudoir booklet stated in its intimate way: “Toilet ar ticles shall be stowed in the top drawer. Bottom drawer shall be reserved for miscellaneous.” My equipmen was well housed in a shaving kit, which I placed without much thought in the top During- inspection Ensign Fitch browsed around the bureau. Op ening the top drawer he came across the shaving kit. "My God," he screamed, “What’s this doing here?’' “I have my shaving things in it sir, and the rules—” “I don’t care if you have a skull in it!’’ he bellowed. “All kits are regarded as miscellaneous in the Navy and so stored in the bottom drawer. This is a final warning." The next day Lieutenant Sands U. S. M. S. had the inspection. Coming to my bottom drawer he stepped away as if he had found his wife at the Astor. “My God!’’ he shrieked. “What is this shaving kit doing in the bottom drawer?” “A kit is a kit sir, and the rules state—’’ “I don’t care. It has shaving things in it and as such should be stowed in the top drawer. This is your final warning." Semper fidelis! The only way I kept myself out of trouble was by answering. “Well, Ensign Fitch says . . ." or, “But Lieutenant Sands says." The showdown came when the men arrived together for Satur day’s grand inspection. The kit was in the first drawer. “My God!” shrieked Fitch “Again.” “I told him to put it there,” said the lieutenant. “You did, Mr. Sands?” Mr. Fitch was incredulous. “After all your training.” “A study of Rule 13, sub-head 2, will disclose that shaving equipment properly goes in the first drawer,” said the Marine ac idly. I winced. The loser would cer tainly salve his wounded pride at my expense. “So it does.” Fitch was jocular. Great fighters, the Marines. Al ways gave a good account of them selves. Unquestionably, well dis ciplined, but you couldn’t expect Navy insight or finesse from such men.“A kit, old man, is a kit,” he kindly declaimed. “If you put your hands in your shoes that doesn’t make them gloves, does it He drove the point home with this mental nail. "The kit goes in the bottom drawer," he said imperi ously. “And if you fill a potato sack with apples you still sell them ov er the apple counter.” The Halls of Montezuma rang with the challenge. “The kit goes in the first drawer,” said Sands, folding his arms and looking toward Trip oli. Ensign Fitch was shaken by the last charge. “Do you really think it goes in the first drawer*’ he asked, ad mitting the need of discussion. “I’m not sure at all,” said the lieutenant, giving a little ground himself. “It’s the most ticklish is sue I’ve had to face in the ser vice." “Couldn’t the Skipper handle this? Captain’s mast or some such —the Ensign grasped for straws. “What do you think, Dowd?” asked Fitch, remembering that an occasional gleam of intelligence shone in the ranks. “It seems to me, sir,” I said straining every muscle to stay off the report, “that it is neither besh nor fowl and should be stowed in the middle drawer with the underwear.” “No compromising,” snapped Lieutenant Sands. “Remen ber Munich,” added Ensign titch. Both were gallant gentlemen. “L suppose it will have to go to Washington?” I asked. “That's it,” cried Fitch. “The Bureau!” “The Bureau!” cried Mr. Sands Both men swore to see the thing through, come hell or big. “Where shall I stow it for the next inspection?” 1 hoped the closet would do until the heat was otf, but they left me to shift for myself. Shaving under these cir cumstances had become too much of an ordeal. At first I was for throwing the kit into the Potomac like Excalibur and going otf on the magic barge with Singing Sam, the Barbasol Man. The choice ultimately fell between a guaranteed depilatory or the new electric razor with four blades that made twenty-five hundred contacts with the beard per sec ond. I settled for the latter. It went in the gear room with the vacuum cleaner, and there were no questions asked. Following Fie midday meal, the mail was parceled out in the bunk room. The Divine Plan provided, according to some, a particular of the post proved the scheme girl for every male, and a study was making headway. Every man was equipped with a number-one woman who wrote to him on an average of every other day. He might hear occasionally from any number of satellites, but these were held of no account because in their turn they each were har nessed to an opposite for whom they regularly tilled reams of pink paper. Sometimes, as with “Sheep” Morgan, this routine was carried to beautiful extremes. “Sheep” played Apelard to a pretty thing who put out at a rate of two let ters a day. She printed her name and address, “Miss Pat Clarendon 205 Hollyhock Avenue, River Valley, Va.” At the top of each effort, which looked suspiciously like a large scale advertising scheme to the skeptics. They ar gued that Morgan, the calalier. unless he had a mind like a sieve must have known the whereapouts of his lovely. In the end, howev er, a correspondence that was es timated in tonnage proved her fi delity, and the inevitable name i the left-hand corner was taken t be one of those unaccountab). “little things” that made him love Miss Clarendon’s regular ex pressions of passion were scented with a gas that screamed, not whispered, “A woman is passing by,” and if the manufacturers gave this a name it might have been “L’Audace*.” The letters themselves were never brief, sim ple notes recapturing illusory sen sations born of the heart’s yearn ing. Her billets-doux came under the heading of freight. They were essays, wrist-thick, that described in studied detail the condition of a soul that suffered exquisitely twenty-four hours a day. “Sheep’s effect -was cyclonic. The sweet sickness consumed her like a Nessus shirt. He had reduced the poor girl, if the length and fre quency of her letters were any indication, to round-the-clock re cording of her love-drugged be ing. “Sheep, my dearest,” she in variably opened, lerfding a rock ing chair melancholy to the flood of tender introspection that fol lowed. “This morning before breakfast 1 feel electric-you currents running through me.” By high noon there was usually a violent turn for the worse.“The thunder that is my own Sheep peals within me,” she wrote as all hell broke loose. The afternoon .journal which carried well into the night descri bed post-matin developments. In the evening she knew compara tive peace as he came to her “in an April way,” but if the moon, in any stage of its cyclical development, showed in the sky, her prose uissolved into a baleful Sheep read these volumes as solemnly as if they were copies of the Volstead Act. Then, con vinced that he still possessed the same old wham, he prepared to compose some himself. Unlike his beloved, Sheep did not burn con tinuously, but by staring at her picture for varied periods of time he could flare up at will. Fired by this Yogi-like exercise, he was able to match her stormy recitals as our training progressed. I thought he was forced to wait longer and longer for inspiration I often wondered if he would not be turned into stone before her image while she perished from malnutrition, and they both lived on, a lovely legend in the Air Corps. However, he married her secretly one week-end, and it is probably much prettier that way. The six weary weeks of prelim ■ inary ground school finally passed and one morning before daybreak we were herded Into a requisi tioned bus and driven to the fly ing field. The overland route passed right through the heart of Anacostia, a little suburb of the city, wound around the Maryland countryside and ended up at a dismal plot of land known as “Hyde Field.’’ I took a seat right behind the driver, an enlisted man who was spurred on to mad der and madder things by wild cries of exhortation from the cargo. “C’rnon, fearless,” they holler ed at the helmsman, whose driv ing had become legend. “You can get sixty out of her, boy.” “Pass' him, Fearless, he's hold ing up the war effort.” Fearless was a sensitive but dynamic individual who felt the passage of time as keenly as if it were hot lead "running down ' is back. Taking advantage of tetraethyl gasoline, sixteen cyl nder motors, and capitalizing in general on the age’s advances, he strove to catch up with the Grim Reaper. A suspicion that he was losing made him redouble his efforts. He tore through intersec tions, paid no heed to stop signs, and careened down the highway as if he had a rendezvous with death. I wasn’t prepared for this sort of thing so soon after break fast, and clawed at the seat cov er as the bus roared down a steep grade. Fearless, realizing he was giving one of his four-star performances, turned back to me “Some ride, eh, Mack?” he said delightedly, using the Navy’s informal “thou.” “Some ride, Jack, 1 agreed through clenched teeth. “I really make her dance, dont I Mack”—he added another burst of throttle. “You really make her dance, Jack.” “Jeez,” muttered Tim Carpen ter, as he was wont during peri ods of great strain. We rushed on a sharp corner. There was a screeching of brakes an uncertain moment on two wheels, then a triumphant racing turn into Hyde Field, and twm blasts on the horn to announce us. Fearless looked at his watch. “Forty seconds off my record,” to fight, Mack, but, by God, I'll he swore. “They say I’m too old see you hoys don’t lose any of your flying time.” “Bless you, Jack,” I murmur ed. pulling myself together. “Keep ’em flying, Mack,” and off he raced. Fearless disappeared over one hill as the sun’s red rim edged above another. The outline of the field emerged in the early morn ing light, and down at the far nd the mechanics began tuning ' e planes up. (TO BE CONTINUED) 'edical Society To Meet November 8th The Seventh District Medi al Society will meet in Albe marle on Wednesday afternoon, November 8th, at 4 o’clock. The meeting will be held in the Edu cation Building of the First Lu theran Church with the banquet at Hotel Albemarle at 7:30 P. M. Dr. H. C. Whims, of Newton, will speak on “Poliomyelitis”— An Acute Emergency and Dr. L. A. Crowell, Sr., of Lincolnton will give the Response to the Ad dress of Welcome. Major John McKee, Moore General Hospital, Swannanoa, will give a scientific address “Psychiatric Casualties of the Present War.” Remove lightning struck or other damaged pines from the farm woodland to prevent beetle attacks, says R. W. Graeber, Ex tension forester at State College. ALKA-SELTZER BRIGHTENS MY DAY ^ /IIW II • Occasionally, i wake up in the morning with a Headache. It sometimes wears off along the middle of the forenoon, but I don't want to wait that long, so I drink a glass of sparkling ALKA-SELTZER. In just a little while I am feeling a lot better. Sometimes the week’s ironing tires me and makes me sore ana stiff. Then it’s ALKA-SELTZER to the rescue — a tablet or two and a little < rest makes me feel more like finish ing the job. And when I eat “not wisely but too well,” ALKA-SELTZER relieves the Acid Indigestion that so often follows. Yes, Alka - Seltzer brightens my day. It brings relief from so many of my discomforts, that 1 always keep it handy. Why don’t you ALKA-SELTZER today? get a package of at your drug store prge Package SM, Small 34*. Visit your school Thursday, November 10, 1944 CHURCH NOTICES Fir*t Baptist Church REV. E. S. ELLIOTT, Pastor Sunday, 10 A. M. Sunday School. We had a good attend ance last Sunday. Let’s make it better this Sunday. 11 A. M. The pastor will preach. 7 i\ M. Training Union *°i' are invited. S F. M Preaching service. The pastor will preach. Circle meetings Monday alici noon at 4 CO o’clocs. Baptismal service at the closv of ihe preaching service this Sunday nvght. The Led has blessed us, and we have had a great meeting. May there he many others who will give tiieir lives to the Lord, and come ready to he baptised Sunday night. 2nd Baptist Church W. Luther Hawkins, Pastor John McGinnis, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 9:15 A. M. A class for every age Morning Worship 11:00 A. M. Davis Trio, Guest Musicians (Second anniversary of pastor. Training Unions 6:30 P. M. Evening Worship 7 :30 P. if. Message and drawing by the pastor. -MORE ABOUT COL. RIDDLE the first services in the Anglo American Church in more than three years. The Colonel wears the Euro pean Theatre ribbon with four campaign stars, the Purple Heart the Bronze Star for meritorious service and the Presidential Ci tation. Before entering the service, Chaplain Riddle was Presbyterian pastor in Cherryville, North Car olina. He is a native of Clover, South Carolina, where his wife and daughter now reside. Close the back and side venti lators of the laying house as the nights begin to get cooler. Pul lets will get colds unless drafts are prevented. Presbyterian Church J. WALTER COBB, Pastor The Sunday morning service is to be unusual in that there will be a dedication baptismal service for infant children, and in that the newly organized Junior Choir will have charge of the singing in place of the regular choir. Spec ial invitations to the parents of the members of the Junior Choir are being mailed out, and invita tions to parents who have chil dren who have not yea reached the age of accountability and who have not been baptized to bring their little ones for this dedication service. Sunday 'School at 10 A. M. W. W. Browne, Supt. Two young people’s groups Two Young People's Groups at 7 P. M., the “Juniors” and the “Pioneers,” Mrs. Hugh Sneed, Director. Woman’s Auxiliary at 7:110 Monday in the church, Mrs. Gruce Crocker, President; Mrs. E. S. Sellers, Leader; Misses Clemmie and Emma Browne and Mrs. E. M. Browne, Hostesses. Choir rehearsal on Wednesday at 7:110 P. M. E. W. Carson, Di rector. TAX Notice! I NOW HAVE 1944 TAX '300KS OF GASTON COUNTY AND AM NOW PREPARED TO GIVE A RE CEIPT FOR YOUR TAX. J. C. JENKINS TAXCOLLECTOR CHERRY V1LLE TOWNSHIP