MRSiiillp TWO , COUNTING UNCLE SAM'S BIG FAMILY : ?&Hnwr*mmmxx i I This Is the Year When the Census; Mar. Makes Round of the I Country. Question He Will Ask, and Why. By CALEB JOHNSON TT?i?Io Sn>n will hpfrin to count his nephews and nieces on the first of April. 1930, and this year he is going to find out a lot mote about them than has been known before. Some time during the month of April an enumerator of the United States Census Bureau will call at every dwelling in the nation and ask the head of the family twenty-, four questions. Some of them might! be considered impertinent if asked 1 by a stranger, or even by a neigh- j hov, but the census enumerators arc j under oath r.ot to disclose any facts learned by them except in their of-j ficial reports. And those reports are; not open anywhere to public inspection. Like the figures in vou.r income lax return, they are official secrets which prying gossips have no access to. Uncle Sam is concerned, for census purposes, only with totals and averages and not at ail with individuals. But a clear picture of the people of the United States as a whole can be obtained only by getting tll#J facts ahiillt each irwlivi?l>i:i1 inhabitant, to start with. For example, one of the things] which it is important to know, besides the number of persons in the United States, is the average age of our people, it is higher 01 lower than it was when the last census was taken, ten years ago, and how much? This average age has been increasing steadily. But if the census of 1030 should show a decline in the average age. it would be a danger signal, a warning to speed up public health measures, a call to investigate the cause and apply al' of the resources of sanitary science toward . improving and guarding the general health. So don't think it is impertinence when the census taker asks your age! Uncle Sam wants to know, not your individual age, hut the average age of aii of trie, peopie. Another question the enumerators will ask is "Who is the head of the family?" That doesn't, mean what it sounds like. Uncle San: isn't interested as to whether the wife wears the breeches or not, but does want to know how many men are dependent upon the earnings of their children, how many women are selfsupporting. The head of the family, irbin the census point of view, is theone who earns the money. Whether you live on a farm or iuj a town. whether you are white, blark, [ red or yellow, male or female, married or unmarried, able to read and write, where you were born and where your parents were born, when you came to America if you are an immigrant, what your native ian-j guage was and whether you can j speak English are questions the rea-j sons for which are clear enough. On j the totals compiled from these answers depends, among other things, the number of persons from your native country who can be admitted to the United States in the next ten years. Everybody who is employed will be asked to give his trade or occupa-J tion and the particular industry in which he or she works, or if working on his own account or as an employer, to say so. But a question on that line this year will be: *'Are you employed now?" That is as of the first of April. There will be for the first time an accurate reccrd of unemployment, figures on which heretofore have been largely estimates. Another new question will be whether you own your home. In a general way the proportion of home j owners has been estimated in the past, but nobody has ever had exact figures. The figures have decided bp^l'inrr All the. ? rr?-nrv^<-^-f I c ... j/v. wi.ifc ^aujcti Ui | our national prosperity. And if you1 do not own your home, the census man wiii ask you 'now much rent you pay. That is another useful index of the size of the national bankroll. Taking the two together, the Government will be able to toll us whether home ownership is on the increase, whether thre is a demand for more individually-owned dwellings, and those facts ate a hearing on the i lumbei industry and the production I of all other building supplies, as well! as on the market for all sorts of i household equipment and furnishings. Another new census question is whether you own a radio set. Nothing could better illustrate the speed with which new inventions take hold, once they strike the public fancy. Ten years ago, when the census of 1920 was taken, there wasn't a radio set in the world except experimental ones; there was no such thing as broadcasting; nobody but a few experts knew the difference between heterodyne and a screen-grid, if any. Mot.- loo!: =t the blamed thing! There are so many receiving sets in the United States that Uncle Sam is going to count 'em, to find out how many of his family he can talk to at once. For the first time, the census taker will ask how old you were at your first marriage. The information will be more important ten years from - :: now than it is now, because the sec' ond set of answers to it, , in 1940; will disclose whether the average age of marriage is getting older or : younger. Our grandparents married in their teens, as a rule; today 25 is nearer the average age. in all probability. Will the young folks of the next ten years cgnticue to postpone morriage or will they revert to the youthful marriages of their ancestors? You will be asked whether you have attended school of college since last September. The figures for education have been climbing steadily ever since the first census was taken. Beyond question they are stiii climbing, but how fast? And as a final question every one of Uncle Sam's nephews will be asked whether he has served as ai soldier, sailor or marine in any war in which his country was involved. We will know for the first time just how many veterans of each war are sti'l living. And that will help to estimate future demands on taxpay-j ers for pensions. The Census is tl ?- oldest of all our Federal bureaus, as old as Congress and the Presidential office and the judiciary, for it was set up in the Constitution itself, which requires that the inhabitants be counted every j ten years. The original purpose was j to find out how many lived in each! state in order to apportion members ' of Congress among the states. That is still one of the purposes, though j Congress itself has been dilatory in j reapportioning its membership in! proportion to population. The first Census, taken in 1790, showed fewer than four million inhabitants in the new nation; 3.929.214. to be exact. We passed the 25 million mark between 1850 and lSOO; by 1880 we had almost exactly 50 millon, and forty years later, in 1920,1 we had doubled that figure with 105,710,020 persons living: in Continental United States. The Census Bureau experts have made estimates from year to year of the increase since that time, and give it as their belief that enumeration of 1980 will show! between 121 and 122 million nephews and nieces of Uncle Sahi. FAMEOFSARGON SPREADING OVER j ENTIRE WORLDl People of This Country Sending Fa-J moui Medicine to Relatives and I Friends in England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Canal Zone, NorWay, Sweden, Cuba and Ma ny Other Distant Lands. Lf you had found a medicine that \yas <>i* such benefit to you that you would go to the trouble of sending it to relatives and friends and distant countries, you would have to be convinced in your own mind that it possessed real merit, wouldn't you; That's just what thousands of people throughout the United States have been doing with Sargon. From all over America and wherever Sargon has heen introduced, thousands of letters have been received from grateful users telling of the gratifying results that have been accomplished by this celebrated medicine. THOUSANDS EXPRESS GRATITUDE Gn November 27th, a letter dated November 23rd, was received at the Sargon offices advertising that in one week one drug firm alone had received orders for Sargon to be shipped fo Cavite, Philippine Islands; Coca-Solo, Canal Zone; Belebrook, Ireland; and Paris, France. J Only recently a well-known resident or" Denver, Colorado, who hadj wc?.-u jcatweu t'j neaiLn oy jargon, sent a full treatment to London. England. to his sister, who is the wife of an executive of one of the greatest retail drug firms in the British Empire. During the past month there appeared in the Toronto papers the statement of a well-known World War veteran whose health had been greatly impaired while in the service, who stated among other things, that he owed his restoration to health to two bottles of Sargon sent him by a friend in Minneapolis. LETTERS RECEIVED FROM THE NORTHWEST From the Northwest, many letters of this kind have been received advising that users of Sargon are sending it to relatives back in their old countries of Norway and Sweden. Many such letters and endorsements have been received lrujii iiieii of prominence, including former governors, business anfL.professional men, mayors, state and county officials, and even ministers of the Gos ii -* . imve aeemea it tneir auty to come forward and tell what Saigon has done for them. These are only a few of thousands of such cases and not a day nor a week passes that does not bring huna 1- _/ t. EEkSS fiC2 UiCUi VI SUIWltlCUtS. ftvm tlK! concerning the good this medicine is doing, and reciting case after case that would convince the most skeptical. Sargon's fame is built on actual results?not empty promises, and only those who have put it to the test know its real powers. Sargon's aim is not mere temporary relief, but new and abundant health. No wonder it is now called the medicine with a million tnends. Boone Drug Company, Agents. ?A d verti sement. THE WATAUGA DEMOCRAT?EVI America's Hcalthu \ $ Sg??^& V apj;\ %, mm^K Wj Florence Smock. 17, of Lake County 17. cf Morgan .County, Jndiana. who we in America at the National Health Co Exposition in Chicago. HENS PROPERLY HOUSED PAY BEST PROFITS Housing the hens in a comfortable j and healthy place may not seem to; be of so much importance but it of-1 ten means the difference between; average returns and excellent re-1 turns. i : "Those who have not. remodeled the old poultry house or built a new 1 one. may secure pb?.ns tor a poultry j : house free of charge from tl.e poul- j try department at State College."1 says \V. F. Armstrong:^ associate! poultry man. "Many irrowers who ; wrili- to us for information seem to think that housing means merely a protection from rain or sn? v an 1 has little effect upon results. Few thiners: > ? k THE ROADSTER j THE PHAETON THE SPORT ROADSTE THE COACH......... THE COUPE I THE SPORT COUPE - | A SIX A SMI m?i 5RY THURSDAY?BOONE, N. C. 'st Boy and Girl WlP' / VK3n^HK#g^F ':jHP?!- / . Florida, and Harold Dcatlirie, also re judged the healthiest boy and girl Rtcst of the International Livestock t in the poultry business are of more importance or have a greater influence upon the production of eggs." At first, says Mr. Armstrong, one must give consideration to the location. A southern slope that is well drained will provide a uniform terr.oerature throughout the vear Jcj?.??y>-.1 tng the house warmer in winter and cooler in summer. The front of the house. or open part, should also face southward, thus providing additional protection from cold winds in winter. A house not having this advantage interferes with the production and health of the birds, especially the more sensitive breeds such as the Leghorns. It is also best to have I added protection in a curtain to close j or partially close the opening depend-) sensati HEW Those who seek the utir satisfaction?at sensations should see and drive the G in Chevrolet History . . . r our showrooms! An improved 50-horsepo valve-in-head engine! Fo hydraulic shock absorbers! internal-expanding, weath Heavier and stronger rear glare windshield! New dasl And scores of other feature Gome in today and see this c how comfortable it is?howhow flexible in traffic. And is now available? greatly t *49 *56 *56 *62 Ail prices f. o I IN THE PR I < Boone Che i > O T H E R , F ing on weather conditions. The second principle is to make the walls tight and free from cracks, m A house 20 feet- deep will hold its} di heat much better than one of less D depth. Housing with thin walls or e\ cracks in the walls is a good way for! se birds to contract colds. Birds living! Si in a cold house and having their! combs frosted may have the fertility; r| of their eggs to drop 50 per cent , jsa to say nothing of loss in egg pro- al The third principle is to have good ventilation. This should be supplied th from both front and back. Poorly e< ventilated houses are a good source be of colds and birds so weakened are j of susceptible to any disease. I in THE GREENSBORO One of the South's big daily boro News occupies a uni<|U serves a large and constantly ers throughout the entire slat the need and demand for a and virile daily paper, whicl NKWSnnnnr There is something- in it every the family, from tthe head of to the kiddies. The best of sports, good editorials, eompl news. Carrier delivery service in al 20 cents per week; mail subscr six and twelve months at the Daily and Sunday, $9 per yeai Circulation De GREENSBORO I GREENSSOR ional n< ur Delco-Lovejoy Fully-enclosed, J" ler-proof brakes! /<== axle! New non- fJRj b gasoline gauge! :s! ar. Drive it. Note easy to handle? remember that it educed pr '5 the club sedan ir 3 the sedan !5 the sedan deuvery l5 the light delivery cha the 154-ton chassis i?? he 14%-icn chassis* wit , b. factory. Flint. Michigan CE RANGE OF 1 vrolet Compan boone. N. c. ASTER, BE i JANUARY 1G, 19p MORRISON REFUSES Former Governor Morrison has ar^unced that he will not he a candate for Congress from the Ninth istrict and indicated he might not ren be a candidate for the Senate at now held by Lee S. Overman, of ilisbury. "Under no circumstances will 1 in for Congress from this district." id Mr. Morrison, "and it is not at 1 certain that I will ever be a candete ^ nny public office." The statement spiked rumors that e former Governor would be draft1 to oppose the Republican incum?nt. Congressman Charles A. Jonas. Lincolnton, who is expected to be j for re-election. 0 DAILY NEWS newspapers, tlu Greense and enviable position, growing- list of subscribe, and fulfills completely progressive, independent h in every respect is a day for every member of the house right on down features always; all the ete markets and general 1 the cities and towns at iptions accepted for three following rates: ; daily only, $7 per year, apartment )AILY NEWS O, N. C. ___ Ei B in Scpmpmieal 7ram?pprtatiom ices! *625 *675 *595 ssis *365 *520 *625 nmHw HE FOUR ?y T T E R SIX