World's Fair Millions to See China Clippers 5^ . Fast nearing completion on Treasure Island In San Francisco Bay is the 1939 Golden Gate Inter national Exposition, as seen in this new picture taken from adjoining Verba Buena Island. Here in the harbor where sailboats now play. Exposition visitors will see giant Pan-American Clippers arriv ing and departing on trans-Pacific flights. 'WAY BACK WHEN by Jeanie DICTATOR ONCE DEPENDENT ON CHARITY YOU may not agree with the prin ciples advanced by Adolf Hitler, or you may be an enthusiastic ad mirer of his. In either case you will be interested in looking at the man and his life to see what les son we may learn. Perhaps the greatest inspiration to be drawn from the German dictator's life is a word of encouragement for those whose early lives may seem fail ures. Adolf Hitler was born on the Ba varian frontier of Germany in 1889, the son of a customs official who had political ambitions for him. The boy developed a desire to be an artist. His father opposed him, so Adolf refused to study in school. He was the despair of his father and mother. When he was eight een, he went to Vienna and applied for admission to the Academy ol Art. His art was too poor to qualify and they directed him to the archi tectural school, but his loafing in early grades made it impossible for him to pass entrance requirements there. At nineteen, his mother died, and as his father had died five years before, he was left alone. For three years he slept in a cheap, men's hotel in Vienna, get ting his meals at a monastery and occasionally begging from passers by. In the winter he shoveled snow to make a living. Whenever he earned a few kronen, he stopped work and went to some cheap cafe to deliver political speeches. He painted poor water colors which a friend peddled for him, he painted picture postcards, and when hungry enough was a house painter. Dur ing the war he was a corporal. Here was a man in his thirties who had never shown any real promise in anything he did. Then, Adolf Hitler formed an ideal of government. r Timely Farm Questions Answered at State College QUESTION: Will it hurt for me to take my cotton to the gin while it is damp? AeNSWER: Yes. Some gins have driers that remove the unde sired moisture, bub many do not. When damp lint is run through a gin, the saw teeth cut it up so that ' the quality is impaired. Gin-cut | cotton sells as a lower grade and aft a price several dollars lower than could be obtained from un- . damaged lint. Pick the cotton when it is dry. if you can. If you must pick it damp, spread it out where it can dry before you take it to t'he gin. QUESTION: My tobacco quota isn't large enough to cover all my crop. Where can I get more quota poundage? ANSWER: You may have aj neighbor who will have some poundage left on his marketing card after he has sold all his leaf. You can buy his surplus for what ever price you both agree upon. Or you can get your county office or warehouse men to get the card for you. When you deal through Will Brave Atlantic In 38-Footer HCltAWO MONTAUK, N. Y. . . . Ignoring this age of speed In which airplanes roar over the Atlantic to set new travel records, J. G. Kuijt (left), a retired planter of the Dutch Indies, is shown with two members of his crew aboard the soi'.boat. "Th? Holland." preparatory to leaving for the ; return trip to Holland. The skipper expects to make the trip In this forty-year-old-boat in about 25 to 36 days. them, the price you pay the other grower for his surplus quota will be five cents a pound. If you have tobacco worth more than 10 ; cents a potind. it will pay you to buy extra poundage at the price fixed by the AAA. QUESTION: Can I keep .chick ens profitably iu my- back yard? ANSWER: Many people do. but | the birds must be given careful attention. Don't overcrowd them. It is better to have a few thrifty ; pullets than a larger number of old hens. Pallets are bet'ter for} eating, and they lay more eggs. Keep the poultry house clean, dis- 1 infect it for parasites and disease, treat the birds as often as neces- j sary to- keep them free from para ; sites. Plenty of fresh water at all, times, a good laying mash, green j feed, and grain are needed. Table J scraps are fed by some poultry! keepers, but don't try to keep your hens healthy on such scraps! and nothing else. In Africa says an explorer, a lot of men never know their wives until after they marry them. We don'ts understand why he confined his observation to Africa. -? " Definite results are now being [seen from the 100 pounds of tri i pie superphosphate which G. H. Ashe, Jackson County farmer, us ed on his pasture. Earlier grass and a thicker sod have resulted. llncie Jim Says j ^ - r ^ vj B?BAL& Electric fans $1.29 up FREE Battery Box with each set of B Batteries. Protect your batteries from dust and moisture. Wet Batteries Re-charged 50c and 75c Let us put your radio in first class condition for the summer baseball games and other sports. Special check-up by licensed experts Only $1.50 ~ RAYNOR'S RADIO SHOP Phone 454-6 Louisburg, N. 0. NAVY TO OPEN RECRUITING j STATION AT LOI'ISBIKG Lieutenant A. S. Joyner, Jr., U. S. Navy, in charge of Navy Ke cruiting Activities in the Caro- 1 Unas, with headquarters in Ral eigh, has announced that a tem porary recruiting station will be opened soon in Louisburg, N. C.. 'tor the purpose of enlisting color ed youths in the Navy as Mess Attendants third class. This recruiting office will be j tycated in the Post Office building and will he open from 9 a. m. to j 4:30 p. m. on August 23rd, 24th and 25th. Those eligible for en-! listment are colored young men between the ages of 18 and 26, who are unmarried and have no police or juvenile court records. Applicant's must be found mental ly. physically and morally quali fied as a result of examination and thorough investigation. The Navy Is now enlisting a1 total of 80 colored boys each month for the duties of Mess At tendant. These duties consist' chiefly of cooking, table service and the general care of officers' living spaces. Those found quali fied in all respects will be en listed with the least possible de lay and transferred to the Naval Training Station. Norfolk, Va., for recruiti training and for assign If yOU are confused by all the conflicting refriger ator claims of "super" savings, "super" speed, "super" service, etc., etc., here are six simple facts worth, remembering when you choose your ELECTRIC ; REFRIGERATOR IThe GENERAL ELECTRIC Triple-Thrift REFRIGERATOR it a produce of the combined research, engineering skill and manufacturing experience of the world's largest electrical ' j manufacturing company. It is thrifty in price, thrifty in current, thrifty in upkeep. 2 The all-steel refrigerator cabinet, the sealed-in-steel cold making mechanism, the 5 year performance protection plan aU were originated by GENERAL ELECTRIC. ? 3 Although the sealed-in-steel G-E THRIFT UNIT is now widely imitated it is still years ahead. For G-E's sealed mechanism has l