PAGE EIGHT
THE BEAUFORT NEWS THURSDAY SEW. 3. 192S
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Famous Rifleman Cave
Name to Pipe Spring
Pipe Spring national .-monument is
famous in Utah and Arizona history.
In 1853 Jacob Haniblin was sent by
President Brigham Young of the Mor
mon church to visit the Hopl Indians
In northern Arizona. His party con
sisted of ten, includlnc a Piute Indian
guide, and, so the story goes, they
camped by a marvelous spring In the
midst cf the desert.
Hamblln, observes the New I6rk
Times, was a noted ride shot, and the
fonvarsatlon turned to the question of
marksmanship, a wager was made
that he could not shoot a hole through
a handkerchief at 20 yards. Hamblln
rd several shots at the square silk
bung by the two upper corners, but th
force of the bullet onlv swent tha
andktrchlef back without penetrating
f tt Stung by his failure and his
friend's laughing remark that he could
not shoot straight, Hamblln declared
that If he could not shoot straight
he could stick bis pipe up as a target
and shoot the bottom out without
breaking the bowl. Up went the pipe,
and "crack" went the rifle. Hamblln
made good his word and from that
time on the spring has been called
Pipe spring, according to the Depart
ment of the Interior.
In 1861 James M. Whltraore was sen
by the church to the southern Dart jt
the state to raise cotton in Utah's
DLxl and to develop the resources of
that part of the territory. He and his
followers settled at St Georga, and
In 1863, in order to provide grazing
facilities for his herds of cattle and
flocks of sheep, he located and lm-
Droved the Pine Sprine ranch, which
lies about 55 miles east of t. George
nd 20 miles west of Kanab.
Indian City of ley pore
Has Unique Features
One of the most remarkable cities
In the whole world is Jeypore, In India.
It Is specially beautiful and regular
because It was built all at one time
and according to a single consistent
design Instead of being built helter
kelter and at different periods. The
founder of It was Jey Sing, a maha
rajah or native ruler who started It In
NOTICE OF SALE.
State of North Carolina,
j County of Carteret.
J Under and by virtue of an order
I of the Superior Court of Carteret
county, made in the Special Proeeed
jings, entitled The Federal Land Bank
I of Columbia, Plaintiff, vs M. R.
Springle and the Carteret County
iNational Farm Loan Association, the
isame being No upon the special
'proceeding docket of said Court, the
undersigned Commissioner will on
the 5th day of October 192S, at 12
o'clock M.. at the Court House door
in Beaufort, Carteret County North
Carolina, offer for sale and will sell
for cash to the highest bidder, the
following described lands, torwit:
All that certain piece, parcel or
tract of hind containing 175 acres.
More or less, situate, lying and be
ing near the State Highway about
jfour miles North of the Town . of
Beaufort, in Beaufort Townshin.
!County of Carteret, State of North'
Carolina, having such shapes, metes,
courses and distances as will more
'fully appear by a plat thereof, made
by u K. Howe, burveyor Feb. 16th
1922 filed with the Federal Land
Bank at Columbia ,and being bound
ed on the North by the lands former
ly of William P. Marshall, on the
West by formerly Benjamine Stall
ton's land, on the South bv the E. 0.
Springle land, and on the East by
the John Russell land, being the
same land conveyed to the Federal
Land Bank of Columbia, by mortga
ge from M. R. Springle and wife
dated March 20th., 1922, and record
ed in Book 1, at page 291.
This 2nd day of September 1925.
v JAMES .W. MASON,
Commissioner of the Court 9-25
f
t
NOTICE
TO THE PEOPLE OF BEAUFORT AND
CARTERET COUNTY:
I am no longer with B. A. Bell Jeweln
Store as Watchmaker. But all work gua
ranteed by me in the pas I will look after
if it is sent to my house or mailed to me will
get prompt attention.
WM. H. BAILEY
Watchmaker & Jeweler
COMING-
SEPTEMBER
- -15 -and-16-
THE HUNCH BACK OF NOTRE DAME
THE
MOST SPECTACULAR AND ONE OF THE BIGGEST
PICTURES OF THE YEAR
SEA BREEZE THEATRE
SPECIAL PROPOSITION
To First 50 Students Enrolling in September
WILSON BUSINESS COLLEGE
V
W. W. MERRIMAN, President
Dailey-Watson Bldg. . Spring St.
WILSON, N. C. 1
DAY and NIGHT CLASSES
"Hall of the Wind"
1728. Most of the buildings are cov
ered with pink and white stucco this
being the case with the "Hall of the
Winds." which is here Illustrated. In
Jeypore the sacred cattle, go about the
streets at will, eating anything eatable
they see, and the people dare not mo
lest them. The monkeys, . elephants,
camels and other animals are also con
sidered sacred and they have' things
pretty much their own way. Pathfind
er Magazine.
Clocks' Two Years' Test
The twenty electric clocks in the
palace of industry and other buildings
at the British Empire exhibition at
Wembley were two years under test
at the royal observatory, Edlnburu'h.
ine special apparatus used included
j a kinematograph which takes accouht
of thousandths of a second. The vari
ations of the clocks during the test
never exceeded one-hundredth of a
second In twenty-four hours.
Buoy's Long Voyage
A light buoy which broke away
from Its moorings in South America
five years ago has traveled nearly
.10,000 miles to Australia. The direc
tor general of navigation In New
South Wales reported that the buoy
- broke adrift In 1019, and, assuming
that it followed the shortest route. It
must have drifted between four and
live miles a day.
.
Retriever Adopts Kitten
A Chicago man owns a retriever and
a cat, and both recently became moth
ers. The retriever's two pupa were
born dead, so she abducted the cat's
ingle kitten. The distressed cat has
endeavored to sxrure possession nf
ner ouapring, dui me retriever holds
ler at bay and Jealously guards the
kitten, which she nurses and tends
devotedly.
To Feast on Ancient Ham
A farmer near Excelsior Springs.
Wo., has kept a bam 47 years. It is
one his father put sway In ashes In
3877. lie says It Is his Intention t In
cite a few of hid old friends to take
dinner with him In 1027, on which oc
the bam will be served and its
fiftieth anniversary appropriate! ceio
txruteA
TURNING THE TABLES IN
SIX-CYLINDER ENGINEERING
D. M. Jone, Mgr. D. M. Jonei Co.
ayt:
Overlands entry into' the six-cylin
der field is eventful and bound to
have a marked influence in the future
specifications of those cars whose
prices bring them into comparison
with the new Overland Six. For
Overland has introduced progress
that must in time to come spur oth
ers to make defensive moves toward
similar progress.
In lieu of the conventional metal
timing gears common to cars of this
class, the new Overland Six has a
modern fabril timing gear, silent and
permanently smooth.
Instead of ordinary cast iron pis
tons, so commonly used in the cars
of its price division, the Overland Six
has pistons of die-cast aluminum
lighter, better fitting, more efficient
conforming to the piston standards
carried out in verv expensive cars
The new. Overland Siv hn form
feed lubrication an advanced ' pat
ented multiple-disc clutch fine alloy
steel gears in the transmission a
special universal joint that requires
no adjustment springs of chrome
vanadium steel a cellular-type rad
iator.
This Fine Car replete with advan-
age upon advantage throughout every
i phase of its engineering,
j Advanced as it is jn the way it
is built, the new Overland Six is giv
ing the motorists of America an ex
ample of advanced performance that
is all to their liking.
They like the smooth action nf its
40 horsepower. They like the sub
stantial feel of the car when travell
ing at high speeds. They like its
flashy pick-ups. They like the way
it takes a lead in traffic. Thev like
the way it passes other cars on heavy
grades.
j Perhaps the most significant thing
:about the new Overland Six is the
lgh-reachwg extent of its appeal. Be
sides the people who are tired of
sluggish, slow-acting cars, and peo
ple who have always owned cars in
this particular price class, the buyers
oi the new Overland Six include
considerable number of neorjle who
have formerly owned cars priced
$700 to $1000 higher than the new
Overland Six.
I That, better than anything -else,
'indicates the superlative merit built
into this car. It reveals in the most
graphic way of all what a profound
impression the new Overland Six
made among all ranks of motorists.
It s the old, old storv let nnv.
body build a better product of any
kind and the world is quick to single
,it out and confer the reward of pat
ronage. ;
The World H Been Quick tf
Honor ThU Fine Car
We have sold within the last rci
Or so three new Overland cars besides
nine used cars. The new ones were
sold as follows: Wm. H. Bell, New
port, N. C. Overland Six
Mrs. M. D. Killingsworth, Beaufort,
Overland Touring. N. F.- Ernoka
Beaufort, Overland Four Sedan.
Adv.
At Your. Service
CULTIVATION FOR
ORCHARD IS BIG AID
Bare soli soon loses its humus and
becomes Infertile, a condition that
should be avoided and here is a way
of preventing It Plow the orchard In
the spring, cultivate both ways and
keep all weeds down until September,
at which time the soli will be In-fine
condition for a seed bed. Sow rye at
the rate of two bushels Dr acre, this
will protect the ground from blowing
or nard freezing during the winter,
as the ground will be well covered be
fore freezing weather comes. Let the
rye grow until it is knee hieh In tho
spring and then turn under and nro-
ceed with clean cultivation through the
summer.
Deep cultivation Is not essentia! nor
advisable, but the cultivation should
be frequent, writes V. M. Couch In
the Indiana Farmers' Guide. Go over
the ground after every rain If possible.
with a disc or harrow to break nn the
crust. This will form a mulch of loose
earth two Inches or more In depth,
which Will greatly retard evanorntlon
and, therefore, conserve moisture for
tne use of the trees. This system of
management has the following ad
vantages. It provides a soli with a
good supply of organic matter, which
will keep it in good physical condi
tion, as well as to prevent damage to
tne soil by wind and water. It nro-
vldes a cover for the ground, catching
me snpw, thereby moderating the tem
perature of the soli.
It provides for clean cultivation dur
ing the sumYner, the time when all
the misture that falls should be con
served for the use of the trees, and
by stopping cultivation and starting
a cron Seiitemher Amt Mm tnuao
v.... ntcfl il 1 C
helped to ripen off their wood and to
prepare for winter. V
It is doubtful if there is anything
gained In the end by cfopplng the
land that has been planted ta fruit
trees. Surely it pays while the crops
are being gathered, but does it pay
to have the orchard come Into bear
ing" on soil that is being reduced In
fertility? It is quite likely that the
orchard during its bearing perlo;! will
have use for all the food element
that the soil contained at the stint
and will not the productiveness of the
orcnaru be reduced in the same pro
portion as the elements . of fertility
have been removed by previous crops?
This will certainly be the result un
less the removed elements are re
stored by means of fertilizers. It
seems to me that ground supporting
an apple orchard for 30 to 40 years has
no food to spare for crops.
G. DUNN RATING AND REFERENCE BOOK.' This
book is purchased by us for your convenienceand infor
mation and you are cordially invited to useV it freely
whether you are a .customer of this bank or not Rat
ings through out the United States and Canada are cov
ered by this edition. Come in and look it over even if
you are not interested in any particular rating-
The Bank' of Beaufort
The Oldest Bank in Carteret County and as Strong as
The Strongest -
Tree Rings Will Tell
Secrets to Scientists
Scientists of the Field Museum of
Natural History expect to learn what
the weather has been like for 200
years or more in the vicinity of Chi
cago by studying the rings on oak
and willow stumn.
bulletin.' It has been found that treaa
of various kinds register within their
trunks a fairly accurate record of the
seasons, because the wood that grew
in the summer and that which erew
In the spring can be distinguished In
rne annual rings. By these compari
sons, deductions as to the amount of
rainfall and sunshine that the trees
received can be made.
'Carrying the study further, the mi
croscope is expected to disclose what
part of the wood was formed durln
old, rainy and dry seasons, for the
Fierce Storm Thought
to Mean World's End
The tnnsr rrr1fln fnm t k u-
' v- 4.iv oivi ui iu HIC 1UB'
tory of the British Isles raged during
the month of November. 1703 Thl
terrible hurricane was so devastating
that It was generally believed ' that
the end of the world had come. De
foe, best known as the author of
Robinson Crusoe, who experienced Its
worst terrors, wrote: "Horror and
confusion seized upon all; no pen
can describe it, no tongue can ex
press it, no thought can conceive It."
The voice of the wind was like thun
der. To venture abroad was to court
instant death ; to stay within doors
was to risk the fall of the house.
The loss of Ufa on land and sea and
In the floods of the Severn and
Thames, seems to have been hevnnd
computation. In London the damage
to propefty was estimated at imnnn.
000. The first Eridvsrona iiirhthi
' -W H (T V . ,
a ridiculous sort of nairnda. of fnn
years standing, was swept away, and
with It the architect. WlnntanW Th.
hurricane ended In a dead calm at
the exact hour when it bad starts
raging a week before.
SHEER. COLORFUL LINGERIE
TAKES NO NOTE OF WINTER
Whence Ermine Comes
The European weasel in his winter
costume was the original purveyor of
ermine. The snowy white pelt, set off
by the jet black at the end of the tall,
attracted attention centuries ago and
was adopted as the royal costume for
the kings of England. It is said that
Edward III forbade Its use by any one
not of royal blood. This ancient royal
costume adorns the "king" In packs of
playing cards. Later It hwn mo f Via Aits-
tlngulshlng fur of nobility, and espe
cially of Judges, who representing the
rbyal power, were regarded merely as
the king himself acting through his
agents In dealing Justice among his
people. As showing their imperial
poweri ermine Is worn In th nfflniai
regalia of the pope and cardinals of
me catnoiic chnch.
ffrticture of the little sap tubes dif
fers accordlne to then rnnmina
Experiments and observations lan
have shown, that the greatest growth
,V trees occurs on the side onnoatra
the direction of the winds. For In
stance, there are trees in Colorado tn
which the heart of the trunk ! eimu,
to the bark on the aide from which
two prevailing winds blow.
Discouragement to Thrift
The neighbor of a man ringed fnp
his extreme thrift saw Mm irnin.
down the road on a week day dressed
in ins ounaay clothes.
"What's up, Jim?" he called out
"Why the glad rags?"
"Haven't you heard the newar
"News I What news?"
"Triplets I"
"Oh, so that accounts for" h.
gan thenelghhor, when the frugal
one Interrupted him:
"Yes, that accounts for my wear
ing these clothes. What In thnndert
the use of trying to be economical T
Boston Transcript.
The Beaufort News Drints Carter
et county news ahead of any other
newspaper as a rule.. " Subscribe, to
it and keep posted. A
T T
T"RSIGNERS and makers of lingerie
are presenting their new fall lines
and It is evident that In their summery
minds there is no connection whatever
between cold weather and underthings.
The responsibility of keeping the femi
nine world warm in cold weather 4s
blithely switched over to outer gar
ments let sweaters, frocks, coats and
he.".ting apparatus do it, appears to
be their motto". Tlie several types of un
dergariuertts, except for athletics, con
cern themselves with beauty of color,
daintiness of fabric, easy adjustment
to the ligure and a general pretti
ness which last Item seems to be
most important of all.
Is not so nearly transparent, and tw
colors are managed in it by using one
for yokes and borders hemstitched to
the body of the garment in another
color; pastel shades are used and a
tailored finish. I5ut crepe de chine and
ninon crepe take precedence In tse
minds of most women over other fab
rics and new rivals of these old fa
vorites find It hnrd to dislodge them.
The laces most used for trimming are
filet, alencon and vul. with embroid
ered netjind net footing In their com
pany. The picture given here shows a pa
Jama set made of flesh-colored crepr
de clrtae and trimmed with frills a
For making vthlfr irresponsible but ! cream-colored val lace. A narrow rlb-
foscinatlng underweur, light or sheer
Mlk and cotton fabrics are demanded
and the call for colored voiles has In
creased. The limit of delicocy Is
reached In georgette crepe or chiffon
and new garments made of It are
bown with one color posed ever an
otherthat Is, they ate double. VoUa
bon girdle and little chiffon rosebud
nt the neck finish It. It has the popu
lar 3110-0 Jacket and Is a model that
may be developed in radium silk, sol
sette. wash satin, checked nainsook of
cotton crepes.
JULIA BOTTOMLBX.
(A Hit, Wealcra Newspaper Unloa.)
W 1 I 1