!
.8
J7XI.
"i tUs' is IcL willl i
.s it tLe cowvtul'j cf
, it 'is tL-.B'v e.l.I .
j r session will tve i fird 1
y . jute beaxL: on
7 r
tie r ''..,
new
ft
" - cmusono
.. Mix.:
pMn. Ino.
i tna pronmts
iicf It
IT'S TEE TO EE
OF THAT CHSISTilAS CI2TT
7ATCEES, JEWELRY ,
ETC3 CHINA and C2YSTAL
J. H fJswbcrn &
207 N. QtaeenSt
;IN RTNSTON ;:
; i i. .Tliis
1 1 7 l any of my
1 ( j, '
1 ' ii" V &t standi
ll'i l ';s!iL;..;rtBS,
u ' t : j I : ; j I re Co
j' ! ill, j tar-
i i. I it 1 it :e time
r-w ,-ry tniZ3 to giTe
' , ;.e to cri-icuitiire,
woid aw. once is preferable
to relief. . , . . "
With hearings completed in all
f arts of the country, it is not un
likely that the member? tf tie
Senate .Committee axi House
C-umittee on "icnltdre will re
r&it to the Cu. ;".:s very sarly in
i' e session, pc-iLeps during the
1' . t week. . Considerable thought
is being given to f lading an el
ective compromise between those
who favor compulsory crop control
and those who favor voluntary con
trol. How, to accompolish either
with legislation that will be brand-;
ed as constitutional is, of course a
major problem. ' ;
But the fanners have more rea
Bon foi hope than they have had
ia recent yean; Their views have.
been given to congressional com
mittess direct. There will be no de
lay in the -character of shunting
farm legislation aside for less im
portant things; ,
l.si ', ' .r Le lives
. t urtr, ' "-i, Lr.s a
'Is '. 1 1 1 s a jricul
l c ii 71a.
1 1' , 1 -5 '',' 4-:ate srp-
1 tf f. If 1 i .r to ST!"- '.V
fr,L:i r- r 1 II V. Ilcyd, AAA
' ?c 1 - i . - . u rt i
e-ocuuiva ,...-,xr ei -ma: vmv
.cor J, Ls wants these Sf"
to r"ialj. e'-Lle year site . .j,
avoiding as fax as possible (Ltic
sLortrs such as drout years
brir.
Xiird, he wants to know that
the ability tf ericiltnre to pro
duce adequate supples in the fu
ture is beiaj conserved through
wise use of the nation's land re
sources. Achievement of "these goals,
Hoyd said, is not only in the
consumer's interest, but it is al
so in harmony with the object
ives of a sound farm program
Production cannot be stabiliz
ed completely, however due to var
iations in weather and , growing
conditions that .cause yield ; per
acre to be greater in some yean
man in others. 1
r Consequently, Floyd said, ; for
the consumer's protection,: .there
should be a carry-over of . ade
quate reserve supplies from ne
year to the next - ? ' .
But u this protection1 is : going
to mean depressed prices, ; then
agriculture cannot afford to give
the consumer this kind of insur
anoe. y " -
For this reason,' something in
addition to the regular 1938 agri-
I cultural program is considered ne
cessary to provide tonsumen
with the protection adequate car'
. -
rrs"
k
ej
t
c
w-o i s with clean,
i pens; protect' them
' e exposure and drafts in
i 11 weather; and isolate
.chased hogs for at least
to see whether they are
1 with disease. - . , , .
t "flu" resembles hog chol
1 this complicates the trou
en pigs are weakened by
?y can easily contract the
V
'1
r8i
1 1
TJTIVITU u
4 Iadache- "alow yrtl
a?" You are a rare ex-
' "on it it does not. -
tr two tablets oALKA
.milt in a glass of v tar
3 a pleasant AalkaEJiig
oni that usually brings
f in ''"t a few minutes.
v-. iJtZER. la also noun
J far -.' f
i m Etmnack "Mnrnlnf ' ,
l", A i .
iv aiti lucum -"
,n .J Lka ti titnpy fiavnr
. r results when yotl txka
',-r. Alka-bulla, Wuen
1 In water, cni' -'" a r
(, ""'itim AyS--- !,vl-
i ft" mi"-!, tite a
i l A.--t"-iSi;er rm-p mi t
- everyo-v 5.r- . ,. '
.j,.aiied wiut hyper- .
. - .
4 1 4 tag Me ..
f 3e- -
' J
thrown into special session is pro
blematic; The decision on whether
to tackle the tax problem mow or
at the regular session ' convening
January, may depend a, great
deal on the. progress in drafting a
farm program that is workable.
If that moves along swiftly, the
highly controversial and import
ant tax Question may come up,
-There , is much- evidence that
those engaged in actively working
on a tax program realise that bus
iness and industry, and in turn
agriculture, are greatly 'affected
by a national hesitancy. 5B is. a
hesitancy of business and industry
to exuand and create more iobs.
I Thus assurance .fe that the capital'
.gains and ' undistriDutea prouts
tare? will be modified would un
feet-on the whole country. How
soon it can be given is the question
of the how. -
- On- the whole, there is . reason
to believe that every effort will
be made to unify the thought on
imnortant: subjects u to the . end
that he White House and the con
gress will finally work together
with a great deal of harmony,
While business, industry and agri
culture look first to Congress to
rive the national reassurance need'
ed, the President wul unaouoteaiy
attempt to make recommendaions
that will find sympathetic attent
ion in the Congres. This would
assure speedier action on an legi
lation. " ' ' " t;i -
At this early .date it looks as
if the special session will assume
mat imnortance from the very
first and attempt to ' end what isi
well described as "national Hesit
ancy" in the march to improve
our whole economic structure. ,
WhethTta;- revision will J''ftS1
prices. The ever normal granary
plan is a proposed solution ' for
this problem. i. -. .
1 .f
3 f :,at counts grains of
r 'ysis- of seSiments
j cf Cuiceo geologist.
i. 7ooflleV CTaham,
r, tliis week eiJuulted
f--1 s from a tree on
i x Lae. A f'-hHr
1 1. JVs flror ar '
' .ji r.Lii 1 out, tify
1 more Las tLcu.b
tie lJ&t crop, were
A silkworm, on a diet of mul
berry leaves, increases its weight
5,000 times. " ' . -'
A California soologist is at
tempting to explain the strange
mi.'-TatioTig, of T.andinavia's lem-:
lag's Li. He rodents that occasion-'
ally move in vast swarms from
the hV'T'-d to the-towlond, nulr,
lions of them dying ea route or
drowhiifj in the sea. ., -'
, A I-llsh chemirt has reported
finding a way to shrink wool so
that it retains its fluffines and
darallllty.
y
A zoologists says that the 0
knpi, aa animal somewhat re
sen.Lllrj tie giriiffe and the xe
bra, h ts fe cT,j r-nTnmal
of ii.cjor iiEpoiiance tliat Las ap
peared new on t!;e sclfiutlTio hori
zon in the twentieth ceiitsry.
r
Fish and Milk
MalteaSafe
Gsmbination '
The popular supentitioa " that
fish and milk make a dangerous
combination is just so. much hoo
ey, said Fred JL Eaiff, of tne da
iry department of State College.
This belief, he laid, probably
started in days before refrigera
tion when people who got sick
ate fish which were not strictly
fresh happened also to drink milk
at the same meaL ,
Ko facts of food chemistry or
physiology substantiate this old
belief he went on. Experience bf
yean disproves it
Other people are afraid to
drink milk and eat add fruits at
the same meal They say that a-
cid, fruits will curdle the milk in
the stomach.
As a matter of fact the first
thing the stomach does to milk is
to ounue it so it can pe oigesiea.
And curds formed from fruit a-
cids are finer and easier to digest
than those ' formed i bj stomach
eastrio juices alone
Another oft-told admonition is
that sipping milk slowly . instead
of drinking it naturally aids di
gestion. Besearch r. studies have
shown that when milk is : sipped
slowly, the curds formed are bigv
eer and harder to digest man
those formed when it is drunk ra
pidly. V , ' . .
jnuk is no more latcening man
any other food containing the
same number of calories, Profes
sor Eaig declared., Xfilk is the
most nearly perfect food, ,r -
He said growing children need
at least a quart of milk a day, and,
adults can drink a pint a day to
good adva.t;e. r : t . - -
Filth and Exposure
Lcr.d Svino "Ha'
Filthy pens and exposure in
bad weaker lead the way to
swine Uiuenza that takes a hea
vy toll of the baby pig crop every
year.
' Br. C. D. Grinnells, veterinarian
at the IT. C. Agricultural Expert
mbr.t Z'it'nn, sail this disease
ran fcpi r.ftTiti-G.lod lv civinjf swine
the rl"U kind of care in fall and
winter. -
V. e similarity of the two dis
s also makes it difficult to teQ
Lcther to treat the animals for
"flu" or for cholera, Br. Qrin
nells continued. ' , ,
Sanitation and vaccination will
prevent cholera.. Sanitation and
protection from exposure will pre
vent "flu". .If he pigs catch the
"flu," they should be placed in
clean, warm pens and fed sparing
ly an easily digested ration., j,
. Symptoms of "flu" and of chol
era, are a tendency for the ani
mals to pile up, or to appear un
duly weak or loggy. These symp
toms may be caused by lung or
intestinal worms also. , . :
" When these symptoms are dis
covered, the safest , thing is to
call in a veterinarion who ? can
diagnose the trouble correctly and
prescribe the right treatment, Dr.
Grinnells states. ' '
Home . Beautifying
Contest f or.4-H-ers
A' " 4-H Home ', beautification
contest for-1938 has been announ
ced by L. B. Barrill, , 4-H club
leader at State (Tolles-B. '
. Ti, .
Although sponsored . by 4-Hi
clubs, he said, the contest will be
open to all farm boys and girls
between the ages of 10. and 20.
"I would like to see every club
member enter this contest,"' he
added,- "not just for the sake of
the contest, but for what they can
do to make their homes more at
tractive. - -i 1 "
"Just think what North Caro
lina's 4-H clnb members could do ;
to make ; this a more beautiful
State."
As a special inducement in the
nation-wide contest, Mrs. Charles
B. Walgreen, of Chicago, offers a
gold medal to the winner in each
county, and 17-jewel gold watch
to the "state winner.
A till) to the ' Wntinjinl i.TJ
Club Congress in Chicago a year
from now wilt be -awarded the
lour sectional winners, and the
national winner will receive a
$300 college scholarship
Winners will be selected ac
cording to the following scores:
General record of club member,
60 points; list of plantings made
in 1938, 20 points; list of plant
ings in previous yean, 10 points.
Snapshots or photos and scale
drawings showing how plantings
have been made and will be made
to beautify home surroundings, 10
points.
- Story giving experience of con
testant in home ground beautifi-'
cation and the benefits derived, 10
points. - r.
The contest -will close October
1, 1938. ; v
Health Work
Aniong Negroes
. .Gains Impetus
Baleigh, North Carolina is com
mended as a "pioneer state" in
the matter of health work among
negroes, by Edwin ' B.' Embree,
President of the Julias BosenwaM
Fund, in a letter to Dr Carl V,
Reynolds, which the State , Health
Officer has made, publis here.
Dr. Beynolds recently wrote Mr.
Embree, telling of the accompolish
ments of Dr.-Walter J. Hughes,
first negro physican attached to
any State Board of Health, whose
appointment was made possible
through a grant from the Bosen-
wald Fund. ' I
Ton will be - pleased to know
that since the appointment of Dr.
Hughes", Mr. Embree informed
Dr. Beynolds, "the states of Texas
and Louisiana hase added similar
negro assistants, while in Illinois
now two -Fdda esthradolicmf
there are two negro physicans on
ist staff. ' ..
VThe children's Bureau and the
United States Public Health Ser
vice have done the same thing.
The cities of Louisville and New
York have negroes in charge of
health centen. In addition to
these movements, several other.
southern .states are preparing to
make similar moves. .
"The State of North Carolina",
Mr Embree concluded, "was a
pioneer in using negro physicans
in tuberculosis work as internes
in the State Sanitorium. Georgia
Kentucky, Florida, Texas and
Maryland are following siut."
tice Day program at CLiniuapW
last week before a crowd ox about
700, and mentioned in addition to
the subject of peace some facts
concerning Bed Cross work and
the Safety Campaign sponsored
annually by the Atalantie Coast
Line Railroad.
Captain Jimmy, who leads the
Red Cross unit in the county, is
expected to be at the fore in the
Safety Campaign, which consists
of enlightening talks before school
and civic bodies on the subject bf
safety . He has expressed hopes
that the Wilmington . District of
the. ACL system, including Ken
ansvillej will lead the procession
in contacting people in the cam
Stage Safety
Campaign Here
' Cap'.x'n Jimmy Jerritt made
the piiicipal speech of the Armis-
Flames Wipe Out
Family's Goods
V A house belonging to Zack Wil
liams, near Maxwell's Mill, and
occupied for the past few years
by the families of Vander Outlaw
and Jim Barnette, burned to the
ground last week, desctroying all
their possessions. .
The occupants of the house were
away from home when the blaze
started and it was completely en
veloped in flames when neighbors
discovered it. All of the furnish
ings and personal possessiois were
burned.
Former w
Agent Visib ....
' Mrs. Herman Ward Taylor, of
Raleigh, and her husband, who is
a swine specialist at State College,
spent a day last weekin Kenans
ville visiting several old' friends.
' Mn3' Taylor, ' formerly Hiss
Buth Eborn, win be pleasantly
remembered as the pioneer Home
Agent in Duplin, directly preced
ing Mrs. A. T. Outlaw. After leav-
ing ere she went to Tarboro. Tay-
lcr is a Dalin county man, also."
. .v
When You Need
a Laxative
Thousands of men and women
know bow wise It is to take Black
Draught at the first sign qf consti
pation. Obey like the refreshing re
lief it brings. They know Its timely
use may save them from feeling
badly and possibly losing time at
work from sickness brought on by
constipation.
If you have to take a laxative oc
casionally, you can rely on
A QOOD LAXATIVE
Dr. H. A. Edwards
DENTIST
PI7K HIIX, Friday Saturday,
Mwiday; KENAHSVlLLE, Tues
day; BEULAVILLE, Wednesday;
BICHLANDS. ThundayT ' '
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