fhrttra 6y /sr*+slJ&*r,rs*T 2d T0JXJB Off'&Arz?l&J VZ. CtR&SS ffARJEtf IfOCAFlOlT QFT&SdA&f T& fl/TAKK3Z-Ari?Xf'3 TQZtB/ "": lMW#i%%YTr nzt&ucxv afdARmssvi /R7VS8Z) CARFpFAM) 2-?. CZZ4J&&&L. ' I I i Howard forfer Ihcmte TmA c # top he died at twenty-eight, leaving only daughters. His mummy was found in 1907 by Carter, but the tomb had been completely rifled. Tut-Ankh-Amen married a daughter of Akh-n* aton and at first accepted, his father-in-law's re-1 ligiou, calling himself Tut-Ankh-Aton. But he found Egypt nearly bankrupt and failing in power. So he changed his name, abandoned the new capi tal, went back to Thebes, restored the priests of Amon with Increased power artd prospered exceed-' Ingly. Does his tomb contain hieroglyphics or papyri relating to all this? The jTocess of mummifying the dead was a vt-l tal factor In the Egyptian religion; on Its success' depended existence In the next world. Embalm ing was therefore a sacred art and for 30 centuries, the Egyptians sought to improve It. As they Im proved the art they improved their tombs. MuB^ mies were first buried in the sand and protected! by rockwork. Early kings built themselves pyra mids. Later kings cut Into the^ solid rock. % The most Important work In Egyptian literature is the "Book of the Dead." This ritual was the guide In the next world and In whole or In part wfis* de posited tilth every mummy. It shows that at one stage of the journey in the next world the shade' must re-enter his body. Hence the need for suc cessful embalming, aj> impenetrable tomb and a storehouse* full of necessities. The Intrinsic value of the articles in the first room has been estimated at about $15,000,000. This leaves the contents of the two annex Yooms and of the catafalque to be reckoned with, wltli the possibility of other chambers. Lord Carnarvon es timates the $15,000,000, to represent "about one fourth of what la now la sight.". The market value on the curio basis can only be gne? ed. > < t- ' ^ ON BOOKS FOB TAX J ^7/ r7 T r , ,>>L lj, I? 6> ; ?| ../?}> v ASSESSORS GIVEN SPEC I Fig IN ~ ? ?* (i i AC1' SESSMENT feOARO. STRUCTIONS STATE A$r MUST BE COMPLETED BY JULY h * .. ' Tax Assessors Have Been Named in i A# Counties of State and Wig Be-t flin Worfc First of May. Restriction of the equalizing powers of county commissioners as to real estate and strict instructions to verify statements of taxpayers as to personal property feature instructions to tax assessors which have been prepared by the State Board of Assessment. The board is composed of R. A. Dough ton, Commissioner of Revenue; J. S. Manning, Attorney General; and W. T. Lee, chairman of the Corporation Com mission. Tax assessors have. been named in all of the counties of the State and will- begfo^ their work on May 1.3 Before that date instructions' will be mailed them from the offices of Commissioner^Doughton. The work of assessment must be completed not later tt an July 1. The several boards of county com missioners have been made boards of Equalization and Review by the General Assembly and empowered to meet in that capacity each July. ' Concerning the equalization pow ers of the board of commissioners the letter of instructions says: "As to real this equilization can be had only on years in which lands are valued for taxation, except when such valuation shall have been ef fected by some extraordinary circum stances, the* facts in connection with' which shall be found by such board in each case." . Under tfife interpretation placed upon the law by Commissioner tDough ton, the counties which have declared present values just and a reassess ment unnecessary are in the same po sition as in years wlien the question of valuation has not arisen and while the county commissioners will sit as a board of equalization they will be lim ited to cases with "extraordinary cir cumstances." i "Get it all on the books and don'ti take anybody's" word for wh*t it isi worth is the substance of the instruc tions in regard to listing personal property. "It is customary to ask the tax payer to give the value of personal property but this is merely for what it may be worth as information and 4?es not relieve the officer from, mak ing a proper valuation," reads the in structions. Special attention is called in the letter to intangible property which may be concealed and assessors are cautioned to secure the listing of all solvent credits including those ^of domestic and foreign corporations. The personal property exemption of $300 has been continued despite the protest of legislators from Eastern counties but assessors ar^ warned that this exemption includes only certain - classes of property such as household and kitchen furniture, growing crops, ' etc. Attention is called in the letter to the drastic penalties for milling false or incomplete tax returns and the as sessors are urged to see that all prop erty, by whomever owned, is put on the books. Low Bids on Projects $3,670.20. One hundred ' and fifty-eight con tractors submitted bids on 2 road and bridge projects offered by the State Highway Commiss!on aggregating $3, 570<238.20, breaking the record for the year and coming within one letting of setting up an entirely new mark' for aggregate bids on a single day's let ting since roads began to be offered in wholesale quantity two years ago. Withdrawei of several major pro jects of hard surfacing on account of the serious shortage of cement cut down the original mileage advertised for letting to approximately 150 miles of new construction. About 9d miles of bard surface and 60 miles of other types were included, with grading and bridges on projects that were With drawn for immediate hard :surtacing. Four major projects went beyond the three^ hundred thousand dollar m&rk in the^ bidding, they being the New Befn end pf the Central High way, a link of the W. C. A, Highway near Wilmington, the Wilson-Greene county line road and .the Waynes vt lie-Canton link of the Central high way. No Contracts have been awarded, and it is likely that a number will be withdraw^ because of unsatisfactory ?^es; ? ? New Corporations. Charters were filed with the Secre tary of . State for the following corpor* ations. to do business in North Caro '?Ma: ' Kenilworth Riding Acadengy, of Ashevflle< ywith $100,000 authorized | capital and $3,600. subscribed >by J. M. Chiles, Ben Chiles, and* W. C. Adicks, all of AsheYUle. , Ivey Really Company, of Charlotte, with $600,000 authorized capital and $300 subscribed by J. B. Ivey, George M. Ivey and David Ovens, all of Char* totte. I Seek To Think up Short L ne Rule One of the tanu r. of the State Corporation c?m NH is invoked against the East (v"111? Railroad and the contention th^1? Atlantic Coast Una has r ? the parent ,ys| pJacte^Qjptt^same rate basi8 b The*5**e fcaa^een pandin- for ? tbaa a- year, extend, ,i ^ ^ the East Caroii^J road, the Virginia & Carolina em, the -Washington and \and^ a? r:tiiroa/l which charge a higher fr-ii'ht than is allowed on the mam i!nP r?l roads, are actually own<-d by t^,. rent lines, and farmed out f 41 ** * to enable them to charm: ;i jjj , * freight rate. The comply inants 4, manded that the lines b-> briar^ part of the parent lines, and ihroJ tariffs ordered into effect. I - In: the ? case of the Kast Carol Railroad, no denial was in^i- of tin fact that ~the Atlantic Coast iJ! owns all of its $55,000 capital stock and all of its $300, 000 out^ancjjj. bonds except $5,000. A separav C01> pany from ^th'e Atlantic Y? leases the property, some :,ti mil^ -J length, and operates as an indivi^ property,, charging the fr. ieht rat., "allowed $hort lines. Hi-nry Ciart Bridgers, of Tarboro, is iir?-?siij? ni c, the company. Judge Pells statement during ti? hearing that "I think any court wouii take judicial notice that any man *l0 owns anything has the management and control of it, is quoted in th<- ar gument, along with Rule No. 1 which declares that "all connecting railroadi .which are under the same manago ment -and control, by leas*', owner ship, or otherwise, of one and the see company for the purpose of transport tion in applying this tariff, be m sidered as one and the same road, and the rates shall be computed aj upon parts of one and the 10,113,500.40; March, 19S3, $4,000,000 (approximate.) Last fiscal year: July, 1921, $S, 220, 513.07; ^ugust, 1921, $10,762,990.45; September, 1921, $16,164,34*14: Octo ber,. 1921, $9, 808,308.40; November, 1921, 8,499,233.73; Devember, V.CI $11,962,422.99; January, 1922. T.56S, 2g>.98; February, 1922, $6,614,156.54; March, 1922, $11,525,228.59 (exactf. Allen to Head Training School. A. T. Allen, for the past five year! director of the work of teacher train ing undeT the State Department of Education, has accepted the presiden cy of the Cullowhee Normal school, in Jackson county, according to an nouncement made by State Superb* tendent E. C. Brooks. Mr. Allen will assume control of the school July !? His successor in the department *"H' , not be named for the present. Under recent acts of the General Assembly $375,000 was appropriated for the expansion of the equipni^1 of the school and under the inar.af-'e* jnent of President Allen the capacity of the school, which has been raided to the grade of a standard normal school will be practically daubini. Building operations have alread> beeO outlined by the Board of Trustees a recent meeting. Fourteen Millions in Revenue. Approximately $14,000,000 was <"1* lected in March by the United Stat*1 internal revenue department, brib ing the total for the nine months of the present fiscal year to $101,00'.!"^ as compared with $91,125,482.80 W the same period last year, GiH'arn Grissom, collector, announced. The state has collected $2,7000^ in in^pme ta* to date, the figure show ing a Substantial increase over last drears receipts. The amount, ho*' qrer, still is below the budget co?* mission's estimate of $3,500,000.